Mezzotint by Jacob Gole (1660?-1737?) after Annibale Carracci. Wellcome Library no. 24994i |
Black humour (gallows humour, Galgenhumor) is a common feature of discourse about disability. However much we may deplore the fact, loss of mobility due to amputation of the lower limb -– at the thigh, leg or foot -- has been considered a particularly appropriate subject for such humour, perhaps owing to suppressed fear of losing such mobility as we may have. Irony is a way of playing down the horror of immobility while at the same time acknowledging it; and there can be intellectual pleasure (at least for functional bipeds) in the various paradoxes that can arise from limblessness, which are prominent in the drawings, photographs, prints and paintings in the Wellcome Library shown here.
Watercolour by C.W.D., 1866. Wellcome Library no. 12109i |
The victim (to Chairman) "Sir, in consequence of the carelessness of your servants. I have been compelled to have my leg amputated, besides suffering other injuries, and I consider myself entitled to compensation."
Facetious director. "Lost your leg have yer? Regular stumps etc? - Well! If yer any-think of a cricketer it must be an ill-convenience!"
Benevolent chairman. "Quite right sir - qu-i-te right, compensation by all means, loss of leg - eh? - an unfortunate accident that for all of us." (To secretary) "Here Mr Jones award this gentleman twelve shillings for a wooden one - and enter it on the minutes."'
Jones replies: "The usual discount sir I suppose for ready money? That'll make it eleven shillings." Another director adds: "One can't be too cautious but he don't look like a malingerer!".
Coloured etching, 19th century. Wellcome Library no. 44050i |
Coloured engraving published by Laurie and Whittle, 24 February 1800. Wellcome Library 44090i |
There are even positive advantages to losing a leg!
Here another seadog has lost both his legs to the naval surgeon, but there's one compensation: no more suffering from corns ("Keine Hühneraugen mehr!").
Lithograph after Johann Bahr, 1909. Wellcome Library no. 577262i
Etching by Frederick Carter, 1928. Wellcome Library no. 44343i (Wellcome Library/©RG Clark) |
Discarded crutches at Lourdes. Photograph, 1937. Wellcome Library no. 578619i |
Coloured lithograph by C.J. Grant, 1834. Wellcome Library no. 11854i. |
Yet … looking towards a future age of stem-cell therapy, who would claim that regeneration of a limb could not occur?
Colour lithograph by H.G. Banks, ca. 1899. Wellcome Library no. 556713i |
The song describes an evening out for four stage-Irishmen called Hogan, Casey, Murphy and "me"; originally "me" was Michael Nolan, a popular Irish music-hall performer. They had spent all their money drinking beer in a pub with an ex-Highland soldier called Patsy Callaghan, who had had his legs shot off from under his kilt when at war. To recover their funds, they got Callagahan drunk, removed his wooden legs and false teeth, pawned them, and left Callaghan literally legless on the pub bench. His plight, depicted on the front cover of the songsheet, is regarded by all as hilarious, though the speaker can't help wondering (in the words of the chorus) "What will poor Callaghan do?".
Michael Nolan asking "What will poor Callaghan do?" |
Oil painting attributed to the Master of Los Balbases, Burgos, ca. 1495. Wellcome Library no. 46009i |
The dream of Saint John Damascene: the Virgin attaches his severed right hand. Drawing, 16--. Wellcome Library no. 651341i |
The first examples discussed here have irony and humour, while the last two examples show that in religious contexts lack of a limb could be represented without humour and without irony. Let's end with an example that has irony but not (I suggest) humour.
Engraving by L. Gaultier, ca. 1613. Wellcome Library no. 571261i |
However, it is a detail of a broadsheet designed by the Franciscan friar Martin Meurisse (1584-1644) to teach logic in Paris in 1613. If it is the nature of man to be a biped, is a "unidexter" a man? And if the function of a foot is locomotion, does a detached foot have the nature of a foot? The answer is that parts that naturally belong to an entity and are necessary for its completion, if removed from that entity, are reduced to predicates of it. Students whose minds have been befuddled by the many distinctions in Aristotle's writings on logic will have been glad to have had such a vivid and ironic image to remind them of how the contingencies relate to the substance of human life.
[1] Anatole France, Le jardin d’Epicure (1895), Paris 1923, p. 158