- A picnic
- Squirrels gathering nuts for winter
- Dinner time
- Common American Toad
Toad swallowing an insect - Squirrel with a nut
- Cow
- Christmas Dinner
A family sitting down at Christmas dinner table - Feeding some rabbits
- The Blue Song
The Blue Song Hot mush and molasses all in a blue bowl— Eat it, it’s good for you, sonny. ’T will make you grow tall as a telephone pole— Eat it, it’s good for you, sonny. Fresh fish and potatoes all on a blue plate— Eat it up smart now, my sonny. ’T will make you as jolly and fat as Aunt Kate— Eat it up quick now, my sonny. Sweet milk from a nanny-goat in a blue cup— Drink it, it’s good for you, sonny, ’T will fill you, expand you, and help you grow up, And make a real man of you, sonny. - Cat and Lunch
- Giving the chickens some water
- Feeding the cow
- Boy feeding donkey
Boy feeding donkey - Common Frog - showing tongue in action
Frog collecting lunch - Ruby-throated Hummingbird
Ruby-throated Hummingbird This, the smallest bird found in the area, can be confused only with large moths such as the sphinx or hawk moths. Both the moths and hummingbirds like to feed on deep-throated flowers such as honeysuckles, petunias and trumpet-vines but the moths prefer late evening or early morning while the hummer never passes up a chance to explore such flowers with his long brush-like tongue with which he gathers nectar. This combined with small insects and spiders goes to make up his diet. Brightly colored phials filled with sugar water will attract him to your yard. Hummingbirds are among the best fliers of the bird world and can hover, fly backward or forward or straight away, whatever meets their fancy. The male has a green back and in some lights the throat patch looks black only to flash ruby red when the bird changes position so the light is reflected. The female is duller and has white feather tips on the tail. - Giraffe Eating
Giraffe Eating - Strange Mother
A dog being a mother to rabbits - Girl feeding a goat
- Assala
Assala snake swallowing a bird whole - Boy and Girl feeding a horse
Boy and Girl feeding a horse - Mother bird feeding young in nest
- Barbara's Birthday
- Honor Bright faithfully fed all his pets
- How the calf was fed
- A mischevous goat
- Feeding the horse
- Mother Robin
- Brown Rat
With great probability, it can be assumed that the Brown Rat from India and Persia has come to us. - Horse with feedbag
Horse with feedbag - Feeding a goat
Feeding a goat - Feeding Time
Feeding Time - Family Dinner
Family Dinner - Cows eating
- Kittens and Cats
A mother cat with her three kittens - Need real food
Horse reaching for some leaves on rather barren tree - Feeding time
Feeding time - Dog eating a bone
- Two horses looking at their food
Two horses looking at their food - Carthusian Brothers in the Kitchen
Carthusian Brothers in the Kitchen of The Grand Chartreuse - Boy eating from a large bowl
Boy eating from a large bowl - Hens and Chickens
- Ewe with baby lambs
- Two children offering hay to cow
- Girl feeding birds
Girl feeding birds - Wild Birds
Girl Feeding some wild birds - Anglo-Saxons Feasting and Health-Drinking
- "Earth" of the Fox
Mother fox bringing food to its young. The fox is a well-known burrower, its "earth" being familiar to many by by sight, and to all by name. Few persons, who do not know the history of the fox, would believe it to be capable of forming excavations of such extent. The fore feet of the mole are clearly formed for digging, their sharp claws penetrating the earth, their broad palms acting as shovels, and their powerful muscles giving the needful force. These limbs are essentially used for digging, and are but little employed as means of locomotion. But the fox is an admirable runner, as any hunter can avouch, and its fore limbs are formed for speed and endurance, their length enduing them with the one quality, and their muscular lightness with the other. Yet, just as the digging limbs of the mole are used fr locomotion, and enable the animal to proceed at no contemptible speed, so the running limbs of the fox are used for digging, and e nable the creature to excavate burrows of no contemptible dimensions. - State Banquet
State Banquet.--Serving the Peacock.--Fac-simile of a Woodcut in an edition of Virgil, folio, published at Lyons in 1517. - Mother hen with her chicks
Mother hen with her chicks - Birds waiting for feeding time
Birds waiting for feeding time - Boy and girl feeding the horses
Boy and girl feeding the horses - Kittens drinking
Kittens drinking - Alehouse
- Horse and chickens
Horse and chickens - Prize winning siamese
Prize winning siamese - Happy Family
Cat and birds - Kittens at the Show
Kittens at the Show - A Petit Souper
Man and woman eating in restaurant - They ate it greedily. It did not seem to harm them
But, as the puppies grew up, we began to feed them raw meat. My grandmother sometimes boiled corn for them, into a coarse mush. They were fond of this. As they grew older, any food that turned sour or was unfit for the family to eat was given me for my doggies. They ate it greedily. It did not seem to harm them. - Feeding squirrels