This is an extremely old black and white photo, not even of Polaroid heritage, within which, framed by the fenced-in pastures of some form of farmstead, stands a potbellied man in farmer's overalls and a young woman in what appears to be mid-twentieth-century garb.
An enormous and saddled stallion rears its proud head in the picture's midground, upon whose stirrup the lady's frozen in mid-climb, supported by the gentleman as he keeps the horse steady.
Both individuals are clearly in the midst of some decades-old private joke, with the man's lips parted in mid-laugh and the woman's face set in an amused grin.
On the back of the picture, in much more modern script, somebody's written, "I'm glad the Japanese took you in Saipan.
You don't have to see judgment day."
An enormous and saddled stallion rears its proud head in the picture's midground, upon whose stirrup the lady's frozen in mid-climb, supported by the gentleman as he keeps the horse steady.
Both individuals are clearly in the midst of some decades-old private joke, with the man's lips parted in mid-laugh and the woman's face set in an amused grin.
On the back of the picture, in much more modern script, somebody's written, "I'm glad the Japanese took you in Saipan.
You don't have to see judgment day."