- Young lady standing
- Young Lady
- Young Lady
- Young lady
- Young lady
- Woman sleeping
- Vespasian
- Unhappy lady
- The widow - standing
Lady standing in black dress - The widow
Sad young lady - Smiling Man
- She finds that exercise does not improve her spirits
- She finds some consolation in her mirror
Maid putting shoe on while young lady looks in mirror - She decides to die in spite of Dr. Bottles
- She contemplates the cloister
- Raffaelle
- Mrs Hemans
- Miss Babbles, the authoress, calls and reads aloud
- Man seated sideways on a chair
- Man scratching his head
- Man drinking
- Man and woman sitting by the fire
- Man
- Livia
- Lady with umbrella
- Lady skating
- Lady putting hat on
- Lady in profile
- Lady in black dress
- Kosciusko
- Julius Caesar
- Hooker
- Hobbes
- Dreamy Look
- Dante
Dante - Correggio
- Constantine
- Cato the censor
The orations of Cato are unhappily lost. But Cicero, a master of eloquence, and well enabled to compare them with similar compositions, passes upon them the highest eulogiums. The eloquence of Cato has been compared, for its force and energy, to the eloquence of that Demosthenes before whom Philip of Macedon quailed, and whose tremendous orations have given the name of Philippics to all sarcastic and vehement invectives. - Byron
- Bradlaugh
- Alexander the Great
- Addison
- Adam Smith
- A widow and her friends
- A quiet dinner with Dr. Bottles - after which he reads aloud miss Babbles’s latest work
- A New Zealander
A New Zealander with moko (tattoo)