The serpentine-shaped top with central oval patera inlay and three-quarter gallery above a conforming frieze drawer, the back with rising silk-lined fire screen, raised on slender squared cabriole legs ending in inscrolled feet, the back with pierced serpentine stretcher.
In "The Cabinet-Maker and Upholster's Drawing-Book" (1793), Thomas Sheraton said of 'Screen-Tables,' "intended for a lady to write or work at near the fire; the screen part behind securing her face from its injuries."