untitled

Alabaster Blue Sectory 08
Page 02

Alabaster Blue provides more principles than supper time.

Alabaster Blue

Alabaster Blue Home
Alabaster Blue Sitemap
Alabaster Blue Sct 01
Alabaster Blue Sct 02
Alabaster Blue Sct 03
Alabaster Blue Sct 04
Alabaster Blue Sct 05
Alabaster Blue Sct 06
Alabaster Blue Sct 07
Alabaster Blue Sct 08
Alabaster Blue Sct 09
Alabaster Blue Sct 10
Alabaster Blue Sct 11
Alabaster Blue Sct 12
Alabaster Blue Sct 13
Alabaster Blue Sct 14
Alabaster Blue Sct 15
Alabaster Blue Sct 16
Alabaster Blue Sct 17
Alabaster Blue Sct 18
Alabaster Blue Sct 19
Alabaster Blue Sct 20
Alabaster Blue Sct 21
Alabaster Blue Sct 22
Alabaster Blue Sct 23
Alabaster Blue Sct 24

Alabaster Blue Sectory 08
Page 02

BAKHUYZEN, JUFFROUW GERARDINA JACOBA VAN DE SANDE. Silver medal at The Hague, 1857; honorary medal at Amsterdam, 1861; another at The Hague, 1863; and a medal of distinction at Amsterdam Colonial Exhibition, 1885. Daughter of the well-known animal painter. From childhood she painted flowers, and for a time this made no especial impression on her family or friends, as it was not an uncommon occupation for girls. At length her father saw that this daughter, Gerardina--for he had numerous daughters, and they all desired to be artists--had talent, and when, in 1850, the Minerva Academy at Groningen gave out "Roses and Dahlias" as a subject, and offered a prize of a little more than ten dollars for the best example, he encouraged Gerardina to enter the contest. She received the contemptible reward, and found, to her astonishment, that the Minerva Academy considered the picture as belonging to them.

Only once did he falter. In March, 1871, when the French sympathizers of his subjects exposed him as a German Prince and a Hohenzollern to great unpopularity, while the bankruptcy of the Jewish speculator to whom his railway schemes had been intrusted threw discredit upon his ideas of economic development, he summoned the members of the Provisional Government from whom he had accepted the crown and announced to them his decision to abdicate. Fortunately for Rumania, they succeeded in dissuading him from his purpose. The famous Conservative statesman, Lascar Catargi, formed a Ministry which held office for five years and enabled the ruler to turn the most dangerous corner of his reign. Thenceforward the path was comparatively clear, though by no means easy. It led to Rumanian participation in the Russo-Turkish war, to the conquest of national independence, and eventually, on May 22, 1881, to his coronation as King of Rumania, with a crown made of steel from a Turkish gun captured by Rumanian troops at Plevna.

And now at the present time we have twenty or more individuals of this Neanderthal type to compare. The latest discoveries are perhaps the most interesting, because in two and perhaps other cases the man has been properly buried. Thus at La Chapelle-aux-Saints, in the French department of Correze, a skeleton, which in its head-form closely recalls the Gibraltar example, was found in a pit dug in the floor of a low grotto. It lay on its back, head to the west, with one arm bent towards the head, the other outstretched, and the legs drawn up. Some bison bones lay in the grave as if a food-offering had been made. Hard by were flint implements of a well-marked Mousterian type. In the shelter of Le Moustier itself a similar burial was discovered. The body lay on its right side, with the right arm bent so as to support the head upon a carefully arranged pillow of flints; whilst the left arm was stretched out, so that the hand might be near a magnificent oval stone-weapon chipped on both faces, evidently laid there by design. So much for these men of the Neanderthal type, denizens of the mid-palaeolithic world at the very latest. Ape-like they doubtless are in their head-form up to a certain point, though almost all their separate features occur here and there amongst modern Australian natives. And yet they were men enough, had brains enough, to believe in a life after death. There is something to think about in that.



[ Dir 08 Part 01 ] [ Dir 08 Part 02 ] [ Dir 08 Part 03 ] [ Dir 08 Part 04 ] [ Dir 08 Part 05 ] [ Dir 08 Part 06 ]
[ Dir 08 Part 07 ] [ Dir 08 Part 08 ] [ Dir 08 Part 09 ] [ Dir 08 Part 10 ] [ Dir 08 Part 11 ] [ Dir 08 Part 12 ]


This document is Copyright © 2008 Alabaster Blue. All rights reserved. Do not copy either electronically or otherwise without permission. Links and references to other Websites are not endorsements. Alabaster Blue provides no guarantees or warrantees concerning other sites. Links are only provided as a courtesy and for entertainment purposes only.

Web Hosting · Blog · Guestbooks · Message Forums · Mailing Lists
Allwebco Web Templates · Build your own toolbar · Accept Credit Cards · Audio, Fonts, Clipart
powered by a free webtools company bravenet.com