The Project Gutenberg eBook of English Illustration 'The Sixties': 1855-70
Title: English Illustration 'The Sixties': 1855-70
Author: Gleeson White
Release date: April 17, 2014 [eBook #45426]
Most recently updated: October 24, 2024
Language: English
Credits: E-text prepared by Chris Curnow, Charlie Howard, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
The Project Gutenberg eBook, English Illustration 'The Sixties': 1855-70, by Gleeson White
| Note: | Images of the original pages are available through Internet Archive. See https://archive.org/details/englishillustrat00whit |
ENGLISH ILLUSTRATION
THE SIXTIES
ENGLISH
ILLUSTRATION
'THE SIXTIES': 1855–70
BY GLEESON WHITE
WITH NUMEROUS ILLUSTRATIONS BY
FORD MADOX BROWN : A. BOYD HOUGHTON
ARTHUR HUGHES : CHARLES KEENE
M. J. LAWLESS : LORD LEIGHTON, P.R.A.
SIR J. E. MILLAIS, P.R.A. : G. DU MAURIER
J. W. NORTH, R.A.: G. J. PINWELL
DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI : W. SMALL
FREDERICK SANDYS: J. McNEILL WHISTLER
FREDERICK WALKER, A.R.A. : AND OTHERS
London
ARCHIBALD CONSTABLE AND CO. LTD.
16 JAMES STREET HAYMARKET
1906
THIRD IMPRESSION
*** This is a re-impression of the original edition of 1897. A few small errors have been corrected. In other respects the text has been left, as it came from the late Mr. Gleeson White's hands, unaltered.
Edinburgh: T. and A. Constable, Printers to His Majesty
TO
A. M. G. W. AND C. R. G. W.
IN MEMORY OF THE
MANY HOURS SPENT
UNGRUDGINGLY IN
PROOF READING
PREFACE
In a past century the author of a well-digested and elaborately accurate monograph, the fruit of a life's labour, was well content to entitle it 'Brief Contributions towards a History of So-and-So.' Nowadays, after a few weeks' special cramming, a hastily written record of the facts which most impressed the writer is labelled often enough 'A History.' Were this book called by the earlier phrase, it would still be overweighted. Nor did an English idiom exist that would provide the exact synonym for catalogue-raisonné, could the phrase be employed truthfully. It is at most a roughly annotated, tentative catalogue like those issued for art critics on press-days with the superscription 'under revision'—an equivalent of the legal reservation 'without prejudice.' To conceal the labour and present the results in interesting fashion, which is the aim of the Chancellor of the Exchequer on a 'Budget' night, ought also to be that of the compiler of any document crammed with distantly unrelated facts. But the time required for rewriting a book of this class, after it has grown into shape, would be enough to appal a person who had no other duties to perform, and absolutely prohibitive to one not so happily placed.
In estimating the errors which are certain to have crept into this record of a few thousand facts selected from many thousands, the author is obviously the last person to have any idea of their number; for did he suspect their existence, they would be corrected before the work appeared. Yet all the same, despite his own efforts and those of kindly hands who have re-collated the references in the majority of cases, he cannot flatter himself he has altogether escaped the most insidious danger that besets a compilation of this kind, namely, overlooking some patently obvious facts which are as familiar to him as to any candid critic who is sure to discover their absence.
The choice of representative illustrations has been most perplexing. Some twenty years' intimacy with most of the books and magazines mentioned herein made it still less easy to decide upon their abstract merits. Personal prejudice—unconscious, and therefore the more subtle—is sure to have influenced the selection; sometimes, perhaps, by choosing old favourites which others regard as second-rate, and again by too reticent approval of those most appreciated personally, from a fear lest the partiality should be sentimental rather than critical. But, and it is as well to make the confession at once, many have been excluded for matters quite unconnected with their art. Judging from the comments of the average person who is mildly interested in the English illustrations of the past, his sympathy vanishes at once if the costumes depicted are 'old-fashioned.' Whilst I have been working on these books, if a visitor called, and turned over their pages, unless he chanced to be an artist by profession as well as by temperament, the spoon-bill bonnet and the male 'turban' of the 'sixties' merely provoked ridicule. As my object is to reawaken interest in work familiar enough to artists, but neglected at present by very many people, it seems wiser not to set things before them which would only irritate. Again, it is difficult to be impartial concerning the beauty of old favourites; whether your mother or sister happen to be handsome is hardly a point of which you are a trustworthy judge. Other omissions are due to the right, incontestable if annoying, every other person possesses in common with oneself, 'to do what he likes with his own'; and certain publishers, acting on this principle, prefer that half-forgotten engravings should remain so.
The information and assistance so freely given should be credited in detail, yet to do so were to occupy space already exceeded. But I cannot avoid naming Mr. G. H. Boughton, R.A., Mr. Dalziel, Mr. G. R. Halkett, Mr. Fairfax Murray, and Mr. Joseph Pennell for their kind response to various inquiries. Thanks are also due to the many holders of copyrights who have permitted the illustrations to be reproduced. As some blocks have changed hands since they first appeared, the original source given below each picture does not always indicate the owner who has allowed it to be included. The artists' names are printed in many cases without titles bestowed later, as it seemed best to quote them as they stood at the time the drawing was published. Lastly, I have to thank Mr. Temple Scott for his elaborate index, prepared with so much care, which many interested in the subject will find the most useful section of the book.
The claims of wood-engraving versus process have been touched upon here very rarely. If any one doubts that nearly all the drawings of the 'sixties' lost much, and that many were wholly ruined by the engraver, he has but to compare them with reproductions by modern processes from a few originals that escaped destruction at the time. If this be not a sufficient evidence, the British Museum and South Kensington have many examples in their permanent collections which will quickly convince the most stubborn. If some few engravers managed to impart a certain interest at the expense of the original work, which not merely atones for the loss but supplies in its place an intrinsic work of art, such exceptions no way affect the argument. Wood-engraving of the first order is hardly likely to die out. It is true that, as the craft finds fewer recruits, the lessened number of journeymen, experts in technique (whence real artist-engravers may be expected to spring up at intervals), will diminish the supply. Given the artist as craftsman, he may always be trusted to distance his rival, whether it be mechanism or a profit-making corporation which reduces the individuality of its agents to the level of machines. For in art, still more than in commerce, it is the personal equation that finally controls and shapes the project to mastery, and the whole charm of the sixties is the individual charm of each artist. The incompetent draughtsman, then, was no less uninteresting than he is to-day; even the fairly respectable illustrators gain nothing by the accident that they flourished in 'the golden decade.' But the best of the work which has never ceased to delight fellow-workers will, no doubt, maintain its interest in common with good work of all schools and periods. Therefore, this rough attempt at a catalogue of some of its most striking examples, although its publication happens to coincide with a supposed 'boom,' may have more than ephemeral value if it save labour in hunting up commonplace facts to many people now and in the future. This plea is offered in defence of the text of a volume which, although cut down from its intended size, and all too large, is yet but a rough sketch.
Collectors of all sorts know the various stages which their separate hobbies impose on them. First, out of pure love for their subject, they gather together chance specimens almost at haphazard. Then, moved by an ever-growing interest, they take the pursuit more seriously, and, as one by one the worthier objects fall into their hands, they grow still more keen. Later, they discover to their sorrow that a complete collection is, humanly speaking, impossible: certain unique examples are not to be obtained for love or money, or, at all events, for the amount at their personal disposal. At last they realise, perhaps, that after all the cheapest and most easily procured are also the most admirable and delightful. This awakening comes often enough when a catalogue has been prepared, and on looking over it they find that the treasures they valued at one time most highly are only so estimated by fellow-collectors; then they realise that the more common objects which fall within the reach of every one are by far the best worth possessing.
A homely American phrase (and the word homely applies in a double sense) runs: 'He has bitten off more than he can chew.' The truth of the remark is found appropriate as I write these final words. To mark, learn, and inwardly digest the output of ten to fifteen years' illustration must needs be predestined failure, if space and time for its preparation are both limited. The subject has hitherto been almost untouched, and when in certain aspects it has attracted writers, they have approached it almost always from the standpoint of artistic appreciation and criticism. Here, despite certain unintentional lapses into that nobler path, the intention has been to keep strictly to a catalogue of published facts and with a few bibliographical notes added.
Setting out with a magnificent scheme—to present an iconography of the work of every artist of the first rank—the piles of manuscript devoted to this comprehensive task which are at my side prove the impracticability of the enterprise. To annotate the work of Sir John Gilbert or Mr. Birket Foster would require for each a volume the size of this. But as Punch, The Illustrated London News, and the Moxon Tennyson have already been the subject of separate monographs, no doubt in future years each branch of the subject that may be worth treating exhaustively will supply material for other monographs. The chief disappointment in preparing a reference-book of this class belongs to the first compiler only; the rest have the joy of exposing his shortcomings and correcting his errors, combined with the pleasure of indulging in that captious criticism which any overheard dialogue in the streets shows to be the staple of English conversation.
GLEESON WHITE.
10 Theresa Terrace,
Ravenscourt Park, W.,
October 1896.
CONTENTS
| CHAPTER I | |
| PAGE | |
| THE NEW APPRECIATION AND THE NEW COLLECTOR, | 1 |
| CHAPTER II | |
| THE ILLUSTRATED PERIODICALS BEFORE THE SIXTIES, | 9 |
| CHAPTER III | |
| SOME ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINES OF THE SIXTIES: I. 'ONCE A WEEK,' | 16 |
| CHAPTER IV | |
| SOME ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINES OF THE SIXTIES: II. 'THE CORNHILL,' 'GOOD WORDS,' AND 'LONDON SOCIETY,' | 38 |
| CHAPTER V | |
| OTHER ILLUSTRATED PERIODICALS OF THE SIXTIES: 'CHURCHMAN'S FAMILY MAGAZINE,' 'SUNDAY MAGAZINE, ETC., | 63 |
| CHAPTER VI | |
| SOME ILLUSTRATED WEEKLY PAPERS IN THE SIXTIES, | 88 |
| CHAPTER VII | |
| SOME ILLUSTRATED BOOKS OF THE PERIOD BEFORE 1860, | 95 |
| CHAPTER VIII | |
| SOME ILLUSTRATED BOOKS OF THE PERIOD 1860–1864, | 112 |
| CHAPTER IX | |
| SOME ILLUSTRATED BOOKS OF THE PERIOD 1865–1872, | 125 |
| CHAPTER X | |
| THE AFTERMATH: A FEW BELATED VOLUMES, | 143 |
| CHAPTER XI | |
| CERTAIN INFLUENCES UPON THE ARTISTS OF THE SIXTIES, | 150 |
| CHAPTER XII | |
| SOME ILLUSTRATORS OF THE SIXTIES, | 155 |
| INDEX, | 181 |
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
(Where two or more illustrations follow each other with no text between, the references are given to the nearest page facing)
| FACING PAGE | |||
| Anonymous, | 'Enoch Arden,' | Leisure Hour (Religious Tract Society), | 82 |
| Armstead, H. H., R.A., | A Dream, | Willmott's Sacred Poetry (Routledge), | 112 |
| Brown, Ford Madox, | Prisoner of Chillon, | Willmott's Poets of the Nineteenth Century (Routledge), | 104 |
| " | Elijah and the Widow's Son, | Bible Gallery (Routledge), | 150 |
| " | Joseph's Coat, | "" | 156 |
| " | Down Stream, from the original drawing in the wood (photographed by Mr. Fred Hollyer)—(photogravure), | "" | 80 |
| Burne-Jones, Bt., Sir E., | Parable of the Boiling-Pot, | "" | 146 |
| Clayton, J. R., | Olympia and Bianca, | Barry Cornwall's Dramatic Scenes (Chapman and Hall), | 108 |
| Crane, Walter | Treasure-trove, | Good Words (Strahan), | 176 |
| Dalziel, T., | Bedreddin Hassan and the Pastrycook, | Arabian Nights (Ward, Lock and Co.), | 178 |
| " | The Destruction of Sodom, | Bible Gallery (Routledge), | 178 |
| Du Maurier, G., | On her Deathbed, | Once a Week (Bradbury and Evans), | 34 |
| " | Per l'Amore d'una Donna, | "" | 34 |
| " | A Time to Dance, | Good Words (Strahan), | 44 |
| " | A Legend of Camelot (Nos. I. to V.), | Punch (Bradbury, Agnew, and Co.), | 88 |
| " | Send the Culprit from the House instantly, | Story of a Feather (Bradbury, Agnew, and Co.), | 132 |
| " | He felt the surpassing importance of his position, | "" | 132 |
| Fildes, S. L., | The Farmer's Daughter, | Sunday Magazine (Strahan), | 68 |
| Foster, Birket, | The Green Lane, | Pictures of English Landscape (Routledge), | 116 |
| " | The Old Chair-Mender, | "" | 116 |
| Gilbert, Sir John, R.A., | Hohenlinden, | Willmott's Poets of the Nineteenth Century (Routledge), | 106 |
| Graham, T., | Honesty, | Good Words (Strahan), | 48 |
| Gray, Paul, | Cousin Lucy, | The Quiver (Cassell), | 78 |
| Herkomer, Hubert, R.A., | Wandering in the Wood, | Good Words for the Young (Strahan), | 78 |
| Houghton, A. Boyd, | My Treasure, | Good Words (Strahan), | 166 |
| " | A Lesson to a King, | Sunday Magazine (Strahan), | 68 |
| " | Luther the Singer | "" | 68 |
| " | John Baptist, | "" | 68 |
| " | The Parable of the Sower, | "" | 70 |
| " | The Vision of Sheik Hamil, | The Argosy (Strahan), | 74 |
| " | Noureddin Ali, | Arabian Nights (Routledge), | 122 |
| " | Love, | Golden Thoughts from Golden Fountains (Warne), | 136 |
| " | Don Jose's Mule, | Good Words for the Young (Strahan), | 78 |
| " | Reading the Chronicles, from the original drawing on the block (photogravure), | (British Museum), | 164 |
| Hughes, Arthur, | Fancy, | Good Words (Strahan), | 54 |
| " | The Letter, | "" | 170 |
| " | The Dial (Sun comes, Moon comes), | "" | 170 |
| " | My Heart, | Sunday Magazine (Strahan), | 70 |
| " | Blessings in Disguise, | "" | 70 |
| " | Barbara's Pet Lamb, | Good Words for the Young (Strahan), | 78 |
| " | Mercy, | "" | 78 |
| Hunt, W. Holman, | The Lent Jewels, | Willmott's Sacred Poetry (Routledge), | 144 |
| Keene, Charles, | 'A Good Fight,' | Once a Week (Bradbury and Evans), | 26 |
| Lawless, M. J., | Effie Gordon, | "" | 28 |
| " | Dr. Johnson's Penance, | "" | 28 |
| " | John of Padua, | "" | 28 |
| " | Rung into Heaven, | Good Words (Strahan), | 48 |
| " | The Bands of Love, | "" | 48 |
| " | The Player and the Listeners, | "" | 50 |
| " | Honeydew, | London Society (Hogg), | 56 |
| " | One Dead, | Churchman's Family Magazine (Hogg), | 64 |
| Lawson, J., | Ariadne, | Once a Week (Bradbury and Evans), | 144 |
| Leighton, Lord, P.R.A., | Cain and Abel, | Bible Gallery (Routledge), | 146 |
| " | Moses views the Promised Land, | "" | 146 |
| " | Abram and the Angel, | "" | 146 |
| Leighton, John, | A Parable, | Sunday Magazine (Strahan), | 70 |
| Mahoney, J., | Summer, | "" | 66 |
| " | Yesterday and To-day, | Good Words (Strahan), | 68 |
| Marks, H. S., R.A., | A Quiet Mind, | Willmott's Sacred Poetry (Routledge), | 114 |
| " | In a Hermitage, | "" | 114 |
| Millais, Sir J. E., P.R.A., | There's nae Luck about the House, | Home Affections (Routledge), | 108 |
| " | The Border Widow, | "" | 108 |
| " | Grandmother's Apology, | Once a Week (Bradbury and Evans), | 22 |
| " | The Plague of Elliant, | "" | 22 |
| " | Tannhäuser, | "" | 24 |
| " | Sister Anne's Probation, | "" | 24 |
| " | The Hampdens, | "" | 24 |
| " | Death Dealing Arrows, | "" | 24 |
| " | The Prodigal Son, | Good Words (Strahan), | 120 |
| " | The Tares, | "" | 120 |
| " | The Sower, | "" | 120 |
| Morten, T., | The Cumæan Sibyl, | Once a Week (Bradbury and Evans), | 34 |
| " | Izaak Walton, | The Quiver (Cassell), | 132 |
| " | Gulliver in Lilliput, | Gulliver's Travels (Cassell), | 134 |
| " | The Laputians | "" | 134 |
| North, J. W., R.A., | Glen Oona, | Wayside Poesies (Routledge), | 130 |
| " | Glen Oona (from the original drawing), | Magazine of Art (Cassell), | 130 |
| " | The Nutting, | Wayside Poesies (Routledge), | 130 |
| " | Afloat, | "" | 130 |
| " | Anita's Prayer, | Sunday Magazine (Strahan), | 68 |
| " | Winter, | "" | 66 |
| Pettie, J., R.A., | The Monks and the Heathen, | Good Words (Strahan), | 48 |
| Pickersgill, F. R., R.A., | The Water Nymph, | Willmott's Poets of the Nineteenth Century (Routledge), | 106 |
| Pinwell, G. J., | The Sailor's Valentine, | The Quiver (Cassell), | 74 |
| King Pippin, | Wayside Poesies (Routledge), | 125 | |
| " | The Little Calf, | "" | 128 |
| " | Madame de Krudener, | Sunday Magazine (Strahan), | 68 |
| " | What, Bill! you chubby rogue, | Goldsmith's Works (Ward and Lock), | 126 |
| " | From the original drawing on the block for She Stoops to Conquer— (photogravure), | (British Museum), | 1 |
| Poynter, E. J., P.R.A., | Joseph before Pharaoh, | Bible Gallery (Routledge), | 148 |
| " | Pharaoh honours Joseph, | "" | 148 |
| Rossetti, Dante Gabriel, | The Maids of Elfen-mere, | The Music-master (Routledge), | 98 |
| " | You should have wept her yesterday, | The Prince's Progress (Macmillan), | 162 |
| Sandys, Frederick, | The Three Statues of Ægina | Once a Week (Bradbury, and Evans), | 30 |
| " | The Old Chartist, | "" | 30 |
| " | Harold Harfagr, | "" | 30 |
| " | Death of King Warwolf, | "" | 143 |
| " | Rosamund, Queen of the Lombards, | "" | 30 |
| " | Legend of the Portent, | Cornhill Magazine (Smith and Elder), | 40 |
| " | Manoli, | "" | 40 |
| " | Cleopatra, | "" | 42 |
| " | The Waiting Time, | Churchman's Family Magazine (Hogg), | 64 |
| " | Amor Mundi— (photogravure), | Shilling Magazine (Bosworth), | 63 |
| " | Sleep, | Good Words (Strahan), | 48 |
| " | Until Her Death, | "" | 48 |
| " | 'If,' | The Argosy (Strahan), | 72 |
| " | October, | The Quiver (Cassell), | 174 |
| " | Danae in the Brazen Chamber, | The Hobby Horse (Chiswick Press), | 172 |
| " | Life's Journey, | Willmott's Sacred Poetry (Routledge), | 114 |
| " | A Little Mourner, | "" | 114 |
| " | Jacob hears the voice of the Lord, | Bible Gallery (Routledge), | 172 |
| " | Morgan le Fay— (photogravure), | Frontispiece | |
| Shields, Frederick, | The Plague-Cart, | Defoe's History of the Plague (Munby), | 118 |
| Small, W., | Between the Cliffs, | The Quiver (Cassell), | 78 |
| " | Mark the Grey-haired Man, | Golden Thoughts from Golden Fountains (Warne), | 136 |
| Solomon, Simeon, | The Veiled Bride, | Good Words (Strahan), | 46 |
| " | The Feast of Tabernacles, | Leisure Hour (Religious Tract Society), | 83 |
| " | The Day of Atonement, | "" | 83 |
| Tenniel, Sir John, | The Norse Princess, | Good Words (Strahan), | 48 |
| Walker, Frederick, | The Nursery Friend, | Willmott's Sacred Poetry (Routledge), | 112 |
| " | A Child in Prayer, | "" | 112 |
| " | Out among the Wild-Flowers, | Good Word (Strahan), | 46 |
| " | Portrait of a Minister, | English Sacred Poetry (Religious Tract Society), | 124 |
| " | Autumn, | A Round of Days (Routledge), | 126 |
| " | Autumn, from the original drawing on the block (photogravure), | (British Museum), | 125 |
| " | The Bit o' Garden, | Wayside Poesies (Routledge), | 128 |
| Watson, J. D., | Too Late, | London Society (Hogg), | 56 |
| " | Ash Wednesday, | "" | 56 |
| Whistler, James M'Neill, | The Major's Daughter, | Once a Week (Bradbury and Evans), | 32 |
| " | The Relief Fund in Lancashire, | "" | 32 |
| " | The Morning before the Massacre of St. Bartholomew, | "" | 32 |
| " | Count Burckhardt, | "" | 32 |