- Ancient-Chess-play
- Bob-Cherry
- Hoodman Blind.—XIV. Century 2
- Barrister
- Martyrdom of Alphege
Martyrdom of Alphege - Balancing 2
- Circular Chess-board.—XIV Century
- Natives of Easter Island
- Diving for Apples
- Imitation of dog - XIV. Century
- Assembly
- The Avenue Des Champs Elysées
- Kayles.—XIV. Century 2
- Bailiewick
- Two boys challenging each other
- New Zealand utensils and weapons
- Hoodman Blind.—XIV. Century 3
- Bootmakers apprentice
- Alexandria
- Luxembourg Palace
- Penns Treaty with the Indians
As we might expect from a man of his even temper and unselfish spirit, Penn treated the Indians with kindness and justice, and won their friendship from the first. Although he held the land by a grant from the King of England, still he wished to satisfy the natives by paying them for their claims to the land. Accordingly, he called a council under the spreading branches of a now famous elm-tree, where he met the red men as friends, giving them knives, kettles, axes, beads, and various other things in exchange for the land. He declared that[Pg 100] he was of the same flesh and blood as they; and highly pleased, the Indians in return declared that they would live in love with William Penn as long as the sun and moon should shine. - A Nutcracker
- The Queen of Rabbits
- Cock-throwing Triumph
- Bowling.—XIV. Century 2
- Bishop Receiving Tithes
- Boy and Butterfly.—XIV. Century
- Pursued by the arrows of the natives
- Various representations of the gallop
Various representations of the gallop. Fig. 1.—From Géricault's picture, "The Epsom Derby, 1821." Figs. 2 and 3.—From gold-work on the handle of a Mycenæan dagger, 1800 b.c. Fig. 4.—From iron-work found at Koban, east of the Black Sea, dating from 500 b.c. Fig. 5.—From Muybridge's instantaneous photograph of a fox-terrier, showing the probable origin of the pose of the "flying gallop" transferred from the dog to other animals by the Mycenæans. Fig. 6.—The stretched-leg prance from the Bayeux tapestry (eleventh century). Fig. 7.—The stretched-leg prance used to represent the gallop by Carle Vernet in 1760. Fig. 8.—The stretched-leg prance used by early Egyptian artists. - Old Dice-box.
- Galilee
- Notre Dame Cathedral (from the Rear)
- Imitaton of Goat - XIV. Century
- A Horse dancing
- Hand-bells.—XIV. Century
- Porte St. Denis
- Horse and Tabor
- Barnacle Geese
- The Place De La Bastille
- Growth of Macedonia under Philip
- A June Morning
- Hotel de Cluny
- A Green Man
- Eastern Roman Empire
- Break-up of Alexander’s Empire
- One of them tore the carrion with his teeth
- Cards
- Meeting of Edmund Ironside and Canute on the island of Olney
Meeting of Edmund Ironside and Canute on the island of Olney - Art Among the Ballad-Mongers
Art Among the Ballad-Mongers - Bowling.—XIV. Century
- The Setter
The pointer and the setter are the two universally recognized dogs for hunting game birds. As to which of the two is the better variety authorities differ, and much depends upon circumstances. - Crossing The Delaware.—The March To Trenton
- Pirogue of the Marquesas islanders
- A Wodehouse
- Rush For the gold fields
Rush For the gold fields - Dog.—XIV. Century
- Buckler-Play.—XIV. Century
- How to shout and blow horns
"How to shout and blow Horns."--Fac-simile of a Miniature in the Manuscript of Phoebus (Fifteenth Century). - Balancing
- Craftsmen in the 14th Century