- The Houses of Parliament
- The Irish Rebellion of 1848
Forging Pikes - The King of Prussia Addressing the Berliners
- The Lower Ward, Windsor Castle
- The Marble Hall, Buckingham Palace
- The Municipal Dignitaries of Penryn introduced to the Prince of Wales
- The Overland Route
- The Prince-Chancellor of Cambridge University Presenting an Address to the Queen
- The Queen and Prince Albert at the Children’s Fête in Coburg on St. Gregory’s Day
- The Queen and the Deserter’s Death-Warrant
- The Queen and the Reapers at Blair Castle
- The Queen in the Royal Gallery, St George’s Chapel, 1846
- The Queen in the Woodwardian Museum
- The Queen Opening Parliament in 1846
- The Queen Visiting a Cornish Iron Mine
- The Queens Entrry in Edinburgh
- The Queens visit to France
- The Remnant of an army
- The Revolution in Paris
- The Royal Palace, Madrid
- The Royal Visit to Fingal’s Cave
- The South-East Corridor, Windsor Castle
- The Victoria Tower, Westminster Palace
- Thomas Carlyle
Thomas Carlyle - Virgin Forest in Canada
- Westminster Hall
- William Smith O’Brien
In 1845 Davis died, and the leadership of the Party passed into the hands of William Smith O’Brien, his lieutenants being John Mitchel and John Martin. All three were Protestants. Mr. Smith O’Brien was descended from King Brian Borhoimè—who played the part of Alfred the Great in Irish history. A brother of Lord Inchiquin, he was an aristocrat and a Tory, with frigid manners, and a high and chivalrous sense of honour. He had drifted into the “Young Ireland” Party, firstly, because fourteen years’ experience of the Imperial Parliament convinced him that it could not legislate wisely for Ireland, and, secondly, because he despaired of any other Party obtaining for Ireland the only Government that could lift her to her place among the nations. As a speaker he was cold, logical, and stilted. But he had a severe and ascetic sense of public duty, and his fidelity and truthfulness secured for him the unswerving loyalty of his followers.