Brannon's Picture of The Isle of Wight - The Expeditious Traveller's Index to Its Prominent Beauties & Objects of Interest. Compiled Especially with Reference to Those Numerous Visitors Who Can Spare but Two or Three Days to Make the Tour of the Island. by George Brannon
page 89 of 162 (54%)
page 89 of 162 (54%)
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all that will here particularly call the stranger from the
carriage-road._ * * * * * In the year 1834, this beautiful spot was advertised to be sold off in small lots for building 18 or 20 villas!--a circumstance much regretted by the admirers of the peculiar scenery of the Undercliff, which was exhibited here in its utmost perfection. Nearly the whole of the land is now disposed of; some of the houses were built for the purpose of letting lodgings; one has been opened as a first-rate Hotel; but the greater number are private residences,--and certainly it must prove a most enviable retreat for families or invalids during the winter months. It is impossible for any spot to be better adapted for a number of houses being built in a comparatively small compass: for the whole of the ground is so romantically tossed about by the sportive hand of Nature,--presenting here a lofty ridge of rocks, there a woody dell adorned with a purling stream or a limpid pool, that most of the houses are completely hid from each other's view. From the bad taste which too generally prevails--we mean the _vanity of glare_--the affectation of _elegance_,--so frequently carried out at the expense of all propriety, we were not without apprehension that many of the gentry at Bonchurch would also neglect the essential rule, that _the peculiar character of every scene demands an_ APPROPRIATE STYLE _in building and decoration_; for it avails little to have ivy-mantled rocks and mossy cliffs, the sunny knoll and the shady glen, with their groves and streams,--if the Genius of the spot be not consulted, and HARMONY made the rule of every innovation and improvement. In a word, it is |
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