"Oh, senseless spirit! let thy horn for thee Interpret: (Canto XXXI., lines 64-65) -
Gustave Dore
"Ser Brunetto! And are ye here?" (Canto XV., lines 28-29) -
Gustave Dore
"What cause," said he, "Hath bow'd thee thus!" (Canto XIX., 138-139) -
Gustave Dore
"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
Mallard in flight - Archibald Thorburn
A kneeling angel presenting a salver, with subsidiary studies of his head and drapery - (after) Antonio Cavallucci
The Death of St Peter Martyr 2 - Tiziano Vecellio (Titian)
A village at the banks of a river - Jan van Goyen
A mother dressing her young son in a kimono - Suzuki Harunobu
Artist and Model Looking at an Ancient Statue by Lamplight - Godfried Schalcken
A Terrace On A Seashore A Small Town Of Capuccini Near Sorrento 1827 - Silvestr Fedosievich Shchedrin
Lady with a Pet Dog 1672 - Pieter Cornelisz. van SLINGELANDT
The Herd Boy 1905 - Frederic Remington