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?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 20 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 67427 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 71 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 13 Post 13 General 12 Office 10 London 9 Mr. 8 Postmaster 7 letter 7 Sir 6 John 6 England 5 York 5 New 5 Edinburgh 4 mail 4 United 4 St. 4 Scotland 4 Lord 4 King 4 Department 3 time 3 illustration 3 Street 3 States 3 Parliament 3 Palmer 3 Majesty 3 Ireland 3 House 3 Government 3 CHAPTER 3 Act 2 year 2 person 2 office 2 day 2 coach 2 british 2 West 2 Treasury 2 State 2 Small 2 Secretary 2 Railway 2 Miss 2 Mail 2 James 2 God 2 Glasgow 2 Falmouth Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 7246 letter 3814 office 3767 post 3614 mail 3032 time 2842 year 2249 postmaster 2031 day 1806 service 1617 postage 1601 man 1586 packet 1517 rate 1502 place 1338 mile 1328 part 1240 case 1218 way 1212 country 1201 person 1182 order 1117 road 1095 coach 1042 number 1028 p. 1006 charge 944 town 897 horse 881 hand 879 money 824 system 807 matter 787 work 784 hour 752 business 749 newspaper 736 revenue 708 duty 705 course 699 line 687 communication 686 - 685 house 677 arrangement 662 account 661 delivery 658 name 643 penny 628 clerk 617 fact Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 9125 _ 4054 Post 3560 Office 1935 London 1569 Mr. 1398 General 1296 | 1071 Bristol 988 New 922 - 902 England 877 Postmaster 814 York 701 Canada 661 Sir 641 John 626 United 609 St. 599 post 580 Lord 569 . 527 Government 504 King 474 Alfred 467 Department 466 States 437 c. 432 Edinburgh 401 Great 394 Miss 392 Act 391 Parliament 387 Street 387 State 384 P. 383 Ireland 377 Paul 376 India 370 Harold 368 Scotland 368 Mr 365 House 345 America 335 Majesty 326 May 323 Halifax 313 Britain 312 Mrs. 309 Mail 308 S. Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 10555 it 9150 he 4619 i 4149 they 2961 him 2832 you 2339 them 1686 we 1377 she 1085 me 819 himself 504 her 433 themselves 395 us 248 itself 121 myself 109 one 87 herself 69 yourself 55 ''em 36 yours 30 ourselves 22 mine 11 ''s 7 theirs 7 thee 7 his 7 em 6 ours 5 ye 4 £600 4 je 3 thyself 3 meself 3 hers 2 yourselves 2 macnab 2 d''you 1 £550 1 £365 1 £16 1 £1,821,541 1 you''re 1 ye''d 1 ya 1 unfit-- 1 tombs,--i 1 thus:--they 1 thus:--"they 1 thus:--"i Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 52305 be 14804 have 3703 do 3456 make 2511 say 2415 take 1978 give 1805 go 1646 come 1632 send 1530 carry 1341 find 1336 know 1334 receive 1224 see 1195 pay 1054 pass 991 follow 919 leave 906 call 890 think 875 get 839 bring 823 write 754 establish 736 keep 689 become 683 seem 650 put 609 deliver 601 use 594 appear 587 look 582 require 565 open 544 tell 538 run 523 increase 522 reach 517 hold 515 show 511 provide 511 allow 509 charge 504 arrive 499 appoint 491 ask 490 employ 486 return 478 contain Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 7936 not 2529 so 2194 other 2165 more 1884 only 1807 up 1513 now 1502 very 1484 great 1480 well 1456 first 1386 same 1354 such 1317 out 1298 as 1297 much 1192 then 1169 general 1107 good 1097 little 1063 postal 1041 also 1019 many 896 long 887 - 853 most 848 own 831 however 796 old 791 new 779 large 744 even 711 far 686 few 664 last 655 thus 655 here 628 post 625 down 624 still 608 again 606 less 597 small 594 on 585 present 575 never 567 about 563 public 548 there 529 several Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 247 good 233 least 186 most 89 great 74 high 50 early 47 bad 45 near 38 large 30 low 28 late 22 small 22 slight 20 Most 18 strong 17 old 16 eld 12 short 12 long 11 slow 11 manif 9 young 7 full 7 fine 7 fast 6 quick 6 mere 6 cheap 5 wild 5 swift 5 simple 5 safe 5 remote 5 easy 4 warm 4 heavy 4 busy 3 strange 3 speedy 3 severe 3 rich 3 lively 3 keen 3 hard 3 gross 3 fair 3 deep 3 common 2 smart 2 shrewd Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 667 most 61 well 53 least 3 hathe 2 hard 1 oldest 1 near 1 lest 1 highest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/38328/38328-h/38328-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/38328/38328-h.zip Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- 1 ccx074@pglaf.org Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 16 office did not 16 office was not 12 _ is _ 11 office is not 10 letters were not 9 _ was _ 9 office had not 8 letters was not 8 office was able 8 office was still 7 letters did not 6 office was now 6 packets were not 5 _ are _ 5 _ do _ 5 letter had not 5 mails were not 5 office is now 5 person having custody 5 postmasters were not 5 service was also 4 - leave powers 4 _ did _ 4 general did not 4 letter was not 4 letters are often 4 letters are still 4 mail leaving london 4 office was also 4 office was so 4 post was not 4 posts did not 4 service was not 4 way is best 3 - leave rights 3 - paid _ 3 - sent _ 3 _ do n''t 3 _ had _ 3 case came on 3 case was different 3 country was not 3 day was over 3 letter was equal 3 letters are now 3 letters delivered free 3 letters had not 3 letters is now 3 mail is regularly 3 mail was not Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 letters were no longer 2 office had no control 2 office is not only 2 office is not responsible 2 office is not unfrequently 2 postage had not yet 1 case was no better 1 countries make not more 1 country have no doubt 1 country was not likely 1 country was not unfavourable 1 day have no direct 1 general is not unmindful 1 general were no longer 1 general were not high 1 letter was not even 1 letter was not there 1 letters are not clearly 1 letters are not safe 1 letters be not so 1 letters have no objection 1 letters is no mere 1 letters was not immediately 1 letters was not only 1 letters were not forthcoming 1 letters were not only 1 letters were not ready 1 london is no exception 1 london is not yet 1 mails are not always 1 mails were not exempt 1 man had not yet 1 man has not yet 1 man was not yet 1 men was not entirely 1 men were no longer 1 office are not now 1 office did not entirely 1 office did not now 1 office did not quite 1 office had no check 1 office had no concern 1 office had no legal 1 office had no less 1 office had no means 1 office had no packets 1 office had no power 1 office had no reason 1 office had not as 1 office is no exception A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 21693 author = Ballantyne, R. M. (Robert Michael) title = Post Haste date = keywords = Abel; Aspel; Blurt; Bones; Bright; CHAPTER; Flint; General; Gentle; George; God; James; Lillycrop; London; Maylands; Miss; Mrs; Office; Pax; Peter; Phil; Post; Sir; Solomon; Stivergill; Tottie summary = "Good-evening, Mike," said George Aspel, as the man approached. "Come, George, let''s go back," said Phil, quickly, "we''ve been looking "It''s not exactly a letter, Master Phil," said the post-runner slowly. "Well then, I''ll send it," said Aspel, closing the letter; "do you know At that moment Miss Lillycrop''s door opened and little Tottie issued George Aspel passed the front of the General Post-Office on his way to "It''s only a few letters," said Aspel; "Mr Blurt explained matters to arrived at the Returned Letter Office two days ago, having been posted I suppose little Bones is behind it," said Miss Stivergill.--"Set The man ran up the steps, posted his letter, which had missed the mail-Aspel," said Peter Pax. Holding on to her two friends, Tottie was swept along the streets at a "Good-bye, little Peter, till we meet again," said Miss Stivergill, "That''s a long time, dear Maria," said Miss Lillycrop, with a little id = 22812 author = Blossom, Thomas title = The Postal Service of the United States in Connection with the Local History of Buffalo date = keywords = Albany; Buffalo; New; York summary = transportation service of the Post-Office Department, were originally The gross receipts of the post-office at Buffalo, for the years given in Post-office establishment of the present day. establish post-offices throughout the American colonies, appointed Postmaster-General "to keep one chief letter-office in New York and and improving the post-offices and the mail service. the post-route from Canandaigua to Niagara shall pass by Buffalo Creek. recollected that the post-office at Buffalo was not established until books of the Post-office Department that mail service, once in two In 1815, the mail was carried from Buffalo to Erie once a week, leaving About the first of the year 1819 the post-office at Buffalo was made a On the 14th of July, 1824, the mail routes by which the Buffalo office then arriving and departing weekly from the Buffalo post-office was statement in regard to the rates of letter postage since the post-office id = 19414 author = Campbell, Alexander title = General Instructions for the Guidance of Post Office Inspectors in the Dominion of Canada date = keywords = General; Mail; Office; Postmaster summary = You and any officer under you having the rank of Assistant P.O. Inspector, have authority to require any Postmaster or Assistant Postmaster in any Post Offices, Mail Contractor or other person in the should be reported to the Postmaster General, the name of the office 6. Letters from Post Office Department not numbered. 9. Book for recording number of miles travelled by Railway Mail case may be reported on for the Postmaster General''s consideration. 2. In cases where the Postmaster is required to perform duty between required to re-mail letters and papers for and from other offices. however, a Railway Mail Clerk is reported to the Postmaster General as 8. When a Mail Clerk or Postmaster has a large number of letters for 1. All cases of alleged loss of mails or letters, or of abstraction the date of the post-mark of the office at which mailed, and by the id = 45092 author = Clarke, Geoffrey title = The Post Office of India and Its Story date = keywords = Act; Bengal; Bombay; Calcutta; Company; Department; Director; District; Expedition; Field; Force; General; Government; Imperial; India; Mr.; Office; Post; Postal; Postmaster; Railway; Superintendent; british summary = Directors-General of the Post Office of India, for their assistance in to use the new postage stamps, post offices were forbidden to accept any value-payable postal article; at the same time the Post Office is Mail Service, which used to be called the Travelling Post Office. money order work post offices were classified under four heads: into the nearest post office in order to show the postal importance Post Office clerks could not sort letters for all stations in India, Postal Service, Suez and Bombay," was raised to six mail officers, Field Postal Service has been a feature of the Indian Post Office for THE INDIAN FIELD POST OFFICE DURING THE GREAT WAR THE INDIAN FIELD POST OFFICE DURING THE GREAT WAR 4. The post offices and mail lines in Oude, generally, became post offices, Peshawar Division, was placed in charge of field postal Postmaster-General, Punjab, arranged for field post offices, and the id = 42983 author = Hemmeon, Joseph Clarence title = The History of the British Post Office date = keywords = Cal; Com; Company; England; General; Geo; House; Ibid; Ireland; Kingdom; London; Office; Parliament; Post; Postmaster; Rep.; United; iii; letter summary = Reductions in letter, newspaper, and book post rates. called the Post Office of England, and one Postmaster-General nominated increased greatly the number of letters carried by the General Post. These orders were given to all the Post Office clerks and letter by an act of Parliament passed in the same year, the Post Office was letters passing first by the General Post, for on these the old rate letter collected.[210] The General Post receiving-houses closed at 7 against each postmaster, one for unpaid letters posted in London, and Penny Post Letters.[603] Three years later the rates and distances for Postmasters-General of England might at any time establish post offices the high rates charged by the Post Office for the conveyance of letters For letters delivered to the Post Office to be sent country bank notes delivered at the General Post Office in London. office of Postmaster-General and not the carrying of letters.[757] id = 40840 author = Holbrook, James title = Ten Years Among the Mail Bags Or, Notes from the Diary of a Special Agent of the Post-Office Department date = keywords = Agent; Assistant; Blake; Boston; Brooklyn; CHAPTER; Carleton; Clark; Congress; Court; Department; General; Government; Harmon; Harrowfork; John; March; Master; Mr.; New; Office; Pat; Post; Special; States; United; Washington; York; letter; mail; person; time summary = Practical Information--Post-Office Laws--Improved Letter masters, post-office clerks, and mail messengers, whose spheres of way letters were obtained from all these post masters in the course of In the mean time, the Post-Office Department had been informed of the Mail Key--A Lady Assistant--Post-Office Records--The official the Mail Key--A Lady Assistant--Post-Office Records--The official Bank Letter lost--The Thief decoyed--Post-Office at Bank Letter lost--The Thief decoyed--Post-Office at This person had held the office of post master in a place of some note the New York post-office, was one referring to a letter written by a On the following day a letter was deposited in the post-office, at to say that he had some weeks since mailed a letter at the post-office many of the letters passing-through the post-office, before the A person receiving a letter from the post-office by mistake, or post-office, any letter or packet; or, if any person shall take id = 27688 author = Hyde, James Wilson title = A Hundred Years by Post: A Jubilee Retrospect date = keywords = Edinburgh; General; Glasgow; London; Mr.; Office; Post; coach; day; letter; mail; time; year summary = place in the Post Office service during the past hundred years; and the and uncertain the mail service by post was in the early years of the then several years in the Post Office service, and desired to obtain a time of the introduction of mail-coaches, just about a hundred years 1798 a post-boy carrying certain Selby mails was robbed near that place, later days of the mail-coach service. the arrival of the London mail-coach in Glasgow, when carrying the first former times, and down to the period of the mail-coaches, the A hundred years ago the chief post-office in London was situated in According to a time-table of the period, a letter posted at post-office here is an unsafe conveyance; many of the letters we receive the total number of letters passing through the Post Office in this times the number of letters which passed through the post fifty years id = 39978 author = Hyde, James Wilson title = The Royal Mail: Its Curiosities and Romance date = keywords = A.M.; Bank; Coupar; Edinburgh; England; General; Glasgow; John; Liverpool; London; Lord; P.M.; Post; Postmaster; Scotland; York; coach; day; find; illustration; letter; mail; office; person; place; time; year summary = said Mails, or Bags of Letters, at the next Post Town or letters in small towns were not always in the pay of the Post-office or Post-office work of carrying letters for money. travelling post-offices the plan of carrying letters away from their London Post-office indistinctly addressed letters are at once set aside, "A person applied at the Leeds post-office, and stated that two letters the Post-office and received the letter, and that he had afterwards left day were being carried to the Lombard Street Post-office, this letter bank that the letter had not been received; but the Post-office was able A person in that town having posted a letter with an old CURIOUS LETTERS ADDRESSED TO THE POST-OFFICE. arrived at the Returned-letter office two days ago, having been posted post-office on the same day for letters, and, as it happened, applying mail-coaches, the Post-office was very generally to be found established id = 58717 author = Hyde, James Wilson title = The Early History of the Post in Grant and Farm date = keywords = Coke; Council; Dover; England; Foreign; General; John; London; Lord; Majesty; Mr.; Office; Post; Postmaster; Secretary; Sir; Stanhope; State; Whitley; Witherings; order summary = New office created of Postmaster for Foreign Posts, Patent granted to Witherings for Foreign Letter Office 91 Witherings as regards the Foreign Letter Office 181 Foreign Letter Office remains with Witherings, the Foreign Letter Office carried on for behoof of Witherings'' Post Office farmed to Thurloe--Interception of letters 237 Early post-office letter-books preserved 300 son, the said office of Postmaster of England for Foreign Parts, for Witherings, gentlemen, the office of place of Postmaster of England for case Post paid be written upon any Letter that shall come from London, "Petitioner and the carriers of Norwich were lately questioned by Mr. Witherings touching the carriage of letters; and the Lords ordered a for 40 years has been postmaster in the said place, which office he of Postmaster of Foreign Parts as also of the Letter Office within Postmaster-General, but his connection with the Post Office was of id = 44171 author = Jefferies, Thomas C. title = The Postal System of the United States and the New York General Post Office date = keywords = Department; Division; General; New; Post; States; Station; York; office summary = Post-office Department by four assistant postmasters-general. for the post-offices and railway mail service. United States Post-Office," called the postal service "the mightiest postmasters, new post-offices, railway mail service, contracts for "chief letter office" in the City of New York, Philadelphia having been _The New York General Post-office To-day_ The world''s greatest post-office to-day is the New York General the New York post-office was published in the year 1786, and the first the future as the first post-office in New York City, located in the matter of providing the post-office at New York with a large amount of [Illustration: _Carriers sorting mail in the General Post Office._] The Motor Vehicle Service of the New York post-office is in charge The Foreign Station of the New York post-office stands out among the One of the most important departments of the New York post-office is the issue and payment of money-orders, the New York post-office is the id = 38328 author = Joyce, Herbert title = The History of the Post Office, from Its Establishment Down to 1836 date = keywords = Act; Allen; Carteret; Court; Dover; Dublin; Earl; Edinburgh; England; Falmouth; General; Holyhead; House; Ireland; John; King; London; Lord; Majesty; Mr.; Office; Palmer; Parliament; Pitt; Post; Scotland; Sir; State; Street; Treasury; Walsingham; letter summary = Office--New Ship-letter Act--Mail Service to India and the Cape-centre of the Post Office system, many letters passed in those days these hundred letters to the General Post Office, a shipmaster on his Act of Parliament for establishing a General Post Office all letters and subjected to the same rates of postage as general post letters; and that General Letter Office in London [shall be demanded and received the sum cross-post letters the postmasters-general had received, at the highest, the offices for the receipt of general post letters were kept open and postmasters-general no appointment within the Post Office could be single letter of any importance was received at the Post Office without Offices for the receipt of general post letters are return of the number of letters passing through the London Post Office first used in London to bring letters to the General Post Office, 316 offices for letters by the general post, 409, 423 id = 40469 author = Lang, T. B. (Thomas Bamford) title = An Historical Summary of the Post Office in Scotland date = keywords = Edinburgh; Office; Post; Scotland summary = CONTROLLER, SORTING DEPARTMENT, GENERAL POST OFFICE, EDINBURGH. Robert Mein, merchant,[10] and Keeper of the Letter Office, Edinburgh, settling and establishing a General Post Office," the Scottish Parliament "ordains and appoints a General Post Office to be kept within Postmaster-General is ordered to take care that Posts are established In 1708, the business of the General Post Office at Edinburgh was establishment of Horse Posts on the Western Road from Edinburgh. first regular Horse Post in Scotland appears to have been from Edinburgh Deputy Postmaster-General for Scotland, and would take office on the 1st In 1730, the yearly revenue of the Post Office establishment in Scotland carried more letters than the Post Office, at least in the country In 1754, the revenue of the General Post Office in Scotland was £8927, In April 1713, the Post Office in Edinburgh was removed to the first POSTMASTER-GENERAL OF GREAT BRITAIN, and the Office in SCOTLAND was id = 51530 author = Leiber, Fritz title = The Last Letter date = keywords = Krumbine; Pink; Potshelter; Wastebasket summary = Black Sorter gulped down ten thousand pieces of first-class mail. a rather wooden-looking man named Krumbine, also bald, recognized "Sit down, Potshelter," the SBI Man said. "Krumbine, a letter turned up in the first-class mail this morning." Take another tranquilizer, Potshelter, and hand over the tray." Krumbine received it with trembling fingers, started to pick up a big You know, letters, characters--like books." "No, no, Krumbine." Potshelter nervously popped a square orange tablet "No code," Potshelter said darkly, proferring the envelope. advertisement--Boy Next Door or--that kind of thing--printed to look Then his gaze fell on the hand-addressed envelope on Krumbine''s desk "Great Scott, boy, where was Your Girl Next Door?" Potshelter, a faraway look in his eyes, said softly, "I think I''m But Krumbine thundered on at Richard Rowe with, "Good Lord, I can see boy, why did you--er--written this letter to this particular girl? "Well, I don''t know--" Krumbine began. id = 42129 author = Lewins, William title = Her Majesty''s Mails An Historical and Descriptive Account of the British Post-Office date = keywords = Act; Committee; Commons; Department; Edinburgh; England; English; General; Government; Hill; House; Ireland; James; King; London; Lord; Majesty; Mr.; Office; Palmer; Parliament; Post; Postmaster; Queen; Scotland; Secretary; Sir; Treasury; United; letter summary = The London Post-Office was managed by the Postmaster-General 1. By its provisions a General Post and Letter-Office is established taken, and the letters were all passed through the Post-Office the same the same line (with all of which the Post-Office sent ship-letters), letters, cost the Post-Office authorities, as the simple expense of of registered letters would so increase, that other Post-Office work law with respect to the detaining of letters in the General Post-Office, The two classes of "General Post" and "London District" letter-carriers letters passing through the Post-Office during the year 1863 was great number of letters remained, in the words of the Post-Office [185] About two hundred letters pass through the General Post-Office letter addressed to the Secretary of the Post-Office, from Lord letter was, that _it had not been sent through the Post-Office_, as it first post) to the Returned Letter Office. Each letter, put into the Post-Office, is forwarded, id = 20702 author = MacQueen, James title = A General Plan for a Mail Communication by Steam, Between Great Britain and the Eastern and Western Parts of the World date = keywords = America; Cape; Falmouth; Fayal; Jamaica; New; St.; West summary = yearly cost of mail communications by the aid of steam, to every West Indies, and steam from Falmouth to Fayal, with sailing-packets The steam-boats from Falmouth to Fayal would carry out all the mails returning with the mails for Great Britain from all the places Two steam-boats would perform this work, giving two mails each month, New York, the point of communication between Fayal and British North West Indian and South American packets returning to the central point, mails were carried by sailing packets on the four great lines, that By steam-boats the course of communication between Great Britain and communication for the return mails from the West Indies for Europe, so plan, the outward mails from Great Britain, by steamers, would reach To extend the mail communications between Great Britain and all places mail communication between the two places 105 days. thirty sailing packets; four steamers in the West Indies; ten mail id = 37238 author = Smith, William title = The History of the Post Office in British North America date = keywords = America; Boston; Britain; Brunswick; Canada; England; Finlay; Great; Halifax; Heriot; John; London; Montreal; New; North; Nova; Quebec; Scotia; St.; States; Stayner; United; Upper; York; british; canadian summary = colonial postal system and the general post office in London, to which monthly service between the Canadian post offices and New York, In America, the general post offices at Boston, New York and treasury, the postmaster general stated that the post office in America the general post office, Franklin states that the mails travel by night postmaster general of Canada, and the post office department at right of the British post office to collect postage in Canada was called from Canada was made part of the revenue of the general post office in United States post office arranged to have the British mails for New The post office committee called the deputy postmaster general before the postmaster general authority over the colonial post office and general post office and the legislatures of Upper and Lower Canada, The secretary of the general post office, in a letter to the postmaster id = 28533 author = Tombs, Robert Charles title = The King''s Post Being a volume of historical facts relating to the posts, mail coaches, coach roads, and railway mail services of and connected with the ancient city of Bristol from 1580 to the present time date = keywords = Allen; Bath; Bristol; Bush; Coach; General; Inn; John; King; London; Mail; Mr.; Office; Palmer; Portsmouth; Post; Postmaster; Road; Sir; Small; St.; Street; White; illustration summary = [Illustration: THE OLD POST-HOUSE IN DOLPHIN STREET, BRISTOL.] 1662.--EXCHANGE AVENUE AND SMALL STREET POST OFFICES, BRISTOL. The first half of the present Bristol Post Office premises in Small THE OLD GENERAL POST OFFICE IN LOMBARD STREET, LONDON.] THE OLD GENERAL POST OFFICE IN LOMBARD STREET, LONDON.] BRISTOL MAIL COACH ANNOUNCEMENTS, 1802-1830.--THE NEW GENERAL POST offered by the London, Bath, and Bristol mail coaches--to and from Southampton and general coach offices, Bush Inn and Tavern, Bristol, THE BRISTOL, BATH AND LONDON COACH TAKING UP MAILS WITHOUT HALTING.] seven coaches carrying West of England mails--the Bath, Bristol, POST OFFICES IN LONDON AND BRISTOL, 1881-1901. Bristol Post Office at the end of the year 1903. SMALL (THE POST OFFICE) STREET, BRISTOL. SMALL (THE POST OFFICE) STREET, BRISTOL. SMALL (THE POST OFFICE) STREET, BRISTOL. General Post Office, Bristol. London to Bristol Royal Mail Coach of 100 years since, with id = 34197 author = Tombs, Robert Charles title = The Bristol Royal Mail: Post, Telegraph, and Telephone date = keywords = Baldwin; Bath; Birmingham; Bristol; CHAPTER; Christmas; Clifton; General; London; Mr.; Office; Post; Postmaster; Railway; Sir; Small; St.; Street; Walton; West; illustration; letter; mail summary = There is a model of an old mail coach at the General Post Office, St. Martin''s-le-Grand, London, popularly supposed to be the model of the distance between the Post Office of London and Bristol, with a view to Bristol Post Office, there to await despatch by day mails to towns in In the Bristol district there is a railway Post Office apparatus station There is record of a Post Office having been established in Bristol by the Bristol Post Office as located there, and the old square open public About 5,500 ship letters were brought to the Bristol Post Office A case occurred at a Bristol Post Office fifteen years since, in which a Bristol Post Office, and kept in training for telegraph service with the years the Bristol Post Office has had two out of the nine The Bristol Post Office has its returned letter branch, with which id = 4296 author = Yonge, Charlotte M. (Charlotte Mary) title = Friarswood Post Office date = keywords = Alfred; Cope; Ellen; God; Harold; Jane; King; Lady; Miss; Mother; Mr.; Mrs.; Paul; Shepherd; Sir summary = ''I''m sure I hope he''s after no harm,'' said Mrs. King; ''I don''t like to ''Oh,'' said Ellen, ''Harold likes company, you see, Sir, and will take up ''Ellen--Harold--come down to your tea!'' called Mrs. King. ''Well!'' said Mrs. King, ''I declare he looks like a picture I have seen--'' ''Poor lad,'' said Mrs. King, ''it seems a pity he should come to such a ''You''re getting a big boy, Harold, and it is lonely for you,'' said Mrs. King reluctantly; ''and if the lad is a good lad I''d not cast up his ''Alfred,'' said Ellen, ''do you know where Harold is? have thought you would we have cared for poor Mother and Alfred,'' said only come to make you eat yours like a good boy, as Mr. Cope said you ''Then you think this poor lad will be ill a long time, Sir?'' said Mrs. King, when Mr. Blunt was preparing to depart.