- 'Broooomp'
- 'I—I—I—am hungry,' stammered Han Hsin
- (No. B 820) Organdy Graduation Dress (No. B 822)
- (No. B 824) Organdy Graduation Dress (No. B 833)
- (No. b 828) Organdy Graduation Dress (No. b 826)
- . . . And cut leaf-shaped pieces
- 10th century castle, on its mound, with a wooden palisade enclosure
- 1798
- 1798
- A Bishop
- A domed church
- A Drive in a Whiskey
- A helping hand
- A juggler, after a miniature
- A necklace
- A new form of torture
Every mine has its lock-up for malingerers, deserters, and others. At the Witwatersrand the coolies are handcuffed over a horizontal beam. The floor is of concrete, and they may sit down, but the beam is so far from the floor that it is impossible for any but exceptionally tall men to sit while handcuffed. They must therefore squat, and for a change raise themselves in a semi-standing posture. - A Puritan Dame
- A Texas Cowboy
A Texas Cowboy - A whanging of wings that lifted . . . Up . . . Higher . . . Swifter
- A Woman's Doublet. Mrs. Anne Turner
- According to Viollet-le-Duc
- An 11th century knight, after the Bayeux tapestry
- An attempt to restore the Krak, according to M. Rey
- An Embroidered Jerkin
- Anglo-Norman knight, after a tomb from 1277
- Appropriate School Dresses
- At that same hour a basket was found in the garden
- Australian Aborigine
Australian Aborigine - Billy the Kid
Billy the Kid - By look and action he was a maiden
- Byzantine enamels from the Limburg reliquary
- Campaign, Ramillies, Bob, and Pigtail Wigs
- Capturing deserters
All the measures taken by the Government and the mine owners to prevent desertion have proved ineffective. The country around the Witwatersrand Mines has taken upon itself the aspect of the whole of the colony during the late war. Mounted constables with loaded revolvers organize drives. The whole district is patrolled, and every effort is made to bring back the deserters to the compounds. But as soon as one lot has returned another escapes. Every day you may see a mounted policeman riding down towards the law courts, followed by a string of Chinese deserters. - Chimney Sweep
Chimney Sweep - Chinese man rowing divider
- City Flat-cap worn by 'Bilious' Bale
- Crinoline Dress
18th Century - Cromwell dissolving Parliament
- Crown of Charlemagne, kept in the imperial treasury of Vienna
- Cutting the flesh
In another form of flogging practised, a short bamboo was used. The coolie would strip to the waist and go down on his knees with his head on the floor. His castigator would then squat beside him, and strike him across the shoulders with lightning rapidity. The blows, though apparently light, always fell on the one spot, and raised a large red weal before cutting the flesh. During the first quarter of this year no fewer than fifty-six coolies were whipped, after 8 p.m. one evening, at the Witwatersrand Mine, the dose varying from five to fifteen strokes. - Divider
- Doctor Chu Ping beamed upon him
- Dr. William Slater. Cathedral Beard
- Dragon
- Dragon Divider
- Drinking Tea
- Emperor Anastasius in consular costume
- Emperor Justinian and his court - Mosaic of San Vitale, in Ravenna
- Emperor Lothaire
- Emperor Otton III, after a miniature from the Evangelist of Bamberg
- Empress Theodora
- Enamelled copper stock. The Annunciation. Limoges, 13th century
- Enamelled copper vase by G. Alpaïs de Limoges
- Envelope and knickerbocker chemise
- Farthingale
Farthingale, or Fardingale, an article of ladies' attire worn in the days of Queen Elizabeth (I), and closely resembling the more recent crinoline. It was formed of circles of whalebone hoops, and protruded more at the waist than the Victorian crinoline. - Figures from Funeral Procession of the Duke of Albemarle, 1670
- Floral Divider
- Flowers in the rain
- Former Constantinian Basilica of Saint Peter. Restitution
- French Lady