"Oh, Indy!" a shaken voice exclaimed. "Do you think he's dying?"

"Oh, Indy!" a shaken voice exclaimed.  "Do you think he's dying?"
"Oh, Indy!" a shaken voice exclaimed. "Do you think he's dying?"

"Oh, Indy!" a shaken voice exclaimed. "Do you think he's dying?"

Date1916
Artist (American illustrator, 1871–1953)
Illustration Citation"Rosemary Roselle," by Joseph Hergesheimer, in The Saturday Evening Post, September 30, 1916
MediumWatercolor on illustration board
Dimensions10 11/16 × 10 1/8 in. (27.1 × 25.7 cm)
Credit LineAcquired through the estate of Frieda Becher, 1979
Object number1979-76
On View
Not on view
ClassificationsDRAWING
Label TextFrederic Gruger was one of the most prolific and expert artists in black and white media, which he mastered early in his career as a newspaper illustrator. Here, a young Massachusetts professor in the Union Army suffers an assault and is cared for by (and falls in love with) a young Richmond woman. Fiction about the Civil War, often centering on romantic complications, was popular well into the twentieth century.