Long Case Clocks
away,—to how many volumes do we not grudge
the richness lavished on their covers? But in Miss
King’s art it is never so. We treasure the book
she has decorated because its contents have an
added value from the beauty of their exterior, and
we feel as we read a book she has illustrated that
it would be the poorer were her drawings, with
their deft and dainty expositions, not a part of it.
Miss King’s art, however, needs but few words to
explain and emphasize its intentions, and proofs
are to be found in the accompanying illustrations
of the practical truth of this appreciation.
FIG. I.—EARLY CLOCK BY
THOMAS TOMPION, “THE
FATHER;- OF ENGLISH
CLOCKMAKING,” ABOUT
1680
FIG. 2.—TIMEPIECE BY
WILLIAM CLEMENT,
KNOWN AS THE FIRST
MAKER OF LONG CASE
CLOCKS, ABOUT 1680
FIG. 3.—CLOCK BY
THOMAS TOMPION,
ABOUT 1700
FIG. 4.—CLOCK, RICHLY
INLAID, BY EDWARD
EAST, ABOUT 1690
SOME NOTES ON OLD LONG
CASE CLOCKS. BY F. J.
BRITTEN.
The long case, or “grandfather,” clock,
so intimately associated with English halls and
homes for over two centuries, is surely worthy
of at least a slight review. It dates from the
time of Charles II., and though each succeeding
period exhibits some distinguishing feature, its
tall, square, wooden case remains characteristic
of the variety throughout. Poets and story-writers
have discoursed affectionately of its tick, the sound
of its bell, its face and its hands, and who among
188
away,—to how many volumes do we not grudge
the richness lavished on their covers? But in Miss
King’s art it is never so. We treasure the book
she has decorated because its contents have an
added value from the beauty of their exterior, and
we feel as we read a book she has illustrated that
it would be the poorer were her drawings, with
their deft and dainty expositions, not a part of it.
Miss King’s art, however, needs but few words to
explain and emphasize its intentions, and proofs
are to be found in the accompanying illustrations
of the practical truth of this appreciation.
FIG. I.—EARLY CLOCK BY
THOMAS TOMPION, “THE
FATHER;- OF ENGLISH
CLOCKMAKING,” ABOUT
1680
FIG. 2.—TIMEPIECE BY
WILLIAM CLEMENT,
KNOWN AS THE FIRST
MAKER OF LONG CASE
CLOCKS, ABOUT 1680
FIG. 3.—CLOCK BY
THOMAS TOMPION,
ABOUT 1700
FIG. 4.—CLOCK, RICHLY
INLAID, BY EDWARD
EAST, ABOUT 1690
SOME NOTES ON OLD LONG
CASE CLOCKS. BY F. J.
BRITTEN.
The long case, or “grandfather,” clock,
so intimately associated with English halls and
homes for over two centuries, is surely worthy
of at least a slight review. It dates from the
time of Charles II., and though each succeeding
period exhibits some distinguishing feature, its
tall, square, wooden case remains characteristic
of the variety throughout. Poets and story-writers
have discoursed affectionately of its tick, the sound
of its bell, its face and its hands, and who among
188