1949: A thinly disguised put-down
By calling it irreparable damage she is showing what she really thinks.
1949: A thinly disguised put-down
By calling it irreparable damage she is showing what she really thinks.
1955: Jumping the gun
The neighbours have ignored the ritual whereby you ASK for their pets to be looked after. They will also probably omit the token present as a thank-you for the said looking after.
1949: Man bites dog?
Here is another surreal little joke. The worn out shoes would not really have frightened the aggressive dog but the cartoon catches our attention.
Ha! I remember having shoes like that. So funny
Don’t we all?
In years gone by I have used good old Araldite to stick them back together again, and it worked well as I remember.
1949: Slow on the uptake
The older man is ignoring what is ‘staring at him in the face’.
Looking carefully at the cartoon we see that Janet Gay is a popular actress and therefore highly sought after. The younger man is unlikely to win her hand.
1949: Unwelcome visitor
I suppose that they are feeding him. That’s not the way to discourage him from staying.
1949: Unlikely truthfulness
This is the last thing that the prospective employer would be saying. I seem to recall a number of British post-war films about people doing what the last cashier had done.
1957: How likely is that?
No long discussion on the young man’s suitability? No months of preparation for the wedding? Arguing about the guest list? This young woman is doing without any of that – if we can believe in this scenario.
1950: A modern view of Egyptology
The cartoonist pretends that wine glasses were in common use three thousand years ago. The other hieroglyphics aren’t correct either.
1946: Emmett addresses the housing problem
Emmett applies his fuddy-duddy style to the post war housing shortage.
1946: Emmett tackles the London Underground
This cartoon suggests to me that Baker Street station is the inspiration for this conceit by Emmett.
The line in the top left-hand corner surely represents the first underground in London (and in the rest of the world) in the 1863. The first Metropolitan line went from Baker Street to Farringdon. That stretch of track is still in use today.
1946: National stereotypes as seen by Emmett
While the actual railway companies were really being nationalised Emmett has drawn some fantasised companies conforming to common national stereotypes.
1955: Roadhog
As I get older I find myself more inclined to agree with the duffer who is holding up the others. It’s quite wrong, I admit.
1950: The hunting, shooting and fishing set
This is a cartoon aimed at the super rich. Anton seems to have had a fetish about footwear. Not only does the matronly lady wear unbelievable stiletto shoes but the architect has equally unlikely small feet.
1949: Psychoanalysis again
Psychonalysis figured quite strongly in the period immediately after World War Two. This cartoon is quite typical in misunderstanding what it was all about.
1947: A cure for being bad at Maths
Vitamins were all the rage at the time. The schoolboy’s hopes in vain that a pill is the answer. The chemist ought to advise more effort but won’t.
1946: Androcles didn’t have a gun
They have been trying to shoot the animal. A rifle has been dropped as soon as the elephant began to charge.
The paw story has been related in antiquity. In this story Androcles was a runaway slave who befriended a sick lion in a cave and did indeed pull a thorn from his paw. Later by chance the two met up in the Coliseum in Rome where the lion was expected to kill the slave. Instead the animal recognised his benefactor and the Emperor spared the lives of man and beast. Bernard Shaw wrote a play about this.
The comparison is not apt since the two men had been trying to shoot the elephant.