CHAPTER XXII.
A Borrower of The Night
ILLUSTRATIONS
Portrait of William Winter--from a crayon by Arthur Jule Goodman
The Anchor Inn
Old House at Bridport
Restoration House, Rochester
Charing Cross
Kensington Palace
The Tower of London
Old Water Gate
Approach to Cheshire Cheese
St. Mary-le-Strand
Temple Church
Gower's Monument
Andrews's Monument
Old Tabard Inn, Southwark
Windsor Castle
St. George's Chapel, Windsor Castle
Windsor Forest and Park
The Curfew Tower
The Sign of the Swan
Westminster Hall
The Mace
Greenwich Hospital
Queen Elizabeth's Cradle
Warwick Castle
Old Inn
Washington Irving's Parlour
From the Warwick Shield
Holy Trinity Church, Stratford
The Inglenook
Approach to Shottery
Distant View of Stratford
Whitehall Gateway
Lambeth Palace
Dulwich College
The Crown Inn, Dulwich
Oriel Window
From the Triforium, Westminster Abbey
Chapel of Henry VII.
Chapel of Edward the Confessor
The Poets' Corner
The North Ambulatory
The Spaniards, Hampstead
The Dome of St. Paul's
The Grange
Shakespeare's Birthplace
Anne Hathaway's Cottage
Charlecote
Meadow Walk by the Avon
Antique Font
Monument
Gable Window
Peveril Peak
St. Paul's, from Maiden Lane
The Charter-house
St. Giles', Cripplegate
Sir John Crosby's Monument
Gresham's Monument
Goldsmith's House
A Bit from Clare Court
Fleet Street in 1780
Gray's Inn Square
Stoke-Pogis Church
Old Church
The White Hart
Column on Barnet Battle-field
Farm-house
Falstaff Inn and West Gate, Canterbury
Butchery Lane, Canterbury
Flying-horse Inn, Canterbury
Canterbury Cathedral
Stratford-upon-Avon
Stratford Church
Washington Irving's Chair
The Stratford Memorial
Mary Arden's Cottage
Church of St. Martin
Westminster Abbey
Middle Temple Lane
_This royal throne of kings, this sceptred isle,_ _This earth of majesty, this seat of Mars,_ _This other Eden, demi-paradise,_ _This fortress built by Nature for herself, . . ._ _This precious stone set in the silver sea, . . ._ _This blessed plot, this earth, this realm, this England, . . ._ _This land of such dear souls, this dear, dear land,_ _Dear for her reputation through the world!_
SHAKESPEARE.
------
_All that I saw returns upon my view;_ _All that I heard comes back upon my ear;_ _All that I felt this moment doth renew._
_Fair land! by Time's parental love made free,_ _By Social Order's watchful arms embraced,_ _With unexampled union meet in thee,_ _For eye and mind, the present and the past;_ _With golden prospect for futurity,_ _If that be reverenced which ought to last._
WORDSWORTH.
SHAKESPEARE'S ENGLAND