. The railroad book of England: historical, topographical and picturesque; descriptive of the cities, towns, country seats, and other subjects of local interest. With a brief sketch of the lines in Scotland and Wales . i, Esq. 2 m. further, HeatouPark. Earl of TTiltnn. forms the great attraction. In the dining-room is a Gipsy Gii-1, byThomson, , a beautiful creation, and a memorial of the powers of aman who has been driven from his profession by disgust at the insensibilityof the day, which rarely appreciates the grander efforts of a native the drawing-room is a Young Girl, by Gr


. The railroad book of England: historical, topographical and picturesque; descriptive of the cities, towns, country seats, and other subjects of local interest. With a brief sketch of the lines in Scotland and Wales . i, Esq. 2 m. further, HeatouPark. Earl of TTiltnn. forms the great attraction. In the dining-room is a Gipsy Gii-1, byThomson, , a beautiful creation, and a memorial of the powers of aman who has been driven from his profession by disgust at the insensibilityof the day, which rarely appreciates the grander efforts of a native the drawing-room is a Young Girl, by Graham, with features ofloveliness and life, exquisitely blending the beauty of nature with thegraces of the painters imagination, it Is a fine conception. A Venus,by Coswav, one of those forms which nature occasionally produces involuptuous rediuidancy of beauty, and which the painter has portrayedwith the power of an enthusiast. A Coiuitry Stable, by :\[orland, whoso rejoices in the portraits of pigs and donkeys, reminds us that his geniuscould not preserve him from a degradation which woidd have disgracedeither. The AVeekly Register of Liversage, presenting a very personili- G G G 410 MANCHESTER AND BIRCH ilOUSE, JOHN BENTLEY, cation of a radical sliocinakcr, the pillar of the beer-shop, though small, isone of his most successful pictiu-es. A Landscape with Eigiu-es, bvGainsborough, next solicits the atteutiou ; it is one of his happy and correct i m. W. EaKNWORTH. 1 in. w. Brinsep Hall. ^ ra. further, Aspul. i m. w. Black Rod. Here is a grammar school, with upwards of onehundred pupils, and three exhibitions to Pembroke College, Cambridge. i m. w. Adlington^. 1 m. Duxbury Hall, William Standish Standish, Esq. Chokley is built on an eminence, and has an ancient church of theNorman style of architecture, another in the Gothic style, a grammarschool, to^A^l liall, workhouse, Dissenting chapels, and numerouscotton mills for the manufacture of all so


Size: 2058px × 1214px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1850, booksubjectrailroa, bookyear1851