In March 1900, Sir John Tenniel published this cartoon in Punch. He has a different target in this cartoon.
The cartoon has the title “Who said “Dead”?”.
The
cartoon shows a donkey running away for its life from a roaring lion emerging
from a cave. The donkey has ‘Continental Press’ written on its back. By March
1900 the sieges of Kimberley and Ladysmith had been relieved and the British
and Empire army under the new commander in chief, Lord Roberts, had begun to
win some successes. The message of the cartoon seems pretty much to be that the
British and Empire forces have now roused themselves to their warlike best, and
proven to the world – well, to Europe at least – that the reports of the death
of the Empire have been greatly exaggerated.
Portraying the European media as a donkey shows a certain
contempt for them – they are donkeys, or asses, fools in other words. The
European reactions to the circumstances of the Boer War were pretty much
universally condemning of the British actions in provoking the war, and British
Imperialism. There was just a little whiff of hypocrisy about this considering
that some of the countries that were the strongest critics had also been
willing and enthusiastic participants in the so-called ‘Scramble for Africa’
themselves.




