Still Life with Widow’s Veil — Otto Dix

The Fox (Fair Game) — Alexander Pope

The Bus — Paul Kirchner

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Fireworks — Konstantin Somov

July — Fairfield Porter

Dreaming of Pomegranates — Felice Casorati

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Artist and Chimera — Jacek Malczewski

The Council of Rats — Gustave Dore

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Thomas Jefferson Writing the Declaration of Independence — Howard Pyle

Christ Tempted by Satan to Turn the Stones to Bread — William Blake

Battle of the Gods That Have Been Transformed — Ernst Fuchs

If it is not known how and when a man dies, it makes a ghost of him for many years thereafter (Nathaniel Hawthorne)

June 30th.–If it is not known how and when a man dies, it makes a ghost of him for many years thereafter, perhaps for centuries. King Arthur is an example; also the Emperor Frederick, and other famous men, who were thought to be alive ages after their disappearance. So with private individuals. I had an uncle John, who went a voyage to sea about the beginning of the War of 1812, and has never returned to this hour. But as long as his mother lived, as many as twenty years, she never gave up the hope of his return, and was constantly hearing stories of persons whose description answered to his. Some people actually affirmed that they had seen him in various parts of the world. Thus, so far as her belief was concerned, he still walked the earth. And even to this day I never see his name, which is no very uncommon one, without thinking that this may be the lost uncle.

Thus, too, the French Dauphin still exists, or a kind of ghost of him; the three Tells, too, in the cavern of Uri.

—Nathaniel Hawthorne’s journal entry of June 30th, 1854; collected in Passages from the English Note-Books.

“The Surprises of the Superhuman” — Wallace Stevens

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Interior with Girl Reading — Peter Ilsted

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Portrait of Gertrude Stein — Felix Vallotton

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Angel of Splendors — Jean Delville

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