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"What could one boy do against two hundred pies?"
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"What could one boy do against two hundred pies?"
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N.C. Wyeth
(American, 1882 - 1945)
"What could one boy do against two hundred pies?"
Known by reproduction only
1905
dimensions unavailable
SUPP2000.1889
Not on view
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He Filled Both Hands and Cut Loose at One of the Four Horsemen
N.C. Wyeth
1912
"There ain't a person in these here United States that kin slide a flatiron over dry-goods the way my Pete kin"
N.C. Wyeth
1905
On the Trail of the First Trust, untitled headpiece illustration
N.C. Wyeth
1905
Mike Fallon
N.C. Wyeth
1907
The man with the hatful of cards picked a hand out of his reserves, put the hat on his head and raised Bill a hundred. Bill came back with a raise of two hundred, and as the other covered it he shoved a pistol into his face observing: "I'm calling the hand that is in your hat."
N.C. Wyeth
1916
Sabra thought privately that two women could have finished the job in half the time with one tenth the fuss
N.C. Wyeth
1929
Behind, not two hundred yards away, were two Indians.
N.C. Wyeth
1905
"My father, a wise and grave man, gave me serious and excellent counsel against what he foresaw was my design"
N.C. Wyeth
1920
"That trip with Charles was one of the happiest times in my whole life. I got acquainted with my boy in those two weeks, as I never knew him before. I found the man in him"
N.C. Wyeth
1931
There were seven or eight assailants, and but one to keep head against them
N.C. Wyeth
1916
Mr. Balfour, of the House of Shaws
What he was, whether by trade or birth, was more than I could fathom
N.C. Wyeth
1913
We were three days taking out even what gold and gems we could load on ourselves and our beasts, the treasure of three queens' pardons
N.C. Wyeth
ca. 1922