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- A cross section of the skin
- A dissection scene
A dissection scene - a lecture on anatomy
a lecture on anatomy - A ring of children
A ring of children - A Son of Pan
“A Son of Pan,” by William Padgett. Example of outline drawing, put in solidly with a brush. If this had been done with pencil or autographic chalk, much of the feeling and expression of the original would have been lost. The drawing has suffered slightly in reproduction, where (as in the shadows on the neck and hands) the lines were pale in the original. Size of drawing 11½ × 6½ in. Zinc process. - Advice to the mentally feeble
Keep the mouth closed. - Alexander Hamilton
- An anatomical diagram of about 1298
An anatomical diagram of about 1298 - An Egyptian Woman
An Egyptian Woman - An Odd Volume
A seated man reading a book - Another case of trying to keep neutral
Couple sitting on a park bench not really communicating - Are you going to volunteer
She: Are you going to volunteer? He: If yes, no. If no, yes. - Aren’t there a couple of young men in there with Clara
“Aren’t there a couple of young men in there with Clara?” “No, only one. There isn’t a sound.” - Ashes of Roses
This careful drawing, from the painting by Mr. Boughton, in the Royal Academy, reproduced by the Dawson process, is interesting for variety of treatment and indication of textures in pen and ink. It is like the picture, but it has also the individuality of the draughtsman, as in line engraving. Size of drawing about 6½ x 3½ in - Badminton in the studio
From the painting by R.W. MacBeth, A.R.A. - Benjamin Franklin
- Billy the Kid
Billy the Kid - Blind man's buff
In the olden times this game was known by the name of "Hood-man Blind," as in those days the child that was chosen to be "blind man" had a hood placed over his head, which was fastened at the back of the neck. In the present day the game is called "Blind Man's Buff," and very popular it is among young folk. - Boy climbing a tree
- Boy leading the charge
Boy leading the charge - Children playing
Children playing - Children playing
Children playing - Children sitting at the table
Children sitting at the table - Children sitting under a tree
Children sitting under a tree - Daniel Webster
- Diagram of the senses, the humours, the cerebral ventricles, and the intellectual facultie
Diagram of the senses, the humours, the cerebral ventricles, and the intellectual facultie - Diagram of the ventricles and the senses
Diagram of the ventricles and the senses with their relation to the intellectual processes according to the doctrine of the Renaissance anatomists. - Drop the handkerchief
A ring is formed by the players joining hands, whilst one child, who is to "drop the handkerchief," is left outside. He walks round the ring, touching each one with the handkerchief, saying the following words: "I wrote a letter to my love, But on my way, I dropped it; A little child picked it up And put it in his pocket. It wasn't you, it wasn't you, It wasn't you—but it was you." When he says "It was you," he must drop the handkerchief behind one of the players, who picks it up and chases him round the ring, outside and under the joined hands, until he can touch him with the handkerchief. As soon as this happens, the first player joins the ring, whilst it is now the turn of the second to "drop the handkerchief." - Feet
Feet - Front view of the thorax
- George Washington
- Girl playing with a kitten
Girl playing with a kitten - Girl playing with her doll
Girl playing with her doll - Girl reaching for a book
Girl reaching for a book - Girl standing under a tree in the rain
Girl standing under a tree in the rain - Girl walking heel to toe
Girl walking heel to toe - Girl washing her doll
Girl washing her doll - Godeys Fashion - 1854
Godeys Fashion - 1854 - Hand
Right Hand - Hand holding Card
Hand holding Card - Happy little boy in the rain
- Henry Clay
- Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - Hide-then go seek
Hide-then go seek - Illustrating Galen’s physiological teaching
The basic principle of life, in the Galenic physiology, is a spirit, anima or pneuma, drawn from the general world-soul in the act of respiration. It enters the body through the rough artery (τραχεῖα ἀρτηρία, arteria aspera of mediaeval notation), the organ known to our nomenclature as the trachea. From this trachea the pneuma passes to the lung and then, through the vein-like artery (ἀρτηρία φλεβώδης, arteria venalis of mediaeval writers, the pulmonary vein of our nomenclature), to the left ventricle. Here it will be best to leave it for a moment and trace the vascular system along a different route. - Illustrating the general ideas on anatomy current at the Renaissance
Illustrating the general ideas on anatomy current at the Renaissance - John Hancock
- John Jay
John Jay - John Quincy Adams
- Lady Cook
Lady Cook - Left Hand holding a card
- Left hand pointing
- Left Hand Pointing - Fine detail
- Left Hand Pointing Coarse detail
- Leonardo Da Vincis diagram of the heart
Leonardo Da Vincis diagram of the heart - Lilies
Three women in a boat picking lilies - Litle girl dancing
Litle girl dancing - Little girl with a clock
- Lymphatics of the head and neck. B, the thoracic duct
- Lymphatics of the leg.