of trees stands up, almost of the hue of indigo, surrounding
a lonely shepherd’s cote; a distant church rises,
a dark tower over the hamlet elms; far beyond, I see
low wolds, streaked and dappled by copse and wood;
far to the south, I see the towers and spires of Cambridge,
as of some spiritual city— the smoke rises
over it on still days, hanging like a cloud; to the
east lie the dark pine-woods of Suffolk, to the north
an interminable fen; but not only is it that one sees
a vast extent of sky, with great cloud-battalions
crowding up from the south, but all the colour of
the landscape is crowded into a narrow belt to the
eye, which gives it an intensity of emerald hue that
I have seen nowhere else in the world. There
is a sense of deep peace about it all, the herb of
the field just rising in its place over the wide acres;
the air is touched with a lazy fragrance, as of hidden
flowers; and there is a sense, too, of silent and remote
lives, of men that glide quietly to and fro in the
great pastures, going quietly about their work in
a leisurely calm. In the winter it is fairer
still, if one has a taste for austerity. The trees
are leafless now; and the whole flat is lightly washed
with the most delicate and spare tints, the pasture
tinted with the yellowing bent, the pale stubble,
the rich plough-land, all blending into a subdued
colour; and then, as the day declines and the plain
is rimmed with a frosty mist, the smouldering glow
of the orange sunset begins to burn clear on the horizon,
the grey laminated clouds becoming ridged with gold
and purple, till the whole fades, like a shoaling
sea, into the purest green, while the cloud-banks
grow black and ominous, and far-off lights twinkle
like stars in solitary farms.
Of the house itself, exteriorly, perhaps the less
said the better; it was built by an earl, to whom
the estate belonged, as a shooting-box. I have
often thought that it must have been ordered from
the Army and Navy Stores. It is of yellow brick,
blue-slated, and there has been a pathetic feeling
after giving it a meanly Gothic air; it is ill-placed,
shut in by trees, approached only by a very dilapidated
farm-road; and the worst of it is that a curious and
picturesque house was destroyed to build it. It
stands in what was once a very pretty and charming
little park, with an ancient avenue of pollard trees,
lime and elm. You can see the old terraces of
the Hall, the mounds of ruins, the fish-ponds, the
grass-grown pleasance. It is pleasantly timbered,
and I have an orchard of honest fruit-trees of my
own. First of all I expect it was a Roman fort;
for the other day my gardener brought me in half of
the handle of a fine old Roman water-jar, red pottery
smeared with plaster, with two pretty laughing faces
pinched lightly out under the volutes. A few
days after I felt like Polycrates of Samos, that over-fortunate
tyrant, when, walking myself in my garden, I descried
and gathered up the rest of the same handle, the fractures