Penny Dreadfuls, 1866 · page 77 of 276
Ivan the Terrible; or, Dark Deeds of Night — page 77: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Description This page contains both an engraved illustration and running prose text from Chapter XXXIX of *Ivan the Terrible; or, Dark Deeds of Night*, a Victorian penny dreadful. The illustration depicts "The Escape of Captain Blue Jacket" and shows figures near a sailing vessel with smoke or mist, apparently illustrating a dramatic scene of capture or conflict. The prose describes two young captives, Harry and Darby, being seized by rough men on an island, threatened with violence, and then dragged to a hidden schooner where armed pirates await them in a concealed bay. The chapter ends with the captives being brought before a stern pirate captain in the ship's cabin.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
EV AN THE TERRIBLE: OR, DARK DEEDS OF NIGHT. S SS \ i} \/ i KS / FS (7 = Le /\= — ( / FE Se — a7 — ——— //) — - ISN . HEIN ' IH! Hi ‘ NEL YG aX NW \\\ We AX SES x ws "4 pier 7) <= site tpt | be NE Ad e \ )} AE SN s. . ty | \ AAW ee) Ss } } . \W \ ESN WS SN THE ESCAPE OF CAPTAIN BLUE JACKET, -See No. 11. CHAPTER XXXIX.—(continued), Hullo !” said one, in gruff guttural tones, “Hullo! what have we here? What, two young intruders on the island ! Well, bring them this way, we’ll make an example of the rascals! No one shall come prying into our affairs without paying dearly for it !” It was in vain that Harry endeavoured to explain matters to his rough captors, and point to the wrecked vessel in proof of what he said, for they only laughed coarsely at all he said, and swore in revengeful tones that ‘“‘they would skin them alive |” “‘ Skinning alive” was an idea too horrible for Darby, who gave tokens that he was not by any means willing to submit to such a fate, and for this purpose struggled manfully to re- lease himself from the vice-like hold of the ruffians in order to have a “fair fight” in order to settle the dispute. It was well that he followed Harry’s advice to remain quiet, for had his brave and gallant groom persisted in his struggies to get free, a pistol ball would have rattled thro No. 10. NOTICE, —Another Engraving (to be presented Gi/atis), is tn 5 of preparation. D&oUgi ebooks his brain, for a pistol was already cocked and pointed at his forehead, while another with a fiendish scowl], drew his cutlass ready and willing to cut his throat from ear to ear. Despondent and resigned to their hard fate, Harry and Darby were dragged by their captors to a distant part of the island, where a schooner lay in a small bay, screened from the sea view by a lofty circular ledge of rocks, which held a small inland bay. As they approached the schooner the chief of them whistled some mysterious signal, and on the instant the scene was all alive with fierce-looking armed men, who rushed out from various caves and hiding-places, They looked with scowls upon the two youthful captives, and hovered round like birds of prey ready and willing to pounes down upon the two defenceless youths and demolish them. Ere long they were conducted on board the schooner, <ni ushered into the cabin, wherein sat a grim, hard-fisted-looking pirateor buccaneer, 7 com Sine @ > |