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| Dennis Miller Bunker In the Greenhouse 1888 oil on canvas Amon Carter Museum, Fort Worth, Texas |
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| Jean-François Debord Retour de Belle Isle I 1986 oil on canvas Musée des Beaux-Arts de Pau |
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| Jean-François Debord Retour de Belle Isle II 1986 oil on canvas Musée des Beaux-Arts de Pau |
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| Kristina Eldon Biographical Landscapes No. 24 (Fox Talbot's Teapot) 2021 inkjet print Moderna Museet, Stockholm |
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| Kerstiaen de Keuninck Mountainous Landscape with Waterfall ca. 1600 oil on panel Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York |
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| Henri Le Sidaner Garden at Hampton Court ca. 1900 oil on canvas Musée des Beaux-Arts de Valenciennes |
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| Isaak Levitan Birch Grove ca. 1885-90 oil on canvas State Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow |
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| August Macke Kandern IV 1914 watercolor on cardboard Clemens-Sels Museum, Neuss, Germany |
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| Henri Matisse Interior with Eggplants 1911 tempera on canvas Musée de Grenoble |
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| Piet Mondrian Color Scheme for Salon of Ida Bienert 1926 gouache on paper Kupferstichkabinett, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen, Dresden |
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| Georgia O'Keeffe Blue and Green Music 1921 oil on canvas Art Institute of Chicago |
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| William Trost Richards Woodland Glade 1860 oil on canvas Amon Carter Museum, Fort Worth, Texas |
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| Roelant Savery Rocky Landscape ca. 1632 oil on canvas Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest |
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| Hans-Christian Schink Bach Ma (4A) 2005 C-print Von der Heydt Museum, Wuppertal |
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| Ivan Shishkin Edge of a Forest ca. 1892-93 oil on canvas State Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow |
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| Stanley Spencer Redlands Road, Reading 1956 oil on canvas High Museum of Art, Atlanta |
Eutychides the lyric poet is dead. Fly, ye people who dwell under earth; Eutychides is coming with odes, and he ordered them to burn with him twelve lyres and twenty-five cases of music. Now indeed Charon has got hold of you. Where can one depart to in future, since Eutychides is established in Hades too?
Simylus the lyre-player killed all his neighbours by playing the whole night, except only Origenes, whom Nature had made deaf, and therefore gave him longer life in the place of hearing.
A stone-deaf man went to law with another stone-deaf man, and the judge was much deafer than the pair of them. One of them contended that the other owed him five months' rent, and the other said that his opponent had ground corn at night. Says the judge, looking at them: "Why are you quarreling? She is your mother; you must both maintain her."
When Calpurnius the soldier saw the battle by the ships painted on a wall, as is the custom, the warrior lay stretched out pulseless and pale, calling out, "Quarter, ye Trojans dear to Ares." Then he enquired if he had been wounded, and with difficulty believed he was alive when he had agreed to pay ransom to the wall.
All say you are rich, but I say you are poor, for, Apollophanes, their use is the proof of riches. If you take your share of them, they are yours, but if you keep them for your heirs, they are already someone else's.
Thou reckonest up thy money, poor wretch; but Time, just as it breeds interest, so, as it overtakes thee, gives birth to grey old age. And so having neither drunk wine, nor bound thy temples with flowers, having never known sweet ointment or a delicate little love, thou shalt die, leaving a great and wealthy testament, and of all thy riches carrying away with thee but one obol.*
– from Book XI (Convivial and Satirical Epigrams) of the Greek Anthology, translated and edited by W.R. Paton (1917)
*that which it was customary to put in the corpse's mouth



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