THE AMERICAN-SCANDINAVIAN REVIEW 
231 
“Mrs. Budger was dancing with Mr. Tracy Tupman, there was no mistaking 
the fact.” T 'lie Pickwick Papers, Chapter II. 
greater or less success—or with no success at all have essayed to 
cut silhouettes. Not only in landscapes, but also in interiors with 
figures she succeeds in getting pictorial effects hitherto considered 
impossible with no other tools than scissors, such as the character¬ 
izing of materials with only black and white, or the vivid rendering 
of line in the bend of a child’s head, in the delicate curve of a young 
girl’s neck, or in the virile expression of a man’s profile. 
