Women authors of our day in their homes; personal descriptions & interviews; . isall-describing pen, but it has been modified and, forcomfort, vastly improved since the days when Out-doors at Idlewild was penned: The ascent of this range is by no means thegracious acclivity it looks to be from below. It isa labyrinth of knolls and hollows, over which onetravels like an ant through a basket of eggs, comingcontinually upon small mountain farms islandedamong irreclaimable rocks and so hidden behindand among them as to seem contrived by hermitsfor inextricable privacy. Oh, what eyries for suchhuma


Women authors of our day in their homes; personal descriptions & interviews; . isall-describing pen, but it has been modified and, forcomfort, vastly improved since the days when Out-doors at Idlewild was penned: The ascent of this range is by no means thegracious acclivity it looks to be from below. It isa labyrinth of knolls and hollows, over which onetravels like an ant through a basket of eggs, comingcontinually upon small mountain farms islandedamong irreclaimable rocks and so hidden behindand among them as to seem contrived by hermitsfor inextricable privacy. Oh, what eyries for suchhuman eagles as wish to live alone, and yet havethe world within pouncing reach. [119] Louise Chandler Moulton In Boston, Massachusetts BY MRS. MOULTON Born in Pomfret, Connecticut Bedtime Stories. Some Womens Hearts. Swallow-Flights and Other Poems. New Bedtime Stories. Random Rambles. Firelight Stories. Ourselves and Our Neighbors. In the Garden of Dreams. Arthur OShaughnessy : His Life and His Work. In Childhoods Country. Lazy Tours in Spain and Elsewhere. At the Winds >-^ ^ ^ a XI Louise Chandler MoultonIn Boston, Massachusetts THE nearest approach to the literary salon,as it flourishes in Paris and London, isprobably found in the occasional gather-ings that take place in the home of Mrs. LouiseChandler Moulton. This charming woman of theworld, poet, and critic of books, has by the forceof her personality and ability made herself thenatural centre of the bookmen and bookwomen ofBoston. Whoever may have accomplished anyworthy thing in the realm of letters finds a heartywelcome into her circle of acquaintances, there tomingle with men of larger figure in the world andto acquire the inspiration that such intercourse isbound to produce. Mrs. Moulton does not dwell in the fashionablequarter of the town. It was expected to be suchyears ago, but the destiny of residential districts, inBoston at any rate, is proverbially uncertain. Theplans of many a rich and aristocratic fam


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookpublishernewyo, bookyear1903