The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction - Volume 13, No. 355, February 7, 1829 by Various
page 19 of 52 (36%)
page 19 of 52 (36%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
THE ANECDOTE GALLERY. * * * * * WINDSOR AS IT WAS. The last Number of the _London Magazine_ contains an article of considerable graphic interest, under the above title. It is written by one "born within a stone's throw of the castle," and, _ni fallor_, by the author of the picturesque description of Virginia Water, in the Magazine for September, last. As the whole article is much too long for our space, we have abridged it, taking care to retain the most characteristic portion of the writer's very pleasing reminiscences:-- My earliest recollections of Windsor are exceedingly delightful. I was born within a stone's throw of the Castle-gates; and my whole boyhood was passed in the most unrestrained enjoyment of the venerable and beautiful objects by which I was surrounded, as if they had been my own peculiar and proper inheritance. The king and his family lived in a plain, barrack-looking lodge at his castle foot, which, in its external appearance and its interior arrangements, exactly corresponded with the humble taste and the quiet, domestic habits of George III. The whole range of the castle, its terrace, and its park, were places dedicated to the especial pleasures of a school-boy. |
|