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Reviews for Lectures on Agricultural Law, Including an Examination of the Ground Game Act, 1880, and the...

 Lectures on Agricultural Law magazine reviews

The average rating for Lectures on Agricultural Law, Including an Examination of the Ground Game Act, 1880, and the... based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2008-12-14 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 4 stars James Allen
there is no person in history cooler than Isabella Stewart Gardner, a 19th century Boston socialite who built herself a castle in the middle of the city and filled it with art and artists and left it to be a museum in her will under the condition that no one EVER move ANYTHING because it was just as she wanted it, and if you think there's a cooler person you don't know enough!! can't wait to read this out-of-print '80s biography of her (although boo that title)
Review # 2 was written on 2020-01-30 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 4 stars Elizabeth Miller
Last month, after taking the red-eye back from Seattle where I spoke for Eastside RWA, I went to the Isabella Gardner Museum. A friend of mine is a docent there and she treated a small circle of us to a private tour. Isabella Stewart Gardner was the wife of a wealthy Boston Brahmin who inherited 1.6 million upon the death of her father in 1891, back when that was an embarrassingly large sum. She and her husband agreed she'd spend the lot acquiring art. So she spent her life and her funds traveling the globe cherry-picking masterpieces. I was already so sick with envy, I was predisposed not to like Ms. Gardner a bit. Then I saw what she'd created. The Gardner Museum is an absolute gem! More than merely a collection of acknowledged masterworks, this is the sum of a life's passion, a peek into a woman's soul. It's a very personal exposee of a unique individual's quest to educate, to tempt, to infuse her culture with an appreciation for beauty. Not only did she acquire art, she encouraged and supported the best artists of her time. Then she put on her curator hat and transformed her home into a museum (She lived on the fourth floor of this incredible building that's wrapped around a four-storey Venetian-style courtyard). By observing what she'd so carefully chosen and so lovingly displayed, I learned about her tastes, her loves, her theology, and her eccentricities. The museum was the site of a major heist ten years ago. Someone broke in with a "shopping list" and sliced a Ver Meer and several Rembrandts from their frames. Since the paintings haven't resurfaced, we can only assume they are in the private collection of some cash-rich, spirit-poor meany-head who doesn't work and play well with others. I wonder at the smallness of heart that would steal beauty from the world so they alone can enjoy it. But I suspect owning those pieces gives them little real pleasure because they can't let anyone know they have them. The frames still hang empty in the Gardner Museum to this day. The painting above is a portrait of Isabella Gardner done by Anders Zorn, a Swedish artist. I think it beautifully captures her generosity of spirit. She's stretched out, filling the space and pressing against the walls, refusing to be confined by the conventions of her day. I like Isabella Gardner very much indeed. I had to learn more about this fascinating woman. She was an original! I highly recommend the book.


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