The present drawing shows the study for the figures on the far right-hand side of the finished picture. The second drawing shows a study for the left-hand figure and also the spectre like figure crouching down in the centre of the composition. These drawings are studies for the painting Souls on the Banks of the River Styx. The interest in the nude and the dynamic treatment of the figure reveals Burne-Jones's increasing interest in Michelangelo and the Italian Renaissance at this period. It is possible that this interest in Michelangelo was connected to his new attitude to sensuality at the time of his affair with Marie Zambaco. Ruskin seems to have made the connection, and in September 1870 when the relationship was still at its height, he read to Burne-Jones his newly written Slade Lecture on The Relation between Michael Angelo and Tintoret an attack on Michelangelo's dark carnality'& perverted imagination which substitutes the flesh of man for the spirit. Burne-Jones was deeply hurt by the attack, and declared as I went home I wanted to drown myself in the Surrey Canal or get drunk in a tavern - it didn't seem worthwhile to strive any more if he could think it and write it.(1) 1. G.B-J., Memorials of Edward Burne-Jones, (Macmillan, London 1904), volume 2, page 18.