John Bull is the personification of Great Britain (or at least of
England). He was first created in 1712 by John Arbuthnot, and eventually
became a common sight in British editorial cartoons of the 19th and
early 20th centuries. John is a sort of British Everyman, endowed with
common sense and good intentions, who likes a pint of beer. In his trip
to the Fiscal Wonder-land, John's frustrations with the bewildering
nonsensi-cality of economic politics are made apparent by the author and
illustrator. You don't need to be an expert in early twentieth-century
British politics to enjoy John's adventures, though. The story's parody
of Lewis Carroll's Wonderland books is still relevant and entertaining
even a century later. Today's bankers and politicians seem not to have
learned much from history. Regrettable as that is, at least Charles
Geake and Francis Carruthers Gould can still make us laugh about it!