- Three children and the old man
- This nice large one is for your dinner
- This nice large one is for your dinner a
- Therefore—upon his donkey—the contrary husband started for Tsun Pu
- Then he seized the plaques and flung them from him
- The royal generals . . . knelt before Hai Low and bumped their heads in the dust
- The king crawled under his throne
- The king and his generals gazed across the river
- The house of Weng Fu was luxurious in the extreme
- The first portrait he painted was that of Ying Ning, a monstrous ugly maiden
- So the seventh demon sped away taking the sea with him
- So Chai Mi sat beside the river and sewed and wept
- Rough Sea Divider
- Rooster divider
- Reading a scroll
- Prince Chin Pa tried in vain to hold his followers
- Painting a rock
Painting a rock - Of course, they wore hideous false faces
- Old Chinese Man Divider
- More and more sad came the music
- Meng Hu could imagine a knife at his throat
- Man working at the table
- It was the howl of a wolf
- Kneeling before a tree
- It was a well-plucked traveler who returned
- 'I—I—I—am hungry,' stammered Han Hsin
- How could she make beds when her hair needed burnishing
- House under a tree
- He made a V of the bowstring
- He was a weighty elephant—amid the cabbages
- He kept his forehead tight-pressed to the floor
- Han Hsin raised a bridge from island to mainland
- Flowers in the rain
- Drinking Tea
- Floral Divider
- Dragon
- Dragon Divider
- Doctor Chu Ping beamed upon him
- Chinese man rowing divider
- Divider
- By look and action he was a maiden
- 'Broooomp'
- At that same hour a basket was found in the garden
- A whanging of wings that lifted . . . Up . . . Higher . . . Swifter
- A necklace
- . . . And cut leaf-shaped pieces
- A helping hand
- Young Chinese Divider
- Parts of Birds
31. Falcon. 42. Bittern. 32. Bird of paradise. 43. Snipe. 33. Crowned pigeon. 44. Curlew. 34. Pheasant. 45. Woodcock. 35. Cock. 46. Ruff. 36. Red Grous. 47. Swan. 37. Black Grous. 48. Eider duck. 38. Ptarmigan. 49. Puffin. 39. Bustard. 50. Penguin. 40. Ostrich. 51. Gannet. 41. Heron. - Heads of Mammiferous Animals
18. Manis. 25. Beaver. 19. Armadillo. 26. Hare. 20. Elephant. 27. Musk. 21. Spaniel. 28. Rein-deer. 22. Greyhound. 29. Ox. 23. Mastiff. 30. Horse. 24. Fox. - Heads of Quadrupeds
1. Rhinoceros. 10. Fallow deer. 2. Seal. 11. Chamois. 3. Cat. 12. Antelope. 4. Sable. 13. Goat. 5. Bear. 14. Sheep. 6. Badger. 15. Bison. 7. Camel. 16. Hog. 8. Elk. 17. Outline of the head of the Great Whale. 9. Stag, or red deer. - The finding of the infant St. George
CHARLES M. GERE. (From his painting in the New Gallery, 1893.) - The Rose Queen
by G. D. LESLIE, R.A. (From “Academy Notes,” 1893.) - A Select Committee
- An Odd Volume
A seated man reading a book - Frustrated
Three dogs are frustrated that they cannot get a cat on top of a post. - Tiresome Dog
“Tiresome Dog,” by E. K. Johnson. - A Son of Pan
“A Son of Pan,” by William Padgett. Example of outline drawing, put in solidly with a brush. If this had been done with pencil or autographic chalk, much of the feeling and expression of the original would have been lost. The drawing has suffered slightly in reproduction, where (as in the shadows on the neck and hands) the lines were pale in the original. Size of drawing 11½ × 6½ in. Zinc process. - Badminton in the studio
From the painting by R.W. MacBeth, A.R.A. - Ashes of Roses
This careful drawing, from the painting by Mr. Boughton, in the Royal Academy, reproduced by the Dawson process, is interesting for variety of treatment and indication of textures in pen and ink. It is like the picture, but it has also the individuality of the draughtsman, as in line engraving. Size of drawing about 6½ x 3½ in