London at the End of the Century:A Book of Gossip

a Beckett, Arthur William

1900

SEEING THE (USUALLY) UNSEEN.

DIPLOMA GALLERY, BURLINGTON HOUSE.

-Next door to the Royal Academy. Open daily all the year round. Immensely amusing. All the pictures painted as gifts to the Academy by recently-elected Academicians and Associates. Some of them will make you roar with laughter. Pictures by several living artists intensely funny. In the near neighbourhood the Gibson collection. A few good Reynoldses and other British old masters. Altogether the visit will furnish instruction combined with amusement, to quote the phrase associated with the lectures delivered at the poor old Polytechnic.

SIR JOHN SLOANE'S MUSEUM, 13, Lincoln's Inn Fields.-Any number of original Hogarths, worth untold gold, and some splendid old Masters. Lots of curious odds and ends, inclusive of designs for the National Gallery, with its salt dredger cupola and its pepper-box towers. Gaining admission will be rather funny. The public are not allowed to enter on any Monday, but you can get cards of admission for that day at the museum from the curator. So, happy thought, wake up the curator!

PARKES' MUSEUM OF THE SANITARY INSTITUTE, 74a, Margaret Street, W.-I daresay a most excellent collection. I have not the faintest idea what it is like.

ROYAL ARCHITECTURAL MUSEUM, 18, Tufton Street, Dean's Yard, Westminster.-Again I daresay vastly interesting. Never heard of the place until I found it in Whitaker, which is rather reticent about its attractions. After giving the name and address, it adds, with significant brevity, Curator, Francis Ford. The excellent almanack says nothing about the terms of admission, or gives any further information, so intending Bank Holiday visitors had better look up the curator. No doubt that presumably excellent gentleman will be delighted to see them. If after this suggestion a discovery is made of what on earth is to be seen in the Royal Architectural Museum in 18, Tufton Street, S.W., this chapter will not have been written in vain.

When these monuments have been done thoroughly the August reveller might-if he can find the time-look in at the Royal United Service Institution in Whitehall, the Museum of Practical Geology in Jermyn Street, and the Museum of the College of Surgeons in Lincoln's Inn Fields. All very good amusement for people who care for plans of battles, models of coal, skeletons, and similar objects of interest.

 

Lunch over, and be ready for a visit to little known exhibitions and museums. I give a list, and would like to bet that not a tenth of my readers have been to one of them, and not a hundredth to all of them.

 
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 Title Page
 Dedication
 PREFACE
CHAPTER I: LONDON AT THE END OF THE CENTURY
CHAPTER II: STRANGERS IN LONDON
CHAPTER III: RELIGION IN LONDON
CHAPTER IV: A PEEP INTO STAGELAND
CHAPTER V: PARLIAMENT UP TO DATE
CHAPTER VI: A NIGHT IN THE HOUSE
CHAPTER VII: THE PREMIER CLUB OF ENGLAND
CHAPTER VIII: LONDONERS HOLDING HOLIDAY
CHAPTER IX: THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE CLUB
CHAPTER X: IN RATHER MIXED CLUBLAND
CHAPTER XI: IN AUXILIARY CLUBLAND
CHAPTER XII: A PANTOMIME AT DRURY LANE
CHAPTER XIII: LONDON EXHIBITIONS
CHAPTER XIV: COACHING THE UNIVERSITY CREW
CHAPTER XV: THE SEQUEL TO THE DERBY
CHAPTER XVI: THE LONDON GONDOLA
CHAPTER XVII: LONDON ON STRIKE
CHAPTER XVIII: LONDON FIRES
CHAPTER XIX: PALL MALL AND PRIVATE THOMAS ATKINS
CHAPTER XX: CONCERNING THE LONDON VOLUNTEERS
CHAPTER XXI: SERVING WITH THE LONDON MILITIA
CHAPTER XXII: LONDON GUNNERS AT SHOEBURYNESS
CHAPTER XXIII: BECOMING A SOCIETY LION
CHAPTER XXIV: ENTERTAINING THE WORKING MAN
CHAPTER XXV: CHOOSING A FANCY DRESS
CHAPTER XXVI: PARLIAMENTARY SPEAKING
CHAPTER XXVII: ART IN LONDON
CHAPTER XXVIII: SPENDING BANK HOLIDAY IN LONDON
CHAPTER XXIX: A BANK HOLIDAY WITHOUT 'ARRY
CHAPTER XXX: LONDON OUT OF TOWN
CHAPTER XXXI: LONDONERS AND THEIR SUMMER HOLIDAYS
CHAPTER XXXII: LONDONERS AND THE CHANNEL
CHAPTER XXXIII: LONDON UNDER DOCTOR'S ORDERS
CHAPTER XXXIV: TWO CITIES IN FORTY-EIGHT HOURS
CHAPTER XXXV: THE LONDONER'S SEARCH FOR HEALTH
CHAPTER XXXVI: THE PARISIAN PART OF THE LONDON DISTRICT
CHAPTER XXXVII: A NOVELTY IN LONDON RECREATIONS
CHAPTER XXXVIII: LONDON SCHOOLBOYS AT THE END OF THE CENTURY