
Last modified: 2009-05-24 by rob raeside
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![[Skull and Cross bones cartoon]](../images/g/gb_19thccartoon.jpg) image
located by David B. Lawrence, 23 July 2008
image
located by David B. Lawrence, 23 July 2008
[Click on image for larger 
version.]
This satirical drawing by George Cruikshank refers to the political situation 
after the Napoleonic Wars when there was social unrest and agitation for 
political reform in the United Kingdom. It was drawn to illustrate an anonymous 
poem published by the radical humourist William Hone, called 'The Man in the Moon' which parodied 
the nursery rhyme to satirise the Prince Regent and his government. He is 
portrayed as the Regent of 'Lunitaria', a corrupt and oppressive state. The 
drawing refers to the lines:
   " And though the Radicals still 
want food 
     A few STEEL LOZENGES will stop their pain
     And set the Constitution right again."
I found it in ' The Laughter of Triumph ' by Ben Wilson, Faber & Faber 2005 (isbn 
0571224709 ). Years later Cruikshank provided drawings for Dicken's novels (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Cruikshank ).
David B. Lawrence, 
23 July 2008