Social Pictorial Satire 
 
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Title: Social Pictorial Satire 
Author: George du Maurier 
Release Date: July 7, 2004 [EBook #12834] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
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PICTORIAL SATIRE *** 
 
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SOCIAL PICTORIAL SATIRE 
[Frontispiece: Mr. and Mrs. Candle. 
From the original drawing by JOHN LEECH. In the possession of 
JOHN KENDRICK BANGS. Esq. The lower portion has never before 
been reproduced.] 
SOCIAL PICTORIAL SATIRE. 
By GEORGE DU MAURIER, 
_Author of "Trilby" "The Martian" &c._
WITH ILLUSTRATIONS 
 
MDCCCXCVIII 
 
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 
_Mr. and Mrs. Caudle_ 
John Leech _"In the Bay of Biscay O"_ 
A Specimen of Pluck _One of Mr. Briggs's Adventures in the 
Highlands_ 
_Thank Goodness! Fly-fishing has begun!_ 
_"The jolly little Street Arabs"_ 
Doing a little Business A Tolerably Broad Hint Charles Keene _The 
Snowstorm, Jan. 2, 1867_ 
_Waiting for the Landlord!_ 
A Stroke of Business _"None o' your Larks"_ 
An Affront to the Service _"Not up to his Business"_ 
George du Maurier Feline Amenities The New Society Craze A 
Pictorial Puzzle Refinements of Modern Speech _"Reading without 
Tears"_ 
The Height of Impropriety Things one would wish to have expressed 
differently 
 
SOCIAL PICTORIAL SATIRE 
It is my purpose to speak of the craft to which I have devoted the best 
years of my life, the craft of portraying, by means of little pen-and-ink 
strokes, lines, and scratches, a small portion of the world in which we 
live; such social and domestic incidents as lend themselves to
humorous or satirical treatment; the illustrated criticism of life, of the 
life of our time and country, in its lighter aspects. 
The fact that I have spent so many years in the practice of this craft 
does not of itself, I am well aware, entitle me to lay down the law about 
it; the mere exercise of an art so patent to all, so easily understanded of 
the people, does not give one any special insight into its simple 
mysteries, beyond a certain perception and appreciation of the technical 
means by which it is produced--unless one is gifted with the critical 
faculty, a gift apart, to the possession of which I make no claim. 
There are two kinds of critics of such work as ours. First there is the 
wide public for whom we work and by whom we are paid; "who lives 
to please must please to live"; and who lives by drawing for a comic 
periodical must manage to please the greater number. The judgment of 
this critic, though often sound, is not infallible; but his verdict for the 
time being is final, and by it we, who live by our wits and from hand to 
mouth, must either stand or fall. 
The other critic is the expert, our fellow-craftsman, who has learned by 
initiation, apprenticeship, and long practice the simple secrets of our 
common trade. He is not quite infallible either, and is apt to concern 
himself more about the manner than the matter of our performance; nor 
is he of immediate importance, since with the public on our side we can 
do without him for a while, and flourish like a green bay-tree in spite of 
his artistic disapproval of our work; but he is not to be despised, for he 
is some years in advance of that other critic, the public, who may, and 
probably will, come round to his way of thinking in time. 
The first of these two critics is typified by Molière's famous cook, who 
must have been a singularly honest, independent, and intelligent person, 
since he chose in all cases to abide by her decision, and not with an 
altogether unsatisfactory result to Mankind! Such cooks are not to be 
found in these days--certainly not in England; but he is an unlucky 
craftsman who does not possess some such natural critics in his family, 
his home, or near it--mother, sister, friend, wife, or child--who will 
look over his shoulder at his little sketch, and say: 
"Tommy [or Papa, or Grandpapa, as the case may be], that person 
you've just drawn doesn't look quite natural," or: 
"That lady is not properly dressed for the person you want her to 
be--those hats are not worn this year," and so forth and so forth.
When you have thoroughly satisfied this household critic, then is the 
time to show some handy brother-craftsman your amended work, and 
listen gratefully when he suggests    
    
		
	
	
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