LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

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FIGURE PAGE
1. The Holy Family. Pintoricchio. Academy, Siena 3
2. The Valley Farm. Constable. National Gallery, London 5
3. Madonna and St. Jerome. Correggio. Parma Gallery, Italy 7
4. The Wood-Gatherers. Corot. Corcoran Art Gallery, Washington, D.C. 9
5. The Aurora. Guido Reni. Rospigliosi Palace, Rome 11
6. Singing Boys. Franz Hals. Cassel Gallery, Germany 13
7. St. Barbara. Palma Vecchio. Santa Maria Formosa, Venice 15
8. Charles I and His Horse. Van Dyck. Louvre, Paris 17
9. The Gale. Homer. Worcester Art Museum, Massachusetts 19
10. Madonna del Gran' Duca. Raphael. Pitti Palace, Florence 21
11. Joan of Arc. Bastien-Lepage. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City 23
12. The Fates. Michael Angelo. Pitti Palace, Florence 25
13. Madonna of the Chair. Raphael. Pitti Palace, Florence 27
14. Wolf and Fox Hunt. Rubens. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City 29
15. The Night Watch. Rembrandt. Ryks Museum, Amsterdam 31
16. The Assumption. Titian. Academy, Venice 33
17. The Melon-Eaters. Murillo. Pinakothek, Munich 35
18. The Muses. Romano. Pitti Palace, Florence 37
19. "Come Abide with Us." Fra Angelico. San Marco, Florence 39
20. The Supper at Emmaus. Rembrandt. Louvre, Paris 41
21. Children of Charles I. Van Dyck. Dresden Gallery 43
22. The Buttery. De Hooch. Ryks Museum, Amsterdam 45
23. Coronation of the Virgin. Botticelli. Uffizi Palace, Florence 47
24. The Wolf-Charmer. La Farge. City Art Museum, St. Louis 49
25. The Old Woman Cutting Her Nails. Rembrandt. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City

Dear Children:

The stories I am telling about the pictures and their painters in this book are gathered from many countries. Some of them belong to very early times when history was told to grown up people by story-tellers at banquets and in the homes, on the street corners and public halls. Some of the stories are legends and traditions that grew up with the beginnings of the Christian era. All of them are taken from authentic sources and many of them illustrate some natural law.

The artists who painted these pictures knew history and the early myths, the fairy-tales, the legends and the traditions, the Bible and the Apocrypha. We love these pictures because they are beautiful and true, but really to understand them we must know what the artists had in mind when they painted them.

If you learn to know these pictures and love them, I will make you another book soon about statues and their stories.

With love and best wishes, from your friend,

Lorinda Munson Bryant


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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