10 results filtered with: William Harrison Ainsworth

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People strolling and buying plague antidotes in old St Paul's Cathedral, London. Etching by J. Franklin.
John FranklinReference: 6924i
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A barber's shop near Lincoln's Inn, London: a man answering an advertisement for the barber's assistant points to the advertisement in The times newspaper. Wood engraving by H.K. Browne (Phiz), 1865.
Hablot Knight BrowneDate: 1865Reference: 29473i
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Old Saint Pauls. A tale of the plague and the fire / by William Harrison Ainsworth.
William Harrison AinsworthDate: 1847
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An alchemist's laboratory: a young man drinks an elixir of life while the alchemist is incapacitated. Wood engraving by H.K. Browne (Phiz), 1865.
Hablot Knight BrowneDate: [1865]Reference: 37582i
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A man consuming many antidotes to the plague during the Great Plague of London. Etching by J. Franklin, 1841.
Franklin, J.Date: 1841Reference: 6925i- Books
Confessions of a water-patient : in a letter to W. Harrison Ainsworth, Esq / [Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton].
Edward Bulwer-LyttonDate: 1847
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Confessions of a water-patient : in a letter to W. Harrison Ainsworth, Esq. editor of "The New Monthly Magazine" / by E. Bulwer Lytton.
Edward Bulwer-LyttonDate: 1847
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The horse of Dick Turpin, Black Bess, dies of exhaustion after Turpin tries to escape from his pursuers. Lithograph by W. Clerk, 1839.
Date: [1839]Reference: 34573i
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The highwayman Dick Turpin, on horseback, arrives at a tree from which two bodies have been hanged. Lithograph by W. Clerk, ca. 1839.
Date: [1839?]Reference: 38282i
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The giant Gog extricating the dwarf Xit from a bear in the Lions Tower at the Tower of London, watched by Queen Mary I. Etching by George Cruikshank.
George CruikshankDate: 1842Reference: 34380i