This penny weekly serialized adventure stories for working-class youth, mixing melodrama with crime and maritime intrigue. The wood-engraved cover depicts a dramatic beach scene: a well-dressed young man and woman in conversation while a rough-looking figure lurks nearby, suggesting romantic complication and danger. Such publications flooded Victorian Britain's streets at one penny per issue, offering sensational narratives of secret plots, wreck and villainy—entertainment dismissed by middle-class critics as morally corrosive. Yet these serials pioneered the episodic storytelling, visual drama, and cheap mass production that would define comic books a century later, establishing a direct lineage from penny blood to pulp adventure to modern sequential art.
About this artifact
- Date
- 1868
- 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.