Audiobook
In the late eighteenth century, English writers discovered the landscape, not only in the paintings of Claude Lorrain, Nicolas Poussin and Salvator Rosa, but also as a place to be visited and viewed as if it were a picture. No part of England was more discovered in this period than the Lake District, which was transformed over the course of the next century from a remote region of farmland and inaccessible hills into a wild and romantic landscape of picturesque lake and mountain, described in works such as Thomas West’s A guide to the Lakes (1778). West’s predecessors – Thomas Gray, Arthur Young, Thomas Pennant and William Hutchinson –had merely passed through the Lakes. West, a resident of the Lakes, took the reader on a tour of the district as a whole, visiting all the lakes, with the sole exception of Wastwater. A devotee of the Claude glass – a convex, tinted mirror in which the landscape appears as it might in a painting by Lorrain – West follows and improves upon Gray’s technique of identifying ‘stations’ from which the landscape would appear at its most picturesque. West’s guide remains something of a hybrid, however, with its lengthy antiquarian descriptions of the surrounding towns of Lancaster, Penrith and Kendal. - Summary by Phil Benson
| # | Chapter Name | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 18:42 | |
| 2 | 42:18 | |
| 3 | 13:22 | |
| 4 | 23:13 | |
| 5 | 13:51 | |
| 6 | 41:09 | |
| 7 | 14:24 | |
| 8 | 12:19 | |
| 9 | 16:29 | |
| 10 | 15:32 | |
| 11 | 6:36 | |
| 12 | 13:22 | |
| 13 | 15:49 | |
| 14 | 7:49 |
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