
According to Southgate, Copley painted three different versions of this over the years. This is the third one. It is based on an event in the life of Brooke Watson, a British politician. It seems to have been the defining moment of his life:
While crossing the Atlantic on his way to England in 1774, the American Colonial painter John Singleton Copley (1738-1815) met Brooke Watson, a 30-something rising London politician who wore a wooden peg in place of his lower right leg. To all who would listen, Watson recounted in grisly detail how he had lost the leg when he was 14 in a harrowing encounter with a shark in Havana Harbor....
...Watson, meanwhile, continued his political ascent, becoming a baronet in 1803. For his coat-of-arms he chose to show Neptune, his trident, and a large fish. In the lower left corner of the shield, in profile, is an image of a right lower leg and foot.
Amazing how a few traumatic moments can shape and shadow a life forever.
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