The Husband, in a State of Furious Drunkenness, Kills His Wife with the Instrument of All Their Misery.

Minneapolis Institute of Art

The Husband, in a State of Furious Drunkenness, Kills His Wife with the Instrument of All Their Misery.

George Cruikshank; Publisher: Frederick Arnold, London

Date
1847
Medium
Glyphograph
Department
European Art
Institution
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Enormously popular in its day, George Cruikshank's The Bottle, is an illustrated morality tale advocating temperance by depicting the insidious and evil effects of drinking. In this scene, one of eight relief prints in the series, Cruikshank depicts the dramatic climax to the progressive deterioration of an alcoholic father and his family. The lead players include the mother, who now lies dead on the floor; the drunken husband, who has just murdered his wife; and a broken bottle, the symbol of their decline. Policemen in top hats tend to the scene, seizing the remorseful husband, while the couple's son and daughter weep in disbelief. England, Europe

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