A Dialogue upon the Gardens of the Right Honorouble the Lord Viscount Cobham at Stow in Buckinghamshire

audiobook

A Dialogue upon the Gardens of the Right Honorouble the Lord Viscount Cobham at Stow in Buckinghamshire

by William Gilpin

EN·~1 hours·6 chapters

Chapters

6 total
1

INTRODUCTION

17:38
2

NOTES TO THE INTRODUCTION

3:18
3

BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE

0:15
4

DIALOGUE

0:01
5

GARDENS

1:11:46
6

The Augustan Reprint Society

5:07

Description

In 1747 a keen observer wandered through the celebrated grounds of Stowe, recording his impressions in a lively dialogue. Two interlocutors, Callophilus and Polypthon, argue the merits of artful ornamentation versus untamed scenery, each quoting contemporary poets and designers to support their views. Their conversation frames the garden as a living textbook of the emerging English landscape movement.

Readers are guided past the grand Rotunda overlooking the ornamental Queen’s Pool, past octagonal lakes crowned with obelisks, and into the newly begun Grecian Valley, a hint of the more natural style that would soon dominate. The work captures the tension between carefully staged vistas and spontaneous ones, offering insight into how early patrons and designers negotiated beauty, virtue, and public taste. For anyone interested in the roots of the picturesque, the dialogue provides a vivid, first‑hand snapshot of Stowe at a pivotal moment.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (94K characters)

Series

Augustan Reprint Society, publication number 176

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Tor Martin Kristiansen, Sue Fleming, Joseph Cooper and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2012-06-06

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

William Gilpin

William Gilpin

1724–1804

A clergyman, schoolmaster, and traveler, he helped turn the idea of the "picturesque" into a major way of seeing landscapes in Britain. His books mixed practical advice, moral reflection, and a sharp eye for scenery, making him an influential voice in late eighteenth-century travel writing.

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