. Charles Eliot, landscape architect : a lover of nature and of his kind who trained himself for a new profession, practised it happily and through it wrought much good /Charles William Eliot. re; but though the build-ing and the great Locusts near the porch are well shown, thepicture gives no hint of the blue distance of hills and moun-tains which in reality appears through the tree-trunks justnorth of the house. If, tempted by this glimpse of distance, the visitor turnsthe corner of the building and steps into the round-archedpavilion which is attached to the north side of the house, thewhol


. Charles Eliot, landscape architect : a lover of nature and of his kind who trained himself for a new profession, practised it happily and through it wrought much good /Charles William Eliot. re; but though the build-ing and the great Locusts near the porch are well shown, thepicture gives no hint of the blue distance of hills and moun-tains which in reality appears through the tree-trunks justnorth of the house. If, tempted by this glimpse of distance, the visitor turnsthe corner of the building and steps into the round-archedpavilion which is attached to the north side of the house, thewhole broad panorama of the river and the Catskills is spreadbefore him to the westward; but even here the wide prospectis broken into scenes and framed by the solid piers and archesof the pavilion itself, and by the trunks and branches of greattrees, chiefly Locusts, standing on the brink of the irregulargrassy slope which falls steeply to a narrow wood on the bluffat the rivers edge. To attempt to describe the scenerywhich bewitches the eye as it wanders over the wide expanseto the west from this pavilion would be an idle effort, wroteMr. Downing in 1847. As a foreground, imagine a large. at. 29] THE KAATSKILLS FROM MONTGOMERY PLACE 255 lawn waving in undulations of soft verdure, varied with finegroups, and margined with rich belts of foliage. Its base iswashed by the river, which is here a broad sheet of water,lying like a long lake beneath the eye. . On the oppositeshores, more than a mile distant, is seen a rich mingling ofwoods and corn-fields. But the crowning glory of the land-scape is the background of mountains. The Kaatskills, asseen from this part of the Hudson, are, it seems to us, morebeautiful than any mountain scenery in the Middle is not merely that their outline is bold, and that the sum-mit of Koundtop, rising three thousand feet above the sur-rounding country, gives an air of more grandeur than is usu-ally seen even in the Highlands; but it is the colo


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectlandsca, bookyear1902