In recognition of the
visit of graphic novelists Stan Mack and Susan Champlin to the
Paul Revere House this afternoon, here’s an example of
Revere himself using a common hallmark of the comics style: the word balloon.
This is a detail from
“A View of the Year 1765,” celebrating how North American colonies had united against the
Stamp Act. Revere copied most of this image from a London print called “View of the Present Crisis,” according to Jayne Triber’s
A True Republican. But I think the silversmith himself threw in this picture of an effigy hanging from Liberty Tree.
The observers tell us, as we can read in those balloons:
- “there’s that Villian H—k”
- “I see he’s got a high place”
Those word balloons show that Revere was alluding to a protest on 1 Nov 1765, the day the Stamp Act was supposed to take effect. Bostonians paraded with two effigies, one representing John Huske, member of
Parliament for Maldon. New Englanders had heard he’d suggested the new tax in expectation of “a high place” in government. Since Huske had been born in
New Hampshire and worked as a merchant in Boston for a while, this seemed like rank betrayal. In fact, Huske opposed the Stamp Act in parliamentary debate.
Revere also had word balloons in
“America in Distress,” a cartoon published in
Joseph Greenleaf and
Isaiah Thomas’s
Royal American Magazine in March 1775. But in that case he closely copied “Britannia in Distress,” published in London five years earlier—word balloons and all.
So, who do you think H--K-- was?
ReplyDeleteI think that was a variant spelling of "Huske."
ReplyDelete