- The Caterpillar of the Small Elephant Hawk-moth (Chærocampa porcellus)
- The Caterpillar of the Elephant Hawk-Moth (Chærocampa elpenor). First stage
- The Caterpillar of the Elephant Hawk-Moth (Chærocampa elpenor). Second Stage
- The Caterpillar of the Elephant Hawk-Moth (Chærocampa elpenor). Just before the second moult.
- The Caterpillar of the Elephant Hawk-Moth (Chærocampa elpenor). Third Stage
- The Caterpillar of the Elephant Hawk-Moth (Chærocampa elpenor). Fourth Stage
- The Caterpillar of the Elephant Hawk-Moth (Chærocampa elpenor). Fifth Stage
- The Caterpillar of the Elephant Hawk-Moth (Chærocampa elpenor). Full grown
- The Caterpillar of the Eyed Hawk-Moth (Smerinthus ocellatus)
- The Caterpillar of the Marbled White Butterfly (Arge galathea)
- King Snake
- Rainbow Darter
- Long-eared Sunfish
- Floral Divider
Floral Divider on circular background - Bat
Bat - Sleeping Bat
- Nest of Phœbe
- Nest of Red-eyed Vireo
- Baltimore Oriole and Nest
- A Wolf
- Nest of the Chicadee
- Chipmunk
- Turtle
Turtle - A Lamprey
- Chinch Bug
- Thirteen-Spotted Lady Beetle
- Pouched Frog
- The Surinam Toad
- Chrysalis of Tomato Worm
- Centipede
- Trout
Trout - Female Stickleback Laying Eggs in Nest
Female Stickleback Laying Eggs in Nest - Male Stickleback Watching Eggs in Nest
Male Stickleback Watching Eggs in Nest - Female Stickleback about to Enter Nest
Female Stickleback about to Enter Nest - Hand of Gorilla, Orang, Gibbon, and Chimpanzee
- Head of Orang-Utan
- chimpanzee
- Gorilla
- tadpoles
- Frog
- A Frog
- Rooster
- Woman of the Sacs, or “Sau-kies,” Tribe of American Indians
The Indian women formed the labouring class. Such a result was inevitable. The warrior would only follow the chase or fight. There was labour to be performed. No men were to be employed for hire. Whatever, therefore, was to be done must be done by the females. The wife is, consequently, her husband’s slave. She plants the maize, tobacco, beans, and running vines; she drives the blackbird from the corn, prepares the store of wild fruits for winter, tears up the weeds, gathers the harvest, pounds the grain, dries the buffalo meat, brings home the game, carries wood, draws water, spreads the repast, attends on her husband, aids in canoe building, and bears the poles of the wigwam from place to place. - Woman of the Bosjes Race
Woman of the Bosjes Race - Roamn Brothel- Imperial era
Another is afforded by the account of the two men whom Joshua sent out as spies. They came into a harlot’s house at Rabbah—a brothel, in fact, where, as at Rome in the Imperial age, the woman sat impudently, without a veil, at the door, and solicited the passers by. They wore peculiar clothing.