Universitätsbibliothek HeidelbergUniversitätsbibliothek Heidelberg
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Smith, John
A catalogue raisonné of the works of the most eminent Dutch, Flemish, and French painters: in which is included a short biographical notice of the artists, with a copious description of their principal pictures : a statement of the prices at which such pictures have been sold at public sales on the continent and in England; a reference the the galleries and private collections in which a large portion are at present; and the names of the artists by whom they have been engraved; to which is added, a brief notice of the scholars & imitators of the great masters of the above schools (Part 8) — London: Smith and Son, 1837

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https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.62822#0167
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NICHOLAS POUSSIN.

95

Ancient History.
effects of virulent poison. On one side of him is seated his
disconsolate wife, Agrippina, bathed in tears, and near her
are three of his children; the youngest is in the arms of a
female standing behind. Around his couch stand a number
of his faithful soldiers, deeply affected at the approaching
dissolution of their beloved general; to these he is turning his
dying countenance, and appears, by the motion of his hand,
to be recommending his wife and children to their protection.
This excellent picture was painted for the Cardinal Barberini.
Engraved by Chatillon, Coelmans, and twice anonymous, one
of which is in mezzotinto.

177. The Death of Philemon. The Greek poet is repre-
sented sitting at the exterior of a building, with his hands
clasped, his countenance greatly excited, and his whole frame
apparently convulsed with laughter, at seeing an ass eating
figs from a basket, which stands on a pedestal at the side.
A young man, the owner of the beast, stands on the farther
side pointing to some distant object.
This picture was formerly in the collection of M. Dufournay.

178. The Plague of Athens. It is, perhaps, impossible for
art to depict with greater pathos or more solemn effect, a
subject so heart-rending as this picture exhibits. The view
is a street of the splendid city of Athens, over which numbers
of the plague-stricken inhabitants are distributed; some ex-
tended on the ground, others prostrated at the portals of the
temples and public buildings. Among a group of the afflicted,
in the fore-ground, are three women, two of them lying on
mattresses, and the third seated at the side; near the latter
 
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