- Allons bon,... c'est encore mon chien que j'ai attrapé... c'est le troisième que je tue en deux ans.... j'e n'ai décidément pas de chance!
Title (alt.):
- Ah blast,... it's my own dog that I shot... that's the third one in two years.... I definitely have no luck at hunting!. Charivari
Description:
A hunter exclaims that he has shot his dog again. He seems not to have any luck as a hunter as this is the third dog he has killed in two years. Daumier’s interest in hunting and fishing was a consequence of press censorship laws in 1835, which limited political engagement of caricaturists working for the free press. At the same time, in 1830 hunting legally ceased to be the prerogative of the aristocratic classes. Parisian bourgeoisie immediately took to the new fancy and engaged in hunting around the forests and countryside of Paris. A new “fashion” was born and members of the Parisian middle class developed a hitherto unknown snobbism and passion for this sport. Deyeux even wrote a poem called “La Chassomanie”. By 1860, some 155’000 hunting licenses had been issued, while one estimated that some 450’000 poachers were actively involved in hunting and fishing. While in the beginning of 1836 some 6’000 hunters were caught hunting without a license, this number increased substantially to 21’000 hunters fined for poaching in 1860.
Copyright restrictions may apply. For permission to copy or use this image, contact the Robert D. Farber University Archives and Special Collections Department, Brandeis University Libraries. The following credit line must be included with each item used: Benjamin A. and Julia M. Trustman Collection of Honoré Daumier Lithographs, Robert D. Farber University Archives & Special Collections Department, Brandeis University.
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Place of origin:
Paris
Notes:
2nd state.
Published in: Le Charivari, October 5, 1865.
Notes (acquisition):
Donated by: Benjamin A. and Julia M. Trustman, 1959.