- 1800 2
- Praying Hands
Praying Hands - Hands
- Surface veins and deep-lying arteries of inner side of right arm and hand
- Vertical section of skin
- Muscles of the anterior surface of the trunk
- handshake
- Diagram showing the action of the straight front corset
- The abdominal corset
- Upper surface, bones of foot
- Location of the viscera of the body
- Diagram showing the action of the curved front corset
- The diaphragm
- Front view of heart and lungs, showing relations to other thoracic organs
- The Nervous System
- Muscles of the anterior surface of the trunk 2
- Relation of kidneys to heart and great blood-vessels
- The New Method of Artificial Breathing
- The spinal column
- The bony thorax, anterior view
- Relation of heart and great vessels to the wall of the thorax
- Muscles of the posterior surface of the trunk
- Blood Corpuscles
- Diagram of Valves in the Heart and Veins
- The skeleton
- A longitudinal section of stomach, or peptic, glands
- The ribs removed, showing relation of thoracic to abdominal viscera
- A Tourniquet
- The Salivary Glands
- Normal chest
- Diagram of the circulatory system
- The natural and artificial positions of the foot
- Skeleton of head and trunk
- The food route in the digestive system
- Sitz-bath tub made of tin
- Effects of tight lacing on bony thorax
- General scheme of the digestive tract
- Diagram of artery, capillaries, and veins
- Outline diagram showing general plan and position of body-machinery
- Muscles of the right side of the head and neck
- 1807
- 1804
1804 - 1803
- 1805
1805 - 1806
- 1805
1805 - 1808
- An official ball in the Strassbourg Theatre
- 1806
- On the Water
On the water - Out for a ride
- 1802
- On the Watch
Bird watching a butterfly - 1797
1797 - 1799
- 1797
1797 - The Adventuress
The term adventuress is applied to women of careless reputation who, being much too smart to endure the ignominious career of professional demi-mondaines, resort to various shrewd schemes to fleece the unwary. Some of their class work in concert with male partners and in such cases the selected victim generally becomes an easy prey. The confidence man may be dangerous; the confidence woman, if she be well educated and bright, as well as pretty, is irresistible except with the most hardened and unsusceptible customers. - An Opera Ball
- Sir Walter Scott
Scott was a part of this revivified world, and his importance in it is not that of its inventor, but of the man who brought so many of its qualities into the art of story-telling that his novels became a secondary inspiration, and moved men as different as Hugo, Balzac, and Dumas, to express themselves in narrative. - 1798