- Moldavian Peasants
Moldavian Peasants - Meeting of Agricultural Labourers at Wootton Bassett
- Max Schneckenburger
In the late afternoon we floated out of the sweet air of the meadows into a stratum of effluvia from the tanneries of Tuttlingen, and but for the fact that the town claims as its hero Max Schneckenburger, the author of the words of “Die Wacht am Rhein” who was educated here in his youth, and for the more cogent reason of hunger, we probably should have paddled past the town without pausing longer than to admire some of its architectural features. - Marriage of Queen Victoria
- Magdalen College
- Lumber Raft
Lumber Raft - Lord Stanley
Lord Stanley - Lord Palmerston
- Lord Melbourne
- 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
- Loading Grain at Braila
Loading Grain at Braila - Landing of Louis Philippe at Newhaven
- King’s College, Cambridge, from the 'Backs'
- King William IV
William IV. was a man of very moderate abilities; but a certain simplicity and geniality of character had secured for him the regard and respect of the people, and had carried him through the revolutionary epoch of the Reform Bill with no great loss of popularity, even at a time when he was supposed to be unfriendly to the measure. For the last two years he had ceased to take any interest in the political tendencies of the day, while discharging the routine duties of his high office with conscientious regularity. - King Leopold
- Joseph Sturge
- Joseph Mazzini
- Joseph Hume
- John Keeble
- John Henry Newman
- Interior of the House of Commons
- Interior of the Chapel Royal, St. James’s
- Interior of a Peasant’s Hut
- In Sunday Dress, Monostorszég
In Sunday Dress, Monostorszég - Hungarian Girls at Bezdán
Hungarian Girls at Bezdán - Horizontal Drying Machine
After bleaching, the cloth is next passed over a mechanical contrivance known as a “scutcher,” which opens it out from the rope form to its full breadth, and is then dried on a continuous drying machine. The figure shows the appearance and construction of an improved form of the horizontal drying machine, which is in more common use for piece goods than the vertical form. - Holyrood Palace, Edinburgh
- Hohenzollern
Hohenzollern Castle - Highland Cottages in Lochaber
- High Pressure Blow-through Kier
Lime Boil.—In this operation, which is also known as bowking (Ger. beuchen), the pieces are first run through milk of lime contained in an ordinary washing machine and of such a strength that they take up about 4% of their weight of lime (CaO). They are then run over winches and guided through smooth porcelain rings (“pot-eyes”) into the kier, where they are evenly packed by boys who enter the vessel through the manhole at the top. It is of the greatest importance that the goods should be evenly packed, for, if channels or loosely-packed places are left, the liquor circulating through the kier, when boiling is subsequently in progress, will follow the line of least resistance, and the result is an uneven treatment. Of the numerous forms of kier in use, the injector kier is the one most generally adopted. This consists of an egg-ended cylindrical vessel constructed of stout boiler plate and shown in sectional elevation in the figure. - Hatfield House
- Gossips, Hundsheim
At the post-office, where we went to buy our first Hungarian stamps, the gossiping old postmaster and his wife—characters not unfamiliar in the rural offices in other countries—were so overwhelmed by the extent of our requirements and the number of our letters that the wheels of official machinery refused to work at all. After they had carefully read all the addresses, and had marvelled long at the range of our correspondence, we succeeded in communicating to their dazed senses the fact that we wanted to buy a stock of stamps of various denominations. - George Wilson, Chairman of the Anti-Corn-Law League
- Gateway of St. James’s Palace
- From an Etching by the Queen
- Feargus O’Connor
- Favourite Dogs
- Falmouth Harbour
- Eldred Pottinger at Herat
- Duke Ernest, of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, Prince Albert’s Brother
- Dredging the Delta
Dredging the Delta - Dr Whewell
- Dost Mahomed
- Donaueschingen Girls
Donaueschingen Girls - Dog’s Head
- Distant View of Windsor Castle
Distant View of Windsor Castle - Devil
Depiction of the devil - Demonstration of Sailors in Favour of the Navigation Laws
- Death of the Duke of Kent - Presenting the commons’ address of condolence to the Duchess at Kensington Palace
But the unusually severe winter of 1819-20 induced the Duke and Duchess to visit Sidmouth, for the sake of the mild climate of Southern Devonshire. At Salisbury Cathedral, to which he made an excursion during the frosty weather, the Duke caught a slight cold, which, after his return to Sidmouth, became serious, owing, it would seem, to neglect and imprudence. According to the medical custom of those days, the patient was copiously bled, and not improbably owed his death to the exhaustion thus occasioned. He expired on the 23rd of January, 1820, in his fifty-third year; and so small were his means that he left the Duchess and the Princess totally devoid of maintenance. Such was the statement made long afterwards by Leopold of Saxe-Coburg, who was with his sister during the days of her trial and bereavement. Soon after the fatal event, the Prince accompanied the widowed lady to London, where addresses of condolence were voted by both Houses of Parliament. The address of the Commons was presented by Lords Morpeth and Clive, when the Duchess of Kent appeared with the infant Princess in her arms. - Daniel O’Connell
- Crossing the Weir—Rottenacker
Crossing the Weir—Rottenacker