Page:Hofstede de Groot catalogue raisonné, Volume 1, 1908.djvu/209

 i JAN STEEN 185 joog. An old Woman with a Beer-Jug. In the collection of E. Hildebrandt, Berlin, 1863 (Parthey, ii. 579, No. 50). jooh. A Woman holding a Glass. In the Reiniger collection, Stuttgart, 1863 (Parthey, ii. 579, No. 51). 701. A Peasant Man and Woman. Signed with the monogram ; panel, 1 1 inches by 8| inches. In the Hollandt collection, Brunswick, 1863 (Parthey, ii. 580, No. 60). joia. A Peasant Scene. In the Strahl collection, Berlin, 1863 (Parthey, ii. 580, No. 62). 701^. Three Jovial Peasants in an Interior. Panel, 10 inches by 9 inches. Sale. The widow of J. E. Dresden, nee Keyzer, Amsterdam, October 3, 1866, No. 66 (71 florins, Popman). 70 1^ A Scene in a Tavern. Exhibited in Leeds, 1868, No. 842. Then in the possession of R. P. Nichols. yoid. An Interior with two Figures. A woman sits at a table. A man with a pipe, who stands near, pours out wine for her. Canvas, 9 inches by 7 inches. Sale. Dr. Goldsmith, Paris, February 27, 1869, No. 75 (185 francs). 702. A Tavern Scene. On a bench sits a laughing man who gives money to an old woman bringing a bottle. Behind her reclines a young woman. On the right a peasant goes out of the door into the street. Signed in full ; panel, 12 inches by 10 inches. Sales. J. Bleuland, Utrecht, May 6, 1839. D. Vis Blokhuyzen, Paris, April I, 1870, No. 69 (425 francs). 703. A Peasant reading a News-Sheet. In a tavern a peasant reads a news-sheet which he holds in his left hand. His pipe is in his right hand, which rests on his knee. On the table are a glass of beer and a piece of tobacco. The upper corners of the picture are rounded off. Signed in full in the upper right-hand corner j 9^ inches by 8 inches. Sale. The dowager Roe'll, nee Hodshon, Amsterdam, April 25, 1872, No. 22 (650 florins). 704. A Man drinking and three other Persons. A stout old man, with his head bare, leans back on his bench to drain a large glass of beer, to the astonishment of another man who stretches out his arms and waves his cap. At the hearth, to the right, sits a third man, with his felt hat pushed over his ear. He is jesting at the corpulence of the hostess, who stands holding a pewter pot. On the ground is a dog. At the back is a window with bull's-eye panes. Panel, 13^ inches by 12 inches. Sale. Baron de Beurnonville, Paris, May 9, 1881, No. 479.