Resources from the exhibition
Over 150 literary works, including many first-time loans from overseas and directly from authors: sound recordings, videos, letters, photographs, maps, song lyrics and drawings - as well as manuscripts and printed editions.

Geoffrey Chaucer, The Canterbury Tales
This manuscript of ‘The Canterbury Tales’ describes the pilgrims who assembled in Southwark. References to the capital in the Tales are plentiful, including the Prioress, whose suspect French was learnt in the 'scole of Stratford atte Bowe'.
Geoffrey Chaucer, The Canterbury Tales, early 15th century, Lansdowne MS 851 © The British Library Board
William Blake's Notebook
Like the narrator of his 1792 poem 'London', William Blake would walk the streets of his neighbourhood, seeking inspiration, but alert to the signs of suffering he encountered.
William Blake's Notebook, 1787-1817, Add. MS 49460 © The British Library Board
Samuel Taylor Coleridge: 'Lakes' Notebook
A map from one of Coleridge's notebooks kept between July and September 1802, recording his solitary exploration of the mountainous landscape of the Lake District.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge, 'Lakes' Notebook, 1802 © The British Library Board
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Lewis Carroll, 'Alice's Adventures Under Ground'
The Thames was an inspiration for one of the greatest children's classics – Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, here seen in its first handwritten version
Lewis Carroll, 'Alice's Adventures Under Ground', 1865, Add. MS 46700 © The British Library Board
Laurie Lee, Cider with Rosie
One of the great nostalgic paeans to rural life, Cider with Rosie is an autobiographical account of Laurie Lee's childhood in Slad, Gloucestershire.
Laurie Lee, Cider with Rosie, 1959, Add. MS 88936/2/25 © United Agents on behalf of the Estate of Laurie Lee
Ted Hughes and Fay Godwin, Remains of Elmet
Ted Hughes spent his earliest years in the Calder Valley in West Yorkshire (the ancient Celtic kingdom of Elmet), and celebrated the area in a collaboration with photographer Fay Godwin.
Ted Hughes and Fay Godwin, Remains of Elmet, 1979 © Fay Godwin

Angela Carter, Wise Children
After time in Japan, Carter settled in south London, and Wise Children is a lament for a lost London and a celebration of the dizzying linguistic richness of its inhabitants.
Angela Carter, Wise Children, 1991, Add. MS 88899/1/16 © Angela Carter. Reproduced by permission of the Estate of Angela Carter









