Printable Vintage Illustration: A Good Listener, 1892

When people talk, listen completely. Most people never listen.
Ernest Hemingway

This is the problem with dealing with someone who is actually a good listener. They don’t jump in on your sentences, saving you from actually finishing them, or talk over you, allowing what you do manage to get out to be lost or altered in transit. Instead, they wait, so you have to keep going.
Sarah Dessen, Just Listen

Illustration of Victorian ladies at a social gathering; the lady in the middle quietly listening to the conversation being held by the two women on either side of her. You can download this high-res illustration as a 10” x 8.75” @ 300 ppi JPEG here.

Creative Commons License
For personal use only. Not for resale. All digitized work by The Real Victorian is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License. Please cite RealVictorian.com as your source when sharing or publishing.

Printable Vintage Art: Woman with Dog by Pierre Bonnard

In a person's lifetime there may be not more than half a dozen occasions that he can look back to in the certain knowledge that right then, at that moment, there was room for nothing but happiness in his heart.
Ernestine Gilbreth Carey, Belles on Their Toes

Sometimes it doesn't matter that there was any time before this time. Sometimes it doesn't matter that it's night or day or now or then. Sometimes where you are is enough. It's not that time stops or that it hasn't started. This is time. You are here. This caught moment opening into a lifetime.
Jeanette Winterson, The Gap of Time

Sources:
[1] Original image from Wikimedia.
[2] The Real Victorian's digitally enhanced version of the painting (seen above), downloadable as an 17.5” x 14” @ 300 ppi JPEG.

Creative Commons Licence
Digitally enhanced reproductions of public domain paintings are shared under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Printable Vintage Illustration: Ladies with Documents (Set1)

So. Tell me. What do you think? Which is better?
To take action and perhaps make a fatal mistake
- or to take no action and die slowly anyway?
Ahdaf Soueif, The Map of Love
On an important decision one rarely has 100% of the information
needed for a good decision no matter how much one spends or how long one waits.
And, if one waits too long, he has a different problem and has to start all over.
This is the terrible dilemma of the hesitant decision maker.
Robert K. Greenleaf, The Servant as Leader

Vintage illustrations from 1890s showing three Victorian ladies mulling over/holding documents in their hands. Could be long, newsy letters or possibly contracts? They seem to be giving the women food for thought! You can download these high-res illustrations as a 7” x 11” @ 300 ppi JPEG (top) and a 9” x 6” @ 300 ppi JPEG (bottom) here.

Creative Commons License
For personal use only. Not for resale. All digitized work by The Real Victorian is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License. Please cite RealVictorian.com as your source when sharing or publishing.