//=time() ?>
Hanna Ralph, by Friedrich August von Kaulbach
She was a German stage and film actress whose career began on the stage and in silent film in the 1910s and continued through the early 1950s.
Rudolf Chambers Lehmann, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 17 January 1895
He was an English writer and Liberal Party politician. As a writer he was best known for three decades in which he was a major contributor to Punch as well as founding editor of Granta magazine.
Lord Charles Beresford, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 3 January 1895
Charles William de la Poer Beresford was a British admiral and Member of Parliament. He was considered by many to be a personification of John Bull, indeed was normally accompanied by his trademark, a bulldog.
Mr R Kipling, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 7 June 1894
Joseph Rudyard Kipling was an English novelist, short-story writer, poet, and journalist. He was born in British India, which inspired much of his work.
Robinson Ellis, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 24 May 1894
He was an English classical scholar. He is buried in St Sepulchre's Cemetery, Jericho, Oxford.
Mr G Alexander, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 22 February 1894
George Alexander, born George Alexander Gibb Samson, was an English stage actor, theatre producer and theatre manager.
Harry Lawson Webster Lawson, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 16 November 1893
He was a British newspaper proprietor. He was originally a Liberal politician before joining the Liberal Unionist Party in the late 1890s.
Midsummer's Eve, 1904, by Harald Slott-Møller
Mr W Allan, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 26 October 1893
William Allan was a Scottish Liberal Party politician and engineer. He published a number of books of traditional Scottish poetry.
Thomas Henry Bolton, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 12 October 1893
He as an English solicitor and a Liberal politician. He was admitted a solicitor 1869 and became a partner in the firm of Bolton & Mote, of Gray's Inn, London.