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ArtistTitleCategoryCollection
Number
DALI, SalvadorLedaPrintsG.1964-0018
DARDÉ, PaulHead of ChristSculpturesS.1959-0060
DARDÉ, PaulEternal GriefSculpturesS.1959-0061
DARDÉ, PaulHead with GrapesSculpturesS.1959-0062
DAUBIGNY, Charles-FrançoisMarsh with DucksPrintsG.1993-0104
DAUBIGNY, Charles-FrançoisDeerPrintsG.1993-0105
DAUBIGNY, Charles-FrançoisPath through a WheatfieldPrintsG.1993-0106
DAUBIGNY, Charles-FrançoisBridgePrintsG.1993-0107
DAUBIGNY, Charles-FrançoisBrook in a ClearingPrintsG.1993-0108
DAUBIGNY, Charles-FrançoisThe Large Sheep PasturePrintsG.1993-0109
DAUBIGNY, Charles-FrançoisThe FordPrintsG.1993-0110
DAUBIGNY, Charles-FrançoisReturn of the FlockPrintsG.1993-0111
DAUBIGNY, Charles-FrançoisGoatherdessPrintsG.1993-0112
DAUBIGNY, Charles-FrançoisHarvestPrintsG.1993-0113
DAUBIGNY, Charles-FrançoisDonky in a FieldPrintsG.1993-0114
DAUBIGNY, Charles-FrançoisNight ImpressionPrintsG.1993-0115
DAUBIGNY, Charles-FrançoisCluster of AldersPrintsG.1993-0116
DAUBIGNY, Charles-FrançoisCows at a Watering PlacePrintsG.1993-0117
DAUBIGNY, Charles-FrançoisHydraulic EnginePrintsG.1993-0118
DAUBIGNY, Charles-FrançoisCows in the WoodsPrintsG.1993-0119
DAUCHEZ, AndréLandscape of BrittanyPrintsG.1959-0016
DAUCHEZ, AndréTrees on the RiverPaintingsP.1959-0063
DAUMIER, HonoréDone for, Lafayette! Trapped, Old FellowPrintsG.1994-0016
DAUMIER, HonoréNadar élevant la Photographie à la hauteur de l'ArtPrintsG.1996-0001
DAUMIER, HonoréRue Transnonain, le 15 avril 1834PrintsG.1998-0042
DAUMIER, HonoréPolitical Caricatures 16: God, how I loved that beingPrintsG.2000-0052
DAUMIER, HonoréVery humble, very submissive, very obedient..........and above all, very greedy Subjects.PrintsG.2000-0053
DAUMIER, HonoréVery humble, very submissive, very obedient ..........and above all, very greedy Subjects.PrintsG.2000-0054
DAUMIER, HonoréThe NightmarePrintsG.2000-0055
DAUMIER, HonoréMasks of 1831PrintsG.2000-0056
DAUMIER, HonoréMasks of 1831PrintsG.2000-0057
DAUMIER, HonoréMinisterial Charenton: Different monomanias of political madmenPrintsG.2000-0058
DAUMIER, HonoréMinisterial Charenton: Different monomanias of political madmenPrintsG.2000-0059
DAUMIER, HonoréAh! His!...Ah! His! Ah! His!...PrintsG.2000-0060
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Court of King PetaudPrintsG.2000-0061
DAUMIER, HonoréChimera of the imagination: My God! What if I am going to have a child with the head of La Poire...or even a Lobeau...a d'Argout...a Soult...a Dupin... Oh! my God!! a Kératry!!!!PrintsG.2000-0062
DAUMIER, HonoréChimera of the imagination: My God! What if I am going to have a child with the head of La Poire...or even a Lobeau...a d'Argout...a Soult...a Dupin... Oh! my God!! a Kératry!!!!PrintsG.2000-0063
DAUMIER, HonoréKssssse! Pédro...Ksssse Ksssse! Miguel (Those two cowards will never do each other great harm)PrintsG.2000-0064
DAUMIER, HonoréCORTÈGE of the commander general of Apothecaries, prince Lancelot de Tricanule at his entry into the Chamber of Peers. (Marshal Lobau)PrintsG.2000-0065
DAUMIER, Honoré1830 and 1833PrintsG.2000-0066
DAUMIER, Honoré1830 and 1833PrintsG.2000-0067
DAUMIER, HonoréSir! Lisbon is captured...PrintsG.2000-0068
DAUMIER, HonoréAh! So you want to annoy the press!!PrintsG.2000-0069
DAUMIER, HonoréPrimo saignare, deinde purgare, postea clysterium donare. PrintsG.2000-0070
DAUMIER, HonoréThe past. The present. The future.PrintsG.2000-0071
DAUMIER, HonoréPhilippe my father, do not leave me yet more glory...PrintsG.2000-0072
DAUMIER, HonoréPhilippe my father, do not leave me yet more glory...PrintsG.2000-0073
DAUMIER, HonoréPhilippe my father, do not leave me yet more glory...PrintsG.2000-0074
DAUMIER, HonoréMlle. Etienne-Joconde-Cunégonde-Bécassine of le Constitutionnel, indignant, suffocated, ruffled and Rococo-fied at the performance of Antony in which that rascal Dumas had the immorality to mock the noble Bécassine family of le Constitutionnel.PrintsG.2000-0075
DAUMIER, HonoréHonest recompense for obedient electors.PrintsG.2000-0076
DAUMIER, HonoréFat, greedy man, go! (Lepeintre the younger, in the role of Tragala in Twenty Years later)PrintsG.2000-0077
DAUMIER, HonoréJourney among the eager populacePrintsG.2000-0078
DAUMIER, HonoréGrotesque figure from China (Taken from the collection of Mr. Ch. Philipon)PrintsG.2000-0079
DAUMIER, HonoréFrance's slumberPrintsG.2000-0080
DAUMIER, HonoréThat man there can be set free, he is no longer dangerous.PrintsG.2000-0081
DAUMIER, HonoréLower the curtain, the farce is over.PrintsG.2000-0082
DAUMIER, HonoréA fundholder of the good royals – A fundholder of the CortèsPrintsG.2000-0083
DAUMIER, HonoréThe prince's mare and the princess's dogPrintsG.2000-0084
DAUMIER, HonoréWhere are we going, where are we going?...We are walking on a volcano, the gulf of revolutions is open beneath our footsteps...the carriage of state has been halted by the flood of all these bad passions.PrintsG.2000-0085
DAUMIER, HonoréWhere are we going, where are we going?...We are walking on a volcano, the gulf of revolutions is open beneath our footsteps...the carriage of state has been halted by the flood of all these bad passions.PrintsG.2000-0086
DAUMIER, HonoréThe shaking headPrintsG.2000-0087
DAUMIER, HonoréThe telegraph millPrintsG.2000-0088
DAUMIER, HonoréThe honours of the PantheonPrintsG.2000-0089
DAUMIER, HonoréModern Galilee: And so she goes on.PrintsG.2000-0090
DAUMIER, HonoréVery good! very good! you are behaving perfectly! we are going to take you to Beaulieu, to Poissy, to Bicêtre, I am pleased with you.PrintsG.2000-0091
DAUMIER, HonoréWe are all honest people, let us embrace each other, and let the matter end.PrintsG.2000-0092
DAUMIER, HonoréPolitical dummies: This game has only lasted three daysPrintsG.2000-0093
DAUMIER, HonoréLittle ones! little ones! little ones!...come! come! come!...come to me, you Turkeys!PrintsG.2000-0094
DAUMIER, HonoréA large mortar with a very short range.PrintsG.2000-0095
DAUMIER, HonoréThe TriumpherPrintsG.2000-0096
DAUMIER, HonoréThe TriumpherPrintsG.2000-0097
DAUMIER, HonoréMarie-Louise-Charlotte-Philippine Pairie: Submissive daughter & fathered by the police.PrintsG.2000-0098
DAUMIER, HonoréThe TemptationPrintsG.2000-0099
DAUMIER, HonoréAthenians, beware of Philippe!PrintsG.2000-0100
DAUMIER, HonoréAthenians, beware of Philippe!PrintsG.2000-0101
DAUMIER, HonoréThe first woundPrintsG.2000-0102
DAUMIER, HonoréMarshal Mortier on the eve of the battle of WaterlooPrintsG.2000-0103
DAUMIER, HonoréMarshal Mortier on the eve of the battle of WaterlooPrintsG.2000-0104
DAUMIER, HonoréThe iron collar.PrintsG.2000-0105
DAUMIER, HonoréMalbroug takes himself off to war...PrintsG.2000-0106
DAUMIER, HonoréIt's war!...Each man for himself!PrintsG.2000-0107
DAUMIER, HonoréPlease, for a poor American.PrintsG.2000-0108
DAUMIER, HonoréHonest recompense conferred...upon Louis-PhilippePrintsG.2000-0109
DAUMIER, HonoréWhen the Devil becomes old, he becomes a HermitPrintsG.2000-0110
DAUMIER, HonoréFrom your humble little squirts / Receive, on your birthday, / Two types of bouquet / For the opening of which prepare yourself. / They will please you, because the French people / Alone have met all the expenses.PrintsG.2000-0111
DAUMIER, Honoré...You have the floor, explain yourself, you are free to do so!PrintsG.2000-0112
DAUMIER, HonoréLeaving for SpainPrintsG.2000-0113
DAUMIER, HonoréMy God! What a disgusting display.PrintsG.2000-0114
DAUMIER, HonoréScattered sheep, enter the foldPrintsG.2000-0115
DAUMIER, HonoréScattered sheep, enter the foldPrintsG.2000-0116
DAUMIER, HonoréIt was indeed worth the trouble of having us killed!PrintsG.2000-0117
DAUMIER, HonoréThe legislative stomach: View of the ministerial benches of the uncorrupted Chamber of 1834PrintsG.2000-0118
DAUMIER, HonoréRue Transnonain, 15 April 1834PrintsG.2000-0119
DAUMIER, HonoréGo to sleep, Figaro, you are feeling feverishPrintsG.2000-0120
DAUMIER, HonoréPublic Exhibition – 1833: Colossal model of a gingerbreadPrintsG.2000-0121
DAUMIER, HonoréPolitical Caricatures 69: There, there's a coconut! It's fresh...PrintsG.2000-0122
DAUMIER, HonoréPolitical Series 106: The d'Arg.. family during the storm.PrintsG.2000-0123
DAUMIER, HonoréPolitical Series 122: A new nosePrintsG.2000-0124
DAUMIER, HonoréPolitical Series 135: Incidentally! It is a fairly distinguished ball...PrintsG.2000-0125
DAUMIER, HonoréPolitical Series 127: Ride a cock-horse on my pony... (children's story)PrintsG.2000-0126
DAUMIER, HonoréMemory of Ste [Sainte] Pélagie.PrintsG.2000-0127
DAUMIER, HonoréI am pleased with you, my good fellows!PrintsG.2000-0128
DAUMIER, HonoréThe fly-netPrintsG.2000-0129
DAUMIER, HonoréThe fly-netPrintsG.2000-0129
DAUMIER, HonoréWho wants it [for 'them']? Go to bed, babblerPrintsG.2000-0130
DAUMIER, HonoréBalance of powersPrintsG.2000-0131
DAUMIER, HonoréMr. Potasse's courageous opinion... Constitutionnel!PrintsG.2000-0132
DAUMIER, HonoréSeize them all, my dear...PrintsG.2000-0133
DAUMIER, HonoréSeize them all, my dear...PrintsG.2000-0134
DAUMIER, HonoréA nightmarePrintsG.2000-0135
DAUMIER, HonoréCelebrities of Caricature: CH.DE LAM...PrintsG.2000-0136
DAUMIER, HonoréCelebrities of Caricature: DUP...PrintsG.2000-0137
DAUMIER, HonoréCelebrities of Caricature: SOU...PrintsG.2000-0138
DAUMIER, HonoréCelebrities of Caricature: D'ARG...PrintsG.2000-0139
DAUMIER, HonoréCelebrities of Caricature: PÉRE-SCIEPrintsG.2000-0140
DAUMIER, HonoréThe uncorrupted Chamber: Mr. POT DE NAZ.PrintsG.2000-0141
DAUMIER, HonoréThe uncorrupted Chamber: Mr. POT DE NAZ.PrintsG.2000-0142
DAUMIER, HonoréThe uncorrupted Chamber: Mr. FULCHIR...PrintsG.2000-0143
DAUMIER, HonoréThe uncorrupted Chamber: Mr VIEUX-NIAIS.PrintsG.2000-0144
DAUMIER, HonoréThe uncorrupted Chamber: Mr ARLÉPAIRE.PrintsG.2000-0145
DAUMIER, HonoréThe uncorrupted Chamber: Mr ARLÉPAIRE.PrintsG.2000-0146
DAUMIER, HonoréThe uncorrupted Chamber: Mr SEBAST...PrintsG.2000-0147
DAUMIER, HonoréThe uncorrupted Chamber: Mr ÉTIEN...PrintsG.2000-0148
DAUMIER, HonoréMr ODIEUX.PrintsG.2000-0149
DAUMIER, HonoréMr BENJAMIN DUDESSERT.PrintsG.2000-0150
DAUMIER, HonoréMr PRUNE.PrintsG.2000-0151
DAUMIER, HonoréMr D'ARGO...PrintsG.2000-0152
DAUMIER, HonoréMr BARTHE.PrintsG.2000-0153
DAUMIER, HonoréMr CUNIN GRID...PrintsG.2000-0154
DAUMIER, HonoréMr CUNIN GRID...PrintsG.2000-0155
DAUMIER, HonoréMr CUNIN GRID...PrintsG.2000-0156
DAUMIER, HonoréMr ROYER-COL...PrintsG.2000-0157
DAUMIER, HonoréMr BAILL...PrintsG.2000-0158
DAUMIER, HonoréMr KERATR.PrintsG.2000-0159
DAUMIER, HonoréMr DE RIGN.PrintsG.2000-0160
DAUMIER, HonoréMr GUIZ...PrintsG.2000-0161
DAUMIER, HonoréMr JOLIV...PrintsG.2000-0162
DAUMIER, HonoréMr JOLIV...PrintsG.2000-0163
DAUMIER, HonoréJudges of the accused of April: Mr. Barbé-Marbois.PrintsG.2000-0164
DAUMIER, HonoréJudges of the accused of April: Count Portalis – duke de Bassano – count de MontlosierPrintsG.2000-0165
DAUMIER, HonoréJudges of the accused of April: Count Portalis – duke de Bassano – count de MontlosierPrintsG.2000-0166
DAUMIER, HonoréCount Mathieu DumasPrintsG.2000-0167
DAUMIER, HonoréJudges of the accused of April: Huguet de Sémonville – Robert Macaire (Thiers) – count RœdererPrintsG.2000-0168
DAUMIER, HonoréJudges of the accused of April: Girod de l'Ain – J.-Joseph Rousseau – admiral VerhuelPrintsG.2000-0169
DAUMIER, HonoréJudges of the accused of April: Girod de l'Ain – J.-Joseph Rousseau – admiral VerhuelPrintsG.2000-0170
DAUMIER, HonoréJudges of the accused of April: Napoléon LannesPrintsG.2000-0171
DAUMIER, HonoréJudges of the accused of April: Napoléon LannesPrintsG.2000-0172
DAUMIER, HonoréJudges of the accused of April: Count J.-Jérôme SiméonPrintsG.2000-0173
DAUMIER, HonoréJudges of the accused of April: Baron de LascoursPrintsG.2000-0174
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Court Ball 1: Mr ROYER COLAS. as an aged Marchioness of the old court...PrintsG.2000-0175
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Court Ball 2: Mr MONTAUGIBET, as a bad sauce-cookPrintsG.2000-0176
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Court Ball 3: THE ABBÉ LOUP, as a smugglerPrintsG.2000-0177
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Court Ball 4: SOUL as a choir-boyPrintsG.2000-0178
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Court Ball 5: Mr OUMAAAANNN, as a woman from AlsacePrintsG.2000-0179
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Court Ball 5: Mr OUMAAAANNN, as a woman from AlsacePrintsG.2000-0180
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Court Ball 6: MADRIER-LONGEAU, as a simpletonPrintsG.2000-0181
DAUMIER, HonoréBergeron and Benoit.PrintsG.2000-0182
DAUMIER, HonoréMr TU-BOISPrintsG.2000-0183
DAUMIER, HonoréViennet at the tribunal.PrintsG.2000-0184
DAUMIER, HonoréViennet at the tribunal.PrintsG.2000-0185
DAUMIER, HonoréODI...PrintsG.2000-0186
DAUMIER, HonoréGUIZ...PrintsG.2000-0187
DAUMIER, HonoréTHI...PrintsG.2000-0188
DAUMIER, HonoréTHI...PrintsG.2000-0189
DAUMIER, HonoréMr VIEUX-NIAIS.PrintsG.2000-0190
DAUMIER, HonoréMr VIEUX-NIAIS.PrintsG.2000-0191
DAUMIER, HonoréBATAILLEPrintsG.2000-0192
DAUMIER, HonoréBATAILLEPrintsG.2000-0193
DAUMIER, HonoréPOT-DE-NAZPrintsG.2000-0194
DAUMIER, HonoréCHEVANDI...PrintsG.2000-0195
DAUMIER, HonoréDE L'OR...PrintsG.2000-0196
DAUMIER, HonoréPolitical Caricatures 56: Mid-wife (marshal Bugeaud)PrintsG.2000-0197
DAUMIER, HonoréPolitical Caricatures 56: Mid-wife (marshal Bugeaud)PrintsG.2000-0198
DAUMIER, HonoréMr SÉBAST...PrintsG.2000-0199
DAUMIER, HonoréBastien and RobertPrintsG.2000-0200
DAUMIER, HonoréBastien and RobertPrintsG.2000-0201
DAUMIER, HonoréMr GA... Mr LECOM...PrintsG.2000-0202
DAUMIER, HonoréMr GA... Mr LECOM...PrintsG.2000-0203
DAUMIER, HonoréGAN...PrintsG.2000-0204
DAUMIER, HonoréGAN...PrintsG.2000-0205
DAUMIER, HonoréMr JOLIV...PrintsG.2000-0206
DAUMIER, HonoréETIEN...PrintsG.2000-0207
DAUMIER, Honoré22000FR.ANCS FINEPrintsG.2000-0208
DAUMIER, Honoré22000FR.ANCS FINEPrintsG.2000-0209
DAUMIER, Honoré22000FR.ANCS FINEPrintsG.2000-0210
DAUMIER, HonoréMr FRUCH...PrintsG.2000-0211
DAUMIER, HonoréMr FRUCH...PrintsG.2000-0212
DAUMIER, HonoréBENJAMIN DUDESSERTPrintsG.2000-0213
DAUMIER, HonoréARLÉPAIRE.PrintsG.2000-0214
DAUMIER, HonoréMr JACOT-LEFAIVEPrintsG.2000-0215
DAUMIER, HonoréMr JACOT-LEFAIVEPrintsG.2000-0216
DAUMIER, HonoréVAT...PrintsG.2000-0217
DAUMIER, HonoréVAT...PrintsG.2000-0218
DAUMIER, HonoréMartin, gaoler of Mont Saint-MichelPrintsG.2000-0219
DAUMIER, HonoréJAQUINET-GOD...PrintsG.2000-0220
DAUMIER, HonoréIt is always with the deepest sadness...PrintsG.2000-0221
DAUMIER, HonoréIt is always with the deepest sadness...PrintsG.2000-0222
DAUMIER, HonoréIt is always with the deepest sadness...PrintsG.2000-0223
DAUMIER, HonoréCrédevillePrintsG.2000-0224
DAUMIER, HonoréFereyPrintsG.2000-0225
DAUMIER, Honoréde La RonchièrePrintsG.2000-0226
DAUMIER, HonoréPartarieu-LafossePrintsG.2000-0227
DAUMIER, HonoréMorell (de)PrintsG.2000-0228
DAUMIER, HonoréRecently there was a crowd at La ConciergeriePrintsG.2000-0229
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 1: F.A. IsambertPrintsG.2000-0230
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 1: J. Martial BineauPrintsG.2000-0231
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 1: J. Martial Bineau: Portrait drawn from life at the moment when this terrible person gives himself up to his favourite passtime, which consists of slashing pictures and breaking those objects of art which fall under his hands.PrintsG.2000-0232
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 1: J. Martial Bineau: Portrait drawn from life at the moment when this terrible person gives himself up to his favourite passtime, which consists of slashing pictures and breaking those objects of art which fall under his hands.PrintsG.2000-0233
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 2: B. Sarrans JeunePrintsG.2000-0234
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 2: B. Sarrans JeunePrintsG.2000-0235
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 2: B. Sarrans JeunePrintsG.2000-0236
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 2: B. Sarrans JeunePrintsG.2000-0237
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 3: Ariste Trouvé-ChauvelPrintsG.2000-0238
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 4: Adolphe ThiersPrintsG.2000-0239
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 5: Adolphe Crémieux (Minister in hopes) Great lover of change, nothing would be missing from his happiness if one day he changed his face!PrintsG.2000-0240
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 5: Adolphe Crémieux (Minister in hopes) Great lover of change, nothing would be missing from his happiness if one day he changed his face!PrintsG.2000-0241
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 5: Adolphe Crémieux (Minister in hopes) Great lover of change, nothing would be missing from his happiness if one day he changed his face!PrintsG.2000-0242
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 6: J. Arm. S. DufaurePrintsG.2000-0243
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 7: J. Antoine TaschereauPrintsG.2000-0244
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 8: Pierre Leroux: This great philosopher directs himself towards the tribune of the national assembly with his collection of social aphorisms.PrintsG.2000-0245
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 8: Pierre Leroux: This great philosopher directs himself towards the tribune of the national assembly with his collection of social aphorisms.PrintsG.2000-0246
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 9: Félix Pyat: Convinced by the speech delivered by Félix Pyat in favour of the right to work, Daumier immediately claimed the right to work at the expense of this orator from the highlands.PrintsG.2000-0247
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 9: Félix Pyat: Convinced by the speech delivered by Félix Pyat in favour of the right to work, Daumier immediately claimed the right to work at the expense of this orator from the highlands.PrintsG.2000-0248
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 10: Henri de Larochejacquelein: The costume in which this citizen was got up on the day he went to the National Assembly to lodge his memorable proposal for President of the French Republic!...Abd-el-Kader.PrintsG.2000-0249
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 10: Henri de Larochejacquelein: The costume in which this citizen was got up on the day he went to the National Assembly to lodge his memorable proposal for President of the French Republic!...Abd-el-Kader.PrintsG.2000-0250
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 11: P. J. Proudhon: Apostle of socialism, enemy of property and its certified destructor, (without government guarantee)PrintsG.2000-0251
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 12: Jules BastidePrintsG.2000-0252
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 12: Jules BastidePrintsG.2000-0253
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 13: Ant. Laurent PagnerrePrintsG.2000-0254
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 14: J. Alexandre BixioPrintsG.2000-0255
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 14: J. Alexandre BixioPrintsG.2000-0256
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 14: J. Alexandre BixioPrintsG.2000-0257
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 15: C. H. Odilon BarrotPrintsG.2000-0258
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 16: A. O. Glais-BizoinPrintsG.2000-0259
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 16: A. O. Glais-BizoinPrintsG.2000-0260
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 17: L. Ant. Garnier-Pagès: Ex-member of the provisional Government, ex-Mayor of Paris, ex-Minister of Finance; Garnier-Pagès has the habit of putting his hands in his pockets, which is a great proof of honesty, above all at a time when so many citizens like to dig their hands into their neighbours' pockets. --- We note besides that Garnier-Pagès is loved by all who know him, despite the fact that he has a slight wart on his forehead.PrintsG.2000-0261
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 17: L. Ant. Garnier-Pagès: Ex-member of the provisional Government, ex-Mayor of Paris, ex-Minister of Finance; Garnier-Pagès has the habit of putting his hands in his pockets, which is a great proof of honesty, above all at a time when so many citizens like to dig their hands into their neighbours' pockets. --- We note besides that Garnier-Pagès is loved by all who know him, despite the fact that he has a slight wart on his forehead.PrintsG.2000-0262
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 18: Antony ThouretPrintsG.2000-0263
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 19: Jean Charles BesnardPrintsG.2000-0264
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 19: Jean Charles BesnardPrintsG.2000-0265
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 20: A. C. V. Ch. Destutt de TracyPrintsG.2000-0266
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 21: J. Jacques DupinPrintsG.2000-0267
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 22: Victor Considérant; Drawn from life at the Tribune on the memorable day when, decorated with all the attributes of a disciple of Fourrier [sic], and assuming the pose of anti-lion, he sought to phalansteryise all the members of the national assembly.PrintsG.2000-0268
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 22: Victor Considérant; Drawn from life at the Tribune on the memorable day when, decorated with all the attributes of a disciple of Fourrier [sic], and assuming the pose of anti-lion, he sought to phalansteryise all the members of the national assembly.PrintsG.2000-0269
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 23: Ant. M. Jules SénardPrintsG.2000-0270
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 23: Ant. M. Jules SénardPrintsG.2000-0271
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 23: Ant. M. Jules SénardPrintsG.2000-0272
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 24: H. G. Boulay de la MeurthePrintsG.2000-0273
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 24: H. G. Boulay de la MeurthePrintsG.2000-0274
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 24: H. G. Boulay de la MeurthePrintsG.2000-0275
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 25: Ferdinand Flocon; At first sight, you perhaps took this person for a Russian prince, slightly Cossack, which cannot have failed to afflict profoundly his quality as a watchful Republican. Ferdinand Flocon was for some weeks Minister of Agriculture, and one of his first acts was to shave his chin, formerly embellished with a full beard. He had even more excellent intentions, but lacked the time to carry them out.PrintsG.2000-0276
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 25: Ferdinand Flocon; At first sight, you perhaps took this person for a Russian prince, slightly Cossack, which cannot have failed to afflict profoundly his quality as a watchful Republican. Ferdinand Flocon was for some weeks Minister of Agriculture, and one of his first acts was to shave his chin, formerly embellished with a full beard. He had even more excellent intentions, but lacked the time to carry them out.PrintsG.2000-0277
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 25: Ferdinand Flocon; At first sight, you perhaps took this person for a Russian prince, slightly Cossack, which cannot have failed to afflict profoundly his quality as a watchful Republican. Ferdinand Flocon was for some weeks Minister of Agriculture, and one of his first acts was to shave his chin, formerly embellished with a full beard. He had even more excellent intentions, but lacked the time to carry them out.PrintsG.2000-0278
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 26: LuneauPrintsG.2000-0279
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 27: P. Lamotte RateauPrintsG.2000-0280
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 27: P. Lamotte RateauPrintsG.2000-0281
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 28: Marie Michel AltarochePrintsG.2000-0282
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 28: Marie Michel AltarochePrintsG.2000-0283
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 29: L. F. Raymond Wolowski [sic]PrintsG.2000-0284
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 30: Jean-Jacques BergerPrintsG.2000-0285
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 31: LagrangePrintsG.2000-0286
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 31: LagrangePrintsG.2000-0287
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 32: J. Marie-Anne DegouséePrintsG.2000-0288
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 32: J. Marie-Anne DegouséePrintsG.2000-0289
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 32: J. Marie-Anne DegouséePrintsG.2000-0290
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 33: N. A. Théodule ChangarnierPrintsG.2000-0291
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 34: P. J. David d'AngersPrintsG.2000-0292
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 34: P. J. David d'AngersPrintsG.2000-0293
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 35: Pierre Jules BarochePrintsG.2000-0294
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 36: Victor SchœlcherPrintsG.2000-0295
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 36: Victor SchœlcherPrintsG.2000-0296
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 37: Jean-Louis GreppoPrintsG.2000-0297
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 38: F. J. DucouxPrintsG.2000-0298
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 39: Achille Tenaille de VaulabellePrintsG.2000-0299
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 39: Achille Tenaille de VaulabellePrintsG.2000-0300
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 40: Louis-Joseph BuffetPrintsG.2000-0301
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 40: Louis-Joseph BuffetPrintsG.2000-0302
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 41: J. F. P. DenjoyPrintsG.2000-0303
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 41: J. F. P. DenjoyPrintsG.2000-0304
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 42: Jules FavrePrintsG.2000-0305
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 42: Jules FavrePrintsG.2000-0306
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 42: Jules FavrePrintsG.2000-0307
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 43: Théobald LacrossePrintsG.2000-0308
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 43: Théobald LacrossePrintsG.2000-0309
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 44: Eus. Isidore BuvignierPrintsG.2000-0310
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 44: Eus. Isidore BuvignierPrintsG.2000-0311
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 44: Eus. Isidore BuvignierPrintsG.2000-0312
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 45: Léon Faucher: The political enemies of Léon Faucher claim that this Minister for the Interior has not all the exterior graces. As for ourselves, who are among his most fanatical supporters, we categorically state, against all others, that Léon Faucher is fat, beautiful, good, gentle.PrintsG.2000-0313
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 45: Léon Faucher: The political enemies of Léon Faucher claim that this Minister for the Interior has not all the exterior graces. As for ourselves, who are among his most fanatical supporters, we categorically state, against all others, that Léon Faucher is fat, beautiful, good, gentle.PrintsG.2000-0314
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 46: Ed. Drouyn de l'HuysPrintsG.2000-0315
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 46: Ed. Drouyn de l'HuysPrintsG.2000-0316
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 47: Achille Baraguay-d'HilliersPrintsG.2000-0317
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 47: Achille Baraguay-d'HilliersPrintsG.2000-0318
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 47: Achille Baraguay-d'HilliersPrintsG.2000-0319
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 48: V. Ambroise, Vte [Viscount] de LanjuinaisPrintsG.2000-0320
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 48: V. Ambroise, Vte [Viscount] de LanjuinaisPrintsG.2000-0321
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 49: P. L. Duvergier de HaurannePrintsG.2000-0322
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 49: P. L. Duvergier de HaurannePrintsG.2000-0323
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented 50: A. Fréd. Pierre Count de FallouxPrintsG.2000-0324
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 1: Marshal BugeaudPrintsG.2000-0325
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 2: Arm. Jacques LherbettePrintsG.2000-0326
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 2: Arm. Jacques LherbettePrintsG.2000-0327
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 3: General LebretonPrintsG.2000-0328
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 4: Charles DupinPrintsG.2000-0329
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 5: Alex. Ch. Henri de TocquevillePrintsG.2000-0330
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 5: Alex. Ch. Henri de TocquevillePrintsG.2000-0331
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 6: Mich. P. Victor GrandinPrintsG.2000-0332
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 6: Mich. P. Victor GrandinPrintsG.2000-0333
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 6: Mich. P. Victor GrandinPrintsG.2000-0334
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 7: Count de MontalembertPrintsG.2000-0335
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 8: Emmanuel AragoPrintsG.2000-0336
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 8: Emmanuel AragoPrintsG.2000-0337
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 9: Math. Louis, Count Molé: The hope of our young Republic!PrintsG.2000-0338
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 9: Math. Louis, Count Molé: The hope of our young Republic!PrintsG.2000-0339
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 10: Ch. Ferdinand GambonPrintsG.2000-0340
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 10: Ch. Ferdinand GambonPrintsG.2000-0341
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 11: Henry Alexandre PeupinPrintsG.2000-0342
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 11: Henry Alexandre PeupinPrintsG.2000-0343
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 12: Agricole PerdiguierPrintsG.2000-0344
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 12: Agricole PerdiguierPrintsG.2000-0345
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 13: Victor Hugo: You have just finished asking him a serious question, he gives himself up to sombre reflections - only the sombre reflection may illuminate the serious question! - he is also the most sombre of all the serious great men!PrintsG.2000-0346
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 13: Victor Hugo: You have just finished asking him a serious question, he gives himself up to sombre reflections - only the sombre reflection may illuminate the serious question! - he is also the most sombre of all the serious great men!PrintsG.2000-0347
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 14: Marie Denis LarabitPrintsG.2000-0348
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 14: Marie Denis LarabitPrintsG.2000-0349
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 15: J.-B. Gustave de LabouliePrintsG.2000-0350
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 16: Émile VésinPrintsG.2000-0351
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 16: Émile VésinPrintsG.2000-0352
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 17: Félix Saint-Priest: Proof with letters. – de St. Priest is no less celebrated for his postal reforms than for his playful character. Since [the sending of] letters has been four sous, de St. Priest has not much to do; but, to keep himself busy, he has tried for some time to alter his blue spectacles; at least, that's what I conclude from the way he wears them!PrintsG.2000-0353
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 18: J. Marie Joseph DevillePrintsG.2000-0354
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 19: Prince Lucien MuratPrintsG.2000-0355
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 20: L. Ch. Alexandre EstancelinPrintsG.2000-0356
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 21: Ph. Auguste DemesmayPrintsG.2000-0357
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 21: Ph. Auguste DemesmayPrintsG.2000-0358
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 22: Ferdinand FavrePrintsG.2000-0359
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 22: Ferdinand FavrePrintsG.2000-0360
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 23: Ath. L. Charles CoquerelPrintsG.2000-0361
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 23: Ath. L. Charles CoquerelPrintsG.2000-0362
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 24: H. M. Augustin CornePrintsG.2000-0363
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 25: Achille FouldPrintsG.2000-0364
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 26: M. L. P. F. Esquirou de Parieu [sic]PrintsG.2000-0365
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 26: M. L. P. F. Esquirou de Parieu [sic]PrintsG.2000-0366
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 27: Pierre Antoine BerryerPrintsG.2000-0367
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 27: Pierre Antoine BerryerPrintsG.2000-0368
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 28: R. P. L. Ségur d'Aguesseau [sic]PrintsG.2000-0369
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 29: Jean-Baptiste DumasPrintsG.2000-0370
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 30: Eugène RouherPrintsG.2000-0371
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 31 Lannes, Duke de MontebelloPrintsG.2000-0372
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 31 Lannes, Duke de MontebelloPrintsG.2000-0373
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 32: Ovide RémillyPrintsG.2000-0374
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 33: Jules, Marquess de Lasteyrie (pronounced Lasteyrie-eye): Formerly a member of the opposition, now the enemy of lights. Dazzled by the too sudden appearence of the Republic's sun, Jules de Lasteyrie has pledged himself to the eye-shade of le Constitutionnel.PrintsG.2000-0375
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 34: J. Phil. Delmas de GrammontPrintsG.2000-0376
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 35: J.-P. de Chasseloup-LaubatPrintsG.2000-0377
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 36: Jérome-Napoléon BonapartePrintsG.2000-0378
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Representatives Represented / The Legislative Assembly 37: General Ducos de Lahitte: Portrait of this Minister of Foreign Affairs, as he appears to simple mortals, on those occasions – seldom less rare than solemn – when he comes forth in the tribune to show us his eloquence and his moustache. Above all, his moustache achieves the greater effect.PrintsG.2000-0379
DAUMIER, HonoréWe enjoyed ourselves greatly!PrintsG.2000-0380
DAUMIER, HonoréThe good grandmotherPrintsG.2000-0381
DAUMIER, HonoréConjugal Manners 7: Six months of marriagePrintsG.2000-0383
DAUMIER, HonoréConjugal Manners 18: Oh, you say you spent the night in your office!...PrintsG.2000-0384
DAUMIER, HonoréConjugal Manners 19: So marry! Miserable old skinflintPrintsG.2000-0385
DAUMIER, HonoréConjugal Manners 24: I'm always telling you, with your sugar...PrintsG.2000-0386
DAUMIER, HonoréConjugal Manners 25: The effect of moonsPrintsG.2000-0387
DAUMIER, HonoréConjugal Manners 26: Eh, Eh! little rascal, you will make brats, you already have the eyes of a scoundrel! You'll be like your father.PrintsG.2000-0388
DAUMIER, HonoréConjugal Manners 27: The first bornPrintsG.2000-0389
DAUMIER, HonoréConjugal Manners 28: Decease of the poodlePrintsG.2000-0390
DAUMIER, HonoréConjugal Manners 29: This is the moment (past midnight) when calm and peace truly reign in happy households. Better late than never.PrintsG.2000-0391
DAUMIER, HonoréConjugal Manners 30: The plea of adultery: "Magistrates, my client is sure of the fact. But this personal conviction is not enough to satisfy him; it is necessary for him to share it with your tribunal, with those listeners gathered here... with the whole of France. Such was the task taken upon myself in the intererst of my client, and I believe that I have made the issue clear before you. Now, it only remains for my client to see... his social position confirmed by a fair judgement, and you are very just. Magistrates, do not refuse him this last satisfaction."PrintsG.2000-0392
DAUMIER, HonoréConjugal Manners 31: Wretched man! Do you want to kill your children's father?PrintsG.2000-0393
DAUMIER, HonoréConjugal Manners 32: Madam's wishesPrintsG.2000-0394
DAUMIER, HonoréConjugal Manners 33: Fireworks (Verse) A Father is a slave given by naturePrintsG.2000-0395
DAUMIER, HonoréConjugal Manners 33: Fireworks (Verse) A Father is a slave given by naturePrintsG.2000-0396
DAUMIER, HonoréConjugal Manners 34: I should have bet on it ... instead of taking him to see Séraphin, you take him to play ... It's already bad enough for grown-ups; poor little dear! ... –– Don't worry, Madam, that's the way children amuse themselves!PrintsG.2000-0397
DAUMIER, HonoréConjugal Manners 35: Ah! Very well, I'm sure! wretched woman...PrintsG.2000-0398
DAUMIER, HonoréConjugal Manners 36: Arthur, you had promised me a throne...PrintsG.2000-0399
DAUMIER, HonoréConjugal Manners 37: The well of Grenelle. And these rogues of chemists who say that it does some good to bathe children in the well of Grenelle; here's poor Dodophe who's gone greener than an apple; I don't know whether my son's a lizard or a toad!!PrintsG.2000-0400
DAUMIER, HonoréConjugal Manners 38: ミミ Oh! You think your wife doesn't look after you well enough, you rogue; when you spend everything, scoundrel!...Well, I'll make myself kiss-curls, rascal!... and I'll buy bonnets... and I'll make you eat corks, rascal... ミミ My angel, I'm wrong, you are a good housewife...but you're breaking everythingPrintsG.2000-0401
DAUMIER, HonoréConjugal Manners 44: Inconvenient to dream aloud: I dreamed... I called Victor! You lied to me, you old gherkin, I couldn't call Victor, because you'd named him Boniface!PrintsG.2000-0402
DAUMIER, HonoréConjugal Manners 45: Heavens! after three months' absence I find my wife's left home!... and good God! what mementoes she's left me!PrintsG.2000-0403
DAUMIER, HonoréConjugal Manners 47: Sir... Sir, here's your handkerchiefPrintsG.2000-0404
DAUMIER, HonoréConjugal Manners 49: A memory of youth: –– Here, you see our initials still haven't worn out...Oh, Sophie, it's here that I won your heart. –– Be quiet, Théophile... what if someone were to hear us!PrintsG.2000-0405
DAUMIER, HonoréConjugal Manners 50: The pleasures of anglingPrintsG.2000-0406
DAUMIER, HonoréNews 89: Geographical neckerchiefsPrintsG.2000-0407
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Human Comedy 1: The entry into lifePrintsG.2000-0408
DAUMIER, HonoréTeachers and Rascals 8: A young man for whom nothing is sacred.PrintsG.2000-0409
DAUMIER, HonoréTeachers and Rascals 9: The foolhardy young who allow themselves to be carried away by a point of honour, and who snap their fingers at the checks of the highest Appeal Court in the landPrintsG.2000-0410
DAUMIER, HonoréTeachers and Rascals 11: Wait... I'm going to do...the school masterPrintsG.2000-0411
DAUMIER, HonoréTeachers and Rascals 15: Sixth-form pupils wanting to play at RhetoriciansPrintsG.2000-0412
DAUMIER, HonoréTeachers and Rascals 26: How to make a young man decide finally to be respectful to his parentsPrintsG.2000-0413
DAUMIER, HonoréTeachers and Rascals 31: The laborious and delicate mission of the drawing teacher; to him is always reserved the difficult task of redressing the twists and inaccuracies of his young pupils!PrintsG.2000-0414
DAUMIER, HonoréPapas 9: A family in which resides the warrior instinctPrintsG.2000-0415
DAUMIER, HonoréPapas 9: A family in which resides the warrior instinctPrintsG.2000-0416
DAUMIER, HonoréPapas 10: Come on, Papa, do another thirty two jumps!...PrintsG.2000-0417
DAUMIER, HonoréPapas 17: A model sonPrintsG.2000-0418
DAUMIER, HonoréPapas 19: A father doing all he can...PrintsG.2000-0419
DAUMIER, HonoréPapas 20: Oh! Sir... you shouldn't laugh at him like that...PrintsG.2000-0420
DAUMIER, HonoréPapas 22: If you don't come to grammar school quicker than this...PrintsG.2000-0421
DAUMIER, HonoréChildish Acts 1: I don't want to get into so much water... there'll be a lot of big fish in therePrintsG.2000-0422
DAUMIER, HonoréChildish Acts 3: Oh! . papa, Papa... there's a nice...PrintsG.2000-0423
DAUMIER, HonoréChildish Acts 4: In winter it's silly to have children dressed up as nicely as this!...PrintsG.2000-0424
DAUMIER, HonoréChildish Acts 5: I would have never thought that at my age...PrintsG.2000-0425
DAUMIER, HonoréChildish Acts 6: –Well, what about my glass... if I don't have my glass I'll tell Mummy that you've been drinking again with that lanky fellow whom she told you not to go about with!...PrintsG.2000-0426
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Sketches 11: Oh! Thank you for what you have done...PrintsG.2000-0427
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Sketches 11: Oh! Thank you for what you have done...PrintsG.2000-0428
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 1: Menelaus the vanquisher. On the smoking ramparts of proud Troy, / Menelaus, son of the Gods, like rich booty, / Entrances his blonde Helen, and takes her to his heart / More beautiful than ever through modesty and love Iliad (Translation by Bareste)PrintsG.2000-0429
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 2: The watch of the Termopythae guardsPrintsG.2000-0430
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 3: Achilles in his tent. In tears, remembering the charms of Briseis / The hero enjoys his dismal sadness. / And in vain, Patrocles, polishing his weapons / Tries to awaken his burning courage. (Secret translation by President P.) This precious bas-relief was discovered in the ruins of the ancient Boule rouge [Red Ball] (Montmartre suburb) by our indefatigable traveller, Mr. Charles Texier. According to Mr. Ingres, only Phidias could have been its maker.PrintsG.2000-0431
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 4: Ulysses' introduction to Nausicaa. At the sight of the hero soiled with black mud, / All flee, but Nausicaa, in her naïve modesty; / Blushingly says to him, without quitting her laundry: / Which God, noble stranger, leads you to my wash-house? (Unpublished translation by Mr. Casimir Delavigne)PrintsG.2000-0432
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 5: The AmazonsPrintsG.2000-0433
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 6: Penelope's nights. Of her absent husband the adorable profile, / Always shines like a star to her gentle eyes / But to drag on for three years, and her trick and her web / ...She must have had an intrepid thread (Odessy Ch[apter] II. Indiscreet translation by Mr. Villemain)PrintsG.2000-0434
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 7: Ulysses' returnPrintsG.2000-0435
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 7: Ulysses' returnPrintsG.2000-0436
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 8: Agamemnon's angerPrintsG.2000-0437
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 9: The education of AchillesPrintsG.2000-0438
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 10: Socrates at Aspasia's homePrintsG.2000-0439
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 11: The sword of DamoclesPrintsG.2000-0440
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 12: A meeting of happy auguresPrintsG.2000-0441
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 13: The rape of Helen. Paris,whom by love was seized up to the teeth, / Was hardly fit to smoke a cigar. / Helen knew this, and without giving warning,/ Carried Paris away in her sturdy arms (Aeneid)PrintsG.2000-0442
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 14: Ulysses and Penelope. Chastely stretched on their bashful marriage-bed; / This noble married couple find themselves at last. / And when Ulysees snores, from his charming mouth / Penelope steals a loving kiss (Trifling work by Mr. Vatout)PrintsG.2000-0443
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 14: Ulysses and Penelope. Chastely stretched on their bashful marriage-bed; / This noble married couple find themselves at last. / And when Ulysees snores, from his charming mouth / Penelope steals a loving kiss (Trifling work by Mr. Vatout)PrintsG.2000-0444
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 15: Aeneas and Dido: A protective fog obscured the heavens; / And as they found themselves without an umbrella, / Leading his friend into a dark cave, / Aeneas on that beautiful day saw his ardours consummated (Aeneid. corrected by Mr. Villemain)PrintsG.2000-0445
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 16: Ariadne's threadPrintsG.2000-0446
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 17: Aeneas in the infernal regionsPrintsG.2000-0447
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 18: Today's witticism. What is Diogenes doing with a lantern? / Said the elegantly turnd-out Dandies to themselves. / Sirs, I am looking for a man, and with my slow, dim eye. / I can't see him; said he: those words really annoyed them (Attempt at poetry by Mr. de Rambuteau)PrintsG.2000-0448
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 19: The youth of AlcibiadesPrintsG.2000-0449
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 20: Alexander and Diogenes. The Sage who dressed in the simple appearance / Of a rascal smoking his short, thick pipe, / Said to the hero who surveyed him: / Scram out of my sunlight! (Song by Mr. Eugène Sue)PrintsG.2000-0450
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 21: Marius at Minturnae. Admire the roguishness of this great General! / Seeing that he was going to be seized; / Across the reeds [and] into the slime he slid / And laughed with certainty in this swamp of FAST COLOUR (Historical pun by Mr. de Rothschild)PrintsG.2000-0451
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 22: The baptism of Achilles. Just as you temper a weapon of war, / Thetis, wanting to make of her brat a hero, / Steeped him in the Styx until he saw the light; / Which proves that baths are good for all purposes (On the Influence of baths, Poem by Mr. Vigier)PrintsG.2000-0452
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 23: Beautiful Narcissus. He was young and beautiful; with their soft breath / The Zephyrs caressed his contours of manifold attractions, / And in the mirror of the fountains / He loved, as we do, to contemplate his features (Quatrain initiated by Mr. Narcisse de Salvandy)PrintsG.2000-0453
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 24: The abandonment of Ariadne. Near her vine-trellis on the bank, / She said to herself on that day: / To console me in love / It's time that Bacchus arrived. (Poems of the heart by Miss Fl...)PrintsG.2000-0454
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 25: Hercules tamed by lovePrintsG.2000-0455
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 26: The Augean stables. For a proud hero to make of himself a cleaner, / Is, for Hercules, difficult to swallow, / But as a proverb says: / One does not argue about sewers or colours (Unpublished pun by Mr. Delessert)PrintsG.2000-0456
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 26: The Augean stables. For a proud hero to make of himself a cleaner, / Is, for Hercules, difficult to swallow, / But as a proverb says: / One does not argue about sewers or colours (Unpublished pun by Mr. Delessert)PrintsG.2000-0457
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 27: Telemachus ravaged by love. Despite Mentor, who grumbles at him without ceasing / He pillaged every morning / The most brilliant flowers for his tender mistress, / Flowers with which this lively hussy / Ornamented her satin neck (Cigarette by Mr. Alfred de Musset)PrintsG.2000-0458
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 28: Hannibal's passage. In these frowning mountains whose snowy crest / Is like a giant's hoary brow, / Triumphant Hannibal, in order to make himself a path / Puts the Alps in vinaigrette (The Occidentals of Mr. Quinet)PrintsG.2000-0459
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 29: Telemachus and Mentor. Seeing his languorous pupil. / Burning for Eucharis with a fire always new / Mentor, with a punch, pitched him straight into the water / To make him abandon the island (Unique quatrain by Mr. Duponchel)PrintsG.2000-0460
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 30: Dionysius the tyrant. If he chooses this condition in his sorry fortune, / It is because in the matter of schools / Tyrants always make too much of it, / So that they can fine one [school] in their old age (The late Barthelemy)PrintsG.2000-0461
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 31: The fall of Icarus. As the sun roasted his wings, / His old scoundrel of a father, inventor of this contrivance, / Said, watching him fall through the eternal vaults: / Assuredly, this is no good (A poet who travels only by carriage)PrintsG.2000-0462
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 32: Telemachus given up to virtuePrintsG.2000-0463
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 33: Arion's rescuePrintsG.2000-0464
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 34: Vulcan's threads. This nasty metal-worker, knowing that his wife / Talked a little too closely with Mars, / Forged pitiless snares / Gripping both of them as they chatted on the lawn (A bachelor D. M. F. P.)PrintsG.2000-0465
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 35: Marius at CarthagePrintsG.2000-0466
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 36: Apelles and Campaste [sic]. Knowing that for his tender and ravishing model / Apelles was dying from mad desires / Alexander, behaving like a great king, gave away this beautiful woman / Whom he'd had enough of, anyway (On antique art, poetical essay by Mr. Cavé)PrintsG.2000-0467
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 37: Tantalus' tormentPrintsG.2000-0468
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 38: Mars and Venus. In this erotic snare / Seeing these lovers, all the gods were taken / By that famous Homeric laughter, / Reserved since that time for unfortunate husbands (Familiar quatrain by Mr. A...)PrintsG.2000-0469
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 39: Leander. Each night, clad in little, but in galant fashion, / And counting upon his arms of iron, / He crossed an arm of sea / To throw himself into those of his lover (Byron, very mixed poems)PrintsG.2000-0470
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 40: Calypso's despair. In the vain hope of forgetting / The ungrateful man for whom her heart bleeds, / This nymphe in her grotto has / Had hung very pretty paper (Fenélon Variant of L[ine] XI)PrintsG.2000-0471
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 41: Hippolytus pierced by CupidPrintsG.2000-0472
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 42: Telemachus interrogated by the wise menPrintsG.2000-0473
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 43: Œdipus at the Spinx's. This ugly animal with the head of an antiquary, / Said to him: Why, Sir, can you not count / On a pyramid? Then without hesitation / Œdipus replied: It's because they are near Cairo? You can be grateful for an old pun (Lesson by Mr. Raoul-Rochette)PrintsG.2000-0474
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 44: The death of AnacreonPrintsG.2000-0475
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 45: EndymionPrintsG.2000-0476
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 46: The mother of the GraccusPrintsG.2000-0477
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 47: Pygmalion. Oh triumph of arts! what was your surprise, / Great scupltor, when you saw your marble come alive, / And with a chaste and gentle manner lean forward / To ask for a pinch [of snuff]. (Count Siméon)PrintsG.2000-0478
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 48: Virgil's shepherdsPrintsG.2000-0479
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 49: The death of SapphoPrintsG.2000-0480
DAUMIER, HonoréAncient History 50: The clemency of Minos. Happy the pale human, who in this black refuge / Arrives, while Minos reads his Charivari; / He is sure to be forgiven, for we know that all judges / Are disarmed when they have laughed (Poetic little advertisement)PrintsG.2000-0481
DAUMIER, HonoréThe middle-of-the-road political policy is well, but business is poorPrintsG.2000-0482
DAUMIER, HonoréYou see, Rouget, being a soldier flatters you...PrintsG.2000-0483
DAUMIER, HonoréProcession of the fatted oxPrintsG.2000-0484
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Emotions 1: Aren't they dreary!... see how they make off!... what it is not to live in property!!!... My little loves, when you come by again we should warn you, we'll burn pastilles from the Seraglio for you...PrintsG.2000-0485
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Emotions 6: Thank you. Go and dine in the town, my boyPrintsG.2000-0486
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Emotions 7: Sir is illPrintsG.2000-0487
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Emotions 8: Cab here Sir, here Sir...PrintsG.2000-0488
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Emotions 8: Cab here Sir, here Sir...PrintsG.2000-0489
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Emotions 13: Robbed!... Pick-pocket StreetPrintsG.2000-0490
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Emotions 15: But waiter, it is unworthyPrintsG.2000-0491
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Emotions 15: But waiter, it is unworthyPrintsG.2000-0492
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Emotions 23: Black and whitePrintsG.2000-0493
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Emotions 25: We should scatter with flowers the path of life!PrintsG.2000-0494
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Emotions 27: That's the limit! I have bought four sizes, just like those there, in my life; Fifine, my first girlfriend; Cocotte, that wench Cocotte! big Mimi, and my wife, like that up there in the cornerPrintsG.2000-0495
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Emotions 28: Eh, there you are my poor chap! How...PrintsG.2000-0496
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Emotions 29: It's annoying! That passes before... your nose: and you go on your way singing... “Alas! She fled like a shadow!...”PrintsG.2000-0497
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Emotions 31: ShockPrintsG.2000-0498
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Emotions 34: A gentleman submerged by his businessPrintsG.2000-0499
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Emotions 36: The cretins! They've sacked mePrintsG.2000-0500
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Emotions 37: For now...we...are in a messPrintsG.2000-0501
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Emotions 38: The origin of Bedouins in ParisPrintsG.2000-0502
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Emotions 39: The friendship of a great chemist...PrintsG.2000-0503
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Emotions 40: Strolling during the thaw – R...R..rascal! – What! ... what ... but I told you I aimed at Gugusse... that big boy's a nuisance! – I'm going to complain to your pa... pa... parents and to the Po... Po... Police Superintendent! ... then we'll see! – Eh! you want to see, do you!... wait till I block your other window!PrintsG.2000-0504
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Emotions 50: A victim of the factions. Ah...ah...at...tchoo!! we're doing well, my nose is pouring too. Mr. Jacqueminot should have drilled some ducks to mount guard in this weather ... and what's more ah... at... tchoo!! what if they caught a coldPrintsG.2000-0505
DAUMIER, HonoréParisians 6: Well yes! As I say...PrintsG.2000-0506
DAUMIER, HonoréNews: Weights and measuresPrintsG.2000-0507
DAUMIER, HonoréNews: Weights and measuresPrintsG.2000-0508
DAUMIER, HonoréNews 10: OustedPrintsG.2000-0509
DAUMIER, HonoréFamily Proverbs 1: Uncle and nephewPrintsG.2000-0510
DAUMIER, HonoréFamily Proverbs 2: Oh! Monster, you allow yourself to tell me that I'm an old melon, and that my hair is a wig: spare the rod and spoil the child!...PrintsG.2000-0511
DAUMIER, HonoréMusicians of Paris 1: Farewell!... by the grace of God...PrintsG.2000-0512
DAUMIER, HonoréMusicians of Paris 3: (chorus)“The sun is so beautiful” (separately) knavish weather! (chorus) “And then in my Brittany the sun is so beautiful!...” Long live Loisa Puget!!!!!PrintsG.2000-0513
DAUMIER, HonoréMusicians of Paris 3: (chorus)“The sun is so beautiful” (separately) knavish weather! (chorus) “And then in my Brittany the sun is so beautiful!...” Long live Loisa Puget!!!!!PrintsG.2000-0514
DAUMIER, HonoréMusicians of Paris 3: (chorus)“The sun is so beautiful” (separately) knavish weather! (chorus) “And then in my Brittany the sun is so beautiful!...” Long live Loisa Puget!!!!!PrintsG.2000-0515
DAUMIER, HonoréMusicians of Paris 4: Modern Paganini, burning his forelock in the fire of the performance!PrintsG.2000-0516
DAUMIER, HonoréMusicians of Paris 5: “Where could we be better off (repeat.)” “Than in the bosom of the family – ” There three artists would find themselves better off in the bosom of the tavern, and their young associate in the bosom of a game of marblesPrintsG.2000-0517
DAUMIER, HonoréMusicians of Paris 6: If you knew how pretty you were! pretened to play.—Say nothing do.— You do not love me si—And I shall always be! la mi.PrintsG.2000-0518
DAUMIER, HonoréCaricatures of the Day 31: A tenor’s promisesPrintsG.2000-0519
DAUMIER, HonoréCaricatures of the Day 40: The well of GrenellePrintsG.2000-0520
DAUMIER, HonoréCaricatures of the Day 40: The well of GrenellePrintsG.2000-0521
DAUMIER, HonoréCaricatures of the Day 75: I say, Madame Giboulard...PrintsG.2000-0522
DAUMIER, HonoréCaricatures of the Day 84: DisillusionPrintsG.2000-0523
DAUMIER, HonoréCaricatures of the Day 90: An advertisement for a concertPrintsG.2000-0524
DAUMIER, HonoréReview of Caricature 25: Academicians working on the dictionaryPrintsG.2000-0525
DAUMIER, HonoréReview of Caricature 26: A wine marchant thwarted in his bussiness I say...Father Madzinguin...your campeachy wood [logwood] doesn't stop them from emptying youe barrels in the stream...they're right to say that water always returns to the river!...PrintsG.2000-0526
DAUMIER, HonoréNews: A delicate missionPrintsG.2000-0527
DAUMIER, HonoréParliamentary Scenes 1: The electoral visit Until tomorrow, dear Mr.Filochard...besides, if I am not elected I will have as my consolation the fact that my candidature has brought me the pleasure of making your acquaintance!...— Oh,Sir!...Oh,Sir!...PrintsG.2000-0528
DAUMIER, HonoréParliamentary Scenes 5: At the TribunePrintsG.2000-0529
DAUMIER, HonoréParliamentary Scenes 7: The elector’s family We arrived in Paris just this morning and straight away said to ourselves: Let's find our Deputy, he’ll show us the interior of the Pantheon, and of the Invalides, and of the Royal Palace, and of the Well of Grenelle...PrintsG.2000-0530
DAUMIER, HonoréParliamentary Scenes 7: The elector’s family We arrived in Paris just this morning and straight away said to ourselves: Let's find our Deputy, he’ll show us the interior of the Pantheon, and of the Invalides, and of the Royal Palace, and of the Well of Grenelle...PrintsG.2000-0531
DAUMIER, HonoréPleasures of the Champs-Élysées 1: Well! darling...you have slimmed since last year!...you only weigh three hundred and twenty! [kilos]PrintsG.2000-0532
DAUMIER, HonoréPleasures of the Champs-Élysées 2: —Eh!...Eh!...but it seems that I'm very strong!...— Oh my God!... your dress-coat's much less so... look, it’s ripped at the back!...PrintsG.2000-0533
DAUMIER, HonoréPleasures of the Champs-Élysées 3: A electrified warriorPrintsG.2000-0534
DAUMIER, HonoréOn the Subject of Interpretations 5: You were caught red-handedPrintsG.2000-0535
DAUMIER, HonoréImagination: The sentryPrintsG.2000-0536
DAUMIER, HonoréNews 112: You’re wrong to want to post up that...advertisement...PrintsG.2000-0537
DAUMIER, HonoréStrangers in Paris 1: The arrival: What, no room!... —Not even for your hat-box... —What about in the sitting-room? —Twenty one Englishmen are in there... —In the attic?... —I've put eleven Savoyards in there... —In the celler?... —Fifteen Polish people have set up home... —Oh! hang it...oh! damnation... oh! Good God!...are we going to spend the night by the side of a milestone?... —That's what you'd better do, because then the night patrol will get you out of trouble quickly by taking you to sleep at the Prefecture of Police's office, Saint Martin cell!... specially reserved for the homeless and poodles without papers!...PrintsG.2000-0538
DAUMIER, HonoréStrangers in Paris 2: The indispensable visit to the tailor of the Palais RoyalPrintsG.2000-0539
DAUMIER, HonoréStrangers in Paris 3: What is called dining in a restaurant: —Waiter!...I've been in your establishment for an hour and a quarter without having a chair...and you've still only given the tooth-picks to my wife who's dying of hunger... you'll make me lose my normal posture, and I'll end up with my feet in the dish... do you understand, waiter! —There now, Sir... there there now, there there!!!PrintsG.2000-0540
DAUMIER, HonoréStrangers in Paris 4: Some slight purchases: Oh!...the beautiful shawls... would you buy me one, dear?... —What!... why didn't you say straightaway that you wanted everything, and we could have started by simply buying up the whole la Ville de Paris shop!...PrintsG.2000-0541
DAUMIER, HonoréStrangers in Paris 5: An obliging guide: —Excuse me, Sir... do you know the most direct route to go to la Bourse? —Certainly, with the greatest pleasure... please come this way... you take the left side... follow it all the way along... and la bourse[sic] is there... right at the tip of my finger!...PrintsG.2000-0542
DAUMIER, HonoréStrangers in Paris 6: A stir at the Jardin des Plantes: —Help,wife... help... I'm being devoured!... —Don't be frightened... intimidate him with your stare!... but why do you have to get face to face with an elephant!...PrintsG.2000-0543
DAUMIER, HonoréStrangers in Paris 7: A slight queue at the door of the Palais de l’IndustriePrintsG.2000-0544
DAUMIER, HonoréStrangers in Paris 8: An episode at the Exhibition: As you see... my device is very powerful and [emits] a continuous jet of water...; if needed, it can water the flowers in your gardenPrintsG.2000-0545
DAUMIER, HonoréStrangers in Paris 9: What are called the seductions of Paris: A stall, see master... this evening you’ll hear Madame Dorus-Grasse and Mr. Bariolhé sing... an excellent stall in the pit... twelve francs...cheaper that at the [ticket] desk!PrintsG.2000-0546
DAUMIER, HonoréStrangers in Paris 10: The visit to the Hôtel des Invalides —It doesn’t smell very good, your broth...how much is it? —Whatever you can give, master... but the minimum is three francs... —Deuce...! I definitely find it a little saltyPrintsG.2000-0547
DAUMIER, HonoréStrangers in Paris 11: A little trip by omnibus: —Are you going to the exhibition?... —Yes, Sir... look at our notice yourself... at the faubourg St. Jacques you take a connecting [omnibus] which takes you to the Jardin des Plantes... from there you go to Belleville from where they take you directly to the Champs-ÉlyséesPrintsG.2000-0548
DAUMIER, HonoréStrangers in Paris 12: A fixed-price dinner: There’s a restaurateur who does things on a large scale... for our thirty two sous he’s given us a stomachache worth twenty francs per head!...PrintsG.2000-0549
DAUMIER, HonoréStrangers in Paris 13: A rustic ball of ParisPrintsG.2000-0550
DAUMIER, HonoréStrangers in Paris 14: Great waters at Versailles!PrintsG.2000-0551
DAUMIER, HonoréStrangers in Paris 15: Strangers stared out by those like themselves: The woman from Carpentras —It's odd...Parisian women are not as elegant as people say!... The woman from Quimper-Corentin —It's extraordinary... the women of the capital are not as daintily turned out as reputation has it!...PrintsG.2000-0552
DAUMIER, HonoréStrangers in Paris 16: The Daguerreotype portrait: —Here is the work of the sun..., how coloured it is, hm?... how warm... and all in three seconds! —Well, true...looking at that, you wouldn’t say that I’d been in the sun for only three seconds... you’d think I’d been in it for three years, because I look like a real negro... never mind, it’s a pretty portrait, and my wife will be well pleased!...PrintsG.2000-0553
DAUMIER, HonoréStrangers in Paris 17: Shops of greater and greater enormity —Can you show me, please, where the counter for cotton bonnets is?... —At the end of the 9th aisle on the right, then the 4th on the left, and once you’ve arrived at the 15th counter, ask for cotton bonnets; there they’ll show you clearly the way you should take to get there... —Oh! damnation... I’m very angry at having left my cab at the door of your shop!...PrintsG.2000-0554
DAUMIER, HonoréStrangers in Paris 18: The hat that one brings back from Paris: You might well say that that hat will make a great impression in Landerneau!... eighty five francs! it's expensive, duckie... you give yourself marabout stork feathers, but it's I who get plucked!...PrintsG.2000-0555
DAUMIER, HonoréStrangers in Paris 19: —Look at that imbecile who hasn't seen that his barrel's leaking... —You're stupid! that's done on purpose, it's chloride that they spread over the streets to disinfect them... it's the Labaraque system, applied to the town of ParisPrintsG.2000-0556
DAUMIER, HonoréStrangers in Paris 20: The departurePrintsG.2000-0557
DAUMIER, HonoréNews 111: The new manner in which these gentlemen[sic] set about paying...PrintsG.2000-0558
DAUMIER, HonoréParis in Winter 2: An ingenious manner of clearing the roofsPrintsG.2000-0559
DAUMIER, HonoréNews 115: Subscribers receiving their newspaperPrintsG.2000-0560
DAUMIER, HonoréNews 120: Vendors of L’EpoquePrintsG.2000-0561
DAUMIER, HonoréNews 120: Vendors of L’EpoquePrintsG.2000-0562
DAUMIER, HonoréFriends 4: Madame Cabassol goes for a sentimental walk in the Jardin des Plantes[?] with the youngest friend of her husband. An unforeseen meeting with the latter, not far from a deerPrintsG.2000-0563
DAUMIER, HonoréFriends 7: It is because he is your friend...PrintsG.2000-0564
DAUMIER, HonoréNews 121: Diogenes and Alcibiades at the OdéonPrintsG.2000-0565
DAUMIER, HonoréNews 124: A day of the eclipsePrintsG.2000-0566
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Good Bourgeois 3: So! What do you think of me in my new uniform...I think I ought to have a fairly stylish little look!...PrintsG.2000-0567
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Good Bourgeois 3: So! What do you think of me in my new uniform...I think I ought to have a fairly stylish little look!...PrintsG.2000-0568
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Good Bourgeois 8: I live a bit high up... but... I enjoy a pretty view!PrintsG.2000-0569
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Good Bourgeois 20: —It appears they have just seen the sea serpent again in the Indian Ocean! —Is that possible, for goodness sake! —Certainly it's possible, for goodness sake, because I told you that it says so in le Constitutionnel! so!...PrintsG.2000-0570
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Good Bourgeois 20: —It appears they have just seen the sea serpent again in the Indian Ocean! —Is that possible, for goodness sake! —Certainly it's possible, for goodness sake, because I told you that it says so in le Constitutionnel! so!...PrintsG.2000-0571
DAUMIER, HonoréNews 127: How do you like my shawl...PrintsG.2000-0572
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Good Bourgeois 25: Wife...it’s biting...it’s biting!PrintsG.2000-0573
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Good Bourgeois 65: Six degrees below zero... oh! I wouldn't be more surprised if tonight I was frozen next to you, duckiePrintsG.2000-0574
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Good Bourgeois 72: An Idyll in the corn fieldsPrintsG.2000-0575
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Good Bourgeois 77: Inconvenient to have married a wife who posesses a talent for[sic] accomplishmentsPrintsG.2000-0576
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Good Bourgeois 78: The day when it is necessary to make a conquestPrintsG.2000-0577
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Good Bourgeois 79: Gentle leisure of an ironmonger retired from businessPrintsG.2000-0578
DAUMIER, HonoréAn alibiPrintsG.2000-0579
DAUMIER, HonoréAn alibiPrintsG.2000-0580
DAUMIER, HonoréNews 139: Inconvenient to buy a newspaper which publishes the news twelve hours before the others. —How is it that I buy your newspaper and I don't find any news in it today! — Sir, today's news was in yesterday’s paper!...PrintsG.2000-0581
DAUMIER, HonoréNews 145: Discussion about the constitutionPrintsG.2000-0582
DAUMIER, HonoréNews 186: It’s annoying to brush these things...PrintsG.2000-0583
DAUMIER, HonoréBathers 1: I’m not going in again!... I think there are Crabs...PrintsG.2000-0584
DAUMIER, HonoréBathers 6: Journey to Saint-CloudPrintsG.2000-0585
DAUMIER, HonoréBathers 7: You see, master, you are... of a strengthPrintsG.2000-0586
DAUMIER, HonoréBathers 7: You see, master, you are... of a strengthPrintsG.2000-0587
DAUMIER, HonoréBathers 10: Hurry up, ugly wretch; have you seen that poodle there, he should have been a sailor, he's made boats for himself with walnut shells, and you're afraid of the four sous pool.PrintsG.2000-0588
DAUMIER, HonoréBathers 15: Look here, Father Coquardeau, it's nice and fresh. —By jove! I quite believe it.PrintsG.2000-0589
DAUMIER, HonoréBathers 18: I say, Papa Drouillet, with that spread...PrintsG.2000-0590
DAUMIER, HonoréBathers 18: I say, Papa Drouillet, with that spread...PrintsG.2000-0591
DAUMIER, HonoréBathers 21: Word of honour, Mme Frenouillet...PrintsG.2000-0592
DAUMIER, HonoréBathers 25: Excuse me, Worshipful Mayor... Could you...PrintsG.2000-0593
DAUMIER, HonoréBathers 26: —Look out, Gargouillet, there's the master going by with his wife; we should wash our hair and hang the soap. —Thank you, I've just finished with it.PrintsG.2000-0594
DAUMIER, HonoréWomen Bathers 1: Naiads of the SeinePrintsG.2000-0595
DAUMIER, HonoréWomen Bathers 2: In the summer it’s only here... that I feel comfortablePrintsG.2000-0596
DAUMIER, HonoréWomen Bathers 3: Dear Baroness, I congratulate youPrintsG.2000-0597
DAUMIER, HonoréAngling 1: A hardened anglerPrintsG.2000-0598
DAUMIER, HonoréAngling 2: It is almost always at the market that Parisian fishermen go to catch their fish.PrintsG.2000-0599
DAUMIER, HonoréAngling 3: The stubborn anglerPrintsG.2000-0600
DAUMIER, HonoréAngling 4: The hook dragging...PrintsG.2000-0601
DAUMIER, HonoréAngling 5: Woe to the Angler with rod and line who finds himself in the way of a steam boat!PrintsG.2000-0602
DAUMIER, HonoréAngling 6: The danger of passionsPrintsG.2000-0603
DAUMIER, HonoréAngling 6: The danger of passionsPrintsG.2000-0604
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Boating Men 1: Well! RigobertPrintsG.2000-0605
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Boating Men 14: A man in to the sea: —Harpoon him more vigorously... we won’t get him without! —And you, hold his legs in the air, that’s the important thing!... nothing gives you a cold more than getting the soles of your feet wet!...PrintsG.2000-0606
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Boating Men 20: Naval combat —So! you insult my flag... you wait, you wait I’ll make you founder with fire... or rather with water from the port-hole, from port and starbord!PrintsG.2000-0607
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Railways 10: The bath-carriagesPrintsG.2000-0608
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Railways 10: The bath-carriagesPrintsG.2000-0609
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Railways 12: —Guard!... Guard!... stop in the name of heaven!... I've got stomack-ache!... —Impossible.. the management forbids it!... but in two and a quarter hours we’ll be in Orleans!...PrintsG.2000-0610
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Railways 14: How are they going to have atmospheric railways!...PrintsG.2000-0611
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Hunt 1: If I could hunt the rain...PrintsG.2000-0612
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Hunt 3: A poor family man who appeals to you!...PrintsG.2000-0613
DAUMIER, HonoréReview of Caricature 33: Academy of womenPrintsG.2000-0614
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Blue-stockings 3: Goodbye, my dear, I am going to my editors’...PrintsG.2000-0615
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Blue-stockings 4: Goodbye, Ophélia!... Don’t forget...PrintsG.2000-0616
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Blue-stockings 5: I say, Bichette... What are you thinking of...PrintsG.2000-0617
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Blue-stockings 10: So!... They haven't noticed my novel again today! now these journalists occupy themselves each morning with the Lièvres [Hares]... with the Perdreaux [Young Patridges]... with the Bécasses! [Snipes]... and they do not think of me... it is unthinkable!...PrintsG.2000-0618
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Blue-stockings 11: Take that further away... impossible to work...PrintsG.2000-0619
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Blue-stockings 12: To think that Arsinoé was not happy to be the sitter for her portrait...PrintsG.2000-0620
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Blue-stockings 13: — Sir, excuse me if I inconvenience you a little... but you understand that I’m now writing a new novel, and I need to consult a multitude of old authors!... —(The Gentleman, aside) Old authors!... Heavens, she should have consulted them while they were alive, for she must have been their contemporary!...PrintsG.2000-0621
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Blue-stockings 14: Devilish bawling child, go!...PrintsG.2000-0622
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Blue-stockings 15: The woman of letters in the humanities applying herself to man, to famously philosophical reflections!PrintsG.2000-0623
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Blue-stockings 16: Bichette... Come and tie my bowtie!...PrintsG.2000-0624
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Blue-stockings 17: (The pit at the Odéon) – The author!... the author!... the author!... – Gentlemen, your impatience will be satisfied... you wish to know who is the author of this play which has just received such a great, and I should say, such justifiable, success... the author... is meeeeee!PrintsG.2000-0625
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Blue-stockings 18: Oh my idolised Victor... a poetic idea has come to me!...PrintsG.2000-0626
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Blue-stockings 19: Hell and damnation!... Hissed!...PrintsG.2000-0627
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Blue-stockings 20: Oh woe!... to have dreamed... a husbandPrintsG.2000-0628
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Blue-stockings 21: Goodbye my dear Flora... Don’t forget...PrintsG.2000-0629
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Blue-stockings 22: The blue-stocking declaiming her play —Act 6 Scene 1... the theatre shows a tiger asleep in the desert... Rosalba barely drags herself forward, and does so with even greater difficulty because of her five children and her aged father: —Rosalba falls at the foot of a date-palm covered with coconuts, and cries in despair: Oh heaven, when will our torments finish. —The entire audience (in a low voice): ‘and ours, too, when will they finish, oh heaven!’PrintsG.2000-0630
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Blue-stockings 23: The artist has represented me at the moment when I am writing...PrintsG.2000-0631
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Blue-stockings 24: Since Virginie has obtained the seventh honourable mention...PrintsG.2000-0632
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Blue-stockings 25: The president shouting at the top of her voice: Ladies!ノPrintsG.2000-0633
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Blue-stockings 26: Oh pleasure of opium, how you enrapture me!...PrintsG.2000-0634
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Blue-stockings 27: It's curious... many ideas come to me... that...PrintsG.2000-0635
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Blue-stockings 31: Follow my argument carefully, Eudoxie...PrintsG.2000-0636
DAUMIER, HonoréPro-divorce Women 1: ミムWomen citizens... it is rumoured that divorce is on the point of being denied to us... let us organise ourselves permanently here and declare that the fatherland is in danger!...PrintsG.2000-0637
DAUMIER, HonoréPro-divorce Women 3: Husbands are merely a vain people, think [about that]!...PrintsG.2000-0638
DAUMIER, HonoréPro-divorce Women 4: Oh! Sir, try to...PrintsG.2000-0639
DAUMIER, HonoréPro-divorce Women 5: A toast to the emancipation of women, by women already emancipated with a vengeancePrintsG.2000-0640
DAUMIER, HonoréNews 184: To say that Proudhon does not want...PrintsG.2000-0641
DAUMIER, HonoréWomen Socialists 1: The uprising against husbands is proclaimed the most sacred of duties!PrintsG.2000-0642
DAUMIER, HonoréWomen Socialists 2: How beautiful you make yourself, my dear?...PrintsG.2000-0643
DAUMIER, HonoréWomen Socialists 3: —It seems that the clubs are going to be completely closed... — The reac[tionaries]... They would never have dared to do that before the dissolution of the legion of Vesuvian Women!...PrintsG.2000-0644
DAUMIER, HonoréWomen Socialists 7: Oh! You are my husband, oh! you are the master... well, I have the right to bundle you out of your home... Jeanne Derouin proved that to me yesterday evening!... go and explain yourself to her!...PrintsG.2000-0645
DAUMIER, HonoréWomen Socialists 8: The delegates of the central socialist club have rejected...PrintsG.2000-0646
DAUMIER, HonoréWomen Socialists 9: Rejected... one door remains open to me...PrintsG.2000-0647
DAUMIER, HonoréSketches of the Day 27: The Representative’s wifePrintsG.2000-0648
DAUMIER, HonoréNews 40: — It is not true that this tragedy contains beauties of the first order... and yet it was refused by the committee of the Théâtre Français and even by that of the Odéon... there is only one thing left: I am going to leave my manuscript with the caretaker of the Gymnasium, without giving my name!PrintsG.2000-0649
DAUMIER, HonoréNews 52: 1st Blue-stocking —Let us profit from the occasion...PrintsG.2000-0650
DAUMIER, HonoréCelebrrrrrrated Painting Jury: composed of a Composer, an Astronomer, a Mathematician, several Architects and a Chemist. — The Chemist (yawning)... in... the... fi... nal... an...alysis..., and because on the painting Jury there is no Painter! What if we went to dinner.PrintsG.2000-0651
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Salon of 1840: Ascension of Jesus Christ: After the original Picture by M[r]. BrrdhkmannPrintsG.2000-0652
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Salon of 1840: Pilgrimage of St. Roch: after the original picture by PÉTRAL VILERNOMZPrintsG.2000-0653
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Salon of 1840: Pilgrimage of St. Roch: after the original picture by PÉTRAL VILERNOMZPrintsG.2000-0654
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Salon of 1842: Charmed to see himself exhibited, the original seen here takes his wife to the Salon, and places her in front of his own image, in order to rejoice in the crowd's judgment. —Look, say some, it's Chinese Commissioner Lin! —No, says others, don't you see that it's a bit of natural history! — It is, joins in a gentleman with a catalogue, it is the portrait of Mr. D..., insurance broker. —Well, with a bonce like that he needn't insure it, because no one would steal it. (His lady wife leaves, extremely flattered.)PrintsG.2000-0655
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Salon of 1842: Charmed to see himself exhibited, the original seen here takes his wife to the Salon, and places her in front of his own image, in order to rejoice in the crowd's judgment. —Look, say some, it's Chinese Commissioner Lin! —No, says others, don't you see that it's a bit of natural history! — It is, joins in a gentleman with a catalogue, it is the portrait of Mr. D..., insurance broker. —Well, with a bonce like that he needn't insure it, because no one would steal it. (His lady wife leaves, extremely flattered.)PrintsG.2000-0656
DAUMIER, HonoréCaricatures of the Day: The bourgeois at the Salon: Let's see... What's that?... (reading from his catalogue) "No. 387. Portrait of Mr. B*** stock-broker"... well... well!... oh! how stupid I am... 386 is the portrait of Mr. B***, this is a portrait of a bull by Mr. Bracassat... I'd also say... that the idea of having yourself painted with horns as big as that... after that, you can't refuse a stock-broker anythingPrintsG.2000-0657
DAUMIER, HonoréNews 122: The last day for the submission of pictures: —Heavens above! —we're already here and my picture isn’t finished... I’m annoyed at having hired my porter for the whole day, I would sooner have had him carry it by the hour!...PrintsG.2000-0658
DAUMIER, HonoréScenes from the Studios 1: Madam, I am greatly honoured!...PrintsG.2000-0659
DAUMIER, HonoréScenes from the Studios 2: A Frenchman painted by himselfPrintsG.2000-0660
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Artists 1: In search of a forest in the Champagne regionPrintsG.2000-0661
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Artists 2: One day I shall have to get you to make my portrait in that style...PrintsG.2000-0662
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Artists 3: Do you notice a civilised spot...PrintsG.2000-0663
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Artists 4: Inconvenient to send a bad picture to the Salon: —They wrote above my forest! —Spinach twelve to the metre! —And me, on my magnificent study worthy of Géricault, they had the barbarity to stick this notice! this is a horse, don’t mistake it for a donkey since it will be confused with the artist!PrintsG.2000-0664
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Salon of 1857 5: The sad countenance of Sculpture placed in the middle of PaintingPrintsG.2000-0665
DAUMIER, HonoréNews 399: The last week before the opening of the Salon: Chorus— Take courage, get to work; my friends are always there!...PrintsG.2000-0666
DAUMIER, HonoréSketches Taken by Daumier at the Exhibition 2: In front of the picture by Mr. G[ustave]. MoreauPrintsG.2000-0667
DAUMIER, HonoréSketches Taken by Daumier at the Exhibition 4: —Personally, what I like in the sculpture room is that you can always find somewhere to sit down!...PrintsG.2000-0668
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Public at the Exhibition —sketch by H. Daumier (sequel): And you, what do you think is the bestPrintsG.2000-0669
DAUMIER, HonoréSketch Taken at the Salon by Daumier: A fantastic painter: — See, look how I visualise the apotheosis of a martyr... — But I can make out only the legs of your figure. —The head's already in the sky... that proves he's a saint!...PrintsG.2000-0670
DAUMIER, HonoréSketch Taken by Daumier at the Salon 1(but numbered: “2”) : —This year yet more Venuses... always Venuses!... as if there were women made like that!...PrintsG.2000-0671
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 1: I didn’t tell you to go and make yourself into... sugar! I told you to go and cook yourself!PrintsG.2000-0672
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 2: Oh you who offer me white and brown sugar. At present I can only put you in salad.PrintsG.2000-0673
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 3: Master, me can't no longer work de cane!...cos de French eat de sugar from beet, me got fat, me can't budge at allPrintsG.2000-0674
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 4: This shows you a great battle which one may believe to be commanded by General Crunch Beet! It will not enter the historical Museum of Versailles and should serve as a pendant to the Battles of CannesPrintsG.2000-0675
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 6: Remove yourself from there so I can get inPrintsG.2000-0676
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 5: Political scene in which interest always forms a CrescentPrintsG.2000-0677
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 5: Political scene in which interest always forms a CrescentPrintsG.2000-0678
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 99: IMPRESSIONS OF A JOURNEY BY A GREAT POET: “One of the curiosities of Frankfurt that will soon disappear, I fear, is the butcher's shop. it [sic] is impossible to see a more splendid pile of fresh flesh. The bloody butchers and pink butchers’ wives chat gracefully under garlands of legs of mutton. A red stream, its colour barely altered by two gushing fountains, runs and smokes in the middle of the street!” (The Rhine by Victor Hugo Volume 2 page 357)PrintsG.2000-0679
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 86: THE FINAL PROOF: After this effort, he slowly turned up his eyes, and slept constitutionally in the bosom of eternal forgetfulnessPrintsG.2000-0680
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 103: LE CONSTITUTIONEL [sic] AND THE WANDERING JEW: Let’s be on our way, old chap, on our way... if even I can’t make you walk it’s certainly because your illness is too constitutional!...PrintsG.2000-0681
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 105: THE REJUVENATION OF THE CONSTITUTIONEL [sic] FOLLOWING THE REJUVENATION OF AESON: I read in Mr. de Chompre's book that the aged Aeson was in earlier times perfectly rejuvenated by making him simmer in a stew-pot with a multitude of small spices, such as marshmallow roots, lizard, sticks of liquorice and toads... but the precise recipe of this stew has been lost... I have imagined new ingredients, but unfortunately they are devilishly expensive! I think I would have done better to preserve my old fellow by —having him stuffed by Mr. Gannat!PrintsG.2000-0682
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 108: BERNARD LÉON (in the role of Mignot in Marie Mignot): ... if only you knew how you wrong a cook when you disturb his timetables! ...PrintsG.2000-0683
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 110: —Great Prince Muley, son of Muley, do you deign to place yourself in the shade beneath this object... the Englishman who had the kindness to make over this object to me for a hundred gold pieces told me that it was of excellent use in all the storms of life... —Let me be... it's useless... the day when the French took away my parasol, I caught sunstroke from which I shall never recover!...PrintsG.2000-0684
DAUMIER, HonoréGRRRREAT HOUSEHOLD REMOVAL OF THE CONSTITUTIONNELPrintsG.2000-0685
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 125: MARRIAGE OF THE EPOCH AND THE CONSTITUTIONNEL: Bilboquet —Virtuous couple, I unite you and bless you... go... lay your format crosswise, and multiply your annuals!...PrintsG.2000-0686
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 125: MARRIAGE OF THE EPOCH AND THE CONSTITUTIONNEL: Bilboquet —Virtuous couple, I unite you and bless you... go... lay your format crosswise, and multiply your annuals!...PrintsG.2000-0687
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE URCHIN OF PARIS AT THE TUILERIES: Crikey!... how you sink into it.PrintsG.2000-0688
DAUMIER, HonoréAll is lost! except the cash...PrintsG.2000-0689
DAUMIER, HonoréLast meeting of the ex-ministersPrintsG.2000-0690
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 163: THE NAPOLEONIC CONSTITUTIONNEL: The Constitutionnel places itself heroically at the head of the Frankish corps recruited from the rue de Valois and the rue de Poitiers to uphold the cause of Prince LouisPrintsG.2000-0691
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 164: NAPOLEONIC-PACKET-BOATPrintsG.2000-0692
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 171: Messrs Victor Hugo and Emile Garardin seeking to elevate Prince Louis on a shield, that's not very stable!PrintsG.2000-0693
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 172: The Napoleonic newspapers leaving the National Assembly after the vote declaring that General Cavaignac has deserved well of the countryPrintsG.2000-0694
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 192: The terrible Girardo-Girardini piercing with his pen the unfortunate Thiers. PrintsG.2000-0695
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 7: THE FRIENDS OF PEACE —THE RESULT OF A DISCOURSE BY COQUERELPrintsG.2000-0696
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 7: THE FRIENDS OF PEACE —THE RESULT OF A DISCOURSE BY COQUERELPrintsG.2000-0697
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 9: —Mr. Cabassol, how can you still take up arms, after having attended three meetings of the Peace Congress! —Precisely, I’m mounting guard to avoid being at war with my sergeant-majorPrintsG.2000-0698
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 9: —Mr. Cabassol, how can you still take up arms, after having attended three meetings of the Peace Congress! —Precisely, I’m mounting guard to avoid being at war with my sergeant-majorPrintsG.2000-0699
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 18: TIME TO RETURN TO THE CLASSROOMPrintsG.2000-0700
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 19: THE CONSTITUTIONNEL CONTEMPLATING THE POLITICAL HORIZONPrintsG.2000-0701
DAUMIER, Honoré[NEWS 20]: Young Estancelin is obliged to return to school!PrintsG.2000-0702
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 23: IN THE ORIENT. Exchange of diplomatic notes and telegraphic signalsPrintsG.2000-0703
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE TEMPTATION OF THE NEW St. ANTHONY: In that particular time, a great and fat sinner named Véron felt himself touched by grace: having reflected that the Press was a priesthood, he became a hermit and retired to a wild place in the midst of the steepest mountains of Montmartre. There, he spent his days and nights in prayer, and as a means of mortification, imposed upon himself as a penitence the continual re-reading of the list of subscribers to the Constitutionnel. —For his only food, Véron took at long intervals a light fragment of Regnauld pâté. —The Devil, irritated by this edifying yet unexpected conversion employed different strategies to make St. Véron succumb to his temptations, but our noble coenobite knew how to resist those things which until recently had held so many charms for him: Satan, who had taken the form of the Constitutionnel in order come in person to tempt St. Véron, returned to the road for Paris, furious. —The anchorite of Montmartre has, since this time, been placed in the rank of the greatest saints which Parisian journalism honours, and is especially supplicated by the unfortunates who have a head cold.PrintsG.2000-0704
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 25: Mr. CRÉMIEUX LOOKING FOR AN APPARTMENT: —If I rent this lodging, I would like the proprieter to take down this dreadful portrait... oh! but, Good God, it's a mirror!...PrintsG.2000-0705
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 33: A MORNING VISIT TO THE ÉLYSÉE: —But Mister Véron, you leave only one sub-prefecture at my disposal!PrintsG.2000-0706
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 36: This chariot still rolls on... This chariot still rolls on, in vain did they want to put sticks in the wheels!PrintsG.2000-0707
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 49: The knight Véron defying the Charivari, in a singular battle in the closed field of the 6th Chamber of the Palace of JusticePrintsG.2000-0708
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 49: The knight Véron defying the Charivari, in a singular battle in the closed field of the 6th Chamber of the Palace of JusticePrintsG.2000-0709
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 50: THE NEW St. SEBASTIAN: Virgin and MartyrPrintsG.2000-0710
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 50: THE NEW St. SEBASTIAN: Virgin and MartyrPrintsG.2000-0711
DAUMIER, HonoréMEMORIES OF THE PEACE CONGRESS 1: Victor Hugo, in a lecture of three points, demonstrates the futility of military glory, and proves by example that the crown of laurels could be replaced to advantage by a crown of roses! this gives him the advantage of making a novel effect of his forehead.PrintsG.2000-0712
DAUMIER, HonoréMEMORIES OF THE PEACE CONGRESS [2]: SECOND MEETING: An American orator proves in an irrefutable manner that the only means of pacifying humankind is to force all men to wear, like him, a green hat, which they should never remove except in the evenings, when going to bed. No one even dared to contest this opinion.PrintsG.2000-0713
DAUMIER, HonoréMEMORIES OF THE PEACE CONGRESS [2]: SECOND MEETING: An American orator proves in an irrefutable manner that the only means of pacifying humankind is to force all men to wear, like him, a green hat, which they should never remove except in the evenings, when going to bed. No one even dared to contest this opinion.PrintsG.2000-0714
DAUMIER, HonoréMEMORIES OF THE PEACE CONGRESS 3: Third and final meeting of the Peace Congress —Everyone kisses, and it is over!PrintsG.2000-0715
DAUMIER, HonoréMEMORIES OF THE PEACE CONGRESS 3: Third and final meeting of the Peace Congress —Everyone kisses, and it is over!PrintsG.2000-0716
DAUMIER, HonoréMEMORIES OF THE PEACE CONGRESS 4: Having finished their work, and having, through three days of speeches, definitively guaranteed world peace, the Congress members of St. Cecilia's room decide to take a triumphal, but peaceable, walk in the Paris streets!PrintsG.2000-0717
DAUMIER, HonoréMEMORIES OF THE PEACE CONGRESS 4: Having finished their work, and having, through three days of speeches, definitively guaranteed world peace, the Congress members of St. Cecilia's room decide to take a triumphal, but peaceable, walk in the Paris streets!PrintsG.2000-0718
DAUMIER, HonoréMEMORIES OF THE PEACE CONGRESS 5: Mr. Cobden’s disciples, in the exercise of their pacific dutiesPrintsG.2000-0719
DAUMIER, HonoréMEMORIES OF THE PEACE CONGRESS 5: Mr. Cobden’s disciples, in the exercise of their pacific dutiesPrintsG.2000-0720
DAUMIER, HonoréMEMORIES OF THE PEACE CONGRESS 6: Universal Peace haveing been decreed, the honorable sir Cobden [sic] finds a way of using the generals who crossed their arms.PrintsG.2000-0721
DAUMIER, HonoréCHARIVARI SKETCHES or DISCORDANT SKETCHES 2: —I say, President, it's impossible to catch a hare this year... they won't stay still... —That's because the government forgot to make them immovable...PrintsG.2000-0722
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 58: Mimi Véron finally believes to have found the true means of pulverising his enemyPrintsG.2000-0723
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 67: Three saints in the same Holy-water BasinPrintsG.2000-0724
DAUMIER, Honoré[NEWS 70]: THE TREE OF LIBERTY: —What! not a friend to shout: death-trap!PrintsG.2000-0725
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 73: Pastime that should be forbidden to eminent political persons, because it exposes them to compromise the European balance.PrintsG.2000-0726
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 75: THE SETTLEMENT OR YOUR LIFE: The delicate manner assumed by the English in reclaiming a debt from a friendly people: —Twenty four hours to pay the interest at twelve per cent!PrintsG.2000-0727
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 85: PAINFUL SITUATION OF THE POOR LITTLE KING OF GREECE: The Englishman —Here's a brat that I could only make one mouthful of!... The Russian —Would you please leave this little man alone —you see, I'm defending him!PrintsG.2000-0728
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 81: The arrival in Alsace of the extraordinary Commissioner Coco Romieu.PrintsG.2000-0729
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 80: Achilles Véron retiring to his tent.PrintsG.2000-0730
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 86: PLACE DE LA BASTILLE: —Buy a crown from me, citizen!PrintsG.2000-0731
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 93: Mr. Thiers at the Music-lectern of Notre-Dame de Lorette.PrintsG.2000-0732
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 95: The Diversion!PrintsG.2000-0733
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 96: View taken at Père LachaisePrintsG.2000-0734
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 96: View taken at Père LachaisePrintsG.2000-0735
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 97: The soothsayers of Empire prepare themselves to consult the entrails of sacred ducks before Caesar chooses other ministers.PrintsG.2000-0736
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 97: The soothsayers of Empire prepare themselves to consult the entrails of sacred ducks before Caesar chooses other ministers.PrintsG.2000-0737
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 99: THE FEAST OF BALTAZAR-VÉRONPrintsG.2000-0738
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 98: A churchwarden’s dreamPrintsG.2000-0739
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 94: The Emperor Nicholas working in his studyPrintsG.2000-0740
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 106: A parricidePrintsG.2000-0741
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 107: Political puppetsPrintsG.2000-0742
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 114: Citizen Auguste Thiers trying out a new costumePrintsG.2000-0743
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 116: THE 4 MAY CELEBRATIONS: The Burgraves decorating with some flowers the statue of the Republic. / ( This part of the programme could not be carried out, / we do not know for what reasons.)PrintsG.2000-0744
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 118: The only costume truly appropriate to this person who was wrongly qualified for the title of Burgrave.PrintsG.2000-0745
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 119: LEGEND OF THE YEAR 1850: St. Montalembert, renouncing leading Parisians in the way of virtue, returns towards heaven, escorted by seraphim who wanted to help him in his pious enterprise. (Daumier pinxit)PrintsG.2000-0746
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 124: MIMI VÉRON'S REMEDY: apothecary-in-chief of the Constitutionnel—Take it... take it, this is the only thing that can save you!PrintsG.2000-0747
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 124: MIMI VÉRON'S REMEDY: apothecary-in-chief of the Constitutionnel—Take it... take it, this is the only thing that can save you!PrintsG.2000-0748
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 128: Mr. DUPIN IN HIS SMALL SHOES: Seeing that the law on electoral reform will be warmly discussed; Mr. Dupin thought that this was the moment to present himself... to Clamecy.PrintsG.2000-0749
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 128: Mr. DUPIN IN HIS SMALL SHOES: Seeing that the law on electoral reform will be warmly discussed; Mr. Dupin thought that this was the moment to present himself... to Clamecy.PrintsG.2000-0750
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 127: Lilliputians trying to profit from the sleep of a new GulliverPrintsG.2000-0751
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 129: A BAD FAREPrintsG.2000-0752
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 129: A BAD FAREPrintsG.2000-0753
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 130: Political gnatsPrintsG.2000-0754
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 140: The new IcarusesPrintsG.2000-0755
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 142: THE POLITICAL HIGH-LIVERS: (France.) —Hum!... hum!... that seems to me to be a pretty poor dish!PrintsG.2000-0756
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 142: THE POLITICAL HIGH-LIVERS: (France.) —Hum!... hum!... that seems to me to be a pretty poor dish!PrintsG.2000-0757
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 145: The Emperor Soulouque, having learned that a European journalist permitted himself to criticise some of the acts of his administration, arrived to sieze the guilty man and plunged him into a cooking pot full of boiling tar —All with the hope that this would serve as a lesson to this hack and that he would not write a second article against his majesty. (Official prefect of Haiti.) (Note from le Charivari) —This ingenious method to curb the deviations of the Press is recommended for the meditation of the Burgraves.PrintsG.2000-0758
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 146: Poodles and fundholders going to congratulate the National Assembly on the rejection of the tax proposed on the transfer of funds and on the canine order.PrintsG.2000-0759
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 146: Poodles and fundholders going to congratulate the National Assembly on the rejection of the tax proposed on the transfer of funds and on the canine order.PrintsG.2000-0760
DAUMIER, HonoréGREAT AND TERRIBLE CRUSADE UNDERTAKEN BY THE BURGRAVES AGAINST THE JOURNALISTSPrintsG.2000-0761
DAUMIER, HonoréGREAT AND TERRIBLE CRUSADE UNDERTAKEN BY THE BURGRAVES AGAINST THE JOURNALISTSPrintsG.2000-0762
DAUMIER, Honoré[NEWS] 185: Attached through their grandeur to the bank of the Seine, the ministers Parrieu and Rouher consoled themselves at not being able to pass the holidays in their mountains by dancing a bourrée from their birthplace, behind the closed doors of one of the rooms in the Ministry of Justice.PrintsG.2000-0763
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 198: A member of the society of the tenth of December taking up the note la to bawl long live the Emperor... with two botttles as the tuning-fork.PrintsG.2000-0764
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 2: Members of the aid society of the tenth of December in the exercise of their philanthropic dutiesPrintsG.2000-0765
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 3: A DECEMBRUISED: —Well!... it seems that the neighbour will also have found himself somewhere along the President of the Republic's passage!PrintsG.2000-0766
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 3: A DECEMBRUISED: —Well!... it seems that the neighbour will also have found himself somewhere along the President of the Republic's passage!PrintsG.2000-0767
DAUMIER, Honoré[NEWS] 5: The aftermath of a political discussion between the two old burgraves and friends Berryer and LarochejaquelinPrintsG.2000-0768
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 6: RATAPOIL and CASMAJOU: The most active members of the philanthropic society of the tenth of December: the portraits drawn from nature, and truly striking.PrintsG.2000-0769
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 6: RATAPOIL and CASMAJOU: The most active members of the philanthropic society of the tenth of December: the portraits drawn from nature, and truly striking.PrintsG.2000-0770
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 7: A MEETING OF THE COUNCIL OF FIVE: Messrs de Lévis, de Pastoret d’Ecars and de St. Priest deigning to allow the plebeian Berryer join them in order to regulate the destiny of the new France.PrintsG.2000-0771
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 14: The new upholsterer to the crown occupying himself in recovering the seat of the throne.PrintsG.2000-0772
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 24: A RECONCILIATION (A scene from high comedy): —I embrace you, but still hold a grudge against you! – I press you to my heart, but you’ll pay for it!PrintsG.2000-0773
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 24: A RECONCILIATION (A scene from high comedy): —I embrace you, but still hold a grudge against you! – I press you to my heart, but you’ll pay for it!PrintsG.2000-0774
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 29: AT THE DOOR OF THE ÉLYSÉE [PALACE]: —Sirs, the Prince has told me to tell you that he is not there! —What! does he no longer wish to follow our advice? —No. he [sic] claims that you've already stuffed him full of it as it is... —Hapless France! hapless Prince!PrintsG.2000-0775
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 41: Knock and it shall be opened unto you!PrintsG.2000-0776
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 35: EX-MEMBERS OF THE EX-SOCIETY OF THE EX-TENTH-OF-DECEMBER: —To be forced to drink beer when they paid for such good wine for us!...PrintsG.2000-0777
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 39: The King of Prussia and the Emperor of Austria preparing to engage in a great battlePrintsG.2000-0778
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 40: The Emperor of Austria and the King of Prussia deciding to fight with new weaponsPrintsG.2000-0779
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 66: A REPLASTERING:— My little chap, you demolish [it] in vain!...I’m going to replaster that very thing!...PrintsG.2000-0780
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 64: Memory of the day of 18 January — Burst of machine-gun fire from the Baroche-MinistryPrintsG.2000-0781
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 90: Two future great dignitaries of the Empire, Mimi Véron and Coco RomieuPrintsG.2000-0782
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 99: Alliance between the Bonapartists and the CapuchinsPrintsG.2000-0783
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 103: A New ConvertPrintsG.2000-0784
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 110: The oath of the Horatii renewedPrintsG.2000-0785
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 111: The Burgraves going to warPrintsG.2000-0786
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 109: THE NEXT DISTRIBUTION OF PRIZES AT THE FRENCH ACADEMY: 1st for virtue and religion... Louis-Mimi VéronPrintsG.2000-0787
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 122: Means proposed by the Charivari to Mr. Léon Faucher for avoiding telegraphic errors from now onPrintsG.2000-0788
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 116: An Autodafé in the 19th century: — a touching religious ceremony organised with the solicitude of the reverends Montalembert and VeuillotPrintsG.2000-0789
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 120: A Ministry returned to the waterPrintsG.2000-0790
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 123: The Hercules of the Champ-ÉlyséesPrintsG.2000-0791
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 125: Going for political information to General Changarnier’s caretakerPrintsG.2000-0792
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 115: A POLITICAL VALET'S COUNCIL — Prince... you should only touch the Constitution with a glove that reaches the elbow... I offer you mine!PrintsG.2000-0793
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 121: The Horatii of the ÉlyséePrintsG.2000-0794
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 130: —What an odd game!...each player finds that he has the King!...PrintsG.2000-0795
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 139: An unexpected conversationPrintsG.2000-0796
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 142: The blind menPrintsG.2000-0797
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 144: Give it wide berth!PrintsG.2000-0798
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 145: The new Oedipus before the new SphinxPrintsG.2000-0799
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 145: The new Oedipus before the new SphinxPrintsG.2000-0800
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 151: The good Mr. Ratapoil promised them that after they'd signed his petition skylarks would fall for them ready roastedPrintsG.2000-0801
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 152: Masquerading as a BonapartistPrintsG.2000-0802
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 158: A stampede of Lilliputians who had tried to garrote Universal Suffrage during his sleepPrintsG.2000-0803
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 159: REAPPEARANCE OF THE GILDED YOUTH IN1851:— My word of honour, we absolutely must get wid of this wepublic tomowwow!...PrintsG.2000-0804
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 160: MR.GUIZOT’S PARROT: “Your insults will never equal the height of my disdain!”PrintsG.2000-0805
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 175: Confusion of the fusion!PrintsG.2000-0806
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 177: UNNECESSARY REGRETS!: —What a pity that this phenomenon should die on the very day of its birth!... it should have been admired by all the courts of Europe!...PrintsG.2000-0807
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 186: —Doctor, I assure you that I am not as ill as you say I am!...PrintsG.2000-0808
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 178: Project for a Statue to be raised to Odilon-NimrodPrintsG.2000-0809
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 179: They wanted to snuff out even the SunPrintsG.2000-0810
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 180: —This is not the only time you will replace us!...PrintsG.2000-0811
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 183: TRYING HIS STRENGTH: — Confound it, how you're going at it...you're going to end up demolishing that head for me!...PrintsG.2000-0812
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 184: AN UNLUCKY FIGHTER: See, here, my friend Léon, gulp this down for me... it's Argenteuil balsam...it's worked every time one of my men has been unwise enough to separate from my gang and has got a frightful beating up!...another time, don't go out alone against the majority!...PrintsG.2000-0813
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 189: The Lord de Berryer having himself received as a Knight into the philanthropic-military order of the Tenth-of-DecemberPrintsG.2000-0814
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 185: A dangerous routePrintsG.2000-0815
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 194: To a known air: —Oh! Richard, oh! my king, the universe abandons you, On the earth there is thus only you interested in your person.PrintsG.2000-0816
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 196: IN NAPLES: The best of kings continuing to make order reign in his dominionsPrintsG.2000-0817
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 199: A meeting of the electoral unionPrintsG.2000-0818
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 200: A VISIT TO THE CONVICT-PRISON IN NAPLES: Mr.Gladstone— And what do you call this man? he doesn't look like a villain. The Gaolor— Don't you believe any of it, on the contrary,he's a demagogue, an old constitutional minister of 1848 called Carlo Poërio. In his inexhaustible clemency the best and most worthy of kings ordered that we chain him to an assassin, so that he might return to the good. He'd have been completely lost if we'd left him with another demagogue.PrintsG.2000-0819
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 203: Casmajou— I think that the time has come to claim as the price for my devotion the reward of a frock-coat!Ratapoil— Well, now, do you think my boots leave nothing to be desired in connection with the sole!(Together)(in chorus)— Oh, the ingratitude of Governments!PrintsG.2000-0820
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 207: Saint Rosette Tamisier continuing the course of her miracles by transforming Father Veuillot into an angelPrintsG.2000-0821
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 214: THE TEMPTERPrintsG.2000-0822
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 239: SKETCH TAKEN AT LE HAVRE: The well clad gentleman— I'm leaving for California.The gentleman with few clothes— And I'm just returning from there!PrintsG.2000-0823
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 239: SKETCH TAKEN AT LE HAVRE: The well clad gentleman— I'm leaving for California.The gentleman with few clothes— And I'm just returning from there!PrintsG.2000-0824
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 221: Low-relief in spiced bread destined to pass down to the remotest posterity the memory of the entry of General Léon Faucher into the town of RHEIMSPrintsG.2000-0825
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 234:— I can't believe my telescope... England holds out her arms to Kossuth!...PrintsG.2000-0826
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 231: Beginning the electoral visits for his PrincePrintsG.2000-0827
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 247: — You will finish by tiring of attacking me... poor little Myrmidons!...PrintsG.2000-0828
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 257: Commerce: How do you think I can walk if you always hold me back!PrintsG.2000-0829
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 262: Commerce: — When then, gentlemen, are you going to finish playing that game... paying all tha costs of the party is beginning to annoy me!...PrintsG.2000-0830
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 22: A NEW FARNESE HERCULESPrintsG.2000-0831
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 30: Being canedPrintsG.2000-0832
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 299: IN A GARDEN AT AUTEUIL: Becoming more and more misanthropic as a result of his political vexations and wishing to flee the world completely, doctor Véron withdrew to the bottom of his cravat.PrintsG.2000-0833
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 15: — These poor animals... they're so disfigured that you can't even recognise them... they who've been such good friends for five years!... oh! Mister Barbaroux, we're living in truly sad times!...PrintsG.2000-0834
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 6: I have seen the days of my entire family cut short And I have seen my husband dragged through the dust! (Andromaque)PrintsG.2000-0835
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 9: Doctor Véron releasing all the Constitutionnel's ducks on to the enraged dogsPrintsG.2000-0836
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 18: All the Parisian women who own dogs are following the example given to them by Madam de Saint Frémont and are coming to withdraw their subscription to the ConstitutionnelPrintsG.2000-0837
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 19: The enemy of dogs having had the imprudence to leave Auteuil in order to come and walk in ParisPrintsG.2000-0838
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 19: Given nightmares by the shadows of his victimsPrintsG.2000-0839
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 17: Where they well know a former phamacistPrintsG.2000-0840
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 295: Doctor Véron, having given up politics, its pomp and its works, retires to the country, at Auteuil, and gives himself up to the favourite passtimes of Arcadia's ancient shepnerds: the true sage consoles himself for everything with Philosophy and a clarinet.PrintsG.2000-0841
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 2: Doctor Véron refusing all forms of consolationPrintsG.2000-0842
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 14: The emotion of Doctor Véron, believing himself to be pursued by an enraged dogPrintsG.2000-0843
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 34: The Triumph of PaganismPrintsG.2000-0844
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 1: Below the upper vignette: Assault on the tribune; Below the lower vignette: The waiting room— They ask for Mr. FerdinandPrintsG.2000-0845
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 2: Below the upper vignette: View of Mr. Dupin rendering himself at the Assembly; Below the lower vignette: Tribune of the Gentlement of the national guardPrintsG.2000-0846
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 2: Below the upper vignette: View of Mr. Dupin rendering himself at the Assembly; Below the lower vignette: Tribune of the Gentlement of the national guardPrintsG.2000-0847
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY3: Below the upper vignette: After a lively and animated discussion; Below the lower vignette: Two famous profilesPrintsG.2000-0848
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY3: Below the upper vignette: After a lively and animated discussion; Below the lower vignette: Two famous profilesPrintsG.2000-0849
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 4: Below the upper vignette: The outer hall; Below the lower vignette: Ordinary meetingPrintsG.2000-0850
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 5: Below the upper vignette: Triumphal entry of Oscar and Théobald; Below the lower vignette: 25 f[rancs] per day — Wealth comes by sleeping!PrintsG.2000-0851
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 6: Below the upper vignette: The bussiness of the representatives especially charged, in the assembly, with representing seducers.... ; Below the lower vignette: Lagrange delivering himself of a sparkle of eloquence by becoming too carried awayPrintsG.2000-0852
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 7: Below the upper vignette: Pierre Leroux daring to address the demi-god Barrot; Below the lower vignette: Pierre Leroux, having set forth to the tribune his social doctriness, [that are] no less tangled than his hair, receives a hand-shakes from his friends, who, in a fashion, appear to have understood themPrintsG.2000-0853
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 8: Below the upper vignette: A cabriolet bearing an unfortunate resemblance; Below the lower vignette: After the meeting, Auguste and Arthur stop being serious politicians and become again foolish young people...PrintsG.2000-0854
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 8: Below the upper vignette: A cabriolet bearing an unfortunate resemblance; Below the lower vignette: After the meeting, Auguste and Arthur stop being serious politicians and become again foolish young people...PrintsG.2000-0855
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 9: Below the upper vignette: A tiring discourse for the president; Below the lower vignette: Mischief which willingly afforded room to young Estancelin, at a time when the majestic Barrot was President of the Council of Ministers, the majestic Barrot no longer resembling a sun, but a cometPrintsG.2000-0856
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 9: Below the upper vignette: A tiring discourse for the president; Below the lower vignette: Mischief which willingly afforded room to young Estancelin, at a time when the majestic Barrot was President of the Council of Ministers, the majestic Barrot no longer resembling a sun, but a cometPrintsG.2000-0857
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 10: Below the upper vignette: The day when there is news; Below the lower vignette: The two most saintly persons in the Legislative AssemblyPrintsG.2000-0858
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 10: Below the upper vignette: The day when there is news; Below the lower vignette: The two most saintly persons in the Legislative AssemblyPrintsG.2000-0859
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 11: Below the upper vignette: Imposing ceremony of the ballot; Below the lower vignette: Different ways of drinking the Parliamentary glass of sugarwaterPrintsG.2000-0860
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 12: Below the upper vignette: Mister Stenographer, you've reproduced my speech well, but you've forgotten to note down at different passages: — Long live feeling,... I've just made these little corrections; Below the lower vignette: General Lebreton advancing to the orderPrintsG.2000-0861
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 13: Below the upper vignette: Mr. Berger, known as The Lofty One, receiving the homage which is certainly due to him on all accounts; Below the lower vignette: The great manœuvre of wooden knives commanded by General Baraguay d'Hilliers.PrintsG.2000-0862
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 14: Below the upper vignette: Lucien Murat and Antony Thouron, whom they persist in calling Thouret, we don't know why; Below the lower vignette: The President's hat serving as a snuffer of discussionPrintsG.2000-0863
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 15: Below the upper vignette: When the boring orator is at the tribune; Below the lower vignette: — See here gentlemen, a little moderation... we’re in the corridor... these insults are only acceptable when we’re in a meeting!PrintsG.2000-0864
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 16: Below the upper vignette: Bineau the Savage making his entry as minister; Below the lower vignette: —Well, so it's no cleverer than that to talk from the tribune? —Yes, but you, Pierre, you're listening to me too politely, you should say something stupid from time to time, [because] without that there's no longer any illusion, we're not in a meeting any more!PrintsG.2000-0865
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 16: Below the upper vignette: Bineau the Savage making his entry as minister; Below the lower vignette: —Well, so it's no cleverer than that to talk from the tribune? —Yes, but you, Pierre, you're listening to me too politely, you should say something stupid from time to time, [because] without that there's no longer any illusion, we're not in a meeting any more!PrintsG.2000-0866
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 17: Below the upper vignette: The day poor Théobald learned he'd been ousted; Below the lower vignette: The French enjoying their right to do sentry duty at the doors of the National AssemblyPrintsG.2000-0867
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 18: Below the upper vignette: —You see, how well little Estancelin speaks for his age, and in front of everybody, and without crying... unlike you Anatole, he's a great satisfaction to his parents! ; Below the lower vignette: The meeting is suspendedPrintsG.2000-0868
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 19: Below the upper vignette: Evening party at Mr. Dupin's; Below the lower vignette: Queue for the public tribunePrintsG.2000-0869
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 20: Below the upper vignette: Cabal at the great man's; Below the lower vignette: A private reprimandPrintsG.2000-0870
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 20: Below the upper vignette: Cabal at the great man's; Below the lower vignette: A private reprimandPrintsG.2000-0871
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 21: Below the upper vignette: Young Estancelin's entry into the class; Below the lower vignette: Leaving the classPrintsG.2000-0872
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 21: Below the upper vignette: Young Estancelin's entry into the class; Below the lower vignette: Leaving the classPrintsG.2000-0873
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 22: Below the upper vignette: Two phenomena, free spectable; Below the lower vignette: Taschereau in the exercise of his interruptionsPrintsG.2000-0874
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 23: Below the upper vignette: Meeting at night; Below the lower vignette: After seven o'clock in the evening, the little ones daren't leave the room without the big onesPrintsG.2000-0875
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 24: Below the upper vignette: Every day he asks to speak, but when given the opportunity, never uses it; Below the lower vignette: Mr. de Montalembert in the Pulpit of the National AssemblyPrintsG.2000-0876
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 25: Below the upper vignette: A solicitor on the look-out for Bineau the Savage, minister of public works. Below the lower vignette: The friendship of a great man is a kindness of the gods! — Particularly on a rainy day and when the gutters are full.PrintsG.2000-0877
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 26: Below the upper vignette: During a break in the meeting; Below the lower vignette: Young Estancelin permitting himself to leave his seat in order not to miss a word the orator says.PrintsG.2000-0878
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 27: Below the upper vignette: When a boring orator ascends the tribune; Below the lower vignette: The boring orator continuing a speech begun two hours earlierPrintsG.2000-0879
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 28: Below the upper vignette: A little meeting in the refreshment-room; Below the lower vignette: Arrival of a representative in a ‘colimaçon’PrintsG.2000-0880
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 29: Below the upper vignette: What you see almost every day; Below the lower vignette: In the corridors, — on days when there is talk of a new conspiracyPrintsG.2000-0881
DAUMIER, HonoréPHYSIOGNOMY OF THE ASSEMBLY 31: Below the upper vignette: Mr. Laurent (of the Ardèche) passing before the ministers’ bench; Below the lower vignette: A speech interlarded with apostrophePrintsG.2000-0882
DAUMIER, HonoréPARLIAMENTARY IDYLLS 1: THE HARVEST: As by your efforts the piled sheaves / Raise the pyramid with pointed top,/ Clyto, the housewife of calm and gentle bearing,/ Steeps the cabbage soup in the earthenware amphora (The Georgics, inedited translation by Mr. Ponsard)PrintsG.2000-0883
DAUMIER, HonoréPARLIAMENTARY IDYLLS 2: THE INDISCREET FAUNS: Come, Cholë come my sister; / amenable to my entreaties, / The virgin with the golden quiver has rid these glades./ Of fauns and Taschereaus./ Thus speaks Nisa. Laughing between the boughs / Two hidden Taschereaus turn upon those hips. /The ardour of their treacherous gaze. (Short-lived Poems by Count de Mantalembert.)PrintsG.2000-0884
DAUMIER, HonoréPARLIAMENTARY IDYLLS 4: FLORA AND ZEPHYR (DE LA MEURTHE.): Lightly he balances himself / On a foot barely skimming the water's surface:/ Flora who admires him in silence / Says to herself. / Ah! God damn it all, how beautiful he is! (Translated from Anacreon by Ratapoil, retired police colonel, member of Châlons sur Marne society of literature and of the society of the Tenth-of-December in Paris)PrintsG.2000-0885
DAUMIER, HonoréPARLIAMENTARY IDYLLS 9: Come to play in the field, /A roguish urchin said to him; / Barrot, from good humour / Does not suspect until too late! / In vain he strives, / But once you have allowed yourself to be deceived / There, as elsewhere, a lost position, / Is difficult to regain! Moral stanzas By General d'Hautpoul. (cultivating the Muses in secret.)PrintsG.2000-0886
DAUMIER, HonoréPARLIAMENTARY IDYLLS 12: Cupid, a shrewd god, but full of vanity, / Bounds upon the table at the risk of a sprain, / In order to prove that his figure is wholly beautiful, / Between the two candlesticks he shows them his torso!PrintsG.2000-0887
DAUMIER, HonoréPARLIAMENTARY IDYLLS 13: Before the session opens anew. / Let us harvest the fruits that Pomona grants us. / Come, says Thiers to Molé, let us make a store / Of a few apples of discord.PrintsG.2000-0888
DAUMIER, HonoréPARLIAMENTARY IDYLLS 15: How sweet it is, how sweet it is on the slope of a valley, / Far form the noise and shouts of the troublesome crowd, / In the middle of a beautiful day, to invoke Apollo / And at night to address sonnets to the moon.PrintsG.2000-0889
DAUMIER, HonoréFrench Types 2: The tailor: He walks with an arched back, his shoulders like a coat-stand and his elbows turned outwards. His suits, cut in the latest fashion, often clash with his boots and hat, he nearly always has a very euphonical name such as Wahaterkermann or Pikprunmann.PrintsG.2000-0890
DAUMIER, HonoréFrench Types 4: The public scribe: The public scribe is the confidant of chambermaids, the poet for cooks, the amourous interpreter for soldiers and the jurisconsult of caretakers. His calling is the final refuge for defective educations and fashions the invalids of literature.PrintsG.2000-0891
DAUMIER, HonoréFrench Types 4: The public scribe: The public scribe is the confidant of chambermaids, the poet for cooks, the amourous interpreter for soldiers and the jurisconsult of caretakers. His calling is the final refuge for defective educations and fashions the invalids of literature.PrintsG.2000-0892
DAUMIER, HonoréFrench Types 11: The Restaurant owner: This Gentleman who wipes the tables, arranges the stools, greets everyone and gravely walks about with a serviette in his hand, he is the master of the establishment. He has from Fifteen to Fifty thousand pounds revenue... How much has Châteaubriant ?...PrintsG.2000-0893
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Freebooters 2: The Municipal Pawnshop’s Pawn-ticket: Sir, the freebooter says to you, I haven’t got the means to redeem my watch, and this evening I’m leaving for my home region. You buy the pawn-ticket, you redeem the watch. It was pledged for 20 f[rancs] and is worth a hundred sous.PrintsG.2000-0894
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Freebooters 6: The Umbrella-trick: The freebooter takes advantage of the storm [,] going about it in the manner you see [here]... he pushes his umbrella into the face of a passer-by and seizes his victim's Watch, Purse or Pocket-book.PrintsG.2000-0895
DAUMIER, HonoréParisian Freebooters 12: The Crocodile: This has to do with a variety of species of Crocodile, which was known to the ancients under the name of Tantalus and which a Gymnasium naturalist of our time has called the Gastronome without money. This voracious whale-like creature is most commonly found in the localities of Merchants of Eatables. His teeth are pointed and very long from lack of exercise, since he uses only his eyes to devour. When he has had the perseverance to remain for a whole day static in front of his prey he sometimes ends up by having the luck to catch... a crick in the neck. He feeds himself only on desires and vain hopes, he is also remarkably thin. Very different from other fish of his species that swim in open water, this type of Crocodile is always in the dry.PrintsG.2000-0896
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE BACHELOR'S DAY 1: 7 O'CLOCK IN THE MORNING: Mr. Coquelet's awakening: Minette and Azor argue over the paternal kiss Mr. Coquelet smiles at this touching rivalry.PrintsG.2000-0897
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE BACHELOR'S DAY 2: 8 O'CLOCK IN THE MORNING: (Housework): The spectable of nature liftes the soul! Mr. Coquelet, in order to divert himself from the cares of housework, comes to his window to seek out the scent of flowers and the song of the ... canary.PrintsG.2000-0898
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE BACHELOR'S DAY 3: Mister Coquelet remaining a batchelor through selfishness shares his frugal breakfast with Azor and Minette.PrintsG.2000-0899
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE BACHELOR'S DAY 4: 10 O'CLOCK IN THE MORNING: Mr. Coquelet having met in the Botanical Gardens Miss Palissandre to whom he had the honour of offering a pink pompon on the 1st of May 1804, has secured a meeting, and having gone to the expense of a pair of gloves for 29 sous, glances into his mirror before setting out on the amourous adventure.PrintsG.2000-0900
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE BACHELOR'S DAY 5: 11 O'CLOCK IN THE MORNING: Mr. Coquelet wishing to offer a bouquet of violets to Miss Palissandre, reproaches himself for his prodigality; and washing his handkerchief with his own hands, clears his conscience by means of this economy.PrintsG.2000-0901
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE BACHELOR'S DAY 6: — Without doubt Mr. Riflot the right to petition is sacred, but is abused! witness that which you're talking to us about: to tax bachelors for being useless to the population! I'am angry about it for married people; but it has to be said that of [bachelors] there is no one, more than I Coquelet, who has helped the population.PrintsG.2000-0902
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE BACHELOR'S DAY 7: ONE O'CLOCK: A walk in the Luxembourg: Go on scoundrel. gulp it down! you'll see what it's like to be thrown into the water by a r... r... r... ras... scal like you!!.PrintsG.2000-0903
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE BACHELOR'S DAY 8: 2 O'CLOCK: Azor's snack: What's the matter, dear chap, this animal has only me, you, you've got everyone.PrintsG.2000-0904
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE BACHELOR'S DAY 9: THREE O'CLOCK: Mister Coquelet at the court of petty sessions; he admires this institution which shelters impudent people and the undertakings of corrupt beings.PrintsG.2000-0905
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE BACHELOR'S DAY 9: THREE O'CLOCK: Mister Coquelet at the court of petty sessions; he admires this institution which shelters impudent people and the undertakings of corrupt beings.PrintsG.2000-0906
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE BACHELOR'S DAY 10: 5 O'CLOCK IN THE AFTERNOON: Mr Coquelet you're an unsociable being, d'you understand with your dog; that's twice when I've had 149, he jumps on the table and jumbles it all up. Your dog's and accomplice!... and you're an old cheat.PrintsG.2000-0907
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE BACHELOR'S DAY 11: SEVEN O'CLOCK: Mr. Coquelet goes home... my word! dear chap, with honourable intentions. a neighbour 45 years old; a very pleasant little widow; but the heart has no part in it:...PrintsG.2000-0908
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE BACHELOR'S DAY No.12: 9 O'CLOCK IN THE EVENING: Mr Coquelet snuffing out his light finishes a day which, resembling yesterday and tomorrow, describes the exact picture of the bachelor's life!PrintsG.2000-0909
DAUMIER, HonoréAffectation 1: There Sir!... and then after this, you're going to run off to see the others!...PrintsG.2000-0910
DAUMIER, HonoréAffectation 2: I said to myself: do they think we're from the rue des Lombards?... There's a little air about you which is not that of a confectioner at all.PrintsG.2000-0911
DAUMIER, HonoréAffectation 6: Damn boots!... that'll teach me to want to make my feet small!!...PrintsG.2000-0912
DAUMIER, HonoréAffectation 8: (He reads a letter) A meeting, it could be from that little Mrs. Giraud!... yes... but perhaps it's from her husband who wants to nab me and give me a thrashing.PrintsG.2000-0913
DAUMIER, HonoréSENTIMENTS AND PASSIONS 4: This Gentleman, on leaving the Tavern where he has lost his last twenty francs, thinks of Rotschild [sic]; of fillets of St. Cloud; of selling his matress, ... of everything, except... not playing again.PrintsG.2000-0914
DAUMIER, HonoréProverbs and Maxims 1: A hungry stomach has no ears.PrintsG.2000-0915
DAUMIER, HonoréProverbs and Maxims 3: Parience is the virtue of asses.PrintsG.2000-0916
DAUMIER, HonoréProverbs and Maxims 7: Little presents sustain friendship.PrintsG.2000-0917
DAUMIER, HonoréProverbs and Maxims 8: To a good cat a good rat.PrintsG.2000-0918
DAUMIER, HonoréProverbs and Maxims 8: To a good cat a good rat.PrintsG.2000-0919
DAUMIER, HonoréProverbs and Maxims 9: love Bertrand, love his dog.PrintsG.2000-0920
DAUMIER, HonoréProverbs and Maxims 10: Don't put your finger between the wood and the bark.PrintsG.2000-0921
DAUMIER, HonoréProverbs and Maxims 11: Take your advantages where you find themPrintsG.2000-0922
DAUMIER, HonoréProverbs and Maxims 12: There's a sucker! personally, I agree with the proverb: “What's good to take is good to keep.”PrintsG.2000-0923
DAUMIER, HonoréBOHEMIANS OF PARIS 1: THE SELLER OF SECURITY [WATCH] CHAINS: The security [watch] chain is so called because it is a secure means of knowing that the ninny who buys it owns a watch. Accomplices stationed in the vicinity are not slow to turn this sign to a profit. Bertrand sold the chain, Macaire deals with the watch.PrintsG.2000-0924
DAUMIER, HonoréBOHEMIANS OF PARIS 2: THE GLEANER: What, not a needle,... not a handkerchief!... there's no longer any means of doing your job... it's the banker's wives, they don't leave anything lying around!...PrintsG.2000-0925
DAUMIER, HonoréBOHEMIANS OF PARIS 4: THE GATHERER OF CIGAR BUTTS: They're not going to stop, those chaps there! they're bailiffs' clerks, they'll smoke them to ashes, and no means of getting plugs of tabacco from them.PrintsG.2000-0926
DAUMIER, HonoréBOHEMIANS OF PARIS 7: THE PUFFER OF CUSTOMERS: About the word puff! (scans, lies in wait for, cheat's dictionary.) Under the appearance of a simple loafer this individual is dedicated to business in security [watch] chains, hall-marked gold gems; silver pencil-cases and other encumbrances of the public way, he scents the police constable; and when the security of [watch] chains is compromised he clears off wth the shop!PrintsG.2000-0927
DAUMIER, HonoréBOHEMIANS OF PARIS 8: THE GRAMMAR SCHOOL FRIEND: Ah! dear friend; how stout you've become... let me embrace you! let me embrace you! (the instant after, it was nothing but a mistake and the gentleman discovers that his extempore friend wished to make the acquaintance of... his watch!)PrintsG.2000-0928
DAUMIER, HonoréBOHEMIANS OF PARIS 9: SPONGER: Let's see! a first class wedding at Véry's! forward with the white gloves, I shall greet the bride as a friend of the groom... and the groom; as an acquaintance of the bride!PrintsG.2000-0929
DAUMIER, HonoréBOHEMIANS OF PARIS 10: THE CHIEF ADMINISTRATOR OF THE EMPIRE: Deuce, deuce! I've taken advantage of Véry, Véfour, the Café Anglais, I've disappeared without paying, on the pretext of an important post I'm waiting for... here am I descended to 32 sous dinners and they give me my bill... I shall have to change my standing... I'm going to play the banker who's forgotten his purse.PrintsG.2000-0930
DAUMIER, HonoréBOHEMIANS OF PARIS 12: THE BAILIFF'S MAN: They call us enemies of liberty!... what are those young fellows there complaining about... they're being taken in a carriage, and they've got a page, at the back... there's a kind of one!PrintsG.2000-0931
DAUMIER, HonoréBOHEMIANS OF PARIS 15: THE OLD ROUÉE: So I'm going to be a door-keeper in the rue du Mont-Blanc in a large house where my husband says they'll call us porters. So I'm going to leave this ramshackle place where there're only four tenants who give me five sous apiece for a New Year's present... Scum!!!...PrintsG.2000-0932
DAUMIER, HonoréBOHEMIANS OF PARIS 17: THE WORKER FOR A LABOUR EXCHANGE: Employed at fifteen sous a day, as a secret bill-poster, what a fate! They're asking for a replacement, by Jove, as are my hat and my clothes, and above all my last night's supper's asking for a replacement!PrintsG.2000-0933
DAUMIER, HonoréBOHEMIANS OF PARIS 19: THE CLAQUER: By Jingo; we're going to need to liven it up this evening, a new play in three acts; the comic wants me to burst out laughing, the heroine wants me to cry, the author wants me to stamp up to the old heavy mother, who wants me to applaud her... there's ... work for you.PrintsG.2000-0934
DAUMIER, HonoréBOHEMIANS OF PARIS 22: THE CLOTHES SELLER: “Closes to sell!... any hats, shoes, old clothes to sell!” This trade fourishes at carnival time in the vicinity of the schools of law and medicine: the student willingly sells his wardrobe to get himself a stevedore's costume, a wife, a small thimble-full of champagne and limitless tittle-tattle!PrintsG.2000-0935
DAUMIER, HonoréBOHEMIANS OF PARIS 24: THE KNIGHT OF THE GOLDEN SPUR: This so-called former Colonel of the Papal Guard, later aide-de-camp to the Prince of Monaco, awaiting as a prize for his services a distinguished post in the Government!... he would, however, willingly accept a tabacconist's shop or a position as an inspector of [street] sweeping; besides [this] he is a gallant man like all knights of his order, for a trifle demanding satisfaction from five-year-old children, perfectly making excuses from the moment you look at him in the face.PrintsG.2000-0936
DAUMIER, HonoréBOHEMIANS OF PARIS 27: COUNTRY ACTORS: —Yes,my dear fellow,yes the barbarians hissed at me in Cinna;and what's more you've seen me in Cinna! —Yes, I flatter myself that I've seen you, but don't you see that the provincials are hard up; open at the Français, go and find Mr.J.J.,get yourself looked after, ask for one hundred thousand francs per year and they'll applaud you...but you want success with 1500F[rancs] salaries and at Beauvais...greenhorn!PrintsG.2000-0937
DAUMIER, HonoréTRIVIAL THINGS 1: Eleven degrees centigrade! what a bad turn it gives you! and they call this a year of mercy!PrintsG.2000-0938
DAUMIER, HonoréTRIVIAL THINGS 2: Blast it! they're happier than thier master,these blackguardly boots!...they're drinking!...PrintsG.2000-0939
DAUMIER, HonoréTRIVIAL THINGS 3: — Come! my young friend,shake me firmly by the hand...that's good. —(aside)Oh! there, there now! "The friendship of a strong man is a flail of the Gods"PrintsG.2000-0940
DAUMIER, HonoréTRIVIAL THINGS 3: — Come! my young friend,shake me firmly by the hand...that's good. —(aside)Oh! there, there now! "The friendship of a strong man is a flail of the Gods"PrintsG.2000-0941
DAUMIER, HonoréTRIVIAL THINGS 4: —Don't leave your friend in that state! —Him my friend!...that's my doorkeeper.PrintsG.2000-0942
DAUMIER, HonoréTRIVIAL THINGS 4: —Don't leave your friend in that state! —Him my friend!...that's my doorkeeper.PrintsG.2000-0943
DAUMIER, HonoréTRIVIAL THINGS 5: Oh,what the devvvvvil!... lady we'd such a good time they was eighteen on us, they was no men nor women, we was all from the Auvergne what the devvvvvvvvil!!!!!...PrintsG.2000-0944
DAUMIER, HonoréTRIVIAL THINGS 5: Oh,what the devvvvvil!... lady we'd such a good time they was eighteen on us, they was no men nor women, we was all from the Auvergne what the devvvvvvvvil!!!!!...PrintsG.2000-0945
DAUMIER, HonoréTRIVIAL THINGS 6: —Is it to you or to the Gentleman who's your brother that I have the honour of speaking? —It is to my brother, Sir.PrintsG.2000-0946
DAUMIER, HonoréTRIVIAL THINGS 7: —Come to dinner, my wife dines in town: we will be fellows together. —Ah,deuce,I have a migraine! (aside) and his wife who is waiting for me at home!PrintsG.2000-0947
DAUMIER, HonoréTRIVIAL THINGS 8: —Don't talk to me about it, it's pitiful:there's a man who's spent his week's money on strong drink, you should look after such unfortunates... —Well at least, pick him up!... —Certainly not... he didn't get drunk at my place!PrintsG.2000-0948
DAUMIER, HonoréTRIVIAL THINGS 9: —Where to, master? is it by the hour or by the journey? -—Rue St.Honore. —What number? —I've told you Rue St.Honore: —What number? —I don'tknow! —Oh well sorry! it's by the hour!...PrintsG.2000-0949
DAUMIER, HonoréTRIVIAL THINGS 10: You; my friend! how did you know I'm a widower; after twenty years of hard lab...[our]... no to setting up house: you see I'm beginning to recover myself and you're suggesting to me a second marriage...Ragoulot, will you let go of me!PrintsG.2000-0950
DAUMIER, HonoréGALLERY OF PHYSIONOMY 3: An absorbing read.PrintsG.2000-0951
DAUMIER, HonoréGALLERY OF PHYSIONOMY 10: Oh! my wife is dead!PrintsG.2000-0952
DAUMIER, HonoréSKETCHES OF EXPRESSIONS 6: My dear man, I congratulate you, your picture has a repturous effect!! —Yes, I find that myself, too.PrintsG.2000-0953
DAUMIER, HonoréSKETCHES OF EXPRESSIONS 13: Emna[sic]!...I love you!...PrintsG.2000-0954
DAUMIER, HonoréSKETCHES OF EXPRESSIONS 14: My dear fellow, may I have the pleasure of your lending me 15 frcs.[francs].—Willingly, but I've only got ten. —Deuce!...deuce!... give them to me anyway, you can owe me five.PrintsG.2000-0955
DAUMIER, HonoréSKETCHES OF EXPRESSIONS 17: Mistah Guguste and my mummy they wanted to go bye-byes, they were tired and..and...and what they said to me was...go and play in the garden, and I... and I...didn't make any noise and I played.PrintsG.2000-0956
DAUMIER, HonoréSKETCHES OF EXPRESSIONS 17: Mistah Guguste and my mummy they wanted to go bye-byes, they were tired and..and...and what they said to me was...go and play in the garden, and I... and I...didn't make any noise and I played.PrintsG.2000-0957
DAUMIER, HonoréSKETCHES OF EXPRESSIONS 19: (Aside)God! my poor boy how ugly you are! (Aloud) My respects to your wife. (Aside) When you've got a face like yours, you shouldn't go out during the day.PrintsG.2000-0958
DAUMIER, HonoréSKETCHES OF EXPRESSIONS 28: Henri!... you judge me too harshly!...PrintsG.2000-0959
DAUMIER, HonoréSKETCHES OF EXPRESSIONS 29: Wretched sleeper, be off with you!...PrintsG.2000-0960
DAUMIER, HonoréSKETCHES OF EXPRESSIONS 30: You'll see!...you'll see! that'll stop the blood as if by hand!...PrintsG.2000-0961
DAUMIER, HonoréSKETCHES OF EXPRESSIONS 34: Damn it, Sir, don't move your hands, you'll lose the pose!PrintsG.2000-0962
DAUMIER, HonoréSKETCHES OF EXPRESSIONS 35: It's her poor cat that's died... —Oh! the poor little woman, how sorry she must be...PrintsG.2000-0963
DAUMIER, HonoréSKETCHES OF EXPRESSIONS 38: The Charade: My first of my lot still keeps going... Horse...Silver...Public Road...good heaven!!!...that's not goingPrintsG.2000-0964
DAUMIER, HonoréSKETCHES OF EXPRESSIONS 39: Come f... kiss this master...at once...PrintsG.2000-0965
DAUMIER, HonoréSKETCHES OF EXPRESSIONS 40: Nothing like it for a head-cold, it’s worth Gold!!!...PrintsG.2000-0966
DAUMIER, HonoréSKETCHES OF EXPRESSIONS 42: Missus Bonneau!... missus Bonneau!... I love missus Bonneau, me!...you sya,she said to you that I told her!...it's not...true!...PrintsG.2000-0967
DAUMIER, HonoréSKETCHES OF EXPRESSIONS 43: Marie!...Marie!...she deceives me...PrintsG.2000-0968
DAUMIER, HonoréSKETCHES OF EXPRESSIONS 46: The Crow, having sung all summer, ... —The Papa— The Crow..., the crow having sung.... begin it again for me at once...PrintsG.2000-0969
DAUMIER, HonoréDouble Faces 1: The Uncle-The Nephew: [On the left of the page, vertically]: (The Nephew, aloud) I've been given a little too much, that's bad —(The Uncle, aside) I'll inherit from my nephew, how strange! [On the right of the page,vertically]: (The Uncle, aloud) I'm not well, my friend. —(The Nephew, aside)Things are going well, I'm going to inherit from him.PrintsG.2000-0970
DAUMIER, HonoréNEW YEAR'S DAYPrintsG.2000-0971
DAUMIER, HonoréORCHESTRA IN FULL SWINGPrintsG.2000-0972
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIANS TYPES 1: Well, clever! how do you find him!... —Yes.yes...but in the end... —Yes...yes...yes!...PrintsG.2000-0973
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIANS TYPES 2: Don't bention it I've got a cold in the 'ead and can't see clearly ,by dear!...PrintsG.2000-0974
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIANS TYPES 3: ...NOT MUCH GOOD? WHAT!!...PrintsG.2000-0975
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIANS TYPES 4: OLD SCOUNDREL!!...PrintsG.2000-0976
DAUMIER, Honoré(PARISIANS TYPES 5): ...DOMINO!!...PrintsG.2000-0977
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIANS TYPES 6: Well there you are, what've you got there? —Don't talk to me about it; we've got people to stay and I've just done my shopping.PrintsG.2000-0978
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIANS TYPES 7: THERE!...GREAT TIMES FOR GREEN PEAS...PrintsG.2000-0979
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIANS TYPES 7: THERE!...GREAT TIMES FOR GREEN PEAS...PrintsG.2000-0980
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIANS TYPES 7: THERE!...GREAT TIMES FOR GREEN PEAS...PrintsG.2000-0981
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIANS TYPES 9: There are nevertheless people who look like that?...Isn't that so, Mr. DurandetPrintsG.2000-0982
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIANS TYPES 10: OH WELL! TOO BAD!...WE'LL PLEAD... I LIKE THAT BETTER!!...PrintsG.2000-0983
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIANS TYPES 11: You argue like a suger cane! —And you, like a suger beet!PrintsG.2000-0984
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIANS TYPES 23: MEMORIESPrintsG.2000-0985
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIANS TYPES 24: The Primary School Teacher: I will be honoured by your son!...what a pretty person!!!PrintsG.2000-0986
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIANS TYPES 25: REGRETSPrintsG.2000-0987
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIANS TYPES 26: Yes, Sir, your respectable air encourages me: you see in me a first tenor who has lost his DO, but who still has his wife. With eighteen children, and nothing more! nooo... thing mmmm... ore; lend me fifteen pounds or so! —I've only got a forty franc piece on me! —I'll give it back to you!PrintsG.2000-0988
DAUMIER, Honoré(PARISIANS TYPES 27): Oh! [it's] absolutely as if you were there, the big woman's taking off her corset, the little one's hunting for a flea.PrintsG.2000-0989
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIANS TYPES 28: A SAMPLE of what is sometimes called the Beaus of Paris.PrintsG.2000-0990
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIANS TYPES 28: A SAMPLE of what is sometimes called the Beaus of Paris.PrintsG.2000-0991
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIANS TYPES 29: Discomfort in talking to people who have a mania for putting thier story into action. —Yes dear Sir, do you think that the rrrrascal was allowed to laugh in my face. You know I won't stand for that. So, I punched him... there, like that, do you see, and I shook you... there, like that... vigorously.PrintsG.2000-0992
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIANS TYPES 30: —My God! Missus Bombec, what hit you? —Don't mention it,dear lady, the horror! the world's become so ferocious that I'd rather be the gatekeeper at the zoo. You know that Bezuchet on the fifth floor who tells everyone that her not-so great daughter, whose filling out nicely round the waist, has become Whatdropical. Me, I just said: oh yeh! —And that's the creature that... —by Jove, flew into my face.PrintsG.2000-0993
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIANS TYPES 31: Everything paid for? We've not been fololish to anyone!!...Cheerio.PrintsG.2000-0994
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIANS TYPES 32: You smell the merchandise... before tormenting it!...PrintsG.2000-0995
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIANS TYPES 33:Would you have Stirrup-oil!...PrintsG.2000-0996
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIANS TYPES 33:Would you have Stirrup-oil!...PrintsG.2000-0997
DAUMIER, HonoréPRACTICES OF THE MERCHANTS OF PARIS 4: That fits your head like a glove!PrintsG.2000-0998
DAUMIER, HonoréPRACTICES OF THE MERCHANTS OF PARIS 5: A discharge of fire!PrintsG.2000-0999
DAUMIER, HonoréPRACTICES OF THE MERCHANTS OF PARIS 6: She does make a fuss, that stuck up woman from the fifth floor, Wearing a hat! and two cups of milk for a sou! Damnation! Ma Capitaine, it's because we've got visitors this morning.PrintsG.2000-1000
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIAN TYPES 44: Citizen grocer, warrior pure and without stain, Once a corporal, he wore a moustache; Dreamed of a future of large bullions And since that time, is the terror of urchins.PrintsG.2000-1001
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIAN TYPES 45: —I'm the greatest enemy of factions. —No politics, Pa Rangoutot! —I'm not talking about them, I wish they'd ban sentry duty because mine's coming up.PrintsG.2000-1002
DAUMIER, HonoréGROTESQUE SCENES 5: The barbar thinks of his creditors while sharpening his razor. The stupefying practice before this face [makes its owner] begin to feel a stomach ache!...PrintsG.2000-1003
DAUMIER, HonoréPROFILES 2: “Hello there, hey! Madam hostess, I like soups bald” (Victor Hugo, Notre Dame de Paris)PrintsG.2000-1004
DAUMIER, HonoréPROFILES 5: THE PORTER ON HIS ROUNDS ON NEW YEAR'S DAY: Nothing but 115 francs for my wishes, and I've already done eight floors!!! Dunces of Tenants! Another time I'll give them wishes... wouldn't they like to get it!PrintsG.2000-1005
DAUMIER, HonoréPROFILES 7: THE FREQUENTER OF FÉLIX'S SHOP: Paris is at once the centre of civilisation, of the fine arts and of small pies; the love of the galette is pushed to fanaticism. Pastry cooks abound here, and today Paris is perhaps the city in the world where most brioches are made.PrintsG.2000-1006
DAUMIER, HonoréMONOMANIACS 1: THE BEASTOPHILE: The supreme happiness of the Beastophile is to make in his home a small menagerie in the bosom of which he spends his life. One can truly apply to him the proverb: “Tell me whom you associate with, [and] I’ll tell you who you are.”PrintsG.2000-1007
DAUMIER, HonoréMONOMANIACS 2: THE EMBROIDERER: An example of the error that nature sometimes commits in labelling the sexes. Thus, in the same way that you see so-called women who sport trousers, a kind of moustache, play the cornet, the double-bass, or who compose humanitarian novels; so you see so-called men who pluck the harp, hem ties, embroider at the frame with their men's hands, and if need be, do a little cooking.PrintsG.2000-1008
DAUMIER, HonoréMONOMANIACS 3: THE EXPERT: There are Experts and Experts, as there are Uncouth Peolple and Uncouth People. Firtly [there is] the Expert who knows (this is the rarest type); then the Expert who knows nothing, or knows stupid and useless things, that is to say, less than nothing. The Expert of these different categories passes for a profound, serious man; he is in a very good position, and makes a reputation in the world, like all who are hollow. He passes his days full of pleasures and free from failings, except that he is subject to the Cross of Honoour and the Academy.PrintsG.2000-1009
DAUMIER, HonoréMONOMANIACS 3: THE EXPERT: There are Experts and Experts, as there are Uncouth Peolple and Uncouth People. Firtly [there is] the Expert who knows (this is the rarest type); then the Expert who knows nothing, or knows stupid and useless things, that is to say, less than nothing. The Expert of these different categories passes for a profound, serious man; he is in a very good position, and makes a reputation in the world, like all who are hollow. He passes his days full of pleasures and free from failings, except that he is subject to the Cross of Honoour and the Academy.PrintsG.2000-1010
DAUMIER, HonoréMONOMANIACS 4: THE AMATEUR GUITARIST: Defying the immense yawn / Wich he elicits by singing his verses / He will sing a ballad / About the remnants of the universe...PrintsG.2000-1011
DAUMIER, HonoréMONOMANIACS 5: THE REGULATOR: The word regulator normally applying to a type of machine, may wall also be applied to the individual above. One finds in Paris, said to be the most spiritual town in the most spiritual country in the Universe, several dozen particular men whose sole intellectual occupation is to regulate, each day, their watch on the shot of midday from the canon of the Royal Palace. Here, gunpowder makes those happy who will never set the world on fire.PrintsG.2000-1012
DAUMIER, HonoréMONOMANIACS 5: THE REGULATOR: The word regulator normally applying to a type of machine, may wall also be applied to the individual above. One finds in Paris, said to be the most spiritual town in the most spiritual country in the Universe, several dozen particular men whose sole intellectual occupation is to regulate, each day, their watch on the shot of midday from the canon of the Royal Palace. Here, gunpowder makes those happy who will never set the world on fire.PrintsG.2000-1013
DAUMIER, HonoréMONOMANIACS 6: THE PARISIAN HUNTER: A benign being, above all harmless. A diligent hunter, leaving home after dawn, killing time rather than other things. His gun is no less philanthropic, no less a faithful observer of the 4th Commandement.PrintsG.2000-1014
DAUMIER, HonoréMONOMANIACS 7: THE HYPOCHONDRIAC: This class of citizens is the providence of medicine, the blessing of pharmacy, it is the Nymph Egeria who has inspired white mustard, Paraguay-Roux, the Regnault pâte, the Clyso-bolus and generally all the inventions destined to comfort non-suffering humanity. The hypochondriac gives himself by turns pleurisy, consumption Etc. Etc. He varies his illness in order to vary his pleasures and each day he exclaims, on feeling his pulse, “I truly must have an iron constitution to be able to resist all these illnesses.”PrintsG.2000-1015
DAUMIER, HonoréMONOMANIACS 8: THE COFFEE-LOVER: The half-cup easily becomes second nature; one finds a number of people who, like the lover above, have made themselves an immutable law to take their coffee, in order to facilitate digestion, even though their means do not allow them to dine. It is agreed that existence would be too bitter without chicory.PrintsG.2000-1016
DAUMIER, HonoréMONOMANIACS 8: THE COFFEE-LOVER: The half-cup easily becomes second nature; one finds a number of people who, like the lover above, have made themselves an immutable law to take their coffee, in order to facilitate digestion, even though their means do not allow them to dine. It is agreed that existence would be too bitter without chicory.PrintsG.2000-1017
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 44: WATER FROM THE WELL OF GRENELLE: —Certainly this hot water is very bad to drink. —Yes, but there are many small insects in it!PrintsG.2000-1018
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 44: WATER FROM THE WELL OF GRENELLE: —Certainly this hot water is very bad to drink. —Yes, but there are many small insects in it!PrintsG.2000-1019
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 48: SQUINTING: To be sure, I didn't recognise you! —Oh! that's because I've been operated on, I don't squint any more, that changes me completely don't you think? —Oh! completely, because before I think you squinted inwards....PrintsG.2000-1020
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 50: A considerable separation.PrintsG.2000-1021
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGICO-CLASSICAL PHYSIOGNOMIES 1: I saw, my lord, I saw your unfortunate son / Dragged by the horses that his hand had fed... Phedre [sic], Théromène's narrative.PrintsG.2000-1022
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGICO-CLASSICAL PHYSIOGNOMIES 1: I saw, my lord, I saw your unfortunate son / Dragged by the horses that his hand had fed... Phedre [sic], Théromène's narrative.PrintsG.2000-1023
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGICO-CLASSICAL PHYSIOGNOMIES 2: For whom are these Serpents which hiss on your heads?.. (Andromache, furies of Orestes)PrintsG.2000-1024
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGICO-CLASSICAL PHYSIOGNOMIES 3: Go and make the Greeks wonder at your fury;? / Go. I repudiate it and you horrify me!! (Andromaque)PrintsG.2000-1025
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGICO-CLASSICAL PHYSIOGNOMIES 3: Go and make the Greeks wonder at your fury;? / Go. I repudiate it and you horrify me!! (Andromaque)PrintsG.2000-1026
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGICO-CLASSICAL PHYSIOGNOMIES 4: I leave more in love than I ever was (Berenice.) [sic]PrintsG.2000-1027
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGICO-CLASSICAL PHYSIOGNOMIES 5: The day is no more pure than the depths of my heart.PrintsG.2000-1028
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGICO-CLASSICAL PHYSIOGNOMIES 6: Yes I come, into his temple, to adore the Eternal One. (Athalie)PrintsG.2000-1029
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGICO-CLASSICAL PHYSIOGNOMIES 6: Yes I come, into his temple, to adore the Eternal One. (Athalie)PrintsG.2000-1030
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGICO-CLASSICAL PHYSIOGNOMIES 8: ...Rodrigue are you courageous? (Le Cid.)PrintsG.2000-1031
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGICO-CLASSICAL PHYSIOGNOMIES 9: Hidden far from this place, Madam, I will see you; Conceal your love in the depths of your soul! (Britannius.) [sic]PrintsG.2000-1032
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGICO-CLASSICAL PHYSIOGNOMIES 10: Nutured in the Saraglio, I know all its winding roads! (Bajazet)PrintsG.2000-1033
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGICO-CLASSICAL PHYSIOGNOMIES 11: ...Let him die! (The Horatii)PrintsG.2000-1034
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGICO-CLASSICAL PHYSIOGNOMIES 11: ...Let him die! (The Horatii)PrintsG.2000-1035
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGICO-CLASSICAL PHYSIOGNOMIES 12: I am young, it is true; but to souls of good birth / Valour does not wait for the number of years. (Le Cid)PrintsG.2000-1036
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGICO-CLASSICAL PHYSIOGNOMIES 13: Yes, it is Agamemnon, it is your King who wakes you!... (Iphigenia)PrintsG.2000-1037
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGICO-CLASSICAL PHYSIOGNOMIES 14: Depart!... (Bajazet)PrintsG.2000-1038
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGICO-CLASSICAL PHYSIOGNOMIES 15: My chariot, my javelins, all of that troubles me; I no longer remember Neptune's lessons. (Phèdre)PrintsG.2000-1039
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGEDY 1: “What pains has this charming face cost me!...” (Phèdre)PrintsG.2000-1040
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGEDY 2: “Come, worthy upholders of Roman grandeur,” “Approach, Caesar’s comrades!...” (The Death of Caesar)PrintsG.2000-1041
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGEDY 3: “Yes! since I regain such a faithful friend”“My fortune will assume a new aspect” (Andromache)PrintsG.2000-1042
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGIC PHYSIOGNOMIES 2: MEROPE “A soldier such as I may justly lay claim “To govern the state when he has known how to defend it!”PrintsG.2000-1043
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGIC PHYSIOGNOMIES 3: ATHALIE “But I found no less than a horrible mingling “Of bone and flesh murdered and dragged throught the mire...!”PrintsG.2000-1044
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGIC PHYSIOGNOMIES 4: HAMLET “Take this urn and swear to me upon it,...” “Your mother, my son, was no criminal...” “Dare you do it, I believe in you!...”PrintsG.2000-1045
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGIC PHYSIOGNOMIES 5: ATHALIE “To the birds' young he gives food” “And his bounty to nature overall!”PrintsG.2000-1046
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGIC PHYSIOGNOMIES 6: ANDROMACHE “I have seen the days of my whole family cut short” “And my husband covered with blood dragged through the dust!”PrintsG.2000-1047
DAUMIER, HonoréTRAGIC PHYSIOGNOMIES 10: OEDIPUS —In piercing him, I myself felt in my soul, / All victorious as I was... you tremble, madam!PrintsG.2000-1048
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 1: THE PRIZE-GIVINGPrintsG.2000-1049
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 3: THE FIRST MEETINGPrintsG.2000-1050
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 9: FULL DRESS DAY: I think like this I look a little... slightly Old Guard!...PrintsG.2000-1051
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 10: THE FIRST BEARD: You really want to be able to shave your beard too, don't you, brat... for that wait until you're fifteen like me!...PrintsG.2000-1052
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 11: A DINNER AT VÉRY’S: So! I've just dined as a bachelor!... yes! but my wife entrusted me with a louis and I've got left... sixty centimes!PrintsG.2000-1053
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 12: A day of the 1st performancePrintsG.2000-1054
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 12: A day of the 1st performancePrintsG.2000-1055
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 18: SHROVE TUESDAY: —I say... Balandier... I think it’s raining?... —You’re mistaken... Moussard... seems to me the opposite ‘cos I’ve just caught sun-stroke!...PrintsG.2000-1056
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 19: A VANITY SATISFIED: —Oh! at last!... the Monitor has recorded my “very good”... naming me in full... about time, too... at least my constituents will no longer say I don't speak in the Chamber!...PrintsG.2000-1057
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 20: A NATIONAL HOLIDAY EVENING: It never fails... you go out to see the fire[works], and revel in nothing but water!...PrintsG.2000-1058
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 24: THE CASHING IN OF A NOTE: —There you are young man... against your bill of exchange for five hundred francs, I give you two hundred brand-new francs, plus a barely used camel... it comes from one of our last forays and will shortly disembark at Toulon... —I'll still take the cash... I'll make a present of the camel to Josephine... she can use it to take donkey rides in Montmorency valley!...PrintsG.2000-1059
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 25: A MEAGRE DINNER: —The fish was good, but it's far too dear on the bill... thirty nine francs for a meagre dinner!... —This restaurant owner's a heretic... he breaks one of the most Christian precepts: thou shalt not eat expensively on Fridays!...PrintsG.2000-1060
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 29: THE OPENING OF THE HUNTING SEASON: Grey eyes... that’s it... sallow complexion... there it is... big ears... exactly... red nose... ah! there's no record of that here, it’s a false arms licence you’ve got there... you haven’t got a red nose, it's violet... I'm arresting you!PrintsG.2000-1061
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 30: A CUSTOM OF INDIA: My dear friend, I come to make my most sincere compliments to you... our prince is definitely dead, and it is to you, the oldest officer of the palace, that befalls the distinguished honour of accompanying his wives to the pyre, where you will burn with them!...PrintsG.2000-1062
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 33: A SAINT’S DAY AND DAY OF BRACES: —Here my sweetheart... on the occasion of my Saint’s day I’ve embroidered these braces!... —(The gentleman, aside.) Good God I’ve already got eleven pairs of them in my drawer... I won’t get away with it this time for less than fifty crowns!... women really take too great an advantage of our wearing trousers, so as to make us wear braces!...PrintsG.2000-1063
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 46: A EULOGISTIC ARTICLE: —Read the article I’ve drafted on your work... I think you’ll be satisfied. —The lady reading— “We have just become acquinted with the volume published by Mme. Eulalie de Bois-Fleuri, and we can announce loudly that France includes one more Blockhead!...” —What Blockhead... but I wrote muse... rogue of a printer!...PrintsG.2000-1064
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 48: IN THE NATIONAL GUARD: You will also have the pleasure of being on guard in a fortnight, and the honour of being inspected at the end of the month!PrintsG.2000-1065
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 56: A PAYMENT OF DIVIDEND: —Excuse me!... they're announcing in all the newspapers that the Capricorn insurance company is making arrangements to pay out a first dividend, and they don't warn that the dividend's of thirty sous per share!... then take a hackney cab; I haven't even got the means to tip my coachman!...PrintsG.2000-1066
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 58: IN CARNIVAL MOOD: —Let's go and laugh and [dance] jigs!... personally, I'll be disguised as a friend!... —Excellent!... you won't be recognised!...PrintsG.2000-1067
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 61: A MISTRESS AT THE OPERA: —You see that little brunette dancer who's [skirt is] ballooning now... well, dear chap! I've had her for a week... she's mad about me!...PrintsG.2000-1068
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 62: THE DAQY WHEN YOU HAVE TO DISPLAY GALLANTRY: —How much is that big bouquet?... —Ten francs —Good God!... and this little here? —Fifteen francs —Damnation!...PrintsG.2000-1069
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 63: THE NEIGHBOURS BEFORE THE JUSTICE OF THE PEACE: Well, I won the case all the same, and you won't be so stuck-up now, Mrs. Pimbèche... because the Justice of the Peace has sentenced you to go back to your house which backs on to mine!...PrintsG.2000-1070
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 66: A NEWLY ENNOBLED MAN: (The manservant announcing) —The Baahh-ron de Blois-flotté!PrintsG.2000-1071
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 67: THE SHIRTMAKER: Sir, I’ve made everything there that’s most suitable... with a shirt of my style you can appear in whichever salon [you wish] and you’ll always be the best dressed man of the entire company...PrintsG.2000-1072
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 68: A FASHIONABLE SUIT: —Sir, I swear that this suit is very becoming!... —Yes it's becoming and economical... with a similar [short] jacket you can perfectly well open the door when [the bell], is rung, and pass yourself off as your own man-servant!...PrintsG.2000-1073
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 69: THE HASHISH SMOKERS: —Oh, what an Oriental pleasure I'm beginning to experience... I seem to be trotting on a camel!... —And I ... I think I'm being... beaten [with a stick on the soles of the feet]...PrintsG.2000-1074
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 71: A STEEPLE-CHASE WINNER: —So you confirm that I came in first... —My dear chap you were magnificent... everybody envies your lot!...PrintsG.2000-1075
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 75: THE RETURN FROM THE St. CLOUD FAIR: To the devil with reed-pipes and reed-pipers... how can they allow such an instrument in a country that already tolerates the Clarinet!...PrintsG.2000-1076
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 76: A ‘PAMELA’ HAT: You are quite right, madam, to embrace the ravishing form of this new hat... in profile above all it suits your countenance divinely!...PrintsG.2000-1077
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 77: PANCAKES: There you go, that's how I give one to myself!... PrintsG.2000-1078
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 80: A PHILANTHROPIC LOTTERY: —The gentleman —for my twenty francs I've won a dreadful woman's bag... how ridiculous! —The lady —and I['ve won] a pair of razors one of which is badly dented... what a bore!...PrintsG.2000-1079
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 84: RECEPTION OF A FREE-MASON: We know from a reliable source that you are here among us only to unveil our secrets to outsiders... your guilty schemes will be frustrated... I have just received order to plunge this dagger into your breast!...PrintsG.2000-1080
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 86: A DECLARATION, IN FULL PUBLIC: —I lo lo lo lo ve you!... —I lo lo lo lo ve you!... (This tender avowal having been made in a flat key, the husband is unable to repeat it)PrintsG.2000-1081
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 87: THE LADY WHO CULTIVATES THE ARTS: The gentlemen in chorus. It's charming...It's chaarming... It's chaaahhhming!...PrintsG.2000-1082
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 88: A NEW ACQUAINTANCE: Oh! madam... I've found Zémire for you, but I certainly think I've lost my heart!...PrintsG.2000-1083
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 91: A gentleman who wants to give himself the satisfaction of having his [death]mask.PrintsG.2000-1084
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 91: A gentleman who wants to give himself the satisfaction of having his [death]mask.PrintsG.2000-1085
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 93: THE DEVILISH SEDUCERS: —Did you see how that little woman looked at us out of the corner of her eye as she passed... it's only at our age that you can truly please women!...PrintsG.2000-1086
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 97: THEY RETURN FROM SPONGING OFF POPPETS.PrintsG.2000-1087
DAUMIER, HonoréLIFE'S HAPPY DAYS 100: A FILIAL HOMMAGE: Yes, it's Leonidas... it's certainly Leonidas...(The happy father deems it necessary to become tender because he recognises Leonidas.)PrintsG.2000-1088
DAUMIER, HonoréPASTORALS 1: —Come back here again... you great wheedler!... bite his calves puppy, bite his calves!... —Good God!... I'd never been acquainted with the force of that power there...concerning the punchPrintsG.2000-1089
DAUMIER, HonoréPASTORALS 4: Damn it, we've been copped!...PrintsG.2000-1090
DAUMIER, HonoréPASTORALS 9: Traveller, your passport ?...PrintsG.2000-1091
DAUMIER, HonoréPASTORALS 10: The danger of wanting to visit too wild spot.PrintsG.2000-1092
DAUMIER, HonoréPASTORALS 12: The danger of finding yourself in the middle of a point-to-point race, or pigsty-chase!PrintsG.2000-1093
DAUMIER, HonoréPASTORALS 13: —What!... all my sheep are dead of the pip and my chickens of sheep-pox!... and this is what's sold to me as a country house with a yield and charm!...PrintsG.2000-1094
DAUMIER, HonoréPASTORALS 13: —What!... all my sheep are dead of the pip and my chickens of sheep-pox!... and this is what's sold to me as a country house with a yield and charm!...PrintsG.2000-1095
DAUMIER, HonoréPASTORALS 22: —I tell you you've moved the boundary stone and you've moved it forward on to my field!... And I'm telling you I haven't... and I'll maintain in front of all the courts that it's due to my father, and even my grandfather, that my boundary's where it is!... Ah! but!...PrintsG.2000-1096
DAUMIER, HonoréPASTORALS 22: —I tell you you've moved the boundary stone and you've moved it forward on to my field!... And I'm telling you I haven't... and I'll maintain in front of all the courts that it's due to my father, and even my grandfather, that my boundary's where it is!... Ah! but!...PrintsG.2000-1097
DAUMIER, HonoréPASTORALS 22: —I tell you you've moved the boundary stone and you've moved it forward on to my field!... And I'm telling you I haven't... and I'll maintain in front of all the courts that it's due to my father, and even my grandfather, that my boundary's where it is!... Ah! but!...PrintsG.2000-1098
DAUMIER, HonoréPASTORALS 32: —Thief of a cock-chafer... so it's you who's eating away all my property... you'll perish by my hand alone!...PrintsG.2000-1099
DAUMIER, HonoréPASTORALS 34: -—Will you shut up with your Cock-a doodle-doos...there's no point in coming to the country to sleep peacefully, —I'm woken everyday at three o'clock in the morning... I slept better in Paris, even when my wife was alive!...PrintsG.2000-1100
DAUMIER, HonoréPASTORALS 40: —Needless to say, I've got to cross this devil of a small wood to get home... I'm angry at having stayed so late at neighbour Rigolard's so as to make a hundred at piquet... if I'd thought I'd have made only half a hundred.PrintsG.2000-1101
DAUMIER, HonoréPASTORALS 47: A gentle gust of windPrintsG.2000-1102
DAUMIER, HonoréPASTORALS 49: Whe they make your hay, and you want to inspect your reapers too closely.PrintsG.2000-1103
DAUMIER, HonoréCaricaturana 17: We're shareholders of the agricultural and arch-fib institute of Coëtbo, of Pysigno-trap, formerly the sanitary society of Mors-Lycos, of the warranty paper for thieves, of the Hoax, a very political newspaper, and of a group of other philanthropic operations; we've just received our dividends and we're using them to eat on a pleasure trip... waiter, another sou's worth of cheese!PrintsG.2000-1104
DAUMIER, HonoréCaricaturana 20: TO ALL THOSE PEOPLE WHO HAVE CAPITAL TO LOSE; For one hundred francs, one and a quarter centimes, in order to eat every twelve hours... THERE'S AN INVESTMENT!! / New principles. We divide the interest in centimes and by the hour... THERE'S A TRICK!!! Guarantees offered to shareholders. The manager takes the society's money and puts some of it in the bank... THERE'S A BANK!!!! Capital...We won't tell you, you've got to see it to believe it... IF YOU WANT BUSINESS, HERE IT IS!!!!!!!!PrintsG.2000-1105
DAUMIER, HonoréCaricaturana 20: TO ALL THOSE PEOPLE WHO HAVE CAPITAL TO LOSE; For one hundred francs, one and a quarter centimes, in order to eat every twelve hours... THERE'S AN INVESTMENT!! / New principles. We divide the interest in centimes and by the hour... THERE'S A TRICK!!! Guarantees offered to shareholders. The manager takes the society's money and puts some of it in the bank... THERE'S A BANK!!!! Capital...We won't tell you, you've got to see it to believe it... IF YOU WANT BUSINESS, HERE IT IS!!!!!!!!PrintsG.2000-1106
DAUMIER, HonoréCaricaturana 24: Cabs as stocks: It's not going well, my horse is failing, expenses consume me, I'm dying of hunger. —My poor Bertrand, how stupid you are! Exchange your turkey-hen for a thoroughbred, your old 1200 quid carriage for a tilbury, your livery misery of a jockey's silk, go to it... Capital thrrrrrree hundred thousand francs! Doughty deeds, random tricks, will increase your out-goings, lessen your gains, you'll recoup your losses in abundance!! —In abundance of what? —In abundance of shares, fool!!PrintsG.2000-1107
DAUMIER, HonoréCaricaturana 33: Robert-Macaire the Journalist: I'm bringing you an article about the new law. I've slated it in a joking way, you see! —What are you thinking of, Mister Macaire, we shouldn't be attacking that law, we should defend it. — Ah,indeed, indeed, I'll rework it and make a frothy article in favour of the aforesaid law.PrintsG.2000-1108
DAUMIER, HonoréCaricaturana 34: What the Devil! Let us respect propriety! But steward, take care with your invitations!... You are missing out all the proprieties!... Why, you have on your list a Mr. Grippardin, a disreputable man!... A Mr. Durand, whose fortune comes from I don't know where!... What the Devil! Mr.Bertrand, if I'd let you do this, you'd end up by making me keep low company.PrintsG.2000-1109
DAUMIER, HonoréCaricaturana 38: Lively! Lively! Bertrand, got to push the merchandise onto the market, beat the big drum, make a show, attract the sucker's attention! Lively! Lively! We'll attack ourselves in the newspapers, write to ourselves, reply to ourselves, answer ourselves, insult ourselves, and above all, advertise ourselves... —do you think the public won't have the key to these shams? —Leave off, everybody has the key to them except the public.PrintsG.2000-1110
DAUMIER, HonoréCaricaturana 48: A candidate: Whom do you need?... A man of probity, conscientious, a serious man, a manufacturer, a man who doesn't need the government in order to become rich, a man familiar with the law, who knows it well, from experience, from long experience... A long experience of the law... You couldn't make a better choice, take my... take my honourable friend.PrintsG.2000-1111
DAUMIER, HonoréCaricaturana 50: Abuse of article 214 of the civil code: My lady wife, you leave me without anything, you only give me a miserable annuity of three thousand quid, you leave me at your door like a beggar, and furthermore, you want to distance me from Paris, to expatriate me, to deport me!... No,no, I shall not leave Frrrrrance!.. No,no!!... Listen. I owe 10,000 f[rancs] to my friend Bertrand, it's a gentleman debt, I owe the keeper of the cheap eating house 525 and ten francs to my lodging house, total 10,535 f[rancs]; give me a few thousand francs more to distract me from my domestic sorrows and I'll leave you in peace, word of honour!PrintsG.2000-1112
DAUMIER, HonoréThe Hundred-and-one Robert-Macaire [Caricaturana] 100: Mr. Daumier, your Robert-Macaire series is a charming thing!... It is the exact portrayal of the pilfering of our age... It is the faithful portrait of the crowd of rascals you find everywhere, in business, in politics, in finance, everywhere! everywhere!!... The cheats should hate you... But the estimation of honest people is yours... Have you still not received the cross of honour?... It's shocking!!...PrintsG.2000-1113
DAUMIER, HonoréCaricaturana 80: Robert Macaire shareholder: But Mr.Macaire, when I distributed these dividends, you knew that they were taken on the capital? —What does it matter! you didn't have the right to distribute them, you should refund them to us. —Refund them to you!!! but you accepted them, it's up to you to refund them! —You didn't have the right to distribute them to us, that's my opinion and I'm sticking to it, you should pay them back to us, that's my opinion and I'm sticking to itPrintsG.2000-1114
DAUMIER, HonoréCaricaturana 81: Would you like gold,would you like silver, would you like diamonds, millions [of francs], thousands of million? Come, help yourself... Baoud! Baoud! Baoud-boud-boud!! Here's bitumen, here's steel, lead, gold, paper, here's gallllvanised irrrrron... come on, come on, come on quickly, the law's going to change, you're going to lose it all, hurry up, get them, get your tickets! get your tickets! (Lively, lively with the music) Baoud! Baoud!! baoud-baoud-baoud!! Baoud! Baoud!!PrintsG.2000-1115
DAUMIER, HonoréCaricaturana 82: Write: Sir, In reply to the letter which you did me the honour of writing, I regret to tell you that the shares of the European Society of Incombustible Boot Polish have been fully subscribed to. However, I have registered your request, and will have the honour of giving you immediate notice in the event of a new issue. I am etc. R.Macaire, Director... Print “withdraw 300,000[francs] and flood France with new shares... —What, we haven't disposed of a single share, we haven't had a single request, we haven't got a sou and you... —Bertrand! You're as thick as a plank... Do what I say and you'll seePrintsG.2000-1116
DAUMIER, HonoréCaricaturana 92: Sir, I despise the charlatanism of the poster, I despise the Puffs of the advertisement, I abhor everything which smells of the charalatan, the tumbler, the rope-dancer, and I limit myself to producing with all naivete and foolishness my merchandise. Read my catalogue! Scent of love, esteem and friendship, in phials from the Middle-Ages... Extract of the smile of infancy —Perfume of Adolphe's first steps— Water of the peoples' alliance, for the handkerchief, with Beranger's song. Perfume of General Foy, a scent to strengthen the brain's fibre and to remind the French of their liberties and rights guaranteed by the constitutional charter. Surrounded by an oration given upon the tomb of the immortal deputy by one of his honourable colleagues. You see, it's impossible to be more simple.PrintsG.2000-1117
DAUMIER, HonoréCaricaturana 93: Suffer the little children to come unto me!... Do you understand the parable, Bertrand? —you don't! blockhead! we'll form a paternal and philanthropic association, we receive 5/10ths now, in order to give 500 for 100 in the future... —And what shall we fix it to in the future —We'll up sticks. Blockhead! There we'll place the tontine, Tonton-ton-ton, Tontine, ton-tonPrintsG.2000-1118
DAUMIER, HonoréCaricaturana 2: Frontpiece to the misadventures of Mr. Gogo,Which will appear in PROVISIONAL CARICATURE.PrintsG.2000-1119
DAUMIER, HonoréMISADVENTURES AND DISAPPOINTMENT OF MR.GOGO 1: What, Director, you've lost 99,721[francs] 35 centimes from the 100,000 f[rancs] that my father deposited in your friendly society 40 years ago!... But your prospectuses say that your Capital has increased six-fold in six years from the accumulation of interests and the interest on the interests... —it's true, but... misfortunes... variations in revenue... my predecessors fleeing from their creditors... anyway, the future of this mutual society is assured from now on... —Oh! it's assured? well that's different!... well!! keep my 278[francs] 65 centimes, accumulate interest and try to regain the capital... don't lose it... I'll come back later... —very well!!... very well!!... I'll keep an eye on your money, I'll look after it as if it were my own... come back later... as late as possible.PrintsG.2000-1120
DAUMIER, HonoréMISADVENTURES AND DISAPPOINTMENT OF MR.GOGO 2: My son, you are wrong to risk your money in shares, the Stock Exchange is a den of swindlers, bitumen is a beastliness, the mines are precipices,... a wise man should enjoy his fortune quietly... —It's true, mother, I'm wrong, but I need some thousands of francs, and I've come to ask you... —My God!... I'd give it with pleasure... but ... frankly!... the card game ruined me this winter...PrintsG.2000-1121
DAUMIER, HonoréMISADVENTURES AND DISAPPOINTMENT OF MR.GOGO 4: But my dear Gogo, you're joking, how can you leave in your business the three thousand francs my daughter brings you, and the two hundred thousand francs for which you are indebted to her?... do you consider that? to expose the fortune of my child to the risks of commerce!... and if you don't succeed,... if you die, my daughter will then be ruined?... not so, not so, if you please! you're going to marry according to dowry regulations, to put into a good mortgage,... Devil take it! I should foresee a separation, today you're a friend, tomorrow you're not, you see it all the time.PrintsG.2000-1122
DAUMIER, HonoréMISADVENTURES AND DISAPPOINTMENT OF MR.GOGO 4: But my dear Gogo, you're joking, how can you leave in your business the three thousand francs my daughter brings you, and the two hundred thousand francs for which you are indebted to her?... do you consider that? to expose the fortune of my child to the risks of commerce!... and if you don't succeed,... if you die, my daughter will then be ruined?... not so, not so, if you please! you're going to marry according to dowry regulations, to put into a good mortgage,... Devil take it! I should foresee a separation, today you're a friend, tomorrow you're not, you see it all the time.PrintsG.2000-1123
DAUMIER, HonoréGreat Exhibition of Industry and Contemporary Hoaxes: Come in and judge for yourselves! I've directed everything, inspired everything, the Tribunals' galette for the Digest (Aside; and for a difficult digestion) The Physionopilfer which catches the manner of everything! (except the resemblance.) Running bitumen (quite.) Men's shirts for the use of small children of which you glimpse only the (Sham.) Marvellous indestructible hats (which melt in the sun and are diluted in the rain.)Dromedary pommade, so much sought after (by camels.) Fool's seed which you know (all of you.) The English Brewery which froths so well (in the Newspapers.) and the sublime, the classical coal of St. Pétrain which you can put to the test (by fire.)PrintsG.2000-1124
DAUMIER, HonoréGreat Exhibition of Industry and Contemporary Hoaxes: Come in and judge for yourselves! I've directed everything, inspired everything, the Tribunals' galette for the Digest (Aside; and for a difficult digestion) The Physionopilfer which catches the manner of everything! (except the resemblance.) Running bitumen (quite.) Men's shirts for the use of small children of which you glimpse only the (Sham.) Marvellous indestructible hats (which melt in the sun and are diluted in the rain.)Dromedary pommade, so much sought after (by camels.) Fool's seed which you know (all of you.) The English Brewery which froths so well (in the Newspapers.) and the sublime, the classical coal of St. Pétrain which you can put to the test (by fire.)PrintsG.2000-1125
DAUMIER, HonoréGreat Exhibition of Industry and Contemporary Hoaxes: Come in and judge for yourselves! I've directed everything, inspired everything, the Tribunals' galette for the Digest (Aside; and for a difficult digestion) The Physionopilfer which catches the manner of everything! (except the resemblance.) Running bitumen (quite.) Men's shirts for the use of small children of which you glimpse only the (Sham.) Marvellous indestructible hats (which melt in the sun and are diluted in the rain.)Dromedary pommade, so much sought after (by camels.) Fool's seed which you know (all of you.) The English Brewery which froths so well (in the Newspapers.) and the sublime, the classical coal of St. Pétrain which you can put to the test (by fire.)PrintsG.2000-1126
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE MOUNTEBANKS: Oh, Master Bilboquet, we're done for, those buffoons there are going to take our public from us. —Fear nothing, Gringallet, there's no point in rivalry, that's high comedy!!!...PrintsG.2000-1127
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE MOUNTEBANKS: You see here the great celebrities of literary, musical and artistic France, they are each 36 feet below sea-level...PrintsG.2000-1128
DAUMIER, HonoréADVERTISING AND PUBLICITY 1: Rascally posters! what roguish advertisements!!... Imagine, I've taken 1,675 boxes of Topical for the Body —And me! would you believe it, Sir! that I've covered my head in fur for 1,853 francs of Lion Pommade!!...PrintsG.2000-1129
DAUMIER, HonoréADVERTISING AND PUBLICITY 2: THEY MAKE THIS POOR PUBLIC SWALLOW THIS!! The Rubber Clyso-Trompe occupies, within the large family of emollients, the place which the gentle flute holds among wind instruments. The Clyso-Trompe refreshes ideas, destroys bugs, calms nervous irritation, opens up intelligence, purifies the Conscience of remorse, inspires Dithyrambs upon the museum of Versailles, but does not at all relieve colic. The lights of the ox in early infacy have received the commendation of all crowned heads. This admirable Pectoral cures Dim-sightedness, Corns, Whitlows, freckles, the mania for maknig dramas. etc. etc. etc. This velvet paste is most particularly suitable for everyone. It relieves hoarseness as if by hand. Duprez is indebted to it from 553 feet above sealevel, where he has never been. It even gives children in the best of health Whooping-cough.PrintsG.2000-1130
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 7: Spanish Shareholders. Here's a first-rate Number! Thanks to Mister Espartero, And to good Mister Maroto, We're no longer at Zero.PrintsG.2000-1131
DAUMIER, HonoréROBERT MACAIRE. 2nd Series 1: Greetings! land of hospitality... greetings! motherland to those who no longer have one... sacred refuge for the unfortunates whom human justice casts out... greetings!!! To all drooping hearts how dear Belgium is!PrintsG.2000-1132
DAUMIER, HonoréROBERT MACAIRE. 2nd Series 2: —Yes, Madam, I am completely devoted to our August Prince, and by means of a few miserable hundreds of thousands of francs will undertake to re-establish him on the throne. —What are your means? —My means! I am full of means! I have friends, newspapers, and if the entire Macaire family declares itself for him, never could a Prince raise a more innumerable army!...PrintsG.2000-1133
DAUMIER, HonoréROBERT MACAIRE. 2nd Series 3: Yes, Sir, you see in me a victim of political hatreds... an outcast... I have been condemned Falsely and I have had to go into exile... I'm clearing off to Belgium in order to reach Spain where I count on taking up arms... (aside) if I can't take anything else.PrintsG.2000-1134
DAUMIER, HonoréROBERT MACAIRE. 2nd Series 5: SETTING THE BILL. —Mister de Macaire, allow me to tell you that your bill astonishes me! For a spy to keep the prince up to date with the Newspapers 120,000 f For a riot which did not take place 35,000 Honorariums for some people, supporters of the Prince 370,000 15 525,000 15—Why your Grace, does that surprises you, but do you therefore think you can regain a throne as easily as you lose it? a mistake, your Grace, a mistake, you are not abreast of the times.PrintsG.2000-1135
DAUMIER, HonoréROBERT MACAIRE. 2nd Series 6: (Robert) So! my dear director, how goes your business? (Bertrand) Oh, vefry well, very well!! I'm very satisfied... only we don't have a sou, we can't continue. —The deuce!! —But a capitalist should deposit 200000 francs with us, the document's going to be signed this evening or tomorrow... I'm very impatient, I've got the greatest need for a pair of boots.PrintsG.2000-1136
DAUMIER, HonoréROBERT MACAIRE. 2nd Series 8: Dramatic farce. Steady on! —Steady on!... don't raise the curtain, I'm not performing... —(The director, hastening, frightened) You're joking, my dear Macaire, you're joking, aren't you? —Not at all, not at all... I won't act... —You won’t play a similar trick at the theatre, on the author, on your poor comrades... —Brrrrt! you don't keep to your engagements, [so] I break mine, give me the forfeit... —I don't keep to my engagements!! —No, you should pay me ready cash, and you owe me... —What ? —You owe me 75 centimes.PrintsG.2000-1137
DAUMIER, HonoréROBERT MACAIRE. 2nd Series 8: Dramatic farce. Steady on! —Steady on!... don't raise the curtain, I'm not performing... —(The director, hastening, frightened) You're joking, my dear Macaire, you're joking, aren't you? —Not at all, not at all... I won't act... —You won’t play a similar trick at the theatre, on the author, on your poor comrades... —Brrrrt! you don't keep to your engagements, [so] I break mine, give me the forfeit... —I don't keep to my engagements!! —No, you should pay me ready cash, and you owe me... —What ? —You owe me 75 centimes.PrintsG.2000-1138
DAUMIER, HonoréROBERT MACAIRE. 2nd Series 11: Again my creditors, always my creditors... it's em... thing!... What do those animals want form me?... would that they'd leave me in peace!... Me, do I ask anything of them?PrintsG.2000-1139
DAUMIER, HonoréROBERT MACAIRE. 2nd Series 12: What's the matter with you, Robert? you seem full of care. —Yes I'm vexed... Those devils of Shareholders have tormented me so much, tormented me so much that I gave them a dividend. —Deuce! a real dividend? —Yes, I gave it to them completely.. —What are you goin to do? —I'm going to try to get it back.PrintsG.2000-1140
DAUMIER, HonoréROBERT MACAIRE. 2nd Series 15: A groundless quarrel. —..Yes, Sir, do me the pleasure of giving that jovial fellow a brief respite... understood that the aforesaid gentleman denies himself the printing of my newspaper, and by this fact ruins my undertaking; to see oneself condemned to 67,000 f[rancs] of losses and interest... —But on what is his refusal grounded? —Oh, on a foolishness.... a trifle... on what I should pay him in cash, for which I'm 21 months in arrears... it's a poor pretext, a groundless quarrel.PrintsG.2000-1141
DAUMIER, HonoréROBERT MACAIRE. 2nd Series 16: Sirs, crushed under the weight of misfortune, ruined, laid bare, I lost my head, I abandoned all that was dear to me, my motherrrland, my creditors, the whole paraphernalia... here am I on foreign soil... sheltered from my persecutors, but ready for the greatest sacrifices to preserve intact the name of Macaire. In consequence, I offer you 2 per cent payable in ten years;... by refusing, you can only lose hopes of the above-mentioned 2 per cent and the estmation of your servant / Macaire.PrintsG.2000-1142
DAUMIER, HonoréROBERT MACAIRE. 2nd Series 17: Man in naluratibus [sic]. Philosophy, my dear Bertrand, explains very well our two characters from our physiques... you are weakness, I am strength... to you is cunning, to me courage... you are the ivy and I the oak, without me the slightest breeze from the police will plunge you into a torrent of misfortune... do not leave me and inscribe upon your arms: I die or I cling.PrintsG.2000-1143
DAUMIER, HonoréROBERT MACAIRE. 2nd Series 17: Man in naluratibus [sic]. Philosophy, my dear Bertrand, explains very well our two characters from our physiques... you are weakness, I am strength... to you is cunning, to me courage... you are the ivy and I the oak, without me the slightest breeze from the police will plunge you into a torrent of misfortune... do not leave me and inscribe upon your arms: I die or I cling.PrintsG.2000-1144
DAUMIER, HonoréROBERT MACAIRE. 2nd Series 18: The way in which you go on one can clearly see that money means nothing to you! if I left you to your own devices, my money would soon be squandered... —Bah! father, it's not for yourself that you accumulate money... —Do you think perhaps it is for you, no, no, with the kind of life you lead I will live longer than you... —My dear father, you only have unpleasant things to say to me...PrintsG.2000-1145
DAUMIER, HonoréROBERT MACAIRE. 2nd Series 19: Macaire inheritor-philanthropist. —You see, Bertrand, my wife is dead, my rights to the inheritance are contestable; I'll offer a third of it to the poor, on condition that they immediately advance me the rest... they'll never touch a brass farthing!... that's how I manipulate legacies!! —Well done, dear fellow! If you don't pick up the Manthyon prize, you'll have been robbed!PrintsG.2000-1146
DAUMIER, HonoréCARICATURES OF THE DAY 20: THE SUBSCRIBER FROM INDUSTRY. (The Cashier) your name? ( The Subscriber) Mr. Filenfin, manufacturer of incombustible textiles, keeps [here] everything relating to his estate at 395, rue St. Denis, put in 75 hundred [for me] (aside) minus philanthropy and advertising!!!PrintsG.2000-1147
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 119: A PANIC AT THE STOCK EXCHANGE. Shares are offered in vain, everyone avoids investing in them.PrintsG.2000-1148
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 163: Project for statues to ornament the Peristyle of the Stock ExchangePrintsG.2000-1149
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 197: HOLDERS OF SHARES IN CALIFORNIA. —Yesterday I poured in five thousand francs as the price of a thousand shares in the Californian Yellow Water-Lily Company... we've the cultivation of the entire left bank of the Sacramento... I think I've done good business... and the owner is as convinced as I am... —I prefer the Golden Carrot Company, I've put all the money I have in it.PrintsG.2000-1150
DAUMIER, HonoréSKETCHES OF THE STOCK EXCHANGE BY DAUMIER 1: Below the upper vignette: Interior of the Stock Exchange. —A view from above on a day [when prices] fall. Below the lower vignette: The stock-brokers' ring, —the least pretty of all known rings.PrintsG.2000-1151
DAUMIER, HonoréSKETCHES OF THE STOCK EXCHANGE BY DAUMIER 2: Below the upper vignette: SMALL-SCALE SPECULATORS. —Mrs. Chaffarou... I need to get out of MILITARY BEDS in order to get into the CRYSTAL PALACE... unless of course I get into the GAUDALQUIVIR. Below the lower vignette: OPENING OF THE STOCK EXCHANGE. How you can fall flat on your face by running too quickly after wealth.PrintsG.2000-1152
DAUMIER, HonoréSKETCHES OF THE STOCK EXCHANGE BY DAUMIER 3: Below the upper vignette: How is it that everyone can't be happy. Below the lower vignette: Pleasant view of the little nightly Stock Exchange in front of the Opera thoroughfare: —make no mistake about it, all these gentlemen are capitalists.PrintsG.2000-1153
DAUMIER, HonoréSKETCHES OF THE STOCK EXCHANGE BY DAUMIER 4: Below the upper vignette: Counsels by the tribunal of commerce in all the majesty of their costume. Below the lower vignette: A raiser of business not disdaining to trouble himself over a mere length of neckerchief.PrintsG.2000-1154
DAUMIER, HonoréSKETCHES OF THE STOCK EXCHANGE BY DAUMIER 5: Below the upper vignette: A day of collapse. Below the lower vignette: Having become a substantial person.PrintsG.2000-1155
DAUMIER, HonoréSKETCHES OF THE STOCK EXCHANGE BY DAUMIER 6: Below the upper vignette: Having succeeded in getting into the interior of the Stock Exchange under the pretext of being litigants at the tribunal of commerce. Below the lower vignette: What a company at the Stock Exchange doors!... to be sure, I'd prefer to queue at the Ambigu, it's better regulated!...PrintsG.2000-1156
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 27: NEWS FROM THE STOCK EXCHANGE. —The Emperor of Russia has entered Constantinople! —And then what? —He's furious, he didn't find the sultan who'd entered St. Petersburg on the very same day.PrintsG.2000-1157
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 4: Desolation of the Stock Exchange's Cossacks on the day when it was announced that the Turks had won a victory.PrintsG.2000-1158
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 2: The Russo-Turkish Seesaw, —A new game for which Minister Gogo pays all the costs.PrintsG.2000-1159
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 1: Mister Gogo and the newsmongers of the Stock Exchange.PrintsG.2000-1160
DAUMIER, HonoréSMALL-SCALE SPECULATORS 3: —And to think that we're forbidden from going in there to do our little bits of business too... those men! no respect at all for the fair sex!...PrintsG.2000-1161
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 330: View of Paris since they have played the famous moral comedy entitled THE STOCK EXCHANGE.PrintsG.2000-1162
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE DOERS OF BUSINESS 1: —I'm launching my great concern —the moment has come... I'll cerrtainly set up a company to exploit my idea..., the manufacture of Artificial Prunes... a capital of three million! —I see what you're driving at, you're going to ask me for the stones!PrintsG.2000-1163
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE DOERS OF BUSINESS 2: A magnificent project for an aerial railway which will link the Panthéon with the Montmartre hills... outlay, two hundred million francs!... —as for the profits, they're incalculable!...PrintsG.2000-1164
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE DOERS OF BUSINESS 3: —It's still going down!...PrintsG.2000-1165
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE SPECULATORS 1: —I bought this ground at one franc per metre and I'll sell it at 9 francs. —Who to?... —The name's not important as long as I earn 8 francs per metre... it's not too expensive. the ground's well worth 600 francs per metre on the boulevard Montmartre!... —Yes, but this place isn't populated. —What d'you mean, not populated... there are more than twenty thousand rabbits!PrintsG.2000-1166
DAUMIER, HonoréTODAY'S PHILANTHROPISTS 5: —Madam... it is not enough only to have danced for the benefit of those poor Poles... let us be Philanthropists to the very end... let us take supper for their profit!...PrintsG.2000-1167
DAUMIER, HonoréTODAY'S PHILANTHROPISTS 6: —Sir, I'm giving towards the Batignolles earthquake... here are two francs... but put down my name and address in your day-book: Rigolard Philanthropic stationer, 345, rue St. Honoré, stocks clocks, plasters by Dantan, Bohemian glass, English riding-sticks, German chemical matches, and generally everything that doesn't relate to his profession!...PrintsG.2000-1168
DAUMIER, HonoréTODAY'S PHILANTHROPISTS 9: “Yesterday, in the rue St. Honoré, a respectable old man fell, struck by an attack of apoplexy, it would have been the end of him had not the celebrated Doctor Cabassol, who was by chance at his window at No. 107, hastened to fly to his aid: thanks to intelligent and prodigious help together with the most touching solicitude the sick man was promptly restored to life. Our celebrated Doctor Cabassol topping his generous behaviour wanted to receive as payment for his care only the thanks of a family which will eternally bless his name. Honour to Doctor Cabassol!” —Look here, it's you who's the respectable old man in question, yesterday you failed to fall when coming to see me, you could have injured yourself and then I could have saved you... I contrived it all a little more dramatically for the newspaper... it won't do you any harm and it'll do me a lot of good!PrintsG.2000-1169
DAUMIER, HonoréTODAY'S PHILANTHROPISTS 11: —I've already forbidden you to call me master... understrand that all men are brothers... animal!PrintsG.2000-1170
DAUMIER, HonoréTODAY'S PHILANTHROPISTS 12: —So then, my friend, at the age of twenty two you had already killed three men... what a powerful nature, and how guilty society is for not having better guided it!... —Oh! yeah sir!... in my view the police have been very wrong... without them I wouldn't be here!...PrintsG.2000-1171
DAUMIER, HonoréTODAY'S PHILANTHROPISTS 15: —Come closer, friends, do not be ashamed... you see that it is only I myself!... you are five hundred... good... today I am going to distribute these twenty three bunches of faggots and this pot-full of broth, broth in which each week I pour the best part of my fortune!...PrintsG.2000-1172
DAUMIER, HonoréTODAY'S PHILANTHROPISTS 15: —Come closer, friends, do not be ashamed... you see that it is only I myself!... you are five hundred... good... today I am going to distribute these twenty three bunches of faggots and this pot-full of broth, broth in which each week I pour the best part of my fortune!...PrintsG.2000-1173
DAUMIER, HonoréTODAY'S PHILANTHROPISTS 17: —Worshipful mayor... in passing through your town we come to you to propose giving a large concert for the benefit of the poor... we will only deduct in advance from the takings the full the expenses of our journey,... which amount to nothing but eight hundred francs.PrintsG.2000-1174
DAUMIER, HonoréTODAY'S PHILANTHROPISTS 25: —I'll never again in my life collect for the poor!... from the moment when I got seventeen francs less than Mrs Ramachard!...PrintsG.2000-1175
DAUMIER, HonoréPEOPLE OF THE LAW 23: AT THE AGUESSEAU CAFÉ. While awaiting the hearing, Demosthenes lunches at the client's expense, steak and chips driving eloquence on.PrintsG.2000-1176
DAUMIER, HonoréPEOPLE OF THE LAW 24: —What a pity that charming little woman didn't ask me to defend her... how I would have argued that her husband is a rascal!...PrintsG.2000-1177
DAUMIER, HonoréPEOPLE OF THE LAW 31: —We've got a great show today, Mr. Galuchet!... —By Jove, I think so... a murder embellished by rape!...PrintsG.2000-1178
DAUMIER, HonoréPEOPLE OF THE LAW 32: —Let them speak a little ill of you... let them say it... in just a moment I myself will insult your adversary's whole family!...PrintsG.2000-1179
DAUMIER, HonoréPEOPLE OF THE LAW 34: —Lost again in the Royal Court... and he's moaning as if he hadn't still got the High Court of Appeal!...PrintsG.2000-1180
DAUMIER, HonoréPEOPLE OF THE LAW 35: True, you've lost your case...PrintsG.2000-1181
DAUMIER, HonoréPEOPLE OF THE LAW 37: —It certainly seems that my jolly fellow is a great villian... so much the better... if I succeed in having him acquitted, what credit to me!...PrintsG.2000-1182
DAUMIER, HonoréPEOPLE OF THE LAW 38: When crime doesn't pay.PrintsG.2000-1183
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 37: A STUBBORN OLD MAN. —Clerk of the court, would you be kind enough to tell me when they'll punish the individual who, at the place du Havre, put my eye in the condition in which you see it. —But sir, it's unthinkable that you should continue to wear such an eye-patch when we've proven to you that no one was punched in the place du Havre... do you know that the ex-members of the Society of the Tenth of December would have the right to demand compensation for the harm that you're doing to their reputation!PrintsG.2000-1184
DAUMIER, HonoréSKETCHES BY DAUMIER 3: —Your client is a scoundrel who's murdered six women, and you're counting on extenuating circumstances. —Why of course!... the jury is composed entirely of married men.PrintsG.2000-1185
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 49: —What!... another wrong Stéphen, this is the twelfth since this morning.PrintsG.2000-1186
DAUMIER, HonoréTENANTS AND LANDLORDS 1: Inconvenient to put their dwelling up for rent in the month of January.PrintsG.2000-1187
DAUMIER, HonoréTENANTS AND LANDLORDS 6: Inconvenient to visit without caution a mezzanine room where the ceiling is a little too low.PrintsG.2000-1188
DAUMIER, HonoréTENANTS AND LANDLORDS 12: Robber of a landlord... who doesn't want to have repairs done for me except in fine weather!...PrintsG.2000-1189
DAUMIER, HonoréTENANTS AND LANDLORDS 15: A FURTIVE HOUSE-MOVING. —Take no notice... it's our friend Cabassol who's feeling uncomfortable, and whom we're taking home!...PrintsG.2000-1190
DAUMIER, HonoréTENANTS AND LANDLORDS 18: How the Spanish balcony is included in Paris.PrintsG.2000-1191
DAUMIER, HonoréTENANTS AND LANDLORDS 22: Is the account exact?... now you're going to ask me if I can give you a receipt... under the pretext that if one's rich one should always give something!...PrintsG.2000-1192
DAUMIER, HonoréTENANTS AND LANDLORDS 30: —Look how they've ruined my walls with their chimney flues... tenants shouldn't be allowed to light fires!... PrintsG.2000-1193
DAUMIER, HonoréWHEN YOU'RE UNLUCKY 1: —To think that I've not been able to fire a single shot since this morning!... —Oh! different from me... I've killed my dog!...PrintsG.2000-1194
DAUMIER, HonoréWHEN YOU'RE UNLUCKY 2: And not even a bit of powder!...PrintsG.2000-1195
DAUMIER, HonoréWHEN YOU'RE UNLUCKY 4: Take no notice sir... it's yer beer I'm servin' yer!...PrintsG.2000-1196
DAUMIER, HonoréWHEN YOU'RE UNLUCKY 8: Shareholders in the railways talking about dividends.PrintsG.2000-1197
DAUMIER, HonoréWHEN YOU'RE UNLUCKY 9: I thought better of her than that...PrintsG.2000-1198
DAUMIER, HonoréWHEN YOU'RE UNLUCKY 10: I'm no longer astonished if I haven't seen my hat...PrintsG.2000-1199
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE ALARMISTS AND ALARMED. 1: —Oh my god! they 've set fire to the neighbour's house!... don't look, Théodore, it'll hurt you too much!... —Why no... it's he who 's just lit up his window with three Chinese lanterns!...PrintsG.2000-1200
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE ALARMISTS AND ALARMED. 2: Where can that band of armed men be going!...PrintsG.2000-1201
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE ALARMISTS AND ALARMED. 2: Where can that band of armed men be going!...PrintsG.2000-1202
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE ALARMISTS AND ALARMED. 2: Where can that band of armed men be going!...PrintsG.2000-1203
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE ALARMISTS AND ALARMED. 4: —Step out... there are two men... that could be the core of a gathering!...PrintsG.2000-1204
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE ALARMISTS AND ALARMED. 4: —Step out... there are two men... that could be the core of a gathering!...PrintsG.2000-1205
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE ALARMISTS AND ALARMED. 5: —Eh! so what’s new?... —Sir, whiting has become even dearer since yesterday!... —I always said that we were going to have a famine...PrintsG.2000-1206
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE ALARMISTS AND ALARMED. 6: —Sir, it's a three sou letter... —Is it the done thing to knock on the door for a three sou letter...I had a fright!... I thought they'd come to ask me for my weapons...PrintsG.2000-1207
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE ALARMISTS AND ALARMED. 6: —Sir, it's a three sou letter... —Is it the done thing to knock on the door for a three sou letter...I had a fright!... I thought they'd come to ask me for my weapons...PrintsG.2000-1208
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE ALARMISTS AND ALARMED. 7: I think they're beating the call to arms... Adolphe don't go... inthe name of the children we could have had!...PrintsG.2000-1209
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIAN IN 1848. 1: —Well... I didn't recognise you... what moustaches!... —It's necessary... I've been made a corporal...PrintsG.2000-1210
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIAN IN 1848. 2: That confounded Pigochard... always has to court the whiimen!...PrintsG.2000-1211
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIAN IN 1848. 2: That confounded Pigochard... always has to court the whiimen!...PrintsG.2000-1212
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIAN IN 1848. 2: That confounded Pigochard... always has to court the whiimen!...PrintsG.2000-1213
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIAN IN 1848. 3: —Yes, citizen, I demand the most complete abolition of factions!...PrintsG.2000-1214
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIAN IN 1848. 3: —Yes, citizen, I demand the most complete abolition of factions!...PrintsG.2000-1215
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE FEASTERS 1: The national guardsman Rifolard, not having left his home during the five days of June, was unable to resist the desire finally to seize the occasion of showing himself; despite the tears of his wife and children, he took his gun to hasten to a banquet in the countryPrintsG.2000-1216
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE FEASTERS 1: The national guardsman Rifolard, not having left his home during the five days of June, was unable to resist the desire finally to seize the occasion of showing himself; despite the tears of his wife and children, he took his gun to hasten to a banquet in the countryPrintsG.2000-1217
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE FEASTERS 4: Rifolaed was more charmed than ever at not having got himself killed in the June days, for that would have deprived him of the pleasure of walking in the streets of Boulogne under a rain of flowers.PrintsG.2000-1218
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE FEASTERS 4: Rifolaed was more charmed than ever at not having got himself killed in the June days, for that would have deprived him of the pleasure of walking in the streets of Boulogne under a rain of flowers.PrintsG.2000-1219
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE FEASTERS 5: Rifolard opened the ball and performed [the step of] a single cavalier advancing which received general approbation.PrintsG.2000-1220
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE FEASTERS 5: Rifolard opened the ball and performed [the step of] a single cavalier advancing which received general approbation.PrintsG.2000-1221
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE FEASTERS 6: Several national guardsmen who had not thought of sea-sickness, keenly regretting having had the idea of going to see England.PrintsG.2000-1222
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE FEASTERS 7: Rifolaed, gazed on by the English, completely forgets the little inconveniences of the crossing.PrintsG.2000-1223
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 6: Don't hurry so... Lapincheux... they've not yet put the duty back on drinks!PrintsG.2000-1224
DAUMIER, HonoréSKETCH OF THE DAY 28: You know the fat deputy from opposite, who's a representative at 25 francs a day, well, this morning I read off the newspaper that they'd given him a commission! —A commission pays generally seventy five centimes without even a written decision... on that day he should've made 25 francs 15 sous, what luck!PrintsG.2000-1225
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 71: The interlude of a primary school teacher suspended from his duties.PrintsG.2000-1226
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 175: Tell me, Mister Colimard, is it true that now the government's going to force all journalists to wear a uniform and that they'll make [them] pay security to all subscribers?...PrintsG.2000-1227
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 27: —Yes, Mrs.Chaboulard, there're twenty four grocers who've joined together and taken the oath to murder president Dupin. —The horror of it!... but also why doesn't the government watch the grocers better... I said it a long time ago, all grocers are scoundrels!... and to prove it, yesterday mine sold me mustard for two sous and he only gave me six liards' worth... I'm going to denounce him, he'll be one of the twenty four!...PrintsG.2000-1228
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 34: Oh! heavens, Madeleine!... I'm sure you let that child shout Long live the Republic in the street!...PrintsG.2000-1229
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE FREQUENTERS OF CAFÉS 1: Personally, I'm in the habit of never giving anything to the waiter, it encourages celibacy.PrintsG.2000-1230
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 332: THE NEW CHALETS No more quaterly rent to pay you, Mr.Vautour... we're not even frightened of the porter any more... in our chalets we're all Swiss!...PrintsG.2000-1231
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIAN SKETCHES 15: ONE OF THE INCONVENIENCIES OF BASEMENTS. Surely not!... there are more of them that have grown during the night!...PrintsG.2000-1232
DAUMIER, HonoréPARISIAN SKETCHES 19: BASEMENTS. —Well, Mister Gendrouillet, how are you in your new accommodation?... —Why, not too bad... apart from rheumatism and mushrooms.PrintsG.2000-1233
DAUMIER, HonoréTHE PORTERS OF PARIS 1: It's no use my letting you see my apartment... we don't let to mothers of families who have children!...PrintsG.2000-1234
DAUMIER, HonoréTENANTS AND LANDLOADS 3: —I've got to contrive in here three rooms and a kitchen!...PrintsG.2000-1235
DAUMIER, HonoréTENANTS AND LANDLOADS 5: —Why, madam..., I am unwise enough to absent myself from my property for some months and this is the state in which I find you... I give you twenty four hours' notice to leave... I don't even know that I don't have the right to claim damages from your husband!...PrintsG.2000-1236
DAUMIER, HonoréTENANTS AND LANDLOADS 7: —It seems to me that your house should make good earnings... —I really think so... I've made two BASEMENTS... and if by chance one of these lodging falls vacant, I'll grow mushrooms there.PrintsG.2000-1237
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 41: The Union and the National Assembly trying to frighten Parisians with the help of a Cossack in the form of a baloon.PrintsG.2000-1238
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 112: Admiral Menschikoff on a tour of inspectionPrintsG.2000-1239
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 80: New positions taken up by the Russians, since they have had to fight dysentery.PrintsG.2000-1240
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 36: The Bear of the north, the most unpleseant of known bearsPrintsG.2000-1241
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 85: The melting of a snow colossusPrintsG.2000-1242
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 118: ADMINISTERING SELF-DISCIPLINE. —It's through my fault, through my fault, through my very great fault!...PrintsG.2000-1243
DAUMIER, HonoréCOSSACKS TO LAUGH AT or COSSACKS FOR A LAUGH 17: Oursikoff!... do you think this is a likeness?... —No, Sire!... —Right...... I'd have sent you to Siberia if you had recognised me... all these bad caricatures from LE CHARIVARI won't prevent my being still the most handsome man in my empire!... —Yes,Sire!......PrintsG.2000-1244
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 73: Cossack mares dead of thirst, for not having been able to go to Constantinople to quench [it] in the Sultanas' marble baths, as they were promised!...PrintsG.2000-1245
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 128: Two great Dukes present at the battle of Balaclava.PrintsG.2000-1246
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 145: He looks terrifying for nothing... and probably even the sparrows won't be frightened of him!...PrintsG.2000-1247
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 250: A DREAM WHICH TURNS INTO REALITY. Seeing himself forced to gulp down the broth which had been prepared for him by Peter the Great.PrintsG.2000-1248
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 251: THE TSAR AT SEBASTOPOL. —It's annoying...... they know I don't like the tricolour flag, and they've put it everywhere!...PrintsG.2000-1249
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 263: Will he win over her, or won't he?...... the bets are on.PrintsG.2000-1250
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 273: Song of happiness performed by Messrs Cobden, Brigth[sic] and Patterson[sic], on the occasion of the re-establishment of peace!...PrintsG.2000-1251
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 274: The return of the Golden Age.(PICTURE COMMISSIONED BY Messrs. COBDEN & BRIGTH)[sic]PrintsG.2000-1252
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 293: Messrs.-Cobden, Glaldstone[sic] and Brigth[sic] showing themselves to be only moderately happy with the arrival of peace.PrintsG.2000-1253
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 298: Messrs.-Cobden, Brigth[sic] and Sturges[sic] beginning to find that peace has given them too much leisure.PrintsG.2000-1254
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 300: Messrs.-Cobden, Brigth[sic] and Sturges, having nothing further to do in Europe, board ship to go and pacify China.PrintsG.2000-1255
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 303: No longer knowing how to use their spare time, the three friends of peace are reduced to making war between themselves.PrintsG.2000-1256
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 379: Mr. Cobden celebrating his triumph over Lord Palmerston, in company with other friends of peace.PrintsG.2000-1257
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 283: A new MARIUSPrintsG.2000-1258
DAUMIER, HonoréItaly's positionPrintsG.2000-1259
DAUMIER, HonoréItaly's awakeningPrintsG.2000-1260
DAUMIER, HonoréItaly's awakeningPrintsG.2000-1261
DAUMIER, HonoréA triumpher in MilanPrintsG.2000-1262
DAUMIER, HonoréGENERAL SCHLICK'S[sic] ENTRY INTO THE CAMPAIGN —This is giving me trouble... but finally I'm on the horse!!!...PrintsG.2000-1263
DAUMIER, HonoréGeneral Schlick[sic] omitting inspection of the floggings.PrintsG.2000-1264
DAUMIER, HonoréAT MANTUA / —What...... here they come to attack us even in this place!!... but what use are strongholds, if you're not secure?......PrintsG.2000-1265
DAUMIER, Honoré—Here you are, General...... here's what the zouaves call their TABLE-FORK!!... —Well then......, what's their knife like ?......PrintsG.2000-1266
DAUMIER, HonoréGeneral Schlagmann, imagining that the uniform gives courages, and wanting at any price also to secure zouaves, determines to dress up some of his Croats as Turks!...PrintsG.2000-1267
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 83: —Well, look here..., you're dressed as an Austrian to do the cooking,aren't you!... —Why, of course... the short white jacket, that's always been the uniform of the cook's boy!...PrintsG.2000-1268
DAUMIER, HonoréAT MILAN —Ho! hey!!!.... ho! hey!!... sirs..... this time you're forgetting to rescue the safe!!!...PrintsG.2000-1269
DAUMIER, HonoréPoor Giulay![sic]... pushed out from everywhere...PrintsG.2000-1270
DAUMIER, HonoréムYou've come to tell me of victory?... then hurry up and come and give me the details!...PrintsG.2000-1271
DAUMIER, HonoréComing announce to his gracious sovereign the result of the battle of Magenta...PrintsG.2000-1272
DAUMIER, HonoréGeneral Giulay[sic] cutting his enemies to pieces... on the map!...PrintsG.2000-1273
DAUMIER, Honoré...... Our retreat was carried out with the greatest of order! (Austrian Report)PrintsG.2000-1274
DAUMIER, HonoréAn unpleasent role to play in the theatre at the present time, and particularly in Piedmont...PrintsG.2000-1275
DAUMIER, HonoréムHere... I fancy I see over there an Austrian general who's got a plucky horse... must make a present of it to the colonel tomorrow!....PrintsG.2000-1276
DAUMIER, HonoréOLD GENERAL GIULAY[sic] REPLACED BY YOUNG GENERAL SCHLCK[sic] / —Giulay proved to me by his military operations that he was blind... very well... , at least this one's only one-eyed!...PrintsG.2000-1277
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 60 : —Have you left him nothing, that farmer?... —But I heff, cheneral, I left him hiss shirt... if you vish I vill brink it for you to etteck —Well now... Chippmann...... here's the [military] cross!...PrintsG.2000-1278
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 52 : —Look here, kaiserlick[sic]......, shall we soon be done with these gallantries to the women?...PrintsG.2000-1279
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 94: Going back faster than he had come.PrintsG.2000-1280
DAUMIER, HonoréVISIT TO THE TURCOS’ TENTS —Here!... they sleep like ordinary men...PrintsG.2000-1281
DAUMIER, HonoréSTRIKING CAMP. Look here...[put] a bit of fresh life into your shoulders!... let's put the bag, the equipment, the covers, the pickets, the cudgels, the water-bottle and the ration loaf on our backs once more!... Personally..., I feel as though I've got the strength to carry the Vincennes castle-keep, if someone would like to burden himself with putting it on my back!...PrintsG.2000-1282
DAUMIER, HonoréSTRIKING CAMP. Look here...[put] a bit of fresh life into your shoulders!... let's put the bag, the equipment, the covers, the pickets, the cudgels, the water-bottle and the ration loaf on our backs once more!... Personally..., I feel as though I've got the strength to carry the Vincennes castle-keep, if someone would like to burden himself with putting it on my back!...PrintsG.2000-1283
DAUMIER, HonoréSTRIKING CAMP. Look here...[put] a bit of fresh life into your shoulders!... let's put the bag, the equipment, the covers, the pickets, the cudgels, the water-bottle and the ration loaf on our backs once more!... Personally..., I feel as though I've got the strength to carry the Vincennes castle-keep, if someone would like to burden himself with putting it on my back!...PrintsG.2000-1284
DAUMIER, HonoréAlbum des Charges du Jour : A difficult position. —Pulled about between civilisation and the retrograde party.PrintsG.2000-1285
DAUMIER, HonoréAlbum des Charges du Jour: AT TANGIER —Sublime Majesty!... here come the Spaniards..., I think of anticipating your wishes, in order to inspire them with respect..., to unfurl your august parasol!... —Do not pester me, Belboul, about my parasol... at this very moment I would prefer to have a Bullet-shield!...PrintsG.2000-1286
DAUMIER, HonoréAlbum des Charges du Jour: AT TANGIER —Sublime Majesty!... here come the Spaniards..., I think of anticipating your wishes, in order to inspire them with respect..., to unfurl your august parasol!... —Do not pester me, Belboul, about my parasol... at this very moment I would prefer to have a Bullet-shield!...PrintsG.2000-1287
DAUMIER, HonoréAlbum des Charges du Jour: A parasol in a difficult position.PrintsG.2000-1288
DAUMIER, HonoréAlbum des Charges du Jour: THE EMPEROR MOROCCO CONSULTING THE CELEBRATED SORCERER DESBAROLLES. —Here is a little line which indicates to me that you are destined to receive a great drubbing!...PrintsG.2000-1289
DAUMIER, HonoréAlbum des Charges du Jour: —There's a wind that's going to thwart the Spaniards' disembarkation nicely!... —Yes, but it's also very poor weather for my parasol...PrintsG.2000-1290
DAUMIER, HonoréAlbum des Charges du Jour: —There's a wind that's going to thwart the Spaniards' disembarkation nicely!... —Yes, but it's also very poor weather for my parasol...PrintsG.2000-1291
DAUMIER, HonoréAlbum des Charges du Jour: Le Cid also setting out on the campaign to go and fight the MoorsPrintsG.2000-1292
DAUMIER, HonoréAlbum des Charges du Jour: Singular combat between the Cid and the Emperor of Morocco.PrintsG.2000-1293
DAUMIER, HonoréAlbum des Charges du Jour: Singular combat between the Cid and the Emperor of Morocco.PrintsG.2000-1294
DAUMIER, HonoréAlbum des Charges du Jour: EUNUCHS DISCHARGED BY THE BEY TUNIS.[sic] —What's going to become of us?... here we are[,] dismissed!... —There's nothing for it but to become coachmen in Constantinople!...PrintsG.2000-1295
DAUMIER, HonoréAlbum des Charges du Jour: The new costume of Turkish coachmen in Constantinople. —Neither men, nor women......, all eunuchs!...... (Extract from the new statute.)PrintsG.2000-1296
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 40: WINTER'S DEPARTURE —What, are you already thinking of leaving us?... you[,] our best ally!...PrintsG.2000-1297
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 29: A quarter of an hour after his death he was still alivePrintsG.2000-1298
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 54: What is called the UNITED KINGDOM.PrintsG.2000-1299
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 50: Charged until the forthcoming election with keeping the emblems of Wallachian sovereignty: the Throne, the Sceptre... and the Trunk.PrintsG.2000-1300
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 65: EXERCISES OF THE PRUSSIAN HERCULES —Will he lift it? [or] won't he?PrintsG.2000-1301
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 87: —Well now! but we can't see anything in your magic lantern? —Have a little patience! the curtain hasn't yet risenPrintsG.2000-1302
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 88: IN GERMANY —Let's still pack [things] up! precaution is the mother of certainty.PrintsG.2000-1303
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 89: Well now!... they no longer seem to be troubling with me at all!PrintsG.2000-1304
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 90: —There are lots of broken eggs there, the only thing is knowing if the omlette will succeed.PrintsG.2000-1305
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 106: An unpleasant predicamentPrintsG.2000-1306
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 103: The President of the diet, or the double Damocles!PrintsG.2000-1307
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 108: —My dear Holsteiner, vote I beg you. —Excuse me... Do you reckon on making me [like that place] there!PrintsG.2000-1308
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 107: Revival of the little DanaïdesPrintsG.2000-1309
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 104: The new CinderellaPrintsG.2000-1310
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 183: —If I had known!...PrintsG.2000-1311
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 248: Time himself proving the need to be fashionably equipped.PrintsG.2000-1312
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 31: GALILEO —Perhaps it would not have put you out, my fine Joshua, to stop it once more, in order to delay my demonstration.PrintsG.2000-1313
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 66: Whom will he catch ?PrintsG.2000-1314
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 129: —I say friend[,] too many arms... economise on iron and you'll economise on silverPrintsG.2000-1315
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 144: A HYPNOTISM SÉANCE. You'd think this devil Mars only wants to sleep with one eye [closed].PrintsG.2000-1316
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 179: The soothsayers of diplomacy not daring to broach the Prussian-bird in order to know what to believe.PrintsG.2000-1317
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 179: The soothsayers of diplomacy not daring to broach the Prussian-bird in order to know what to believe.PrintsG.2000-1318
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 225: —To think that with the stone from all these pedestals you could have built a good dozen primary schools.PrintsG.2000-1319
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 240: IN A CAPTIVE BALLOON: THE Gent WHO LOOKS TOWARDS THE SOUTH —Deuce! / THE Gent WHO LOOKS TOWARDS THE THE EAST —Good God!PrintsG.2000-1320
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 251: Le Charivari. Obliged soon to redraw a new view of the site where the temple of Peace stood.PrintsG.2000-1321
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 260: MODERN SOOTHSAYERS. Do not at all seem to have the inclination to laugh when looking at each other.PrintsG.2000-1322
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 261: New Year's gift for 1868PrintsG.2000-1323
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 261: New Year's gift for 1868PrintsG.2000-1324
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 280: Playthings of for Big ChildrenPrintsG.2000-1325
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 274: Revival of the Japanese.PrintsG.2000-1326
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 275: What England calls an act-of-union.PrintsG.2000-1327
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 283: A nurse who is a little naive.PrintsG.2000-1328
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 11: Hard to unknot.PrintsG.2000-1329
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 12: What the devil is it that curbs his appetite?PrintsG.2000-1330
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 12: What the devil is it that curbs his appetite?PrintsG.2000-1331
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 12: What the devil is it that curbs his appetite?PrintsG.2000-1332
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 34: Balancing experimentPrintsG.2000-1333
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 35: Not pleasing for the others.PrintsG.2000-1334
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 43: Devilish North windPrintsG.2000-1335
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 51: It's [or: They're] not biting any more!PrintsG.2000-1336
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 51: It's [or: They're] not biting any more!PrintsG.2000-1337
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 106: —Well for this year Papa Mars doesn't seem to want to take my place!PrintsG.2000-1338
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 72: The blank newspaperPrintsG.2000-1339
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 72: The blank newspaperPrintsG.2000-1340
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 79: VIEW TAKEN OF EUROPE IN 1900.PrintsG.2000-1341
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 81: Steady!PrintsG.2000-1342
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 98: Statues of the futurePrintsG.2000-1343
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 98: Statues of the futurePrintsG.2000-1344
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 105: Beginning to regret his victoryPrintsG.2000-1345
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 52: —A little tidying up rejuvenates.PrintsG.2000-1346
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 52: —A little tidying up rejuvenates.PrintsG.2000-1347
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 96: The human pyramidPrintsG.2000-1348
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 120: Will he leave! [or] won't he!PrintsG.2000-1349
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 131: Revival of TurennePrintsG.2000-1350
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 131: Revival of TurennePrintsG.2000-1351
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 129: A method by which he walks without going forward.PrintsG.2000-1352
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 130: OTHER COCK-CHAFERSPrintsG.2000-1353
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 146: THE POLITICAL [feast of] SAINT MÉDARD PrintsG.2000-1354
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 146: THE POLITICAL [feast of] SAINT MÉDARD PrintsG.2000-1355
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 144: If a meter could be adapted to cannons as on cabs, perhaps the total would reflect the [army's] estimates [or,budgets].PrintsG.2000-1356
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 151: —Provided that that devil Mars doesn't remove his muzzle!!PrintsG.2000-1357
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 189: John Bull swears that he is attached to the son of Theodore by an indissoluble tie.PrintsG.2000-1358
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 186: —And that's how you give yourself sprains in the back!......PrintsG.2000-1359
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 209: —My bicycle!PrintsG.2000-1360
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 212: THE BEAR'S PAVING-STONE.PrintsG.2000-1361
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 218: EUROPEAN BUDGETSPrintsG.2000-1362
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 218: EUROPEAN BUDGETSPrintsG.2000-1363
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 217: What do they see in there ??...PrintsG.2000-1364
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 222: Hurry [,] you fat things! Hurry!...PrintsG.2000-1365
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 281: Those who title themselves the upholders of Spain.PrintsG.2000-1366
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 280: CHRISTMAS PRESENTS OF 1868PrintsG.2000-1367
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 268: —The boa is digesting: no danger of his moving.PrintsG.2000-1368
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 41: —Voters, [come] into my arms!......PrintsG.2000-1369
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 62: I am a bird, see my wings. I am a mouse, long live the rats.(La-Fontaine.)PrintsG.2000-1370
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 72: Will it be a god, a table or a wash-basin?PrintsG.2000-1371
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 73: France preparing to put her candidates under the measure.PrintsG.2000-1372
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 85: THE ELECTORAL MACHINE-GUN. What a sprinkling!...PrintsG.2000-1373
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 97: THE DAY AFTER THE BATTLE.PrintsG.2000-1374
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 141: THE EUROPEAN [game of] TILTING AT THE RING: What is called keeping the shot too high.PrintsG.2000-1375
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 141: THE EUROPEAN [game of] TILTING AT THE RING: What is called keeping the shot too high.PrintsG.2000-1376
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 193: A hypnotism séancePrintsG.2000-1377
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 229: General rehearsal of the CouncilPrintsG.2000-1378
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 255: There's my cartridgePrintsG.2000-1379
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 250: The Council accroding to BasilPrintsG.2000-1380
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 268: TWENTY YEARS AFTER. ARAGO —Once upon a time, it was different. CREMIEUX —Let's remember that.PrintsG.2000-1381
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 269: Then don't look over there, you well know that it's a puppet.PrintsG.2000-1382
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 275: THE RE-ENTRANCE OF BANQUO-GLAIS-BIZOIN. At [this] sight the speaker, for fear of being interrupted [,] interrupted himself.PrintsG.2000-1383
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 284: THE PASS-WORD. —Reaction...... Sorry, I'm mistaken... Liberty.PrintsG.2000-1384
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 13: —Basil, my friend, your word is askew.PrintsG.2000-1385
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 28: Make way for the youngsters!PrintsG.2000-1386
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 29: The plank is very short!PrintsG.2000-1387
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 21: THE NYMPH EGERIA New modelPrintsG.2000-1388
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 47: —Reverend, before proclaiming Papal infallibility, take a pass-ticket for me for what's being performed in there.PrintsG.2000-1389
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 59: Will it burst, [or] won't it !PrintsG.2000-1390
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 51: —Are you going to open the cage door [?] —Upon my word... I'm going to repaint it.PrintsG.2000-1391
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 52: The declaration of DamoclesPrintsG.2000-1392
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 53: AFTER FLORIAN I'll walk for you and you'll see for mePrintsG.2000-1393
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 74: Funeral Ceremonies of the Official Candidature.PrintsG.2000-1394
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 73: Beware of the light!PrintsG.2000-1395
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 76: The 56 or the political Trappists. —All the same, to think of being obliged to sit facing the tomb!...PrintsG.2000-1396
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 76: The 56 or the political Trappists. —All the same, to think of being obliged to sit facing the tomb!...PrintsG.2000-1397
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 91: Will it take!PrintsG.2000-1398
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 103: Oh! what a pleasure to be a voter!PrintsG.2000-1399
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 109: THE NEW ASSUMPTION 1870 edition.PrintsG.2000-1400
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 117: What is called a well filled session.PrintsG.2000-1401
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 138: THE LEGISLATIVE ARENAS. OR The ruins of the Chamber in 2870PrintsG.2000-1402
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 138: THE LEGISLATIVE ARENAS. OR The ruins of the Chamber in 2870PrintsG.2000-1403
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 177: —What the Devil are they doing up above!PrintsG.2000-1404
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 183: A NIGHTMARE OF MR. VON BISMARK'S [sic] —Thank you!...PrintsG.2000-1405
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 191: The call-up of their reserves.PrintsG.2000-1406
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 219: Perceiving that in thinking of digging foundations{,] he dug his grave.PrintsG.2000-1407
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 219: Perceiving that in thinking of digging foundations{,] he dug his grave.PrintsG.2000-1408
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 219: Perceiving that in thinking of digging foundations{,] he dug his grave.PrintsG.2000-1409
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 232: THE EMPIRE IS PEACE.PrintsG.2000-1410
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 235: Too narrow for two.PrintsG.2000-1411
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 233: All the same we never doubted that one day we'd sail in that ship.PrintsG.2000-1412
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 244: NAPOLÉON SQUERE.PrintsG.2000-1413
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 255: A LANDSCAPE IN 1870.PrintsG.2000-1414
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 265: GERMAN UNITYPrintsG.2000-1415
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 280: TERROR-STRICKEN BY THE LEGACYPrintsG.2000-1416
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 299: POOR FRANCE!... THE TRUNK IS STRUCK BY LIGHTNING, BUT THE ROOTS HOLD FAST!PrintsG.2000-1417
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 306: THIS HAS KILLED THATPrintsG.2000-1418
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 312: THE BORDEAUX ASSEMBLY Who will take up the knife?PrintsG.2000-1419
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 315: THE NEW CHARIOT OF VICTORYPrintsG.2000-1420
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 321: Personally, I'm revictualled!... I don't care about the rest.PrintsG.2000-1421
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 374: ROUHER'S SADNESS: —I've stuffed it as best as I can [but] in vain, [it's] impossible to make [people] believe that it's still alive.PrintsG.2000-1422
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 592: —Go and finish yourself off for me.PrintsG.2000-1423
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 606: THE PRESIDENT OF RHODESPrintsG.2000-1424
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 661: That which will bring our deputies back to Paris, in spite of themselvesPrintsG.2000-1425
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 661: That which will bring our deputies back to Paris, in spite of themselvesPrintsG.2000-1426
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 687: Waiting for the question of returning to Paris to be resolved.PrintsG.2000-1427
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 687: Waiting for the question of returning to Paris to be resolved.PrintsG.2000-1428
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 695: —Thank you; I'll avoid taking it!PrintsG.2000-1429
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 1: THE ACCURSED ONE!PrintsG.2000-1430
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 1: THE ACCURSED ONE!PrintsG.2000-1431
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 5: OUR LAST TWELFTH-NIGHT CAKE —Does it not seem to you that it is calculated to disgust others?PrintsG.2000-1432
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 7: Doing the houseworkPrintsG.2000-1433
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 9: —Curtains!!!PrintsG.2000-1434
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 26: —My good friend, give me the pleasure of your signing this petition against obligatory education. —Sorry, Mister Basil, but I dunno how to write.PrintsG.2000-1435
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 29: BASIL IS FRIGHTENED.PrintsG.2000-1436
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 29: BASIL IS FRIGHTENED.PrintsG.2000-1437
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 39: WHO'LL KNOCK DOWN THE REPUBLIC?... —Too high that target there, sirs, for you to hit!PrintsG.2000-1438
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 50: THE FUSION. Of course the rogues let you believe when you come in that the phenomenon is alive.PrintsG.2000-1439
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 59: —No go!!!PrintsG.2000-1440
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 66: Oh! if I were the King of Spain How [quickly] I'd clear off! (Variation on a celebrated ballad)PrintsG.2000-1441
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 69: It's dangerous, fishing with a cast-net.PrintsG.2000-1442
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 69: It's dangerous, fishing with a cast-net.PrintsG.2000-1443
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 77: Not surprising that it's long with as many crossings out as that.PrintsG.2000-1444
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 77: Not surprising that it's long with as many crossings out as that.PrintsG.2000-1445
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 80: Where there is no more sap[,] spring loses its claims.PrintsG.2000-1446
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 85: —This trunk is no one's, therefore it ought to belong to us.PrintsG.2000-1447
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 88: POOR MR. ROUHER! A VOICE (from the wings)—Come on! you've got to jump. HIM—But i'm going to sink to the bottom!PrintsG.2000-1448
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 94: If the workers fight among themselves, how do you expect the building to be reconstructed?PrintsG.2000-1449
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 97: —Notice to devotees... if only there were this in France!PrintsG.2000-1450
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS 103: THE AUGEAN STABLESPrintsG.2000-1451
DAUMIER, HonoréJOURNEY TO CHINA 1: THE DISEMBARKATION. Each traveller who lands at a port in China is immediately conducted, like a wrong-doer, between two rows of inquisitive people to the passport office: hardly has he touched the soil of the Celestial Empire, than he becomes the prey of luggage-porters, hotel-boys, interpreters, messengers and other highwaymen authorised by the Chinese police.PrintsG.2000-1452
DAUMIER, HonoréJOURNEY TO CHINA 2: THE PASSPORT. The foreigner who visits China is submitted to an indispensable formality; he receives a slip of paper on which is written the age he wants to indicate, the profession he says he pursues and the place where it pleases him to appoint his birth; all that followed by a description of particulars which applies to everybody, after which, against a consideration of two francs, the Chinese government is deemed to lend him succour and assistance for one year. PrintsG.2000-1453
DAUMIER, HonoréJOURNEY TO CHINA 3: THE CUSTOMS. Having arrived at customs, the traveller is examined, ransacked, undressed and rifled —His clothes are not admitted to [this country], since they make them in China; —His wig [is], because they do not make them; —His boots, because leather is prohibited; —His clyster-pump, because it is a mechanical object with a suspect use... they seize everything and make him pay duty for the rest, after which, he is as free as the air...PrintsG.2000-1454
DAUMIER, HonoréJOURNEY TO CHINA 4: THE SEAFARERS' HOTEL. He who says hotel-keeper —in China— and above all in a seaport, says patent thief... if you bring to his notice that he counts dinners that you have not ordered —errands that you have not had [him] make —waiters who have not served you —expenses for transporting luggage for which you have paid, he replies graciously: Suh, we always count that, always... that is the Chinese habit!... Editer's note: This habit also exists in certain French sea ports.PrintsG.2000-1455
DAUMIER, HonoréJOURNEY TO CHINA 5: CHINESE LAW. Chinese barristers strive so hard, striking so many oratorical poses that the magistrates, in order not to be distracted by the gestures of the defence and to lose nothing of his arguments, generally devote themselves to some manual work, one slices his desk with penknife cuts; the other draws crude little figures on stamped paper or fashions folded paper hens; others have recourse to a more efficient method, they close their eyes and fall into deep meditation from which the usher who shouts silence! with all his might is at great pains to extract them... it is for this reason that Chinese justice is represented with a bandage over its eyes.PrintsG.2000-1456
DAUMIER, HonoréJOURNEY TO CHINA 6: CHINESE PROPRIETY. In this country they have a singular idea of propriety!... the most chaste young girl, the most upstanding woman do not blush, by a prodigious exaggeration of forms, to call attention to a certain quarter to which they give the appearance of a veritable air-balloon... they call that a bustle...PrintsG.2000-1457
DAUMIER, HonoréJOURNEY TO CHINA 7: CHINESE MARRIAGE. The angler's skill in setting his lines, the hunter's artfulness in taking game, the horse-dealer's tricks to hide the redhibitory defects of his horse, nothing is comparable to the skill, the artfulness, the trick which a mother deploys in order to marry her daughter... the poor Chinese men mistrust the lures, of honey and of glue, to no avail, someone always falls into the maternal snare.PrintsG.2000-1458
DAUMIER, HonoréJOURNEY TO CHINA 8: WOULD YOU MARRY... IN CHINA. A Chinese woman who brings nothing to her husband places the household in difficulties because her clothes are very costly. / A Chinese woman who brings something, places the household in embarrassing circumstances because her clothes cost more. / A Chinese woman who brings many things places the household in misery: her whims devour everything!PrintsG.2000-1459
DAUMIER, HonoréJOURNEY TO CHINA 9: A CHINESE DANCE.One is greatly mistaken if one believes the Chinese people to be giddy, joyful and the friend of pleasure: they are on the contrary serious and morose, since their greatest amusement consists in a type of lugubrious walking in which the men and women walk one in front of the other, or one beside the other, and seem to be saying among themselves: brother we should die! In order also to point to the philosophical intention behind this ceremony, the opposite of dancing, they call it: Counter-dancing.PrintsG.2000-1460
DAUMIER, HonoréJOURNEY TO CHINA 10: CHINESE PROBITY. The unfortunate man who commits a little failing and gives 80 per cent to his creditors is ruined, dishonoured, lost, and sees all his careers close before him... if he would like to be well thought of, well received in the world, there is only one way... that is to begin again upon a bigger scale and to give away nothing at all.PrintsG.2000-1461
DAUMIER, HonoréJOURNEY TO CHINA 11: CHINESE MODESTY. The Chinese love modesty and outlaw without pity all those immodest dances introduced by the Tartars under the names of Kan-Kan, Ka-chu-cha et cetera, there is only one of them , a single one, the most voluptuous, the most lascivious of all, one which delivers the woman to the embraces of a young man, one which troubles and intoxicates the senses, this one a Chinese man rigorously forbids to his daughters and permits it... only to his wife!PrintsG.2000-1462
DAUMIER, HonoréJOURNEY TO CHINA 12: THE HORSE RACES. The Chinese, who have the most wretched coach horses it is possible to imagine, have recognised the necessity to improve this interesting race of quadrupeds. As a consequence the Equestrain Society of Peking could think of inventing nothing better than to create races in which the horses would cover one league in four minutes. Fairly frequently, the horse attains its goal, but never the society for its encouragement: understood that the winner is then taken in triumph to its home... in a cart. He is improved for perpetuity.PrintsG.2000-1463
DAUMIER, HonoréJOURNEY TO CHINA 13: AN ENTERTAINMENT OF PEKING. Chinese men, who have worked assiduously all day long, meet with the need to distract themselves in the evening, thus they have invented a very ingenious game the detail of which of which [sic] would be too tedious [to explain], suffice it for us to say that it is played with little bits of bone called dominoes, nearly all the dealers in opium, tea, sugar, prunes and other colonial commodities make themselves out to be excessively clever at this eminently Chinese game.PrintsG.2000-1464
DAUMIER, HonoréJOURNEY TO CHINA 14: THE POLKA. The Chinese people, an eminently observant and wise people, having noticed that the turkey-cock an animal of very phlegmatic temperament, seemed however to take the greatest pleasure in [enticing?] by turns each foot with a small jerky movement, one day took it into their heads to imitate this poultry in that type of amusement. Thence the origin of a dance which immediately caused delight in the best society of Peking and its suburb, but as a result of an equally Chinese whim this dance was named the Polka whereas good sense, grammar and the turkeys called for themselves to be baptised with the name of turkey-cocka.PrintsG.2000-1465
DAUMIER, HonoréJOURNEY TO CHINA 15: SMOKERS AND SNUFF-TAKERS. —Do not believe that all Chinese stupify themselves with opium; no, a crowd of people and above all [those] in good society make their sovereign pleasure consist of smoking and taking a certain leaf which looks pretty disagreeable, but whose taste is very loathsome —As this leaf is harvested from a plant called nicotiana they were completely naturally inclined to call it tobacco.PrintsG.2000-1466
DAUMIER, HonoréJOURNEY TO CHINA 16: THE MUSIC LESSON. The Chinese man of independent means likes to occupy his leisure by cultivating music: very willingly he takes lessons on the clarinet, the accordion or the hunting horn, and in spite of the contrary opinion of his unfortunate neighbours, persists in calling this an accomplishment!PrintsG.2000-1467
DAUMIER, HonoréJOURNEY TO CHINA 19: CHINESE WORRIORS. All Chinese men have the right, from six to eight times a year, to carry a rifle, a cartridge-pouch, and even to wear a fur cap; then they apply themselves, more or less voluntarily to night patrols which have as their goal the maintenance of public peace. Only it happens quite often that the chief named KA-PO-RAL takes infinite trouble to prevent his warriors singing at the tops of their voices “mother GO-DI-CHON” or other Chinese ballads, and it is by waking with a start that the good citizens learn that their rest is being watched over.PrintsG.2000-1468
DAUMIER, HonoréJOURNEY TO CHINA 17: THE PENAL CODE. The Chinese legislators have decreed that all the accused will answer a summons freely in front of their judges, and so they are brought before the examining magistrate between two policemen and bound with handcuffs, which in fact leaves them no more liberty than to sneeze. Moreover justice is delivered with such promptness in the Celestial Empire that it is very rare for he who has been cautioned to remain more than eight months before attending his trial, finally the solemn day arrives when he sees himself sentenced to a fortnight in prison, and the capped mandarin has the goodness to explain to him that this fortnight is not to be confused with the eight months he has already spent behind bolted doors.PrintsG.2000-1469
DAUMIER, HonoréIN CHINA 8: —To think that in France, I had so much trouble in getting one of them, and here, here I am with two on my arm... what a swanky place!...PrintsG.2000-1470
DAUMIER, HonoréIN CHINA 8: A Chinese warrior patrol —having taken too literally the order given them to scout out... [the enemy's movement...]PrintsG.2000-1471
DAUMIER, HonoréIN CHINA 13: —Here, look at that case..., it contains the American envoys who are going to Peking!... —You'd think that that carriage contained curious animals... —To be sure! if they are curious..., too bad for them, because they won't see much of the country they're travelling through!...PrintsG.2000-1472
DAUMIER, HonoréIN CHINA 13: —Here, look at that case..., it contains the American envoys who are going to Peking!... —You'd think that that carriage contained curious animals... —To be sure! if they are curious..., too bad for them, because they won't see much of the country they're travelling through!...PrintsG.2000-1473
DAUMIER, HonoréIN CHINA 14: The arrival in Peking, of the American ambassadors.PrintsG.2000-1474
DAUMIER, HonoréIN CHINA 14: The arrival in Peking, of the American ambassadors.PrintsG.2000-1475
DAUMIER, HonoréIN CHINA 15: The American envoy obtaining an audience from the Emperor of ChinaPrintsG.2000-1476
DAUMIER, HonoréIN CHINA 17: A Chinese patrol on reconnaissance.PrintsG.2000-1477
DAUMIER, HonoréIN CHINA 17: A Chinese patrol on reconnaissance.PrintsG.2000-1478
DAUMIER, HonoréIN CHINA 18: —They're going to be truly caught, those Europeans!... they've got cannons which are terrible, because they're grooved, [but] I, I've had the excellent idea of making all my soldiers striped!...PrintsG.2000-1479
DAUMIER, HonoréIN CHINA 19: —Tchinn-Tchinn..., you bring me good news!... I accord you the highest honour of kissing the august dust of my august shoes!...PrintsG.2000-1480
DAUMIER, HonoréIN CHINA 21: To think that there is what the French call Chinese!...PrintsG.2000-1481
DAUMIER, Honoré(NEWS 123) : Chinese functionaries watching over the welfare of the Empire!...PrintsG.2000-1482
DAUMIER, HonoréNEWS: CHINA CIVILISING HERSELF. —Now then..., attention!... here's the European theory... the eyes looking fifteen paces into the distance and let the foot which is on the ground quickly go to rejoin that which is in the air...PrintsG.2000