- Pierre Mille
Pierre Mille - Ahole
The mask of Ahole, who flogs the children during the Powamû celebration, has the same two lateral horns and representation of radiating feathers over the crown of the head, but instead of sagittaform marks on the forehead there is a colored band from ear to ear across the face. - Common Hopi sun symbol
- Kwátaka, bird with sun symbolism
- Screen of the Alósaka
The symbolism of Alósaka is shown in a rude drawing made by one of the Hopi to illustrate a legend, and it represents this being on a rainbow, on which he is said to have traveled from his home in the San Francisco mountains to meet an Awatobi maid. Above the figure of Alósaka is represented the sun, which is drawn also on the screen above described, for Alósaka is intimately associated with the sun, as are all the other horned gods, Ahole, Calako, Tuñwup, and the Natackas. - ‘... thrust him out of the church’
- “Big-head,” a solar god
- Two children offering hay to cow
- Tea time interrupted
- Cows and horse
- ‘Dymoke of Scrivelsby’
- Horse and cow
- Cows and a horse
- ‘Hakeney’
- Cows eating
- ... thrust a leaden bodkin into the head of that image
- Cow
- Sacred Bull of Burma
- Calf and caravan
- Cow
- Bull calf and the poppy
- Cow and little girl
- Herd of cows
- Calf
- Bull calf chasing an old lady
- Two cows
- Two cows
- Cow and girl
- Cows and a rabbit
- Cow
- The Wolf among the Sheep. (John x. 12)
There is no doubt that the Hebrew word Zeëb, which occurs in a few passages of the Old Testament, is rightly translated as Wolf, and signifies the same animal as is frequently mentioned in the New Testament. - The unfortunate “fowle” was “hurten so sore”’
- Cow
- Two calves
- London Bridge and the Tower
- Robert Berewold in the pillory
- Crypt under Merchant Taylors’ Hall
- Austin Friars
- ‘... showed him his injuries’
- ‘... fully armed with swords and bucklers’
- ‘... ducking him in a horse-pond’
- ‘... constructed a pantomime dragon on the pattern of the real article’
- Driving in the car
- A Tournament
- Pilgrims
- Crypt of St. Michael’s
- ‘The broken bough fell on the head of a man standing down below’
- Richard II. riding out of London to the War in Ireland
- ... sware ‘gret othes’ and took himself by the hair
- Gateway of the Bloody Tower
- ‘... failed to identify the geese’
- Bastion of the City Wall
- ‘When a lion looks at you it becomes a leopard’
- '... crossed to England’'
- The Tower of London
- Machinery for raising the Portcullis, Tower of London
- ‘The young Edward III.’
- Richard II. delivered by Bolingbroke to the Citizens of London
- sat for its portrait to Matthew Paris
- ‘The tiger and the mirror’