The poets, from
Chaucer to the last of his true British successors, with one voice
enlarge on the overflowing sweetness of England, her hills and
dales, her pastures with sweet flowers, and the loveliness of her
silver streams. It is the cherishing of the wholesome enjoyments
of daily life that has implanted in the sons of England love of
home, goodness of nature, and sweet reasonableness, and has given
strength to the thews and sinews of her children, enabling them to
defend her land, her principles, and her prosperity. With regard
to the three Sonning bridges, parts of them have been already
rebuilt with iron fittings in recent years, and no disinterested
reasonable person can see why they could not be easily made
sufficient to carry all existing traffic. If the bridges were to
be widened in the service of some disproportionate vehicles it is
obvious that the traffic such enlarged bridges are intended to
carry would be put forward as an argument for demolishing the
exquisite old bridge over the main river which is the glory of
this exceptionally picturesque and well-ordered village; and this
is a matter of which even the most utilitarian would soon see the
evil in the diminished attraction of the river not only to
Englishmen, but to Colonials and Americans who have across the sea
read widely of its beauty.
Pages:
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364