Wednesday 18 August 2021

Unto This Last

 

I last stood at this spot in John Ruskin's house in 1981.
I was 15 and on a camping trip with my school's Writers' Club.
We had visited many literary sites that didn't really connect with a 15-year-old schoolgirl from Manchester.
But John Ruskin's house was a place where I felt inspired.
I stood at that spot and decided I would become a writer.
The following year I won a short story competition run by Salford City Council and went on to study Ruskin at university during my English Literature (Literature of Ideas) degree.

10 years later I was employed as a journalist at The Liverpool Echo where I met a very good friend, Peter Grant who had studied at Ruskin College in Oxford.
Ruskin was born and lived in London and later, Oxford but moved to Brantwood by Coniston Water in 1871.

During his life he had been an artist, painter, writer, poet, political theorist and social reformer.
He took on Brantwood when it was a wreck and rebuilt the home and gardens.
He lived there until his death in 1900.



Unto This Last is a series of political essays which warns of the dangers of industrialization on nature.




Ruskin often enjoyed boating trips on the lake from here.





The gardens are amazing with a variety of areas which have been developed since Ruskin's death using his ideas.



I loved the ferns in The Professor's Garden.



If you ever get the chance to visit it is such an inspiring place and I am sure the spirit of the man lives on in the fabric of the building.


I wore:


Sandals: Birkenstock

Skort: Trespass

Top: Next

Glasses: Prada

3 comments:

  1. I would have enjoyed the fern garden, looks lush. Isn't it sad that there have been so many warnings down the ages about how we are damaging our environment and we are so late to respond.

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  2. How wonderful that your visit to Ruskin's house inspired you to become a writer. His garden looks absolutely gorgeous, I'd love to visit! xxx

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  3. Looks like a beautiful place Jane. I visited the Ruskin School of Art in Oxford many years ago. I'm aware of some of his paintings, but didn't realise he was a writer and theorist too. How lovely to be able to re-visit his house in the Lake District. Lulu x

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