The Inferno, Canto 18, line 38: Ah! how they made them bound at the first stripe! -
Gustave Dore
The Inferno, Canto 18, lines 116-117: Why greedily thus bendest more on me, Than on these other filthy ones, thy ken? -
Gustave Dore
The Inferno, Canto 18, lines 130-132: Thais is this, the harlot, whose false lip Answerd her doting paramour that askd, Thankest me much! -
Gustave Dore
The Inferno, Canto 19, lines 10-11: There stood I like the friar, that doth shrive A wretch for murder doomd -
Gustave Dore
The Inferno, Canto 21, lines 50-51: This said, They grappled him with more than hundred hooks -
Gustave Dore
The Inferno, Canto 22, line 70: In pursuit He therefore sped, exclaiming; Thou art caught. -
Gustave Dore
The Inferno, Canto 22, lines 137-139: But the other provd A goshawk able to rend well his foe; And in the boiling lake both fell. -
Gustave Dore
The Inferno, Canto 23, lines 52-54: Scarcely had his feet Reachd to the lowest of the bed beneath, When over us the steep they reachd -
Gustave Dore
The Inferno, Canto 23, lines 92-94: Tuscan, who visitest The college of the mourning hypocrites, Disdain not to instruct us who thou art. -
Gustave Dore
Broadstairs, Kent - Walter Williams
Waiting for the return of the fishing fleet - John James Wilson
The Grampians - Alexander Nasmyth
The Harbour - Claude-joseph Vernet
Mont Orgueil Castle - Richard Principal Leitch
Clear Mountain and Running Stream - Wang Yuanqi
Saint Anthony the Abbot Tempted by a Lump of Gold - Fra (Guido di Pietro) Angelico
A Lunar night At the spring - Ivan Konstantinovich Aivazovsky