- Walter Scott
Walter Scott - Hatfield House
- Professor Faraday
- Lord Campbell’s Audience of the Queen
- Celtic warrior in hunting dress
- The Queen in the Royal Gallery, St George’s Chapel, 1846
- Lord Campbell
- Meeting of Agricultural Labourers at Wootton Bassett
- The Council Chamber
- 'Rebecca' riot in South Wales
- James Hogg
James Hogg - The Queen in the Woodwardian Museum
- Lord George Bentinck
- Lobby of the House of Commons
- Aralia japonica
A valuable species, quite distinct from any of the others, with undivided, fleshy, dark-green leaves. It is usually treated as a green-house plant, but is hardy and makes a very ornamental and distinct-looking shrub on soils with a dry porous bottom. It grows remarkably well in the dwelling-house; in fact it is one of the very few plants of like character that will develop their leaves therein in winter. Not difficult to obtain, it may be used with advantage in the flower-garden or pleasure-ground among medium-sized plants—say those not more than a yard high. It would form striking isolated specimens on the turf, and is also very suitable for grouping. A native of Japan. - Lord Ashley (afterwards Earl of Shaftesbury).
- King Leopold
- Celtic Chieftain in full war-dress
- Celt 2
- The Prince-Chancellor of Cambridge University Presenting an Address to the Queen
- Landing of Louis Philippe at Newhaven
- Celt Warrior
- Sir John C. Hobhouse
Sir John C. Hobhouse - Mother Louse
- The Queen Opening Parliament in 1846
- The Chartist Demonstration on Kennington Common
- Sir James Graham
- The Duke of Kent
- St Georges Chapel, Windsor
- Washington Irving
Washington Irving - The Castle of the Wartburg
- Night Scene in a Fifteenth-century Inn
- The Queen and the Deserter’s Death-Warrant
- Lord Byron
Lord Byron - man
- Sir Robert and Lady Sale
- Joseph Mazzini
- Berberis nepalensis
The noble habit of this plant makes it peculiarly valuable, possessing, as it does, the grace of a luxuriant fern with the rigidity of texture and port of a Cycas. The leaves are occasionally 2 ft. in length and of a pale green colour, sometimes with eight pairs of leaflets and an odd one: some of the leaflets 6 ins. long and nearly 2 ins. broad, with coarse spiny teeth on the margin. The inflorescence is very striking and beautiful. The Nepaul Barberry is one of those subjects that are too hardy to perish in our climate, yet which do not usually attain perfect development in it. It exists about London in the open air, and flowers in early spring; but the leaves seldom attain one-fourth of their full development, and the plant scarcely ever displays its vigorous grace. In mild parts, principally in the south and south-west, it grows more freely, and when judiciously placed in sheltered positions, in deep and rather sandy soil, it becomes a beautiful object. Where it thrives in the open air, it may be most tastefully used in the more open spots near the hardy fernery, here and there among “American plants,” or other choice s - The Deputation from London and Dublin Corporations before the Queen
- Reception of Louis Philippe at Windsor Castle
- Akbar Khan
- Queen Victoria in 1839
Queen Victoria in 1839 - Reception of the Queen in Hyde Park after the News of Oxford’s Attempt on her Life
- Mr. Disraeli in his Youth
- Lord Melbourne
- Sign of the 'Sir Jeffrey Amherst'
On the other side of the highway, swinging romantically from the branches of a great Scotch fir, is the picture-sign of the house, bearing the legend, “Sir Jeffrey Amherst, Crown Point,” and showing the half-length portrait of a very determined-looking warrior, clad in armour and apparently deep in thought; while in the background is a broad river, across whose swift current boat-loads of soldiers, in the costume of two centuries ago, are being rowed. - Edward Lytton Bulwer
Edward Lytton Bulwer - Costume Ball at Buckingham Palace
- Dusting the letters before firing
The letters are now taken charge of by a girl, who lays them out on a wire tray, the hollow side up, and paints them over with a thin mordant. While they are in this position, and before the mordant dries, they are taken on the gridiron-like tray to a kind of large box, which is full of the powdered enamel, and, holding the tray in her left hand, the girl takes a fine sieve full of the powder and dusts it over the letter, all superfluous powder falling through the open wirework and into the bin again, so that there is absolutely no waste. - Dog’s Head
- Bridge and Cattle, Newport, Mon
- Mediæval Cellarer
- Prince Metternich
- King’s College, Cambridge, from the 'Backs'
- Lord Brougham
Lord Brougham - brewhouse
- The Queen and Prince Albert at the Children’s Fête in Coburg on St. Gregory’s Day
- The Marquis of Lansdowne
- The Earl of Aberdeen
- Pierre-Jean De Béranger
Pierre-Jean De Béranger