"why greedily thus bendest more on me, (Canto XVIII., line 116) -
Gustave Dore
"Why pluck'st thou me?" (Canto XIII., line 34) -
Gustave Dore
"Within these ardours are the spirits, each Swathed in confining fire." (Canto XXVI., lines 48-49) -
Gustave Dore
'Be that word our sign of parting, bird or fiend!' I shrieked, upstarting. -
Gustave Dore
'Get thee back into the tempest and the Night's Plutonian shore!' -
Gustave Dore
'Surely,' said I, 'surely that is something at my window lattice; -
Gustave Dore
'T is some visitor entreating entrance at my chamber door? -
Gustave Dore
?A stately Raven of the saintly days of yore. -
Gustave Dore
Dawn and dusk on an estuary - William A. Thornley or Thornbery
A rhenish river landscape with a herdsman and cattle - Cornelis Kimmel
Portait Of A Gentleman - (after) Hudson, Thomas
Portrait Of A Gentleman - Richard Waitt
The barque Sumatra of Llanelly approaching the South Stack Lighthouse - William H. Yorke
Sketch Of A Dog - Boris Dmitrievich Grigoriev
On a meadow sitting boy - Georges Seurat
A Winter Landscape with Travellers on a Path in a Village, a frozen Waterway nearby - (after) Daniel Van Heil
Boats on an Italianate lake - (after) James Baker Pynne