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Behind, not two hundred yards away, were two Indians.
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Behind, not two hundred yards away, were two Indians.
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N.C. Wyeth
(American, 1882 - 1945)
Behind, not two hundred yards away, were two Indians.
Oil on canvas
1905
dimensions unavailable
SUPP2000.1770
known by reproduction only
Not on view
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"I remember," writes Buffalo Bill, "the next day father began trading with the Indians, who were so pleased over the bargins we offered that they sent their friends back to us after they cantered away."
N.C. Wyeth
1916
He perceived, at some yards from the ruin of the building, an old man surrounded by weeping children.
N.C. Wyeth
1927
One day a band of fifteen Indians jammed me in a sand ravine. I made a running fight for eleven miles, but went unscathed and had a lead of two miles at Sweetwater Bridge.
N.C. Wyeth
1916
As they paddled away, they could see the Indians come whooping into the clearing.
N.C. Wyeth
1945
From Behind His Back Indians Bounded Down Toward Him, Eager to Capture Him Alive
N.C. Wyeth
1910
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
Untitled (farm yard scene, two figures and a cow; verso, related figure and animal studies)
ca. 1896-1898
"What could one boy do against two hundred pies?"
N.C. Wyeth
1905
They Did Not Want "Civilized," Field-Tilling Indians
N.C. Wyeth
1905
untitled (three Indians at a stream in snowy woods)
N.C. Wyeth
1904
Thanksgiving with Indians
N.C. Wyeth
1940
The White Company
Day was already breaking in the east, and Sir Nigel's company, three hundred strong, were on their way for the defile.
N.C. Wyeth
1922