by Mary Russell Mitford ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 6, 1987
For the nostalgic Anglophile--a reprinting, with reproductions of contemporary paintings and sketches, and original drawings and watercolors, of essays about country life, first published in England's The Ladies' Journal of the 1820's and 1830's. Mainly brief puffs of pleasure in the seasonal round of a small village, and gentle tidbits celebrating indigenous yeomen and lesser toilers at work, play, and romance, these are the cheerful accounts of rural living that all who didn't have to live it--from squire to straphanger--love to read. Mitford (b. 1787), a good journeyman writer forced to support her parents with her (undoubtedly underpaid) labors, first takes the reader on a tour of ""shady lanes and sunny commons,"" and the dwellings and rambling roads of her village--""a little world of our own."" Later there are walks of pleasure with child and dog to witness such natural events as the first primrose or to enjoy the glories of cowslip gathering, an excursion undertaken ""when the spirits sink and fall. . .under the mere pressure of existence."" There are also dips into society--at the races, haymaking, cricket matches, a Christmas party, etc. Here and there are village tales--the misanthrope who adopts the grandchild of a dying enemy; a girl with more sensibility than sense who loses a beau. A nicely bound, commercially pretty book, with those tributes to bygone bucolic ways and days by Constable, Stubbs, and lesser others complementing Mitford's straightforward prose and popular sentiments--an eye-catcher, likely to appeal for Christmas giving.
Pub Date: Oct. 6, 1987
ISBN: 1604507241
Page Count: -
Publisher: Prentice Hall Press
Review Posted Online: N/A
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 1987
Categories: NONFICTION
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