comicbooks.com Join Free

Judge, 1921-08-13 · page 4 of 36

Judge — August 13, 1921 — page 4: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Judge — August 13, 1921 — page 4: Judge, 1921-08-13

What you’re looking at

# Analysis This illustration by Vaux Wilson depicts a romantic scene between a bride and groom in a rural, mountainous setting. The groom, dressed formally in a dark suit and hat, sits beside the bride in her white dress near a wooden gate with stacked rocks nearby. The dialogue reveals the joke's point: the bride romanticizes their pastoral location ("Isn't this heavenly, darling?"), while the groom pragmatically responds with hunger, wishing they'd brought sandwiches instead. The satire mocks the contrast between idealized honeymoon expectations and practical reality—a common theme in early-20th-century humor magazines like *Judge*. The groom's mundane concern undercuts the bride's romantic sentiment, suggesting that even newlyweds face ordinary hardships like hunger during their supposedly idyllic getaway.

📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)

Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.

Drawn by Vaux Wison + A. C. The Bride—Isn'T THIS HEAV DARLING? T COULD SIT HERE WITH YOU FOREVER! The Groom—By Jove! WE'D BROUGHT SOME DWICHE 4 comicbooks.com