- Young girl
- Without the wedding garment
- An Egyptian Dancer
- Mother in doorway - col
- D
- Miniature, taken from Dante’s 'Paradise'
- Fishing
- Cupids
- Playing from the Rough
- George Alexander as Guy Domville
- SK or KS
- SK or KS
- Sir Francis Drake
Sir Francis Drake, before he had the royal sanction for his depredations, was a famous free-booter against the Spaniards. The queen made no scruple of employing so bold and enterprising a man against a people who were themselves the greatest free-booters and plunderers amongst mankind. He was the first Englishman that encompassed the globe. Magellan, whose ships passed the South Seas some time before, died in his passage. - A tea party
- Honoré De Balzac
Balzac, the working machine, was simply enormous energy so coaxed and trained as to produce an enormous output. The raw material of his rich humanity passed through violent processes. It had but small chance of any very delicate finish. Balzac thought in books and in cycles of books, never in pages, paragraphs, or sentences. - Miguel De Cervantes Saavedra
Cervantes, like Shakespeare, used all the resources of his time, and did not disdain to profit by other men's experiments. Don Quixote owed a triple debt to the common-sensible humorous rogue novel invented seventy years before, as well as to the more serious tales of knights and pastoral life that made his existence possible. Thieves and shepherds and paragons of chivalry assisted at his birth. The thieves in particular were responsible for the design, or lack of design, in the construction of the book. The rogue novels were made by stringing a series of disconnected 'merry quips' along the autobiography or biography of a disreputable hero. - In the Nineteenth Century
- Cat shrieking
- Thomas Parr
- Looking for eggs
- mangrove fruit 2
- The Phillipian Jailor before Paul and Silas
- William Godwin
William Godwin, the author of An Enquiry concerning Political Justice and of several novels, among them one now most undeservedly half forgotten, called Caleb Williams. It is seldom possible to point to any one book as the sign-post of a literary cross-roads, but there can be no doubt that in Caleb Williams we see the beginnings of self-conscious construction in story-telling. - Lewis Waller as Henry V
- Jack and Jill - col
- A Boy Scout's Necktie
- An Eighteenth-Century Pierrot
- A South Sea Islander
- suitors bringing gifts to princess- bw
- Staircase of a Tower
- Seal of the University of Oxford, in which is a Book bound with Corners and Clasps
- Hindu Bridegroom's procession
- Fashionable coiffure of an elderly lady in the 18th Century
- Boys will be boys
- Girl with bouquet
- Marie Antoinette
- Julian L'Estrange as Hermes
- Elizabeth of York
- I saw three ships - col
- Lifting Insensible Man
- Statue in Alabaster of Philip Chabot, Admiral of France, by Jean Cousin
- Domini
- Stages of the Diamond-back Moth
a, Diamond-back Moth (Plutella cruciferarum) b, young caterpillar, dorsal view c, full-grown caterpillar, dorsal view d, side view e, pupa, ventral view. From Journ. Dept. Agric. Ireland, vol. I - Child have you fallen
- Dagged Costume in the Twelfth Century
- A Peignoir
- lady digging up plant in forest - col
- Rue des Chantres
- Boy and Girl
- Pies
Pies - A Baby Apple
A Baby Apple Where there was a blossom before, you find now a little green thing something like a knob, This tiny knob keeps growing bigger and bigger, and then you see that it is a baby apple. - Writing Thankyou notes
- Two standing ladies
- In the Time of Henry VII
- Beerbohm Tree as Malvolio
- I saw three ships
- suitors bringing gifts to princess - col
- Rough Diagram, showing Comparative Sizes of Famous Ships at Different Periods
The sizes of these ships can only be shown approximately, as in some cases only the length of the keel is known; in others a mean has to be taken between length of keel and length over-all; while in others the authority does not say where the length was measured. H.M.S. Queen Elizabeth—650 feet long, with a beam of 94 feet—is bigger than all the rest put together.Rough Diagram, showing Comparative Sizes of Famous Ships at Different Periods The sizes of these ships can only be shown approximately, as in some cases only the length of the keel is known; in others a mean has to be taken between length of keel and length over-all; while in others the authority does not say where the length was measured. H.M.S. Queen Elizabeth—650 feet long, with a beam of 94 feet—is bigger than all the rest put together. - Children going for a walk
- At the market