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The Grip cartoons: vols. I & II, May 1873 to May 1874 cover

The Grip cartoons: vols. I & II, May 1873 to May 1874

Chapter 36: No. 34. “The New Heathen Chinee.”
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About This Book

A curated selection of satirical cartoons re-rendered and presented with a brief introduction and concise annotations by the artist. The plates use caricature, visual puns, and topical pastiche to critique parliamentary scandals, civic disputes, public commissions, and notable public figures, shifting between single-panel gags and recurring motifs. Explanatory notes accompany each image to clarify local allusions and the cartoonist’s intent, so the sequence functions both as humorous commentary on contemporary public life and as an organized record of editorial opinion.

No. 34.
The New Heathen Chinee.

The analogy sought to be pointed out between the new Premier and Bret Harte’s famous “Ah Sin” was merely in the possession of a great advantage in the way of cards. Mr. Mackenzie went to the country with the “Pacific Scandal” for a text, and it proved as ruinous to the Conservative Party as Ah Sins “twenty-four packs” did to “Bill Nye” and his Pardner. This explanation is needed, as the cartoon was considered, by some who misunderstood it, to impugn the honesty of the gentleman represented.

January 24th, 1874.

No. 34.

THE NEW “HEATHEN CHINEE;”
OR, THE WINNING HAND AND SLEEVE.