- A Botticelli Dancing-Dress
- A Chemisette
- A Chinese Actor
- A Chinese Peasant
- A Croatian Peasant
- A Croatian Peasant man
- A dress laced in fromt
- A dress laced in the back
- A Fa-toka, New Zealand
- A German Student in the Fourteenth Century
- A Greek Peasant in Mediæval Days
- A Hungarian Peasant in the Seventeenth Century
- A New Zealand family
- A Peignoir
- A Plain Wimple
- A Riding Costume
- A Roman Lady
- A Shoulder-Jacket
- A Simple Buttoned Gown
- A South Sea Islander
- A Spaniard in the Sixteenth Century
- A struggle between the Swallow and a Malay prah
- A Westphalian Peasant
- Alain René Le Sage
In a little garden summer-house behind a Paris street, Le Sage sat at his desk, dipped through Spanish books, and wrote with a light heart of the people that he knew, disguised in foreign clothes, and moving in places he had never seen. - Albanian Peasants
- Alexandre Dumas
There is a much less terrible pleasure to be had from the works of Dumas. Behind all Hugo's books is the solemnity, behind Dumas' the joy of living, the joie de vivre—the French phrase, although identical, seems better to express it. - An Egyptian Dancer
- An Egyptian Peasant Woman
- An Eighteenth-Century Pierrot
- An Elaborate Head-dress in the Reign of Henry V
- An Italian Gentleman
- An Italian Lady
- An Old Indian Festival Dress
- Barn with barn swallows
- Beerbohm Tree as Malvolio
- brushwood wall of a graduation tower
- Cabinet with worm preparations
- Charles Darwin as a Child with his Sister Catherine
- Charles Darwins Signature
- Christmas tree in the room
- Coconut palms on the beach
- Coldwell Steam Lawn Mower
- Columbia Electric Delivery Chassis
- Cook's reception by the natives
- Dagged Costume in the Twelfth Century
- Daniel Defoe
With an imagination scarcely less opulent than Bunyan's, Defoe, if he had described a dream, would have managed somehow to make it as short-winded and inconsequent as a real one. He was in love with verisimilitude, and delighted in facts for their own sakes. 'To read Defoe,' wrote Charles Lamb, 'is like hearing evidence in a Court of Justice.' No compliment could have pleased him better. - Darwin
- Death of Captain Cook
- Divers at work
- Down House from the Garden
- Dragon tree from the Canary Islands
- Duntley Washable Battery Cell
- ead and foot of the housefly
- Edgar Allan Poe
Perhaps Poe's technique is more easily examined in those of his tales in which the same faculties that planned the construction supplied also the motive. The three great detective stories, The Purloined Letter, The Murders in the Rue Morgue, and The Mystery of Marie Roget, are made of reasoning and built on curiosity, the very mainspring of analysis. - Elizabeth of Woodville
- Elizabeth of York
- Emma Darwin at Thirty-One
Soon after his return home, he married his cousin, Emma Wedgwood, a noble and charming woman, and a little later, in 1842, he settled at the small village of Down, in the county of Kent, and made his home there until his death in 1882. - Fanny Burney
Fanny Burney took more material with a lighter hand, stealing away the business of The Tatler, The Spectator, The Citizen of the World, and trying not only to 'draw characters from nature' but also to 'mark the manners of the time.' - Farmer Boy and the sheep
- Fête in Cook's honour at Tonga