LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- PAGE
- What It Is and What Is It? [Frontispiece]
- French Invasion of England [3]
- Nelson at the Battle of the Nile (Gillray) [5]
- Bonaparte after Landing (Gillray) [6]
- John Bull Taking a Luncheon (Gillray) [8]
- French Consular Triumvirate (Gillray) [11]
- Capture of the Danish Ships (Gillray) [14]
- The Broad-Bottom Administration (Gillray) [16]
- Pacific Overtures (Gillray) [19]
- The Great Coronation Procession (Gillray) [21]
- Napoleon and Pitt (Gillray) [23]
- Armed Heroes (Gillray) [25]
- The Handwriting on the Wall (Gillray) [27]
- The Double-Faced Napoleon (German cartoon) [29]
- The Two Kings of Terror (Rowlandson) [31]
- The King of Brobdingnag and Gulliver (Gillray) [33]
- Napoleon's Burden (German cartoon) [36]
- The French Gingerbread Baker (Gillray) [38]
- The Devil and Napoleon (French cartoon) [39]
- The Consultation (French cartoon) [41]
- The Corsican Top in Full Flight [45]
- Napoleon in the Valley of the Shadow of Death (Gillray) [47]
- The Spider's Web (Volk) [48]
- The Partition of the Map [49]
- Napoleon's Plight (French cartoon) [50]
- The Signature of Abdication (Cruikshank) [52]
- The Allies' Oven (French cartoon) [54]
- The New Robinson Crusoe (German cartoon) [55]
- Napoleon Caged (French cartoon) [56]
- Restitution [58]
- Adjusting the Balance [60]
- John Bull's New Batch of Ships (Charles) [62]
- Russia as Mediator (Charles) [63]
- The Cossack Bite (Charles) [63]
- John Bull and the Alexandrians (Charles) [64]
- John Bull's Troubles (Charles) [64]
- The Order of the Extinguishers (French cartoon) [67]
- Proudhon [68]
- Digging the Grave [69]
- Le Poire (Philipon) [70]
- The Pious Monarch [74]
- The Great Nut-Cracker [75]
- Enfoncé Lafayette (Daumier) [77]
- The Ship of State in Peril [79]
- The Pit of Taxation (Grandville) [81]
- The Question of Divorce (Daumier) [83]
- The Resuscitation (Grandville) [84]
- Louis Philippe as Bluebeard (Grandville) [85]
- Barbarism and Cholera Invading [89]
- The Raid [89]
- Mayeux (Traviès) [91]
- Robert Macaire (Daumier) [93]
- Extinguished! [94]
- Louis Philippe as Cain [95]
- Laughing John—Crying John [96]
- The Wellington Boot [99]
- The Land of Liberty [103]
- England's Admonition (Leech) [104]
- The Napoleon of Peace [105]
- The Sea-Serpent of 1848 [107]
- Europe in 1830 [109]
- Honoré Daumier (Benjamin) [112]
- The Evolution of John Bull [115]
- Joseph Prudhomme (Daumier) [116]
- The Only Authorised Lamps (Vernier) [120]
- Italian Cartoon of '48 [121]
- Napoleon le Petit (Vernier) [122]
- The New Siamese Twins [123]
- Louis Napoleon and Madame France [124]
- The Proclamation (Gill) [125]
- Split Crow in the Crimea [126]
- Bursting of the Russian Bubble [130]
- General Février Turned Traitor (Leech) [131]
- Rochefort and His Lantern [133]
- Brothers in Arms [134]
- An American Cartoon on the Crimean War [136]
- Theatrical Programme [138]
- The British Lion's Vengeance (Tenniel) [139]
- The French Porcupine (Leech) [141]
- Bank-Oh's Ghost, 1837 [144]
- Balaam and Balaam's Ass [144]
- New Map of the United States [145]
- The Steeplechase for 1844 [147]
- Uncle Sam's Taylorifics [150]
- The Mexican Commander [151]
- Defense of the California Bank [153]
- The Presidential Foot Race [153]
- Presidential Campaign of '56 [154]
- No Higher Law [155]
- The Fugitive Slave Law [157]
- The Great Disunion Serpent [158]
- Rough and Ready Locomotive Against the Field [160]
- Sauce for Goose and Gander [162]
- Peace (Nast) [164]
- Virginia Pausing [166]
- Civil War Envelopes [167]
- Long Abe [168]
- The Promissory Note [169]
- The Great Tight Rope Feat [170]
- At the Throttle [171]
- The Expert Bartender [172]
- The Southern Confederacy a Fact [173]
- The Brighter Prospect [174]
- "Why Don't you Take It?" [175]
- The Old Bull Dog on the Right Track [176]
- Little Mac in his Great Act [178]
- The Grave of the Union [180]
- The Abolition Catastrophe [181]
- The Blockade [182]
- Miscegenation [183]
- The Confederacy in Petticoats [184]
- Uncle Sam's Menagerie [185]
- Protecting Free Ballot [186]
- The Nation at Lincoln's Bier (Tenniel) [187]
- Figures from a Triumph [189]
- The Diagnosis (Cham) [190]
- The Egerean Nymph (Daumier) [191]
- Paul and Virginia (Gill) [192]
- The First Conscript of France (Gill) [193]
- The Situation (Gill) [195]
- Louis Blanc (Gill) [197]
- Rival Arbiters (Tenniel) [198]
- The Man Who Laughs (Gill) [199]
- The Man Who Thinks (Gill) [200]
- "To Be or Not to Be" (Gill) [201]
- Achilles in Retreat (Gill) [202]
- The President of Rhodes (Daumier) [203]
- A Tempest in a Glass of Water (Gill) [204]
- A Duel to the Death (Tenniel) [205]
- September 4th, 1870 [206]
- Her Baptism of Fire (Tenniel) [207]
- André Gill [208]
- The Marquis de Galliffet (Willette) [209]
- The History of a Reign (Daumier) [210]
- "This has Killed That" (Daumier) [211]
- The Mousetrap and its Victims (Daumier) [211]
- Prussia Annexes Alsace (Cham) [213]
- Britannia's Sympathy (Cham) [214]
- Adieu (Cham) [215]
- Souvenirs and Regrets (Aranda) [216]
- The Napoleon Mountebanks (Hadol) [217]
- Prussia Introducing the New Assembly (Daumier) [219]
- "Let us Eat the Prussian" (Gill) [220]
- Design for a New Handbell (Daumier) [222]
- Germany's Farewell [223]
- Bismarck the First [224]
- Trochu—1870 [225]
- Marshal Bazaine (Faustin) [226]
- Rochefort [227]
- The German Emperor Enters Paris (Régamey) [228]
- Caran D'Ache [232]
- Gulliver Crispi [233]
- Changing the Map (Gill) [234]
- Poor France! (Daumier) [237]
- The Warning (Daumier) [238]
- The New Year (Daumier) [239]
- The Root of all Evil [240]
- The Napoleonic Drama [241]
- The French Political Situation (Régamey) [243]
- New Crowns for Old [245]
- Tightening the Grip [246]
- Aeolus [247]
- "L'État, C'est Moi" [248]
- The Hidden Hand [249]
- The Irish Frankenstein [250]
- The Daring Duckling [251]
- Settling the Alabama Claims [252]
- Gordon Waiting at Khartoum [253]
- The Gratz Brown Tag to Greeley's Coat (Nast) [256]
- Thomas Nast [257]
- Labour Cap and Dinner Pail (Nast) [259]
- The Rag Baby (Nast) [260]
- The Inflation Donkey (Nast) [261]
- The Brains of Tammany (Nast) [262]
- A Popular Verdict [263]
- The Tattooed Columbia (Keppler) [264]
- Splitting the Party [265]
- The Headless Candidates [266]
- On the Down Grade [267]
- Forbidding the Banns (Keppler) [270]
- The Wake (Keppler) [272]
- A Common Sorrow [273]
- Why They Dislike Him [274]
- The First Tattooed Man (Gillam) [275]
- A German Idea of Irish Home Rule [279]
- The New National Sexton [280]
- Horatius Cleveland [281]
- Bernard Gillam [282]
- Joseph Keppler [283]
- The John Bull Octopus [285]
- The Hand of Anarchy [286]
- The Triple Alliance [287]
- A Present-Day Lesson [290]
- Gordon in Khartoum [291]
- The Spurious Parnell Letters [291]
- Dropping the Pilot (Tenniel) [292]
- L'Enfant Terrible [293]
- William Bluebeard [294]
- Chinese Native Cartoon [295]
- Japan in Corea [296]
- Business at the Deathbed [297]
- The Start for the China Cup [297]
- End of the Chinese-Japanese War [298]
- The Chinese Exclusion Act [299]
- The Great Republican Circus (Opper) [300]
- To the Rescue [301]
- A Pilgrim's Progress [302]
- General Boulanger [303]
- The Hague Peace Conference [303]
- A Fixture [304]
- Group of Modern French Caricaturists [305]
- The Anglo-French War Barometer [307]
- Rip Van Winkle Awakes [310]
- They're Off [311]
- Where am I at? (Gillam) [312]
- The Political Columbus (Gillam) [314]
- Cleveland's Map of the United States (Gillam) [315]
- Return of the Southern Flags (Gillam) [317]
- The Champion Masher (Gillam) [319]
- The Harrison Platform (Keppler) [320]
- The Chilian Affair [322]
- A Political Tam O'Shanter (Gillam) [324]
- Don Quixote Bryan and the Windmill (Victor Gillam) [325]
- Outing of the Anarchists [326]
- To the Death [327]
- The Great Weyler Ape [328]
- We are the People [329]
- Be Careful! It's Loaded (Victor Gillam) [331]
- The Safety Valve [333]
- The Latest War Bulletin (Hamilton) [334]
- Spanish Cartoons of the Spanish-American War [335]
- The Spanish Brute (Hamilton) [337]
- Spanish Cartoons of the Spanish-American War [339]
- The Rhodes Colossus (Sambourne) [342]
- The Situation in South Africa (Gillam) [343]
- Bloody Cartography [344]
- Lady Macbeth [345]
- The Flying Dutchman [346]
- Oom Paul's Favorite Pastime [347]
- Up against the Breastworks [348]
- The Napoleon of South Africa [349]
- Fire! [350]
- The Last Phase of the Dreyfus Case [350]
- Toward Freedom [351]
- The French General's Staff [352]
- Between Scylla and Charybdis [353]
- Devil's Island [354]
- C. G. Bush [356]
- Willie and His Papa (Opper) [357]
- Homer Davenport [359]
- Davenport's Conception of the Trusts [361]
HISTORY OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY IN CARICATURE
PART I
THE NAPOLEONIC ERA
CHAPTER I
THE BEGINNING OF POLITICAL CARICATURE
While the impulse to satirize public men in picture is probably as old as satiric verse, if not older, the political cartoon, as an effective agent in molding public opinion, is essentially a product of modern conditions and methods. As with the campaign song, its success depends upon its timeliness, upon the ability to seize upon a critical moment, a burning question of the hour, and anticipate the outcome while public excitement is still at a white heat. But unlike satiric verse, it is dependent upon ink and paper. It cannot be transmitted orally. The doggerel verses of the Roman legions passed from camp to camp with the mysterious swiftness of an epidemic, and found their way even into the sober history of Suetonius. The topical songs and parodies of the Middle Ages migrated from town to town with the strolling minstrels, as readily as did the cycles of heroic poetry. But with caricature the case was very different. It may be that the man of the Stone Age, whom Mr. Opper has lately utilized so cleverly in a series of caricatures, was the first to draw rude and distorted likenesses of some unpopular chieftain, just as the Roman soldier of 79 A. D. scratched on the wall of his barracks in Pompeii an unflattering portrait of some martinet centurion which the ashes of Vesuvius have preserved until to-day. It is certain that the Greeks and Romans appreciated the power of ridicule latent in satiric pictures; but until the era of the printing press, the caricaturist was as one crying in a wilderness. And it is only with the modern co-operation of printing and photography that caricature has come into its full inheritance. The best and most telling cartoons are those which do not merely reflect current public opinion, but guide it. In looking back over a century of caricature, we are apt to overlook this distinction. A cartoon which cleverly illustrates some important historical event, and throws light upon the contemporary attitude of the public, is equally interesting to-day, whether it anticipated the event or was published a month afterward. But in order to influence public opinion, caricature must contain a certain element of prophecy. It must suggest a danger or point an interrogation. As an example, we may compare two famous cartoons by the English artist Gillray, "A Connoisseur Examining a Cooper" and the "King of Brobdingnag and Gulliver." In the latter, George III., in the guise of a giant, is curiously examining through his magnifying glass a Lilliputian Napoleon. There is no element of prophecy about the cartoon. It simply reflects the contemptuous attitude of the time toward Napoleon, and underestimates the danger. The other cartoon, which appeared several years earlier, shows the King anxiously examining the features of Cooper's well-known miniature of Cromwell, the great overthrower of kings. Public sentiment at that time suggested the imminence of another revolution, and the cartoon suggests a momentous question: "Will the fate of Charles I. be repeated?" In the light of history, the Gulliver cartoon is to-day undoubtedly the more interesting, but at the time of its appearance it could not have produced anything approaching the sensation of that of "a Connoisseur."
Gillray's Conception of the French Invasion of England.
The necessity of getting a caricature swiftly before the public has always been felt, and has given rise to some curious devices and makeshifts. In the example which we have noted as having come down from Roman times, a patriotic citizen of Pompeii could find no better medium for giving his cartoon of an important local event to the world than by scratching it upon the wall of his dwelling-house after the fashion of the modern advertisement. There was a time in the seventeenth century when packs of political playing-cards enjoyed an extended vogue. The fashion of printing cartoons upon ladies' fans and other articles of similarly intimate character was a transitory fad in England a century ago. Mr. Ackermann, a famous printer of his generation, and publisher of the greater part of Rowlandson's cartoons, adopted as an expedient for spreading political news a small balloon with an attached mechanism, which, when liberated, would drop news bulletins at intervals as it passed over field and village. In this country many people of the older generation will still remember the widespread popularity of the patriotic caricature-envelopes that were circulated during the Civil War. To-day we are so used to the daily newspaper cartoon that we do not stop to think how seriously handicapped the cartoonists of a century ago found themselves. The more important cartoons of Gillray and Rowlandson appeared either in monthly periodicals, such as the Westminster Magazine and the Oxford Magazine, or in separate sheets that sold at the prohibitive price of several shillings. In times of great public excitement, as during the later years of the Napoleonic wars, such cartoons were bought up greedily, the City vying with the aristocratic West End in their patriotic demand for them. But such times were exceptional, and the older caricaturists were obliged to let pass many interesting crises because the situations would have become already stale before the day of publication of the monthly magazines came round. With the advent of the illustrated weeklies the situation was improved, but it is only in recent times that the ideal condition has been reached, when the cabled news of yesterday is interpreted in the cartoon of to-day.