A complete illustrated catalogue to the National Gallery . t place of honour, looking ratherblack in the shadows, and already becoming old-fashioned in the cos-tumes of twenty years ago. Sketched by permission of Messrs. Pilgeramand Lefevre, the owners of the copyright. Bequeathed by Jacob Bell. 411. Highland Music. Sir E. Landseer. i ft. 6^ in. X i ft. 11* in. 1830. old Highlander playing on the bagpipes to five dogs. 607. ?• Highland Dogs. Sir E. Landseer. i ft. 4^ in. x i ft. 9 in. Sketch for the frontispiece to Scropes Deer-stalking, published in 1839. Bequeathed by Jacob Bell.
A complete illustrated catalogue to the National Gallery . t place of honour, looking ratherblack in the shadows, and already becoming old-fashioned in the cos-tumes of twenty years ago. Sketched by permission of Messrs. Pilgeramand Lefevre, the owners of the copyright. Bequeathed by Jacob Bell. 411. Highland Music. Sir E. Landseer. i ft. 6^ in. X i ft. 11* in. 1830. old Highlander playing on the bagpipes to five dogs. 607. ?• Highland Dogs. Sir E. Landseer. i ft. 4^ in. x i ft. 9 in. Sketch for the frontispiece to Scropes Deer-stalking, published in 1839. Bequeathed by Jacob Bell. 435. Farmyard—Milking Time. T. S. Cooper, 3 ft. i^ in. X 4 ft. 4 in. 1834. A large landscape, painted near Canterbury; contrasting curiously with Landseers treatment of the same subject, in the Maid and the Magpie. See also No. 436, by the same artist, on the north wall (p. 22). 424. ^^ Interior of a Jewish Synagogue at the Time of the Reading of theLaw. S. A. Hart, Painted 1S30. 3 ft. 8 in. x 2 ft. li in. Vn. lO British No. 6i8. 2 ft. 3iin. X 3 ft. ii in. 618. The Foundlingr G. B. ONeill. R. A. 1852. Parish guardians examining a child found in the streets. Bequeathed by Jacob Bell. ?431. ^The Disgrace of Lord Clarendon, ^iiQx his last interview withthe king at Whitehall Palace, 1667. E. M. Ward, I ft. 9 in. X 2 ft. 4t in. 1S46. Vn. Lord Clarendon is descending the garden steps; the retiring figure in thejniddle distance, of which the bade only is seen, represents the king, Charles courtiers, amongst whom is conspicuous Lady Castlemaine, in the balcony,are exulting in the disgrace of the fallen minister.—Pepys Diary. This is a sketch for the picture in Lord Northwicks collection. 373. Tartar Robbers Dividing their Spciir Sir W. Allan. 3 ft. \ in. X I ft. 8t in, R. A. 1817. Vn. Sir W. Allan was a Royal Academician, and fellow student of Wilkie. The most prominent picture here is the Maid and Magpie which•we have sketched,
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Keywords: ., bookauthorblackbur, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, bookyear1879