I’m pretty sure that I’ve mentioned my love of Lewis Caroll’s
Alice books, not the least part of which is my huge admiration for John Tenniel’s
original illustrations for them. Tenniel was remarkable in many ways. His
father was a fencing teacher, and in the course of instructing John once he
caught him in the eye. John concealed the fact that he had been permanently
injured and lost his sight in the eye over a period of time. To be able to draw
as well as he did for as long as he did with only one eye is remarkable.
I also appreciate his political cartoons for Punch,
although more for the incredible skill and facility of his drawing than through
any sympathy with his politics. Tenniel was invited to become joint cartoonist
for Punch in 1850, and he continued to produce what would amount to over 2000
cartoons for the magazine until his retirement over 50 years later in 1902. In
terms of his political views, well, Tenniel was a man who was very much in
sympathy with the urban, middle class readership of Punch and while he could be
a trenchant critic of politicians and governments and their policies at home,
his take on international relations could be pretty imperialistic.
I mention this because you may have read posts earlier this
year when I discussed my collection of chocolate tins that Queen Victoria sent
to troops serving in South Africa during the Boer War. Now, I think I’ve also
mentioned how I love drawing before. Because of arthritis I’ve allowed two or
three weeks to go by without producing any sketches, but I had a week’s leave
from work this last week and so I took up my pens again. I made a copy of a
Tenniel cartoon about the pollution of the Thames – here:-
I then thought to myself, I wonder what Tenniel made of the
Boer War? Well, I say that I wondered, but really and truly I had a pretty good
idea what I’d find. John Tenniel, by this time Sir John Tenniel, was, like the magazine’s
readership, solidly in favour of the unjust war. Here’s my copies of a few of
his cartoons from the weeks leading up to the start of the war and the first
few weeks.
Now, Tenniel often used three allegorical figures to depict
Britain – and for Tenniel Britain really meant England. When Tenniel wanted to
depict Britain as a sympathetic figure, a figure of compassion and peace, he
would use the figure of Britannia, like the figure from the 50p piece/old pre
decimal one penny. When he wished to stress Britain’s might and power, he used
the figure of the British Lion. When he used neither of these, he used the
figure of John Bull.
Here’s a question for you. What nationality was the man who
created the figure John Bull? Yes, that’s right. Scottish. In 1712, John Bull
was created by Scottish satirist John Arbuthnot, in a pamphlet satirising the Whigs
and their policies in the War of the Spanish Succession. In the succeeding
decades Bull pretty much morphed into the archetypal representation of the
free-born, corpulent, small c – conservative Englishman, hence his depiction
even into late Victorian times as a, for want of a better word, corpulent
English country squire from the 19th century.
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| BRITANNIA CONSOLATRIX BRITANNIA - :- ‘I will take care of you! Your man has gone to do his duty – and I will do mine!’ |
Then there’s the idea that Britain, represented by the
allegorical figure Britannia, would do its duty, and take care of the
casualties of war and their families. Now, I will admit that it was in 1901
that pensions were paid to war widows of NCOs and other ranks for the first
time. But this had not been on the table in 1899 when the cartoon was made. Nor
was it very generous when it was made, and it was subject to strict conditions
regarding conduct and being of good character. Should a war widow remarry, for
example, she would receive a very small sum and the pension would cease.
Even in the 21st century we see British
army veterans having to accept help from charities because of the injuries,
mental and physical, that they received in the name of our country which are
not catered for by the Ministry of Defence. So you can imagine just how little
real help was available to veterans of the Boer War on their return to Britain.
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| “JOHN BULL (TO BOER) – “AS YOU WILL FIGHT, YOU SHALL HAVE IT. THIS TIME IT’S A FIGHT TO A FINISH.” |
This one appeared in October 1899, the year and month that the war
broke out. The picture shows John Bull squaring up to a Boer farmer ( the word
Boer itself means farmer).
The title is “Plain English” while beneath this there is
the caption :-
“JOHN BULL (TO BOER) – “AS YOU WILL FIGHT,
YOU SHALL HAVE IT. THIS TIME IT’S A FIGHT TO A FINISH.”
This needs some explanation. It’s probably best that I
start with a slight digression. When I write of the Boer War as an unjust and
unnecessary war, this is what I really feel about it. Which does not mean that
I’m trying to paint the two Boer Republics as admirable nations. Their
attitudes towards black native African nations was appalling, for example. But
it is not as if the British were motivated to fight in order to ameliorate
conditions for native Africans. No, they were motivated by Imperialistic
shortsightedness and led on by the greed of men like Cecil Rhodes. Just my
opinion and as always, feel free to disagree.
So, as a background to the cartoon, Great Britain annexed
the two Boer republics, The Transvaal Republic and the Orange Free State, in
the 1870s. Despite repeated attempts at negotiating a peaceful solution, Boer
representatives were rebuffed time after time, and this led to rebellion and
the first Boer War in December 1880. Superior tactics, and a British army that
was poorly led and equipped , along with Prime Minister William Gladstone’s
sensible refusal to allow the war to escalate into a more costly and wasteful
conflict led to the war concluding in March of 1881 and a treaty which led to
the reestablishment and independence of the two Boer Republics. So that’s what
Tenniel means when he says ‘THIS time’.
Had gold not been discovered in the Transvaal, then the conditions that led to the Second Boer War may never have arisen. In the 1890s, the Uitlanders – a Boer term for foreigners, that is, prospectors and gold miners lured by the gold rush,- chafed at what they saw as the exorbitant taxes they had to pay, bearing in mind that they were ineligible to vote until they had lived there for 14 years. The Boer governments were willing to enter into negotiation with the British government which took up the Uitlanders’ cause and proved willing to move on this. However, the inflexibility of the British convinced them that war was inevitable, even though Transvaal premier Paul Kruger would say that declaring war on the British Empire was like defending yourself against a lion with a pocket knife. So strictly speaking Tenniel was not incorrect to suggest that the Boer republics started the fight – they declared war – but they really were given no choice, despite knowing that their chances of success were limited.


