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ARTISTS
ARTISTS:
Anonymous. Cock Robin Series: Tom Thumb (Linen edition)
Anonymous. Familiar Series: The Story of Tom Thumb
Anonymous. From: Tom Thumbe, His Life and Death (1630)
Beard, Dan(iel Carter) (1850-1941)
- "The Abbot's Solemn Procession" (1889)
- "After the Explosion" (1889)
- "After Prayers We Had Dinner" (1889)
- "All Men Are Born Free and Equal" (1889)
- "And So We Started" (1889)
- "And were Soon as Sociable as Old Acquaintances" (1889)
- "Another Miracle" (1889)
- "Armor is Heavy, Yet it is a Proud Burden, and a Man Standeth Straight in it" (1889)
- "At the Twelfth Repetition they Fell Apart in Chunks" (1889)
- "Audi Alteram" (1889)
- "A Band of Slaves" (1889)
- "Barber to H. M., The King" (1889)
- "Bgwjjilligkkk!!" (1889)
- "The Boys Helped Me, or I Could Have Never Got in" (1889)
- "Brer Merlin Steals the Lariat" (1889)
- "Brother to Dirt Like this?" (1889)
- "Burial of a Freeman" (1889)
- "By a Sarcasm of Law and Phrase They Were Freemen" (1889)
- "Catcher of the Ulster Nine" (1889)
- "Charge of the 500 Knights" (1889)
- "A Child's Affair of Simpleness" (1889)
- "Children of Monarchy by the Grace of God and the Established Church" (1889)
- "The Church Is Master Now." (1889)
- "The Church Puts Its Foot in It" (1889)
- "The Church, the King, the Nobleman, and the Freeman" (1889)
- "Deciding an Argument" (1889)
- "Decorations of Sixth Century Aristocracy" (1889)
- "Defend Thee, Lord! Peril of Life Is Toward!" (1889)
- "'Delirium, of Course, But So Real!'" (1889)
- "Detailed an Intelligent Priest, and Ordered Him to Report It" (1889)
- "Discrepancy in Noses Makes No Difference" (1889)
- "The Earth Belongs to the People" (1889)
- "Effect of the Pipe on the Freemen" (1889)
- "Effect of the Pipe on Sandy" (1889)
- "Effect of the Sun on the Iron Clothes" (1889)
- "The End" (1889)
- "Evolution" (1889)
- "The False Prophet Going to Meet the King" (1889)
- "The Feast" (1889)
- "The Fire" (1889)
- "The Flies Buzzed and Bit Unmolested" (1889)
- "For I Was Afraid of the Church" (1889)
- "A Foundling" (1889)
- "'Go It, Slim Jim!'" (1889)
- "Go 'Long," I Said, "You Ain't More Than a Paragraph" (1889)
- "'Great Scott, But There Was a Sensation'" (1889)
- "Great Scott, Can't You Understand a Little Thing Like That?" (1889)
- "'Hands Off! My Person Is Sacred.'" (1889)
- "Hast Seen Sir Launcelot About?" (1889)
- "'He Gave Me a Sudden Look That Bit Right Through Into My Marrow'" (1889)
- "He Unlimbered his Tongue and Cursed Like a Bishop" (1889)
- "He Was a Man" (1889)
- "He Was Frightened Even to the Marrow" (1889)
- "He was Great Now" (1889)
- "He was Hungry for a Fight" (1889)
- "The Head of the Cavalcade Swept Forward" (1889)
- "'Hello-Central!'" (1889)
- "High Church" (1889)
- "How Old are You, Sandy?" (1889)
- "I Caught a Picture That Will Not Go From Me" (1889)
- "'I Could Imagine the Baby Goo-gooing.'" (1889)
- "Inherited Ideas Are a Curious Thing" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. A Word of Explanation" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter I)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter II)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter III)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter IV)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter V)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter VI)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter VII)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter VIII)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter IX)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter X)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XI)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XII)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XIII)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XIV)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XV)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XVI)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XVII)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XVIII)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XIX)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XX)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XXI)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XXII)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XXIII)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XXIV)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XXV)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XXVI)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XXVII)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XXVIII)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XXIX)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XXX)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XXXI)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XXXII)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XXXIII)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XXXIV)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XXXV)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XXXVI)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XXXVII)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XXXIX)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XL)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XLI)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XLII)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XLIII)" (1889)
- "Initial Letter. (Chapter XLIV)" (1889)
- "I Saw He Meant Business" (1889)
- "It Had in It a Sample of About All the Upper Occupations and Professions" (1889)
- "'It Lay There All Battered to a Pulp'" (1889)
- "It was Delicious to See a Newspaper Again" (1889)
- "It Was the Largest Castle We Had Seen" (1889)
- "It Was a Noble Effect" (1889)
- "The Journey" (1889)
- "The King" (1889)
- "King Uriens" (1889)
- "Knights Practicing on the Quiet" (1889)
- "Latest Eruption, Only Two Cents" (1889)
- "Launcelot Swept In" (1889)
- "Look Out and Hold on Tight" (1889)
- "Marhaus, Son of the King of Ireland, from an Effigy Found in the Castle" (1889)
- "'Merely a Great Big Village'" (1889)
- "Merlin" (1889)
- "A Middy From My Naval Academy" (1889)
- "Mrs. Le Fay" (1889)
- "My Lord, the Earl Grip" (1889)
- "The Newsboy" (1889)
- "Next!" (1889)
- "The Nineteenth Century Booming Under Its Very Nose" (1889)
- "Non-Indexed Image, Page 432" (1889)
- "Not a Word of it Could these Catfish Make Head or Tail of" (1889)
- "Oh, Beware! These are Awful Words!" (1889)
- "On the Tramp" (1889)
- "One of the 52" (1889)
- "The Orator" (1889)
- "Overbalanced" (1889)
- "One of the People" (1889)
- "Original Agony" (1889)
- "The Practical Joker's Joke" (1889)
- "Presently We Struck an Incident" (1889)
- "Pursuit" (1889)
- "Queen Guenever Was as Naively Interested as the Rest" (1889)
- "The Queen's Own" (1889)
- "Rah for Protection!" (1889)
- "The Rest of the Tale Is Just War, Pure and Simple." (1889)
- "The Reverent and Awe-Stricken Multitudes" (1889)
- "The Round Table" (1889)
- "'A Sample of One Sort of London Society.'" (1889)
- "Sandy" (1889)
- "Sandy and the Boss at the Second Table" (1889)
- "Sandy Rode by on a Mule" (1889)
- "Sandy was Worn Out with Nursing" (1889)
- "Sandy with Royalty" (1889)
- "She Continued to Fetch and Pour Until I was Well Soaked" (1889)
- "Sing, Dance, Carouse Every Night" (1889)
- "Sir Arthur Took It up by the Handles" (1889)
- "Sir Boss" (1889)
- "Sir Cote Male Taile" (1889)
- "Sir Galahad Takes a Header" (1889)
- "Sir Gawaine and Sir Uwaine" (1889)
- "Sir Mordred" (1889)
- "Sir Sagramour Le Desirous" (1889)
- "'Sister, Your Blind is Disarranged'" (1889)
- "The Slave Driver" (1889)
- "'Slaves Warming Themselves'" (1889)
- "Slim Jim" (1889)
- "Smothered with Blessings" (1889)
- "Snuffing the Candle" (1889)
- "'So We Took a Man-of-war.'" (1889)
- "Solid Comfort" (1889)
- "Some Manhood Even in a King" (1889)
- "Some of the Boys Going a Grailing" (1889)
- "The Spirit of the Church" (1889)
- "The Spirit that Goeth with Burdens that Have not Honor" (1889)
- "Starving, Eh? Why Don't you Grow a Nose Like Mine?" (1889)
- "The Stranger's Story" (1889)
- "Streets of London" (1889)
- "'The Sun Struck the Sea of Armor and Set It All on Fire'" (1889)
- "Supreme Head of the Church and Some Other Heads" (1889)
- "Tail-Piece" (1889)
- "Tail-Piece" (1889)
- "The Tale of the Lost Land" (1889)
- "That Fellow on the Pillar, Standing Rigid" (1889)
- "That Old Tower Leaped into the Sky in Chunks" (1889)
- "That Was the Church" (1889)
- "That Will Do," I Said, "I Reckon You Are a Patient" (1889)
- "Then Sir Marhaus Ran to the Duke, and Smote Him with His Spear" (1889)
- "There are Ways to Persuade Him to Abandon It." (1889)
- "There was No Soap, No Matches, No Looking-Glass" (1889)
- "They Came in a Body, They Came With a Whirr" (1889)
- "They Have a Right to Their View. I Only Stand to This" (1889)
- "They Thought I Was One of Those Fire-Belching Dragons" (1889)
- "This Horrible Sky-Towering Monster" (1889)
- "This Would Undermine the Church" (1889)
- "The Three Brothers, as Described by Sandy" (1889)
- "The Three Maids" (1889)
- "Three Years After" (1889)
- "Toward the Monk the Coal Burner was Deeply Reverent" (1889)
- "To Subtract the Nation and Leave Behind Some Dregs" (1889)
- "To the Gentleman He was Abject" (1889)
- "'Traitor, Now Is Thy Death Day Come.'" (1889)
- "Transformation" (1889)
- "The Tree and the Fruit" (1889)
- "A Tree is Known by its Fruits" (1889)
- "The Troublesomest Old Sow of the Lot" (1889)
- "Two of a Kind" (1889)
- "Under the Curse of Rome" (1889)
- "Varlet, Serve to Me What Cheer ye Have" (1889)
- "Walking on Air, She was So Proud" (1889)
- "We Constituted the Rear of His Procession" (1889)
- "We Got the Hogs Home." (1889)
- "We Were Challenged by the Warders, and After Parley Admitted" (1889)
- "A West Pointer" (1889)
- "What Is It You Call It? Chuckleheads" (1889)
- "When a Slave Passed He Couldn't Even See Him" (1889)
- "Where Launcelot is, she Noteth not the Going Forth of the King" (1889)
- "'Where Was My Great Commerce?'" (1889)
- "'Who Fails Shall Sup in Hell To-night'" (1889)
- "Why do you Not Warn Me To Cease?" (1889)
- "'Why, They Were Nothing but Rabbits!'" (1889)
- "A Yard of Snowy Church-warden" (1889)
- "Ye Iron Dude" (1889)
- "'Yes, Sire, That Is About It, I Am Afraid'" (1889)
Beardsley, Aubrey (1872-1898)
Bensell, E. B.
Blackburn, Jemima (1823-1909)
- Here, mother, in the red cow's mouth (1855)
- "How befell this woeful sight?" (1855)
- How Merlin Was Outwitted by the Lady Viviana (1855)
- How Sir Thomas Thumb Was Carried to Fairy Land (1855)
- How Tom Thumb Became Frolicsome and Tricksy (1855)
- How the Wizard Merlin Came to the House of Owen (1855)
- It was he who kept every wasp, spider, or chafer, from entering the palace to torment such ladies of Queen Guenever (1855)
- "Never you fear, father; I will sit in the horse's ear and tell him which way to go." (1855)
- Of Tom Thumb's First Appearing Before the Good King Arthur (1855)
- Quickly springing on her back, he thought to make her rise into the air (1855)
- She let her strange mouthful fall on the grass, where his mother caught him (1855)
- "Sir, foul as I am, I may help thee in thy need." (1855)
- Title Page (left) (1855)
- Title Page (right) (1855)
- The venomous bite of the spider had shed poison into his veins (1855)
Bowley, M.
Brickdale, Eleanor Fortescue (1872-1945)
Brown, Ian (b. 1962)
Brundage, Frances (1854-1937)
Cameron, Julia Margaret (1815-1879)
Chapman, William Ernest
Darlington, Frances (1880-1939)
Dixon, Arthur (fl. 1893-1920)
Doré, Gustave (1832-83)
Emrik and Binger
Flint, William Russell, Sir (1880-1969)
- "'Ah, Sir Bors, Gentle Knight Have Mercy on Us All'" (1927)
- "And Anon He Rased off His Helm, and Smote His Neck in Sunder" (1927)
- "And Then They Put on Their Helms and Departed, and Recommended Them All Wholly unto the Queen; and There Was Weeping and Great Sorrow" (1927)
- "And Therewith on His Hands and on His Knees He Went so Nigh that He Touched the Holy Vessel" (1927)
- "As She Was at the Fire to Take Her Execution, Young Tristram Kneeled afore King Meliodas,and Besought Him to Give Him a Boon" (1927)
- "'As Soon as I Wist that This Adventure Was Ordained Me I Clipped off My Hair, and Made this Girdle in the Name of God'" (1927)
- "'But Ye Shall Abide, and I Shall Throw Such an Enchantment upon Him that He Shall Not Awake within the Space of an Hour'; and So She Did" (1927)
- "He Gave Him Such a Buffet upon the Helm with His Sword that King Arthur Had" (1927)
- "How Sir Launcelot and His Kinsmen Rescued the Queen from the Fire" (1927)
- "'Madam,' said Sir Tristram, 'This is a Fair Shield and a Mighty'" (1927)
- "Morgan le Fay Was Put to School in a Nunnery, and there She Learned so Much that She Was a Great Clerk of Necromancy" (1927)
- "'My Knights, and My Servants, and My True Children, Which Be Come out of Deadly Life into Spiritual Life, I Will Now No Longer Hide Me from You'" (1927)
- "She Was a Great Huntress and Daily She Used to Hunt, and Ever She Bare Her Bow with Her" (1927)
- "Sir Launcelot Beheld the Young Squire and Saw Him Seemly and Demure as a Dove, with All Manner of Good Features, that He Weened of His Age Never to Have Seen so Fair a Man of Form" (1927)
- "Then Sir Launcelot Saw Her Visage, But He Wept Not Greatly, But Sighed" (1927)
- "Then the King Was Sworn upon the Four Evangelists" (1927)
- "Then the Queen Guenever Made Great Sorrow for the Departing of Her Lord and Other" (1927)
- "Then Was She Girt with a Noble Sword whereof the King Had Marvel" (1927)
- "There He Blew Three Deadly Motes, and There Came Two Damosels and Armed Him Lightly" (1927)
- "'Therefore Thee Behoveth Now to Choose One of Us Four'" (1927)
- "They Fought for the Love of One Lady, and Ever She Lay on the Walls and Beheld Them" (1927)
- "They Went into Their Country of Benoye, and Lived There in Great Joy" (1927)
- "This Espied King Mark, How She Kneeled down and Said: 'Sweet Lord Jesu, Have Mercy upon Me, for I May Not Live after the Death of Sir Tristram de Liones'" (1927)
- "When She Saw He Would Not Abide, She Prayed unto God to Send Him as Much Need of Help as She Had, and that He Might Feel It or He Died" (1927)
Ford, H. J. (1860-1941)
Fripp, Innes
Galbreth, Jessica
Garrett, Edmund H. (1853-1929)
Harrison, Florence (1884-19--)
Harshberger, Mac (1900-1975)
Herter, Albert (1871-1950)
Hoopes, Margaret Campbell
Hunt, William Holman (1827-1910)
Kappes, Alfred (1850-1894)
Kent, William (1685-1745)
King, Jessie M. ( 1875-1949)
Kirk, M[aria]. L[ouise]. (1860-193x)
Mackenzie, T[homas] (1887-1944)
Maclise, Daniel (1806-1870)
Ottman, W.
Paul, Evelyn
Pogàny, Willy (1882-1955)
- "Above His Shoulder a Great Spear Rose High" (1912)
- "Alighted Ferris, Sword in Hand to Kill" (1912)
- "All Grew Giant-Hearted With Their Lord" (1912)
- "At Length He Mounted, and Crossed O'er the Lowered Drawbridge" (1912)
- "Behold the Sacred Spear" (1912)
- "Behold the Swan-Lord and His Daughter Fair" (1912)
- "Beneath the Oaks of Montsalvat" (1912)
- "Bewilderèd Stood Parsifal" (1912)
- Contents Page (1912)
- "A Crystal Chalice . . . That Seemed to Pulse Forth Light" (1912)
- "The Cup and Spear" (1912)
- "Deathless, and Parch'd With Thirst" (1912)
- "Each Knight Rode Mighty With the Strength of Ten" (1912)
- "The Flag That Thou Must Follow" (1912)
- "Grey Twilight For That Aged Pair" (1912)
- "Groaning, At His Side He Clutched" (1912)
- "He . . . Traced Upon Her Brow the Sign of Christ" (1912)
- "He Saw an Agèd Man Beside the Brink" (1912)
- "The High Mysterious Call" (1912)
- "Into the Shadowy Wood He Took His Way" (1912)
- "Introduction" (1912)
- Introduction and Part I Background Illustration (1912)
- "Klingsor's Palace" (1912)
- "Kundry, the Lady of the Forest" (1912)
- "Leaning On His Lance Stood Parsifal" (1912)
- "No Medicine May Heal Amfortas' Wound" (1912)
- "Parsifal" (Frontispiece) (1912)
- "Parsifal and Amfortas" (Frontispiece) (1912)
- "Parsifal Heals Amfortas" (Frontispiece) (1912)
- "Parsifal in the Forest" (Frontispiece) (1912)
- "Parsifal Praying" (Introduction) (1912)
- "Parsifal Swung It in His Joyous Mood" (1912)
- "Part I: The Coming of the Grail" (1912)
- "Part II: The Calling of Parsifal" (1912)
- "Part III: Kundry" (1912)
- "Part IV: Parsifal the Fool" (1912)
- "Part V: The Spear" (1912)
- "Part V: Background Illustration" (1912)
- "Part VI: The Deliverer" (1912)
- "Part VI: Background Illustration" (1912)
- "She, Amaz'd, Recoiled a Step" (1912)
- "Silent and Pale Was Kundry" (1912)
- "Slow and Without a Word They Turned Them Home" (1912)
- "So Fared He On" (1912)
- "A Span Deep in His Side I Drove It" (1912)
- "Still Mute . . . Stood Young Parsifal" (1912)
- "Stranger Things Their Eyes Were Still to See" (1912)
- "They Clung Together, By One Impulse Sweet United" (1912)
- "They Turned the Tide of Some Disastrous Fight" (1912)
- "This was Kundry . . . Angry, Asham'd" (1912)
- "Thus Were His Lips By Courtly Devoir Seal'd" (1912)
- "Thy Mother Secretly Fled From Her Lordly Castle" (1912)
- "Time With All the Stor'd Up Weight of All Her Centuries Smote Her" (1912)
- "Title Page #1" (1912)
- "Title Page #2" (1912)
- "Titurel and the Grail" (1912)
- "Titurel Bore It Homeward Reverently" (1912)
- "Titurel, the Valiant Pious Knight" (1912)
- "Upon Her Scarlet Lips He Kiss'd Her" (1912)
- "Vainly Had He Yearn'd To Be Enroll'd Among That Band" (1912)
- "A Woman's Face . . . With Grey Locks and Eyes of Fire" (1912)
- "The Wounding of Amfortas" (Frontispiece) (1912)
Pyle, Howard (1853-1911)
Rackham, Arthur (1867-1939)
Rhead, George Wooliscroft (1854-1920) & Louis (1857-1926)
Rossetti, Dante Gabriel (1828-1882)
Rutland, Florence M.
Sangorski, Alberto (1862-1932)
These images comprise the complete text of Tennyson's poem "Morte D'Arthur" as illuminated and illustrated by Alberto Sangorski
Sleigh, Bernard (1872-1954)
Smith, John Moyr
Speed, Lancelot (1860-1931)
- "And running to her chamber, she sought in her casket for the piece of iron . . . . and fitted it in Tristram's sword" (1912)
- "At last the strange knight smote him to the earth, and gave him such a buffet on the helm as well-night killed him" (1912)
- "Beyond the chapel, he met a fair damsel, who said, 'Sir Lancelot, leave that sword behind thee, or thou diest'" (1912)
- "But still the knights cried mightily without the door, 'Traitor, come forth!'" (1912)
- "By the time they had finished drinking they loved each other so well that their love never more might leave them" (1912)
- "Came forth twelve fair damsels, and saluted King Arthur by his name" (1912)
- "The castle rocked and rove throughout, and all the walls fell crashed and breaking to the earth" (1912)
- "Galahad . . . . quickly lifted up the stone, and forthwith came out a foul smoke" (1912)
- "The giant sat at supper, gnawing on a limb of a man, and baking his huge frame by the fire" (1912)
- "The lady of the lake" (1912)
- "'Lady,' replied Sir Beaumains, 'a knight is little worth who may not bear with a damsel'" (1912)
- "The Marriage of King Arthur" (1912)
- "Prianius was christened, and made a duke and knight of the Round Table" (1912)
- "Sir Lancelot smote down with one spear five knights, and brake the backs of four, and cast down the King of Northgales" (1912)
- "So he rode into the hall and alighted" (1912)
- "Then fell Sir Ector down upon his knees upon the ground before young Arthur, and Sir Key also with him" (1912)
- "Then they began the battle, and tilted at their hardest against each other" (1912)
- "Then was Sir Lancelot sent for, and the letter read aloud by a clerk" (1912)
- "'This girdle, lords,' said she, 'is made for the most part of mine own hair, which, while I was yet in the world, I loved most well'" (1912)
- "Waving her hands and muttering the charm, and presently enclosed him fast within the tree" (1912)
Stassen, Franz (1869-1949)
Townsend, F. H. (1868-1920)
(Illustrations to The Misfortunes of Elphin)
- "A face, as round and as red as the setting sun in November, shone forth in the aperture" (1897)
- "And strikes up, 'I'd be a butterfly'" (1897)
- "Elphin was impressed into royal favour" (1897)
- "He heard, or seemed to hear, words, 'Beware of the oppression of Gwenhidwy'" (1897)
- "'I am the man'" (1897)
- "'I swore I would not budge from the water unless my two barrels went with me'" (1897)
- "'I will take a simple and single draught of what happens to be here'" (1897)
- "In the coracle lay a sleeping child, clothed in splendid apparel" (1897)
- "Initiated him in these mysteries" (1897)
- "'Obey the king: first drink, then speak'" (1897)
- "One of 'the Three Chaste Kisses of the island of Britain'" (1897)
- "Rhûn and his bard returned to the banks of the Mawddach, where they resolved themselves into an ambuscade" (1897)
- "She gave him a supper" (1897)
- "The cataracts thunder down the steep" (1897)
- "The cupbearers reeled off with their lord" (1897)
- "The hoarse voice of Teithrin ap Tathral sounded in their ears from without, 'Foxes! you have been seen through, and you are fairly trapped'" (1897)
- "This slap is recorded in the Bardic Triads as one of the Three Fatal Slaps" (1897)
- "'Thus, thus I prove the falsehood'" (1897)
- "'Whither lead you, my friend? My horse can no longer keep his footing'" (1897)