Life, 1900-09-06 · page 5 of 20
Life — September 6, 1900 — page 5: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis of Life Magazine Page 185 This page features a single illustration by Ruth Willington titled "It Does Men Good to Be Jilted." The scene depicts a romantic rejection: a well-dressed woman in an elaborate dark gown turns away from a suited man in what appears to be an indoor setting, while other figures observe in the background. The caption dialogue reads: "The Rejected One: I Hardly Think So. Most of Them Get Over It and Marry Some One." This is satirical commentary on romantic rejection and courtship customs of the era. The joke appears to mock the common Victorian/Edwardian notion that romantic rejection is devastating, with the rejected suitor's protestations being countered by the suggestion that rejected men typically recover and marry someone else—hardly the tragedy they claim it to be.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
Ruth Wittington; 17 pors MEN GooD To BE JILTED. The Refected One; 1 MANDLY THINK 80. MOST OF THEM GET OVER IT AND MANRY £OME ONT. comicbooks.com