“The marvellous brilliancy of [the planet (that looks like a star)] Venus toward the close of the month will probably cause many persons ignorant of astronomy to mistake it for an artificial light; indeed, one evening about five years ago Westminster Street was lined with curious and excited watchers who pointed out the planet as the searchlight of an aëroplane.” — H.P. Lovecraft, “The September Sky” from his regular astronomy column.
Judging by the female fashions and the electric trams the picture might be the late 1900s, and thus about the time of the “about five years ago” Lovecraft refers to in his 1914 column. In the picture a sign for the Empire Theater can just about be discerned, in the distance on the right. Illiteracy is still a factor in everyday life — as evidenced by the visual shop signs such as a huge key for a locksmith and key-cutter, and an eye for an optician. Lovecraft’s College Hill is glimpsed, rising up as some smudges of green at the end of the street.