- A Descendant of the Prophet
- A Guardian of the Temple
- A Karnak Beggar
A Karnak Beggar - A Luxor Dancing-girl
- A Bargain in the Ghezireh Gardens
- A Dancing-Girl
- A Daughter of the Nile
- A Dealer in Antiquities
- Thebes, January 2, 1898
- Tombs of the Kings, Thebes
- The Present Situation
- The Sheik of the Pyramids
- The Slipper Bazaar, Cairo, January 22, 1898
- The man who has ‘been there before
- Shepheard’s Hotel, Cairo
- Shopping
- Statue of Thothmes, Karnak
- Temple of Ti
- The Bridge
- On the Road to Cairo
- Our Bisharin Friends, Assuan
- Our Christmas Dinner, Esneh, December 23
- Posing
- Rameses the Great
- Salem Ghesiri Dragoman
- Most of the day was spent with Baedeker
- On Grenfell Hill. The Keeper of the Tomb
- On the Bank at Komombos
- On the Bank
- In a Coffee-house, Cairo
- In the Fish-Market
- Indifference
- Karnak, January 2, 1898
- Lunching in Karnak
- Girl with goat
- Guardians of the Temple
- His Highness Prince Mahomet Ali, Cairo, February 14, 1898
His Highness Prince Mahomet Ali, Cairo, February 14, 1898 - Home Visitors
- Camel-back
- Christmas Night—“Auld Lang Syne.”
- Christmas, 1897
- Egyptian High Life
- At Philæ
- At the Races, Khedival Sporting Club
- Beni-Hassan
- British Influence
- 'As good an imitation of Monte Carlo as the law allows.'
- An Assuan Beggar
- At Komombos
- At Lady Grenfell’s Masquerade Ball
- A Peddler
- A Son of the Desert
- All, the Pilot
- An Artist in the Mouskie
- An Assiût Donkey
- A supposed monumental head of Sesostris
The most renowned monarch that ever reigned over Egypt was Sesostris. The date of his reign is not precisely known; but there is a carving in stone, lately found in Egypt among the ruins of an ancient city. which is more than three thousand years old, and supposed to be a portrait of him. It is doubtless the oldest portrait in existence. This king formed the design of conquering the world, and set out from Egypt with more than a million of foot soldiers, twenty-four thousand horsemen, and twenty-seven thousand armed chariots. His ambitious projects were partially successful. He made great conquests, and wherever he went he caused marble pillars to be erected, and inscriptions to be engraved on them, so that future ages might not forget his renown. The following was the inscription on most of the pillars: - SESOSTRIS, KING OF KINGS, HAS CONQUERED THIS TERRITORY BY HIS ARMS. But the marble pillars have long ago crumbled into dust, or been buried under the earth; and the history of Sesostris is so obscure, that some writers have even doubted whether he made any conquest's at all.