Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is a featured picture, which means that members of the community have identified it as one of the finest images on the English Wikipedia, adding significantly to its accompanying article. If you have a different image of similar quality, be sure to upload it using the proper free license tag, add it to a relevant article, and nominate it.
The Blind Girl; Waiting; The Violet's Message; Annie Miller; Autumn Leaves; The Rescue; Wandering Thoughts; Spring; Peace Concluded, 1856; Only a Lock of Hair; The Escape of a Heretic, 1559; Portrait of Sophy Gray; Sir Isumbras (A Dream of the Past) The Vale of Rest 'Where the weary find repose' The Black Brunswicker; Meditation; The Ransom ...
The Blind Girl (1856) is a painting by John Everett Millais which depicts two itinerant beggars, presumed to be sisters, one of whom is a blind musician, her concertina on her lap. They are resting by the roadside after a rainstorm , before travelling to the town of Winchelsea , visible in the background.
Lou Miri Pixie, the green-haired messenger faerie sent by the King of Wavis that guides Latok along his way. Freya "Fray" Jerbarn, a blue-haired girl Latok rescues from a wolf-infested forest. Fray is the main heroine of a Xak series spin-off, Fray in Magical Adventure and its remake Fray CD , but during the course of Xak she does not know yet ...
Original – The Blind Girl, an 1856 painting by John Everett Millais, now held at the Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery Reason High resolution and is seen as a Featured picture candidate on Commons. Articles in which this image appears The Blind Girl, Works of Elizabeth Murray, Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, Concertina, Rainbows in culture ...
An 11-year-old girl who is blind and has a brain tumour said she had fulfilled her "dream" of presenting her own radio show. Betsy Griffin, from Chorleywood, Hertfordshire, was diagnosed with the ...
Mariana is an 1851 oil-on-panel painting by John Everett Millais.The image depicts the solitary Mariana from William Shakespeare's Measure for Measure, as retold in Tennyson's 1830 poem "Mariana".
Know better, bake better!