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HomeLife: The Gibson EraThe Complete Cartoon Archive › "You have been very successful with the girls — what's your rule in making love to one?"
"You have been very successful with the girls — what's your rule in making love to one?" by Gibson, Charles Dana, 1867-1944, artist
Public domain · digitally restored by comicbooks.com
The Complete Cartoon Archive

"You have been very successful with the girls — what's your rule in making love to one?"

Gibson, Charles Dana, 1867-1944, artist · 1904, from *Life* magazine

Gibson's pen-and-ink drawing pairs two figures central to his social universe: a Gibson Girl in a trailing evening gown — corseted, poised, glancing away with studied indifference — and a shorter, somewhat hapless young man in formal tail-coat and striped trousers, hands pocketed, gazing at her with an expression of mild, self-aware foolishness. Gibson's targets here are class and courtship ritual. The caption's joke turns on self-deprecating honesty: the successful suitor's secret is calculated self-abasement. Gibson skewers masculine romantic vanity by letting the man cheerfully confess his own absurdity — a wry inversion of the era's breezy confidence that social performance and sincerity were the same thing.

About this artifact

Creator
Gibson, Charles Dana, 1867-1944, artist
Date
1904, from *Life* magazine
Rights
Public domain — free to view, share, and reuse.
Restoration
Digitally restored and hosted by comicbooks.com.

Part of our mission to preserve and restore the public-domain heritage of the medium.