Here's the sixteenth page:
(Click
here for a 1328X1996 version)
And, as usual, the page features both dialogue and a panel that the slideshow skipped over.
But's what's more interesting is that what takes place in the scene in the comic is similar in ways to two separate scenes that take place in the '91 Series, though the comic plays fast and loose with how they actually play on the series:
As the first begins to play early in Hour 4 of the series, Barnabas and Vicki walk through the woods and soon comment on the timelessness of wild places. Vicki remarks that she feels so free, it's as if she could fly. And that's when Barnabas recites the same lines from Byron that he does on Book 1, Issue 2's Page 15 of the comic, and Vicki also responds with her lines from Byron as in the comic. However, from there things digress greatly because when Vicki decides to playfully run away from Barnabas, he suffers the memory of Josette running from him to Widows' Hill. He frantically runs after Vicki, crying out, but in his mind he is unable to prevent Josette from jumping. Once he becomes himself again, he warns Vicki that she shouldn't run about about like she had been, and then he explains the legend of Widows' Hill and admits that it's where Josette died.
And as the second begins to play later in Hour 4 of the series, things are very different right from the outset because Barnabas and Vicki are in Josette's room at the Old House and he is reading poetry that he says was written by his namesake for Josette. As the situation soon becomes passionate between them, Barnabas is suddenly seized with blood lust and with difficulty he tears himself away from Vicki, turning his back to her to hide his vampiric state, just as he does on Book 1, Issue 2's Page 16 of the comic. Vicki begs him to tell her what's wrong, but Barnabas urges her to leave, claiming he "just doesn't feel" himself and begs her not to ask for a better explanation. Reluctantly, Vicki leaves, and after she does so, Barnabas, fangs exposed, moans in agony.