| The Panorama of Matlock* |
| Eighteenth and nineteenth century tour guides about Matlock Bath and Matlock |
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Preface and Map
(with view from the Museum Garden)
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PREFACE. |
WATERING PLACES are usually divided into two classes, the inland and
the maritime; the one depending for attraction on its convenience
for sea-bathing, the other claiming preference on the merit of its
medicinal springs ; and neither of them indifferent to the contingent
advantage of a romantic or picturesque neighbourhood. If the choice
were to be decided by the superiority arising from this important
accessory, it would doubtless be awarded to the former class, an inland
Watering Place being likely to comprehend within its circuit a greater
variety of rural beauty, a richer store of objects not only worth
seeing, but worth going to see, than can be expected on most points
of the coast, where the view necessarily comprehends a large proportion
of sterile land
[End of first page of preface]
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PREFACE. iv |
and water, or, as it has been emphatically remarked, a dry desert
on one side, and a wet one on the other.
AMONG the places of fashionable resort in the interior of the kingdom,
it would perhaps be difficult to select one possessing features more
generally attractive than that which is the subject of the present
description. Distinguished for the salubrity of its air, and exhibiting
the most diversified combinations of mountain and valley, wood and
water; affording also, in its numerous and unrivalled trout-streams,
inexhaustible sport for the angler, it presents a greater variety
of incentives than might elsewhere be found, for exercise in the open
air; without which, all the mineral waters that have ever been discovered
are of little avail to the valetudinarian.
ADOPTING that order which appears most convenient, I shall commence
with the description of Matlock Bath.
H. B.
[End of page iv of preface]
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*Transcribed by Ann Andrews in March 2004 from:
"The Panorama of Matlock and Its Environs; With the Tour of
the Peak", by H. Barker, Esq. (1827), published by Longman
& Co., London. From the copy held at Derby
Local Studies Library (ref DLSL 143) and published here with the
librarian's very kind permission. Also very grateful thanks to Jane
Steer for generously providing copies and all her help and interest
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