544 
Report of the Implements 
with felt and matcli-boarding. The roof was covered with gal- 
vanised corrugated iron, the surface of which was neatly lapped 
with special boarding, and painted to represent Broseley tiles. 
The gables were enriched with the Royal arms. It contained 
drawing-room, reception, and five other rooms, all lofty and well 
appointed, the windows being finished in appropriate style. It 
had four handsome elevations, with a verandah at each comer 
leading from the drawing and reception rooms, and the porch 
harmonised with the other architectural features. 
The Queen's Pavilion (Front Elevation). 
The internal decoration and furnishing of the Pavilion were 
carried out by Messrs. James Shoolbred & Co., Tottenham Court 
Road, London, W. The rooms were decorated in the style of 
the English Renaissance, more familiarly known as Elizabethan, 
the decorations being all liand-painted. From the entrance hall, 
with its fresco representing autumn flowers, and grain with the 
sickle around it, one passed into the spacious reception room, its 
ceiling and cavetto decorated with strapwork in rich and golden 
hues, the Royal arms being introduced on quaint shields, and the 
walls adorned with wreaths of wild roses, with the legend : — 
Gather you rosebuds while you may, 
Old time is still a-flyiug: 
For that same flower that blooms to-day, ,„ . . 
To-morrow may be dying. 
