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| Samuel Palmer Oak Trees, Lullingstone Park 1828 watercolor, gouache and ink on paper National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa |
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| Lady Augusta Mostyn Oak Tree, Eridge Park, Sussex before 1857 albumen silver print National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa |
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| Henri-Joseph Harpignies Oaks at Château Renard 1875 oil on canvas McNay Art Museum, San Antonio, Texas |
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| Jan van Goyen The Blasted Oak, or, The Fortune Teller 1638 oil on canvas Musée des Beaux-Arts de Bordeaux |
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| Filippo Napoletano (Filippo Angeli) Figures in Landscape with Blasted Tree before 1629 drawing British Museum |
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| David Armstrong Tree, Potsdam 1993 C-print Whitney Museum of American Art, New York |
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| Christo (Christo Javacheff) Wrapped Trees Project for Champs Élysées 1969 collage and mixed media on paper Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, Virginia |
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| Paul Flandrin Oak Trees at the Villa Borghese 1835 drawing British Museum |
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| Robert Glenn Ketchum Patriarch Oak 1993 C-print Akron Art Museum, Ohio |
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| Adolphe Martial Potémont Old Oaks at Bas Bréau ca. 1865 etching and drypoint Art Institute of Chicago |
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| Childe Hassam Easthampton Elms in May 1925 etching Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC |
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| Francis Frith Largest of the Cedars, Mount Lebanon ca. 1857-60 albumen silver print National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa |
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| Georgia O'Keeffe Cedar Tree with Lavender Hills 1937 oil on canvas Reynolda House Museum of American Art, Winston-Salem, North Carolina |
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| Anne Brigman The Dying Cedar 1906 platinum print Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC |
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| Robert Swain Gifford Trees and Meadow ca. 1885 oil on canvas Brooklyn Museum |
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| Birge Harrison Tunnel of Trees in Winter before 1929 oil on canvas (sold at Bonham's, New York in 2020) private collection |
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| Edward John Hughes Trees, Savary Island 1953 oil on canvas National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa |
Long John Brown & Little Mary Bell
Little Mary Bell had a Fairy in a Nut,
Long John Brown had the Devil in his Gut;
Long John Brown lov'd Little Mary Bell,
And the Fairy drew the Devil into the Nut-shell.
Her Fairy skip'd out & her Fairy skip'd in;
He laugh'd at the Devil saying "Love is a Sin."
The Devil he raged & the Devil he was wroth,
And the Devil enter'd into the Young Man's broth.
He was soon in the Gut of the loving Young Swain,
For John eat & drank to drive away Love's pain;
But all he could do he grew thinner & thinner,
Tho' he eat & drank as much as ten Men for his dinner.
Some said he had a Wolf in his stomach day & night,
Some said he had the Devil, & they guess'd right;
The Fairy skip'd about in his Glory, Joy & Pride,
And he laugh'd at the Devil till poor John Brown died.
Then the Fairy skip'd out of the old Nut-shell,
And woe & alack for Pretty Mary Bell!
For the Devil crept in where the Fairy skip'd out,
And there goes Miss Bell with her fusty old Nut.
– William Blake (ca. 1800-1803)




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