![]() ![]() "And what brought thee to Cairo?" asked the magistrate. Then they cast him into prison, where he abode three days, after which the chief of the police sent for him and said to him, "Whence art thou?" The robbers made off but the police entered the mosque and finding the man from Baghdad asleep there, laid hold of him and beat him with palm-rods, till he was well-nigh dead. Presently, as fate would have it, a company of thieves entered the mosque and made their way thence into an adjoining house but the people of the house, being aroused by the noise, awoke and cried out whereupon the chief of the police came to their aid with his officers. So he set out for Cairo but, when he arrived there, night overtook him and he lay down to sleep in a mosque. One night, he lay down to sleep, dejected and sick at heart, and saw in a dream one who said to him, "Thy fortune is at Cairo go thither and seek it." There lived once in Baghdad a very wealthy man, who lost all his substance and became so poor, that he could only earn his living by excessive labor. The Ruined Man Who Became Rich Again Through a Dream 1001 Nights Ashliman's folktexts, a library of folktales, The Golden Fox (Czech Republic / Austria).The Dream of the Zirl Bridge (Austria).The Dream of the Treasure on the Bridge (Germany).Dreams Should Not Be Ignored (Netherlands).The Dream of Treasure under the Bridge at Limerick (Ireland).How the Junkman Traveled to Find Treasure in His.The Ruined Man Who Became Rich Again Through a Dream.May 1995, 33-47.The Man Who Became Rich through a Dream: Folktales of Type 1645Īnd other folktales of Aarne-Thompson-Uther type 1645 Ian Hodkinson, “Joseph Wright of Derby (1734-1797): An Unusual Example of An Artist-Lined Painting.” Journal of the American Institute of Conservation. “An Unbroken Chain of Custody: Pendant Portraits of Enoch and Susan Parker Parrott of Portsmouth, New Hampshire.” Piscataqua Decorative Arts Society. VII, issue 3) of Antiques & Fine Art Magazine. The Marine Paintings of John Samuel Blunt (1798-1835).” Courtesy, the Summer/Autumn 2006 issue (vol. IX, issue 5) of Antiques & Fine Art Magazine. “Samuel Jordan: Artist, Thief, Villain.” Courtesy, the Summer/Autumn 2009 issue (vol. XI, issue 3) of Antiques & Fine Art Magazine. “Edwin Plummer and his Portrait Likenesses.” Courtesy, the Summer/Autumn 2011 issue (vol. A Copley Pastel of a Boston Maiden.” Courtesy, the Spring 2012 issue (vol.xi, issue 6) of Antiques and Fine Art Magazine, 180-184. “Cherished Mementos: Engravings by Richard Brunton from the Earliest Years of the American Republic”.Summer 2014 issue (vol.15, no.3) of American Ancestors, 45-48. “Richard Brunton: An Artist of No Ordinary Character,” blog post at Journal of American Revolution,, May 17, 2015. 14, issue 3) of Antiques and Fine Art Magazine, 118-123. “Richard Brunton, Folk Artist/Counterfeiter.” Courtesy, the Autumn 2015 issue (vol. Willson of NH” and His Remarkable Watercolors.” Courtesy, the Autumn 2017 issue (Volume 16, issue 3) of Antiques and Fine Art Magazine, 110-115. “Tributes in Paper from the City of Brotherly Love.” Americana Insights, 2021. ![]() ![]() “In Search of New Horizons: Surfing the Records of American Folk Art Gallery” Incollect, 2021. “Thomas Earl, Schoolmaster, America.” Americana Insights, 2021. “Thomas Earl Part II: Who Was Thomas Earl?” Americana Insights, 2021. “Thomas Earl Part III: Artist Extraordinaire” Americana Insights, 2022. Published by Marquand Books, Seattle, in association with Yale University Book Press, 2011, 141-153. Selections from the Jane Katcher Collection of Americana, Volume II. “Unlocking the Mysteries of the Wilkinson Limner ” Expressions of Innocence and Eloquence. “Rufus Porter’s Miniature Portraits: Practices and Patrons” Rufus Porter’s Curious World, Art and Invention in American, 1815-1860, Published by Bowdoin College Museum of Art in association with Pennsylvania University Press, 2019. Portsmouth, NH: Portsmouth Athenæum, 2007. 136 pages, paperback with fold-out flaps. Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 2015. Soldier, Engraver, Forger, Richard Brunton’s Life on the Fringe in America’s New Republic. ![]()
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