*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 65026 ***

[Image unavailable.]

(In certain versions of this etext [in certain browsers] clicking on the image will bring up a larger version.)

(etext transcriber's note)

{1} 

THE SOCIAL LADDER

Drawings by

CHARLES DANA GIBSON



New York: R. H. RUSSELL London: JOHN LANE 1902 {2}

This is the seventh book in the regular series of Mr. Gibson’s published drawings, consisting of:

DRAWINGS BY C. D. GIBSONNo. 1
PICTURES OF PEOPLENo. 2
SKETCHES AND CARTOONSNo. 3
THE EDUCATION OF MR. PIPPNo. 4
AMERICANSNo. 5
A WIDOW AND HER FRIENDSNo. 6
THE SOCIAL LADDERNo. 7

Each book contains eighty-four of Mr. Gibson’s best cartoons, and all are uniform in size, shape and binding. Thanks are due Messrs. Mitchell & Miller for their co-operation in making this volume as representative and complete as possible.

Copyright by Mitchell & Miller
COPYRIGHT, 1902, BY ROBERT HOWARD RUSSELL

THIS book is published in Great Britain by especial arrangement with Mr. James Henderson, the proprietor of the English copyright of some of the drawings.

Printed in the United States of America, in July, 1902
Entered at Stationers’ Hall

{3} 

{5} 

{4}

[Image unavailable.]

{6}

[Image unavailable.]

THE SOCIAL LADDER

{7}

[Image unavailable.]
[Image unavailable.]

STUDIES IN EXPRESSION.

{8}

An Imitation of the lady of the house.

{9}

[Image unavailable.]

{10}

[Image unavailable.]

MRS. STEELE POOLE’S HOUSEWARMING.

[Image unavailable.]

She: “You don’t know what it is to love.

I don’t, eh? Haven’t I been to every play, read every popular novel in the last six months, got into debt hopelessly, had my appendix removed, {11}and all for your sake?

[Image unavailable.]

Mr. Meeker doesn’t object so much to his wife’s entertainments as he does to the way she uses his room for the gentlemen’s things.

{12}

{13}

[Image unavailable.]
[Image unavailable.]

HIS REVENGE.

Time: Any morning at 4:15.

Mr. Meeker, having been kept up late for the last twenty years and rebuked for his lack of interest, develops a sudden enthusiasm. Mrs. {14}Meeker and the girls now do the waiting.

{15}

[Image unavailable.]
[Image unavailable.]

STUDIES IN EXPRESSION.

{16}

At a dramatic agency.

[Image unavailable.]

THE SONG OF THE DÉBUTANTE.

{17}

Mother, dear Mother, come home with me now.

[Image unavailable.]

THE TROUBLES OF THE RICH.

{18}

At the last moment, several who were invited send their regrets.

{19}

[Image unavailable.]

{20}

[Image unavailable.]

THE STORY OF HIS LIFE.

[Image unavailable.]

{21}

[Image unavailable.]

THE HEIRESS.

She cannot talk, she cannot sing,
She looks a fright; but folks aver
Ten millions have been set apart
To talk and sing and look for her.

{22}

[Image unavailable.]

{23}

[Image unavailable.]

Mr. Grubbs walks in his sleep and appears for the first and only time at an entertainment in his own house.

{24}

[Image unavailable.]

{25}

[Image unavailable.]

WHY NOT

have plate glass fronts to the opera boxes? The occupants could still be seen, but not heard.

{26}

[Image unavailable.]

{27}

[Image unavailable.]

THE NEXT MORNING

Mrs. Innittor Dedd’s maid reads: “Among those present was Mrs. Innittor Dedd, whose lovely face and splendid figure were enhanced by a tiara of diamonds and three ropes of pearls. She wore her famous rubies and was even more regal than at the Bullyon’s ball the night before,” ETC., ETC.

{28}

[Image unavailable.]

{29}

[Image unavailable.]

ADVICE TO A HOSTESS.

Keep your entertainment within the mental grasp of your guests.

{30}

[Image unavailable.]

{31}

[Image unavailable.]

MODERN CELEBRITIES.

An interesting discussion between the author of “The Barrenness of Unkissed Kisses” and a famous dramatist.

{32}

[Image unavailable.]

WASTED ENERGY.

Professor Bung: A beauty? Well, perhaps she is.

Mr. Rattles: Why, man, haven’t you noticed the divine way she smiles?

Oh, I’m not altogether unobservant. I have made a calculation, in fact, that the energy expended on her smiles, if scientifically applied, would run an automobile.{33}

[Image unavailable.]

STUDIES IN EXPRESSION.

Showing that a man may be a hero in his own house.

{34}

[Image unavailable.]

{35}

[Image unavailable.]

PARASITES.

Basking in the golden sunshine.

{36}

[Image unavailable.]

OF COURSE THERE ARE MERMAIDS.

{37}

[Image unavailable.]

PLENTY OF GOOD FISH IN THE SEA.

{38}

[Image unavailable.]

{39}

[Image unavailable.]

HIS CHRISTMAS GIFT.

{40}

[Image unavailable.]

{41}

[Image unavailable.]

A SUGGESTION.

For ill-assorted pairs.

{42}

[Image unavailable.]

{43}

[Image unavailable.]

Mrs. Katcham prides herself on always having the latest celebrity at her house. To-night it is no less a personage than “Gouger.”

{44}

[Image unavailable.]

{45}

[Image unavailable.]

STUDIES IN EXPRESSION.

While Uncle Joe has his tie fixed.

{46}

[Image unavailable.]

{47}

[Image unavailable.]

A CROOKED TALE.

There was a crooked man,
Who made a crooked deal,
And got a crooked fortune
By a very crooked steal;
He had a crooked wife,
With a very crooked name,
And now they live apart
In very crooked fame.

{48}

[Image unavailable.]

He: You promised to be my pupil and learn to love me.

But it makes such a difference when your heart isn’t in your work.{49}

[Image unavailable.]

THE AMBITIOUS MOTHER AND THE OBLIGING CLERGYMAN.

{50}

[Image unavailable.]

{51}

[Image unavailable.]

FROZEN.

{52}

[Image unavailable.]

WHERE IGNORANCE, ETC.

Where did you go on your wedding trip?

That’s what I’ve been wondering.{53}

[Image unavailable.]

STUDIES IN EXPRESSION.

While a Spanish-American hero describes the horrors of war.

{54}

[Image unavailable.]

{55}

[Image unavailable.]

THE MERRY-GO-ROUND.

{56}

[Image unavailable.]

THE BROKER RINGS UP HIS GIRL.

Hello! Hello! Big strike in Consolidated Catamount—can marry—want three days’ option hand and heart.

She: Will give refusal.

{57}

[Image unavailable.]

ANOTHER MOTH.

{58}

[Image unavailable.]

{59}

[Image unavailable.]

THE ENTHUSIAST WHO INSISTS UPON SHOWING YOU HIS ESTATE.

{60}

[Image unavailable.]

{61}

[Image unavailable.]

STUDY IN EXPRESSION.

While the hostess whispers to Jones, “Remember, now, we are counting on you to make us laugh.”

{62}

[Image unavailable.]

{63} 

{64} 

{65}

[Image unavailable.]

ONE OF THE DISADVANTAGES OF BEING IN LOVE WITH AN ATHLETIC GIRL.

{66}

[Image unavailable.]

{67}

[Image unavailable.]

Pillsbury does not care for society, but his wife will not go without him.

{68}

[Image unavailable.]

{69}

[Image unavailable.]

WHY SOME CHILDREN DIDN’T GET THEIR PRESENTS.

{70}

[Image unavailable.]

{71}

[Image unavailable.]

ALAS! THE VOICE OF HIS FIANCÉE.

{72}

[Image unavailable.]

{73}

[Image unavailable.]

STUDIES IN EXPRESSION.

The author and the soubrette.

{74}

[Image unavailable.]

{75}

[Image unavailable.]

THE HALF ORPHAN.

Mamma will be down in a minute.{76}

[Image unavailable.]

{77}

[Image unavailable.]

“UNLUCKY AT CARDS, LUCKY IN LOVE.{78}

[Image unavailable.]

{79}

[Image unavailable.]

WHEN A MAN’S IN LOVE.

[Image unavailable.]

*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 65026 ***