Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 15 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 54763 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 71 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 15 illustration 9 Mr. 7 London 7 John 6 England 5 drawing 5 France 4 process 4 line 4 book 4 Sir 4 Magazine 4 George 4 English 4 Charles 3 work 3 french 3 William 3 Venice 3 St. 3 New 3 Mrs. 3 Life 3 King 2 wood 2 print 2 plate 2 pen 2 italian 2 half 2 fig 2 art 2 Thomas 2 Street 2 Robert 2 Queen 2 Paris 2 Oxford 2 October 2 Majesty 2 Louis 2 Lord 2 Italy 2 House 2 Hans 2 Gutenberg 2 Fairy 2 Duke 2 Cruikshank 2 Book Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 3837 illustration 3209 book 2361 work 1715 drawing 1620 artist 1486 p. 1346 time 1181 year 1166 line 1096 art 1026 page 984 man 982 plate 962 wood 961 design 872 edition 870 day 849 printer 839 engraving 833 process 832 century 826 paper 776 picture 749 block 656 hand 653 volume 648 number 624 part 622 type 610 engraver 609 subject 589 other 546 printing 539 illustrator 533 cut 526 illust 507 figure 504 woodcut 495 name 490 author 489 way 479 life 460 place 460 character 459 fact 445 press 438 map 431 child 429 title 413 example Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 20244 _ 1648 Mr. 1191 J. 865 W. 860 John 766 f. 745 London 654 H. 550 England 545 E. 525 G. 516 de 512 p. 499 C. 471 George 470 Sir 459 F. 443 English 442 Charles 432 S. 430 M. 416 Book 403 R. 377 Lord 371 . 361 William 348 Robert 347 King 342 Paris 328 T. 324 Cruikshank 317 Magazine 313 France 287 Thomas 279 St. 264 New 246 D. 234 A. 230 A 227 Illustrated 224 Bible 222 Punch 218 B. 210 Royal 210 Life 210 House 208 Leech 207 Queen 204 Henry 200 L. Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 5503 it 4240 he 1935 they 1908 we 1347 i 1284 him 1260 them 667 himself 543 us 443 you 274 themselves 266 she 223 itself 221 me 188 one 159 her 34 herself 29 ourselves 16 myself 8 thee 7 his 5 yourself 5 mine 4 yours 4 theirs 3 ''em 2 ours 2 oneself 2 ay 2 ''s 1 zo 1 us:-- 1 u 1 two[7 1 pp 1 laws 1 je 1 ia 1 gazette_:--''i 1 em 1 bookshelf 1 b.c.--"i 1 9h 1 64.--plantin Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 28403 be 7430 have 1879 make 1825 print 1520 do 1191 illustrate 1076 give 1042 find 972 see 969 use 919 take 874 say 857 show 801 engrave 784 appear 772 publish 746 know 698 draw 629 follow 617 come 610 produce 524 seem 520 call 501 represent 410 reproduce 398 go 397 contain 396 become 391 leave 374 work 348 write 341 bring 318 issue 305 obtain 303 bear 296 think 296 set 296 begin 281 cut 272 place 267 put 267 look 257 employ 247 pass 245 carry 244 design 241 describe 237 consider 224 add 223 include Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3467 not 1594 more 1478 so 1478 other 1458 first 1239 good 1205 well 1186 very 1164 most 1114 great 1075 only 1044 many 917 also 892 same 836 much 819 early 768 little 730 up 717 as 686 then 685 such 640 now 624 own 604 large 603 few 580 out 532 even 499 new 496 however 492 old 475 small 473 too 472 here 462 long 458 fine 446 less 437 original 432 black 419 far 406 last 385 full 382 still 380 often 371 thus 364 english 363 later 363 certain 351 almost 350 never 340 artistic Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 507 good 239 most 191 least 124 early 80 great 50 high 47 fine 27 late 27 large 24 bad 24 Most 18 simple 17 strong 17 small 16 low 14 slight 10 manif 9 old 9 happy 8 true 7 rare 7 eld 7 cheap 6 young 6 plain 6 near 6 broad 5 easy 4 long 4 light 4 hard 4 few 4 deep 4 clear 3 wild 3 weak 3 strange 3 smooth 3 short 3 rude 3 rich 3 quick 3 noble 3 new 3 j 3 full 3 fit 3 expr 3 dark 3 bright Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 925 most 77 well 50 least 1 ¦ 1 near Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 2 archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/45426/45426-h/45426-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/45426/45426-h.zip 1 http://archive.org/details/englishillustrat00whit 1 http://archive.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 22 plate is then 9 _ see _ 7 _ was not 6 drawing is not 5 illustration is not 5 plate is now 4 books printed abroad 4 paper is then 3 _ are also 3 _ did not 3 _ have already 3 _ illustrate _ 3 blocks take longer 3 book is very 3 books are not 3 books were not 3 process does not 3 work is more 3 work is much 2 _ do not 2 _ has not 2 _ illustrated news 2 _ is _ 2 _ is also 2 _ is not 2 _ published several 2 _ was _ 2 _ was as 2 art did not 2 art is not 2 art was not 2 art was so 2 artist does not 2 artist has not 2 artist is most 2 block is ready 2 book called _ 2 book has lately 2 book is devoted 2 book is full 2 book is now 2 book is well 2 book was not 2 books are no 2 books are very 2 books printed elsewhere 2 books were very 2 century did not 2 designs are more 2 drawing is only Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ are not difficult 1 _ has not sufficient 1 _ illustrated not only 1 _ is no esoteric 1 _ is no real 1 _ published no more 1 _ was no doubt 1 _ was not long 1 _ was not merely 1 _ was not so 1 _ was not strong 1 art had no place 1 art has not greatly 1 art is not always 1 art is not necessarily 1 art took no root 1 artist did not alone 1 artist had not then 1 artist has no actual 1 artists are not safe 1 artists know no difference 1 artists were not infrequently 1 block is no more 1 block is not suitable 1 blocks had not then 1 book is not merely 1 book was not only 1 books are no better 1 books are no longer 1 books are not as 1 books are not remarkable 1 books had no titlepage 1 books had not yet 1 books have no resistance 1 books were not good 1 books were not very 1 century are no longer 1 century are not more 1 century was not there 1 day is not far 1 days was not yet 1 designs have no persian 1 drawing is not satisfactory 1 drawing is not so 1 drawing is not too 1 drawing is not unusually 1 drawings are not generally 1 drawings have not only 1 drawings having no doubt 1 drawings is not easily A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 32320 author = Blackburn, Henry title = The Art of Illustration 2nd ed. date = keywords = Academy; England; London; Mr.; art; book; drawing; illustration; line; process summary = [Illustration: (PEN-AND-INK DRAWING FROM HIS PICTURE, BY MR. Newspaper Illustration, and especially the methods of drawing for what The most important branch of illustration treated of is _line drawing_, Education of the Illustrator--Line Drawing for Process--Sketching from Life--Examples of Line Drawing. Dots--"Half-tone" Process--Wash Drawing--Illustrations from [Illustration: LINE PROCESS BLOCK.] At the time referred to, drawing on the wood-block and engraving were engraved on wood, and the knowledge of this has left drawing for process series of illustrations, drawn on the wood block by artists in his own drawing for the processes, where the artist, and not the engraver, has some illustrators, as line blocks will print in newspapers much better hurried illustrator; he has only to draw in line (or outline, which is present, we may draw the line between the illustrator and the Pen-and-ink drawing by line process.] This artist learned the method of line work for process in a month.] id = 44890 author = Bouchot, Henri title = The Printed Book: Its History, Illustration and Adornment From the Days of Gutenberg to the Present Time date = keywords = Bible; Book; England; France; Francis; Fust; Germany; Grolier; Gutenberg; Italy; John; King; Louis; Lyons; Mayence; Paris; Schoeffer; St.; Tory; Venice; english; fig; french; illustration; italian; work summary = a book was illustrated on wood at the end of the century--Influence printers and their work--Engraved plates in English books. printed works, and some of the illuminators engraved in relief or cast Be that as it may, the book, the printing of which was finished on St. Sylvester''s Day, 1467, is the first known with engravings, and only volumes folio, the oldest in date of books printed at Paris in French. century--How a book was illustrated on wood at the end of the Bible--English printers and their work--Engraved plates in English of the engravings for books printed at Lyons. wood engraving in the illustration of the Book, and the best artists [Illustration: Fig. 65.--Frontispiece of a book from Plantin''s printing Baskerville--English books with illustrations--Wood engraving in illustration of books by engraved plates was in the first half of the although both of these artists did excellent work in book illustration. id = 40250 author = Crane, Walter title = Of the Decorative Illustration of Books Old and New 3rd ed. date = keywords = GERMAN; Hans; MSS; Mr.; Page; SCHOOL; Venice; XVITH; book; century; decorative; design; illustration; sidenote summary = period in printing and decorative book-illustration we have seen since principles and conditions governing the design of book pages and printed books at my disposal, from which to choose illustrations; to Mr. Emery Walker for help in many ways; to Mr. John Calvert for permission to FEELING IN BOOK DESIGN AFTER THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY, AND OF idea of what charming decorative feeling these title page designs decoration and illustration of books, and many are the splendid designs There is a fine title page designed by Holbein, printed by Petri, at marks a new era in book illustration, but as regards their decoration, as did the art of the printer, and design as applied to the printed page, system of the production of illustrations and designs for books, treatment of black and white design and book illustrations, _primarily decorative artist in book designs, which showed, among other more modern id = 31195 author = Everitt, Graham title = English Caricaturists and Graphic Humourists of the Nineteenth Century. How they Illustrated and Interpreted their Times. date = keywords = Bill; Bonaparte; Brooks; Brougham; Browne; Bull; Charles; Comic; Cruikshank; Dickens; Doyle; Duke; England; English; Face; France; General; George; Gillray; House; James; John; King; Lane; Leech; Lever; Life; London; Lord; Louis; Magazine; Majesty; March; Mr.; Mrs.; Napoleon; New; October; Old; Phiz; Princess; Punch; Queen; Richard; Robert; Royal; Seymour; Sir; St.; Street; Thackeray; Thomas; William; british; french; illustration; sketch summary = Illustrators of his day.--Sketches and Studies.--Death of the Artist. a Comic Artist.--Satire on Charles Lever.--Unfitted to Illustrate his work of a man of talent and genius like John Tenniel, a result surely to George Cruikshank, as a purely comic artist or caricaturist, Doré is succeed in graphic satire, unless he be a man of marked artistic power William Buss, in his book on "English Graphic Satire" (a work published George, Robert Seymour, Thomas Rowlandson, John Leech, and other artists subjects, etched by the artist after the design of George Moutard Perhaps more than any other comic artist of past or present time, George Leech''s hand appears for the first time in the fourth number of _Punch_ We have seen that at the time John Leech commenced work as a comic time considerable celebrity as an artistic illustrator of books. illustrative art as, perhaps, any artist of his time; and yet, amongst id = 34869 author = Hill, Thomas George title = The Essentials of Illustration A Practical Guide to the Reproduction of Drawings & Photographs for the Use of Scientists & Others date = keywords = Botany; London; Ltd.; Vol; drawing; fig; half; illustration; line; plate summary = known straightforward line drawings reproduced by half-tone; in other of the plate, the drawing is made on the paper with a pencil of a Fig. 1.--A wood engraving, by Edmund Evans, from the original drawing engravings are reproductions of line drawings, so that although we may [Illustration: PLATE 7.--Half Tone reproduction of a photograph taken In making drawings for reproduction by means of the half-tone process, line block, whilst the third is a reproduction by half-tone of a [Illustration: PLATE 12.--Three Colour Half Tone.] In making their drawings for reproduction by line blocks, authors have expressed by drawing with white ink on black paper. black ink where the reproduction by line block is possible. important, so that the result is a block or a plate which will print inches for half tone three colour blocks and photogravure plates. skill is required; for ordinary printing on good plate paper the id = 43557 author = Hinton, A. Horsley (Alfred Horsley) title = A Handbook of Illustration date = keywords = Original; black; drawing; half; illustration; ink; line; paper; pen; process; reproduction; tone; work summary = reproduction--Negative and print--Legitimate hand work--Relieving the CHAPTER IX.--MATERIALS FOR SIMPLE LINE DRAWING.--Papers and described--Pencil and chalk drawing for line reproduction. kinds of paper, smooth for pen work, rough for crayon, or medium for illustrator acquainted with the method in which his drawing or photogram [Illustration: HALF-TONE FROM PHOTOGRAM; HIGH LIGHTS STRENGTHENED WITH [Illustration: LINE REPRODUCTION FROM PEN AND INK. [Illustration: LINE REPRODUCTION FROM PEN AND INK. [Illustration: HALF-TONE FROM PHOTOGRAM--THE BLOCK ENGRAVED ON BY HAND. _THE PREPARATION OF ORIGINALS FOR REPRODUCTION BY HALF-TONE PROCESS._ _Half-tone from Indian-ink wash drawing on grey paper._ (_Original 5-5/8 [Illustration: DESIGN--CHINESE WHITE ON ORDINARY BROWN PAPER--HALF-TONE. processes used for producing drawing in line. and, of the many ways of illustrating by line process, it is the best [Illustration: PEN AND INK ON BLACK LINE SCRAPE BOARD. [Illustration: PEN AND INK ON BLACK LINE SCRAPE BOARD WITH WHITE SCRAPED [Illustration: PENCIL AND PEN ON VERTICAL LINE WHITE SCRAPE BOARD. id = 36417 author = Jackson, Mason title = The Pictorial Press: Its Origin and Progress date = keywords = Archbishop; Charles; Chronicle; City; Civil; Duke; England; English; France; George; God; House; Illustrated; John; Journal; King; Life; London; Lord; Magazine; Majesty; Mercurius; Mr.; News; Observer; October; Oxford; Parliament; Post; Prince; Queen; Rupert; Sea; Sir; St.; Street; War; Weekly; William; great; illustration; murder summary = engravings from the _Illustrated London News_, including some from the Periodical Newspaper published in England--Illustrated Tracts Periodical Newspaper published in England--Illustrated Tracts relating King and Queen--The Ladies'' Parliament--Illustrated Tracts relating to illustrated news, but as showing what a Lord Mayor of London looked like published a long article on the subject, illustrated with a woodcut view The _Illustrated London News_--The Early Numbers--The Burning of The _Illustrated London News_--The Early Numbers--The Burning of _Illustrated London News_, and under that title the first number great, and it is a little surprising that the _Illustrated London News_ was first made public in the pages of the _Illustrated London News_, the illustrations, and the ''_London News_'' printing-machine was one of the the time the _Illustrated London News_ was started, when large blocks The _Illustrated London News_ had five artists in the field during the the _Illustrated London News_ with sketches. special artist of the _Illustrated London News_. id = 36751 author = Kirkbride, Joseph title = Engraving for Illustration: Historical and Practical Notes date = keywords = art; artistic; engraver; engraving; illustration; picture; process; wood; work summary = early pictorial reproductions from engraved wood blocks. of substantial progress, and impressed the art of wood engraving with attention of the artistic world, and for many years wood engraving was The exact measure of Bewick''s influence on the art of wood engraving The possibilities of the wood engraver''s art, therefore, transition, _i.e._ Niello work to engraving as a reproductive art, is in the reception accorded by her artists to the art of metal engraving. into England of metal engraving as a reproductive art is doubtful. style of Houbraken, a Dutch artist, who some time previously engraved a was a brilliant exponent of the expressive power of the engraver''s art. The work of the engraver, like many other phases of reproductive art, is employment of process engraving for purposes of pictorial illustration the wood engraver''s art to the amplification of their half tone blocks. Process engraving, artistic, 58. Wood engraving, pictorial and artistic effects, 14. id = 33682 author = Paston, George title = Old Coloured Books date = keywords = Alken; Cruikshank; Egan; George; Life; London; Plates; Rowlandson; illustration summary = to him that humorous works illustrated with coloured etchings by illustrated books published by the same firm, _The History of the William Hone of _Table-Book_ fame, who employed him to illustrate a him, the idea of a book on Life in London as seen by a young man about for the illustrations to his book, which were from the pencil of George London_, illustrated by Robert Cruikshank. The books illustrated in colour at the end of the eighteenth and Magazine_, and was illustrated with plates drawn by Alken and etched by A later edition of the book was illustrated by a new sporting artist, popular book-illustrator, executing plates for the novels of Mrs. Trollope, Captain Marryatt, and Harrison Ainsworth; while, towards the Old Illustrated Books. artists of the famous books illustrated in colour which were Coloured Plates by Henry Alken, and 43 Illustrations on Illustrated with 27 Coloured Plates, id = 40322 author = Pennell, Joseph title = Modern Illustration date = keywords = England; France; Magazine; Mr.; Process; drawing; illustration; pen; wood summary = JEAN GIGOUX Process block, unsigned, from wood-engraving SIR GEORGE REID Wash drawing, engraving on wood, able to consult on modern illustration, that is on drawing, engraving excellent books notably a "Chapter on English Illustration," by Mr. Dobson, in Mr. Lang''s "The Library," and Mr. Linton''s works on a great artist like Dürer did not contribute illustrations to books most [Illustration: WOOD-ENGRAVING BY THOMAS BEWICK. to produce new work done specially for the wood, engravers were [Illustration: FROM AN ORIGINAL DRAWING ON THE WOOD BY HARVEY.] [Illustration: FROM CRUIKSHANK''S "TABLE BOOK." Engraved on wood by T. Vogels, Kreitzschmar, who engraved the drawings for the "Works of John Gilbert had been making his striking and powerful designs, Mr. Birket Foster his exquisite drawings, while much good _facsimile_ work this revival of wood-engraving may encourage original work, and a new work was published as illustration; yet, at the same time, it id = 35494 author = Pollard, Alfred W. (Alfred William) title = Fine Books date = keywords = Augsburg; Basel; Bible; British; Cambridge; Caxton; Cologne; England; English; France; Gutenberg; Hans; Henry; Horae; Italy; Jean; Johann; John; Latin; Library; London; Lyon; Mainz; Mr.; Museum; New; Nuremberg; Oxford; Paris; Robert; Rome; Sir; Strassburg; Thomas; Venice; Vérard; William; book; edition; french; german; greek; illustration; italian; print summary = Bamberg several books with woodcut illustrations and printed printer was only employed for a short time to print one or more books than fine copies of two well-printed books in which the printer has The natural method of illustrating a book printed with type is by means probably the first illustrated book printed in Germany, the cuts were illustration of books printed in movable type began in Italy as early as interest in the history of French book-illustration and printing, since were made, and an edition in book form was printed some time after may note that Caxton printed 100 books and editions that have come down Cologne, printing at, 61, 169, 205, 225, 231; book-illustration at, Florence, early printing, 67, 70, book-illustration at, 133-9, 267; Germany, printing in, 44-64, 169 _sq._, 224; book-illustration, Louvain, early printing at, 73; book-illustration, 122; English Venice early printing, 66 _sq._; book-illustration, 125-32, 194-7, id = 43232 author = Ridgway, John L. title = The Preparation of Illustrations for Reports of the United States Geological Survey With Brief Descriptions of Processes of Reproduction date = keywords = Geological; Greek; Survey; color; drawing; figure; illustration; line; map; photograph; plate; print; process summary = drawing each feature in a separate color on one sheet unless the work In preparing an original geologic map a letter symbol, such as has SYMBOLS FOR USE ON MAPS SHOWING FEATURES OF GROUND WATER. SYMBOLS FOR USE ON MAPS SHOWING FEATURES OF GROUND WATER. drawings to be reproduced in colors in order to strengthen the lines map should preferably be photographed in order to obtain prints on made by an author with pencil on blue-lined section paper may be inked maps are shown in Plate IV, but the size and weight of each line or In the final preparation of a base map to be engraved and printed in shading is to be printed in a separate color the base map should be [Illustration: Figure 9.--Map bearing six areal line patterns.] and white line drawing, photograph, or like original is reproduced in Wax-engraved plates may be used for printing colored maps or diagrams, id = 38164 author = Sketchley, R. E. D. (Rose Esther Dorothea) title = English Book-Illustration of To-day Appreciations of the Work of Living English Illustrators, with Lists of Their Books date = keywords = Book; Charles; Fairy; George; John; Longmans; Macmillan; Mr.; Mrs.; Sir; Tales; Walter; dent; illustration summary = a whole series of large folio books were illustrated in this way in the affected the present form of decorative book-illustration. work will be considered, and many have illustrated children''s books. has done little book-illustration, is one of the strongest artists of in these drawings, as in his pictures and later illustrations, an There are few artists illustrating books to-day whose work is drawings to ''Rambles in Dickens'' Land'' (1899) showed study of Mr. Railton, which is also observable in other books, such as ''The Story of book-illustration and of ''black-and-white'' art has not greatly affected art, and in the effect of his illustrative work on his contemporaries. That Mr. Pegram is a book-illustrator by the inclination of his art as a book-illustrator, however, his landscape drawings to Borrow''s ''Wild and true story books edited by Mr. Lang, and the drawings of Mr. Millar and generally harmonious illustrations, the artist''s drawings to id = 27112 author = White, Gleeson title = Children''s Books and Their Illustrators date = keywords = Charles; Fairy; John; Messrs.; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Robinson; book; child; illustration; little; story summary = Illustrators of Children''s Books," although its main purpose is the text that the most popular illustrated books which please the children are Children''s books were illustrated entirely by capital illustrations by John Franklin; and a series of Pleasant Books illustrations to children''s books only because they chanced to be designed books for children which were published about the same period. the illustration of children''s books, has done but few, and of these the illustration of children''s books, has done but few, and of these the illustration of children''s books, has done but few, and of these the illustration of children''s books, has done but few, and of these illustrated and decorated Mr. Baring-Gould''s "A Book of Fairy Tales" who has rarely illustrated works for little children, but in the famous Louis Davis has illustrated far too few children''s books. books with coloured illustrations. of "Children''s Books and their Illustrators." Owing to exigences of id = 45426 author = White, Gleeson title = English Illustration ''The Sixties'': 1855-70 With Numerous Illustrations by Ford Madox Brown: A. Boyd Houghton: Arthur Hughes: Charles Keene: M. J. Lawless: Lord Leighton, P.R.A.: Sir J. E. Millais, P.R.A.: G. Du Maurier: J. W. North, R.A.: G. J. Pinwell: Dante Gabriel Rossetti: W. Small: Frederick Sandys: J. Mcneill Whistler: Frederick Walker, A.R.A.: and Others date = keywords = Boyd; Dalziel; English; Good; Houghton; John; London; Magazine; Millais; Mr.; Pinwell; Poems; Small; Society; Week; Words; illustration summary = artists, but merely a working book of reference, whatever importance many costly illustrations in a magazine to-day as in a volume costing to provide a magazine with original illustrations by the chief artists Edwards, a most popular illustrator, appears in the last volume next year Walter Crane illustrates the serial, _Anne Hereford_, by Mrs. Henry Wood, and also a poem, _Margaret_, by his sister. journal illustrated by the same artist, its pictures were all printed of two artists who very rarely appeared as magazine illustrators. before any work on modern English illustrators had appeared. contains illustrations by artists whose work extended into the sixties illustrated quarto gift-book with many designs by John Gilbert, J. year John Gilbert illustrated the _Book of Job_ with fifty designs; value, considered as works of art, of these old illustrations, is not artist''s work in illustration, to Tennyson''s _Loves of the Wrens_.