#robert smith surtees
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
blackswaneuroparedux · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
There is no secret so close as that between a rider and his horse.
Robert Smith Surtees
169 notes · View notes
clove-pinks · 1 year ago
Text
Not to be Ohh Mister Waffles at 2 in the morning, but I am not over Mr. Waffles, from the 1852 novel Mr. Sponge's Sporting Tour by Robert Smith Surtees.
Mr. Waffles was a "pretty man." Tall, slim, and slight, with long curly light hair, pink and white complexion, visionary whiskers, and a tendency to moustache that could best be seen sideways. He had light blue eyes; while his features generally were good, but expressive of little beyond great good-humour. In dress, he was both smart and various; indeed, we feel a difficulty in fixing him in any particular costume, so frequent and opposite were his changes. He had coats of every cut and colour. Sometimes he was the racing man with a bright-button'd Newmarket brown cut-away, and white-cord trousers, with drab cloth-boots; anon, he would be the officer, and shine forth in a fancy forage cap, cocked jauntily over a profusion of well-waxed curls, a richly braided surtout, with military over-alls strapped down over highly varnished boots, whose hypocritical heels would sport a pair of large rowelled, long-necked, ringing, brass spurs. Sometimes he was a Jack tar, with a little glazed hat, a once-round tye, a checked shirt, a blue jacket, roomy trousers, and broad-stringed pumps; and, before the admiring ladies had well digested him in that dress, he would be seen cantering away on a long-tailed white barb, in a pea-green duck-hunter, with cream-coloured leather and rose-tinted tops.
[...] He had always been a most important personage among the ladies, but as the men couldn't marry him, those who didn't want to borrow money of him, of course, ran him down. It used to be, "Look at that dandified ass, Waffles, I declare the sight of him makes me sick;" or, "What a barber's apprentice that fellow is, with his ringlets all smeared with Macassar."
HELLO????
And of course he's illustrated by John Leech!!
Tumblr media Tumblr media
I have never read R.S. Surtees other than skimming him, but Phillis and Cecil Cunnington used him a lot as a source on clothing and fashion for Handbook of English Costume in the 19th Century.
55 notes · View notes
alfieshawfmp · 7 months ago
Text
Illustration and image manipulation
Tumblr media Tumblr media
British Library digitised image from page 346 of "The 'Jorrocks' edition"
Image taken from: Title: "The 'Jorrocks' edition"Author(s): Surtees, Robert Smith, 1805-1864 [person] ; Romford, Facey [person]British Library shelfmark: "Digital Store 012618.h.16"Page: 346 (scanned page number - not necessarily the actual page number in the publication)Place of publication: London (England)Date of publication: 1892Publisher: Bradbury, AgnewType of resource: MonographLanguage(s): EnglishPhysical description: viii, 405 pages (8°)
Tumblr media
During my experimentation and inspiration phase, I've accumulated hundreds of esoteric public domain artwork. As you can see above, when I reverse image search them, theres no trace of the origin to these artworks. On the British Library page where I found it, there are authors and dates to the imagery but even the books are difficult to get a hold of. As an experiment, I tried 'restoring' some of these lost/forgotten illustrations by tracing and illustrating over them.
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Are these relevant to the national trust? no. But i still find it useful to explore and experiment with this style of illustration to potentially weave in with my future design. These esoteric illustrations do remind me of some of the trendy designs amongst clothing brands popular with contemporary audiences.
0 notes
recoiloperated · 1 year ago
Text
“The only infallible rule we know is, that the man who is always talking about being a gentleman never is one.”
-Robert Smith Surtees
The thing about all the trad discourse is that men who are strong leaders don’t boast about being strong leaders all the time, they just are.
The ones who boast are the red flag men, girlies
688 notes · View notes
merelygifted · 3 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
- Robert S Surtees, from MR FACEY ROMFORD’S HOUNDS (1865)
THE ORIGINAL POST HAS BEEN MARKED AS “SENSITIVE” AND NSFW, and has been in appeal FOR MONTHS! I still get followed by hundreds of actual PORN BOTS, but u marked THIS post as “SENSITIVE.”  Guess I know whose side yr on, tumblr.
Try, try again...
7 notes · View notes
asfaltics · 5 years ago
Text
crosswalk round the rooia, lieu
Tumblr media
scribble window, 20200319
i.e. After exchanging a few nothings, . . ...o.o. with an air of easy ixoditlerei: , round the rooia, lieu
OCR embarrassment by poor scan, pointing to Handley Cross; or, the Spa Hunt. A sporting tale. By the author (Robert Smith Surtees, 1805-1864 *) of “Jorrock’s Jaunts and Jollities,” &c. vol. 1 (London, 1843) : 192 BL copy, digitized October 1, 2018, source jpeg  
3 notes · View notes
clarasimone · 4 years ago
Text
That one line of poetry by Robert Smith Surtees in Iain Glen’s mouth was so worth the wait. Thank you @itszulasworld​
Tumblr media
John
14 notes · View notes
noelcollection · 6 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Check out this binding! While the text was published in 1852, the book appears to have been rebound at a later date. It consists of half red morocco over marbled boards with a gilt spine. The endpapers are also decorated.
Images from:
Surtees, Robert Smith. Mr. Sponge's sporting tour. London : Bradbury, Agnew & Co., 1852. Call Number: PR5499 .S4 M5 1852 Catalog record: https://bit.ly/2Ie5xk7
14 notes · View notes
burgerfiction · 6 years ago
Video
youtube
Sunrise: A Song Of Two Humans (1927/28) - Charles Rosher & Karl Struss
White Shadows In The South Seas (1928/29) - Clyde De Vinna
With Byrd At The South Pole (1929/30) - Joseph T. Rucker & Willard Van der Veer
Tabu: A Story Of The South Seas (1930/31) - Floyd Crosby
Shanghai Express (1931/32) - Lee Garmes
A Farewell To Arms (1932/33) - Charles Lang
Cleopatra (1934) - Victor Milner
A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1935) - Hal Mohr
Anthony Adverse (1936 B&W) - Tony Gaudio
The Garden Of Allah (1936 COLOR) - W. Howard Greene & Harold Rosson
The Good Earth (1937 B&W) - Karl Freund
A Star Is Born (1937 COLOR) - W. Howard Greene
The Great Waltz (1938 B&W) - Joseph Ruttenberg
Sweethearts (1938 COLOR) - Oliver T. Marsh & Allen Davey
Wuthering Heights (1939 B&W) - Gregg Toland
Gone With The Wind (1939 COLOR) - Ernest Haller & Ray Rennahan
Rebecca (1940 B&W) - George Barnes
The Thief Of Bagdad (1940 COLOR) - Georges Perinal
How Green Was My Valley (1941 B&W) - Arthur C. Miller
Blood And Sand (1941 COLOR) - Ernest Palmer & Ray Rennahan
Mrs. Miniver (1942 B&W) - Joseph Ruttenberg
The Black Swan (1942 COLOR) - Leon Shamroy
The Song Of Bernadette (1943 B&W) - Arthur C. Miller
Phantom Of The Opera (1943 COLOR) - Hal Mohr & W. Howard Greene
Laura (1944 B&W) - Joseph LaShelle
Wilson (1944 COLOR) - Leon Shamroy
The Picture Of Dorian Gray (1945 B&W) - Harry Stradling
Leave Her To Heaven (1945 COLOR) - Leon Shamroy
Anna And The King Of Siam (1945 B&W) - Arthur C. Miller
The Yearling (1946 COLOR) - Charles Rosher, Leonard Smith & Arthur E. Arling
Great Expectations (1947 B&W) - Guy Green
Black Narcissus (1947 COLOR) - Jack Cardiff
The Naked City (1948 B&W) - William H. Daniels
Joan Of Arc (1948 COLOR) - Joseph A. Valentine, William V. Skall & Winton Hoch
Battleground (1949 B&W) - Paul C. Vogel
She Wore A Yellow Ribbon (1949 COLOR) - Winton Hoch
The Third Man (1950 B&W) - Robert Krasker
King Solomon’s Mines (1950 COLOR) - Robert Surtees
A Place In The Sun (1951 B&W) - William C. Mellor
An American In Paris (1951 COLOR) - Alfred Gilks & John Alton
The Bad And The Beautiful (1952 B&W) - Robert Surtees
The Quiet Man (1952 COLOR) - Winton Hoch & Archie Stout
From Here To Eternity (1953 B&W) - Burnett Guffey
Shane (1953 COLOR) - Loyal Griggs
On The Waterfront (1954 B&W) - Boris Kaufman
Three Coins In The Fountain (1954 COLOR) - Milton R. Krasner
The Rose Tattoo (1955 B&W) - James Wong Howe
To Catch A Thief (1955 COLOR) - Robert Burks
Somebody Up There Likes Me (1956 B&W) - Joseph Ruttenberg
Around The World In 80 Days (1956 COLOR) - Lionel Lindon
The Bridge On The River Kwai (1957) - Jack Hildyard
The Defiant Ones (1958 B&W) - Sam Leavitt
Gigi (1958 COLOR) - Joseph Ruttenberg
The Diary Of Anne Frank (1959 B&W) - William C. Mellor
Ben-Hur (1959 COLOR) - Robert Surtees
Sons And Lovers (1960 B&W) - Freddie Francis
Spartacus (1960 COLOR) - Russel Metty
The Hustler (1961 B&W) - Eugen Schufftan
West Side Story (1961 COLOR) - Daniel L. Fapp
The Longest Day (1962 B&W) - Jean Bourgoin & Walter Wottitz
Lawrence Of Arabia (1962 COLOR) - Freddie Young
Hud (1963 B&W) - James Wong Howe
Cleopatra (1963 COLOR) - Leon Shamroy
Zorba The Greek (1964 B&W) - Walter Lassally
My Fair Lady (1964 COLOR) - Harry Stradling
Ship Of Fools (1965 B&W) - Ernest Laszlo
Doctor Zhivago (1965 COLOR) - Freddie Young
Who’s Afraid Of Virginia Woolf? (1966 B&W) - Haskell Wexler
A Man For All Seasons (1966 COLOR) - Ted Moore
Bonnie And Clyde (1967) - Burnett Guffey
Romeo And Juliet (1968) - Pasqualino De Santis
Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid (1969) - Conrad L. Hall
Ryan’s Daughter (1970) - Freddie Young
Fiddler On The Roof (1971) - Oswald Morris
Cabaret (1972) - Geoffrey Unsworth
Cries And Whispers (1973) - Sven Nykvist
The Towering Inferno (1974) - Fred J. Koenekamp & Joseph F. Biroc
Barry Lyndon (1975) - John Alcott
Bound For Glory (1976) - Haskell Wexler
Close Encounters Of The Third Kind (1977) - Vilmos Zsigmond
Days Of Heaven (1978) - Nestor Almendros
Apocalypse Now (1979) - Vittorio Storaro
Tess (1980) - Geoffrey Unsworth & Ghislain Cloquet
Reds (1981) - Vittorio Storaro
Gandhi (1982) - Billy Williams & Ronnie Taylor
Fanny And Alexander (1983) - Sven Nykvist
The Killing Fields (1984) - Chris Menges
Out Of Africa (1985) - David Watkin
The Mission (1986) - Chris Menges
The Last Emperor (1987) - Vittorio Storaro
Mississippi Burning (1988) - Peter Biziou
Glory (1989) - Freddie Francis
Dances With Wolves (1990) - Dean Semler
JFK (1991) - Robert Richardson
A River Runs Through It (1992) - Philippe Rousselot
Schindler’s List (1993) - Janusz Kaminski
Legends Of The Fall (1994) - John Toll
Braveheart (1995) - John Toll
The English Patient (1996) - John Seale
Titanic (1997) - Russell Carpenter
Saving Private Ryan (1998) - Janusz Kaminski
American Beauty (1999) - Conrad L. Hall
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000) - Peter Pau
The Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring (2001) - Andrew Lesnie
Road To Perdition (2002) - Conrad L. Hall
Master And Commander: The Far Side Of The World (2003) - Russell Boyd
The Aviator (2004) - Robert Richardson
Memoirs Of A Geisha (2005) - Dion Beebe
Pan’s Labyrinth (2006) - Guillermo Navarro
There Will Be Blood (2007) - Robert Elswit
Slumdog Millionaire (2008) - Anthony Dod Mantle
Avatar (2009) - Mauro Fiore
Inception (2010) - Wally Pfister
Hugo (2011) - Robert Richardson
Life Of Pi (2012) - Claudio Miranda
Gravity (2013) - Emmanuel Lubezki
Birdman (2014) - Emmanuel Lubezki
The Revenant (2015) - Emmanuel Lubezki
La La Land (2016) - Linus Sandgren
Blade Runner 2049 (2017) - Roger Deakins
12 notes · View notes
artfortheages · 6 years ago
Quote
There is no secret so close as that between a rider and his horse.
Robert Smith Surtees
7 notes · View notes
blackswaneuroparedux · 3 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
There is no secret so close as that between a rider and his horse.
- Robert Smith Surtees
104 notes · View notes
clove-pinks · 3 years ago
Text
The Victoria & Albert Museum is determined to make me read the novels of R.S. Surtees, I think. Surtees is quoted by the V&A to describe men's apparel for multiple items in their clothing and textiles collection. He was known as a comic writer, and apparently a very clothing-focused writer?? e.g. the fox head waistcoat of his character Mr. Jawleyford.
3 notes · View notes
thehorsedispatch · 3 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
New Post has been published on https://horsetoloan.com/horse-riding/horse-quotes/
Horse Quotes
Tumblr media
Horse Quotes
For all the horse lovers out there, we have put together a list of the all-time best horse quotes ever. Of course, these weren’t actually spoken by horses, but most of them were spoken by horse lovers, and all of them were spoken about horses. 
There is something about the outside of a horse that is good for the inside of a man.
Winston Churchill 
No hour of life is wasted that is spent in the saddle. 
Winston Churchill
Horse sense is the thing a horse has which keeps it from betting on people. 
W.C. Fields
I’d rather ride on a Mustang than in one.
Bailey Ann Neal
When your horse follows you without being asked, when he rubs his head on yours, and when you look at him and feel a tingle down your spine… you know you are loved.
John Lyons
There is no secret so close as that between a rider and his horse.
Robert Smith Surtees
A horse gallops with his lungs, perseveres with his heart, and wins with his character. 
Tesio
We have almost forgotten how strange a thing it is that so huge and powerful and intelligent an animal as a horse should allow another, and far more feeble animal, to ride upon its back.
Peter Gray
He doth nothing but talk of his horses. O for a horse with wings! When I bestride him, I soar, I am a hawk: he trots the air; the earth sings when he touches it; the basest horn of his hoof is more musical than the pipe of Hermes. As full of spirit as the month of May, and as gorgeous as the sun in Midsummer.
William Shakespeare 
Courage is being scared to death but saddling up anyway.
John Wayne
The history of mankind is carried on the back of a horse.
Unknown
There are many wonderful places in the world, but one of my favorite place is on the back of my horse.
Rolf Kopfle
A pony is a childhood dream. A horse is an adult treasure.
Rebecca Carroll
There is no secret so close as that between a rider and his horse.
Robert Smith Surtees 
A man on a horse is spiritually, as well as physically, bigger than a man on foot.
John Steinbeck 
In their eyes shine stars of wisdom and courage to guide men to the heavens.
Jodie Mitchell
A horse doesn’t care how much you know until he knows how much you care. Put your hand on your horse and your heart in your hand.
Pat Parelli 
No heaven can heaven be, if my horse isn’t there to welcome me.
Unknown
Horses lend us the wings we lack.
Pam Brown
God forbid that I should go to any heaven in which there are no horses.
R.B. Cunningham Graham 
I am still under the impression that there is nothing alive quite so beautiful as a horse.
John Galsworthy
I often said there is nothing better for the inside of a man than the outside of a horse.
Ronald Reagan
No philosophers so thoroughly comprehended us as dogs and horses.
Herman Melville 
For one to fly, one needs only to take the reins.
Melissa James
One can get in a car and see what man has made. One must get on a horse to see what God has made.
Unknown
The essential joy of being with horses is that it brings us in contact with the rare elements of grace, beauty, spirit, and freedom.
Sharon Ralls Lemon
The horse. Here is nobility without conceit, friendship without envy, beauty without vanity. A willing servant, yet never a slave.
Ronald Duncan
The horse, with beauty unsurpassed, strength immeasurable and grace unlike any other, still remains humble enough to carry a man upon his back.
Amber Senti
There is something about riding down the street on a prancing horse that makes you feel like something, even when you ain’t a thing.
Will Rogers
A horse can lend its rider the speed and strength he or she lacks – but the rider who is wise remembers it is no more than a loan.
Pam Brown
A dog may be man’s best friend, but the horse wrote history.
Unknown
You took me to adventure and to love. We two have shared great joy and great sorrow. And now I stand at the gate of the paddock watching you run in an ecstasy of freedom, knowing you will return to stand quietly, loyally, beside me.
Pam Brown
Wherever man has left his footprints in the long ascent from barbarism to civilization, we find the hoofprint of a horse beside it.
John Trotwood Moore
Through the days of love and celebration and joy, and through the dark days of mourning – the faithful horse has been with us always.
Elizabeth Cotton
Horse thou art truly a creature, for thou fliest without wings and conquorest without sword.
Unknown 
There is no better place to heal a broken heart than on the back of a horse.
Missy Lyons
You and your horse. His strength and beauty. Your knowledge and patience and determination and understanding and love. That’s what fuses the two of you onto this marvelous partnership that makes you wonder… “What can heaven offer any better than what I have here on Earth?”
Monica Dickens
At its finest, rider and horse are joined not by tack, but by trust. Each is totally reliant upon the other. Each is the selfless guardian of the other’s very well-being.
Unknown 
It is the horse’s gift to connect us with Heaven and our own footsteps.
Ronni Sweet
The air of heaven is that which blows between a horse’s ears.
Proverb 
The horse moved like a dancer, which is not surprising. A horse is a beautiful animal, but he is perhaps the most remarkable because he moves as if he always hears music. 
Mark Helprin 
0 notes
merelygifted · 3 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
“Rot the beggar!” exclaims Romford.
Good thing he was wearing his old hat.
John Leech illustration
1 note · View note
fuzzysparrow · 7 years ago
Text
RIP 2017
Sir Roger Moore
Sir John Hurt
Mary Tyler Moore
Robert Hardy
Tim Pigott-Smith
Adam West
Martin Landau
Richard Hatch
Erin Moran
Sashi Kapoor
Om Puri
Bill Paxton
Barry Norman
Gordon Kaye
Liz Dawn
Roy Barraclough
Hywel Bennett
Peter Sallis
Jane Freeman
Geoffrey Bayldon
Rodney Bewes
Keith Barron
Tony Booth
Roy Dotrice
Tony Hagarth
Sir Peter Hall
Rosemary Leech
Sara Coward
Sir Bruce Forsyth
Keith Chegwin
Sean Hughes
John Noakes
Brian Cant
Carol Lee Scott
Andy Cunningham
Desmond Carrington
Brian Matthew
Steve Hewlett
Heinz Wolff
William G Stewart
Clare Hollingworth
Frank Delaney
Colin Dexter
Michael Bond
Alan Simpson
Jerry Lewis
Antonio Carluccio
Jill Saward
Christine Keeler
Martin McGuiness
Cormac Murphy-O'Connor
Lord Snowdon
Tam Dalyell
Rhidri Morgan
Sir Gerald Kaufman
Rodney Bickerstaff
Paul Weitz
Hans Rosling
Ian Brady
Max Clifford
Charles Manson
Jana Novotna
Baroness Heyhoe Flint
Graham Taylor
Joost van der Westhuizen
Ugo Ehiogu
Tommy Gemmell
Sir Colin Meads
Ronnie Moran
Jake LaMotta
John Surtees
Tim Gudgin
Tom Petty
Glen Campbell
Don Williams
Joni Sledge
Walter Becker
Malcolm Young
Gregg Allman
John Geils Jr
David Cassidy
Peter Sarstedt
Peter Skellern
Johnny Hallyday
Fats Domino
Chris Cornell
Chuck Berry
Tara Palmer-Tomkinson
Hugh Hefner
RIP to everyone who lost their life this year. Reblog and add anyone else's name who is missing from the list.
8 notes · View notes
blprompt · 4 years ago
Text
British Library digitised image from page 292 of "Plain or Ringlets? By the author of 'Handley Cross' [R. S. Surtees] . ... With illustrations by John Leech"
Tumblr media
Image taken from: Title: "Plain or Ringlets? By the author of 'Handley Cross' [R. S. Surtees] . ... With illustrations by John Leech" Author(s): Leech, John, 1817-1864 [person] ; Surtees, Robert Smith, 1805-1864 [person] British Library shelfmark: "Digital Store 012618.h.35" Page: 292 (scanned page number - not necessarily the actual page number in the publication) Place of publication: London (England) Date of publication: 1892 Publisher: Bradbury, Agnew Edition: Another edition The Jorrocks edition With illustrations by John Leech Type of resource: Monograph Language(s): English Physical description: x, 398 pages (8°) Explore this item in the British Library’s catalogue: 002929606 (physical copy) and 014827478 (digitised copy) (numbers are British Library identifiers) Other links related to this image: - View this image as a scanned publication on the British Library’s online viewer (you can download the image, selected pages or the whole book) - Order a higher quality scanned version of this image from the British Library Other links related to this publication: - View all the illustrations found in this publication - View all the illustrations in publications from the same year (1892) - Download the Optical Character Recognised (OCR) derived text for this publication as JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) - Explore and experiment with the British Library’s digital collections The British Library community is able to flourish online thanks to freely available resources such as this. You can help support our mission to continue making our collection accessible to everyone, for research, inspiration and enjoyment, by donating on the British Library supporter webpage here. Thank you for supporting the British Library. from BLPromptBot https://ift.tt/33DhTgK
0 notes