Remarks On Forest Scenery And Other Woodland Views Relative Chiefly to Pictur

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Remarks On Forest Scenery And Other Woodland Views Relative Chiefly to Pictur
William Gilpin
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We had been mounting gradually from the great road through two or three miles, when the country giving way on the right ^ a grand difplay of woody-fcenery was opened towards Brokenhurft, and Lynd- hurft. On the left, the heath is but meagerly fldrted with wood. To make amends how- ever, I0 3 ever, the cliffs of the ifle of Wight range beyond it in the diftance. Scattered about thefe wild grounds we meet with many tumuli. Between Shirley- holms, and Setley-wood, are four or five. Two of them are... raifed in contiguous circles, which is a circumftance rather uncommon. It feems to indicate, that the perfons, to whofe memory they were conftrufted, had been nearly connected. On pacing the cir- cumference of each, we find they have be- longed to perfons of unequal dignity, in the proportion of a hundred and eight, to eighty three. But a little to the eail of Shirley-holms, near Peatmer-pond, arifes a larger tumulus than either of thefe, called Shirley-barrow. It's circumference is a hundred and forty paces.

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