- Horses Drinking
Horses Drinking - Horses in stall
Horses in stall - Horses running in snow
Horses running in snow - House mouse
House mouse - How the calf was fed
- Hungarian Ox
- Hunting Dog
- Hunting with the dogs
Hunting with the dogs - In company of the everlasting tortoise
- In full play
Kitten playing with a ball - Indian Elephant employed in a Timber yard, Moulmein
- Indian Hunting Bison
- Italian Buffalo
- Jerboa
Jerboa - Jimmie
- Jugglers
At first, and down to the thirteenth century, the profession of a juggler was a most lucrative one. There was no public or private feast of any importance without the profession being represented. Their mimicry and acrobatic feats were less thought of than their long poems or lays of wars and adventures, which they recited in doggerel rhyme to the accompaniment of a stringed instrument. The doors of the châteaux were always open to them, and they had a place assigned to them at all feasts. Jugglers exhibiting Monkeys and Bears.--Fac-simile of a Manuscript in the British Museum (Thirteenth Century). - Jumping Hare or Earthman
The Jumping Hare inhabits shabby tracts and even desert-like steppes. It has spread over much of South Africa, occurs in the west at least to the width of Angola and in the east certainly still in German East Africa. In cape land it is very frequent in some places, as in mountain regions as in open plains, sometimes these animals are found in such a large number that they form real colonies. In a similar way to his relatives, he digs subterranean long-aisle dwellings, which are usually heavily branched and located at a short distance from the surface and lead to a larger depth. Usually such a dwelling serves up residence to several couples, yes even to whole families. - Jungly Gau
- Kitten
- Kitten
- Kitten and bucket
- Kitten and curtain
- Kitten and dragonfly
- Kitten and puppy faceoff
- Kitten and puppy playing
Kitten and puppy playing with a basket of apples - Kitten and Rabbit
- Kitten climbing
- Kitten Dreams
- Kitten getting comfortable
- Kitten laying down
- Kitten looking down
- kitten on a toy boat
- Kitten Playing
Kitten Playing - Kitten playing with ball
Kitten playing with a ball - Kitten practicing a snarl
- Kitten thinking
- Kitten with paw out
- Kitten with paw up
- Kittens after the Show
Kittens after the Show - Kittens at the Show
Kittens at the Show - Kittens drinking
Kittens drinking - Kittens play fighting
- Kittens playing with ball of wool
- Kudu
Kudu - Kyloe, or Highland Ox
- Lagomys
Lagomys - Lemming
The most famous species of this genus, the Lemming (Myodes lemmus, Lemmus norwegicus) reaches a total length of 15 cM., of which at most 2 will be on the tail stump. The richly stuffed, long-haired coat exhibits a very graceful sign. In the case of the brownish-yellow ground colour, which is fitted in the neck with wave lines, dark spots protrude; two yellow stripes stretch from the eyes to the rear. The tail and legs are yellow, the parts yellowish, almost sandy. - Light White and Sandy She-Cat and Kittens
Light White and Sandy She-Cat and Kittens - Lion
- Lion
Male lion - Lion by Alfred Stevens
- Lion Divider
Lion Divider - Lion from a Theban bas-relief
- Lion from Assyrian Bas-relief
Lion from Assyrian Bas-relief - Lion, supporting the pillar of the Pulpit, St. Mark’s
- Lioness
Lioness - Lioness
Lioness - lioness
Lioness - Lioness and young, from an Ionian vase of the sixth century B. C
Lioness and young from an Ionian vase of the sixth century b. c. found at Caere in Southern Etruria (Louvre, Salle E, No. 298), from Le Dessin des Animaux en Grèce d’après les vases peints, by J. Morin, Paris (Renouard), 1911. The animal is drawing itself up to attack its hunters. The scanty mane, the form of the paws, the udders, and the dentition are all heavily though accurately represented. - Llama