Passmore Edwards Settlement House
104 |
Tavistock Place, London. |
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The Lime Walk |
110 |
In the garden of Trinity College, Oxford. Referred to in “Robert Elsmere.” |
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Cottage of “Mary Backhouse” |
114 |
At Sad Gill, Long Sleddale. The barns and storehouses, on either end, give the small cottage an attenuated appearance. |
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The Rectory of Peper Harow |
118 |
In Surrey, England. The original of Murewell Rectory, the house of “Robert Elsmere.” |
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The Rothay and Nab Scar |
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From Pelter Bridge, Ambleside, England. |
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Lake Como |
138 |
From “the path that led to the woods overhanging the Villa Carlotta.” |
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Stocks |
144 |
The home of Mrs. Humphry Ward, near Tring, England. |
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Lake Maggiore, Italy |
150 |
According to Ruskin the most beautiful of the Italian Lakes. |
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Isola Bella, Lake Maggiore |
154 |
The costly summer home of Count Vitaliano Borromeo in the Seventeenth Century. |
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The Atrium of the Villa Maria |
170 |
At Cadenabbia, Lake Como. |
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“I call this my J. M. W. Turner” |
174 |
View from the dining-room window of the Villa Maria. |
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The Old Manse |
180 |
In Concord, where Emerson wrote “Nature” and Hawthorne lived for three years. |
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Walden Woods |
184 |
The cairn marks the site of Thoreau’s hut and “Thoreau’s Cove” is seen in the distance. |
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House of Ralph Waldo Emerson |
190 |
Concord, Massachusetts. |
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The Wayside |
194 |
House in Concord, where Hawthorne lived in the latest years of his life. |
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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. |
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The House of the Seven Gables |
204 |
The house in Turner Street, Salem, Mass., built in 1669, and owned by the Ingersoll family. |
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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.” |
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”Aunt Abigail’s” Room |
212 |
In the “Nutter” House. |
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An Old Wharf |
216 |
On the Piscataqua River, Portsmouth, where Aldrich often played in his boyhood. |
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Celia Thaxter’s Cottage |
224 |
On Appledore, where the poet maintained her famous “Island Garden.” |
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Appledore |
232 |
Trap-dike, on Appledore, the largest of the “Isles of Shoals.” |
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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.” |
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John Burroughs at Work |
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