Book contents
- Frontmatter
- NOTE TO THE ENGLISH EDITION
- Contents
- I VENICE
- II ITALY REVISITED
- III OCCASIONAL PARIS
- IV RHEIMS AND LAON: A LITTLE TOUR
- V CHARTRES
- VI ROUEN
- VII ETRETAT
- VIII FROM NORMANDY TO THE PYRENEES
- IX AN ENGLISH EASTER
- X LONDON AT MIDSUMMER
- XI TWO EXCURSIONS
- XII IN WARWICKSHIRE
- XIII ABBEYS AND CASTLES
- XIV ENGLISH VIGNETTES
- XV AN ENGLISH NEW YEAR
- XVI AN ENGLISH WINTER WATERING-PLACE
- XVII SARATOGA
- XVIII NEWPORT
- XIX QUEBEC
- XX NIAGARA
- Frontmatter
- NOTE TO THE ENGLISH EDITION
- Contents
- I VENICE
- II ITALY REVISITED
- III OCCASIONAL PARIS
- IV RHEIMS AND LAON: A LITTLE TOUR
- V CHARTRES
- VI ROUEN
- VII ETRETAT
- VIII FROM NORMANDY TO THE PYRENEES
- IX AN ENGLISH EASTER
- X LONDON AT MIDSUMMER
- XI TWO EXCURSIONS
- XII IN WARWICKSHIRE
- XIII ABBEYS AND CASTLES
- XIV ENGLISH VIGNETTES
- XV AN ENGLISH NEW YEAR
- XVI AN ENGLISH WINTER WATERING-PLACE
- XVII SARATOGA
- XVIII NEWPORT
- XIX QUEBEC
- XX NIAGARA
Summary
It will hardly be pretended this year that the English Christmas has been a merry one, or that the New Year has the promise of being particularly happy. The winter is proving very cold and vicious –as if nature herself were loath to be left out of the general conspiracy against the comfort and selfcomplacency of man. The country at large has a sense of embarrassment and depression, which is brought home more or less to every class in the closely-graduated social hierarchy, and the light of Christmas firesides has by no means dispelled the gloom. Not that I mean to overstate the gloom. It is difficult to imagine any combination of adverse circumstances powerful enough to infringe very sensibly upon the appearance of activity and prosperity, social stability and luxury, which English life must always present to a stranger. Nevertheless, the times are distinctly hard—there is plenty of evidence of it—and the spirits of the public are not high. The depression of business is extreme and universal; I am ignorant whether it has reached so calamitous a point as that almost hopeless prostration of every industry which you have lately witnessed in America, and I believe things are by no means so bad as they have been on two or three occasions within the present century. The possibility of distress among the lower classes has been minimised by the gigantic poor-relief system, which is so characteristic a feature of English civilisation, and which on particular occasions is supplemented (as is the case at present) by private charity proportionately huge.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Portraits of Places , pp. 307 - 315Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1883