A village barber-surgeon standing in front of his shop, holding a razor and a lancet; in the distance are the village stocks. Coloured etching by J. Bretherton after H.W. Bunbury.

  • Bunbury, Henry William, 1750-1811.
Date:
1 March 1772
Reference:
29464i
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Description

L.M. is an abbreviation for Licentiate in medicine, a British qualification to practise medicine or surgery or both, bestowed by a bishop or archbishop. The motto "In utrumque paratus" (prepared for both) refers to barbering and surgery, represented respectively by the razor and the lancet; it is derived from Virgil ("ad utrumque paratus", Aeneid II.61). Under his arm he holds a bowl for use in shaving or bloodletting. A bob wig is one which turns up into curls at the back. A bob major is a peal of bells, but is here used presumably to mean a long bob wig. A scratch wig is a small, short wig. A washball is a ball of soap; a breeches-ball is a ball of composition for washing breeches (definitions from the Oxford English dictionary). Scotch pills (also called Anderson's pills) were marketed as laxatives.

Publication/Creation

[London] (No. 134 New Bond Street) : Publish'd as the Act directs by J. Bretherton, 1 March 1772.

Physical description

1 print : etching, with watercolour ; image 21.8 x 15.8 cm

Lettering

The village barber. LM. L'Inghilterra. H.W. Bunbury delin: 1772 ; I. Bretherton f. The barber's shop-sign is a painting of a wig with lettering "Barn: factotum, dresses shaves bleeds &c. In utrumque paratus". A notice board fixed to the wall advertises "Bobs, bob-majors, scratches & other wigs made here; also sausages, washballs, black puddings, Scotch pills, powder for the itch, redherrings, breeches balls, & small beer by the maker". "L'Inghilterra" is in Italian to match "La Francia" in the pendant print

References note

British Museum, Catalogue of political and personal satires, vol. IV, London 1883, no. 4757

Reference

Wellcome Collection 29464i

Notes

Forms a pair with: a print by Bretherton after Bunbury of a French dog groomer, with lettering "The dog barber. La Francia"

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