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قراءة كتاب The Lure of the Camera

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‏اللغة: English
The Lure of the Camera

The Lure of the Camera

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 3

Passmore Edwards Settlement House

104 Tavistock Place, London.   The Lime Walk 110 In the garden of Trinity College, Oxford. Referred to in “Robert Elsmere.”   Cottage of “Mary Backhouse” 114 At Sad Gill, Long Sleddale. The barns and storehouses, on either end, give the small cottage an attenuated appearance.   The Rectory of Peper Harow 118 In Surrey, England. The original of Murewell Rectory, the house of “Robert Elsmere.”   The Rothay and Nab Scar 130 From Pelter Bridge, Ambleside, England.   Lake Como 138 From “the path that led to the woods overhanging the Villa Carlotta.”   Stocks 144 The home of Mrs. Humphry Ward, near Tring, England.   Lake Maggiore, Italy 150 According to Ruskin the most beautiful of the Italian Lakes.   Isola Bella, Lake Maggiore 154 The costly summer home of Count Vitaliano Borromeo in the Seventeenth Century.   The Atrium of the Villa Maria 170 At Cadenabbia, Lake Como.   “I call this my J. M. W. Turner” 174 View from the dining-room window of the Villa Maria.   The Old Manse 180 In Concord, where Emerson wrote “Nature” and Hawthorne lived for three years.   Walden Woods 184 The cairn marks the site of Thoreau’s hut and “Thoreau’s Cove” is seen in the distance.   House of Ralph Waldo Emerson 190 Concord, Massachusetts.   The Wayside 194 House in Concord, where Hawthorne lived in the latest years of his life.   The Mall Street House 200 Salem, Mass. The room in which Hawthorne wrote “The Scarlet Letter” is in the third floor, front, on the left.   The House of the Seven Gables 204 The house in Turner Street, Salem, Mass., built in 1669, and owned by the Ingersoll family.   The Bailey House 208 The house in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, of Thomas Bailey Aldrich’s grandfather, known as “Captain Nutter” in “The Story of a Bad Boy.”   ”Aunt Abigail’s” Room 212 In the “Nutter” House.   An Old Wharf 216 On the Piscataqua River, Portsmouth, where Aldrich often played in his boyhood.   Celia Thaxter’s Cottage 224 On Appledore, where the poet maintained her famous “Island Garden.”   Appledore 232 Trap-dike, on Appledore, the largest of the “Isles of Shoals.”   John Burroughs at Woodchuck Lodge 238 The summer home of Mr. Burroughs is near Roxbury, New York, in the Catskill Mountains. When not at work he enjoys “the peace of the hills.”   John Burroughs at Work

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