[Life and Letters of Lord Macaulay by George Otto Trevelyan]@TWC D-Link book
Life and Letters of Lord Macaulay

CHAPTER VI
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By the evening of the 24th June he was once more on the road; and, about noon on the following day, he began to ascend the Neilgherries, through scenery which, for the benefit of readers who had never seen the Pyrenees or the Italian slopes of an Alpine pass, he likened to "the vegetation of Windsor Forest, or Blenheim, spread over the mountains of Cumberland." After reaching the summit of the table-land, he passed through a wilderness where for eighteen miles together he met nothing more human than a monkey, until a turn of the road disclosed the pleasant surprise of an amphitheatre of green hills encircling a small lake, whose banks were dotted with red-tiled cottages surrounding a pretty Gothic church.

The whole station presented "very much the look of a rising English watering-place.

The largest house is occupied by the Governor-General.

It is a spacious and handsome building of stone.

To this I was carried, and immediately ushered into his Lordship's presence.


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