Pulp Fiction, 1883 · page 61 of 142
Stories with a Vengeance — page 61: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
This page is a full-page illustration rendered in black-and-white engraving style. The caption reads "THE DROWS AND OTHERS MADE SWIFTLY FOR THE MAN-OF-WAR." (See p. 54.) The image depicts a dramatic maritime scene showing multiple small boats and their occupants rushing toward or away from a large sailing vessel in the background. The composition features dynamic action with figures in the foreground boats and detailed rigging on the tall-masted ship. Heavy clouds of smoke or steam rise from the right side of the composition, suggesting combat or disaster. The style is typical of early pulp fiction illustration, with intricate crosshatching and line work characteristic of wood engraving or similar period techniques.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
Tt 1) }} ] ! | i i H ‘f i] i y i ( —_— (See p. 54.) TATE J Original from PENN | COMICMoOO KS. COM 4 y f "/ 9 © i] A / fj Ry FSM MT yo i ae eae PRL te ] mt - = vas Lae ry eae ee WI fe 2 4 / 1a WR Vi \ \ . | \ hhh N\\ THE DHOWS AND OTHERS MADE SWIFTLY FOR THE MAN-OF-WAB.” \y fi \ } \ | \ } ry Gor gle hm om iti Dic