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A list of all pages that have property "Text"Text" is a predefined property that represents text of arbitrary length and is provided by <a target="_blank" rel="nofollow noreferrer noopener" class="external text" href="https://www.semantic-mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:Special_properties">Semantic MediaWiki</a>." with value "&lt;p&gt;"We had paused right in front of [the Flemish artist] Bruegel the Elder's "Corn Harvest" (1565), one of the world's great paintings of everyday life . . . .[M]y eye fell upon a tiny tableau at the left-center of the painting in which young men appeared to be playing a game of bat and ball in a meadow distant from the scything and stacking and dining and drinking that made up the foreground. . . . There appeared to be a man with a bat, a fielder at a base, a runner, and spectators as well as participants in waiting. The strange device opposite the batsman's position might have been a catapult. As I was later to learn with hurried research, this detain is unnoted in the art-history studies."&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;From John Thorn, "Play's the Thing," &lt;em&gt;Woodstock&lt;/em&gt; &lt;em&gt;Times&lt;/em&gt;, December 28, 2006. See &lt;a&gt;thornpricks.blogspot.com/2006/12/bruegel-and-me_27.html,&lt;/a&gt; accessed 1/30/07.&lt;/p&gt;". Since there have been only a few results, also nearby values are displayed.

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    • 1565.1  + (<p>"We had paused right in front of <p>"We had paused right in front of [the Flemish artist] Bruegel the Elder's "Corn Harvest" (1565), one of the world's great paintings of everyday life . . . .[M]y eye fell upon a tiny tableau at the left-center of the painting in which young men appeared to be playing a game of bat and ball in a meadow distant from the scything and stacking and dining and drinking that made up the foreground. . . . There appeared to be a man with a bat, a fielder at a base, a runner, and spectators as well as participants in waiting. The strange device opposite the batsman's position might have been a catapult. As I was later to learn with hurried research, this detain is unnoted in the art-history studies."</p></br><p>From John Thorn, "Play's the Thing," <em>Woodstock</em> <em>Times</em>, December 28, 2006. See <a>thornpricks.blogspot.com/2006/12/bruegel-and-me_27.html,</a> accessed 1/30/07.</p>lt;a>thornpricks.blogspot.com/2006/12/bruegel-and-me_27.html,</a> accessed 1/30/07.</p>)