The Inferno, Canto 34, lines 127-129: By that hidden way My guide and I did enter, to return To the fair world -
Gustave Dore
The Inferno, Canto 34, lines 133: Thus issuing we again beheld the stars. -
Gustave Dore
The Inferno, Canto 34, lines 20-21: Lo! he exclaimd, lo Dis! and lo the place, Where thou hast need to arm thy heart with strength. -
Gustave Dore
The Inferno, Canto 5, lines 105-106: 'Love brought us to one death: Caina waits The soul, who spilt our life.' -
Gustave Dore
The Inferno, Canto 5, lines 134-135: 'In its leaves that day We read no more.' -
Gustave Dore
The Inferno, Canto 5, lines 137-138: I through compassion fainting, seemd not far From death, and like a corpse fell to the ground. -
Gustave Dore
The Inferno, Canto 5, lines 72-74: 'Bard! willingly I would address those two together coming, Which seem so light before the wind.' -
Gustave Dore
The Inferno, Canto 6, lines 24-26: Then my guide, his palms Expanding on the ground, thence filled with earth Raisd them, and cast it in his ravenous maw. -
Gustave Dore
The Inferno, Canto 6, lines 49-52: 'Thy city heapd with envy to the brim, Ay that the measure overflows its bounds, Held me in brighter days. Ye citizens Were wont to name me Ciacco.' -
Gustave Dore
The Deposition - Libri Gerolamo dai
Soldiers returning from battle - Joseph Conrad Seekatz
Sunday in the Park - Philippe Jacques Linder
A morning walk to town - Anthony Devis
Peasant Boy with Hat Study - Laszlo Mednyanszky
The Umbrella Trip from Flibustiers Parisiens - Junca
The Adoration of the Magi - Jean Pierre Granger
A prophet of God denounces the idolatry of Jeroboam - William Brassey Hole
In Thought - (after) Charles Sillem Lidderdale