WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
The Grip cartoons: vols. I & II, May 1873 to May 1874 cover

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

Chapter 50: No. 48. “Mrs. Gamp’s Home-Thrust.”
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

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. 48.
Mrs. Gamp’s Home-Thrust.

Early in the session a committee was appointed to inquire into the cause of the North-West difficulties, and during the progress of the inquiry evidence was elicited (mainly from Archbishop Tache) which implicated Sir John A. Macdonald. The Reform Party is represented in the cartoon as facetiously anticipating a repetition of the right hon. gentleman’s famous asseveration of his innocence. (See Cartoon No. 11.)

May 2nd, 1874.

No. 48.

MRS. GAMP’S HOME-THRUST.

Sairey Gamp (The Reform Party)—“’AVEN’T GOT NOTHINK TO SAY ABOUT THEM ’ANDS THIS TIME, I SUPPOGE, MISTER SIR JOHN?”