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HomeLife: The Gibson EraThe Complete Cartoon Archive › 'He Sprang Up, Trembling, to His Feet' — Illustration for *Gallegher and Other Stories*
'He Sprang Up, Trembling, to His Feet' — Illustration for *Gallegher and Other Stories* by Charles Dana Gibson
Public domain · digitally restored by comicbooks.com
The Complete Cartoon Archive

'He Sprang Up, Trembling, to His Feet' — Illustration for *Gallegher and Other Stories*

Charles Dana Gibson · 1891

Gibson's pen-and-ink drawing depicts a young working-class man—Gallegher, Richard Harding Davis's street-smart copy-boy protagonist—lurching upright in what appears to be a dim, confined space, one fist raised and thrust forward, his body caught between alarm and defiance. A crumpled figure or bundle lies at his feet; a barred aperture and a round peephole mark the wall behind him, suggesting a cell or locked room. The composition is tightly shadowed, Gibson using dense crosshatching to press darkness against the figure and isolate his pale, startled face. This is literary illustration rather than social cartoon: no caption hierarchy, no political target. It captures Davis's boy-reporter adventure fiction at its breathless pitch—the moment of sudden, physical reckoning that made Gallegher a sensation with American magazine readers in 1891.

About this artifact

Creator
Charles Dana Gibson
Date
1891
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.