ts) Gerard (David).
" 573. Vision Veronese.
" 316. Baigneuses Lancret.
AFTER 1800.--
No. 265. La belle Zelie Ingres.
" 115. Paysages Corot.
Etudes Diverses Gericault.
" 152. La Justice de Trajan. Delacroix.
" 544. Un metier de chien Stevens (Joseph).
" 239. Etudes Diverses Meissonier.
" 97. Portrait Francois Millet.
" " Tete Bonington.
" 489. Le Pilote Renouf.
DRAWINGS.--
No. 811. Etude Lebrun.
" 833. Figures Rembrandt.
" 795. Visite de Bonaparte a Rouen Isabey.
" 737. Vue de Rouen in 1777 Cochin.
" 796. Etude Jouvenet.
" 856. Diverses Etudes Gericault.
Etudes Delacroix.
SCULPTURE.--
No. 937. Napoleon (marbre) Canova.
" 959. Gericault (tombeau, marbre) Etex.
" 946. Armand Carrel (bronze) David d'Angers.
" 934. Pierre Corneille (terre cuite) Caffieri.
" 941. Boieldieu (marbre) Dantan Jeune.
" 985. Fontenelle (marbre) Romagnesi.
IV
_Authorities_
Though I desire to express my indebtedness to all the works mentioned
in these pages, the books given in the list that follows are those
which should be first consulted by anyone who wishes to follow on
completer lines the story of the town which I have been obliged to
shorten. The commonplace of artistic, or historical, or architectural
literature I have omitted. Those who know it will easily recognise the
passages in which I have made use of Freeman, of Ruskin, of Viollet le
Duc, of Michelet, of many other standard works. Those who yet have it
to discover can find it for themselves in any library.
But the undermentioned works, some of them only to be found in Rouen
itself, are worthy of the attention of any student who wishes to carry
his researches further into one of the most interesting of French
mediaeval cities. All the publi
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