[465] One of these pieces, for instance, is a plate with arms of Sir John Lambert, who was created a baronet in 1711 and died in 1722. It has enamels of the transition kind.
[466] P. 209.
[467] The willow pattern is merely an English adaptation of the conventional Chinese landscape and river scene which occurs frequently on the export blue and white porcelain of the eighteenth century. That it represents any particular story is extremely improbable.
[468] Frank Falkner, The Wood Family of Burslem, p. 67.
[469] Another chambrelan who flourished about the same time and who worked in the same style was C. F. de Wolfsbourg.
[470] O. C. A., p. 464.
[471] “The mountains are high, the rivers long.”
[473] Catalogue, No. 367.