Lijst van lantaarnplaatjes (between 1906-1913)

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52 FHOTOGRAPHIC SKETCHES OF BRITISH LIFE AND SCENERY. s5 If 7 long train. 26 Tickled by a straw. 27 Uncultivated genius. 28 Not so bad for me. 20 Oh, what a gay t 50 Polishing the under-standing. 51 Democrates was the laughing philosopher of Greece, but here is a laughing girl of grease. 82 Open vour mouth and shut your eyes. 84 A wicked joke. 85 Seven o’clock in the morning. 86 Seven o’clock in the evening. 87 The attack. 38 The defeat. 89 I say, Bill, hold hard there. .40 I’ll warm you for drinking all the cider. 41 I’ll just draw the cork and have a taste. 42 How much can I take without being found out 1 48 A swig on the sly. 44 Ah 1 ah I he little thinks I’m watching. 45 Upon my word, I’ll toll of you, master John. 46 Look for the towel before you soap your face. 47 With a hunch of bread and cheese and a cup of cider, he makes his happy meal. 48 See how the ploughboy, free from care, enjoys his humble bread and cheese fare. 49 A rustic musician. 50 The modem invention, the art of puffing. ( 61 Dressing for a walk. 32 Tame little dick. 53 The knitting lesson. 64 Here is a nice little summer-house made of an umbrella. 65 Playing hide and seek. 66 The amusing letter. 57 How am I to answer this t 58 Bad News. 69 It requires thought. 60 Your chain shall be loosened and you shall be free. 61 Pretty poll, pretty poll, how do you do 1 62 English faces. Come and tell me, little bird, who decked thy wings with gold. 63 English faces. Lost in thought. 64 English faces. Amiability. 65 English faces. Flower painting. 66 English faces. Sisters drawing and needle* work. 67 Wait a minute, Johnnie dear, and then you shall get on. 88 No reins docs Johnnie need, for he loves his pretty steed. 69 This is Johnnie’s rocking horse, his pretty i Christmas toy. 70 He b.ows and rides at fullest speed upon his lively rocking steed. 71 They made a coach out of a chair and on to it they yoked a pair. 72 Giving dolly a riding lesson. 73 The young draughtsman. A step on the long ladder of Art. 74 Nelly on her brother’s rocking horse. 75 Our life is one continual strife, but in this book is one eternal life. 76 Granny showing little Nell how to thread her needle. 77 Come, little bird, and pick up some crumbs, and do not be afraid. 78 Tickled by a feather. 79 Little Kate watering her dowers. 80 Getting ready to go out. 81 The doll’s tea party. 82 The doll's tea party. 83 Little Nell gave a party and invited her dolls to tea. 81 The first sail. 85 English faces. The portrait. A faithful re- membrance of one so dear. 88 A tiff. The course of true love never did run smooth. 87 The convenience of a broad-brimmed gipsy hat. 88 Making a cat's cradle. 89 Young architects. PHOTOGRAPHIC SKETCHES OF ENGLISH LIFE AND SCENERY. 1 Cockercombe, Quontock Hills. ** Fountain heads and pathless groves.” 3 “ Conspicuous by absence. • 8 The artist’s lunch. “Art feeds the fancy; fancy does not feed the man.” 4 * : Bchind some tree he waits, the scaly people to betray.” 8 Cockercombe, Quantock Hills. “There is a pleasure in the pathless woods." 6 His pencil like a creature of his brain, makes nature still more beautiful, 7 “ Baiting for a fish/’ 8 “ Fishing for a bait.” 0 “All that arc lovers of virtue, he quiet, and go a angling.” 10 “A triton among the minnows.” 11 “Tho rustic bridge which spans the stream where cresses grew.” 12 “Looking into the brook, she saw no Taircr image than herself.” B3 The signal, “as she waited for him by the ladder 6tile.” 14 “’Tis but a step down yonder lane, and the little church stands near.” 16 Evening; “I’ll meet thee in the lane.” 16 A Somersetshire cot “Oh! for my lowly thatched cottage.” 17 A cottage interior. “The whitewash’d wall and nicely sanded floor, the varnish’d clock that click’d behind the door.’’ 18 The cottage pump. “By the pure stream she stood, no purer than hcrselt.” 19 “The sweetest thing that ever grew beside a human door.” 20 The pet donkey. “ Better be a live donkey than a dead king.’ 21 The cottage door. Will you take a glass of ale. Sir! “Hospitality, all reality, no for- mality, there you wall ever see.” 22 “ She read of fairies, hut she thought of man; whilst at her feet the limpid river ran.” 23 “Alone, alone; all, all alone.” 24 “ They were unto each other all in all.” 25 The old quarry man. “He strikes the rock, and straightway springs a spark like his vain hopes.” 26 Do you dig stones, my man! Yes, I dig s^me*. to seek for bread. 27 A touch of nature and art (heart).