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# Yes - it's called Gin Alley or Gin Street or similar
It's documenting the drunkenness of the poor so publically deplored by the gentlefolk of the Victorian(?) era. I think it's based on the fact that - I think (basically facts, education, and all that jazz are as Kryptonite to this little brain) - at one point gin was actually cheaper than water - certainly it was abused as such. It's a deliberately satirical grotesque, but very near the knuckle and quite disturbing - like I said - depressing, even.
(, Wed 2 Mar 2011, 12:47, archived)
# It may have been cleaner too.
Lovely lovely gin. Wonder whether they had it with tonic and a bit of lemon.
(, Wed 2 Mar 2011, 12:52, archived)
# It probably was - drinking ale was certainly prescribed to prevent the spread of cholera.
G&T I understand (I assure you I'm neither an alcoholic or historian) to have been invented when the mass travel to India resulted in significant amounts of scurvy, and tonic water was given to travellers for the quinine in it.

In typicially British fashion, what with tonic water being - well - fucking horrible, some bright spark suggested slipping a slug of gin into it, and the rest, as they say, is a Michael Jackson compilation.
(, Wed 2 Mar 2011, 12:57, archived)
# You're nearly there
tonic water was prescribed for its quinine content which fights malaria

scurvy is why we're called limeys
(, Wed 2 Mar 2011, 13:33, archived)
# Malaria, scurvy - what's a couple of DEATHS matter when expanding an empire?!
/protest song
(, Wed 2 Mar 2011, 13:36, archived)
# Gin Lane.
It was the second part of William Hogarth's artistic swipe at 18th C London, the first part being Beer Street.
(, Wed 2 Mar 2011, 12:56, archived)
# Yeah.
That's what I said.

You racist.
(, Wed 2 Mar 2011, 12:57, archived)
# And it was Georgian, not Victorian
(, Wed 2 Mar 2011, 13:40, archived)
# As I say, facts, reasoned debates - these are not of my world.
I - like everyone else - prefer to hold opinions on things about which I know little.
(, Wed 2 Mar 2011, 13:58, archived)
# A less well-known but equally impressive image of Hogarth's is
Credulity, Superstition, and Fanaticism

If only for the wabbits leaping from Mary Toft's fanny.
(, Wed 2 Mar 2011, 23:21, archived)
# Golly!
Surprised and entertained, thankyou :-)
(, Thu 3 Mar 2011, 0:08, archived)