England of My Heart : Spring eBook

Edward Hutton (writer)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 317 pages of information about England of My Heart .

England of My Heart : Spring eBook

Edward Hutton (writer)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 317 pages of information about England of My Heart .

And so on the next morning the first place I went to see was The Wakes, the house where this great and dear lover of England of my heart lived, dying there in 1793, to lie in his own churchyard, his grave marked by a simple headstone bearing his initials “G.W.” and the date.  In the church is a tablet to him and his brother Benjamin, who has also placed there in memory of him the seventeenth century German triptych over the altar.  But he needs no memorial from our hands; all he loved, Selborne itself in all its beauty, the exquisite country round it, the hills, the valleys, the woods and the streams are his monument, the very birds in their songs remind us of him, and there is not a walk that is not the lovelier because he has passed by.  Do you climb up through the Hanger and admire the beeches there?  It is he who has told us what to expect, loving the beech like a father, “the most lovely of all forest trees whether we consider its smooth rind or bark, its glossy foliage or graceful pendulous boughs.”  Do you linger in the Plestor?  It is he who tells you of the old oak that stood there, and was blown down in 1703 “to the infinite regret of the inhabitants and the vicar who bestowed several pounds in setting it in its place again; but all this care could not avail; the tree sprouted for a time then withered and died.”  Or who can pass by Long Lythe without remembering that it was a favourite with him too.  For he loved this place so well, that as Jacob waited for Rachel so he for Selborne.  He had been born there, where his grandfather being then vicar, aged seventy-two years and eleven months, he was to die in 1720.  He went to school at Farnham and Basingstoke, and then in 1739 to Oriel College, Oxford, where in 1744 he was elected to a Fellowship.  Presently benefice after benefice was offered him but he refused them all, having made up his mind to live and die at Selborne.  Selborne must then have been a very secluded place, the nearest town, Alton, often inaccessible in winter one may think, judging from the description Gilbert White gives of the “rocky hollow lane” that led thither, but it is perhaps to this very fact that we owe more than a few of those immortal pages ever living and ever new.  Since he was cut off from men he was able to give himself wholly to nature.  He is less a part of the mere England of his day than any man of that time; he belonged only to England of my heart.  Yet the events of his time, though they touched him so little, were neither few nor unimportant.  The year of his birth was the year of the South Sea Bubble.  When he was a year old the great Duke of Marlborough died.  His eighth birthday fell in the year which closed the eyes of Sir Isaac Newton.  He was twenty-five in the “forty-five,” when Prince Charles Edward held Edinburgh after Preston Pans.  He saw the change in the calendar, the conquest of India by Clive, the victory and death of Wolfe at Quebec the annexation of Canada, the death of Chatham, the loss of the American Colonies, the French Revolution.  And how little all this meant to him!

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Project Gutenberg
England of My Heart : Spring from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.