the rounded rectangular top centred by an inlaid chess/chequer board within an inlaid laurel banded border, above a single frieze drawer flanked by scrolled brackets and inliad with foliate motifs, raised on end supports with lotus carved bases and united by a turned and carved stretcher, on trestle plinths with scrolled feet and recessed brass castors(76cm wide, 74cm high, 43cm deep)Footnote: Note: Morel & Seddon were the principal suppliers of furniture and furnishings to George IV (1762–1830) and the leading proponents of the new national style. Their lavish interior decoration repurposed fine French and English eighteenth-century furniture from George IV's previous residence, Carlton House, as well as supplying new pieces in styles ranging from late Empire to Gothic Revival. The French cabinet-maker and upholsterer Nicholas Morel (fl.1790–1830), who had worked with George IV from the 1790s, went into business with George Seddon (1769–1857) in 1827 principally to undertake the extensive refurbishment of Windsor Castle, 1827–30.