- John Galt
- Lady
- The Battle of Ferozeshah
- Drinking scene
- From an Etching by the Queen
- The Queen’s First Council
- Once More Running a Steeplechase
- The Pillory
- The Sad Fate of a Mediæval Ale-wife
- The Extra Coach at Christmas
- George Wilson, Chairman of the Anti-Corn-Law League
- Arrival of the Royal Procession at the House of Lords
- St. Stephen’s Cloisters, Westminster Hall
- The Coronation Chair, Westminster Abbey
- A Sixteenth-century Cooperage
- 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. - 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 - Thomas Campbell
Thomas Campbell - The Exchange and Frederick’s Bridge, Berlin
- Queen Adelaide
- Mixing the enamel
Mixing the enamel - Cathedral of St. Isaac, St. Petersburg
- Celt
- The Houses of Parliament
- The Old Tabard Inn, High Street, Southwark
The Old Tabard Inn, High Street, Southwark - 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. - Young Conifers and hardy fine-leaved Plants
- Newark Castle
- A Mediæval Innkeeper
- The George Inn, Salisbury
- Feargus O’Connor
- Buckingham Palace
- For a quart of Ale is a dish for a King
- Eldred Pottinger at Herat
- The Team Extended
- Richard Cobden
- Theodore S Hook
Theodore S Hook - Lamentable Complaints
- M. Blessington
M. Blessington - The Blacksmith
The Blacksmith - Highland Cottages in Lochaber
- Sydney Smith
Sydney Smith - Lord John Russell
Lord John Russell - Regina's Maids of Honour
Regina's Maids of Honour - Mary Russell Mitford
Mary Russell Mitford - The Earl of Durham
- Thomas Moore
Thomas Moore - Anglo-Saxon Tumblers
- An Ancient brewery
- Prince Albert
- Eleanor Rummyng
- Banquet to the Queen in the Guildhall
- Thomas Carlyle
Thomas Carlyle (4 December 1795 – 5 February 1881) was a British historian, satirical writer, essayist, translator, philosopher, mathematician, and teacher [Wikipedia] - The Falcon Inn, Chester
- Punishment of the Hurdle
- The Queen Receiving the Sacrament at her Coronation
- Demonstration of Sailors in Favour of the Navigation Laws
- Westminster Hall
- Charles Gavan Duffy (1848)