- 'Britain's Sure Shield'
- 10th century castle, on its mound, with a wooden palisade enclosure
- 1585 - 1620
- 1725-1750
- 1797
- 1798
- 1798
- 1798
- 1799
- 1800
- 1806
- 1810
- 1811
- 1813
- 1828-1836
- 1830-1840
- 1840-1860
- 1845 - 1855
- A Bed in the Reign of Henry III
- A Bishop
- A Citizen and his wife
Ordinary Civil Costume ; temp Charles I (From Speed's map of 'The Kingdom of England,' 1646.) - A Coach of the Middle of the Seventeenth Century
(From an engraving by John Dunstall.) - A Countryman and Countrywoman
Ordinary Civil Costume ; temp Charles I (From Speed's map of 'The Kingdom of England,' 1646.) - A domed church
- A Drive in a Whiskey
- A Gallo-Roman
- A Gallo-Roman Woman
- A game of Emigrette
- A Gentleman and gentlewoman
Ordinary Civil Costume ; temp Charles I (From Speed's map of 'The Kingdom of England,' 1646.) - A juggler, after a miniature
- A Man of Granada
- A Mohammedan Chief
- A Muffish Meeting
- A Neat Meeting
- A Norman Ship
(From the Bayeux Tapestry.) - A Royal Attendant, Spain
- A Sea-Fight
(From the 'Life of Richard Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick'; drawn by John Rous about 1485.) - A Spaniard of the Seventeenth Century
- A Spanish Captain
- A Spanish Captain of the Sixteenth Century
- A Spanish Captain, Time of Philip II
- A Spanish Cavalier of the Sixteenth Century
- A Spanish Flagellant
- A Spanish Gentleman, early Sixteenth Century
- A Spanish Gentleman, time of Philip II
- A Spanish Gentlewoman of the Sixteenth Century
- A Spanish King of the Fifteenth Century
- A Spanish Merchant, Fifteenth Century
- A Spanish Nobleman of the Fifteenth Century
- A Spanish Noblewoman of the Fifteenth Century
- A Spanish Penitent of the Sixteenth Century
- A Sudden Emergency
- Acanthus latifolius (lusitanicus).
Ornamental foliaged herbaceous Section; retaining its leaves till very late in the year. The leaves of this are bold and noble in outline, and the plant has a tendency, rare in some hardy things with otherwise fine qualities, to retain them till the end of the season without losing a particle of their freshness and polished verdure. In fact, the only thing we have to decide about this subject is, what is the best place for it? Now, it is one of those things that will not disgrace any position, and will prove equally at home in the centre of the mixed border, projected in the grass a little from the edge of a choice shrubbery, or in the flower-garden; nobody need fear its displaying anything like the seediness which such things as the Heracleums show at the end of summer. - According to Viollet-le-Duc
- Ailantus and Cannas
Suggesting the effects to be obtained from young and vigorous specimens of hardy fine-leaved trees. - An 11th century knight, after the Bayeux tapestry
- An Ale-stake
The bibulium, that is to say, the ale-house or tavern, displayed its sign for all men to see: the ivy-garland, or wreath of vine-leaves, in honour of Bacchus, wreathed around a hoop at the end of a projecting pole. This bold advertisment of good drink to be had within long outlasted Roman times, and indeed still survives in differing forms, in the signs of existing inns. It became the “ale-stake” of Anglo-Saxon and middle English times. The traveller recognised the ale-stake at a great distance, by reason of its long pole—the “stake” whence those old beer-houses derived their name—projecting from the house-front, with its mass of furze, or garland of flowers, or ivy-wreath, dangling at the end. But the ale-houses that sold good drink little needed such signs, a circumstance that early led to the old proverb, “Good wine needs no bush.” - An appointment at the Cafe des Tuileries
- An attempt to restore the Krak, according to M. Rey
- Ancienne Habitation à Bourges