Page:Hofstede de Groot catalogue raisonné, Volume 3, 1910.djvu/469

 xi ISACK VAN OSTADE 455 Sale. W. Rijers, Amsterdam, September 21, 1814, No. 119 (120 florins, Everdijk). 53^. Outside a Village Inn. A post- waggon drawn by a grey- horse and a bay. Several men load the waggon or feed the horses. Farther away are dogs and numerous accessories. In the distance are a church and trees. [Probably identical with 53^7. Possibly identical with 50.] Canvas, 35 inches by 47 inches. Sale. L. B. Coders, Amsterdam, April 8, 1816, No. 78 (200 florins, J. de Fries). 54. Halting at an Inn. Outside an inn shaded by fine trees are many persons on horseback or on foot, with a grey horse and cart. Farther back are more men and animals. A view of hills. Panel, 22 inches by 28^ inches. Sale. B. Ocke, Leyden, April 21, 1817, No. 93 (100 florins, Spruijt). 55. [Identical with 73.] 55*7. Outside an Inn. Some men halt for refreshment with their horses and dogs. Sale. Amsterdam, November 7, 1826, No. 23 (4 florins 15, Smart). 56. Halting at a Roadside Inn. Sm. 61. Numerous travellers with horses have halted. In a waggon is a woman of whom a cripple with wooden legs is begging. Sm. thought this " the second best picture that he has seen by the master." Dated 1654 (?) ; panel, 23 inches by 34 inches or 30 inches by 40 inches, according to a MS. note by Sm. in his own copy of his catalogue. In the collection of the Duchesse de Berry, Paris, 1829; sold in 1837 to Prince Demidoff (for 32,655 francs) probably with 22 according to a MS. note by Sm. in his own copy of his catalogue. 56^. Outside an Inn Door. Peasants and horses. Panel, 26 inches by 22 inches. Sale. P. J. de Marneffe, Brussels, May 24, 1830, No. 223. 57. Halting at an Inn. Sm. 20. Among the travellers are two men and a woman in a waggon drawn by a grey horse, which drinks at a trough. Two cavaliers with other figures. Panel, 19^ inches by 17^ inches. Engraved by Longueil. Sales. Beaujon, Paris, April 25, 1787 (1421 francs). Montaleau, Paris, 1802 (2221 francs). 58. Halting at an Inn. Sm. 18, and Suppl. n. In the right fore- ground is a thatched inn, with a small and narrow flight of wooden steps leading up to it ; the inn is built on the ivy-clad walls of an older building. At the door stands the landlady with a child in her arms (though, according to Sm. 1 8, she sits on the steps with a child in her lap, while a man pumps water into a pail on the right). Two other children play at the foot of