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PB71TY 1599 Tam O'Shanter & Souter Johnnie, Central Park, N.Y (NYPL b11708082-G91F249 041F)
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2E460W4 Henry Hoppner Meyer, ca. 1782–1847, British, Tam O'Shanter, 1814. Mezzotint (proof).
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2T68PEG Scottish crofter with whip and basket, wearing tam oshanter, coat and breeches, with dog, 18th century. Copperplate engraving by David Deuchar after an original by from A Collection of Etchings after the most Eminent Masters of the Dutch and Flemish Schools, Edinburgh, 1803.
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2E9K567 Shepherd in the Scottish Highlands, 1800s. In tam o'shanter cap, tartan kilt with sporran, check stockings, leather shoes, with sheep dog. Berger des montagnes d'Ecosse. Handcoloured copperplate engraving after an illustration by William Alexander from J-B. Eyries’ L'Angleterre ou Costumes, Moeurs et Usages des Anglais, England: Costumes, Manners and Mores of the English, Librairie de Gide Fils, Paris, 1821. Jean-Baptiste Eyries (1767-1846) was a French geographer, author and translator.
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2MBC4PW 'The Jubilee: "Waiting For The Queen."', c1897. Children in the crowd, engraving from a photograph. The Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria was officially celebrated on 22 June 1897 to mark the 60th anniversary of her accession on 20 June 1837. From "The Queen's Resolve and Her Doubly Royal Reign of Sixty Years", by Charles Bullock, B.D. ["Home Words" Publishing Office, London, ]
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F2196F Burn's Monument completed in 1823, located near the auld Brig o' Doon (the old bridge over the River Doon), featured in the final verse of the Robert Burns's poem Tam o' Shanter, Alloway, South Ayrshire, Scotland
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MNXJEA . English: 'Tam O'Shanter and the Witches' Illustration to the poem of Robert Burns Deutsch: 'Tam O'Shanter and the Witches' Illustration zu Robert Burns' gleichnamigen Gedicht. 1892 (Print Year). John Faed  (1819–1902)   Alternative names Faed Description British painter Date of birth/death 31 August 1819 22 October 1902 Location of birth/death Burley Mill, Kirkcudbrightshire in Scotland Ardmore Authority control : Q955520 VIAF: 46670676 ISNI: 0000 0001 1634 1684 ULAN: 500024696 LCCN: nr97035182 NLA: 35971074 WorldCat 1158 Tam O'Shanter and the Witches - John Faed
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2T6CRAN Scottish woman pouring a bottle of ale into a bucket on a table for a man in a tam oshanter cap, 18th century. She wears a hood and cimple, apron and tartan skirt, and holds a large key. The room has a wooden table, chair, barrel, cupboard and shovel. Copperplate engraving by David Deuchar from A Collection of Etchings after the most Eminent Masters of the Dutch and Flemish Schools, Edinburgh, 1803.
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2Y3C02F "Waiting For The Shot," by James Hardy, Jun. in the Dudley Gallery, 1871. Engraving of a painting. 'To lovers of deer-stalking this picture will probably have a stronger sporting than artistic interest. It indicates the supreme moment of suspense in one of the most exciting kinds of field sport. The game is sighted, but at the slightest sign it may vanish, and no chance of overtaking the same herd would in all likelihood be presented for many weary miles. The stalkers must not betray their covert till the far-ranging rifle-bullet has a chance of striking. The shot fired, then the dog
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PB6C5D 1599 Tam O'Shanter and Souter Johnnie, near the Casino (NYPL b11708073-G91F219 091B)
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2T6CNH1 Lady in crinoline dress with two gentlemen callers in a parlour. Rosa McDermott with Jack Bunting twirling his tam oshanter and Jasper Goldspink lounging on a chair. The two strings. Handcoloured steel engraving after an illustration by John Leech from Robert Smith Surtees Plain or Ringlets?, Bradbury and Evans London, 1860. Leech (1817-1864) was an English caricaturist and illustrator best known for his work for Punch magazine.
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3BJ5J52 The Scottish Volunteers: Border Rifles - group of officers (Undress), 1881. British Army soldiers. 'The Border Riflemen still adhere to their original uniform as regards its material - a steel-grey cloth, which they may be said to make for themselves, either at Galashiels or Selkirk. It was adopted as one of the Government patterns (No. 6537), and, with the brown leather belts, which are worn, it is considered to make a very serviceable and at the same time soldier-like uniform - more suitable for a Volunteer corps, though, of course, less showy than the scarlet, which has now become so genera
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2T68CM0 English gentleman with whiskers in tam oshanter cap riding a horse on his way to a picnic in the country. A carriage with ladies behind him, and a peasant in smock in the foreground. Mr. John Bunting on his way to the Pic-nic. Handcoloured steel engraving after an illustration by John Leech from Robert Smith Surtees Plain or Ringlets?, Bradbury and Evans London, 1860. Leech (1817-1864) was an English caricaturist and illustrator best known for his work for Punch magazine.
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3BJ5J4T The Scottish Volunteers: Bugler W. Balmer, aged 80, Border Rifles, late the 92nd Highlanders, 1881. 'Bugler William Balmer, of the Border Rifles, was born at Hawick, in the year 1800, enlisted in the 92nd Highlanders in 1817, and after twenty-one years' service as bugler and drummer in that regiment - of which twelve were spent in the West Indies - was discharged in 1838 with a pension of one shilling a day. Returning to his native town, he resumed the occupation of a weaver; and on the formation of the 4th Roxburgh Corps in 1860 he joined it, and continued to serve as a bugler for twenty year
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2T68T97 Scottish peasants dancing in a rustic tavern, 18th century. They wear tam oshanters and caps, jackets and trousers, and dance in a room with table, barrels and wheat sheafs. Copperplate engraving by David Deuchar from A Collection of Etchings after the most Eminent Masters of the Dutch and Flemish Schools, Edinburgh, 1803.
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3CTKAYN Five Minutes for Refreshment, 1883. 'Sportsmen in the Scottish Highlands, whether deer-stalking, or grouse-shooting, or salmon-fishing be their chosen pursuit, will probably make acquaintance with a "gillie," who may be just such a hardy veteran, a genuine son of that "land of the mountain and the flood," as the brave old fellow portrayed on our front page. Donald, or whatever his name is, with many sterling North British virtues, has not the merit, in some persons' eyes, of being a tee-totaller; but it is seldom, if ever, that he has been seen "fou," or what we s
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2T6D0TY Shepherd in the Scottish Highlands, 1800s. In tam o'shanter cap, tartan kilt with sporran, check stockings, leather shoes, with sheep dog. Berger des montagnes d'Ecosse. Handcoloured copperplate engraving after an illustration by William Alexander from J-B. Eyries L'Angleterre ou Costumes, Moeurs et Usages des Anglais, England: Costumes, Manners and Mores of the English, Librairie de Gide Fils, Paris, 1821. Jean-Baptiste Eyries (1767-1846) was a French geographer, author and translator.
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3DK6WB0 Advertisement for the United Kingdom Tea Company, 1895. 'Trade Mark. UNITED KINGDOM TEA COMPANY'S TEAS FIRST HAND, DIRECT from the GROWERS, EXCEL ALL OTHERS AND ARE THE VERY PERFECTION OF HIGH QUALITY, 1/-, 1/3,1/6,1/9, & 2/- per lb. 7,10,14, or 20 lb. packed in Canisters; 40, 65, or 100 lb. in Chests, without Extra Charge. DELIVERED CARRIAGE PAID. THOUSANDS OF PACKAGES SENT OUT DAILY. Write for Samples (and Book on Tea), Free by Post, and Taste and judge for Yourselves. EXQUISITE COFFEE. Immensely better than usually obtainable, 1/4, 16, 1/8, & 1/10 a lb. Everyone who knows the Luxury
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3A1TE4K "A Leisure Hour," by W. M. Wyllie, from the exhibition at the Dudley Gallery, 1873. 'Yet, humble' sea-waif though he be, we will venture to say that [this boy] does not answer to somebody's contemptuous definition of an angler - "a hook at one end of a line and a fool at the other." No; he is not spending his time foolishly, as that glistening bunch of mackerel, which, too, he knows well how to dress and bring to table, amply testifies. Cabin-boy and cook, probably, on board a coaster, his duties are many and various...Sometimes, when the work is done, and a gentle breeze r
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3BJ5J76 The Royal Visit to Edinburgh: The Scottish Volunteers - The Young Idea, 1881. A British Army rifleman cleans his gun in the family home, as his child sits on the floor playing with his equipment and wearing his hat. From "Illustrated London News", 1881.
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3BJ5J6R Scottish Volunteers at home: after dinner at a sheep-farm near the Spital of Glenshee, 1881. 'A pleasant scene of peaceful repose and refreshment in the yard of a farm-house or country inn, where a party of volunteers, after attending drill in plain clothes, sit together and "have a crack" about the affairs of the local corps, is represented in one of our Sketches. The women of the house, mother and daughter, are serving them with barley bannocks from the basket, and prime native whisky from a bottle which is carried round punctually, but which has no worse effect than gently to stim
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2R4DHFG The Highland Shepherd - painted by R. Ansdell - from the Exhibition of the Royal Academy, 1856. Engraving of a painting. '...one of those happy transcripts of Highland life that has made Mr. Ansdell a favourite artist beyond the limits of his native Lancashire'. From "Illustrated London News", 1856.
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2MBC23J ''Cadbury's Cocoa', 1891. From "The Graphic. An Illustrated Weekly Newspaper", Volume 44. July to December, 1891.
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2R4DJ6G "Severe Weather" - painted by R. Ansdell - from the Exhibition of the British Institution, 1856. Engraving of '...Mr. Ansdell's masterpiece...Very fine and truthful it is. The shepherd and his dogs are equally cowering from the cold, bitter, biting blast that blows so pinchingly on the stones which serve (but indifferently) to protect them from a Scottish north-east wind. Very life-like is the entire scene. True to Highland characteristics and Highland nature'. From "Illustrated London News", 1856.
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2WG0JJE "Tired Sheep - Glen Spean, Scotland", by R. Ansdell, from the exhibition of the Royal Academy, 1862. Engraving of a painting. 'The sky has the stillness and calmness of eventide, the sun has just sunk below the horizon, the moor and Spean "water", or river, are in quiet shadow, but his rays still linger on the scarped slopes of the distant hills, the flock of birds - packs of ptarmigan maybe - is circling its way to the roost up among the snowy granite ledges, the shepherd consoles himself with his evening pipe and the near prospect of home - for such we presume to be the c
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Total de Resultados: 25

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