Just noticed this. The attriibution is not quite accurate. The pictures are from Quoom's "Last Queen of Troy -- Apollo's Daughter", pages ten to fifteen. This was posted in Sumner 2009 - not really recent. Quoom's current stuff is kinda outdated - but not THAT outdated.
And the story is set in the context of the Trojan war - but if you should consider the Iliad a "beware of Greeks" story is anyone's guess. While the original phrase (timeo danaos dona ferentes) is ascribed to a Trojan priest during that war, its author is Latin poet Virgil (Publius Vergilius Maro), who wrote this some 20 BC in the Aeneid - his own epic take on the Trojan war and the Roman origin myth. But he wrote that 1200 years (!) after the actual trojan war, and it quite likely transports more his contemporary Roman view on the Greeks than anything historical. While the Greeks cities had been major military powers in the Mediterranean sea for nearly a millennium, at Roman times they had no military power left and relied on soft powers like educatrion, diplomacy and trade. And that is what Romans saw, and why they "feared" Greeks bearing gifts.
I stand corrected.