The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction. Volume 17, No. 495, June 25, 1831
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Various. The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction. Volume 17, No. 495, June 25, 1831
HERMITAGE AT FROGMORE
ANCIENT WAGES TO MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT
THE WORD "EI."
A FAREWELL TO SPAIN
THE DEATH-BEDS OF GREAT MEN
THE NOVELIST
OSMYN AND ZAMBRI
THE NATURALIST
BOTANY OF SHAKSPEARE
THE CUTTLE-FISH
THE OSTRICH
MANNERS AND CUSTOMS OF ALL NATIONS
RUSSIAN BURIAL GROUND
ANCESTORS
THE SELECTOR; AND LITERARY NOTICES OF NEW WORKS
HISTORY OF POLAND
WHITE'S BAMPTON LECTURES
WEALTH OF HENRY VII
SPIRIT OF DISCOVERY
THE COURSE OF THE NIGER
SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS
DISAGREEABLES
THE GATHERER
GAD'S HILL
DIGNIFIED REPROOF
L—A—W
WATERLOO—"FORGET ME NOT."
SWORD PRESENTED BY THE KING TO THE DUKE OF WELLINGTON, ON THE ANNIVERSARY OF WATERLOO
ODDITIES
THE LORD CHANCELLOR
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Frogmore is one of the most delightful of the still retreats of Royalty. It was formerly the seat of the Hon. Mrs. Egerton, of whom it was purchased by Queen Charlotte, in 1792, who made considerable additions to the house and gardens. The grounds were laid out by Uvedale Price, Esq. a celebrated person in the annals of picturesque gardening. The ornamental improvements were made by the direction of the Princess Elizabeth, (now Landgravine of Hesse Homburg,) whose taste for rural quiet we noticed in connexion with an Engraving of Her Royal Highness' Cottage, adjoining Old Windsor churchyard. 1
Frogmore occupies part of a fertile valley, which divides the Little Park from Windsor Forest, and comprises about thirteen acres. Mr. Hakewill describes it as "diversified with great skill and taste, and a piece of water winds throughout it with a pleasing variety of turn and shape. The trees and shrubs, both native and exotic, which spread their shade and diffuse their fragrance, are disposed with the best effect; while buildings are so placed as to enliven and give character to the general scene. The Ruin was designed by Mr. James Wyatt, and being seated on the bank of the water, as well as in part in the wood, it presents, with its creeping ivy and fractured buttresses, a most pleasing object from various points of the garden. The Hermitage (see the Engraving) is a small circular thatched building, completely embowered in lofty trees, and was constructed from a drawing of the Princess Elizabeth. There is also a Gothic Temple, sacred to solitude, and a well-imagined and picturesque barn, which heighten the appropriate scenery. Too much cannot be said of the secluded beauty of this charming spot, and nothing further need be said of the taste and judgment of Major Price, to whom its arrangements have been entrusted."
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Her Royal Highness the Princess Charlotte.
Latimer, when he beheld a fagot ready kindled laid at Ridley's feet, exclaimed—"Be of good cheer, master Ridley, and play the man; we shall this day light such a candle in England, as I hope, by God's grace, shall never be put out."
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