- Newark Castle
- The Team Extended
- Feargus O’Connor
- Eldred Pottinger at Herat
- For a quart of Ale is a dish for a King
- Young Conifers and hardy fine-leaved Plants
- A Mediæval Innkeeper
- The George Inn, Salisbury
- Rescue of Edmund Pet, Mariner, 1613
Another pamphlet, of 1613, has the annexed woodcut, and is entitled ‘Lamentable Newes, shewing the Wonderful Deliverance of Maister Edmond Pet, Sayler, and Maister of a Ship, dwelling in Seething-lane, in London, neere Barking Church; with other strange things lately hapned concerning those great windes and tempestuous weather, both at Sea and Lande. Imprinted at London by T. C., for William Barley, dwelling over against Cree Church, neere Algate. 1613.’ It describes the wreck of a Newcastle ship on the east coast, and how ‘Maister Pet,’ after being exposed to the winds and waves for forty-eight hours, was rescued by a Dutch man-of-war, he being the only survivor from his ship. It will be seen the woodcut represents two seamen lowering what appears to be an arm-chair into the sea. This was probably the artist’s notion of the safest and most comfortable way to rescue shipwrecked persons. - The Old Tabard Inn, High Street, Southwark
The Old Tabard Inn, High Street, Southwark - The Houses of Parliament
- Cathedral of St. Isaac, St. Petersburg
- Celt
- Mixing the enamel
Mixing the enamel - Queen Adelaide
- Bocconia cordata
This is a fine plant in free soil, but comparatively poor in that which is bad or very stiff. It forms handsome erect tufts from 5 ft. to over 8 ft. high, and is admirably suited for embellishing the irregular or sloping parts of pleasure-grounds. The stems grow rather closely together, and are thickly set with large, reflexed, deeply-veined, oval-cordate leaves, the margins of which are somewhat lobed or sinuated. The flowers, which are rosy-white and very numerous, are borne in very large terminal panicles. The flowers are not in themselves pretty, but the inflorescence, when the plant is well grown, has a distinct and pleasing appearance. - Thomas Noon Talfourd
Thomas Noon Talfourd - The Exchange and Frederick’s Bridge, Berlin
- The Coronation Chair, Westminster Abbey
- Thomas Campbell
Thomas Campbell - A Sixteenth-century Cooperage
- Arrival of the Royal Procession at the House of Lords
- York in the 15th Century
To-day mediæval buildings are to be found all over England. The majority of them are examples of an architecture that has not been surpassed for majesty, beauty, size, and constructional skill. Such buildings, without the help of the literary and other memorials, testify by themselves to the greatness of the Middle Ages. - St. Stephen’s Cloisters, Westminster Hall
- George Wilson, Chairman of the Anti-Corn-Law League
- The Extra Coach at Christmas
- The Sad Fate of a Mediæval Ale-wife
- The Queen’s First Council
- The Pillory
- Once More Running a Steeplechase
- John Galt
- From an Etching by the Queen
- Drinking scene
- The Battle of Ferozeshah
- Buphthalmum speciosum
A hardy, distinct, and vigorous herbaceous plant, the stems of which are stout, very slightly branching, and about 4 ft. high, with broad, oval-acute leaves mostly clustered around the base of the plant, the lower ones falling gracefully towards the earth. The flowers, which have a red or purple disk and yellow rays, are more than 2 ins. across, and are terminal, solitary, long-stalked, borne in the axils of the upper leaves, and appear in June, July, or August, according to the season. The plant seldom flowers well before the third year. It is of easy culture in any soil, is increased by division in autumn, winter, or spring, and is best fitted for association with the more vigorous herbaceous plants in rough places. S. of Europe. - Wyle Cop, Shrewsbury, 'A Minute Before Twelve'
- Lady
- Queen Victoria at the Time of her Accession
- Obstruction on the Bridge
- Dr Whewell
- Aralia papyrifera
(Chinese Rice-paper Plant).—This, though a native of the hot island of Formosa, flourishes vigorously with us in the summer months, and is one of the most valuable plants in its way, being useful for the greenhouse in winter and the flower-garden in summer. It is handsome in leaf and free in growth, though to do well it must, like all the large-leaved things,be protected from cutting breezes. - Favourite Dogs
- Falmouth Harbour
- Colocasia odorata
Tender stove Section; will endure exposure only during summer in the warmest parts of the southern counties. - Daniel O’Connell
- Duke Ernest, of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, Prince Albert’s Brother
- Proclamation of the Queen at St. James’s Palace
- William Wordsworth
William Wordsworth - The Team Gathered
- Cardinal Wolsey in progress
- Aralia canescens
Deciduous fine-leaved Shrub; hardy everywhere. - An Ale-house lattice
- Benjamin D’Israeli
Benjamin D’Israeli - Bambusa aurea
A very hardy and graceful Chinese species, differing but slightly from B. viridi-glaucescens in size and habit, and forming elegant tufts with its slender much-branched stems, which attain a height of from 6½ ft. to 10 ft., and are of a light-green colour when young, changing into a yellowish hue, and finally becoming of a straw-yellow when fully grown. The leaves are lance-shaped acute, light green, and are distinguished from those of B. viridi-glaucescens by having their under surface less glaucescent, and the sheath always devoid of the long silky hairs. The preliminary remarks on culture, etc., will apply to all the species here described. - The Queen receiving the sacrament, after her coronation - Westminster Abbey, June 29, 1838
- A Sudden Emergency
- Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Samuel Taylor Coleridge - Down Hill
- The Throne-Room, Buckingham Palace
- Galloped the Five Mile Stage in Eighteen Minutes