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(RM) 609545103
THE BRITISH CHANNEL SQUADRON ENTERING CHERBOURG HARBOUR, 1865. CREATOR: UNKNOWN.
The British Channel Squadron entering Cherbourg Harbour, [northern France], 1865. View '...from a sketch by our special artist...The first to round the point was the Royal yacht Osborne, while, at the same moment, a salute was fired by the guns of the fort. Immediately afterwards followed the Admiralty yacht Enchantress, and then, slowly wheeling round, came the Edgar, with her lofty masts, her sides and poop towering far out of the water, and the two broad white stripes which mark her tiers of guns broken at intervals by the portholes through which peeped the cannon, ready to return the compliment she was about to receive. As she passed the end of the breakwater the Magenta fired a salute of eleven guns, which was immediately returned by the English Admiral's ship with one of nineteen guns...The low, broad, ungainly vessel with the circular turrets on her deck, which comes behind the flagship, is the Royal Sovereign...The other ironclads, following each other at quarter-mile distance, are shown to the left hand. The Enchantress is near the right-hand corner, with a French Government steamer beyond. At the extreme left corner, in the fore part of the view, is a steamer with a party of excursionists, her rigging gaily decked with many flags'. From "Illustrated London News", 1865. The British Channel Squadron entering Cherbourg Harbour, 1865. Creator: Unknown. (KEYSTONE/HERITAGE IMAGES/THE PRINT COLLECTOR)
(RM) 609543022
THE BEACON, BY J. ABSOLON, IN THE EXHIBITION OF THE INSTITUTE OF PAINTERS IN WATER COLOURS, 1864. CREATOR: W THOMAS.
The Beacon, by J. Absolon, in the Exhibition of the Institute of Painters in Water Colours, 1864. Engraving of a painting. 'For what, or for whom, has this buxom, comely lass brought her torch, all alone, to this desolate spot; for whom, or for what, with dilated eyes that bicker so brightly in the torch flare, is she...gazing so vehemently into the gathering shades of a...storm-portending night?...this is evidently a humble domestic beacon-light, not a fire to alarm and rouse a nation. Moreover, the venue is plainly...eagerly longed for, not dreaded; and it is fixed on the French...shore, as we infer from the costume - the jacket, the short, striped petticoat, and blue though not literary stockings worn by our heroine. Is this Normandy matelotte, then, looking out for and trying to guide safely to the haven of home a fisherman father, husband, brother, or lover, who has been...overtaken by bad weather?...it is much more probable that the painter intended to represent the wife, sweetheart, or relative of a French smuggler, who, thus fearful and anxious, has come at night to some harbourless part of the coast with her torch, the lighting of which is the preconcerted signal for running on shore with a cargo of English cotton or calico prints'. From "Illustrated London News", 1864. The Beacon, by J. Absolon, in the Exhibition of the Institute of Painters in Water Colours, 1864. Creator: W Thomas. (KEYSTONE/HERITAGE IMAGES/THE PRINT COLLECTOR)
(RM) 609486875
THE PRINCE AND PRINCESS OF WALES EMBARKING AT DUNDEE FOR DENMARK ON SATURDAY LAST, 1864. CREATOR: UNKNOWN.
The Prince and Princess of Wales embarking at Dundee for Denmark on Saturday last, 1864. '...the Prince and Princess of Wales, with their infant son, Prince Albert Victor, embarked at the Queen's Quay, in the harbour of Dundee, on their voyage to Copenhagen. The scene presented by the streets, which were densely thronged by the workpeople just released from the spinning-mills, manufactories, and dockyards for their Saturday half-holiday, was of the most animated description...the Royal carriage passed under the triumphal arch...commemorative of the Royal visit of 1844...the volunteers were ranged as a guard of honour, and at the jetty the band was stationed and received the Royal pair with the notes of the National Anthem...At length, plying its ten oars vigorously and displaying the Royal standard, the barge [of the Osborne] came alongside...(Our Special Artist made his sketch at the moment when the Prince and Princess stepped into the barge.) As the barge moved away a cordial cheer was once more raised, uttered, no doubt, with best wishes for a safe and speedy return. About half an hour afterwards another barge came alongside for the baby Prince, who, in charge of his nurse, had been driven quietly and unobservedly from the station'. From "Illustrated London News", 1864. The Prince and Princess of Wales embarking at Dundee for Denmark on Saturday last, 1864. Creator: Unknown. (KEYSTONE/HERITAGE IMAGES/THE PRINT COLLECTOR)
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