Hampshire Days Find!

W H Hudson was an American naturalist who took readily to the English countryside, lived in Bournemouth, and wrote many popular books in the early part of the last century. Hampshire Days (1903) for the most part celebrates the New Forest and of course pays homage to Gilbert White's Selbourne. The book is a fascinating, if idiosyncratic, account of a natural world before it was blasted by agri-chemicals, and for Hampshire's naturalists the book makes enthralling reading. Quirky reading, too, with some challenging observations on the anthropology of Hampshire's human residents and a famous complaint about the poisonous effects on people's constitutions of drinking too much tea.

27 September 2009 from Friday Next

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