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English Hours

Chapter 2: NOTE
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About This Book

A sequence of travel essays and sketches that record personal impressions of towns, cities, cathedrals, castles, and coastal districts across England. The pieces combine close architectural and topographical description with anecdote and atmospheric observation, attending to weather, street life, interiors, and local custom. The writer balances historical associations with immediate sensory detail, moving between brisk reportage and contemplative reflection. Individually dated and varying in tone, the short essays form a conversational travelogue that blends criticism, memoir, and meditation on the character of place.

NOTE

The papers gathered into this series, originally published in various periodicals, have already been reprinted—the earliest in date more than thirty years ago; the others, with the exception of two, more recently, in a volume entitled “Portraits of Places.” They have been here once more placed together, for the great advantage they will be felt to derive from the company and support of Mr. Pennell’s illustrations. Each article is marked with its date, and it is obvious that the impressions and observations they for the most part embody had sprung from an early stage of acquaintance with their general subject-matter. They represent a good many wonderments and judgments and emotions, whether felicities or mistakes, the fine freshness of which the author has—to his misfortune, no doubt—sufficiently outlived. But they may perhaps on that very account present something of a curious interest. I may add that I have again attentively looked them over, with a view to any possible amendment of their form or enhancement of their meaning, and that I have nowhere scrupled to rewrite a sentence or a passage on judging it susceptible of a better turn.

H. J.

1905.