In 1907 and 1908 W. W. Denslow produced a series of comic drawings, illustrating verses written by Dudley A. Bragdon. These are collectively known as the Par-lor Pets series, and the individual panels comment on the various objectionable behaviors of guests. They were published in the Sunday Magazine, a weekly newspaper supplement that was syndicated and issued with a number of papers around the country. Denslow and Bragdon had previously collaborated on the book Billy Bounce, in 1906.
I have found ten examples of the comic on the Library of Congress Chronicling America website. I'm not certain if it is the entire series, but it seems like a good round number that could be a complete set. These ten pieces were published from November 24, 1907 to June 21st, 1908; they were not issued weekly, but vary from month to month. Some months feature one cartoon, others two, and May of 1908 doesn't seem to have any!
(In the comments below, Michael Gessel mentions that Doug Greene catalogued 12 examples from this series - I've since found the examples for July 12 and Sept 6, and included them with the others.)
The series is numbered from I to X, with the subtitle "Extract from Ill Nature Studies", and they were published in numerical order. Click on the images to read the complete text.
November 24, 1907 is The Parlor Thanksgiving Turkey:
Oh, look and see! Whom have we here
With coun-te-nance so smirk-y?
He's saying grace. Of course you've guessed.
'Tis a Thanks-giv-ing Tur-key
December 8, 1907 is The Par-lor Li-on:
Oh! see the gen-tle Par-lor Li-on!
Ob-serve his taw-ny mane!
For our de-light he opes his mouth
And roars and roars a-gain.
Jan 5, 1908 is The Par-lor Kit-ten:
The Par-lor Kit-ten next we see.
Ob-serve her cun-ning pose!
What do I think that she’ll do next?
My dear, no-bod-y knows.
January 19, 1908 is The Par-lor Bore:
Of all the beasts that roam the room
Be-ware the Par-lor Bore;
He stalks the so-cial jun-gle and
He lurks be-hind the door; February 16, 1908 is the Par-lor Owl:
What is this bird that looks so wise?
Pray name this won-drous fowl
In yon-der sol-emn bird you see
The fa-mous Par-lor Owl.
March 15, 108 is The Par-lor Clam:Ob-serve the silent Par-lor Clam
In clam-my calm-ness sit-ting.
Al-though 'tis sel-fish to be so
A shell-fish fit is fit-ting.
March 22, 1908 is The Par-lor Bear:
Pray note with care the snarl-ing beast
That sulks in yon-der chair;
That fierce out-rage-ous an-i-mal.
So called The Par-lor Bear.
April 12, 1908 is The Par-lor Pig:
Oh! see the pant-ing Par-lor Pig!
Ob-serve his tense ex-pres-sion!
How val-iant-ly he fights to lead
The din-ing room pro-ces-sion!
April 26, 1908 is The Par-lor Pup-py:
Oh see the Par-lor Pup-py! He
Is mouth-ing some one's glove.
He'll steal it if he gets the chance,–
We call that "Pup-py Love."
June 21, 1908 is The Par-lor-Fer-ret:
Be-hold the Par-lor Fer-ret! See
His black and bead-y eye!
At dig-ging bur-ied scan-dal up
He-s cun-ning, sharp and sly.
As far as I know, this was the last of the series; it even features portraits of Denslow and Bragdon as the two gentlemen fleeing the room!
Below are the two missing episodes mentioned in the comment section:
July 12, 1908 is The Par-lor Shark:
Ob-serve the Wall Street Par-lor Shark -
You won-der what he's say-ing?
Don't spec-u-late on what he says
Be-cause I'm sure he's prey-ing.
September 6 is The Par-lor Cat:
Ob-serve the Par-lor Cat my child.
And when you chance to meet her
Be care-ful not to cross her path,
Be care-ful how you greet her.
I recently purchased the original drawing for the fifth pet of the series, The Par-lor Owl. It's possible to think of the Owl as another self-portrait of Denslow, with its parted hair and walrus mustache. Perhaps he identified with this particular pet!
As with so much antique illustration art, this piece has some condition issues; but it's a fine large example of Denslow's bold style from that period. The panel measures 15" x 15".
2 comments:
A checklist by Doug Greene of Denslow’s published works in the Autumn 1992 issue of The Baum Bugle listed 12 dates when the series ran, from November 24, 1907, to September 6, 1908.
Thanks for clarifying that - I figured somebody would know!
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