A Tale to Tell: Thomas Bewick’s Tailpieces
The following guest post was written by Worcestershire's Skills for the Future trainees Tamsin Rowe and Shabeena Anait.
With some 5000 books on its shelves, it is small wonder that the collections in the Hurd Library continue to surprise and delight two hundred years after the bibliophilic bishop first placed them there.
While browsing the ornithological volumes during our ‘swap shop’, Shabeena and I came across an edition of Thomas Bewick’s British Birds from 1797-1804. We were initially drawn to the beautiful engravings of birds for which its author is famed, but soon realized this book had another secret to reveal. For Thomas Bewick was a man of dark moods and darker moral humour who included in his work a series of ‘tailpieces’ or ‘vignettes’ in the blank spaces at the end of chapters. These quirky and often risqué images depict various aspects of eighteenth-century life wholly unconnected with the subject-matter of the book.
Bewick was a wood-engraver and naturalist, born at Cherryburn in Northumberland in August 1753. The son of a tenant farmer and collier, he went on to become one of the most celebrated artists to come out of Tyneside, producing copperplate engravings for several books of zoology, ornithology, poetry, fable and children’s literature. Apprenticed to Newcastle silver engraver, Ralph Beilby, Bewick’s talent for engraving animals soon came to the attention of publishers. He moved briefly to London to take up commissions before returning to the north-east to enter into what became a twenty year business partnership with his old master. In 1797, growing at last dissatisfied with Beilby, Bewick took on his own apprentices, which included his brother, John Bewick, and Robert Johnson and Luke Clennell who went on to become famous engravers in their own right.
Below are some examples of our favourite vignettes from volumes one and two of Bewick’s British Birds:
‘Man Pissing Against a Wall’ from British Birds, vol. I, 1797, p.42. Drawn by Thomas Bewick and cut by Luke Clennell.
‘The Snowman’ from British Birds, vol. I, 1797, p.78. Drawn by Robert Johnson.
‘A Boy and a Nest’ from British Birds, vol. II, 1804, p. 31. Drawn by Robert Johnson and cut by Thomas Bewick.
NB: Caption information found on the The Bewick Society website.
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Written by guest bloggers by Tamsin Rowe and Shabeena Anait, Skills for the Future Heritage Trainees.
Photographs copyright Tamsin Rowe and Shabeena Anait.