- John Selden
- St. Paul
- Mark of William Eustace (1512), Bookseller and Binder, Paris
- Never mind. I was a child myself once
- Text Frames 2
- Two ladies 4
- Screenshot (28171) cr
- Chinese Floating Mine
One of two, tied together, with which an attempt was made to blow up H.M.S. Encounter. - As it is
- Screenshot (28177) cr
- A German Student in the Fourteenth Century
- Salt marshes on the seashore
- Houseflies in the kitchen
- Princess Sibylla of Saxony
- Notre-Dame, Rouen, ogival style. (Thirteenth Century.)
- Two girls in lingerie
- Screenshot (28167) cr
- Cabinet with worm preparations
- Miniature from the Book of the Gospels of Charlemagne
- Two Girls
- Screenshot (28196) cr
- Young Lady with umbrella
- Two ladies in fur coats
- Screenshot (28116) cr
- Screenshot (28143) cr
- Notre-Dame, Paris (Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries)
- Cupid
- Pointed Window with Stone Seats
- Notre-Dame la Grande of Poitiers (Twelfth Century)
- Miniature taken from the 'Virgil' in the Library of the Vatican, Rome
- A Lady 2
- The Houppelande
- The Horned Head-dress
- Portrait of John Lutma, Goldsmith of Groningen
- Miss Ellen Terry as Mistress Page
- Portrait of the Pope Sylvester I
- Two ladies 2
- The cup of Consolation
- Mixed Melody
- Screenshot (28176) cr
- Richard Steele and Joseph Addison
A wise remark will usher in an Eastern tale, and, not even in the papers of Steele or Addison are the subjects of characters, like the little beau, who would have been a 'mere indigent gallant,' magicked so deliciously to life. Finally, he did with 'The Man in Black' what Addison and Steele could so well have done with Sir Roger. Fielding and Smollett had written before him, and he saw that he could follow their art without resigning any of the graces of the essayist. - A Chinese Actor
- Miniature in the 'Livre d’Heures'
- Gentleman's mourning - time of Henry VII
- Tweed Hunting Outfit
- Lady
- In the Eighteenth Century
- Véronique
- Mr Hobbs
Mr Hobbs was born in Malmsbury, Wilts, from whence he obtained the name of Malmsburiensis, and educated in Magdalen Hall, Oxford, where he took his degree of Bachelor of Arts; from whence he was taken into the Earl of Devonshire's family before he was twenty years of age, and soon after traveled with his son into France and Italy. And after variety of travels abroad, he returned into England, and settled in the house of his patron the Earl of Devonshire, where he lived many years in ease and plenty, rather as a friend and confidant, than a tutor or instructor. He was of very extensive genius, improved by great labour and sedulity, and had the reputation both abroad and at home, of a great philosopher and mathematician. CHARLES II, having learned mathematics of him, at his restoration, allowed him a pension of a hundred pounds a year out of the Exchequer, though he was a contemner of all money and riches. As to his peculiar notions in religion and policy, with which he infected many ingenious gentlemen, they are too difficult to be excused, and too dangerous to be palliated; he died in the ninety-first year of his age. - Saloon of the Schools, Oxford
- Mrs John Lewes
- Walking dress, 1830
- Back Views
- Lady
- Henry III.'s Queen
- A Botticelli Dancing-Dress
- A Chinese Peasant
- Indian Gipsy calling Jackals
- Screenshot (28173) cr