[53] See _Guide to the Italian Pictures_ at Hampton Court, by Mary
Logan, 1894.
[54] Official Catalogue, and Crowe and Cavalcaselle, ii. 502.
[55] Pater: _The Renaissance_, p. 158.
[56] ii. 219.
[57] The execution of this grotesque picture is probably due to Girolamo
da Carpi, or some other assistant of Dosso.
[58] Crowe and Cavalcaselle, ii. 292, unaccountably suggested Francesco
Vecellio (!) as the author.
[59] The subject is derived from a passage in the _De Divinitate_ of
Cicero, as Herr Wickhoff has pointed out.
[60] See _Venetian Painting at the New Gallery_. 1895.
[61] Unless we are to suppose that Vasari mistook a copy for an
original.
[62] Francesco Torbido, called "il Moro," born about 1490, and still
living in 1545. Vasari states that he actually worked under Giorgione.
Signed portraits by him are in the Brera, at Munich, and Naples. Palma
Vecchio also deserves serious consideration as possible author of the
"Shepherd Boy."
[63] Crowe and Cavalcaselle, ii. 144.
[64] Morelli, ii. 212.
[65] See Appendix, p. 123.
[66] Quoted by Morelli, ii. 212, note.
[67] Crowe and Cavalcaselle, ii. 155.
[68] Crowe and Cavalcaselle also cite a portrait in the Casa Ajata at
Crespano; as I have never seen this piece I cannot discuss it. It was
apparently unknown to Morelli, nor is it mentioned by other critics.
[69] Morelli, ii. 205.
[70] Crowe and Cavalcaselle, ii.
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