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Bulletin of Bibliography Pamphlets, No. 25

Literary Geography

A BIBLIOGRAPHY

BY

Edith ]. Roswell Hawley

Bibliography presented for graduation Library School of the New York Public Library, 1915, with additional entries to March, 1917.

BOSTON

THE BOSTON BOOK COMPANY J9J7

To be issued in

The Bulletin of Bibliography

J9J8

Tin- Riverdale Press, Brookline, Mass.

Bibliography of Literary Geography

BY EDITH J. ROSWELL HAWLEY

Bibliography presented for graduation, Library School of the New York Public Library, 1915, with additional entries to March, 1917.

"Wer den Dichter will verstehen Muss in Dichters Lande gehen."

Goethe.

Books and articles listed are in The New York Public Library, except a few titles which are copied from the Library of Congress depository catalogue. This biblio- graphy includes only the best known English and Ameri- can authors. At some future time another bibliography may be compiled including the less known modern authors. .

ENGLISH

General

Adcock, Arthur St. John. The booklovers' London.

X. V. Macmillan, 1913. 324 p. illus. Famous houses and literary shrines of London.

Lond. Dent., N. Y. Button, 1912. 356 p. illus.

ports. Ballingall, William. Scenes of Scottish story. Edin.

Edmonston, 1874. 88 p. illus. Bartholomew, John George. A gazetteer of towns

and places in Europe having a literary or historical

interest.

In his literary and historical atlas of Europe. Lond.-

Dent., N. Y. button [1910]. p. 145-82. (Every

man's Library. The Lake District associated with Wordsworth,

Coleridge, Southey, De Quincey, Ruskin, etc. map. In his Literary and historical atlas of Europe. Lond.

Dent., N. Y. Button [1912]. p. 133. Bates, Katherine Lee. The Lake country, illus.

Chautauquan 45: 36-65. Dec., 1905.

3

3G6342

Boynton, Percy Holmes. London in English litera- ture. Chic. Univ. of Chic. Press, 1913. 326 p. illus. Bibliography, "Illustrative reading," at end of each

chapter. Appendix: Illustrative novels; p. 301-30.

Contents. Chaucer's London. Shakespeare's London. Milton's London. Dryden's London. Addison's London. Johnson's London. London of Lamb and Byron. Dickens' London. Victorian London. Contemporary London.

Brereton, Austin. The literary history of the Adelphi and its neighborhood. 2d ed. Lond. Unwin, 1908. 294 p. illus. See index for references to individual authors.

Brown, Alice. By oak and thorn; a record of English days. Bost. Houghton, 1896. 226 p.

Contents. In praise of gypsying. The food of fancy. A still hunt. The pilgrim in Devon. The haunt of the Doones. The land of Arthur. The Bronte country. The quest of the cup. An unresisted temptation. Latter day Cranford. Under the great blue tent.

Bullock, John Malcolm. London and literature. Lamp 28: 107-10. Mar., 1914.

Gives a list of memorial tablets erected in London to literary men and women.

Chancellor, Edwin Beresford. The annals of Fleet Street; its traditions and associations. Lond. Chap- man, 1912. 343 p. illus. See index for references to individual authors.

The history of the squares of London, topo- graphical and historical. Lond. Paul, 1907. 420 p.

illus.

See index for references to individual authors. Colvin, Sidney. Box Hill and its memories, illus.

Scribner's Magazine 60: 195-209. Aug., 1916. Conway, Mpncure Daniel. The English lakes and

their Genii, illus. Harper's Magazine 62: 7-27.

Dec., 1880. Cradle of the Lake Poets. Illus. Leisure Hour 37:

.").s;3-90, 663-8. 1888. Dobson, Austin. A literary ramble along the Thames

from Fulham to Chiswick. illus. Century 32 (n.s.

10): 175-86. June, 1886. Dutt, William Alfred. Some literary associations of

East Anglia. N. Y. McClure, 1907. 324 p. illus. Faust, A. J. Literary pilgrimage in London. Catholic

World 36: 699-712. Feb., lss:i. Forman, Henry James. The city: some Milton,

Shakespeare and Dickens land. In his London, an

intimate picture. N. Y. MacBride, 1913. p. 95-116. Geddie, John. Romantic Edinburgh. 2d ed. rev.

Lond. Sands, 1911. L'99 p. illus. Contains references to various authors.

Grant, Arthur. In the old paths; im-mories of literary pilurimu.urs. Bost. Houghtnn, 1«.»M. 275 p. illus. Contents. In the old paths. Among tin- beeches of Buckinghamshire. In Shakespeare's Arden. Memories of Litchfield. Oxford and the Cotswolds. Amid the haunts of Cowper. "The e'en brings a' name."

Hadden, James Cuthbert. Some literary associa- tions of Lakeland. Argosy 70: 379-87. Apr., 1900.

Hare, Augustus John Cuthbert. Walks in London. 7th ed. rev. N. Y. Macmillan, Lond. Allen, 1902. 2 v. Contains references to various authors.

Hargrove, Ethel C. Literary associations. In her Wanderings in the Isle of Wight. Lond. Melrose, 1913. p. 134-58.

Harwood, William Sumner. Literary Chelsea, illus. Critic 38: 417-24. May, 1901.

Haskell, Mabel Percy. Paradise of poets. (Lake country) illus. Delineator 66: 412-14. Sept., 1905.

Headlam, Cecil. The Inns of Court. Lond. Black, 1909. 211 p. illus. See index for references to individual authors.

Hemstreet, Charles and Hemstreet, Marie. Nooks and corners of old London; by Charles and Marie Hemstreet. N. Y. Potts (cl910J. 186 p. illus. See index for references to individual authors. Contents. Within sound of Bow Bells. On the way to Grr at St. Helens. Milton's birthplace. Lamb's workshop and some other things. By way of the Tower and London Bridge. The spell of the Temple and Inns of Court. Along the Strand and a peep at Covent Garden and the coffee houses. A passing glimpse of many windows. From Regent Street to the shadows of Soho.

Home, Gordon Cochrane. The English lakes. Lond. Black, 1911. 63 p. illus. (Beautiful Britain.) Contains references to the Lake poets.

Howitt, William. Homes and haunts of the most eminent British poets. 3d ed. Lond. Routledge, 1857. 706 p. illus.

Hutton, Laurence. Literary landmarks of Edin- burgh. N. Y. Harper, 1898. 80 p. illus.

Literary landmarks of London. 8th ed. N. Y.

Harper, 1892. 367 p. ports.

Literary landmarks of Oxford. Lond. Richards,

1903. 274 p. illus.

Jessopp, Augustus. The lake-dwellers. 19th Cen- tury 48: 743-54. Nov., 1900.

Lang, Andrew, ed. Poets' country. Phil. Lippincott, 1907. 363 p. illus.

Contents. Shakespeare.— William Wordsworth. Byron. S. T. Coleridge. Scott. Shelley and nature. Mil- ton.— Sir John Denham and "Cooper's Hill." Waller, Cowley. and Dryden. The descriptive poetry of the eigh- teenth century. Pope and the minor poets of the Augustan age. Akenside, Armstrong, Shenstone, Grainger, Mallet, and Smollett. Goldsmith, Collins and Gray. Falconer

and marine scenery, Mason, the Whartons, and Beattie. Langhorne, Jago, Scott of Amwell, Charlotte Smith, Bowles, Crowe, and Hurdis. William Cowper. Crabbe and Aid- borough. Tennyson. Chaucer at Eltham. Oliver Gold- smith at Hyde House Farm. Keats at Enfield. Edmund Spenser at Penhurst. Thomas Moore in Wicklow. Burns.

Lang, Elsie M. Literary London; with an introduc- tion by G. K. Chesterton. Lond. Laurie, [1906]. 349 p. illus.

An alphabetical list of streets, houses and distiicts connected with literature.

Literary shrines of old London. In Ditchfield,

P. H., ed. Memorials of old London. Lond. Bern- rose, 1908. v. 2, p. 166-81.

Lansdale, Maria Hornor. Scotland historic and romantic. Phil. Coates, 1902. 2v. illus. Contains references to several authors.

Lee, Sidney. The Johnson Club; a literary pilgrimage to Rochester, illus. Pall Mall Magazine 36: 513- 21. Oct., 1905. Chaucer and Shakespeare. Pepys and Hogarth. Dr. Johnson. Charles Dickens.

Lindley, Percy. Holidays in England by the cathedral cities, the Tennyson and Dickens country and the homes of the Pilgrim fathers. N. Y. Great Eastern Railway of England [1S85?]. 97 p. illus. map.

Literary Landmarks of London.

Living Age, 227 (7th ser. 9): 775-8. Dec. 22, 1900.

Same.

Eclectic magazine. 136 (3d ser. 5): 264-7, Feb. 1901.

Loftie, William John. English lake scenery; with archaeological, historical, poetical, and descriptive notes. N. Y., Scribner, 1875. 114 p. illus.

Mabie, Hamilton Wright. Backgrounds of literature- N. Y. Macmillan, 1912. 328 p. illus.

Contents. The Lake Country and Wordsworth. Emer- son and Concord. The Washington Irving country. \\Vimar and Goethe. 1 he land of Lorna Doone. America in Whitman's poetry. The land of Scott. Hawthorne and the new world.

Maurice, Arthur Bartlett. The literary Baedeker, illus. Bookman (N. Y.) 37: 411-25, 546-64, 628-44, June- AUK- . HH-'*.

1. London and rural England. 2. Paris and rural France.

3. About the continent.

Nicoll, William Robertson. The literary associations oi Il;uiip<tfu«l. illus. Bookman (London) 5: 11 !•'>, it. 7;0: I I.', (17: 11 15,144. Oct., 1893-Feb., 1895.

Northup, Clark Sutherland. Literary associations ot London. I >ial .->«>: -JJKMi. Apr. 1, 1914,

Noyes, Alfred. The Thainr- in literature, illus. Bookman (London) 82: r_':*-7. July, r.»n:.

6

Olcott, Charles Sumner. Tin- hm> of the camera. Host. HoutUiton, 191-1. 300 p. illus. ports.

Contents. The lure of the camera. Literary r.unblcs in Gt. Britain. A day in Wordsworth's country. From Hawthornden to Roslin Gl_»n. Tlu- country of Mrs. Hum- phry Ward. A tour of tin- Italian Lakes. Literary landmarks of New England. A day with John Burroughs. Glimpses of the Yellowstone. The Grand Carton of Arizona.

Rawnsley, Hardwicke Drummond. Literary associa- tions of the English lakes. Glasgow, MacLehose, ls«M. 2v.

Contents, v. 1. Cumberland, Keswick, and Southey's country, v. 2. Westmoreland, Windermere, and the haunts of Wordsworth.

Rideing, William Henry. In the land of Lorna Doone, and other pleasurable excursions in England. N. Y. Crowell. [c!895]. 173 p.

Contents. In the land of Lorna Doone. In Cornwall with an umbrella. Coaching trips out of London. A bit of Yorkshire coast. Amy Robsart, Kenilworth.and War- wick.

Roscoe, Edward Stanley. Penn's country; being literary and historical studies of the country of Penn, Milton, Gray, Burke, and the Disraelis, rev. and enl. ed. Lond. and N. Y. Longmans, 1914. 212 p. illus. map, ports.

Sharp, William (Fiona MacLeod, pseud.). Literary geography. N. Y. Scribner, 1904. 248 'p. illus. ports.

Contents. The country of George Meredith. 1 he coun- try of Stevenson. Dickens-land. Scott-land. The coun- try of George Eliot. Thackeray-land. The Bronte coun- try.— Ayhvin-land (Wales and East Anglia). The Car- lyle country. The literary geography of the English lakes. The literary geography of the Thames. The literary geog- raphy of the lake of Geneva.

Shelley, Henry Charles. Inns and taverns of old London, setting forth the historical and literary associa- tions of those ancient hostelries together with an account of the most notable coffee houses, clubs, and pleasure gardens of the British metropolis. Bost. Page, 1909. 366 p. illus. See index for references to individual authors.

Literary by-paths in Old England. Bost. Little,

1900. 400 p. illus.

Contents. In Spenser's footsteps. The home of Sir Philip Sidney. Memorials of William Penn. The birth- place of Gray's Elegy. Gilbert White's Selborne. Gold- smith's "Deserted Village." Burns in Ayrshire. Keats and his circle. In Carlyle's country. Thomas Hood's homes and friends. Royal Winchester.

Sydney, William Connor. Cradle of the Lake poets. Living Age v. 200 (6th ser. v. 1): 154-64. Jan. 20, 1894.

Tearle, Christian (pseud, of E. T. Jaques). The

pilgrim from Chicago; being furthur rambles with an American. Lond. Longmans, 1913. 349 p. illus. Contents. With Dickens in Jacob's Island. Poore Pancras. On the way to Reculver. Reculver and the "Little Wonder." Fordwich and some gossip about Chau- cer. — The little friars in Canterbury. The Black Prince's well and an anthem. Horwood's map of London. Fagin's country and Colebrook Row. A nibble at the Temple. Another nibble at the Temple. Towards St. Albans. "Sic Sedebat." Pepys' church. Holy Trinity, Minories, and Tower Hill. Johnson's house in Gough Square.

Rambles with an American. N. Y. Duffield, 1910.

376 p. illus. Contains references to various English authors.

Vaughan, John. Literary associations of Hampshire. 19th Century 61: 658-69. Apr., 1907.

Winchester Cathedral close; its historical and

literary associations. Lond. and N. Y. Pitman, 1914. 281 p. illus. plan.

Wharton, Anne Rollings worth. Where poets lived and loved. (English lakes.) Lippincott 75: 577-83. May, 1905.

Whitten, Wilfred (John O 'London, pseud). London in poetry and poets in London. Bookman (London) 31: 117-25. Dec., 1906.

A Londoner's London. 2d ed. Lond. Methuen

[1913]. 329 p. illus. See index for references to individual authors.

Wolfe, Theodore Frelinghuysen. A literary pil- grimage among the haunts of famous British authors. 5th ed. Phil. Lippincott, 1895. 260 p. illus. Chapter headings do not indicate the scope of the chapter.

Contents. Literary Hampstead and Highgate. By Southwark and Thames-side to Chelsea. The scene of Gray's Elegy. Dickensland, Gads Hill and abouts. Some haunts of Byron. The home of Childe Harold. War- wickshire; the Loamshire of George Eliot. Yorkshire shrines: Dotheboy's Hall and Rokeby. Sterne's sweet retirement. Haworth and the Brontes. Early haunts of Robert Collyer: Eugene Aram. Home of Sidney Smith. Nithsdale rambles. A niece of Rorbet Burns. Highland Mary, her homes and grave. Bronte" scenes in Brussels. Leman'fl shrines. Chateaux of Ferney and Coppet.

Literary rambles at home and abroad. Phil, and

Lond. Lippincott, 1901. 235 p. illus. England, p. 119-218.

Austen

Adams, Oscar Fay. In the footsteps of Jane Austen. illus. Xew KnK'Uiml Magazine n.s. 8: 594-608. July, 1893.

Benson, Arthur Christopher. Jane Austen at Lyme Krgis. Putnam's Magazine 6: 206-13. May. 1909.

Garnett, Richard. Jane Austen ami lu-r country, illus. Bookman (N. Y.) 15: 44-51, Mar., 1902.

8

Kebbel, T. E. Jane Austen at home. Living Age 164 -."•til SIT. 41)): 680-85. Mar. 14, 1S.V..

Blackmore

Brown, Alice. The haunt of the Doones. In her By oak and thorn. Boston. Houghton, 1896. p. 72- 100.

Johnson, Clifton. The land of Lorna Doone. Harper's Bazar 33: L'OL'-S. May 26, 1900.

Mabie, Hamilton Wright. The land of Lorna Doone. illus. In his Backgrounds of Literature. N. Y. Mac- millan, 1912. p. 183-92.

Maurice, Arthur Bartlett. R. D. Blackmore's coun- try, illus. Bookman (X. Y.) 14: 29-37. Sept., 1901.

Rideing, William Henry. In the land of Lorna Doone. In his In the land of Lorna Doone and other pleasurable excursions in England. N. Y. Crowell [cl895], p. 1-22.

Snell, Frederick John. The Blackmore country. Lond. Black, 1906. 288 p. illus. map. (The pil- grimage series.)

The Valley of the Doones. Atlantic 71: 573-5, Apr., 1893.

Bronte

Brown, Alice. The Bronte country. In her By oak

and thorn. Boston. Houghton, 1896. p. 132-43. Chadwick, Esther Alice. In the footsteps of the

Brontes, by Mrs. Ellis H. Chadwick. Lond. Pitman,

1914. 502 p. illus. ports. Bibliography, p. 489-90. Craik, Georgiana M. Birthplace of Charlotte

Bronte. Canadian Magazine 9: 264-7. Apr., 1876. Davies, William M. Haworth thirty-seven years ago.

Temple Bar 107: 132-7. Jan., 1896. Evans, E. P. Bronte family and their home. Put- nam's Magazine 16: 278-86. Sept., 1870. Hobson, Ernest. "Shirley" land. Living Age 251

(7th ser. 33): 77-87. Oct., 13, 1906. Home of Charlotte Bronte. (Spectator.) Outlook

90: 906-8. Dec. 26, 1908. Meeker, Claude. Haworth; home of the Brontes.

Bradford, Treweek, 1R95. 44 p. illus. (Bronte

Society pub. v. 1, pt. ii.) Scrutori, William. Birthplace of Charlotte Bronte;

with two etchings by the author (Thornton Chapel

and Parsonage). Leeds, Fletcher, 1884, 58 p. Sharp, William (Fiona Macleod, pseud.). The Bronte

country, illus. In his Literary geography. N. Y.

Scribner, 1904. p. 106-24. [Sherwood, John D.] Visits to the homes of authors:

Charlotte Bronte. Hours at Home, 5: 244-5, July,

1867.

Stead, J. J. The "Shirley" country. Bradford, . Field, 1897. 16 p. illus. map. (Bronte Society.

pub. v. 1, pt. vii.)

Same. Revised, v. 4, pt. xvii.

Stuart, J. A. Erskine. The Bronte country; its

topography, antiquities, and history. Lond. Long- mans, 1888. 241 p. illus. Walford, L. B. Home of Charlotte Bronte. Living

Age 184 (5th ser. 69) : 424-8. Feb. 15, 1890. Wheeler, Emily F. Haworth and the Brontes. Lip-

pincott 35 (n.s. 9) : 496-503. May, 1885. Wolfe, Theodore. Scenes of Charlotte Bronte's life

in Brussels. Lippincott 36 (n. s. 10): 542-8. Dec.

1885. Wroot, Herbert E. The persons and places of the

Bronte novels. Bradford, Field, [1902-06]. 237 p.

(Bronte Society. Trans, and other pub. v. 3.)

Browning

Asolo. Bookman (London) 10: 47-8, May, 1896. Bronson, Katherine C. Browning in Asolo. illus.

Century 59 (n.s. 37) : 920-31. Apr., 1900. McMahan, Anna Benneson. Browning pilgrimage

in 1902. illus. Lamp 27: 291-300. Nov., 1903. Spender, Harold. The Browning palace at Venice.

Bookman (London) 2: 81-2. June, 1892. Treves, Sir Frederick. The country of "The ring

and the book." Lond. Cassell, 1913. 303 p. illus.

map.

Whyte, Arthur J. Browning pilgrimage; places en- shrined in Sordello. Contemporary Review 103:

668-78. May, 1913.

Burns Ayr and the birthplace of Burns; a guide to visitors,

Ayr; Ferguson [18?]. 56 p. illus. Bartholomew, John George. Land of Burns, map.

In his Literary and historical atlas of Europe. Lond.

Dent, N. Y. Dutton [1912]. p. 128. Crockett, William Shillinglaw. Some of the homes

and haunts of Robert Burns, illus. Bookman

(London) 24: 12-17. Apr., 1903. Cuningham, Allan. Pictures and portraits of the life

and land of Burns. Lond. Virtue [1839-40]. 4 v.

illus. ports. The poems, letters, and land of Robert Burns.

Lond. Virtue [1839]. 2 v. illus. Dougall, Charles Shirra. The Burns country. Lond.

Black, 1904. 338 p. illus. map. (The pilgrimage

-i-ries.) Dykes, T. Land of Burns. Macmillan's Magazine 54:

287-95. Aug., 1886.

10

Harper, George McLean. Robert Burns' country;

the In-art <>! Ayrshirr. illus. Scribner's Magazine 44: till :,:>. Dec., 190s.

Hawthorne, Nathaniel. Some of the haunts of Burns. Atlantic 6: 385-95. Oct., 1860.

Henderson, Thomas F. The auld Ayrshire of Robert Burns. 145 p. illus.

Burns and the Burns country. In his Scotland of

to-day. Lond. Methuen [1907]. p. 202-17.

Howitt", William. Robert Burns, illus. In his Homes and haunts of the most eminent British poets. 3d ed. Lond. Routledge, 1857. p. 229-68.

[Jackson, Helen Hunt.] A Burns pilgrimage. Cen- tury iMi (n.s. 4): 752-61. Sept., 1883.

Johnson, Clifton. A Burns pilgrimage. In his The land of heather. N. Y. and Lond. Macmillan, 1912. p. 237-45.

Land o' Burns. Dublin University magazine 18: 509-23, 710-23. Nov., Dec., 1841.

Macmillan, Michael. Burns, illus. In Lang, An- drew, ed. Poets' country. Phil. Lippincott, 1907. p. 339-58.

Rideing, William Henry. Land o' Burns, illus. Harper's Magazine 59: 180-91. July, 1879.

Shelley, Henry Charles. The Ayrshire homes and haunts of Burns. N. Y. and Lond. Putnam, 1897. 148 p. illus. ports.

Burns in Ayrshire. In his Literary by-paths.

Bost. Little, 1906. p. 175-209.

Visit to Burns' birthplace. Eclectic Review 110: 182-92. Aug., 1859.

Wilson, James Grant. The home of Robert Burns. Lippincott 1: 657-65. June, 1868.

Wilson, John. The land of Burns; a series of land- scapes and portraits by Professor Wilson and Robert Chambers. Glasgow, Blackie, 1846. 2 v. in 1. illus.

Wolfe, Theodore Frelinghuysen. The Ayrshire Burnsland. In his Literary rambles at home and abroad. Phil, and Lond. Lippincott, 1901. p. 170- 89.

Carlyle

Blunt, Reginald. In Cheyne walk and thereabout, containing short accounts of some ingenious people and famous places that were by the riverside at Chelsea. Phil. Lippincott, 1914. 321 p. illus. Refers to Carlyle.

Burroughs, John. In Carlyle's country. Atlantic 51:320-30, Mar., 1883.

Carlyle's birthplace. Outlook 98: 519. July 8, 1911.

Geddes, Patrick. Early homes and haunts of Car- lyle. Living Age, v. 264 (7th ser. v. 46): 724-7. Mar. 19, 1910.

11

MacNeil, Jane. The homes of Carlyle. illus. Mun-

aey 25: 633-9. Aug., 1901. Paterson, James. Carlyle's home at Craigenputtock.

illus. Good Words 24: 128-31. Feb., 1883. Pennell, Elizabeth Robins. The Carlyle house in

Chelsea. Nation (N. Y.) 62: 286-7. Apr. 9, 1896. A pilgrimage to Carlyle's country. Critic 7: 67-9.

Aug. s, lsv>.

Sharp, William (Fiona Maclepd, pseud.). The coun- try of Carlyle. illus. In his Literary geography.

N. Y. Scribner, 1904. p. 146-59. Shelley, Henry Charles. Gleanings in Carlyle's

country, illus. New England Magazine n.s. 11 : 194-

205. Oct., 1894. In Carlyle's country. In his Literary by-paths.

Bost. Little, 1906. p. 269-309. [Sherwood, John D.] Visits to the homes of authors.

The home of Thomas Carlyle. Hours at Home 5:

113-6. June, 1867. Sloan, John MacGavin. The Carlyle country; with

a study of Carlyle's life. Lond. Chapman, 1904.

283 p. illus. ports.

Coleridge

Almy, Percival H. W. The Coleridge country. Gen- tleman's Magazine 291 (n.s. 67): 66-73. July, 1901. Coleridge, Ernest Hartley. S. T. Coleridge, illus.

In Lang, Andrew, ed. Poets' country. Phil. Lip-

pincott, 1907. p. 66-72. Coleridge and Nether Stowey. Athenaeum 101:

765-6. June 17, 1893. Collins, Mortimer. Coleridge's country. Belgravia

12: 197-208. Aug., 1870. Greswell, William Henry Parr. Coleridge and the

Quantock hills. Macmillan's Magazine 56: 413-20.

Oct., 1887. Howitt, William. Samuel Taylor Coleridge. In his

Homes and haunts of the most eminent British poets.

3d ed. Lond. Routledge, 1857. p. 293-418. Knight, William Angus. Coleridge and Wordsworth

in the west country; their friendship, work, and sur- roundings. Lond. Matthews, 1913. 237 p. illus. Page, John Lloyd Warden. Coleridge and the

Quantocks. illus. English Illustrated Magazine 10:

344-7. Jan., 1893. Rawnsley, Hardwicke Drummond. Coleridge at the

English lakes, illus. Bookman (London) 26: 200-3.

Sept., 1904. Rhys, Ernest. A little academe; Coleridge's cottage

at Stowey. Gentleman's Magazine 259 (n.s. 35) :

:'.71 S9. Oct., 1885. Van Dyke, Henry. A day among the Quantock hills.

illus. Scribner's Magazine 37: 668-75. June, 1905.

12

Dickens About England with Dickens, illus.

Monthly •_'(»: -j«».j :•(»:*. Aug., issn. Allbut, Robert. London rambles "En /i.u/ay" with Charles Dickens. Lnml. Curtice [pref. issr.J ils ,,.

Contents. Charing Cross to Lincoln's Inn Fields. Lin- coln's Inn to Mansion House. Charing Cross to Thavies Inn, Holborn Circus. Holborn Circus to Tottenham Court Road. Bank of England to Her Majesty's Theatre. Excur- sions to Chatham, Rochester and Gad's Hill Place. Localities and addresses distant or unidentified.

Rambles in Dickens-land. Lond. Chapman [1903]. 174 p. illus.

Ashby-Sterry; Joseph. Charles Dickens in South-

\vark. illus. English Illustrated Magazine 6: 105-15.

Nov., isss. Bartholomew, John George. Places mentioned in

Dickens' works, map. In his Literary and his- torical atlas of Europe. Lond. Dent, N. Y. Dutton

[1912]. p. 134. Boynton, Percy Holmes. Dickens's London. Chau-

tauquan 61: 331-55. Feb., 1911. Chancellor, Edwin Beresford. Dickens' London.

Living Age 273 (7th ser. 55): 179-82. Apr. 20,

1912. [Conway, Moncure Daniel.] Footprints of Charles

Dickens. Harper's Magazine 41: 610-16. Sept.,

1870. Dexter, Walter. A literary highway; the London to

Dover Road. Living Age 239 (7th ser. 21) : 626-32.

Dec. 5, 1903. Dickens, Charles, Jr. Disappearing Dickensland.

North American Review 156: 670-84. June, 1893.

Pickwickian topography, illus. English Illustrated Magazine 10: 186-98. Nov., 1892.

Dickens, Charles W. Relics of Dickens' London.

illus. Munsey 27: 833-42. Sept., 1902. Dickens in Yorkshire. Athanaeum 103: 83-5, 180-1.

Jan. 20, Feb. 10, 1894. Charles Dickens and London. illus. Bookman

(London) 41: 238-46. Feb. 1912. Dickens' pilgrimage. Living Age 279 (7th ser.

61): 370-3, 427-30, 497-500, 571-4, 625-8. Nov.

8-Dec. 6, 1913. Dickensian ; a magazine for Dickens lovers and monthly

record of the Dickens Fellowship. London, v. 1-12. -f-

1905-1916.+

Fitzgerald, Percy Hetherington. Bozland. Gen- tleman's Magazine 277 (n.s. 53): 447-66. Nov.,

1894. Further travels in Bozland. Gentleman's Magazine

278 (n.s. 54): 116-37. Feb., 1895.

13

The history of Pickwick; an account of its charac- ters, localities, allusions, and illustrations. Lond. Chapman, 1891. 375 p. '"Appendix. Bibliography of 'Pickwick' ": p. 357-75.

Pyrcroft House of "Oliver Twist." Magazine of

Art. 18: 432-4. Oct., 1895.

Hassard, John Rose Greene. A Pickwickian pil- grimage. Bost. Osgood, 1881. 155 p.

Hughes, William R. A week's tramp in Dickens land, together with personal reminiscences of the "Inimitable Boz." Lond. Chapman, 1891. 432 p. illus.

In Dickens land; pictures with "Notes on Dickens land pictures." Chautauquan 61: 379-90. Feb., 1911.

Kitton, Frederick George. The Dickens country. Lond. Black, 1905. 235 p. illus. ports. (Pil- grimage series.)

With Dickens in Hertfordshire. illus. Good

Words 37: 175-83. Mar., 1896.

Leach, Anna. Homes and haunts of Dickens, illus. Munsey 17: 240-50. May, 1897.

Lee, Sidney. The Johnson club; a literary pilgrimage to Rochester (Charles Dickens), illus. Pall Mall Magazine 36: 520-21. Oct., 1905.

The London of Dickens, illus. Putnam's Maga- zine 2: 497-500. July, 1907.

Martin, Benjamin Ellis. In and out of London with Dickens, illus. Scribner's Monthly 22: 32-45. May, 1881.

In London with Dickens, illus. Scribner's Monthly

21: 649-64. Mar., 1881.

Mr. Pickwick and Nicholas Nickleby. illus. Scrib- ner's Monthly 20: 641-56, Sept., 1SS«).

Nicklin, John Arnold. Dickens-land; described by I. A. Nicklin, pictured by E. W. Hazlehurst. Lond. Blackie, 11)11. 64 p. illus. (Beautiful England.)

The old churchyard of "Bleak House." Critic 15:

6S '.I. Aug. 1<>. 1*S!>.

Philip, Alexander J. A Dickens dictionary; the

characters and scenes of the novels and miscellaneous

works alphabetically arranged. Lond. Routledge,

I'.ii)'.). 40s p. Ragan, H. H. Following Dickens with a camera.

Outing '-'3: 2WI-301, Jan. 1894. Ragan, Harger. In the footsteps of Dickens, illus.

Cosmopolitan 15: 3-14. Mav, 1893. Sharp, William (Fiona Macleod, pseud.). Dickens-

laiul. illus. hi his Literary geography. N. Y.

Snilmei, 1901. p. 37 .V, Sheldon, Caroline. Around London with Dickens.

Education 21: 333 ». Feb., 1904.

14

[Sherwood, John D.] Visits to the homes of authors. The homr of Charles Dickens. Hours at Home 5: L'ii'.i I'J. July. isiiT.

Smith, Francis Hopkinson. In Dickens' London. X. V. Snilmrt, I'.M-l. 127 p. Illustrated with char- coal drawings l>y the author.

Stevenson, Burton Egbert. The city of Edwin Drood. illus. Bookman (N. Y.) 39: 394-402. Jan., 1914.

Tearle, Christian (pseud, of E. T. Jaques). Fagin's country and Colebrook Row. illus. In his The pilgrim from Chicago. Lond. Longmans, 1913. p. 122-43.

Rambles with an American. N. Y. Duffield, 1910.

p. 1-33, 303-333.

With Dickens in Jacob's island, illus. In his The

pilgrim from Chicago. Lond. Longmans, 1913. p. 1-23.

The Times. London. A Dickens pilgrimage. Lond. Murray, 1914. 93 p. (The Times series.)

Ward, Henry Snowden and Ward, Catherine Weed Barnes. The real Dickens land; with an outline of Dickens' life: Lond. Chapman, 1904. 204 p. illus.

Welch, Deshler. "The Mississippi Eden." illus. Har- per's Magazine 121: 434-42. Aug., 1910.

Eliot Bartholomew, John George. George Eliot's country.

map. In his Literary and historical atlas of Europe.

Lond. Dent, N. Y. button [1912]. p. 135.

Gives fictitious name under real name.

Bates, Katherine Lee. The heart of England. War- wickshire, illus. Chautauquan 45: 275-87. Feb.,

1907. Fraser, John Foster. A bit of George Eliot's country.

illus. Bookman (London) 9: 52-5. Nov., 1895. Hyde, John. Notes from the country of "Adam

Bede." Gentleman's Magazine 285 (n.s. 61): 15-23.

July, 1898. Kingsley, Rose Georgina. George Eliot's country.

illus. Century 30: (n.s. 8): 339-52. July, 1885. Leach, Anna. Homes and haunts of George Eliot.

illus. Munsey 17: 753-60. Aug., 1897. Morley, George. In Adam Bede's neighborhood.

illus. Art Journal 49: 233-7. 1897. Olcott, Charles Sumner. George Eliot; scenes and

people of her novels. N. Y. Crowell [1910]. 231 p.

illus. Literary rambles in Gt. Britain. 1. George Eliot.

illus. In his The lure of the camera. Bost. Hough- ton, 1914. p. 17-35.

15

Sharp, William (Fiona Macleod, pseud.). The country of George Eliot, illus. In his Literary geography. X. V. Scribner, 1904. p. 74-86.

Wood, Esther. The originals of characters and places in George Eliot's novels, illus. Bookman (London) 22: 163-6. Aug., 1902.

Gaskell Andrews, Louise. Old Cranford. illus. port. New

England Magazine n. s. 43: 345-51. Nov., 1910. Brown, Alice. Latter-day Cranford. In her By oak

and thorn. Boston. Houghton, 1896. p. 187-214. Chadwick, Esther Alice. Mrs. Gaskell; haunts,

homes and stories, by Mrs. Ellis H. Chadwick. N. Y.

Stokes [1911]. 472 p. illus. ports. Hill, Constance. Jane Austen, her home and her

friends. Lond. and N. Y. Lane, 1902. 278 p. illus.

ports. Payne, George A. Knutsford in fiction. Gentleman's

Magazine 279 (n.s. 55) : 507-14. Nov., 1895. Tozier, Josephine. A day in Cranford. illus. port.

Putnam's Magazine 2: 643-54. Sept., 1907.

Gray Collins, John Churton. Golsdmith, Collins, and

Gray. In Lang, Andrew, ed. Poets' country. Phil.

Lippincott, 1907. p. 177-90. Grant, Arthur. Stoke Poges and Thomas Gray.

In his Old paths. Bost. Houghton, 1914, p. 61-73. Grave of Gray, the poet. Chambers Journal, n.s. 3:

410-12. June 28, 1845. Roscoe, Edward Stanley. Gray and Stoke Poges.

In his Penn's country. Lond. and N. Y. Longmans,

1914. p. 53-64. Shelley, Henry Charles. Birthplace of Gray's Elegy.

illus. In his Literary by-paths. Bost. Little, 1906.

p. 101-23. Webber, Elizabeth. Tower of ivy Scene of Gray's

"Elegy." illus. Education 33: 417-19. Mar., 1913.

Hardy Harper, Charles George. The Hardy country; literary

landmarks of the Wessex novels. Lond. Black, 1904.

318 p. illus. map. (The pilgrimage series.) [Holland, Clive.] A pilgrimage to Wessex. [Lond.

Lund, 1901.] 28 p. illus. port. map. A journey

made by the Whitefriars Club, June 29, 1901. Thomas Hardy; the man, his books, and the land

of Wessex. Bookman (London) 21: 46-51. Nov.,

1901. Thomas Hardy and the land of Wessex. illus. Pall

Mall Magazine 36: 531-42. Nov., 1905.

16

Thomas Hardy's country; scenes from the Wessex

novels, illus. Bookman (XV\v York) 9: 328-40, 411- L'.'i. 5 19-26. June-Aug.. isvi.

The work of Frederick Whitehead, a painter of

Thomas Hardy's Wessex. illus. Studio. 32: 105-9. July, I'.MM.

In the d'Urberville country, illus. Bookman (Lon- don) (•: H'» S. May. Is'.M.

In Thomas Hardy's country. Temple Bar. 108: 150-53. May, 1896.

Lea, Hermann. Thomas Hardy's Wessex. Lond. Macmillan, 1913. 2 IS p. illus. map.

Saxelby, F. Outwin. A Thomas Hardy dictionary; the characters and scenes of the novels and poems alphabetically arranged and described. Lond. Rout- ledge, 1911. 238 p. maps. Bibliography p. XI- XXII.

Sherren, Wilkinson. The Wessex of romance. Lond. Chapman, 1902. 312 p. illus. Glossary: p. 293-301. Bibliography: p. 305-12.

Stunner, Herbert H. In Hardy's Wessex. Dor- chester; Isle of Portland; Wareham; Isle of Purbeck. Living Age v. 227 (7th ser. v. 9) : 260-61, 395-8, 457-9, 844-5. Oct. 27-Dec. 29, 1900.

Thomas Hardy's Wessex. map. Bookman (London) 1: 26-8. Oct., 1S5U.

White, James William. In Thomas Hardy's country. Nation 55: 184-5. 200-202. Sept. 8, 15, 1892.

Windle, Bertram Coghill Alan. The Wessex of Thomas Hardy. Lond. Lane, 1902. 332 p. illus. maps.

Kipling Forbes, Edgar Allen. Across India with Kim. illus.

World's Work 24: 639-49. Oct., 1912. Maurice, Arthur Bartlett. Rudyard Kipling's United

States, illus. Bookman (N. Y.) 38: 156-63. Oct.,

1913. Munson, Arley. Kipling's India. Garden City,

Doubleday, 1915. 204 p. illus.

Contents. The threshold of India. Anglo India. The

Himalayas. The great desert. The border country.

The oldest land. On the road to Mandalay. Same. Bookman 39: 30-45, 153-71, 255-71, Mar.-

May, 1914. Wolfe", Theodore Frelinghuysen. Kipling. In his

Literary haunts and homes. American authors.

Phil. Lippincott, 1899. p. 207-14. Young, William Arthur. A dictionary of the charac- ters and scenes in the stories and poems of Rudyard

Kipling, 1886-1911. Lond. Routledge [1911].

231 p. Bibliography, including "Addenda" and "a

summary of the books," p. v-xxx.

17

The Sussex of Rudyard Kipling, illus. Bookman

(X. Y.) 43: 38-51. Mar., 1916.

Lamb

Ainger, Alfred. How I traced Charles Lamb in Hert- fordshire. Living Age 241 (7th ser. 23): 655-67.

June, 11, 1904. Boynton, Percy Holmes. London of Byron and

Lamb, illus. port. Chautauquan 62: 33-55. Mar.,

1911. Fitzgerald, Percy Hetherington. Charles Lamb;

his friends, his haunts, and his books. 2d ed. Lond.

Bentley, 1866. 229 p. port. Grave of Charles Lamb. Living Age 75 (3d ser.

19): 316-18. Nov. 15, 1862. Leach, Anna. Where Charles Lamb still lives, illus.

Munsey 17: 569-76. July, 1897. Martin, Benjamin Ellis. In the footprints of Charles

Lamb. N. Y. Scribner, 1890. 193 p. illus. port.

Bibliography: p. 150-93. Same. Scribner's Mag. 7: 267-82, 471-86. Mar.,

Apr., 1890. Urbanus Sylvan, pseud. House in Hertfordshire.

Living Age 239 (7th ser. 21) : 656-61. Dec. 12, 1903.

Meredith Gary, Elizabeth Luther. Landscape background in

George Meredith's writings. Critic 47: 52-7. July,

1905. Lusk, Lewis. George Meredith's country, illus. Art

Journal 72: 35-40, 65-70. Feb.-Mar., 1910. Sharp, William (Fiona Macleod, pseud.}. The

'country of George Meredith, illus. In his Literary

geography. N. Y. Scribner, 1904. p. 1-9.

Scott

Amy Robsart and Cumnor Hall. London Society 10: :;is 53. Oct., 1866.

Bartholomew, John George. "Ivanhoe"; map show- in « routes of Cedric, Isaac, and Brian de Bois-Guilbert. In his Literary and historical atlas of Europe. Lond. Dent, N. Y. Dutton [1912]. p. 129.

Land of Scott, map. In his Literary and histori- cal atlas of Europe. Lond. Dent, N. Y. Dutton [1912]. p. 129.

Crockett, William Shillinglaw. Footsteps of Scott. I.. Mid. Foulis, 190S. 21S p. illus.

The Scott country. 2d ed. Lond. Black, 1902.

510 p. illus. (The pilgrimage series.)

Sir Walter Scott; some of his homes and haunts.

illus. Bookman (London) 21: 190-99. Mar., 1902.

Hannay, David. Sir Walter Scott's country, illus. Art Journal 39: 1-4, 49-52, lO'.t r_>, m ii. Jan.- July. 1887.

18

Howitt, William. Sir Walter Scott, illus. In his Homes and haunts of the most eminent British poets. 3d ed. Lond. Routledge, 1857. p. 446-86.

Hunnewell, James Frothingham. The lands of Scott. Bost. Houghton, 1899. 508 p. illus. maps.

Lang, Andrew. Scott, illus. In his Poets' country. Phil. Lippincott, 1907. p. 83-99.

Mabie, Hamilton Wright. The land of Scott, illus. In his Backgrounds of literature. N. Y. Macmillan, 1912. p. 249-302.

[Martin, John, ed.] Illustrations; landscape, historical, and antiquarian, to the poetical works of Sir Walter Scott. Lond. Tilt [pref. 1834], 731. illus.

Landscape illustrations of the Waverley novels,

with descriptions of the views. Lond. Tilt, 1834. 2 v. v. 1: Waverley to Legend of Montrose. v. '2: Ivanhoe to Woodstock.

Napier, George G. The homes and haunts oi Sir Walter Scott. Glasgow, MacLehose, 1897. 216 p. illus. map.

Norton and Shaw. Shaw's tourists' picturesque guide to Abbotsford, Melrose, and the land of Scott. Lond. n.d. 74 p. illus. map.

Olcott, Charles Sumner. The country of Sir Walter Scott. Bost. Houghton, 1913. 414 p. illus. map. Map of Scotland indicating localities connected with each novel, p. 30.

Ritchie, Leitch. Scott and Scotland. Lond. Long- mans, 1835. 255 p. illus. (Heath's picturesque annual for 1835.)

The scenery of The bride of Lammermoor. Cham- bers' Journal 66 (5th ser. 6): 321-4. May 25, 1889.

Sharp, William (Fiona Macleod, pseud.). Scott- land, illus. In his Literary geography. N. Y. Scribner, 1904. p. 56-73.

Sir Walter Scott's country, illus. Bookman (N. Y.) 16: 210-14. Nov., 1902. Review of W. S. Crokc- ett's book: The Scott country.

Tearle, Christian (pseud, of E. T. Jaques), Abbots- ford house. In his Rambles with an American. N. Y. Duffield, 1910. p. 251-63.

Wright, George Newham. Landscape-historical illus- trations of Scotland and the Waverly novels: from drawings by Turner, Bentley.and Cruikshank. Lond. Fisher. [183?] 2 v.

Stevenson Carrington, James Beebee. Along the route of

Stevenson's Inland voyage, illus. Book Buyer 25:

229-32. Oct., 1902. Visit to Stevenson's Silverado, illus. Lamp 29:

7-18, Aug., 1904.

19

French, Harold. Silverado scene of Robert Louis Stevenson's honeymoon, illus. Overland n.s. 48: 129-37, Sept., 1906.

Hamilton, Clayton Meeker. On the trail of Steven- son. The pictures from drawings by Walter Hale. Garden City, Doubleday, 1915. 151 p.

Contents. Edinburgh. The rest of Scotland. Eng- land. — France. The rest of Europe. The United States.

Hammerton, John Alexander. In the track of R. L. Stevenson and elsewhere in old France. Bristol, Arrowsmith, 1907. 254 p. illus.

Stevenson pilgrimage along the route of "An inland

voyage." illus. Critic 46: 524-35. June, 1905.

Macdougall, Margaret Armour. The home and early haunts of R. L. Stevenson. Edin. White, 1895. 49 p. illus. port.

Masson, Flora. Scottish homes and haunts of Robert Louis Stevenson. Living Age 270 (7th ser. 52): 72-80. July 8, 1911.

Ross, J. Edgar. Silverado today. illus. Overland n.s. 53: 193-9. Mar., 1909.

Ross, John A. The early home of Stevenson, illus. Good Words 36: 181-6. Apr., 1895.

Sanchez, Nellie Van de Grift. In California with Robert Louis Stevenson, illus. port. Scribner's Magazine 60: 467-81. Oct., 1916.

Sharp, William (Fiona Macleod, pseud.). The country of Stevenson, illus. In his Literary geog- raphy." X. V. Scribner, 1904. p. 20-36.

Simpson, Evelyn Blantyre. Robert Louis Stevenson's hills of home. Living Age 229 (7th ser. 11): 255-9. Apr. 27, 1901.

Watt, Francis. Robert Louis Stevenson and Edin- burgh, illus. Art Journal 48: 46-50. Feb., 1896.

Tennyson Allen, Grant. Tennyson's homes at Aldworth and

Faringford. illus. English Illustrated Magazine 10:

145-56. Dec., 1892. Bartholomew, John . George. Arthurian regions.

map. In his Literary and historical atlas of Europe.

Lond. Dent, N. Y. Dutton, [1912]. p. 132. Collins, John Churton. Tennyson, illus. In Lang,

Andrew, ed. Poets' country. Phil. Lippincott, 1907.

p. 253-73. Hargrove, Ethel C. Where Tennyson lived. In her

Wanderings in the Isle of Wight. Lond. Melrose. 1913.

I.. 159-62. Howitt, William. Alfred Tennyson. In his Homes

and haunts of the most eminent British poets. 3d ed.

Lond. Routledge, 1857. p. 691-703.

20

Huckel, Oliver. Through England with Tennyson, a pilgrimage to places associated with the great lau- reate. NTY. Crowell, [1913]. 294 p. illus. ports.

Lincolnshire scenery and character as illustrated by Mr. Tennyson. Macmillan's Magazine 29: 140-4. Dec., ls73.

[Sherwood, John D.J Visits to the homes of authors. The home of A. Tennyson. Hours at Home 5: 116-8. June, 1867.

Walters, John Cuming. In Tennyson land; a brief account of the home and early surroundings of the poet laureate and an attempt to identify the scenes and trace the influences of Lincolnshire in his works. Lond. Redway, 1890. 108 p. illus.

Winterwood, Geoffrey. In the laureate's footsteps. illus. Good Words 33: 670-8, Oct., 1892.

Thackeray

Brown, Alice. Thackeray's homes, illus. Book Buyer 14 : 492-5. June 1897. Review of Crowe, Thackeray's haunts and homes.

Chancellor, Edwin Beresford. The London of Thackeray's novels. Living Age v. 284 (7th ser. v. 66) : 793-7, Mar. 27, 1915.

Crowe, Eyre. Thackeray's haunts and homes. N. Y. Scribner, 1897. 82 p. illus.

Mabie, Hamilton Wright. Thackeray's London. Outlook 106: 140-2. Jan. 17, 1914.

Melville, Lewis (pseud, of Lewis S. Benjamin). The characters and places of Thackeray's books, illus. Bookman (London) 23: 192-200. Feb., 1903.

Thackeray and Thackeray's London, illus. Book- man (London) 40: 17-24. Apr., 1911.

The Thackeray country. Lond. Black, 1905.

223 p. illus. (The pilgrimage series.)

Thackeray's London, illus. port. Century 82:

319-28. July, 1911.

Mudge, Isadore Gilbert, and Sears, M. E. A Thack- eray dictionary: the characters and scenes of the novels and short stories alphabetically arranged. Lond. Routledge, N. Y. Button, 1910. 304 p. Synopses p. xiii-xl. Bibliography, "List of authorities cited": p. xli-xlii. Index to originals of characters and places: p. 301-4.

Rideing, William Henry. In the footsteps of Thack- eray, illus. Century 26 (n.s. 4): 830-44. Oct., 1883.

Thackeray in London. Critic 4: 181-2, 193-4,

Apr., 19, 26, 1884.

Thackeray's London. A description of his haunts

and the scenes of his novels. Lond. Jar vis, 1885. 103 p.

21

Sharp, William (Fiona Macleod, pseud.). Thack- eray-land, illus. In his Literary geography. X. V. Scribner, 1904. p. 87-105.

Smith, Francis Hopkinson. In Thackeray's London. Garden City, Doubleday, 1913. 199 p. Illustrated by the author.

Thackeray's London. Chambers' Journal 69 (oth ser. 9): 641-3. Oct. 8, 1892.

Thackeray's London. Temple Bar 105: 422-32. July, 1895.

West, Sir Algernon. Mayfair and Thackeray. Living Age 248 (7th ser. 30) : 307-14. Feb. 3, 1906.

Wordsworth

Brooke, Stop ford Augustus. Dove cottage: Words- worth's home from 1800-8, December 21, 1799 to May, 1808. Lond. Macmillan, 1899. 75 p.

Burroughs, John. In Wordsworth's country. Cen- tury 27 (n.s. 5): 418-21. Jan., 1884.

Coleridge, Ernest Hartley. William Wordsworth, illus. In Lang, Andrew, ed. Poets' country. Phil. Lippincott, 1907. p. 25-45.

Cuyler, Theodore Ledyard. The English lakes and Wordsworth. Godey's Lady's Book 28: 30-32. Jan., 1844.

Haskell, Mabel Percy. Paradise of poets, illus. Delineator 66: 412-14. Sept., 1905.

Higginson, Thomas Wentworth. Wordsworthshire. Atlantic 96: 88-95. July, 1905.

Howitt, William. Scenery of "The white doe of Rylston." Tait's Edinburgh Magazine 6: 367-73. July, 1839.

William Wordsworth. In his Homes and haunts of

the most eminent British poets. 3d ed. Lond. Rout- ledge, 1857. p. 532-55.

Knight, William Angus. A literary shrine; Dove Cottage, the home of Wordsworth and de Quincey. illus. Century 60 (n.s. 38): 53-62. May, 1900.

Through the Wordsworth country. Lond. Son-

nenschein, 1887. 268 p. illus.

Mabie, Hamilton Wright. The lake country and Wordsworth, illus. In his Backgrounds of litera- ture. N. Y. Macmillan, 1912. p. 3-54.

O'Hagan, Thomas. In the footsteps of Wordsworth- illus. port. Catholic World 78:310-20. Dec., 1903-

Olcott, Charles Sumner. A day in Wordsworth's country, illus. In his Lure of the camera. Bost. Houghton. l'.»l 1. p. .")! 7-2.

22 .

Robertson, Eric Sutherland. Wordsworth and the

English lake country: an introduction to a poet's

country. X. V. Appleton, 1911. 351 p. illus. map.

Title of the English edition: Wordsworthshire.

"Works chiefly consulted:" p. 316-7. "Concordance

showing persons and places belonging to Wordsworth-

shire": p. 340-48. Wilson, James Grant. Footprints of Wordsworth.

illus. Putnam's Magazine 3: 459-64. Jan., 1908. Yarnell, Ellis. Walks and visits to Wordsworth's

country, illus. Lippincott 18: 543-54, 669-82. Nov.,

Dec., 1876. Wordsworth, William. See also Books about the

Lake Country filed under English-General.

AMERICAN General

American literary shrines. Bookman (N. Y.) 36: L>:W-40. Nov., 1912.

Bacon, Edwin Munroe. Literary pilgrimages in New England to the homes of famous makers of Ameri- can literature, and among the haunts and scenes of their writings. N. Y. Silver [1902]. 532 p. illus. map.

Bartholomew, John George. A gazetteer of towns and places in America having a literary or historic interest. In his Literary and historical atlas of America. Lond. Dent. N. Y. Dutton [1911]. p. 137- 166. (Everyman's library'.)

Carruth, Frances Weston. Boston in fiction, illus. Bookman (N. Y.) 14: 236-54, 364-85, 507-21, 590- 604. Nov., 1901-Feb., 1902.

1. The old north end. 2. About the Common. 3. The Back Bay district. 4. Suburban Boston.

Fictional rambles in and about Boston, N. Y.

McClure, 1902. 380 p. illus.

Dell, Floyd. Chicago in fiction, illus. Bookman (N. Y.) 38: 270-7, 375-7. Nov., Dec. 1913.

French, Allen. Chiefly literary, illus. In his Old Concord. Bost. Little, 1915. p. 79-156.

Hemstreet, Charles. Literary New York, its land- marks and associations. N. Y. and Lond., Putnam, 1903. 271 p. illus. map.

Homes of American authors: comprising anecdotal, personal, and descriptive sketches; by various writers. X. Y. Putnam, 1853. 366 p. illus. ports.

Mabie, Hamilton Wright. Backgrounds of litera- ture. N. Y. Macmillan, 1912. 328 p. illus.

Contents. The Lake Country and Wordsworth. Emer- son and Concord. The Washington Irving country. Weimar and Goethe. The land of Lorna Doone. America in Whitman's poetry. The land of Scott. Hawthorne and the new world.

23

Mallary, Raymond DeWitt. Lenox in literature.

illus. port. Critic 41 : 31-40. July, 1902. Maurice, Arthur Bartlett. New York in fiction.

X. V. Dodd, 1901. 231 p. illus. Contents. Old and proletarian New York. About

Washington Square. The new city and suburban New York .

New York of the novelists. N. Y. Dodd, 1916. 366 p. illus.

Same. Bookman N. Y. 42: Sept., 1915-Feb., 1916.

Olcott, Charles Sunnier. The lure of the camera. Bost. Houghton, 1914. 300 p. illus. ports.

Contents. The lure of the camera. Literary rambles in Gt. Britain. A day in Wordsworth's country. From Hawthornden to Roslin Glen. The country of Mrs. Hum- phry Ward. A tour of the Italian Lakes. Literary land- marks of New England. A day with John Burroughs. Glimpses of the Yellowstone. The Grand Cafion of Arizona.

Wilson, Rufus Rockwell. New England in letters. N. Y. Wessels, 1904. 384 p. illus. Chapter head- ings do not indicate the scope of the chapter.

Contents. Through Longfellow's country. Wanderings in Whittier land. The Salem of Hawthorne. Emerson and others in Concord. Cambridge and its worthies. A day of literary beginnings. The autocrat and his comrades. The Boston of a later time. The land of the pilgrims. A windingBay State journey. The Berkshires and beyond. Connecticut wits and worthies.

Wolfe, Theodore Frelinghuysen. Literary haunts and homes; American authors. Phil. Lippincott, 1899. 227 p. illus.

Contents. 1. In oldest New York. 2. About and above City Hall Park. 3. The Latin quarter and its environs. 4. Northward to the Harlem and beyond. Homes and haunts of Poe. Bryant, Whitman, etc., a Long Island ramble. Cooper shrines and scenes. Irving's Sunnyside and Sleepy Hollow. Kipling, Hartford authors, etc., a Connecticut River pilgrimage.

Literary rambles at home and abroad. Phil, and

Lond. Lippincott, 1901. 235 p. illus. America, p. 15-119.

Literary shrines; the haunts of some famous Amer- ican authors. 10th ed. Phil. Lippincott, 1897. 233 p. illus. Chapter headings do not indicate the scope of the chapter.

Contents. The Concord pilgrimage: 1. A village of literary shrines. 2. The Old Manse. 3. A storied river and battlefield. 4. The home of Emerson. 5. The orchard house and its neighbours. 6. Hawthorne's Wayside home. 7. The Walden of Thoreau. 8. The hilltop hearsed with pines. In and out of literary Boston: 1. Cambridge, Elm- wood, Mount Auburn. 2. Belmont, the Wayside Inn, Home of Whittier. 3. Salem, Whittier 's oak-knoll and be- yond. — 4. Webster's Marshfield, Brook Farm. etc. In Berkshire with Hawthorne: 1. The Graylock and Hoosac region. 2. Lenox and Middle Berkshire. A day with the good grey poet.

24

Harte

Beasley, Thomas Dykes. A tramp through the Bret Harte country; with a foreword by Charles A. Mur- dock, San Francisco, Elder [1914]. 96 p. illus.

Clemens, William M. Bret Harte's country. Book- man (X. V.) 13: 223-37. May, 1901.

Doub, R. A. Trip through the Bret Harte country. Overland 2d ser. 60: 234-6, Sept., 1912.

Fulton, Robert. Glimpses of the Mother Lode, illua. Bookman (N. Y.) 39: 49-57. Mar., 1914.

Kyne, Peter B. Trailing Bret Harte by motor, illus. Sunset 31: 97-107. July, 1913.

Peixotto, Ernest C. Through Bret Harte's country, illus. Scribner's Magazine 34: 533-40. Nov., 1903.

Hawthorne

Alden, William Livingston. Scenes from the Marble faun, illus. Scribner's Monthly 2: 493-4. Sept., 1871.

Bacon, Edwin Munroe. Hawthorne at Concord. In his Literary pilgrimages. N. Y. Silver, 1902. p. 402-14.

Cable, Lucy Leffingwell. Old Salem and The scarlet letter, illus. Bookman (N. Y.) 26: 398-403. Dec., 1907.

Clarke, Helen Archibald. Hawthorne's country. N. Y. Baker, 1910. 348 p. illus. port.

Contents. Far afield in New England. Historical miniatures. Puritan tragedies. "The artist of the beauti- ful."— The Roxbury Utopia. In wonderland. English episodes. Italy as Hawthorne saw it. The elixir of life.

Conway, Moncure Daniel. Hawthorne and Brook Farm. Every Saturday 7: 13-18. Jan. 2, 1869.

Harris, Amanda Bartlett. The old Manse at Con- cord. Appleton's Journal 8: 300-301. Sept. 14, 1872.

Hawthorne, Julian. Scenes of Hawthorne's romances, illus. Century 28 (n.s. 6) : 380-97. July, 1884.

The Salem of Hawthorne, illus. Century 28 (n.s.

6): 3-17. May, 1884.

Hawthorne. illus. port. In Homes of American authors. N. Y. Putnam, 1853. p. 291-313.

Morley, George. Hawthorne's Warwickshire haunts. Living Age 225 (7th ser. v. 7) : 379-83. May 12, 1900.

Nevins, Winfield Scott. The homes and haunts of Hawthorne, illus. ports. New England Magazine n.s. 9:289-306. Nov., 1893.

Olcott, Charles Sumner. Hawthorne. Salem and Concord, illus. In his Lure of the camera. Bost. Houghton, 1914. p. 179-206.

Perry, Bliss. Hawthorne at North Adams. Atlantic 71 : 675-82. May, 1893.

25

Wilson, Rufus Rockwell. Hawthorne's Salem haunts.

illus. port. Munsey 20: 370-78. Dec., l*9s. Wolfe, Theodore Frelinghuysen. In Berkshire with

Hawthorne. In his Literary shrines. Phil. Lippin-

cott, 1897. p. 153-98. Other references to Hawthorne throughout the book.

Irving Bacon, Edgar Mayhew. Sunnyside. illus. In his

Chronicles of Tarrytown and Sleepy Hollow. N. Y.

and Lond., Putnam, 1897. p. 66-70. Hemstreet, Charles. The city that Irving knew.

illus. In his Literary New York. N. Y. and Lond.

Putnam, 1903. p. 87-105. Hulbert, H. W. Historic homes; Washington Irving

and Sunnyside. Magazine of American History 12:

153-61. Aug., 1884. Irving, illus. In Homes of American authors. N.Y.

Putnam, 1853. p. 35-61. Lossing, Benson John. Sunnyside, Tarrytown. illus.

In Singleton, Esther, ed. Historic buildings of

America. N. Y. Dodd [c!906]. p. 249-54. Mabie, Hamilton Wright. The Washington Irving

country, illus. In his Backgrounds of ' literature.

X. Y. Macmillan, 1912. p. 101-31. Mapes, Ella Stryker. Where Irving worked and

wandered, illus. port. Critic 41: 328-32. Oct.,

1< M)2. Miller, Harry Edward. In the Sleepy Hollow country.

illus. ports. New England Magazine n.s. 23: 449-

69. Dec., 1900. Rainey, Ada. The city home of Washington Irving.

illu*. House Beautiful 35: 30-31. Dec., 1913. Rockwood, George G. The classic grounds of Ameri- can authors. Irving. [With explanatory text by

Edward Guilbert.] N. Y. 1864. 81. illus. Visit to Sunnyside. Leisure Hour 14: 103-6. Feb.

IS. iMi.-i.

Williams, Lawrence. The ghost in Irving Place. illus. port. Bookman (N. Y.) 30: 53-5. Sept., 1909.

Wolfe, Theodore Frelinghuysen. Irving's Sunny- side ami Sleepy Hollow. In his Literary haunts ami homes. American authors. Phil. Lippincott. IVMi. p. 171 192.

Longfellow

American homes. No. 1. The residence of H. W. Longfellow, Cambridge, Massachusetts, illus. Art Journal 32: r,\ :>. Feb., ISM>.

Bacon, Edwin Munroe. Wayside Inn at Sudbury. illus. In his Literary pilgrimages. N. Y. Silver. I'.MIL'. P. :i»ii' 7().

26

Bangs, Ella Matthews. An historic mansion. The Wadsworth-Longfellow house at Portland, Me. illus port. New England Magazine n.s. 27: 695- 713. Fel>.. 1!»03.

Cammett, Stephen. Early homes of Longfellow. illus. Century 73 (n.s. 51): 647-57. Mar., 1907.

Longfellow's town. Portland, Me. illus. Put- nam's Magazine 1: 648-57. Mar., 1907.

Clarke, Helen Archibald. Longfellow's country. N. V. Baker, 1909. 252 p. illus. port.

Contents. Along the coast of New England. Under the shadow of Blomidon. Idylls from history. The New England Tragedus. The lore of "Hiawatha." In Cam- bridge.

Earl, Fanny Kennish. Longfellow's early home i Portland), illu-. Midland Magazine 9: 402-8. May. ls«is.

Edwards, George Thornton. The youthful haunts of Longfellow. Portland, Me. Edwards, 1907. 205 p. illus. ports.

Goold, Nathan. The Wadsworth-Longfellow house, Portland, illus. In Singleton, Esther, ed. His- toric buildings of America. N. Y. Dodd [c!906], p. 199-204.

The home of Longfellow, illus. Appleton's Journal 2: 577-81, Dec. 18, 1869.

Howard, Honora S. The Longfellow homestead. Canadian Magazine 3: 389-90. Aug., 1894.

Longfellow, illus. In Homes of American authors. N. V. Putnam, 1853. p. 265-87.

Macleod, Campbell. Evangeline's town, where the Acadian lovers met; the true story of Longfellow's poetical romance. Craftsman 13: 534-7. Feb., 1908.

Mapes, Ella Stryker. The Wayside Inn today, illus. Lamp 27: 2s- 32. Aug., 1903.

Mayer, Mary Josephine. The land of Evangeline. il- lus. Critic 41: 108-11. Aug., 1902.

Porter, Noah. Evangeline; the place, the stcry, and the poem. X. V. Cassell [c!882]. 32 p. illus.

Titherington, Richard Handfield. Longfellow's places and people, illus. Munsey 9: 259-64. June, 1893.

Poe

Dugdale, Jennie Bard. The grave of Edgar Allan

Poe. Poet Lore 11: 583-8. Autumn no. 1899. Graves, Charles Marshall. Landmarks of Poe in

Richmond, illus. ports. Century 67: 909-20. Apr.,

I'.HM. Lamb, M. J. The house of Poe at Fordham. illus.

Appleton's Journal 12: 75-7. July 18, 1874. McCabe, Lida Rose. A pilgrimage to Poe's cottage.

illus. Book Buyer 25: 592-8. Jan., 1903.

27

Stedman, Edmund Clarence. Poe's cottage at Fordham. illus. Century 73 (n.s. 51) : 770-73. Mar., 1907.

Visit to Poe's grave. Outlook So: ^:;7 8. Apr. 13, 1907.

Whitty, J. H. Edgar Allan Poe in England and Scot- land, illus. Bookman, N. V. 44: 14-21. Sept., 1916.

Wolfe, Theodore Frelinghuysen. Homes and haunts of Poe. In his Literary haunts and homes: American authors. Phil. Lippincott, 1899. p. 12s.

Whittier Bacon, Edwin Munroe. In Whittier's country, illus.

port. In his Literary pilgrimages. N. V. Silver,

1902. p. 35 64. Forten, C. L. Visit to the birthplace of J. G. Whittier.

Scribner's Monthly 4: 5X1-3. Sept., 1S72. Griffith, George Bancroft. Birthplace and home

of Whittier. Potter's American Monthly 14: 258-

61. Apr., 1880.

Hoyt, Martin W. Rambles in Whittier land. Man- chester, N. H. Granite state Pub. co., 1912. 45 p.

illus. ports. Kennedy, William Sloane. In Whittier's land, illus.

ports. New England Magazine n.s. 7: 275-93. Xov.,

1892. Maulsby, David Lee. Whittier's \Y\\- Hampshire.

illus. Xew England Magazine n.s. 22: (iol-47. Aug.,

1900. Penfield, Roderic C. In Whittier's country, illus.

Harper's Weekly 45: 7<>7. Aug., K>. I'.KM. Pickard, Samuel Thomas. Whittier land, a hand- book of North Essex, containing main- anecdotes of

and poems by John Greenleaf Whittier never before

collected. Bost. Houghton, 1904. 160 p. illus.

map. Tyler, J. G. Whittier's birthplace: Haverhill, Mass.

Magazine of American History 29: 50-51. Jan.,

1893. Wood, Ruth Kedzie. A now pilgrim in Whittierland.

illus. Bookman (X. V.) 38: -1M -'.». Jan.. 1914.

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