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  • The Masonic Magazine
  • Nov. 1, 1878
  • Page 30
  • FROM OXFORD TO LONDON BY WATER*
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The Masonic Magazine, Nov. 1, 1878: Page 30

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    Article FROM OXFORD TO LONDON BY WATER* Page 1 of 4 →
Page 30

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

From Oxford To London By Water*

FROM OXFORD TO LONDON BY WATER *

HPIIOSE who have known the Thames tor the past ten years must have been struck b y - * - the immense increase of the pleasure traffic upon the river . Expeditions such as that Avhich has suggested the present paper Avere , not so many years ago , confined almost entirely to boating men from the University or the London rowing clubs . The week after the end of the Summer Term at Oxford saw a goodly stream of four and pairoars , manned by undergraduates , making their Avay to Windsor , Eichmond , or Wauds-Avorth ; and throughout the summer months occasional parties of Londoners miht

g have been found starting from Salter ' s raft at Oxford for a three or four days' trip doAvn their noble river . Now , however , the fashion has spread Avider , ancl the excursionists on the Thames maybe counted by hundreds . The river-side inns are full to overfloAA'ing in July and August ; and you cannot row for many miles without coming upon a party preparing to camp out hi some snug spot by the river bank , either by pitching a tent , or bcovering in their boats with an ingenious contrivance like the " tilt" of a covered

y cart . Some idea of the extent of this pleasure traffic may be formed from the fact that at the beginning of August , Avhen the Avriter ancl his party started from Oxford , they were told that Salter alone had at that moment ninety-five boats out along the river betAveen Oxford ancl London .

Given fine weather , scarcely any more enjoyable trip can be imagined for those AA-IIO are fond of the . open air , good exercise , ancl pleasant scenery . Those AA'ho are not familiar AA'ith the Thames have no idea of the lovely spots that he within an hour or two ' s journey from London , and of the many varied combinations of AVOOC ! and hill and stream Avhich the river presents , aud in AA'hich the artist ancl the lover of nature may find endless interest ancl occupation as he passes along . The physical exercise , too , brings health and A * igour and appetite ; aud after a long pull under a summer sunthe

, veriest sybarite must admit that no bumper of champagne had ever half the charm of the first draught of " Alsopp from its native pevrter . " The freedom from all the restraints and ties of ordinary life , the sense of independence in moving from point to point AA'ith none of the clisagreebles of ordinary travel , and the sound ancl dreamless sleep AA'hich only such a healthy existence giA'es—these combine to " set one up " iu the short space of a feAV days more effectively than all the doctors iu London . There are certainl

y many worse Avays of spending a four or five days' holiday . Let us , hoAA'ever , begin to trace the course of such an expedition , as it is fresh in tho Avriter ' s memory . An early morning train to Oxford enables us to start in time for a first day's journey to Shilling ford or Wallingforcl ; but it is , of course , rather more convenient to sleep over-night at Oxford , ancl start earlier , before the mid-day heat . The University toAvn—that part of it , at least , in AA'hich the colleges mainly stand—is

in August like a city of the dead . Broad Street is almost deserted ; in the Eaclcliffe Square not a footstep will disturb our contemplation of one of the most striking group of buildings in the AA'orld ; the " High , " save for a slight bustle at the entrance to the market , is like the High' Street of any provincial town . A " honeymoon" couple strolling lovingly along , or a party of keen-faced Americans "doing" the p lace as vapidly as they can , are the only signs of life in St . John ' s or NBAV College gardens , or

under the shadow of the noble elms in Christ . Church meadoAA-s , as AA' 6 pass along the Broad Walk toAvards the river . The stranger , or non-University man , AA'ho does not understand the sacred institution of the "Long , " or the half-superstitious belief of Oxford men in the city ' s unhealthiness as a summer residence , will be surprised to see the most beautiful of English cities so deserted at the most beautiful time of the year ; and , if he be a Cambridge man , will be able to phiihe himself upon the more sensible custom of his OAA ' UniA'ersity in its Loug Vacation residence for reading purposes .

“The Masonic Magazine: 1878-11-01, Page 30” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01111878/page/30/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
THE LOCKE MS. Article 2
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 3
THE PLATT MEMORIAL.—OLDHAM. Article 6
AUTUMN. Article 8
BEATRICE. Article 9
DO THY DUTY BRAVELY. Article 11
AN ELEGY. Article 12
ART-JOTTINGS IN ART-STUDIOS. Article 13
MILDRED: AN AUTUMN ROMANCE. Article 16
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 19
FAITHFULLY. Article 22
SOMETHING FOUND. Article 23
THE BROOK-SIDE. Article 24
LOST AND SAVED ; OR, NELLIE POWERS, THE MISSIONARY'S DAUGHTER. Article 25
FROM OXFORD TO LONDON BY WATER* Article 30
THE BETTER PART. Article 34
THE BENI MZAB. Article 35
LEGENDS OF THE PAST. Article 36
ASSYRIAN DISCOVERIES. Article 38
AN HERMETIC WORK. Article 42
THE WORDS OF STRENGTH. Article 48
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

From Oxford To London By Water*

FROM OXFORD TO LONDON BY WATER *

HPIIOSE who have known the Thames tor the past ten years must have been struck b y - * - the immense increase of the pleasure traffic upon the river . Expeditions such as that Avhich has suggested the present paper Avere , not so many years ago , confined almost entirely to boating men from the University or the London rowing clubs . The week after the end of the Summer Term at Oxford saw a goodly stream of four and pairoars , manned by undergraduates , making their Avay to Windsor , Eichmond , or Wauds-Avorth ; and throughout the summer months occasional parties of Londoners miht

g have been found starting from Salter ' s raft at Oxford for a three or four days' trip doAvn their noble river . Now , however , the fashion has spread Avider , ancl the excursionists on the Thames maybe counted by hundreds . The river-side inns are full to overfloAA'ing in July and August ; and you cannot row for many miles without coming upon a party preparing to camp out hi some snug spot by the river bank , either by pitching a tent , or bcovering in their boats with an ingenious contrivance like the " tilt" of a covered

y cart . Some idea of the extent of this pleasure traffic may be formed from the fact that at the beginning of August , Avhen the Avriter ancl his party started from Oxford , they were told that Salter alone had at that moment ninety-five boats out along the river betAveen Oxford ancl London .

Given fine weather , scarcely any more enjoyable trip can be imagined for those AA-IIO are fond of the . open air , good exercise , ancl pleasant scenery . Those AA'ho are not familiar AA'ith the Thames have no idea of the lovely spots that he within an hour or two ' s journey from London , and of the many varied combinations of AVOOC ! and hill and stream Avhich the river presents , aud in AA'hich the artist ancl the lover of nature may find endless interest ancl occupation as he passes along . The physical exercise , too , brings health and A * igour and appetite ; aud after a long pull under a summer sunthe

, veriest sybarite must admit that no bumper of champagne had ever half the charm of the first draught of " Alsopp from its native pevrter . " The freedom from all the restraints and ties of ordinary life , the sense of independence in moving from point to point AA'ith none of the clisagreebles of ordinary travel , and the sound ancl dreamless sleep AA'hich only such a healthy existence giA'es—these combine to " set one up " iu the short space of a feAV days more effectively than all the doctors iu London . There are certainl

y many worse Avays of spending a four or five days' holiday . Let us , hoAA'ever , begin to trace the course of such an expedition , as it is fresh in tho Avriter ' s memory . An early morning train to Oxford enables us to start in time for a first day's journey to Shilling ford or Wallingforcl ; but it is , of course , rather more convenient to sleep over-night at Oxford , ancl start earlier , before the mid-day heat . The University toAvn—that part of it , at least , in AA'hich the colleges mainly stand—is

in August like a city of the dead . Broad Street is almost deserted ; in the Eaclcliffe Square not a footstep will disturb our contemplation of one of the most striking group of buildings in the AA'orld ; the " High , " save for a slight bustle at the entrance to the market , is like the High' Street of any provincial town . A " honeymoon" couple strolling lovingly along , or a party of keen-faced Americans "doing" the p lace as vapidly as they can , are the only signs of life in St . John ' s or NBAV College gardens , or

under the shadow of the noble elms in Christ . Church meadoAA-s , as AA' 6 pass along the Broad Walk toAvards the river . The stranger , or non-University man , AA'ho does not understand the sacred institution of the "Long , " or the half-superstitious belief of Oxford men in the city ' s unhealthiness as a summer residence , will be surprised to see the most beautiful of English cities so deserted at the most beautiful time of the year ; and , if he be a Cambridge man , will be able to phiihe himself upon the more sensible custom of his OAA ' UniA'ersity in its Loug Vacation residence for reading purposes .

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