Life, 1891-06-25 · page 7 of 15
Life — June 25, 1891 — page 7: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Page 399 Analysis This page from *Life* magazine contains three satirical pieces about relationships and social behavior in the early 20th century. **"Always Wrong"** (top left) tells a romantic story in verse: a woman refuses a suitor's kiss, then regrets it, calling him back—but he's already gone. The accompanying illustration shows their contrasting emotions. **"He Might Easily Have Missed"** (center) presents a dialogue joke about a man named Tomp who shot himself. The humor relies on dark irony typical of the era's comedy. The **top illustrations** show fashionable figures in period dress (large hats, long coats), satirizing courtship rituals and misunderstandings between men and women. **Bottom right**: A street scene captioned about "Carmencita doing der skirt dance," likely referencing a performance or theatrical trend of the period. Overall, the page satirizes romantic miscommunication and social conventions of the era.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
“So GLAD TO SEE YOU, Miss MaBet, IT's COMING ON TO RAIN —ER—Wwos'T You" HE WAS GOING TO SAY “ LET ME GET YOU AN UMBRELLA,” BUT SHE MISUNDERSTOOD HIM, ALWAYS WRONG. HILE wandering where soft breezes play, O'er meadows, green and wide, If he but loitered by the way, “Come on,” she sweetly cried. But when he paused to kiss her glove, And breathe in trembling dread The yearning story of his love, “Come off,” she stern- ly said. Madeline S. Bridges. HE MIGHT EASILY HAVE MISSED. HE: Did you hear about young Tomp- He: No. What? SHE: Took upa pistol and blew his brains out last night ! He: Must have been a mighty good shot. ky . That wasn’t nice of you to refuse me the ten dol- lars I wanted to bor row ; one friend should always help another. A B: Yes; but you always want to be the other. if IZ ‘HI, Jimmy, HERE'S CARMENCITA DOIN’ DER SKIRT DANCE.” comicbooks.com