[Highways & Byways in Sussex by E.V. Lucas]@TWC D-Link bookHighways & Byways in Sussex CHAPTER III 2/8
They are the smoothest things in England, gigantic, rotund, easy; the eye rests upon their gentle contours and is at peace.
They have no sublimity, no grandeur, only the most spacious repose.
Perhaps it is due to this quality that the Wealden folk, accustomed to be overshadowed by this unruffled range, are so deliberate in their mental processes and so averse from speculation or experiment.
There is a hypnotism of form: a rugged peak will alarm the mind where a billowy green undulation will lull it.
The Downs change their complexion, but are never other than soothing and still: no stress of weather produces in them any of that sense of fatality that one is conscious of in Westmoreland. Thunder-clouds empurple the turf and blacken the hangers, but they cannot break the imperturbable equanimity of the line; rain throws over the range a gauze veil of added softness; a mist makes them more wonderful, unreal, romantic; snow brings them to one's doors.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|