- The Party Promptly broke up
- The Man that broke the bank at Monte Carlo
- The Girl who represented Alsace
- The Concierge of each house stood continually at the front door
- The Chateau Rouge
- The American Colony is not wicked
- Tes Dans La Rue, T'es Cheztoi
- Standing on their feet for hours at a time
- Some Young People of Montmarte
- She looked down upon our street
- With a long loaf of bread
- What might happen some time if these were love-matches
- To bring a queen back to Paris
- The Restauraunt among the trees
- And transform long-haired students into members of the institute
- A Cafe Chantant
- Portraits of Carnot in Heavy Black
- On Montmarte
- Listening for the voice to speak his name once more
- Interested in the Winner
- Inside Columbin's
- I have one picture in the salon
- French Soldier
- At the Moulin Rouge
- At the Jardin de Paris
- At the Black Cat
- At Bruant's
- Around some stately dignitary
- And you believe the guides
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Arms of George Washington First President of the Republic - Visit of Samoset to the English
Some time in March of 1621, an agreeable and unexpected occurrence took place at the rendezvous of the whites. It was a visit of an Indian sagamore, named Samoset, with professions of friendship for them, and satisfaction at their arrival in the country. His kind greeting to them was, "Welcome, Englishmen! Welcome, Englishmen!" He spoke in broken English, which he had learned from English fishermen on the eastern coast. This was an event of great consequence to the settlers, as they learned from him many things in respect to the region around, and the Indians that inhabited it. He came to the English settlement again, with some other natives, and advised the emigrants of the coming of the great sachem, named Massasoit. In a short time this chief made his appearance, in company with his principal associates, particularly an Indian named Squanto, who proved to be of signal service to the whites. He had learned the English language, in consequence of having been carried to England by an English adventurer. Mutual fear and distrust took place between the parties, as Massasoit came in sight on the hill which overlooked the place. After they each had taken proper precautions against surprise, through the agency of Squanto they came together, and the result of the interview was a league of peace, which was kept inviolate more than fifty years. - Sir Isaac Newton's House, Orange and St. Martin's Streets
- Roger Bacon's House at Oxford
- Ramage's Telescope
- Mariner's Compass
- Map of the Moon
- Hipparchus
- Hadley's Sextant
- Galileo and the Well-sinkers
- Florence
- Birthplace of Newton
- Baghdad
- Ars Longa, Vita Brevis
- Alexandrian Mathematicians
- Alembic and receiver
- Air Pump
- A Court in the Alhambra
- Workman fashioning a spectacle lens
- Tycho Brahe's House and Observatory
- The Screw of Archimedes
- The Present Aspect of Constantinople
- The Magdeburg Experiment on the Large Scale
- The Giralda at Seville
- The Cathedral of Amiens
- The Alchemist
- Hipparchus
- Statue of Newton, Trinity College, Cambridge