Popular artistic allusions to the fable, or the idiom arising from it, were especially common during the 19th century. Where Lope de Vega had adapted the theme to a problem play in the 17th century, the Belgian composer
Albert Grisar used it as the basis for his one-act comic opera of 1855,
Le chien du jardinier. The idiom was also taken up in the US by the successful writer of farces,
Charles H. Hoyt, where a horse rather than the more common ox figured on the 1899 poster (see left). The title has also been used in various media since then, but without reference to the fable in publicity or on covers. Several well-known artists had illustrated fable collections and their designs were recycled for various purposes. Among these may be mentioned
Wenceslaus Hollar's print for the 1666 Ogilby edition of Aesop's fables, in which a dog occupies the manger and barks at a single ox being driven into a wooden barn. Shortly afterwards,
Francis Barlow pictured the dog snarling on a pile of hay in a brick-built barn, while the dog does so in a more open farmyard structure in
Samuel Howitt's
A New Work of Animals (1810). Hollar's design of the ox turning its head to look round at the dog with the barn's brick entrance behind was clearly an influence on later illustrators, including those for the various editions of
Samuel Croxall's fable collection and for
Thomas Bewick's of 1818. Such illustrations were influential too on those who created designs for crockery. That on a
Spode serving dish from 1831 is also related to the Barlow design, although the action takes place outside the barn. A
Staffordshire nursery dish of 1835, however, has more in common with Howitt's design. The fable also figured on the popular alphabet plates from Brownhills Pottery later in the 19th century, although in this case only the ox's head is featured as it gazes at the dog reared up and barking. In Britain artistic preference was for the anecdotal and the sentimental among 19th century genre artists, who found the fable ideal for their purposes. The most successful, and typical of many others, was Walter Hunt (1861–1941), whose "Dog in the Manger" (1885) was bought by the
Chantrey Bequest and is now in
Tate Britain. At least two versions exist of the work. In one two calves peer at a
Jack Russell puppy that sits looking back in the hay that they want to eat. In the Tate version, a different breed is curled up asleep in their manger. The idiom was also put to figurative use during the 19th century. In much the same anecdotal tradition, the print-maker
Thomas Lord Busby (1782–1838) used the title to show a
dyspeptic man eyeing askance a huge dinner, while hungry beggars and an importunate dog look on, in a work from 1826. Later on
Charles H. Bennett revisited the scene in his
The Fables of Aesop and Others Translated into Human Nature (1857), where a dog dressed as a footman and carrying food to his master bares his teeth at the poor ox begging at the door. In this case the fable was rewritten to fit the scenario. Such work, bordering on the cartoon, provided a profitable avenue for social commentary. An American example appeared in the illustration to a children's book of 1880, where a dog dressed as a ruffian stands on the straw, cudgel in hand, warning off a cow and her calf (see above). It ushers in use of the theme in illustrated papers a little later.
J. S. Pughe's centrefold in
Puck pictures a dog in the uniform of a U.S. Marine holding off European nations that wish to participate in the
Nicaragua Canal scheme. It was followed by the cover cartoon of ''
Harper's Weekly'' picturing
William Jennings Bryan as the dog, obstructing the choice of the Democratic presidential candidacy and preventing others getting at the
White House oats. ==References==