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Alexander Joseph Daiwaille (1818-1888) "Landscape in the high mountains" Oil on canvas
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Morning
by Sara Teasdale
I went out on an April morning All alone, for my heart was high, I was a child of the shining meadow, I was a sister of the sky.
There in the windy flood of morning Longing lifted its weight from me, Lost as a sob in the midst of cheering, Swept as a sea-bird out to sea.
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Walter Launt Palmer (American, 1854-1932, b. Albany, NY, USA, d. Ibid) - Winter Moonrise, c. 1917, Paintings: Watercolor, Gouache, Pencil on Board
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Sunset on the Laguna of Venice, 1862, Edward William Cooke
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The Colosseum on a Monnlit Night, c.1830 by Carl Gustav Carus (German, 1789–1869)
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🐯 Our living world. v.1. New York: S. Hess,[1885]
Lions & Tigers & Bears, oh my!: -) Courtesy of your friends at #bhlib
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Imatra Waterfall, 1893 by Nikolay Dubovskoy (Russian, 1859–1918)
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Harriet Cany Peale (1799-1869) "Kaaterskill Clove" (1858) Hudson River School
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A Man Singing by Candlelight, 1625-35 by Adam de Coster (Flemish, c.1586--1643)
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Sea and Clouds by William Blake Richmond (English, 1842–1921)
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Thomas Fearnley (1802-1842) "The Grindelwald Gletscher"
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Art from the book A Monster Calls written by Patrick Ness and illustrated by Jim Kay.
It’s a children’s book about a boy (Conor) who starts having nightmares about a monster every night since his mother started her cancer treatment. One night when he wakes up, there is an actual monster right outside his window. The monster is a yew tree in the cemetery behind Conor’s house during day-time but the monster we see at night. I wont go into more detail about the story because it’s really worth reading. You might want to have some tissues and ice-cream ready though.
It was inspired by Siobhan Dowd, who passed away due to cancer and could not write this book herself
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