smithsonianlibraries: Should we make the “Frog Days of Summer” a…





smithsonianlibraries:

Should we make the “Frog Days of Summer” a thing? Only if we can get more use out of these fantastic plates from August Johann Rösel von Rosenhof’s, Historia naturalis ranarum nostratium (1758).

In it,  Rösel describes the natural history of all then-known frogs and toads indigenous to the Nuremberg region in Germany. The title is noteworthy first for the extensive, accurate information in the text, printed in two columns in both German and Latin.

Learn more about the volume on our blog: https://s.si.edu/2nBZBWD

View the digitized volume in @biodivlibraryhttps://s.si.edu/2P6qQVX

books0977: Laugh & Grow Wise. The Senior Owl of Ivy…



books0977:

Laugh & Grow Wise. The Senior Owl of Ivy Hall. Griffith and Farran, London, 1865. Illustrations are hand-colored; lithographed by Maclure, MacDonald & MacGregor.

Three little girls sat down to eat,
A hearty dinner one fine day;
And Sally brought some bread and meat,
And a great pie upon a tray.
“Oh, what is in that pie, I wonder?”
Said Mary, when she saw the crust,—
“Oh, how I wish I might look under;
"Do, Sally, cut it, or I must!”

books0977: City Dance (1883). Pierre Auguste Renoir (French,…



books0977:

City Dance (1883). Pierre Auguste Renoir (French, 1841-1919). Oil on canvas. Musée d'Orsay.

Designed as a pair with Country Dance. The format is identical and the almost life-size figures represent two different even opposite aspects of dancing. The elegant restraint of the city dancers and the cool ballroom around them contrasts with the gaiety of the country dance in the open air. Suzanne Valadon’s dress in City Dance is cool in colour.

Happy New Year!