Galleries
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- Gallery 1 - Waifs & strays, various dates.
- Gallery 2 - Wandering around London, 24th April 2004.
- Gallery 3 - Wandering around England. Trains, stations, buildings &c., April - August 2004.
- Gallery 4 - Images from Cassell's History of England
- Gallery 5 - Project Gutenberg illustrations
- Gallery 6 - Project Gutenberg illustrations 2
- Gallery 7 - Project Gutenberg illustrations 3
- Gallery 8 - Project Gutenberg illustrations 4
- Gallery 9 - Project Gutenberg illustrations 5
- Gallery 10 - Project Gutenberg illustrations 6
- Gallery 11 - Project Gutenberg illustrations 7
- Gallery 12 - Project Gutenberg illustrations 8
- Gallery 13 - Project Gutenberg illustrations 9
- Gallery 14 - Project Gutenberg illustrations 10
- Gallery 15 - Project Gutenberg illustrations 11
- Gallery 16 - Project Gutenberg illustrations 12
- Gallery 17 - Project Gutenberg illustrations 13
- Gallery 18 - Project Gutenberg illustrations 14
- Gallery 19 - Project Gutenberg illustrations 15
- Gallery 20 - Project Gutenberg illustrations 16
- Gallery 21 - Project Gutenberg illustrations 17
- Gallery 22 - Wandering around England II - 2005
- Gallery 23 - 2006-7 photos
- Gallery 24 - Illustrations from Google books
- Gallery 25 - Illustrations from Microsoft Books Live Search
Images from Project Gutenberg books - 15
editThomas Babington Macaulay at the age of forty-nine — after an engraving by W. Holl, from a drawing by George Richmond
Charles Dickens at the age of twenty-seven — from the portrait by Daniel Maclise
Mrs. Gaskell — from the portrait by George Richmond
Cover of Babes in the Wood, illustated by Caldecott
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The parents: sore sicke they were and like to dye "Now, brother", said the dying man, "look to my children deare" With lippes as cold as any stone, they kist the children small The parents being dead and gone, the children home he takes Away then went those pretty babes, rejoycing at that tide And he that was of mildest mood, did slaye the other there These prettye babes, with hand in hand, went wandering up and downe In one another’s armes they dyed
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Illustration of an imagined Nombre de Dios, from Peter Schenk's 1672 Hecatompolis
Puerto del Príncipe being sacked in 1668 by Henry Morgan
Pons Sublicius, according to Luigi Canina