- Man and woman in Chinese costume
- She decides to die in spite of Dr. Bottles
- Young Lady
- She finds that exercise does not improve her spirits
- She contemplates the cloister
- Dreamy Look
- Young lady
- Young lady standing
- A widow and her friends
- The widow
Sad young lady - Young Lady
- Lady in black dress
- Lady putting hat on
- She finds some consolation in her mirror
Maid putting shoe on while young lady looks in mirror - Lady skating
- Lady in profile
- Young lady
- Unhappy lady
- Lady with umbrella
- Man and woman sitting by the fire
- The widow - standing
Lady standing in black dress - Woman sleeping
- Hannah Snell
Who took upon herself the Name of James Gray; and, being deserted by her Husband, put on Mens Apparel, and travelled to Coventry in quest of him, where she enlisted in Col. Guise’s Regiment of Foot, and marched with that Regiment to Carlisle, in the Time of the Rebellion in Scotland; shewing what happened to her in that City, and her Desertion from that Regiment. - Agalena and Her Funnel-Web
Agalenidæ, as our funnel-web weavers are called, are long-legged, brown spiders, in which the head part of the cephalo-thorax is higher than the thoracic part, and distinctly separated from it by grooves or marks at the sides. The eyes are usually in two rows, but in Agalena the middle eyes of both rows are much higher than the others. The feet have three claws, and the posterior pairs of spinnerets are two-jointed and usually longer than the others. Agalena nævia, the technical name of our Common Grass Spider, abounds in all parts of the United States, but its very commonness is the principal reason why it is so little known except by the trained naturalist, its very familiarity leading the average man and woman to look upon it with contempt.