BURLESQUES


MR. GEORGE GRAVES IN "PRINCESS CAPRICE"


BURLESQUES

BY

H. M. BATEMAN

WITH AN INTRODUCTORY NOTE BY A. E. JOHNSON

LONDON

DUCKWORTH & CO.

3 HENRIETTA STREET, COVENT GARDEN


First Published 1916

PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN BY WM. BRENDON AND SON, LTD.
PLYMOUTH, ENGLAND


INTRODUCTORY NOTE

Mr. H. M. Bateman possesses in remarkable degree that rare gift, a real power of comic draughtsmanship. He is capable not only of comic vision, but of comic expression. His "line" is an instinctive expression of the comic: it reveals an innate feeling for the essentially humorous. To put it briefly, if somewhat vaguely, he "draws funnily." He is the terse and witty pictorial raconteur—a shrewd observer who can sum up a character, or conjure up a scene, with a few strokes of such penetrating insight that they carry instant conviction.

Humour of the kind which the drawings in this volume embody is so spontaneous, and the expression of it so direct and incisive, that there is perhaps a tendency to overlook the intensity of the effort which produces the seemingly effortless result. Mr. Bateman's method is sometimes described as caricature, but that is to miss its true significance, though the term may seem, upon the surface, appropriate enough. Caricature is the art of inducing humour, by dint of satirical exaggeration, in a subject not necessarily humorous of itself. Mr. Bateman's more difficult function is to reveal humour, not to impose it.

There is no trace of the self-conscious humorist in these drawings. Facetiousness is a quality conspicuously and gratefully absent. The artist's only concern is to pluck the very heart out of his subject, and that his mind has a trend towards the humorous aspect of life is merely accidental. For it is the humour of life, not merely of men, that attracts him, and even when he deals with seemingly quite trivial subjects, there is nothing petty or trite about his comic treatment of them.

He generalises. His observations are of types, not of individuals, of situations rather than of scenes. He draws for us people whom we all know but none of us have actually seen, for when he portrays a type his sketch embodies all the salient characteristics that go to make that type. If he draws a plumber, for example, he shows us the Compleat Plumber—more like a plumber than any plumber ever was. And as with character, so with action—whatever Mr. Bateman elects to make his puppets do, they do it with an intensity and vigour beyond all practical possibility, but not (and this is the artist's secret) beyond the bounds of imagination and belief. When a man is seen running in a Bateman drawing he does not merely run—he runs; if he slumbers, one can veritably hear him snore! The intensity of the artist's imaginative effort visualises for us that which cannot humanly be, but would be if it could.

Pictorial exponents of the comic art are few, for of so-called "humorous drawings" not many are inspired by the true comic spirit. It is a fortunate opportunity, therefore, which the present volume provides of preserving in collected form so much that bears the evident stamp of the real thing.

A. E. J.


LIST OF DRAWINGS

PAGEPAGE
They call it "Fame"[1]Man and Wife[37]
Maestros: The Impressive[3]Speechmakers: The Faithful Old
Maestros: The Unemotional[5]Dog[39]
Maestros: The Sentimental[7]Speechmakers: The Worm[41]
The Winter Vest[9]Twins[43]
The Man who Won a Motor-car[11]Platonic[45]
The Accompanist who did her Best[13]All this for 3d., 6d., and 1/-[47]
The Potter-about-the-hall-all-The Missed Putt[49]
day Person[15]The Man who only wanted Two
The Grumble-at-the-food-and-Halfpennies for a Penny[51]
everything-else-Person[17]Psychic: Gloom[53]
"I Remember in 1870——"[19]Lost—a Pekinese Dog[55]
The Temper[21]Dancers and Dances: Spanish[57]
Genuine Antiques[23]Dancers and Dances: American[59]
Sights up in Town[25]Dancers and Dances: Oriental[61]
Sights down in the Country[27]The Public Library[63]
Little Tich[29]Merely a Matter of Seconds[65]
The Blue[31]A Heart to Heart Talk[67]
Preparations for a Great Offensive[32], [33]How I Won the Marathon[69]
Garçon![35]99° in the Shade[71]


The drawings contained in this book originally appeared,
with some exceptions, in "The Sketch," "London Opinion,"
"The Graphic," "The Bystander," "Printer's Pie" and
"Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News." The author is
indebted to the proprietors of these journals for permission to
issue them in this volume.


THEY CALL IT "FAME"



MAESTROS I. The Impressive: Rachmaninoff's "Prelude"



MAESTROS II. The Unemotional: Bach's "Italian Fugue"



MAESTROS III. The Sentimental: A Chopin Nocturne



STUDIES OF A RESPECTABLE MIDDLE-AGED GENTLEMAN WEARING A NEW WINTER VEST FOR THE FIRST TIME



THE MAN WHO WON A MOTOR-CAR



THE ACCOMPANIST WHO DID HER BEST



HOTEL HOGS The potter-about-the-hall-all-day-and-watch-the-new-arrivals person



HOTEL HOGS The grumble-at-the-food-and-everything-else person



"I REMEMBER IN 1870——" London clubmen in war-time parading for practice in writing to the papers



THE TEMPER


The Goblets


GENUINE ANTIQUES



SIGHTS UP IN TOWN



SIGHTS DOWN IN THE COUNTRY



LITTLE TICH



THE BLUE


PREPARATIONS FOR—


—A GREAT OFFENSIVE



"GARÇON!"



MAN AND WIFE



SPEECHES AND THEIR MAKERS The Faithful Old Dog



SPEECHES AND THEIR MAKERS The Worm



TWINS



PLATONIC



ALL THIS FOR 3D., 6D., AND 1/-



THE MISSED PUTT



THE MAN WHO ONLY WANTED TWO HALFPENNIES FOR A PENNY



PSYCHIC



LOST—A PEKINESE DOG




DANCERS AND DANCES Spanish



DANCERS AND DANCES American



DANCERS AND DANCES Oriental



THE PUBLIC LIBRARY



MERELY A MATTER OF SECONDS



A HEART-TO-HEART TALK



HOW I WON THE MARATHON




99° IN THE SHADE



Transcriber's Notes

Obvious punctuation and spelling errors repaired.