
Argosy Weekly April 1915: Woman Adrift in Neptune's Seas
A mood of desperate beauty and oceanic peril radiates from this Argosy weekly cover, depicting a young woman in tattered golden garments half-submerged in dark, churning seas. A dramatic shaft of light — possibly a searchlight or supernatural beam — cuts through the deep blue darkness above her, illuminating her upturned, imploring face. The painterly waves and luminous skin tones evoke classical maritime romanticism fused with pulp adventure urgency, perfectly capturing the era's taste for imperiled heroines.
The story title 'The Butt of Neptune's Jest' is spectacularly overwrought pulp naming at its finest. A luminous beam from unknown origin illuminates a half-drowned woman clinging to unseen wreckage — classic Munsey-era peril with mythological seasoning.
“ARGOSY Issued Weekly The Butt of Neptune's Jest by George Mariano 10¢ A COPY APRIL 3 $4.00 A YEAR”





