- Thelemark cows of Norway
- Cat sitting in a chair
- Beaver
- Beaver 2
- Curiosity
- Cat and mouse
- Chicken and kitten
- Cat
- Black kitten
- Kitten getting comfortable
- Cat on a curtain
- Wise cat
- kitten on a toy boat
- Kitten and curtain
- Soggy cat
- Three kittens
- Kitten Dreams
- Three kittens and a basket
- Nice looking roast
- Kitten
- Girl and cat
- Wasn't me
- Kittens playing with ball of wool
- Kitten and Rabbit
- Family portrait
- Fifi, Nicholas and Toto
- Cat and kitten 2
- Spoon-feeding kitten
- Kitten and bucket
- Cat and kitten 3
- Two cats
- Decorated Cat
- Mother cat with kitten
- Cat and kitten
- Kittens play fighting
- Kitten and puppy faceoff
- Elephant employed to build a railway in Africa
- Black cat grooming himself
- Bear
- Tiger
- Angora Goats
- Skin Canoes of the Mandan Indians
- Podolian Cow, Galicia
- The Mehari, or racing Camel
- Another family portrait
- Heads of Mammiferous Animals
18. Manis. 25. Beaver. 19. Armadillo. 26. Hare. 20. Elephant. 27. Musk. 21. Spaniel. 28. Rein-deer. 22. Greyhound. 29. Ox. 23. Mastiff. 30. Horse. 24. Fox. - The Berkshire
- Arnee from Indian Painting
- Heads of Quadrupeds
1. Rhinoceros. 10. Fallow deer. 2. Seal. 11. Chamois. 3. Cat. 12. Antelope. 4. Sable. 13. Goat. 5. Bear. 14. Sheep. 6. Badger. 15. Bison. 7. Camel. 16. Hog. 8. Elk. 17. Outline of the head of the Great Whale. 9. Stag, or red deer. - Cotswold
- Caribou
Caribou - Brown Lemming
Brown Lemming - Arnee
- Gaur
- Brahmin Bull
- Halicore Dugong
- Manatee (Manatus Americanus)
- Small Breed White pig, Shown at Bedford
- Walrus skull, showing the powerful canine teeth
- Ailuropus Melanoleucus
Besides these two varieties of bears, there is another animal, which, though it is not properly a bear, resembles one so closely that it is classed by the Chinese and Tibetans in that family. It is known to the Chinese as hua hsiung, or "mottled bear," and Milne Edwards, who studied and described it, has called it Ailuropus melanoleucus. This animal was, I believe, discovered by that enterprising missionary and naturalist, Father Armand David (who called it "white bear"), in the little eastern Tibetan principality of Dringpa or Mupin, in western Ssu-ch'uan.[13] Five specimens have so far been secured of this very rare animal: three are in the Jardin des Plantes of Paris, the other two in the Museum at the Jesuits' establishment, at Zikawei, near Shanghai.