The gin shop [graphic]
Found In:
Lewis Walpole Library > The gin shop [graphic]
Description
- Title
- The gin shop [graphic]
- Creator
- Cruikshank, George, 1792-1878, printmaker
- Contributor
-
Cruikshank, George, 1792-1878, artist, publisher.
Clements C. Fry Collection of Medical Prints and Drawings (Medical Historical Library, Yale University). - Published / Created
- November 1st, 1829.
- Publication Place
- London
- Publisher
- George Cruikshank
- Abstract
-
"Design in an irregular oval border to which four scrolls are attached: ‘To the Work House, To the Mad-House, To the Gaol, The Gibbet'. The shop is ornate and pilastered, lit by a double gas chandelier. The customers, dregs of the town, stand at the counter, within the toothed circle of a huge man-trap on the floor. A drunken man in the remnants of fashionable clothes, takes a glass from the barmaid (right). She is outwardly comely, but her fashionable dress, a smiling mask, and gloves, conceal a skeleton, revealed by a skull which grins from her shoulder, and the bones of a foot and ankle. Beside her is a book: ‘Open Gin Shop The Way to Wealth'. An old hag drinks, another gives gin to an infant in her arms; a little girl drains a glass, and a tiny child clamours at the counter. On the counter stands a small cask on which sits a skeleton: Bacchus with bottle and glass. On the left stands Death (who has set the trap), a skeleton dressed as a London watchman; he holds up an hour-glass in place of lantern; he holds a javelin which points ominously to a trap-door in the boards at his feet. He says: ‘I shall have them all dead drunk presently! They have nearly had their last glass'. On the extreme right behind the barmaid is a doorway framing a ring of little demons dancing round a spirit-still; a skull grins from the transparent retort; below the floor is a dark space: ‘Spirit Vaults'. The casks in the shop are coffins. A huge one is ‘Old Tom' [gin, especially if good and strong]. The others are ‘Deady's Cordial' [Deady was a well-known distiller], ‘Kill Devil' [rum, especially if new], ‘Blue Ruin' [bad gin], ‘Gin & Bitters'. On the wall are two placards: [1] a playbill, ‘Drury Lane Theatre, Road to Ruin [cf. British Museum Satires No. 8073] --Life in London [cf. British Museum Satires No. 14320], Devil to Pay' [cf. British Museum Satires No. 7908]; [2] ‘Wanted a few Members to complete A Burial Society'."--British Museum online catalogue
- Description
-
Title etched below image.
Four lines of quoted verse below title: "Now oh dear, how shocking the thought is, They makes the gin from aquafortis; They do it on purpose folks lives to shorten, And tickets it up at two-pence a quartern". New Ballad.
Sheet trimmed within plate mark.
One of six plates of a series entitled: Scraps and sketches / by George Cruikshank. Part the second. See Catalogue of prints and drawings in the British Museum. Division I, political and personal satires, v. 11, pages 239-240.
Temporary local Medical Library subject terms: Drunkeness -- Children and Childcare - Provenance
- Leverhulme-Auchincloss, vol. xx, p. 144.
- Extent
- 1 print : sheet 25.8 x 35.4 cm
- Language
-
English
Collection Information
- Repository
- Lewis Walpole Library
- Call Number
- 829.11.01.03+
Subjects, Formats, And Genres
- Genre
-
Satires (Visual works) England 1829
Etchings England London 1829 - Material
- etching ; and wove paper.
- Resource Type
- still image
- Subject (Topic)
-
Alcoholism
Death (Personification)
Alcoholic beverages
Gin
Intoxication
Children
Demons
Stills (Distilleries)
Coffins - Subjects
-
Alcoholism
Death (Personification)
Alcoholic beverages
Gin
Intoxication
Children
Demons
Stills (Distilleries)
Coffins
England > 1829
England > London > 1829
Access And Usage Rights
- Access
- Public
- Rights
- The use of this image may be subject to the copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) or to site license or other rights management terms and conditions. The person using the image is liable for any infringement.
Identifiers
- Orbis Record
- 9626749
- Object ID (OID)
- 10970500