Famous Houses and Literary Shrines of London
CHAPTER XVI
CONCLUSION
When I was writing of what remains to us of the London of Shakespeare, I might have mentioned the four-century-old gateway of Lincoln's Inn, in Chancery Lane, that Ben Jonson helped to build, and close by which, at 24 Old Buildings, Cromwell's secretary, John Thurloe, lived in 1654; and although in my first chapter I gave a fairly lengthy list of famous authors and artists who were Cockneys by birth, I by no means made it so long as I could have done. Hablot K. Browne, otherwise "Phiz," the chief of Dickens's artists, was born in Kennington, and lived for eight years, towards the close of his career, at 99 Ladbroke Grove Road; Lord Lytton, whom Tennyson unkindly described as "the padded man that wears the stays," and who was for a time a more popular novelist than either Dickens or Thackeray, was born at 31 Baker Street, and lived in after years at 12 Grosvenor Square, and at 36 Hertford Street; Gibbon was born at Putney, and lived for some years at 7 Bentinck Street, which he said was "the best house in the world"; John Leech was born over his father's coffee-shop in Ludgate Hill, and lived when he had risen to fame at 32 Brunswick Square, and passed the last years of his life at 6 The Terrace, Kensington; and one who I confess interests me at least as much as any of these, Douglas Jerrold, was born in Greek Street, Soho, lived as a boy at Broad Court, in the same neighbourhood, and afterwards shifted about into half-a-dozen different parts of London, and died in 1857 at Kilburn Priory, on the skirts of St. John's Wood. West Lodge, his house at Lower Putney Common, still stands much as it was when he occupied it, with his mulberry tree still growing in that garden round which, one memorable summer afternoon, he and Dickens, Forster, Maclise, and Macready gave each other "backs," and played a joyously undignified game of leapfrog. I don't know whether anybody reads _Mrs. Caudle's Curtain Lectures_ now, but everybody read them and laughed over them when they were new, and Jerrold's best jokes and witticisms are much too well known to leave me an excuse for repeating any of them here. For all his bitter tongue, he was kind, generous, sensitive, afire with a fine scorn of wrong, injustice, and every variety of social humbug and snobbery. "A small delicately-formed, bent man," is Edmund Yates's recollection of him, "with long grey hair combed back from his forehead, with grey eyes deep-set under penthouse brows, and a way, just as the inspiration seized him, of dangling a double-eyeglass which hung round his neck by a broad black ribbon."
Browning, who was born at Hanover Cottage, Southampton Street, Camberwell, in 1812, lived at De Vere Gardens, and at 19 Warwick Crescent. Removing from 74 Gloucester Place in 1842, Elizabeth Barrett and her autocratic father went to 50 Wimpole Street, and calling there with a friend in 1845, Robert Browning was introduced to her. It was from and to this house that so many of those wonderful love-letters of theirs were written, and little more than a year after their first meeting, her father stubbornly refusing his consent to their union, she stole out by this sedate and sombre door one autumn morning to join her waiting lover, and they were quietly and clandestinely married at the old church round the corner in Marylebone Road--the same church in which, in the same year, Dickens, then living at Devonshire House and within sight of it, married Mr. Dombey, with Captain Cuttle looking on at the ceremony from the gallery.
At 82 Wimpole Street Wilkie Collins died; and at 67, lived Henry Hallam, the historian, and his son Arthur, the friend of Tennyson, who often visited him there, and has enshrined his memory for ever in his _In Memoriam_; where, too, he pictures this house and this street:
"Dark house, by which once more I stand Here in the long unlovely street, Doors, where my heart was used to beat So quickly, waiting for a hand.
A hand that can be clasped no more-- Behold me, for I cannot sleep, And like a guilty thing I creep At earliest morning to the door.
He is not here; but far away The noise of life begins again, And ghastly thro' the drizzling rain On the bald street breaks the blank day."
Theodore Hook, another Cockney, was born in Charlotte Street, Bedford Square; Captain Marryat, another, in Great George Street, Westminster, and whilst he was writing the most famous of his books he lived at 8 Duke Street, St. James's, and at Sussex Lodge, in the Fulham Road. Ruskin, who, like Browning, is included in my earlier list of Cockneys, was born at 54 Hunter Street, and made his home for many years at 163 Denmark Hill, both of which houses still survive him.
Benjamin Franklin lived at 7 Craven Street, Strand; before he rented a house in London after Johnson's death, Boswell had lodgings, on his annual visits to town, in Half Moon Street, Piccadilly, in Conduit Street, Regent Street, and in Old Bond Street; where Sterne dwelt before him and Gibbon after him, and at 27A, Harrison Ainsworth, later than them all; but Ainsworth's more notable residence, where he lived when he was in the full glory of his enormous popularity, is Kensal House, out in the no-longer-rural district of Kensal Green.
At 19 Albert Gate, Sloane Street, lived Charles Reade, who was nearly all his life quarrelling with his critics and fighting against legal injustices with an almost ungovernable fury, and yet David Christie Murray said he was one of the four men he had met who were "distinguished by that splendid urbanity of manner which was once thought to express the acme of high breeding.... A beautiful, stately cordiality commonly marked his social manner, but he could be moved to a towering rage by an act of meanness, treachery, or oppression; and in his public correspondence he was sometimes downright vitriolic." Anthony Trollope died at 34 Welbeck Street; and Lord Macaulay at Holly Lodge on Campden Hill. George Cruikshank lived in the queer, dull-looking little house that still remains at 263 Hampstead Road, and from that address put forth his groundless claims to being the originator of Ainsworth's novels, _Jack Sheppard_ and _The Miser's Daughter_, and Dickens's _Oliver Twist_. Ainsworth was still living, and strenuously denied his assertions; Dickens was dead, but there existed a letter of his about the illustrations to his book that sufficiently proved that the story was not written round Cruickshank's drawings, as the aged artist seemed to have persuaded himself it was. A greater artist than Cruickshank (and another Cockney, by the way) was born in Cumberland Market, near Regent's Park, and died in a sponging-house in Eyre Street Hill, Clerkenwell Road, in 1804. That was George Morland. Two years before his death he went with his wife and put up at the Bull Inn, at Highgate, which was kept by a former acquaintance of his. He is supposed to have utilised as a studio the large room with three bay windows that runs above the bar the full width of the building. He entertained Gainsborough and Romney and other contemporary artists there, but within a few months had had a fierce quarrel with the landlord and returned to lodge with his brother in Dean Street, Soho. He was by then showing the effects of his reckless dissipations, and looked "besotted and squalid and cadaverous; hanging cheeks and pinched nose, contracted nostrils, bleared and bloodshot eyes, swelled legs, a palsied hand, and tremulous voice bespeaking the ruin of what had once been the soundest of frames." Drunk or sober, he worked rapidly and with unfailing mastery, but he was generally cheated by those around him of the due reward of his labours. Going on a short holiday to Brighton, he wrote giving his brother this list of what he had drunk in a single day: "Hollands gin, rum and milk--before breakfast. Coffee--for breakfast. Hollands, porter, shrub, ale, Hollands, port wine and ginger, bottled ale--these before dinner. Port wine at dinner. Porter, bottled porter, punch, porter, ale, opium and water. Port wine at supper. Gin, shrub, and rum on going to bed." At the bottom of the list he sketched a tombstone bearing a skull and crossbones, and by way of epitaph: "Here lies a drunken dog." And debts and duns and death in the sponging-house were the inevitable end of it.
Lady Blessington held her brilliant salon at 8 Seamore Place, Mayfair, before in 1836 she removed to the more noted Gore House, Kensington, and welcomed to her splendid drawing-rooms Byron, Lytton, Disraeli, Landor, Marryat, Dickens, Thackeray, Sydney Smith, Maclise, Hook, and all the greatest men of the day in literature, art, politics, and society, till in 1849 she was overwhelmed with financial embarrassments and fled to Paris, where she died the year after. Gore House has vanished from its place long since, and the Albert Hall more than covers the site of it. But Holland House, which was equally or more celebrated for its magnificent social gatherings in the first half of last century and earlier, still holds its ground. Addison lived there after his marriage to the Countess of Warwick in 1716, and from his bedroom there, in his last hours, sent for his dissipated stepson in order that he might see "how a Christian can die."
Perhaps more interesting than either of these, from a literary standpoint, is the house of Samuel Rogers, 22 St. James's Place, overlooking the Green Park. You can scarcely open the memoirs of any man of letters of his time, but you may read some account of a breakfast or a dinner at Rogers's. "What a delightful house it is!" says Macaulay. "It looks out on the Green Park just at the most pleasant point. The furniture has been selected with a delicacy of taste quite unique.... In the drawing-room the chimney-pieces are carved by Flaxman into the most beautiful Grecian forms. The bookcase is painted by Stothard, in his very best manner, with groups from Chaucer, Shakespeare, and Boccaccio. The pictures are not numerous, but every one is excellent. The most remarkable objects in the dining-room are, I think, a cast of Pope, taken after death by Roubiliac; a noble model in terra-cotta by Michael Angelo, from which he afterwards made one of his finest statues, that of Lorenzo de Medici; and, lastly, a mahogany table on which stands an antique vase. When Chantrey dined with Rogers some time ago he took particular notice of the vase and the table on which it stands, and asked Rogers who made the table. 'A common carpenter,' said Rogers. 'Do you remember the making of it?' said Chantrey. 'Certainly,' said Rogers, in some surprise; 'I was in the room while it was finished with the chisel, and gave the workman directions about placing it.' 'Yes,' said Chantrey, 'I was the carpenter.'" Byron, who was a guest at Holland House and at Lady Blessington's, was a frequent guest at Rogers's table also. It was Rogers who introduced him to Miss Milbanke, the unfortunate lady who was to become his wife; and Byron seems by turns to have admired him, disliked him, and looked upon him with a sort of laughing contempt. "When Sheridan was on his deathbed," he writes, "Rogers aided him with purse and person: this was particularly kind in Rogers, who always spoke ill of Sheridan (to me, at least); but indeed he does that of everybody. Rogers is the reverse of the line 'The best good man with the worst-natured Muse,' being 'The worst good man with the best-natured Muse.' His Muse being all sentiment and sago, while he himself is a venomous talker. I say 'worst good man,' because he is (perhaps) a good man--at least he does good now and then, as well he may, to purchase himself a shilling's worth of Salvation for his Slanders. They are so _little_, too--small talk, and old womanny; and he is malignant too, and envious."
Rogers had a fine head, a distinguished manner, a bland, silky way of saying the most cutting and cynical things. He was not so much a poet as a banker of a poetical temperament. His poetry will presently be forgotten, but his breakfasts and his dinners will be remembered because he lived to be well over ninety, was a very wealthy man of taste, and had the will and the means to play the generous host to some three generations of the wisest, wittiest, greatest men of his era, and several of them said brighter and better things in his dining and drawing-rooms than he ever wrote in his books. He covered such a long span of time that he could entertain Sheridan, who was born in 1751, and Dickens, who died in 1870. Many of the same glorious company had a meeting-place also until a more recent day at Bath House, Mayfair, where Lady Ashburton, the great friend of the Carlyles, held famous receptions, of which Carlyle himself and the Brookfields have left us reminiscences. And the invaluable Allingham has one or two notes about her in his _Diary_; one dated 5th November 1875, in which he says Carlyle passed his house "about four to-day. I overtook him in the Fulham Road, and walked with him to Lady Ashburton's door at Knightsbridge. He said, 'Browning in his young days wore a turn-down shirt collar with a ribbon for a necktie, and a green coat. I first met him one evening at Leigh Hunt's, a modest youth, with a good strong face and a head of dark hair. He said little, but what he said was good.'" Possibly the talk fell upon him because Browning was among the guests he was to meet that day at Lady Ashburton's.
William Morris and Burne Jones lived and worked together at 17 Red Lion Square; Steele used to live in Bloomsbury Square, where later Disraeli and his father lived, at No. 5. George Borrow lived at 23 Hereford Square, South Kensington. Berkeley Square has a peculiar attraction for me, less because Horace Walpole had his home at 42, than because Colley Cibber dwelt as a very old man at No. 20. In the same way I am not so much drawn to Gower Street by the fact that in a greatly altered house there Darwin used to live, as I am to that shabby Percy Street, Tottenham Court Road, where Albert Smith had a house at which Sala once visited him. Walpole and Darwin are, of course, incomparably greater men than Cibber and Albert Smith, but these last two have a curious fascination for me. I read Smith's _Christopher Tadpole_ and _The Scattergood Family_ when I was a boy, and his figure flits elusively in the background of Dickens's reputation, wrapped in a very characteristic mid-Victorian bohemianism, and, without precisely knowing why, I have taken a sort of liking to him. Sala says he was a kind, cheery little man, who when he was at work at home wore a blue blouse. "I recall him," he says, "as a sturdy-looking, broad-shouldered, short-necked man, with grey eyes and flowing locks of light brown, and large side-whiskers; later in life he wore a beard. His voice was a high treble." His study in Percy Street was littered always with French novels, dolls, pipes, cheap jewellery, cakes of soap made in the image of fruit, minature Swiss châlets, fancy costumes, and such a miscellany of odds and ends that it had the appearance of an old curiosity shop. As for Cibber, I began by feeling contempt for him, because of the scorn Pope pours on him in _The Dunciad_, and the character for dulness that was imposed upon him by that savage satirist and his host of imitators. But when I read some of Cibber's comedies (such as _The Careless Husband_, and _Love Makes a Man_) I found them amusing and clever in their fashion, certainly not dull, and when I dropped one day into the National Portrait Gallery and saw that coloured bust of him under a glass case and leering through the glass eyes that have been fitted into his head--I succumbed, and acquired a sneaking regard for the gay old coxcomb that is not yet beginning to cool. You cannot read his plays and his delightful _Apology_ for his Life without getting interested in him; and then if you go and look at that bust you will feel that you know the sly, witty, shrewd, ruddy-visaged, not over clean, furtive, leery old rascal as intimately as if you had been acquainted with him in the flesh.
But if one set out to write of the homes and haunts of these minor celebrities this book would be endless; moreover, many amongst them that have some peculiar attraction for me might have no interest for any one else; and many that for special reasons mean a great deal to you might mean nothing at all to me. So, as the wiser course, I have, in the main, limited my survey to the houses of men and women who are considerable enough to be known, more or less, by every one who has even a nodding acquaintance with literature, and to that extent my chronicle is at an end.
INDEX
Addison, Joseph, 3, 28, 150, 339
Addison Bridge Place, 199, 203
Adelphi Terrace, 114, 223, 233
Ainsworth, W. Harrison, 238, 334, 337
Akenside, Mark, 3, 28, 150
Albany, The, 199
Albemarle Street, 181
Albert Gate, Sloane Street, 334
Albion Street, 296
Aldermanbury, 19
Aldersgate Street, 12, 17, 19
Aldford Street, 178, 181
Aldgate, 4
Allingham, William, 259, 262, 276, 280, 281, 285, 343, 344
Ampton Street, 275
Arbuthnot, John, 31, 150
Archer, Thomas, 2
Argyll Place, 167
---- Street, 167
Arlington Road, 245
Ashburton, Lady, 343, 344
Atterbury, Francis, 31
Austin, Alfred, 253
Avenue Road, 245
Ayrton, William, 207
Bacon, Francis (Lord Verulam), 6
Baillie, Joanna, 145, 194
Baker Street, 328
Balmanno, Mary, 233
Barbauld, Mrs., 146, 220
Barber, Francis, 102
Barham, R. H., 238
Barrett, Elizabeth, 331, 332
Bartholomew Close, 19, 38, 50
Barton, Bernard, 219, 222, 226
Basire, James, 118, 120
Bath House, Mayfair, 343
Bathurst, Dr., 94
Battersea, 26-35, 260
Bayham Street, 314
Beauclerk, Topham, 63, 114
Beaumont, Francis, 20
Bellott, Stephen, 14, 15, 16
Bennet Street, 194
Bentinck Street, 315, 328
Berkeley Square, 344
Besant, Sir Walter, 146
Bird-in-Hand Court, Cheapside, 23
Bishopsgate, 10
Blackstone, Sir William, 80
Blake, William, 9, 118-139, 271
Blandford Square, 245
Blessington, Lady, 338
Bloomfield, Robert, 3
Bloomsbury Square, 344
Bolingbroke, Henry St. John, Viscount, 26-35, 106
Bolingbroke House, 26-35
Bolt Court, 90, 117
Bond Street, 265
Boner, Charles, 279
Borrow, George, 344
Boswell, James, 59, 71, 79, 81, 82, 85, 86, 93-117, 118, 334
Bouverie Street, 181
Bow Lane, 19
---- Street, 90
Brawne, Fanny, 154, 156, 160, 163, 164, 165
Bread Street, Cheapside, 4, 19
Broad Street, Soho, 9, 118, 119, 130, 167
Brontë, Charlotte, 303
Brooks, Shirley, 316
Brown, Charles Armitage, 154, 164, 166
Browne, Hablot K. ("Phiz"), 316, 323, 328
Browne, Sir Thomas, 4
Browning, Robert, 9, 259, 281, 331, 332, 344
Brunswick Square, 328
Buckingham Street, Euston Road, 135
---- ---- Strand, 200, 315
Bunhill Row, 19
Burbage, Richard, 13
Burke, Edmund, 59, 88
Burne-Jones, Sir Edward, 76, 344
Burney, Dr. Charles, 56, 106, 114
---- Fanny, 56
Burns, Robert, 194, 198
Butts, Thomas, 124
Byron, Lord, 9, 67, 68, 155, 167, 193-199, 200, 203, 286, 287, 321, 338, 340
Cade, Jack, 10
Camberwell, 236
Campbell, Thomas, 200
Campden Hill, 334
Cannon Street, 10, 18
Canonbury Tower, 76
Carew, Thomas, 20
Carlyle, Mrs., 279, 285, 286, 292, 318
---- Thomas, 96, 198, 205, 210, 262, 263, 275-286, 291, 292, 293, 294, 296, 303, 304, 317, 321, 343, 344
Carter Lane, 12
Cary, Rev. H. F., 51
Castle Street, Cavendish Square, 89
---- ---- Leicester Square, 63
Cattermole, George, 238
Cave, Edward, 88, 102
Chancery Lane, 4, 328
Charing Cross, 3, 4, 224
Charlotte Street, 144, 332
Charterhouse, 94, 188, 281, 296
Chaucer, Geoffrey, 4
Cheapside, 2, 4, 5, 17, 19, 20, 23, 24
Chelsea, 254, 255-293
Cheshire Cheese, the, 108
Chesterfield, Lord, 103-105
Chesterton, G. K., 128
Cheyne Row, 275-286
Cheyne Walk, 254, 255, 256-265, 273-275
Chiswick, 36-51
Christ's Hospital, 200
Churchill, Charles, 6, 44, 47, 48
Cibber, Colley, 28, 344, 347
Clarke, Cowden, 156, 240
---- Mrs. Cowden, 317
Cleveland Street, 314
Clifford's Inn, 220
Cloth Fair, 10
Cobbett, William, 200
Colebrook Row, 219, 220, 221, 223, 224
Coleridge, S. T., 156, 199-206, 208, 212, 213, 214, 215, 216, 223
College Street, Kentish Town, 163
Collins, Wilkie, 146, 318, 332
Colman, George, 67
Colvin, Sir Sidney, 150
Condell, Henry, 19
Conduit Street, Regent Street, 334
Congreve, William, 150
Constable, John, 143-145, 153
Cornhill, 1, 2, 6
Cornwall, Barry, 216, 238
Coryat, Thomas, 19
Covent Garden, 41, 109, 135, 200, 216, 217, 218
Cowley, Abraham, 4
Cranbourne Street, 38
Craven Street, Strand, 50, 334
Cripplegate, 6, 19
Cross, John, 254
Cruikshank, George, 238, 316, 334, 337
Cumberland Market, 337
Cunningham, Allan, 43, 59
Darwin, Charles, 344
Davies, Thomas, 109, 110, 113
Day, Thomas, 187-193
Dean Street, 41, 167, 338
Defoe, Daniel, 6
Dekker, Thomas, 19
Denmark Hill, 334
Dennis, John, 32, 220
De Quincey, Thomas, 168-177, 206
De Stael, Madame, 167
De Vere Gardens, 331
Devereux Court, 3
Devil Tavern, 19, 108
Devonshire Terrace, 239, 323, 332
Dibdin, Charles, 245
Dickens, Charles, 3, 146, 149, 153, 238, 239, 250, 286, 287, 294, 300, 311, 312, 313, 314-327, 328, 331, 332, 334, 337, 338, 343, 344
---- Mrs., 303, 322
Dilke, Wentworth, 154, 156
Disraeli, Benjamin (Lord Beaconsfield), 167, 338, 344
---- Isaac, 344
Dobson, Austin, 294
Dodsley, Robert, 96
Donne, Dr. John, 4, 19
Doughty Street, 316, 317, 318, 322, 323
Dowden, Dr., 181
Down Street, 280
Dryden, John, 167
Duke Street, 333
Du Maurier, George, 146
Dyer, George, 220, 232
East Smithfield, 4
Edmonton, 8, 225, 226-232
Edwardes Square, 293
Eliot, George, 245-254, 255
Elm Tree Road, 233, 236, 238, 239, 240
Ely Place, 10
Emerson, R. W., 280, 281
Enfield, 223, 225, 226
Exeter Street, 89
Felpham, 127, 136
Fetter Lane, 90
Fielding, Henry, 43, 71, 72
Fields, Ticknor, 303
Finchley Road, 237, 242
Fitzgerald, Edward, 142, 153, 303, 305
---- Percy, 89
Fitzosbert, William, 1
Fitzroy Square, 273
---- Street, 314
Flaxman, John, 120-139, 140, 167
Fleet Street, 4, 8, 89, 108, 109, 181
Fleming, Mrs., 76, 79
Fletcher, John, 4, 18, 20
Forster, John, 87, 149, 238, 294, 295, 318, 321, 322, 323, 331
Fountain Court, 131, 134
Franklin, Benjamin, 49, 334
Friday Street, 18, 20
Frith Street, 167, 181, 185
Froude, J. A., 279
Fulham Road, 266, 333
Fuller, Thomas, 20
Furnival's Inn, 315, 316
Gad's Hill Place, 315, 324
Gainsborough, Thomas, 64, 67, 130, 153, 337
Gamble, Ellis, 38, 39
Garrick, David, 43, 48, 50, 59, 96, 103, 110, 114, 153
---- Mrs., 114
Garth, Sir Samuel, 31
Gay, John, 31, 150
Gerrard Street, 42, 59, 167
Gibbon, Edward, 328
Gilchrist, Alexander, 123, 124, 131
Gilman, Mr., 156, 223
Globe Theatre, 12, 13, 18, 19
Gloucester Place, 331
Godwin, Mary, 181
---- William, 216
Goldsmith, Oliver, 59, 63, 68, 71, 76, 79, 80, 81, 82, 85, 86, 87, 88, 153
Gore House, Kensington, 338
Gough Square, 90, 95-109
Gower, John, 18
Gower Street, 344
Gray, Thomas, 6
Gray's Inn, 90
Great Coram Street, 296
---- George Street, 333
---- Newport Street, 56
---- Portland Street, 117
---- Queen Street, 117, 118
Greaves, Walter, 260, 262, 273
Greek Street, 168-177
Green Street, 120
Greene, Robert, 13
Grosvenor Square, 328
Half Moon Street, 334
Hall, S. C., 185
Hallam, Arthur, 332
---- Henry, 332
Hamilton, Lady, 142
---- Sir William, 275
Hammersmith, 200, 271, 294
Hampstead, 140-166
Hampstead Road, 314, 334
Hannay, James, 300
Harley Street, 271
Harmsworth, Cecil, 90
Harry, M. Gerard, 266
Hawkesworth, Dr. John, 94, 102, 103
Hawkins, Sir John, 63, 93, 94, 108
Hawthorne, Nathaniel, 294
Haydon, Benjamin, 135, 156, 158, 181, 210
Hayley, William, 124, 134, 140, 142
Hazlitt, Mrs., 220
---- William, 39, 156, 167, 181-186, 200, 203, 204, 205, 207, 216
Heminge, John, 19
Hercules Buildings, Lambeth, 123-124
Hereford Square, 344
Herrick, Robert, 5
Hertford Street, 328
Highgate, 156, 157, 199, 223, 259, 337
Hind, Lewis, 271
Hobbes, Thomas, 3
Hogarth, Mary, 322
---- Mrs., 50-51
---- William, 36-51, 56, 63, 68, 79, 150
Hogg, T. J., 177
Holborn, 90, 226
Holcroft, Thomas, 216
Holland House, 339
Holles Street, 9, 193
Hone, William, 158, 223
Hood, Thomas, 9, 223, 233, 235-245
Hook, Theodore, 332, 338
Hungerford Market, 314
Hunt, Holman, 9
---- Leigh, 68, 153, 155, 156, 158, 210, 285, 286-295, 318, 344
Hunter Street, 334
Irving, Washington, 38
Islington, 76, 79, 219-221
Isola, Emma, 227, 228, 231
Ivy Lane, 94, 108
Jeffrey, Francis, 275
Jerrold, Douglas, 239, 294, 331
Johnson, Mrs., 97, 98, 101
---- Samuel, 3, 33, 43, 50, 52, 59, 60, 63, 68, 71, 72, 79, 81, 82, 86, 88, 89-117, 275
Johnson Street, 314
Johnson's Court, 90
Jonson, Ben, 4, 19, 20
Keats, John, 6, 23, 153-166
Kemble, John, 167
Kemp, William, 13
Kensal Green, 334
Kensington, 293, 296, 299, 303-306, 311, 328, 338, 339
---- Gardens, 300
Kilburn Priory, 331
King Street, Covent Garden, 200
Kingsley, Charles, 255
---- Henry, 255
Kit-Kat Club, 150
Knight, Joseph, 256
Ladbroke Grove Road, 328
Lamb, Charles, 6, 9, 39, 40, 51, 80, 86, 130, 156, 186, 200, 206, 207-232, 233, 234, 235, 236, 240, 241, 287
---- Mary, 209, 213, 215, 216, 220, 222, 223, 224, 225, 226, 231, 233, 234
Landor, Walter Savage, 208, 338
Landseer, Sir Edwin, 238
Langland, John, 1
Langton, Bennet, 63, 72, 103
Lant Street, 314
Leathersellers' Buildings, 3
Lecky, Mrs., 281
Leech, John, 328
Leicester Square, 38, 39, 49, 52, 59, 60, 63, 81, 86, 88, 117, 120
Lennox, Mrs., 108
Levett, Robert, 102, 103
Lewes, George Henry, 249, 253, 316
Lincoln's Inn Fields, 149, 322
Little College Street, 314
---- Queen Street, 212
Lloyd, Charles, 215
Locke, John, 207
Lombard Street, 6
London Bridge, 24
---- Stone, 10
Loudon Road, 245
Ludgate Hill, 328
Lytton, Lord, 242, 250, 328, 338
Macaulay, Lord, 334, 340
Maclise, Daniel, 149, 239, 255, 331, 338
Macready, W. C., 331
Maiden Lane, 271
Manning, Thomas, 211
Marchmont Street, 181
Marryat, Captain, 238, 333, 338
Marston, Philip Bourke, 9
Marylebone Road, 288, 323, 332
Massinger, Philip, 18
Mathews, Charles, 197
Matthew, Mrs., 120, 134
Mawson Row, Chiswick, 36
Mecklenburgh Square, 316
Medwin, 177
Meredith, George, 255
Mermaid Tavern, 18, 19, 20
Middleton, Thomas, 4
Milbanke, Anna Isabella, 194, 197, 199, 340
Mill, John Stuart, 9, 275
Milnes, Moncton (Lord Houghton), 238
Milton, John, 4, 19
Monkwell Street, 14, 15, 16, 19
Montagu, Lady Mary Wortley, 28
Moore, Thomas, 67, 194
Moorfields, 6, 153
More, Hannah, 114
Morland, George, 337, 338
Morris, William, 37, 344
Mount Street, 178
Mountjoy, Christopher, 14, 15, 16, 17
Moxon, Edward, 227, 228, 231
Mulready, William, 167
Munday, Anthony, 19
Munro, Alexander, 281
Murray, David Christie, 334
---- John, 198
New Street, 135
Newgate Street, 200
Newman Street, Oxford Street, 63
Newton, Sir Isaac, 52-56, 207
Nollekens, Joseph, 39, 140
Norfolk Street, Strand, 200
North Bank, 245
---- End, Fulham, 71, 72, 73
Northcote, James, 167
Old Bond Street, 197, 334
Old Buildings, Lincoln's Inn, 328
Onslow Square, 306
Opie, Mrs., 198
Oxford Street, 168, 169, 174
Palace Green, Kensington, 311
Pall Mall, 64, 200, 205
Parson's Green, 71
Patmore, P. G., 185, 211
Peckham Rye, 118
Peel, Sir Robert, 242, 325
Pennell, Mr. and Mrs. J., 260, 261, 265, 266, 267, 268
Percy, Bishop, 117
---- Street, Tottenham Court Road, 344, 347
Philip, Mrs. and Miss Birnie, 267, 268
Phillips, Sir Richard, 51
Piccadilly, 199, 334
Poland Street, 123, 167, 177, 178
Pope, Alexander, 6, 26-35, 36, 106, 150, 155, 347
Pope's Head Alley, 2
Poultry, the, 9
Praed, W. Mackworth, 88
Prior, Matthew, 3
Putney, 255, 295, 328, 331
Queen Anne Street, 271, 272, 273, 274
Quiney, Richard, 12
Raleigh, Sir Walter, 20
Ralph, James, 36
Reade, Charles, 334
Red Lion Square, 344
Reynolds, John Hamilton, 156, 223
---- Sir Joshua, 33, 56, 59, 60, 63, 64, 67, 81, 86, 88, 103, 110, 114, 117, 130, 141, 153, 271
Richardson, Samuel, 42, 68, 71-75, 97
Ritchie, Lady Thackeray, 299, 300, 305, 306
Robert Street, Adelphi, 223, 233
Roberts, David, 272, 273
Robinson, Crabb, 130, 233
Rogers, Samuel, 67, 145, 194, 200, 203, 205, 339-343
Romney, George, 135, 140-143, 337
Rossetti, Christina, 9
---- Dante Gabriel, 9, 255, 259, 260, 261
---- W. M., 255
Rowan Road, 294
Rowley, William, 19
Ruskin, John, 9, 265, 281, 334
Russell Square, 303
Russell Street, Covent Garden, 109, 216, 217, 218, 219
St. Andrew Undershaft, 10
St. Anne's, Soho, 186
St. Bartholomew the Great, 10
St. Clement Danes, 89, 108
St. Helen's, Bishopsgate, 10
St. James's Place, 339
---- Street, 199
St. John's Wood, 233, 236-245, 253, 254, 288, 331
St. Martin's Street, 52
St. Olave, Silver Street, 15, 16
St. Saviour's, Southwark, 10, 19
Sala, George Augustus, 316, 323, 325, 326, 344, 347
Salisbury Court, 42
Savile Row, 68
Scott, Sir Walter, 145, 197
Seamore Place, 338
Selden, John, 20
Shakespeare, Edmund, 18
---- William, 6, 10-24, 106, 328
Shelley, Percy Bysshe, 156, 167, 177-181, 206, 287, 288, 294
Sheridan, Richard Brinsley, 67, 68, 194, 340, 343
Shirley, James, 4
Silver Street, 14, 16, 17
Smith, Albert, 344, 347
Smith, J. T. ("Rainy Day"), 120, 140
Smith, Sidney, 316, 338
Smollett, Tobias, 255
Soho, 41, 42, 56, 59, 118-123, 130, 167-186, 338
Soho Square, 167, 168
Southampton Street, Camberwell, 331
South Moulton Street, 127, 129, 131
Southey, Robert, 223
Southwark, 10, 11
Spencer, Herbert, 245
Spenser, Edmund, 4
Stanfield, Clarkson, 146, 149, 238, 272
Staple Inn, 10, 90, 109
Steele, Richard, 3, 150, 344
Sterne, Laurence, 334
Stevenson, Robert Louis, 150, 241
Stothard, Thomas, 134, 271
Strand, 6, 7, 8, 90, 105, 131, 315
Stubbs, Bishop, 3
Sullivan, Sir Arthur, 9
Swift, Jonathan, 27, 31, 150
Swinburne, A. C., 9, 255, 327
Talfourd, T. N., 210, 216
Tavistock Square, 324
Taylor, John, 160
Temple Bar, 19
Temple, Rev. T. W., 117
Temple, the, 6, 7, 10, 72, 80, 87, 177, 207, 216, 218, 296, 304
Tennyson, Alfred, Lord, 142, 150, 328, 332
Terrace, the, Kensington, 328
Thackeray, W. M., 88, 153, 208, 242, 296-313, 314, 315, 326, 328, 338
Thames Street, 4, 18
Thomson, James, 27
Thornhill, Sir James, 41, 42, 52, 167
Thrale, Mrs., 63
Thurloe, John, 328
Tite Street, 265, 266
Tower, the, 10
Trollope, Anthony, 312, 313, 326, 334
Turk's Head, 42
Turner, J. M. W., 9, 260, 268-275
Turpin, Dick, 153
Twickenham, 31, 32, 35, 271
Upper Cheyne Row, 286, 288, 291-293
Vale, the, Chelsea, 266
Vine Street, Westminster, 6
Wallace, Charles William, 12, 14, 15
Walpole, Horace, 255, 344
Wanstead, 236
Warburton, William, 33
Wardour Street, 135
Warton, Joseph, 28, 94
Warwick Crescent, 331
Watts, G. F., 262
Watts-Dunton, Theodore, 23, 255
Webster, John, 4
Welbeck Street, 334
Wellclose Square, 187
Wellington Street, Strand, 315, 324
West, Benjamin, 43, 63
Westbrook, Harriett, 178, 181
Westminster, 6, 333
---- Abbey, 10, 134
Whistler, James McNeill, 39, 256, 259-268, 271
Whitefriars Street, 2
Wilderness Row, Clerkenwell, 296
Wilkes, John, 44
Wilkins, George, 15, 19
Williams, Anna, 101, 102, 106
Will's Coffee House, 216
Wimbledon Park Road, 245-253
Wimpole Street, 265, 331, 332
Winchmore Hill, 236
Wine Office Court, 76, 108
Wood Street, Cheapside, 17, 19
Woodstock Street, 89
Wordsworth, William, 7, 8, 145, 205, 208, 216, 220, 222, 225, 226
Yates, Edmund, 309, 310, 311, 312, 316, 331
Young Street, Kensington, 296, 299, 303, 304, 305, 306
Printed by BALLANTYNE, HANSON & CO. Edinburgh & London.
Transcriber's Notes:
Passages in italics are indicated by _italics_.
Superscripted characters are indicated by {superscript}.