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Destroy This Mad Brute Date: 1917
Comparisons of man and apeRepresentation of the analogy betwixt man and brute. Child and monkey with fruit, portrait of man and ape, skulls of man and ape. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by J
THE WOLF AS SHEPHERD One of Dores finest illust- -rations, simply taken at face value, and at the same time a powerful allegory of brute force hiding its brutality
HUNGRY SEA MONSTERA sea-monster grabs a victim from the shore, while his cowardly companion runs away instead of tackling the brute Date: 1550
German Kultur by Edmund SullivanThe Beast Breaks Loose - Kultur as it appears to Edmund J. Sullivan. The brutish, monstrous German soldier envisaged by Edmund Sullivan as a huge, hulking gorilla like monster
Beauty and the Barge, by Jacobs and ParkerBeauty and the Barge, by W W Jacobs and Louis N Parker. First produced at the New Theatre, London, August 1904 (preceded by That Brute Simmons). Date: 1904
That Brute, Simmons by H C Sargeant and Arthur MorrisonPromotional postcard for That Brute, Simmons by H. C. Sargeant and Arthur Morrison from Morrisons short story of that name, first published in Tales of Mean Streets (1894)
A Millionaire, drawing the attention of a pretty girl. I wonder if money is indeed her best friend...! Date: 1895
Et tu, Brute!. Illustration shows Rudyard Kipling holding a pen labeled Criticism which he is using as a prod to get the British Lion moving in a particular direction. Date 1902 January 29
To Arms, Britons! First World War propaganda" Arms, Britons! Avert These Horrors: The Triumph of Science and Efficiency." A typical propagandist reminder to the British of what they were fighting for, this brutish German soldier
Buck Balfour. Cartoon of Arthur Balfour (later British Prime Minister) when he was Chief Secretary for Ireland on the cover of Funny Folks