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Color print. Sweet Derwent Water of the English Lakes

SOUVENIR  OF VISITS IN 1928/1937, color print. Sweet Derwent Water of the English Lakes.  "Her gentle limbs did  she undress   And lay down in her loveliness." Coleridge, who loved this above and similar scenes in the lakes region.  The quotation is from 'Christabel' by Samuel Taylor Coleridge 1772-1834 In May 1928 Paul Harris  set off on a marathon tour of Britain and his first call was a long anticipated visit to the Lake District.  From Keswick,  close to Derwentwater and Coleridge's home at Greta Hall, he wrote to Vivian Carter, the Secretary of R.I.B.I.:-"Rural England has proven to be all that I expected of it;  in many respects more than I expected.  Words are inadequate to express my admiration of the countryside, the secluded nooks, the out of the way paths, the unfrequented roads, the abundant flowers, the hedges, songbirds, little villages, etc.

Moreover the courtesy with which I have been received in Ayrshire and in the Lakes region of England has been wonderful.  Naturally the  country and this land of Wordsworth, Coleridge, Southey and Ruskin have a strong appeal to every lover of English literature, and the physical chorus make a combination hard to beat."  Besides admiring the beautiful scenery, Paul Harris went to pay homage to his literary heroes.  It was not until 1937, that he returned to the Lake District, when he was driven from Liverpool to Kendal and thence  to the shores of Lake Windermere. "The water and the ranges of mountains in the background were still quite discernible in the lingering twilight, although it was eleven o'clock at night," Harris wrote.

Once again, he recalled in his account of this visit, the many literary figures who had been inspired to write by their love of nature here in the English Lakes.  He was able to revisit some favourite spots, Grasmere, Derwent and Keswick, before returning to Kendal for an inter-club Rotary meeting at midday on Thursday July 15, 1937.

This ongoing project is the work of RGHF historian Basil Lewis, first posted 7 April 2006 This section is maintained by RGHF webmaster Paul D. McLain. If you can help identify or supply more information about anything on this page, please contact us at www.historycomment.org

After you see the museum office, meet his partners and office workers at Harris Dodds & Brown. (A page of photographs of the actual office in the early 2000's)

Souvenirs

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