Martin van Maële’s illustrated Poe - The Fall of the House of Usher.
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As he spoke there was a tap at the door, and the boy in buttons entered to announce Miss Mary Sutherland, while the lady herself loomed behind his small black figure like a full-sailed merchant-man behind a tiny pilot boat. Sherlock Holmes welcomed her with the easy courtesy for which he was remarkable...
Miss Mary Sutherland, drawn by Sidney Paget, Josef Friedrich, Martin Van Maële, and Gastão Simões da Fonseca, respectively
Source
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#Martin van Maële (1863–1926)
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La Sorcière - Jules Michelet, 1862
illustrated by Martin van Maële
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Illustrations for Charles Baudelaire’s Les Fleurs du Mal by M. Martin van Maële, 1917
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Illustration by Martin Van Maële for Jean de Villiot's La Maison de la Verveine (1904).
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La Fliute - Witches’ Sabbath by Martin van Maële (1863 – 1926).
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Illustration by Martin van Maële in a 1911 edition of La Sorcière, by Jules Michelet.
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tidings from a look through the wikimedia pages for skeleton (label for artistic nudity)
skeleton prayer (osteographia, gerard van der gucht, 1733)
our old friend skeleton communism (thomas nast, 1880)
(adam and eve, hans sebald beham, 1543)
(???, Martin van Maële, ???)
(kiss of death, poblenou cemetary, joan fontbernat paituví, 1930)
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Martin Van Maële (1863-1926), ‘La Revenant’, “Les Fleur Du Mal” by Charles Baudelaire, 1917
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Illustration by Martin van Maële.
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"An instant later, his feet were on my shoulders."
-Illustration by Martin Van Maële, from The Adventure of the Priory School
Originally published in Société d'Édition et de Publications, 1906
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