Edmund Dulac’s Tanglewood Tales: Jason Choosing Tiphys for the Voyage of the Argo Edmund Dulac’s illustration...
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St Paul’s Cathedral During the Blitz, often known as St Paul’s Survives, is a 1940 black-and-white wartime photograph by Herbert Mason. Taken during the Second World War after a major German air raid on London, the image shows the dome of St Paul’s Cathedral rising through smoke and darkness above silhouetted rooftops. Its dramatic contrast and symbolic composition made it one of the defining visual records of the London Blitz, representing endurance, faith, and national resilience.
Herbert Mason was a British press photographer best remembered for this iconic image, made while working for the Daily Mail. His photograph transformed a moment of destruction into a powerful emblem of survival, combining documentary urgency with fine-art atmosphere. Though Mason’s wider career was rooted in photojournalism, this single image became a landmark of 20th-century war photography.
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