Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 17 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 82802 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 75 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 12 London 12 Charles 11 John 10 St. 10 Sir 10 England 9 Mrs. 9 Mr. 9 House 8 William 8 Thomas 8 James 8 George 7 illustration 7 Street 7 Mary 7 Lord 7 Byron 6 Miss 6 King 6 Johnson 5 Temple 5 Henry 5 Dr. 5 Church 4 Scott 4 Queen 4 New 4 Hall 4 Duke 4 Dickens 4 Burns 3 man 3 like 3 life 3 great 3 York 3 Wordsworth 3 Whittier 3 Westminster 3 Society 3 Shakespeare 3 Paul 3 Old 3 Madame 3 Lady 3 Jean 3 Italy 3 Hill 3 God Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 3543 house 3118 man 3071 year 2870 time 2608 day 2345 life 1753 place 1545 room 1483 friend 1400 poet 1181 name 1137 street 1057 home 1039 work 1033 side 1028 world 1018 way 1009 church 1002 hand 971 death 937 part 906 wall 886 book 838 country 766 wife 754 age 750 thing 732 garden 731 heart 727 tree 726 letter 725 father 722 family 719 illustration 713 poem 710 child 708 town 697 eye 694 end 688 scene 673 woman 666 window 657 night 655 stone 643 mind 639 word 629 one 610 building 594 foot 593 author Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 10182 _ 1636 Mr. 1393 London 1156 Sir 1087 Street 1029 St. 945 Club 873 John 871 Lord 749 House 728 England 722 Mrs. 708 Rue 685 de 677 Milton 640 Charles 599 New 599 Dickens 592 Byron 546 William 513 James 510 Saint 502 George 496 Thomas 467 King 459 Shakespeare 455 Johnson 448 Paris 434 Mary 432 Dr. 427 . 422 Scott 411 Henry 393 I. 374 Whittier 369 Church 358 Miss 354 house 351 Society 349 York 348 Duke 345 Garrick 344 Burns 332 Queen 325 street 325 Lady 322 God 308 Tavern 307 Hawthorne 305 Goldsmith Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 15275 he 11752 it 5517 i 4802 him 3633 they 3324 we 2706 she 2455 you 2423 them 1452 me 1315 himself 1240 her 1178 us 350 themselves 347 itself 225 one 225 myself 205 herself 123 thee 67 ourselves 51 his 46 yourself 33 mine 21 yours 21 theirs 14 hers 12 ours 12 ''em 9 thyself 8 ye 8 ''s 4 ay 3 yt 3 us:-- 2 walpole 2 thou 2 described:-- 1 £320 1 youth:-- 1 you''ll 1 thy 1 this:-- 1 sévigné 1 sylvarum_:--"they 1 strong,--not 1 spot-- 1 southey 1 somewhere:-- 1 so:-- 1 so--_they Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 48705 be 15521 have 2871 do 2721 make 2622 say 2450 see 2196 come 1982 write 1942 go 1941 give 1895 take 1811 find 1689 know 1591 live 1317 stand 1105 call 992 die 990 leave 957 look 944 seem 935 bear 907 tell 883 become 870 think 746 pass 734 bring 694 show 676 use 676 keep 675 lie 652 hear 639 read 619 remain 619 meet 598 build 591 get 591 follow 586 sit 581 appear 555 hold 553 begin 505 grow 492 put 488 describe 486 love 484 set 480 feel 459 fall 457 walk 452 speak Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 5844 not 2962 so 2766 great 2748 here 2575 old 2526 more 2116 now 2032 very 2016 most 1884 little 1863 many 1833 first 1815 other 1735 then 1732 well 1659 only 1604 up 1558 much 1556 long 1453 there 1402 good 1382 still 1365 as 1276 out 1236 own 1233 never 1180 such 1041 last 984 same 973 down 928 once 926 few 896 new 877 even 875 young 864 early 863 too 835 ever 811 away 797 far 788 high 785 also 745 large 680 just 674 always 654 fine 654 again 645 small 638 often 637 beautiful Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 380 good 347 most 228 least 164 great 130 early 116 high 111 fine 58 old 57 bad 53 eld 47 late 43 large 42 young 41 noble 39 Most 38 deep 36 happy 30 near 26 low 25 small 24 rich 24 lovely 22 strong 22 grand 21 dear 21 bright 19 slight 18 long 15 true 14 warm 13 pure 13 poor 11 wise 11 rare 11 lofty 11 close 10 simple 10 pleasant 9 new 9 gentle 8 southw 8 lively 8 j 8 full 8 farth 8 fair 8 dark 7 wild 7 sweet 7 strange Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1669 most 60 well 37 least 4 hard 3 near 2 long 1 ¦ 1 worst 1 unblest 1 oftenest 1 kindest 1 hottest 1 highest 1 greatest 1 early 1 disappeared,--the 1 bitterest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 www.gutenberg.org 4 www.archive.org 2 link.library.utoronto.ca Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 2 http://www.archive.org 2 http://link.library.utoronto.ca/booksonline/). 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/38890/38890-h/38890-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/38890/38890-h.zip 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/38889/38889-h/38889-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/38889/38889-h.zip 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/31814/31814-h/31814-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/31814/31814-h.zip 1 http://www.archive.org/details/literaryshrinesh00wolfrich 1 http://www.archive.org/details/literarypilgrima00wolfrich Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 11 _ was _ 9 _ see _ 6 _ do _ 6 _ had _ 6 _ is _ 5 house is now 5 house is very 5 street is now 4 house is still 4 house was large 4 house was originally 4 man is not 4 man was more 4 place is now 3 _ has _ 3 _ was originally 3 days gone by 3 friends were not 3 house has long 3 man was ever 3 place is still 3 room was not 3 street is still 3 time went on 3 work is very 2 _ am _ 2 _ called _ 2 _ did _ 2 _ did not 2 _ see also 2 _ show _ 2 _ think _ 2 _ was first 2 _ was not 2 _ were _ 2 book was not 2 church called trinity 2 club did not 2 club was not 2 day is still 2 day was hon 2 day was not 2 death was now 2 friend did not 2 hand was round 2 house is more 2 house is quite 2 house is unaltered 2 house is well 2 house was always Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ do not commonly 1 _ is no more 1 _ was not more 1 books did not much 1 club is not so 1 club made no objection 1 club was not thorough 1 club were not more 1 day is no more 1 day was not yet 1 death was not yet 1 friends were not pleased 1 homes have no existence 1 house having no interest 1 house is no longer 1 house is not so 1 houses were not yet 1 life has not yet 1 life was not likely 1 london is no more 1 men did not always 1 part are not moss 1 poet has no need 1 poet was no prude 1 streets are no more 1 streets is not so 1 time be no more 1 time had no neighbors 1 time had not sufficiently 1 time passed not altogether 1 walls are not visible 1 work is not only 1 work was not entirely 1 work was not long 1 works are not interesting 1 world had not yet 1 world has no such 1 world has not yet 1 year known no occupation 1 years were not past A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 44269 author = Adcock, Arthur St. John title = Famous Houses and Literary Shrines of London date = keywords = Blake; Boswell; Byron; Carlyle; Charles; Cheyne; Court; Dickens; George; Goldsmith; Hampstead; Hogarth; House; Hunt; Johnson; Lamb; London; Lord; Mr.; Mrs.; Road; Row; Shakespeare; Sir; Square; St.; Street; Temple; Thackeray; illustration summary = Sir Joshua Reynolds''s House, Great Newport Street 57 life." Again, "Fleet Street and the Strand," he writes to Manning, "are Shakespeare," on the face of an old gabled house in Aldersgate Street, but lived in Bow Lane; Donne, who was born in Wood Street, wrote his early you pass a narrow, mean street of small houses, which is Bolingbroke Road, Street, but he told a friend that the happiest years of his life had been Mrs. Williams was then living in his house, which was in Gough Square. panoramic view of the life that Johnson lived in his Gough Square house, it took place at No. 8 Russell Street, Covent Garden--another famous house Ten years before Boswell went to live at 56 Great Queen Street, William Street, Euston Road, and lived here through all his most famous years, James Thornhill''s house in Dean Street; near by, in Soho Square, lived the id = 57372 author = Brereton, Austin title = The Literary History of the Adelphi and Its Neighbourhood date = keywords = Adam; Adelphi; Bishop; Coutts; Duke; Durham; Earl; England; Exchange; Footnote; Garrick; Henry; House; James; John; Johnson; King; Lady; London; Lord; Mrs; New; Northumberland; Queen; Sir; Society; Strand; Street; Thomas; William; York summary = certainly left Durham House for the Tower--but it was with great pomp Adelphi--Goldsmith writes from a Sponging-House to Garrick in York House--Francis Bacon--The Great Seal taken from Him--Lord The Adelphi (Durham Yard and the New Exchange) and Charing of Cleves feast at Durham House--Dudley, Duke of Northumberland--Lady [Illustration: THE ADELPHI (DURHAM YARD AND THE NEW EXCHANGE) AND Sir Walter Raleigh was given the use of Durham House in 1583, and he born until eight years after Raleigh''s death, knew the Durham House of present George Court to Durham House Street. New Exchange--Her Burial in Westminster Abbey--Sir William Read, of Durham House and Yard into the Present Adelphi--The Magnitude of Durham House and Yard into the Present Adelphi--The Magnitude Adelphi--"for the first time this year, Mrs Garrick disliking company York House--Francis Bacon--The Great Seal taken from Him--Lord Keeper the Great Seal was Sir John Puckering, who died at York House in 1596. id = 31133 author = Griswold, Hattie Tyng title = Home Life of Great Authors date = keywords = Bryant; Burns; Byron; Carlyle; Charles; Dickens; Emerson; England; George; God; Goethe; Holmes; Hugo; Italy; Lamb; London; Longfellow; Lowell; Margaret; Mary; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Shelley; Whittier; Wordsworth; day; friend; great; illustration; life; like; little; love; man; old; time; year summary = little time for reading, yet wish to know something of the private life who had now passed thirty years of age, for the first time loved a passions of life; who knew no love, no hate, no ambition, no great poet''s one great love than any of the others who for a time held his married,--a long time, as the world goes, for husband and wife to is none other than man''s normal life as we shall one day know it,'' life he lived in the world''s eye, and the world feels a great interest large school, where she lived a sad life for a long time, without any of be long before an admiring world shall read at the end of his life''s Mr. and Mrs. Longfellow passed here a long, beautiful, and happy life, devotedly made some of her life-long friends at this time. the life and thought of the coming time. id = 31814 author = Hemstreet, Charles title = Literary New York: Its Landmarks and Associations date = keywords = Broadway; Church; City; Freneau; George; Hall; House; Irving; James; John; New; Park; Poe; St.; Street; Washington; William; York; illustration summary = In the first ten years that Colden lived in New York he wrote In the far down-town business section of New York, there is a street Wall Street, close by the house where Alexander Hamilton lived, who in years, was to leave the humble house in Nassau Street, to live in the [Illustration: MAP OF STREETS IN THE CITY OF NEW YORK IN 1827.] walked along the streets of New York for the first time. Paulding lived with William Irving in the Vesey Street house for nine At the time that Cooper lived in New York there walked along Broadway, Chapel Street, to the house where at that time he made his home. For nine years after The Mad Poet went to the Chapel Street house his from his last city home in Greene Street to live out the remaining house near Washington Square, where he lived for some years and wrote id = 41164 author = Howitt, William title = Homes and Haunts of the Most Eminent British Poets, Vol. 1 (of 2) date = keywords = Addison; Burns; Byron; Castle; Charles; Chatterton; Chaucer; Cowper; Dr.; Dryden; Earl; Elizabeth; England; God; Goldsmith; Gray; Henry; Hill; House; Ireland; Italy; James; John; Johnson; Lady; London; Lord; Mary; Milton; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; Pope; Richard; Robert; Rowley; Scott; Shakspeare; Shelley; Sir; Spenser; St.; Swift; Temple; Thomas; Thomson; Tighe; William; english; great; irish; life; man summary = great and able king, it is evident, regarded Chaucer as a good man of The old age of Chaucer, like that of too many men of genius, is said to Perhaps no man ever inhabited more houses than our great epic poet, yet man than William Hazlitt, who rented the house some years, purely that time lived at the manor-house, and lies buried in the church here. on the authority of the son of his truest friend and benefactor, Mr. Longueville, he had lived some years, in Rose-street, Covent Garden. their great champion Swift, Sir William Wyndham, Lord Bathurst, Dr. Arbuthnot, and other men of note of that party assembled. a great poet of the critical and didactic kind, and his house and place garments, great houses, what are they but the things which _the man_ had man at one time to go forth from a remote scene and solitary old house id = 45887 author = Howitt, William title = Homes and Haunts of the Most Eminent British Poets, Vol. 2 (of 2) date = keywords = Abbotsford; Bothwell; Burns; Byron; Campbell; Castle; Charles; Coleridge; Crabbe; Dr.; Duke; Edinburgh; Elliott; England; English; Ettrick; George; God; Greek; Hemans; Hogg; Hunt; Italy; James; John; Landor; Latin; London; Lord; Miss; Montgomery; Moore; Mr.; Mrs.; Robert; Rogers; Scotland; Scott; Sheffield; Sir; Southey; St.; Thomas; Walter; William; Wilson; Wordsworth; Yarrow; great; house; life; like; man summary = saw human life lie like waste land, as worthless of notice, while our Like Lord Byron, Sir Walter Scott, and other illustrious men, Hogg, of editor of such a work; a man who, though a good poet, and wonderful, Stowey, like all other places where remarkable men have lived, even drink a glass of ale in this house, because a great man had lived in chamber, that on the right hand as you face the house, at which Mrs. Hemans, she said, used to write; and which commands a fine view of the form the life and spirit of the past many-colored ages of his country, the place many years afterward, the good old plane-tree gone, the the poet said, with great feeling--''That lady whom you saw just now is much at times in the houses of his great friends. great good-nature, and seeing me look into this room, he said, "Walk id = 30390 author = Mansfield, M. F. (Milburg Francisco) title = Dickens'' London date = keywords = Bridge; Charles; City; Court; Cross; Dickens; Fleet; George; Hall; Hill; Holborn; House; Inn; James; John; Lane; London; Mr.; Park; Pickwick; Rochester; Sir; Square; St.; Strand; Street; Temple; Theatre; Westminster summary = London Dickens knew, as well as of the changes which have taken place sights and scenes of London connected with the life of Charles Dickens. Yard, and Shoe Lane, the Middle and Inner Temples, and Sergeant''s Inn. The great fire of London of 1666 stopped at St. Dunstan''s-in-the-West and frequented by the London journalist of to-day and of Dickens'' time, still Dickens, like most others who have written of London life, has made have changed since Dickens'' day, London Bridge is undergoing widening and the time of Charles I., and the buildings remaining in Dickens'' day, In Dickens'' time, that glorious thoroughfare, known of all present-day The theatres of London, during the later years of Dickens'' life, may be Of the great event of Dickens'' day, which took place in London, none was Perhaps the greatest topographical change in the London of Dickens'' day middle-class Londoner, who repairs there, or did in Dickens'' time, on id = 41914 author = Martin, Benjamin Ellis title = The Stones of Paris in History and Letters, Volume 1 (of 2) date = keywords = Boileau; Charles; Church; Comédie; Corneille; Fontaine; France; Germain; Henri; Hôtel; Jacques; Jean; King; Louis; Louvre; Madame; Molière; Paris; Place; Pont; Quai; Racine; Rue; Rues; Saint; Théâtre; Voltaire; french; illustration summary = escorting the little ten-year-old Henry IV., the new King of England, Saint-André-des-Arts, and was done away with in the cutting of Rue Saint-André-des-Arts, and the very ancient walls in the rear court of Saint-Germain comes down to the quay, and where the old wall came down the end of this latter street, where Rue Saint-Honoré passes in front Meung, its site now marked by a tablet in the wall of the house No. 218 Rue Saint-Jacques. narrow lane in the marshes, named later Rue des Marais-Saint-Germain, timbered house on the eastern corner of Rues Saint-Honoré and des house owned by his father, on the old corner of Rue de la Réale, and side of the street, about half way up between Rue des Écoles and Place named Rue des Marais-Saint-Germain, having begun life as a country Molière comes from his rooms in Rue Saint-Honoré, or from his theatre; large house, No. 61 Rue Saint-André-des-Arts. id = 42367 author = Martin, Charlotte M. title = The Stones of Paris in History and Letters, Volume 2 (of 2) date = keywords = Antoine; Balzac; Bastille; Boulevard; Charles; Church; Châteaubriand; Duc; Dumas; France; François; Germain; Henri; Hugo; Hôtel; Jean; King; Louis; Madame; Marais; Paris; Paul; Philippe; Place; Rue; Saint; Tournelles; Victor; illustration summary = carried away by new Boulevard Saint-Germain, and with it the _hôtel_ with his mother, in a small apartment on the fourth floor of No. 19--now 37--Rue Notre-Dame-des-Champs. the shabby houses just west of Saint-Jacques-du-Haut-Pas, in Rue des was put to school in the same street, and later in Rue Saint-Louis, des Marais-Saint-Germain, now Rue Visconti; named for the famous Raphael de Valentin lived in the _hôtel-garni_ Saint-Quentin, Rue des he lived in a great mansion, No. 40 Rue Saint-Lazare, in other rooms Not far from this house of death, in Rue Saint-Antoine too, was a warrants, and he places the house in Rue des Tournelles, while it was year 1813, in a roomy old building of the time of Louis XV., in Rue du piece of it, holding an old house, that fronted on Rue Saint-Antoine, grounds of the Hôtel Saint-Paul and the cutting of streets through id = 34526 author = Mead, Lucia True Ames title = Milton''s England date = keywords = Abbey; Cambridge; Charles; Christ; Church; College; Cromwell; Elizabeth; England; English; Great; Hall; Henry; House; James; John; London; Mary; Milton; Paul; Sir; St.; Street; Temple; Thomas; Tower; Vane; Westminster; William summary = ancient site of the Knights Templar, whose Temple church, in Milton''s day, The Bread Street of Milton''s day, though swept over by the Great Fire, was Milton saw the most noted house upon the street, known as "Gerrard Hall." Bishop Earle, writing when Milton was twenty years of age, describes St. Paul''s as follows: "It is a heap of stones and men with a vast confusion Court, Milton, now sixteen years old, followed his friend to Cambridge. windows, its splendid organ-screen--old in Milton''s college days--must outside the ancient parish church, that John Milton saw, except the Horton the beautiful old church where the Milton family attended service for five years old when Milton married her, in the church of St. Mary Aldermary, a churches which remain, of those that Milton saw within the city walls. such houses Milton saw at every turn in the beautiful old London that he id = 29754 author = Pickard, Samuel T. (Samuel Thomas) title = Whittier-land A Handbook of North Essex, Containing Many Anecdotes of and Poems by John Greenleaf Whittier Never Before Collected. date = keywords = Amesbury; Chocorua; Elizabeth; England; Haverhill; Hill; Mary; Merrimac; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; New; Old; Ordway; Thomas; Whittier; illustration; like; poem summary = The Whittier Hill which overlooks the poet''s Amesbury home was named this vicinity that Thomas Whittier built his first house in Haverhill. Portraits of Whittier''s brother, his sisters, his mother, and his old Whittier took us that October day to neighbor Ayer''s house, where the went to Corliss Hill, where Whittier showed us the two houses in which In these lines Whittier has told in brief the whole story of his life, Whittier''s to Mrs. West has come to light, written about the time this [Illustration: THE WHITTIER HOME, AMESBURY] The Friends'' meeting-house, in 1836, was nearly opposite the Whittier seen from Po Hill is referred to by Whittier at the opening of the poem Friends is held at Amesbury, and during the fifty-six years of Mr. Whittier''s residence in the village, this was an occasion on which he opposite the Greenleaf place, and Whittier''s poem "The Home-Coming of id = 41146 author = Timbs, John title = Club Life of London, Vol. 1 (of 2) With Anecdotes of the Clubs, Coffee-Houses and Taverns of the Metropolis During the 17th, 18th, and 19th Centuries date = keywords = Brookes; Charles; Club; Covent; Dr.; Duke; Earl; England; Fox; Garden; Garrick; George; House; James; John; Johnson; King; Lady; London; Lord; Mall; Mr.; Mrs.; Mug; Pall; Prince; Queen; Royal; Selwyn; Sheridan; Sir; Society; St.; Steaks; Swift; Tavern; Thomas; Walpole; White; William; member summary = honest-hearted, real good men of the poetical members of the Club. Out of these meetings is said to have grown the Royal Society Club, thirteen persons dining at the table said to be on record in the Club circumnavigator Lord Anson honoured the Club by presenting the members The Club always dined on the Society''s meeting-day. The redoubtable Sir John Hill dined at the Club in company with Lord earliest record is a book of rules and list of members of the old Club Among the Rules of the Club, every member was to pay one guinea a year Athenæum; the Club-house in Charles-street being entered on by the of members; and in 1864, the Club removed to a new house built for members of the Clubs of the day, continued to play it. "The members of the Clubs in London, many years since, were persons, id = 41516 author = Timbs, John title = Club Life of London, Vol. 2 (of 2) With Anecdotes of the Clubs, Coffee-Houses and Taverns of the Metropolis During the 17th, 18th, and 19th Centuries date = keywords = Bedford; Button; Charles; City; Club; Coffee; Covent; Crown; Devil; Dr.; Duke; England; Fleet; Garden; George; Great; HOUSE; Hall; Head; James; John; Johnson; King; London; Lord; Mr.; Mrs.; Old; Pope; Queen; Rose; Royal; STREET; Sir; Society; St.; Tavern; Temple; Tom; White summary = This old Coffee-house, No. 8, Fleet-street (south side, near Temple the beaux at the Bow-street Coffee-house, near Covent-garden did, when Coffee-house to go to dine at the tavern, where we sit till six, when the Coffee-house," says Steele, "I had not time to salute the company, south-west corner of St. James''s-street, and is thus mentioned in No. 1 of the _Tatler_: "Foreign and Domestic News you will have from St. James''s Coffee-house." It occurs also in the passage quoted at page Garden, at the Great Coffee-house there, as he called Will''s, where he The Taverns and Coffee-houses supplied the place of the Clubs we have Button''s Coffee-house, in Russell-street, Covent Garden, where it The London Coffee-house (now a tavern) is noted for its publishers'' Coffee-house," and was a well frequented tavern and hotel: it was the gate; a place of good resort, and taken up by coffee-houses, id = 35105 author = Winter, William title = Shakespeare''s England date = keywords = Abbey; Anne; Avon; Byron; CHAPTER; Charles; England; Henry; House; John; Lane; London; Mary; Paul; Queen; Shakespeare; Sir; St.; Stratford; Street; Thomas; Tower; Westminster; William; english summary = sombre, mysterious, thoughtful, restful old London; and, like the Syrian letters on a little slab in the stone floor mark the last resting-place place in London where the past and the present are so strangely of Shakespeare comes very near to the heart of the master when he stands place--the Shene of old times--was long a royal residence. presently passing through a little, winding lane, I walk in the High New Place to Stratford Church, had but a little way to go. tower of this church; and, as you walk from the place where Milton lived New Place, Shakespeare''s home at the time of his death and the house in witnesses to his will, lived in the house next to the present New Place Illustration: "Remains of the Old Font at which, probably, Shakespeare American window," is placed Shakespeare''s monument. Shakespeare''s grave, in the chancel of Stratford church, id = 56429 author = Winter, William title = Gray Days and Gold in England and Scotland date = keywords = August; Avon; Byron; Castle; Charles; Clopton; Edinburgh; England; Henry; John; Johnson; King; Loch; London; Lord; Mary; Mr.; Richard; Scotland; Scott; Shakespeare; Sir; St.; Stratford; Thomas; Walter; William; Wordsworth; York; american; chapter; illustration summary = Landor has been placed on the west wall of St. Mary''s church. pass through the little red village of Rowde, with its gray church low gray tower of Moore''s church some time before you come to it, little way from the church, marked by a low flat tomb, on the end of at the wall of the graveyard in which stands the little gray church It was hard to leave the place, and for a long time I stood near the been placed in the church to mark the poet''s sepulchre: a fact which and Guild chapel; the remains of New Place; Trinity church and the looking down the long reach of the Avon toward Shakespeare''s church. destruction [1759] of the house of New Place in which Shakespeare died. villages and gray church towers,--the land grows hilly, and long white which flows close beside the place, is a church of great antiquity, id = 38889 author = Wolfe, Theodore F. (Theodore Frelinghuysen) title = Literary Shrines: The Haunts of Some Famous American Authors date = keywords = Alcott; Berkshire; Boston; Channing; Concord; Dr.; Emerson; Hawthorne; Holmes; House; Longfellow; Lowell; Manse; Miss; Mrs.; Old; Ripley; Street; Thoreau; Whittier; home; little; sidenote summary = Thoreau''s house, not far from the recent hermit-home of his friend Below the Thoreau-Alcott house on the village street was a prior home of Motley, Lowell, Holmes, Emerson, Hawthorne, Thoreau, and others. Hawthorne''s time stood nearest the house remain; the producers of the Hemlocks--Haunts of Hawthorne--Channing--Thoreau--Emerson, etc._ Hemlocks--Haunts of Hawthorne--Channing--Thoreau--Emerson, etc._ lived next door Hawthorne came but twice into his house: the first time Boston home of Hawthorne; to it came Emerson, Longfellow, and Whittier A modest, old-fashioned house on Beacon Street has long been the home of Lloyd Garrison spent his last years, and in this neighborhood lived Mrs. Blake, poet of "Verses Along the Way." Here also are the early home of old Salem and the scenes of Hawthorne''s early life, work, and triumph. Hawthorne and his friend lingered in summer days, we look away to Of the simple home-life at the little red house, Hawthorne''s diaries and id = 38890 author = Wolfe, Theodore F. (Theodore Frelinghuysen) title = A Literary Pilgrimage Among the Haunts of Famous British Authors date = keywords = Abbey; Annie; Brontë; Burns; Byron; Carlyle; Charlotte; Church; Collyer; Dickens; Eliot; George; Gray; Héger; Jean; John; Laurie; London; Madame; Mary; Miss; Mrs.; Scott; Smith; Staël; Sterne; Voltaire; home; room; sidenote summary = corner Hunt lived, in the curious little house Carlyle described, and "Elegy." A near-by little ivy-grown brick house, with wide windows in the old church by which he lies, near the grave of the poet Vincent mansion are the carriage-house and the school-room of Dickens''s sons. away." Near the gate of Gad''s Hill House is a wayside inn, the "Sir John Gibbon died, Byron had for some years a suite of rooms. the church wall describes Byron as the "Author of Childe Harold''s Byron, years afterward, saw Mary for the last time and kissed for its A near-by hill is called Sterne''s Seat, but time has left here little to room, upon whose walls hung a portrait of Burns, one of his sister Mrs. Begg, and some framed autograph letters of the bard, which the niece _Voltaire''s Home, Church, Study, Garden, Relics--Literary Court of _Voltaire''s Home, Church, Study, Garden, Relics--Literary Court of