- Nobleman Merchant and lady
Costumes of Bourgeois or Merchant, of a Nobleman, and of a Lady of the Court or rich Bourgeoise, with the Head-dress (escoffion) of the Fifteenth Century.--From a Painted Window of the Period, at Moulins (Bourbonnais), and from a Painting on Wood of the same Period, in the Musee de Cluny. - Nobleman Hunting
- Nobleman and Bourgeois
Costumes of a young Nobleman and of a Bourgeois in the Fourteenth Century.--From a painted Window in the Church of Saint-Ouen at Rouen, and from a Window at Moulins (Bourbonnais). - Noble of the Tudor or Louis XI Period
Noble of the Tudor or Louis XI Period - Noble ladies and Children
Dress of Noble Ladies and Children in the Fourteenth Century.--Miniature in the "Merveilles du Monde" (Manuscript, National Library of Paris). - Nobility 9th Century
Costumes of the Nobility from the Seventh to the Ninth Centuries, from Documents gathered by H. de Vielcastel from the great Libraries of Europe. - Nobility 7th - 9th Century
Nobility 7th - 9th Century - Nobility
Costumes of the Nobility from the Seventh to the Ninth Centuries, from Documents gathered by H. de Vielcastel from the great Libraries of Europe. - Noahs Offering
- No Fool
Wa-hon-ga-shee (No Fool) There had been frequent, hard-fought battles with the Pawnees, who, being superior in numbers, had usually obtained the victory. However, the Great Spirit punished them when, at last, a small band was discovered, just at nightfall, by a strong party of Kaws. Revenge, always sweet to the barbarian, was now assured. Surrounding the foe under cover of darkness, the Kaws, commanded by Wa-hon-ga-shee (No Fool), waited patiently for daylight. - Niobe with her youngest daughter
- ninth Sunday in ordiary time
ninth Sunday in ordiary time - Nine-storied Pagoda
Nine-storied Pagoda - Nilewar
Nilewar - Nighthawk
Nighthawk He’s not a hawk, but like other members of the Goatsucker family, often feeds at night. This gray-brown, robin size bird with white bars across the wings, often is called a “bull-bat.” Early morning and late evenings seem to be favorite feeding times for then insects on which he feeds, are on the wing. During the day you will find him sitting horizontally on some sheltered limb, his colors blending perfectly. He looks more like a knot or broken stub than a bird. He leaves his resting place with a glide and then goes into his distinctive flight. The Nighthawk often ascends high in the sky with a series of quick wing beats, each accompanied by his call of a nasal “peent.” When the desired height is attained, he folds his wings slightly and dives with a booming sound. This is a part of the breeding display. - Night Scene in Market Square, Portland, Maine
- Night Scene in a Fifteenth-century Inn
- Nicolaus Copernicus
Nicolaus Copernicus - Nicola the magician
Nicola the magician - Nicholas Flamel and wife
Nicholas Flamel and Pernelle, his Wife, from a Painting executed at the End of the Fifteenth Century, under the Vaults of the Cemetery of the Innocents, in Paris. - Ni-co-man
Among the Delawares was a chief, who bade fair to equal in fame, the most distinguished of his predecessors. Not many moons before, Ni-co-man had awakened from a dream of conquest and beheld, in the pale light, a shadowy figure wrapped in a blanket of snowy white. - Newport Gate, Lincoln
There is another piece of Roman work in the neighbourhood of Newport Gate, which is a piece of wall built with ashlar and binding courses of tile. It is known as the Mint Wall - Newly-hatched Young of a Crayfish
- Newark. O. - An engineer lifted from his train
- Newark Castle
- New Zealanders 2
- New Zealanders
- New Zealand war canoe
New Zealand war canoe - New Zealand utensils and weapons
- New York Hospital - Scene of the Doctors' Riot
- New York City - Battery B, N.G.S.N.y., waiting for orders
- New York City - BAttery B, N.G.S.N.Y., equipping for a move
- New York and Brooklyn Bridge
- New York - the stairway defended by artillery
- New York - The rioters dragging Col. O'Brien's body through the street
- New York - The riot in Lexington Avenue
- New York - the fight between rioters and militia
- New York - The dead sergeant in 22nd Street
- New York - the construction gang repairing the tracks at Corning
- New York - The Colored orphan asylum, 143rd Street. The former building destroyed during the draft riots of 1863
- New York - the attack on the Tribune Building
- New York - Serving chowder to the soldiers
- New York - Rioters tearing up rails at the bridge at Corning
- New York - Rioters soaping the tracks at Hornellsville
- New York - Rioters marching down the New York Central Railroad track at West Albany, July 24, 1877
- New York - Receiving and removing dead bodies at the morgue
- New York - Hanging and burning a negro in Clarkson Street
- New York - Burning of the Second Avenue Armory
- New York - Burning of the Provost Marshal's office
- New Testament
New Testament - New Police
Here is a sketch of the uniform of the "New Police" as they were called, copied from a satirical print of Sir Robert Peel, by the celebrated H. B. (John Doyle, father of Richard Doyle, to whom Punch owed so much). The hats were worn until a comparatively recent period, and in summer-time they wore white trousers. - New Plymouth and Mount Egmont
- New Pattern Eprouvette
The only real use of these eprouvettes is to check and verify the uniformity of a current manufacture of powder, where a certain course of operations is intended to be regularly pursued, and where the strength, tested by means of any instrument, should therefore be uniform. - New Moleskin Set
NEW MOLESKIN SET, as sketch, worked from full selected British skins. Special price, STOLE, 69/6 MUFF, 45/6 5 Gns. the set. Actual value 8 gns. - New model fur coat
New model fur coat - New model fur coat
NEW MODEL FUR COAT, as sketch, in Natural Musquash, worked from reliable skins, with handsome skunk collar and handsome belt at back. Price 16-½ Gns. Actual value 25 Gns. - New Guinea hut on piles
- New fur set, in Natural Skunk
NEW FUR SET, as sketch, in Natural Skunk, worked from dark selected skins, recommended for hard wear. Special price, STOLE, 19-½ Gns. MUFF, 12-½ Gns. 29 Gns. the Set. Actual value, 39 gns. - Nests of the Bottle bird
Nests of the Bottle bird - Nests of Social Weavers
The social weaver is found in the south of Africa. Hundreds of these birds, in one community, join to form a structure of interwoven grass containing various apartments, all covered by a sloping roof impenetrable to the heaviest rain, and increased year after year as the population of the little community may require.