You know, I’ve been running out of Tenniel cartoons about the Boer War. So I’ve made a copy of a Linley Sambourne cartoon. Who?
Edward Linley Sambourne was born 24 years after Tenniel, in 1844. His original career was as an apprentice engineer, but he was moved into the drawing office when his aptitude was discovered. His work came to the attention of Punch editor Mark Lemon, and he had his first drawing published in the magazine when he was 23 in 1867.Within 4 years he had become a staff member, although he was not to provide his first political cartoon until 1884. Ten years later he began to regularly draw the magazine’s second cartoon. Finally, upon Tenniel’s retirement in 1902 he became the principal cartoonist for Punch.
You have to feel for him a bit. After waiting so long for
Tenniel to step down, Linley Sambourne could only enjoy the position as top dog
for 8 years, passing away in 1910.
I think it’s fair to suggest that working for the same
magazine for which Tenniel had been principal cartoonist for so long must have
rubbed off on Linley Sambourne a bit. His personification of Ladysmith in this
cartoon, for example, is very similar to the Britannia that Tenniel himself
used so often. However, I do feel that there is usually a little less of the
caricature about Linley Sambourne’s work than there is with Tenniel. This may
be his legacy as an apprentice engineering draughtsman. There’s even a
precision about his hatching and shading, compared with Tenniel’s.
I have actually copied one of Linley Sambourne’s drawings
before – this one which hailed Tenniel’s knighthood.



