CLAUDE LORRAINE
Landscapes.
277
lastly, purchased in 1815, by the Emperor Alexander, and is
now in the Palace of the Hermitage, at St. Petersburg!}.—
Engraved by Schlotterbeck, and also by C. Haldenwang.
—See also Nos. 38, 88, 187, 313, and 334.
3ft. 8| in. by 5ft. 1 in.—C. Worth 2500 gs.
A duplicate of the preceding picture, of a smaller size, was
painted in 1675, for a Mr. Cause.
155. A Pastoral Scene. In this picture the eye looks over
an open country, distinguished by a castle and other buildings,
upon an eminence in the middle distance, and a winding river
ssowing round the hill and sweeping along the extremity of
the fore-ground. In this part and right of the scene is an
isolated tree, bending with the weight of its boughs over the
river; at the foot of the tree sits a herdsman, playing on a
pipe, while his oxen and goats are browsing over the grassy
fore-ground. A large tree, the trunk of which only is seen,
is on the left, amidst bushes and a light young acacia.
Painted in 1661, for Mr. Wiald.
156. A Herdsman driving Cattle to a River. In the fore-
ground of a hilly and well wooded landscape, is a herdsman
with a long stick on his shoulder, driving several oxen and a
number of goats to a river which ssows over a large portion
on the left, and is crossed in the centre by a bridge, having
three square openings for the water to pass, and abutting
against a bank clothed with bushes. The right of the picture
is adorned with a large clump of young trees and bushes,
amidst which grows a fine chesnut; beyond this stands the
ruins of a temple: two boats are on the river, and peasants
with cattle are passing the bridge. Painted in 1662, for
Signor Don Lee.
Landscapes.
277
lastly, purchased in 1815, by the Emperor Alexander, and is
now in the Palace of the Hermitage, at St. Petersburg!}.—
Engraved by Schlotterbeck, and also by C. Haldenwang.
—See also Nos. 38, 88, 187, 313, and 334.
3ft. 8| in. by 5ft. 1 in.—C. Worth 2500 gs.
A duplicate of the preceding picture, of a smaller size, was
painted in 1675, for a Mr. Cause.
155. A Pastoral Scene. In this picture the eye looks over
an open country, distinguished by a castle and other buildings,
upon an eminence in the middle distance, and a winding river
ssowing round the hill and sweeping along the extremity of
the fore-ground. In this part and right of the scene is an
isolated tree, bending with the weight of its boughs over the
river; at the foot of the tree sits a herdsman, playing on a
pipe, while his oxen and goats are browsing over the grassy
fore-ground. A large tree, the trunk of which only is seen,
is on the left, amidst bushes and a light young acacia.
Painted in 1661, for Mr. Wiald.
156. A Herdsman driving Cattle to a River. In the fore-
ground of a hilly and well wooded landscape, is a herdsman
with a long stick on his shoulder, driving several oxen and a
number of goats to a river which ssows over a large portion
on the left, and is crossed in the centre by a bridge, having
three square openings for the water to pass, and abutting
against a bank clothed with bushes. The right of the picture
is adorned with a large clump of young trees and bushes,
amidst which grows a fine chesnut; beyond this stands the
ruins of a temple: two boats are on the river, and peasants
with cattle are passing the bridge. Painted in 1662, for
Signor Don Lee.