The ladies-in-waiting of the Glass Palace were, by turns, stationed around the west room to wait upon.
Most of the dissenters chose not to declare their disagreement in front of the thousands of spectators at the "Glass Palace".
A music school with 2900 students is housed in a new building, connected to the Glass Palace through the first basement, ground floor and mezzanine floor.
The Glass Palace was translated and published into over 25 languages.
It inspired the city of Columbus to create a horticulture building modeled after the Exposition's Glass Palace.
The building was sometimes called the "Glass Palace" due to the extensive use of architectural glass in its design.
In 1869, Compton was living in Munich and two years later for the first time exhibited his work at the Glass Palace.
It is sometimes referred to as "The Glass Palace" in Portland.
But then any explanation may seem redundant here, since both king and peasant alike in "The Glass Palace" lack a complex inner life.
It was actually a different Ghosh I read, The Glass Palace.