C. N. and A. M. Williamson
All rights reserved, including that of
translation into foreign languages,
including the Scandinavian
| Patricia Moore | [Frontispiece] |
| PAGE | |
| Long Island "There's absolutely nothing like it on the other side of the water, not even in Devonshire or Dorset" | [87] |
| Easthampton "You enter beside the Great Pond, which is so charming in itself and in its flat frame of village green" | [95] |
| Long Island--South shore "Artists would find a paradise of queer, cozy gables, and corners of gardens crowded with old-fashioned flowers" | [102] |
| "Southampton's soul is very, very old, full of memories of Indians" | [122] |
| Sunnyside "Washington Irving's dear old Dutch house is like a beautiful living body with his memory for its soul" | [190] |
| "The old Dutch Church at Tarrytown" | [197] |
| The Hudson River "When we came into sudden sight of the river there was a magical effect" | [207] |
| Delaware Water Gap "Winding and wonderful it was in beauty" | [213] |
| "The mountains seem cleft in twain. It's a marvellous effect--startling" | [216] |
| York A bit of the rock-bound Maine coast | [303] |
| "The air is spiced with the fragrance of balsam to Crawford Notch" | [310] |
| "The young, slender birches of the mountain wayside" | [319] |
| Crawford's Notch, White Mountains | [324] |
| "I shall always think of Vermont as the State of wild lawns and gardens" | [330] |
| "We found the Green Mountains particularly lovable" | [336] |
| Captain Winston's maps pages [90], [114], [132], [209], [216], [239], [258], [295], [311], [325], [331], and [339] |