- Le Ministère de la Marine
- The Queen receiving the sacrament, after her coronation - Westminster Abbey, June 29, 1838
- Moses arrivve in camp
- An Ale-house lattice
- General arrangement of Otis Elevator in the tower
- Aralia canescens
Deciduous fine-leaved Shrub; hardy everywhere. - The Alarm
- Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Samuel Taylor Coleridge - A Sharp Curve—Manhattan Elevated Railway, 110th Street, New York
Equally valuable improvements were made in cars, both for passengers and freight. Instead of the four-wheeled English car, which on a rough track dances along on three wheels, we owe to Ross Winans, of Baltimore, the application of a pair of four-wheeled swivelling trucks, one under each end of the car, thus enabling it to accommodate itself to the inequalities of a rough track and to follow its locomotive around the sharpest curves. There are, on our main lines, curves of less than 300 feet radius, while, on the Manhattan Elevated, the largest passenger traffic in the world is conducted around curves of less than 100 feet radius. There are few curves of less than 1,000 feet radius on European railways. - The fifteen joys of marriage
Illustration from 'LES QUINZE JOIES DE MARIAGE,' PARIS, TREPEREL, C. 1500. - Middle of fifteenth century to sixteenth century
- Group of Greenland Eskimo
The home-land of the Eskimo is dreary. They live in Labrador, Greenland, and the Arctic country stretching from Greenland west to 7Northern Alaska. Generally, it is a land of snow and ice, where it is impossible to raise even the most hardy plants. The people are forced to live chiefly on animal food. Not only is the weather usually cold, but for a large part of the year the Eskimo do not see the sun, and for the rest of it they see the sun all the time. The Eskimo eat the flesh of seals, whales, birds, hares, bears, dogs, foxes, and deer. In that cold country they like fat meat. Sometimes meat and fish are eaten raw, but they may be boiled or fried. Fresh, raw blubber is much loved. The skin of whales, seals, and halibut is favorite food. Travellers tell astonishing stories of the quantities of candles and oil that Eskimo eat and drink when they are supplied to them. The supply of plant food is small: stalks of angelica, dandelion, sorrel, berries, and seaweed are used. - A Sudden Emergency
- Court Costume of a Young Italian Nobleman, Fifteenth Century
- Fifteenth century
- A Mexican Orchestra
- "Sweep O!"
To guard against fires, the people of New York are obliged by law, to have their chimnneys swept once a month. To do this, boys are employed, who with brush and scraper, will climb up the chimney, clump-a-clump, as they go, and when at the top, they sing their chimney song, then down they come scraping all the way, all covered with soot. - Cloud blowers
Cloud blowers. Faywood Hot Springs. (Swope collection.) The pipes from the Mimbres take the form of tubular cloud-blowers, specimens of which are shown. Apparently these pipes were sometimes thrown into sacred springs, but others have been picked up on the surface of village sites or a few feet below the surface. - Galloped the Five Mile Stage in Eighteen Minutes
- Down Hill
- Dukes of Suffolk and Norfolk receive the great seal from Wolsey
- The Throne-Room, Buckingham Palace
- A Love Affair in Little Italy
- Face the other way, boys
- Costume - Fifteenth century
- Mr. Dustan saving his children
- La Galerie Notre-Dame
- In the turret of the Monitor
- Le Petit Pont
- Collège Henri IV
- Schaefer method of artificial respiration. Expiration
The patient is laid on his stomach, arms extended from his body beyond his head, face turned to one side so that the mouth and nose do not touch the ground. This position causes the tongue to fall forward of its own weight and so prevents its falling back into the air passages. Turning the head to one side prevents the face coming into contact with mud or water during the operation. This position also facilitates the removal from the mouth of foreign bodies, such as tobacco, chewing gum, false teeth, etc., and favors the expulsion of mucus, blood, vomitus, serum, or any liquid that may be in the air passages. - Toilers of the Tenements
- Desert dweller
- Battle of Lake George
- Lamarck when old
Portrait of Lamarck, when old and blind, in the costume of a member of the institute, engraved in 1824. - Mayan Ceremony as represented in the Dresden Codex
- Fashions for 1836 and 1837
Fashions for 1836 and 1837 - Pile-dwelling Village, New Guinea
- 'As good an imitation of Monte Carlo as the law allows.'
- Tokens sent to Wolsey by the King and Anne Boleyn
- Sailor’s Snug Harbor
- Boy with Flag
- Caladium esculentum
Tender Section; displaying noble leaves during summer in the warmer parts of the southern counties. This species has, for outdoor work, proved the best of a large genus with very fine foliage. It is only in the midland and southern counties of Great Britain that it can be advantageously grown, so far as I have observed; but its grand outlines and aspect when well developed make it worthy of all attention, and of a prominent position wherever the climate is warm enough for its growth. It may be used with great effect in association with many fine foliage-plants; but Ferdinanda, Ricinus, and Wigandia usually grow too strong for it, and, if planted too close, injure it. - Samuel Rogers
Samuel Rogers - Battlefield scene
- At Komombos
- La Morgue
- Round Table of King Artus of Brittany
The form of table was commonly long and straight, but on occasions of state it was semicircular, or like a horse-shoe in form, recalling the Romanesque round table of King Artus of Brittany. - San Salvadore
- Le Pont-au-Change
- Typical Mayan Inscription
- An Assiût Donkey
- General arrangement of the Roux Combaluzier
- Female - Fifteenth century, 2nd half
- Types of Human Heads on the Lintels of Yaxchilan
- British Influence
- Fifteenth century, 1st half
- Governor Winslow's visit to Massasoit during his sickness
- Grotesque Face on the Back of Stela B
- A Wayplace of the Fallen