Life, 1901-10-10 · page 3 of 20
Life — October 10, 1901 — page 3: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis This page from *Life* magazine (page 283) features a romantic illustration titled "To Celestine" rather than political satire. The image shows a woman in profile holding a rose, accompanied by a poem addressing a recipient named Celestine. The poem expresses devotion and eternal faithfulness, with a conditional statement: the speaker promises constancy on the condition that "you, my dear patrician, / Must stay just as you are!" This appears to be sentimental romantic content rather than political commentary or satire. The illustration style—a soft pencil portrait—and the intimate nature of the verse suggest this is decorative/romantic material typical of early 20th-century magazine content, rather than satirical commentary on public figures or events. The signature at the bottom indicates the artist's name, though it's not entirely clear from the image.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
To Celestine. 7 OU ask me if forever I will be true to you. In all the world there’s never A lover who's more true! And yet there's one condition My constancy to mar— That you, my dear patrician, Must stay just as you are! comicbooks.com