School; a magazine devoted to elementary and secondary education . s to observe objects or scenes under con-ditions similar to those required by the passages to be illustrated. DoesHolman Hunt wish to paint his great conception of the Scapegoat,he leads an old grey goat to an environment in keeping with his thoughtand paints his masterpiece there. Mary Siddal floating in a bath-tubaided Millais in painting his conception of the drowned Ophelia. (5) Criticise approvingly where possible. 262 THE SCHOOL i And indeed the arm is hardly dare . . yet, only you to see, Give the chalk here—quic


School; a magazine devoted to elementary and secondary education . s to observe objects or scenes under con-ditions similar to those required by the passages to be illustrated. DoesHolman Hunt wish to paint his great conception of the Scapegoat,he leads an old grey goat to an environment in keeping with his thoughtand paints his masterpiece there. Mary Siddal floating in a bath-tubaided Millais in painting his conception of the drowned Ophelia. (5) Criticise approvingly where possible. 262 THE SCHOOL i And indeed the arm is hardly dare . . yet, only you to see, Give the chalk here—quick, thus the line should go! j Ay, but the soul! hes Rafael! rub it out!The accompanying half-tones were photographed from two illus- | trations selected from many handed in by a class of first year first is a water-colour painted by Gordon E. Munnoch to illustrateLongfellows lines: j The summer sun is sinking low;Only the tree-tops redden and glow;Only the weather-cock on the spireOf the neighbouring church is a flame of fire!All is in shadow ?afe-fc. Figure second is a coloured crayon sketch by Louis Girard to illustrateHoods lines: I remember, I rememberThe house where I was born,The little window where the sunCame peeping in at morn. As a fitting conclusion the following may be quoted from the Decem-ber number of the School Arts Magazine: Illustrative Drawing isprobably the most useful form of drawing in Public Schools, for it canbe applied to so many of the school subjects. We have found this workwell worth while. The Education of the Foreigner J. T. M. ANDERSON, , Inspector of Schools, Yorkton, Sask. THE steady, influx of many thousands of immigrants from all partsof the civilised world has given rise to many serious and per-plexing problems. Perhaps the gravest of these, all things con-sidered, is the education of the rising generation among these variouspeoples so that they may have a knowledge of our language and a properideal of Canad


Size: 1577px × 1584px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookpublishertoron, bookyear1914