It Was A Lover And His Lass

Cover of It Was A Lover And His Lass by Oliphant
Author: Oliphant
Year: 2015
Language: en
Pages: 290
ISBN-13: 9781517171810
Dimensions:
Height: 9 inches
Length: 6 inches
Weight: 0.87 pounds
Width: 0.66 inches
Editorial overview Touché

It Was A Lover And His Lass by Oliphant, published by CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform on September 2, 2015, is a work of literature that presents a vivid depiction of an unfinished palace set in a remote northern county of Scotland. This 290-page edition explores the striking contrast between the grand architecture of the palace and its desolate surroundings, highlighting the eerie beauty of a structure that remains vacant and uninhabited amidst a wild and wooded landscape.

Readers will find a detailed description of the palace, characterized by its French-Scottish architectural style and surrounded by exotic flora, including tall araucarias and blue-green pines. The narrative captures the haunting atmosphere of the site, emphasizing the stark emptiness of the glassless windows and the overgrown steps leading to a barricaded door. Through this portrayal, the book invites contemplation on the relationship between human creations and the natural world, as the palace stands as a ghostly reminder of ambition unfulfilled.


Official synopsis Publisher

There stands in one of the northern counties of Scotland, in the midst of a wild and wooded landscape, with the background of a fine range of hills, and in the vicinity of a noble trout-stream, a great palace, uninhabited and unfinished. It is of the French-Scottish style of architecture, but more French than Scotch-a little Louvre planted in the midst of a great park and fine woods, by which, could a traveller pass, as in the days of Mr. G. P. R. James, on a summer evening when the sun had set, and find himself suddenly face-to-face with such an edifice amid such a solitude, the effect even upon the most hardened British tourist would be something extraordinary. There it stands, white and splendid, raising its turreted roofs, such a house as a prince might live in, which would accommodate dozens of guests, and for which scores of servants would be needful. But all naked, vacant, and silent, the glassless windows like empty sockets without eyes, the rooms all unfinished, grass growing on the broad steps that lead up to the great barricaded door, and weeds flourishing upon the approach. Round about it are avenues of an exotic splendour, like the building, tall araucarias of kin to nothing else that flourishes in Scotland, blue-green pines of a rare species, and around these, in long-drawn circles, lines of level green terraces, upon which you can walk for miles-terraces more fit for Versailles than for Murkley, where the grass is generally wet, and promenades of this kind not very practicable for the greater part of the year. The pines have taken hold of the soil, have thriven and flourished, the araucarias are unequalled in Great Britain. Nature and the landscape have assimilated them, and made them free of the country in which they are to stand for ages. But the house, being due to human-kind, cannot be thus assimilated. No kindly growth, naturalizes it, no softening of years makes it fit into its place. It is too big and imposing to be run over by honeysuckles and roses like a cottage; it stands like a ghost among all the paths that lead to its blocked-up door. The rows of melancholy openings where windows ought to be glare out in their emptiness, in contrast with that door which never opens, and makes all natural access to the place impossible. An army of tramps might clamber in at the windows, and make carnival in the vacant rooms, but the master of the house could not without an organized assault find admittance in the recognized way. At night, or when the evening glooms are falling, nothing can be more startling than to stray into the presence of this huge thing, which is not a habitation, and which seems, all complete yet so incomplete, to have strayed into regions quite uncongenial and out of sympathy with it, where it stands as much out of its element as a stranded boat.

FAQ
What is “It Was A Lover And His Lass” about?
This page includes the available description and bibliographic details for “It Was A Lover And His Lass” by Oliphant. Synopsis preview: There stands in one of the northern counties of Scotland, in the midst of a wild and wooded landscape, with the background of a fine range of hills, and in the vicinity of a noble trout-stream, a great palace, uninhabite…
Who is the author of “It Was A Lover And His Lass”?
“It Was A Lover And His Lass” is credited to Oliphant.
When was “It Was A Lover And His Lass” published?
Publisher: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. Year: 2015.
What is the ISBN for “It Was A Lover And His Lass”?
ISBN-13: 9781517171810.
What are the book details (language, pages, edition)?
Language: en. Pages: 290.

More Books by Oliphant

Related Books by Topic