Theme Explorer

Page 1 of 2 31 Records Found
12

Bean Dibber

This is a bean dibbing iron. The dibber was pushed into the ground to make holes for seeds or plants.

Country Fete

This oil painting on panel depicts people at a fete in the grounds of a house and was painted by the English School about 1840. It was originally joined to another panel called 'Country Procession'. ...

Country Fete and Procession

These are two panel paintings which were originally joined which are painted by an English School about 1840. One shows people at a fete in the grounds of a house, and the other, people arriving at the ...

Country Procession

This panel painting depicts people arriving at a Country Fete on foot, horseback and by carriage. Some are making a tour of the allotment gardens. This painting was originally joined to Country Fete, ...

Cubbington. Penns Yard

Back to back houses with cellars in Penns Yard ( now Penns Close). Group of women and children standing in front of the small front gardens. Standing by the door are Mrs Stanley and Mrs Kenzitt. On the ...

Dutchman and his Wife

Willem Van Mieris A Dutchman and his Wife Oil on wood 370mm x 320mm Domestic interior with a man and his wife in the foreground. The lady is sitting holding a dog, her husband is standing behind to her ...

Ettington. Jeffrey Bevington Lowe

Jeffrey Bevington Lowe, as an old man, seated in front of his summer house door at Ettington. He died 25th October, 1864. 1860

Family Group

This is an oil painting on canvas depicting a family group (father, mother, son and daughter) seated indoors, but the family are unknown. The two children are holding books which might be prayer books ...

John Gerarde, The Herball, 1597 - garden detail on title page

Shakespeare set scenes in gardens such as this Many scenes in Shakespeare’s plays are set in gardens. The formal lay-out of beds and hedges seen on this title-page engraving were familiar to ...

John Gerarde, The Herball, 1597 - apples woodcut, p.1274, detail.

Apples, at the end of a meal are mentioned in Shakespeare's The Merry Wives of Windsor. Gerarde’s herbal includes all kinds of fruit and trees as well as flowers and vegetables, many of which ...

John Gerarde, The Herball, 1597 - Clove gilloflowers, p.472.

Carnations are the source for a Shakespearian argument in The Winter’s Tale. Gerarde described carnations [pinks] with their ancient name ‘clove gillivors’ and Shakespeare’s ...

John Gerarde, The Herball, 1597 - daffodils, p.108

b>Autolycus sings of daffodils in The Winter’s Tale Autolycus, the former courtier turned pedlar, first arrives on the scene singing of the joys of spring: ‘When daffodils begin to peer... ...

John Gerarde, The Herball, 1597 - gilloflowers (Wall Flowers), p.370.

The names of plants, discussed by Shakespeare. The detail with which Gerarde describes plants, vegetables and fruit as well as flowers assisted contemporary herbalists and housewives with their gardens. ...

John Gerarde, The Herball, 1597 - Goosetree [barnacles], detail, p.1391, detail.

Truth and Myth in Shakespeare's books of reference: The Barnacle Goose Tree. Shakespeare includes, in The Winter's Tale (4.4), a similar myth to Gerarde’s tale of a barnacle-goose tree in the ...

John Gerarde, The Herball, 1597 - Goosetree [Barnakle tree], p.1391.

The Elizabethan myth of the goose-tree. Myth and legend, passed on by word of mouth until it was written down and becomes almost a fact, included the story that Gerarde records at the end of his herbal, ...

John Gerarde, The Herball, 1597 - Goosetree described by Gerarde, p.1392.

Locations of plants known to Shakespeare's contemporaries. Herbals and gardening books in Elizabethan England often describe the locations in which a plant may be found in the wild, as well as where ...

John Gerarde, The Herball, 1597 - hand drawn detail added to title page.

Garden detail replaced in an amateur way by an owner of a volume contemporary with Shakespeare. This copy of the first edition of Gerade’s Herball has original hand-colouring of all the illustrations ...

John Gerarde, The Herball, 1597 - holly, p. 1155,detail.

Holly and its uses in Shakespeare's time. There were twenty-seven holy days, or ‘holidays’ spread through the Elizabethan year, but the twelve days of Christmas, at the time of the winter ...

12