"... this tide is always moving! Always! When all those people we now see in such activity are in their graves, the same hurried activity will still continue here ..." - Hans Christian Andersen
When Hans Christian Andersen visited London in June 1847 he was obviously impressed by the pace of London life. In his autobiography he called the English capital,
"London, the city of cities! ... Here is Paris but with a mightier power; here is the life of Naples but without its bustle."
Hans Christian Andersen was not the only notable figure of the 19th Century to be struck by the pace of London life. When the composer Felix Mendelssohn visited London in 1829 he wrote to his sister,
"It is fearful! It is mad! I am quite giddy and confused. London is the grandest and most complicated monster on the face of the earth."
These observations of London are just a few of the many descriptions which can be found on the interactive map, Lost & Found: A European Literary Map of London.
As a global city, once at the heart of a massive colonial Empire, London has of course long attracted visits by writers, artists and intellectuals from around the world. University College London is curating how London has been seen through the eyes of Europe's cultural luminaries by mapping some of these observations of the city.
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