Nonsense talked by a cobbler compared to the talk of a parson and a surgeon-apothecary. Coloured etching attributed to C. Williams, ca. 1812.
- Woodward, G. M. (George Moutard), approximately 1760-1809.
- Date:
- 1812
- Reference:
- 532357i
- Pictures
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Description
The cobbler sits outside his shop, left; above his door is a signboard inscribed "Men and womens soles translated, their understandings mended. Uprights rectified, and quarters restiched, by J Cook, Knt. of St Crispin, and Secular Twister to the Parish of Sheeperton". Two sailors listen to his maunderings, centre. On the right is the house of the parson with clay walls and a thatched roof (with lettering on signboard "Abraham Amen Parish Clerk and Sexton") and the house of the surgeon-apothecary, which is timbered and has a tiled roof, and a signboard inscribed "John Heaven Apothecary and undertaker", with two coats of arms and a mortar and a pestle)
Publication/Creation
[London] (in Cheapside) : [Published] by Thos. Tegg
Physical description
1 print : etching, with watercolour ; platemark 24.7 x 35.5 cm
Lettering
The cheerful cobler ; Woodward del.t ; CW
The cobbler speaks or sings some rhymes about twisting twine, represented by eleven lines of verse shown coming out of his mouth. One of the sailors says "Scuttle my hammock, jib, if this here fellow does not beat our parson." The other sailor replies "I think so messmate and the surgeon into the bargain."
Bears number: 160
References note
Not found in British Museum, Catalogue of political and personal satires
K. Arnold-Forster and N. Tallis, The bruising apothecary, London 1989, no. 29
Reference
Wellcome Collection 532357i
Type/Technique
Languages
Where to find it
Location Status Access Closed stores