The Anatomist, 12 March 1811
Scope and Contents
Engraving (coloured impression). An aged surgeon leans over a bag of instruments on a table (right), selecting a knife; he wears an old-fashioned wig, hat, coat, etc. A pretty girl seizes him by the arm; she shouts at him, pointing behind her to his subject, a young man lying on the trestle-table, fully dressed and apparently in perfect health, who has just wakened, fully dressed and apparently in perfect health, who has just wakened, horrified. In an open cupboard stands a skeleton (left). On the wall is a notice: 'A Course of Anatomical Lectures accompanied with Dissections will be delivered tommorrow Even(ing) by Professor Sawbone'. Two lighted candles stand on the table. On the lintel of the door is a bust of who is thought to be Hippocrates frowning down at the scene. Probably a satire on body-snatching. Cf. Nos. 5119, 13283. For Rowlandson’s interest in anatomical dissections cf. Nos. 6127, 9682. Grego, 'Rowlandson', ii. 202. Partial description from the Catalogue of Political and Personal Satires Vol. IX. 11800.
Dates
- Creation: 12 March 1811
Conditions Governing Access
Physical item available by appointment in our Reading Room
Extent
1 Item(s)
Language of Materials
English
Repository Details
Part of the Special Collections and Archives Repository
Western Bank Library
University of Sheffield
Western Bank
Sheffield South Yorkshire S10 2TN United Kingdom
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