- Richard Rock
Richard Rock (1690? - November 1777) was a well-known doctor in eighteenth century London. Originally from
Hamburg , he was depicted byWilliam Hogarth in the fifth scene of his 1731/2 satirical and moralistic series, "A Harlot's Progress ", where he stands in dispute with notable French doctorJohn Misaubin beside the dying body of their patient, Moll Hackabout. The contrast between Rock (German, short and fat) and Misaubin (French and gaunt) is intentional. Misaubin is easily recognised by his notably tall and thin appearance, but the second doctor was harder to identify with certainty, so Hogarth added his name on a slip of paper on the stool to the lower right of the scene in later printings.Hogarth also included Rock in his 1738 engraving, "Morning", the first of series entitled "The Four Times of the Day", selling his medicines in
Covent Garden . Rock was known for selling a pill forvenereal disease .Oliver Goldsmith discusses Rock and his physical appearance in Letter LXVIII of his 1760 work, "The Citizen of the World".References
*Finley Foster, " [http://www.pubmedcentral.gov/picrender.fcgi?artid=194385&blobtype=pdf William Hogarth and the Doctors] ", "Bull Med Libr Assoc". 32(3): 356–368 (July 1944) (PDF)
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