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Lord Morris of Spiddal, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 14 September 1893
Michael Morris was an Irish lawyer and judge. He was Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench for Ireland from 1887 to 1889 and sat in the House of Lords as a Lord of Appeal in Ordinary from 1889 to 1900.
Alfonso XIII - Vanity Fair, 21 January 1893
He was King of Spain from 17 May 1886 to 14 April 1931, when the Second Spanish Republic was proclaimed. He was a monarch from birth as his father, Alfonso XII, had died the previous year.
Portrait de Jacques Nayral, 1911, by Albert Gleizes
Nayral (a pseudonym for Joseph Houot) was a young modernist poet, dramatist, publisher and occasional sports writer,
La Femme aux Phlox (Woman with Phlox), 1913, by Albert Gleizes
L'Abondance (Abundance), 1910-11, by Henri Le Fauconnier
George Frederic Watts, by Leslie Ward - Vanity Fair, 26 December 1891
He was a British painter and sculptor associated with the Symbolist movement. He said "I paint ideas, not things."
A.N. "Monkey" Hornby, by Henry Charles Seppings Wright. - Vanity Fair, 15 August 1891
He was one of the best-known sportsmen in England during the nineteenth century excelling in both rugby and cricket.
Animals dressed as humans in "The Tortoise and the Hare", from an edition of Aesop's Fables illustrated by Arthur Rackham, 1912