Pan plays for a maiden. Dated book-plates (Ex libris) with a treatise on their origin and development. 1895.
Victorian painter Frederic Leighton’s bookplate.
Pan plays for a maiden. Dated book-plates (Ex libris) with a treatise on their origin and development. 1895.
Victorian painter Frederic Leighton’s bookplate.
Pan enchants the bunnies.
Selected proofs from the first and second portfolios of illustrations from Scribner’s Monthly and St. Nicholas. 1881.
Burial urn. L'antiquité expliquée, et représentée en figures. v.5., pt.1. 1719.
Masturbating satyr. Attic Red-Figure Kalpis Fragment. Greek (Attic). 500-480. B.C. Nemfrog photo.
The inscription on the vase says, “I see two suns.”
Plate 39. Someone with a dog head, someone with an ass’s head, a satyr and other things on pedestals. Costume des anciens peuples. 1784.
“Satyr punishing a sailor, from the Choragic monument.” Appleton’s popular science monthly. June 1897.
Pipes of Pan. 1902. Frontispiece.
Pan the musician. From the book of myths. 1902. Endpaper.
Satyr carrying a priapic figure. An Account of the remains of the worship of Priapus, lately existing at Isernia, in the kingdom of Naples. 1786.
A satyr or faun. History of the heathen gods and heroes of antiquity. 1816.
Pan. Jester life and his marionettes. 1908
Satyrs as architectural elements. Materials and documents of architecture and sculpture. v3. 1915.
Mythological caryatids. Materials and documents of architecture and sculpture. v3. 1915.
A satyr dances to the centaur’s musc, Pietro Sante Bartoli, after Rafaël, 1645 - 1700. Rijksmuseum.