From London to Land's End / and Two Letters from the "Journey through England by a Gentleman"
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About This Book
A lively early-18th-century travelogue tracing a journey from London westward to the southwestern tip, combining topographical description, accounts of towns, social manners, and economic practices. The narrator records architecture and royal estates, local industries such as sheep farming and fishing, maritime disasters and storm stories including lighthouse loss and shipwrecks, dialectal curiosities and provincial customs, and political observations on parliamentary representation; he also proposes practical schemes notably for settlement of refugees. Sketches of everyday people, such as shepherds, fishermen, and merchants, and comparisons of past and present landscapes knit the observations into an informal portrait of England.
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