قراءة كتاب Hampton Court

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Hampton Court

Hampton Court

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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HAMPTON COURT

Described by Walter Jerrold
Pictured by E. W. Haslehust

A castle tower

BLACKIE AND SON LIMITED
LONDON GLASGOW AND BOMBAY
1912

THE LION GATE

 
Beautiful England
Volumes Ready
Oxford The Cornish Riviera
The English Lakes Dickens-Land
Canterbury Winchester
Shakespeare-Land The Isle of Wight
The Thames Chester
Windsor Castle York
Cambridge The New Forest
Norwich and the Broads Hampton Court
The Heart of Wessex Exeter
The Peak District  
 
Uniform with this Series
Beautiful Ireland
LEINSTER MUNSTER
ULSTER CONNAUGHT
 

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

  Page
The Lion Gate Frontispiece
The Great Gatehouse, West Entrance 8
A Corner of Wolsey’s Kitchen 14
Anne Boleyn’s Gateway, Clock Court 20
Master Carpenter’s Court 26
Fountain Court 32
The Great Hall 38
The Pond Garden 42
East Front from the Long Water 46
The Wilderness in Spring 50
The Long Walk 54
The Long Water in Winter 58

Hampton Court
“Close by those meads for ever crown’d with flowers
Where Thames with pride surveys his rising towers
There stands a structure of majestic frame,
Which from the neighb’ring Hampton takes its name.”—Pope.

I

For combined beauty and interest—varied beauty and historical interest—there is no place “within easy reach of London”, certainly no place within the suburban radius, that can compare with the stately Tudor palace which stands on the left bank of the Thames, little more than a dozen miles from the metropolis and, though hidden in trees, within eye-reach of Richmond. It is not only one of the “show places”, which every traveller from afar is supposed to visit as something of a duty, but it is a place that conveys impressions of beauty and restfulness in a way that few others can. It remains ancient without having lapsed into a state of desuetude that leaves everything to the imagination; it is a living whole far from any of the garishness that belongs to contemporaneity. Whether seen from the outside on the west, where the warm red brick, the varied roofs, the clustered decorative chimneys suggestive of the Tudor time make a rich and harmonious whole; or from the south east, where the many-windowed long straight lines of the Orange additions show the red brick diversified with white stone, it is a noble and impressive pile. Within, too, are priceless treasures, themselves alone the objective of countless pilgrimages. And recognizing the attractions of the buildings and their contents is to take no account of the lovely grounds, and of the crowding associations of a place that, since its establishment four hundred years ago, has again and again been the centre at which history was made.

Throughout our records for many centuries the valley of the Thames has been favoured when our monarchs have sought to establish a new home. Greenwich and London—the Tower, Whitehall, Buckingham Palace—Richmond and Hampton Court, Windsor, Reading and Oxford, are some of the places that have at one time or another been the chosen centre of royal life; and Hampton Court Palace is the newest of those situated close on the river’s bank, though nearly two hundred years have elapsed since it was a regular royal

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