In one stanza of Lord Byron’s poem Childe Harold's Pilgrimage (1812–18), a dying gladiator reflects that he has been ‘butchered to make a Roman holiday’, a melancholic commentary on the cruel waste of humanity for the sake of public entertainment. Although Briton Rivière’s painting alludes to the poem, Rivière has imbued this work with Christian overtones not found in Byron’s text. Rivière’s slave draws the sign of the cross in the sand, making this a scene of religious martyrdom.
[1] Record of the sale to the NGV not recorded in the Agnew’s stockbook. See Picture Stockbook 1879–85, NGA27/1/1/6, pp. 242–43, Thomas Agnew & Sons archive, National Gallery Research Centre, London, accessed https://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/paintings/research/research-centre/agnews-stock-books/reference-nga27116-1879-85
[2] The official catalogue of exhibits, etc.: Centennial International Exhibition, Melbourne, Melbourne: Mason, Firth & M'Cutcheon 1888–89, Loan Collection, British Gallery, p. 30, accessed http://handle.slv.vic.gov.au/10381/298691
Exhibited Royal Academy, London, 1881, no. 155; Autumn Exhibition, Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool, 1881, no. 127; Fine Art Exhibition, Whitechapel Gallery, London, 1882, no. 46; Fine Art Exhibition, Whitechapel Gallery, London, 1887, no. 47, lent by Agnew’s; Loan Collection, British Gallery, Centennial International Exhibition, Melbourne, 1888–89, no. 123, lent by Agnew’s; The Olympic Spirit, Australian Gallery of Sport, Melbourne, 1987, cat. p. 8; The First Fifty Years: Nineteenth Century British Art from the Gallery Archives, NGV, Melbourne, 1992; Hidden Treasures, David Jones Gallery, Sydney, 1992.