FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35  
36   37   38   39   >>  
the debts are all clear, 'Mong the kindred as here may be read." Before the conclusion, the author says, "To the rest that succeed, We need not proceed, Enough has already been penn'd, And now it's high time, For our doggrel rhyme To come, lest it err, to an end." This hint I shall apply to myself, lest my article become as dry and uninteresting as my subject, and conclude with a declaration in which I heartily concur: "Fee simple, and a simple fee, And all the fees in tail, Are nothing when compared to thee, Thou best of fees--female." W.A.R. * * * * * FINE ARTS THE NINTH EXHIBITION OF THE SOCIETY OF BRITISH ARTISTS. We are happy to learn that the "British Artists" continue to flourish. Their association, we believe, originated in the inefficiency of similar Institutions. They started in a spirit of generous rivalry, and, above all things, with the view to aid aspiring merit. It could, however, scarcely be called rivalry to any other Institution, and to this line of conduct we attribute much of the success of the Society of British Artists. As the Secretary states in an Address to the Public, prefixed to this year's Catalogue, "they have never opposed, either directly or indirectly, any existing Institution for the promotion of the Fine Arts, but have uniformly sought to go hand in hand with whatever tended to their general advancement." It appears likewise, that works in Painting, Sculpture, Architecture, and Engraving, to the amount of L18,000. and upwards, have been sold from the walls of the Exhibition, since the formation of the Society, and numerous commissions given in consequence of the talent thus displayed; and that all future donations will be devoted towards completing the purchase of the galleries occupied by the Society, in Suffolk-street. The full attendance at the private view on Friday, accorded with these gratifying statements. Suffolk-street and Pall Mall East were crowded with the carriages of visiters, and in the rooms was an abundant sprinkling of nobility, patrons of art, men of letters, and some note of purchases at the keeper's table. There are upwards of 800 Pictures, and about 100 specimens of Sculpture and Engraving. The crowded state of the rooms during the hour that we were there, allowed us only to note a few works. 1. _Cardinal Weld_; a well painted portrait, by James Ramsey, of the be
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35  
36   37   38   39   >>  



Top keywords:

Society

 

simple

 
crowded
 

British

 

Artists

 

Suffolk

 

Engraving

 

Sculpture

 

street

 

rivalry


upwards
 

Institution

 

displayed

 

future

 

consequence

 

numerous

 

formation

 

commissions

 

donations

 

talent


Before

 

conclusion

 

occupied

 

galleries

 

devoted

 

completing

 

purchase

 

tended

 

general

 
advancement

succeed

 
uniformly
 

sought

 

appears

 

likewise

 

author

 

attendance

 

amount

 

Painting

 

Architecture


Exhibition

 

private

 

specimens

 

Pictures

 

keeper

 

allowed

 

painted

 
portrait
 

Ramsey

 

Cardinal