- Meeting of Agricultural Labourers at Wootton Bassett
- Magdalen College
- Lord Stanley
Lord Stanley - Lord Palmerston
- Lord Macaulay
- Lord Lyndhurst
- Lord George Bentinck
- Lord Elgin, Governor-General of Canada
- Lord Elgin Stoned by the Mob
- Lord Campbell’s Audience of the Queen
- Lord Campbell
- Lord Brougham (1850)
- Lord Ashley (afterwards Earl of Shaftesbury).
- Lobby of the House of Commons
- Landing of Louis Philippe at Newhaven
- King’s College, Cambridge, from the 'Backs'
- King Leopold
- Joseph Sturge
- Joseph Mazzini
- Joseph Hume
- John Keeble
- John Henry Newman
- Interior of the House of Commons
- Interior of a Peasant’s Hut
- Windsor Castle
- Highland Cottages in Lochaber
- Hatfield House
- George Wilson, Chairman of the Anti-Corn-Law League
- From an Etching by the Queen
- Feargus O’Connor
- Favourite Dogs
- Falmouth Harbour
- Eldred Pottinger at Herat
- Dr Whewell
- Dost Mahomed
- Dog’s Head
- Demonstration of Sailors in Favour of the Navigation Laws
- Daniel O’Connell
- Costume Ball at Buckingham Palace
- Christening of the Princess Louise in Buckingham Palace Chapel
- Chatsworth House, from the South-West
- Charles Gavan Duffy (1848)
- Cathedral of St. Isaac, St. Petersburg
- Burning of the House of Assembly
- Burleigh House, Stamford
- Bridge and Cattle, Newport, Mon
- Baron Stockmar
- Arrival of the Royal Procession at the House of Lords
- Akbar Khan
- Holyrood Palace, Edinburgh
- Courtyard of St. James’s Palace
- Christening of the Princess Royal
- Buckingham Palace
- Banquet to the Queen in the Guildhall
- West Front of Kensington Palace
In the dawn of June 20th, 1837, immediately after the death of King William IV., the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Lord Chamberlain left Windsor for Kensington, to convey the tidings to his late Majesty’s successor. They reached the Palace about five o’clock in the morning, and knocked, rang, and beat at the doors several times before they could obtain admission. When at length the porter was aroused, the visitors were shown into one of the lower rooms, where a long time passed without any attention being paid them. Growing impatient, they rang the bell, and desired that the attendant on the Princess Victoria might be sent to inform her Royal Highness that they requested an audience on business of importance. Another long delay ensued, and again the bell was rung, that some explanation might be given of the difficulty which appeared to exist. On the Princess’s attendant making her appearance, she declared that her Royal Highness was in so sweet a sleep that she could not venture to disturb her. It was now evident that stronger measures must be taken, and one of the visitors said, “We have come on business of State to the Queen, and even her sleep must give way to that.” The attendant disappeared, and a few minutes afterwards the young sovereign came into the room in a loose white robe and shawl, her fair hair falling over her shoulders, her feet in slippers, her eyes dim with tears, but her aspect perfectly calm and dignified - The Throne-Room, Buckingham Palace
- The Royal Arms
The Royal Arms - The Queen’s First Council
- The Queen Receiving the Sacrament at her Coronation
- The Marquis of Lansdowne