- A Primitive Spindle
- A Bark Canoe
- A Bark Raft
- Type of Huts suggested by Magdalenian drawings
- Stone Age Man
- Carolina of Austria
- A Fight in the Tree-tops
- Group of Coyotes
- Head of Prong-horn Antelope
- A squirrel
- Head of Royal Bengal Tiger
- Skeleton of an American Bison
- Paring Down a Large Mammal SkiN
- Holding the bow
- Position of the left hand and the left arm
The violin is held with the left hand and rests on the left collar bone. The instrument must be horizontal. To give a firm grip, a small pad is often placed between the violin and the left shoulder. A chin-rest screwed to the ribs, and covering a part of the upper table, is also to be recommended. The chin-rest serves also to protect the varnish. To prove that the violin is held securely and well, the left hand may be removed. - Constituent parts of the violin - Exterior
The most important part is the upper table or belly (a). The other parts are the ribs or sides (b), the back (c), the neck (d), the head comprising the scroll and peg box (e), the pegs (f), the finger board (g), the bridge (h), the tailpiece (i), the button[3] (k), the nut (l), and the f or sound-holes (m). The interior of the violin contains the soundpost and the bass bar. - Rabab
. Rabab—Arabian bowed instrument (of Persian origin). Pictures of Indian and Persian bowed instruments exist, but the period when they were employed is not exactly known. - Raba—Indian violin
Pictures of Indian and Persian bowed instruments exist, but the period when they were employed is not exactly known. - Constituent parts of the bow
- Constituent parts of the violin - Interior
- The bow
This received its name from its ancient form, which has undergone many alterations before the present form was arrived at - C. JVLIVS CAESAR
In marmore penes Cl. Ric Mead M.D. sui tabulam dicat Wm. Stukeley. 1722. - CAESAR’S Camp called the Brill at PANCRAS.
London, then called Trinobantum, was a considerable trading emporium in British times, and before Cæsar’s arrival here. But the greatest curiosity of London, and what renders it highly illustrious, has never been observed by any writer: to give some account of it, is the purpose of this paper. - MAPPA BRITTANIÆ FACIE
- A cooked turkey
- A globe
- Ready to make a receipe
- Squirrels gathering nuts for winter
- Table set for dinner
- Weighing a baby
- Young child
- It takes all sorts of people to feed the world
- Loaf of Bread
- Open air food market
- Beehive
- Campfire cooking
- Gardening implements
- Harvest
- A simple meal
- A picnic
- A sailing ship
- A loaf of bread
- Bears are dangerous
- Grizzly Bear
- Target Area
- Polar Bear
- Polar Bear
- Owl
- The Swarm spirit
- Bird 4
- Bird
- Black Mallard Ducks
- Black Mallards
- Ducks Swimming (2)
- Owl 2
- Bird 2
- Bird 3
- Woodpecker