George Clarke, having been bludgeoned on the head in riots at an election meeting n Brentford, Middlesex, is treated by a surgeon and a physician: around them stand six doctors proposing different cures, and eight election officials playing down his illness. Etching, 1769.

Date:
[1769]
Reference:
2477064i
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About this work

Description

George Clarke was bludgeoned on the head in riots at an election meeting in Brentford, Middlesex, on 8 December 1768, and died on 14 December 1768. The Irish chairmen of the election, called Laurence Balfe and Edward McQuirk, were tried for murder, having incited the riots, but were cleared as a result of the conclusion by a committee of the Company of Surgeons that his death could have been caused by fever instead by the blow to his head

Publication/Creation

[London] : [The universal museum], [1769]

Physical description

1 print : etching ; image 10.8 x 17.8 cm

Lettering

The present state of surgery, or modern practice. Engraved for the Universal museum The surgeons on the left say (right to left) "If ye fever does not kill him contusions & fractures are nothing"; "A court plaister will remove ye seat of ye disorder; "Shall we apply ye trepan Sir"; A glyster might evacuate ye broken pieces of bone."; "That would be a fundamental cure indeed.";"It may make his head ache & increase ye fever". Two of the men on the right, holding staves, say "The doctor says a broken scull's nothing if they can but cure ye fever" and "Thank God we need not fear being knock'd on ye head then". Three other people say "I wish those Irish dogs had kept ye distemper to themselves. It's worse than the itch."; "Aye they were deadly wise at ye election time"; "I catch'd a fever from a bludgeon at Brentford myself". The two men with staves on the right are presumably Balfe and McQuirk

References note

British Museum, Catalogue of political and personal satires, vol. 4, 1883, pp. 466-467, no. 4224

Reference

Wellcome Collection 2477064i

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