Skip to main content
Esquire Classic
Issues
Topics
Contributors
Sign In
Subscribe
cartoon
"Say, don't tell me you've managed to put one of those old five-chambered Smith & Wessons into working condition!"
December
1
1959
"Say, don't tell me you've managed to put one of those old five-chambered Smith & Wessons into working condition!"
December
1
1959
View Article Pages
cartoon
"Say, don't tell me you've managed to put one of those old five-chambered Smith & Wessons into working condition!"
December
1
1959
Sign In to read this article
Get instant access to 85+ years of Esquire.
Subscribe Now!
Exclusive & Unlimited access to
Esquire Classic - The Official Esquire Archive
Every issue Esquire has ever published, since 1933
Every timeless feature, profile, interview, novella - even the ads!
85+ Years of outstanding fiction from world-renowned authors
More than 150,000 Images — beautiful High-Resolution photography, zoom into every page
Unlimited Search and Browse
Bookmark all your favorites into custom Collections
Enjoy on Desktop, Tablet, and Mobile
View Full Issue
More From This Issue
FICTION
I Don't Need You Any More
December
1959
By
ARTHUR MILLER
PERSONALITY
Antonino the Great
December
1959
By
ROBERT O’BRIEN
FICTION
End of a Relationship
December
1959
By
ALBERTO MORAVIA
PICTURED ESSAYS
The Dark World of John Barrymore
December
1959
By
John Barrymore
ARTICLES
1960: Birth of a Century
December
1959
By
DAVID SCHOENBRUN
A CHRISTMAS RONDELET
Un Petit Drame
December
1959
By
George Bernard Shaw
Unlock every article Esquire has ever published.
Subscribe Now!
Exclusive & Unlimited access to
every timeless profile, interview, short story, feature, advertisement
, and much more!
More From This Issue
FICTION
I Don't Need You Any More
December
1959
By
ARTHUR MILLER
PERSONALITY
Antonino the Great
December
1959
By
ROBERT O’BRIEN
FICTION
End of a Relationship
December
1959
By
ALBERTO MORAVIA
Cartoons
cartoon
"Give us a rhumba, Gus!"
OCTOBER 1935
cartoon
All we want to do is live to see the day when a swing clarinetist points his clarinet at the floor instead of the ceiling when he plays a high note.
APRIL 1942
cartoon
"I'm Quittin' This Racket—i Can Make More Dough in a Shipyard!"
MARCH 1944
cartoon
cartoon
“I'll Bet the Bank Examiners Are Having a Hell of a Time with My Books!”
FEBRUARY 1938
cartoon
“Well, You Might at Least Offer Me a Cigar!”
FEBRUARY, 1942
cartoon
"And Whose Little Baby Are You?"
JUNE 1942
Get instant access to 85+ years of Esquire.
Subscribe Now!
Exclusive & Unlimited access to
Esquire Classic
Everything Esquire has ever published