- Witch
- A European Side-wheeler
These steamers are often seen in European waters and are widely used as excursion boats. - Miniature taken from the 'Roman de Fauvel'
- Making hearts for Valentine
- Eskimo Game
- Seal of the University of Paris (Fourteenth Century)
- Screenshot (28194) cr
- lady digging up plant in forest - col
- L. J.-Marie Bizeul
- Le Ministère de la Marine -fifth state
- Omelets
Omelets - Unlocking te door
- Girl in the flowers
- An Egyptian Dancer
- Lady looking at sunset
- fruit of the chestnut tree
- Victor Hugo
The studio and the study were very close together. Gautier, Hugo, and Mérimée were all painters in their own right, and there is a difference between the writers who have only seen life from a library, and those who have seen it from behind an easel. The writer who has once felt them can never forget the eye-delighting pleasures of the palette, but composes in colour-schemes, and feels for the tints of words as well as for their melody. - I saw three ships
- Flies in the food
- Tree
- A Floating Dry Dock
And a ship undergoing repairs. - Girl with bouquet
- Three ladies
- Planting the garden
- Golfer
- Cicindela tuberculata - Larva
- An Old Indian Festival Dress
- Le Pont-au-Change vers 1784, d’après Nicolle
- 4 Children
- Miniature taken from a Missal of the Beginning of the Eleventh Century
- Young girl
- Writing Thankyou notes
- An Eighteenth-Century Pierrot
- suitors bringing gifts to princess - col
- Pan flute playing for lovers
- An Experiment of 1924
This ship, designed by a German, is propelled by the wind blowing against the two strange towers. These towers are rotated by a motor with the result that, according to the Magnus law, the pressure of the wind becomes greater on one side of each tower than on the other, thus tending to move the ship. It seems hardly likely, at the time this book goes to press, that this application of a formerly unused physical law will revolutionize the propulsion of ships. - An Elaborate Head-dress in the Reign of Henry V
- A Croatian Peasant
- T
- Girls Costume - present day
- Child have you fallen
- AA
AA - AA
AA - Supper
- Rue des Chantres
- A Boy Scout's Necktie
- Shhh
- The Leviathan
Formerly the German liner Vaterland, and taken over by the United States during the World War. - Wild Beach plums
- George Alexander as Guy Domville
- I saw three ships - col
- Mullberry Bush
- F
- An owl and some bats
- Running with a dagger
- The Majestic
Formerly the German liner Bismarck. It is now the property of the White Star Line. - The Berengaria
A former German ship now belonging to the Cunard Line. - Mr Hobbs
Mr Hobbs was born in Malmsbury, Wilts, from whence he obtained the name of Malmsburiensis, and educated in Magdalen Hall, Oxford, where he took his degree of Bachelor of Arts; from whence he was taken into the Earl of Devonshire's family before he was twenty years of age, and soon after traveled with his son into France and Italy. And after variety of travels abroad, he returned into England, and settled in the house of his patron the Earl of Devonshire, where he lived many years in ease and plenty, rather as a friend and confidant, than a tutor or instructor. He was of very extensive genius, improved by great labour and sedulity, and had the reputation both abroad and at home, of a great philosopher and mathematician. CHARLES II, having learned mathematics of him, at his restoration, allowed him a pension of a hundred pounds a year out of the Exchequer, though he was a contemner of all money and riches. As to his peculiar notions in religion and policy, with which he infected many ingenious gentlemen, they are too difficult to be excused, and too dangerous to be palliated; he died in the ninety-first year of his age. - Hindu Bridegroom's procession
- A wife who is not a good cook