Life, 1893-08-17 · page 7 of 20
Life — August 17, 1893 — page 7: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis of Life Magazine Page 103 This page contains three satirical cartoon vignettes depicting everyday interactions in a country grocery store, likely from the early 20th century. The cartoons mock social pretension and class attitudes among Americans. The first shows a hen entering a back door—labeled as someone who "found a chance to set" after weeks of worry. The second depicts a grocer refusing fresh eggs to a customer. The third shows a customer entering, with dialogue suggesting they're inquiring whether the grocer has "come fine ones." The final dialogue between a "Foreigner" and "American" about "Zygmowskys among your landed gentry" satirizes American attitudes toward newly-arrived immigrants, suggesting Americans view recent arrivals as somehow beneath established social classes—despite America's reputation as a nation of immigrants.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
* LIFE York; Mr. Reinhart isa Pittsburger; Mr. Boughton spent his early years in the United States and unquestionably belongs there, although he hap- pened first to see the light in England. Mr. Millet is of a very old Sngland stock, and Mr. Sargent derived his parents from ica, though he chose to be born in Florence, and seems never to have found time to come home, even for a visit. He lives in Lon- don, as do, more or less of the time, Mr. Abbey, Mr. Boughton and Mr. Millet, and Mr, Reinhart lives in Paris. Inasmuch as it appears that no amount of expostulation could affect the propensity of the: gentlemen to domesticate themselves abroad, it is as well, perhaps, that we should be resigned to their preference, and even be thankful that, while continuing to breathe the air of freedom ourselves, we may enjoy so large a share of the beneficial effect of the effete European atmosphere upon their imaginations. We might as well be glad, too, te them up, for he does it very agreeably, as much real comfortand satisfac- that Mr. James is there to w and probably gives us thereby quite tion as if he were at home writing ws up, as by rights he should be. He finds no sort of fault with his friends for preferring the Worcestershire village of Broadway to New York or Chicago, and, after all, if we | blame any Americans for living abroad, it should be those who | go to be idle, rather than those who go to work. Mr. Abbey has | justified his choice of an environment. He belongs in Broadway quite | as much as Mr, Parsons does, who lives there by an inherited right to an WORRYING MY HEART OUT FOR Wi FOUND A CHANCE TO SET. | English setting. As for Mr. Millet, he is a natural cosmopolitan, | with an inherent right to light on any spot of earth from which he can | see a picture, and to hold it until the picture is made. The man whom Mr. James has doubts about is Mr. Reinhart. He intimates that there is a don'tgivadam streak in Mr. Reinhart which amplifies his range, to be sure, since apparently he would as soon draw one thing as another. But it has the remarkable effect of making Mr. James wonder whether “the cosmopolite does not necessarily pay for his freedom by a want of function—the impersonality of not being representative!" Certainly Mr. James himself has not paid that — Customer (who has just entered front door): GOT ANY price, His function is distinct enough, and when the Americans in TRESMFCOS TODAY Do Europe get leave to send a delegate to Congress he will be the repre- oxes, EO itive of their choice. Ww Here a pages of gossip about artists and art, yet a layman can understand almost every word of it—every word indeed, provided he is so far enlightened that, indoctrinated in the lingo of art-critics as to know 1 that “ plastic " does not mean sticky, but something quite different. at a good writer he is ¢ a hundred and seventy-five \ * ‘ * } HERE is good reading in “ The Niagara Book.” Niagara is important and worth knowing about. The book is a compen- dium of all that is knowable about it, and of much besides that isn’t strictly knowable. Of the latter sort is Mark Twain's contribution of “Extracts from Adam's Diary,” which is really and truly funny. Other eminent hands besides Mark Twain's contribute to this excep- tional guide-book. Mr. Howells opens it with the narrative of his first and last visits to the Falls, Prof. Shaler tells the geological part of the Niagara story, and Mr. Peter A. Porter sustains the Customer; WELL, 1—ER—DON'T WANT TO BUY ANY, 1 JUST WANTED TO KNOW IF YOU HAD ‘EM, historical end. Other contributors tell what to see and deal with the local botany and beasts (including the vi g lions) and all about the [SOREIGNER: Are the Zognows scheme that is in process of development for using Niagara's water- your landed gentry ? power, The book has good pictures by Harry Fenn, and a striking AMERICAN: Wi (Underhill & Nichols : Buffalo.) gentry. among II, among our recently-landed cove comicbooks.com