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SPEKE HALL
There
are, alas! but few now remaining of the timber buildings of the sixteenth
century that are either so important in size or so well-preserved as this
beautiful old Lancashire house. They
were built at a time when the country had settled down into a peaceable state; when
houses need no longer be walled and loopholed against the probable raids of
enemies; when their windows might be of ample size and might look abroad
without fear. Many of them, however, were still moated, for a moat was of use
not only for defence but as a convenient fish-pond, and as a bar to the
depredations of wolves, foxes and rabbits. The
advance of civilisation also brought with it a greater desire for home
comforts, and the genius of the country, unspoilt, unfettered, undiluted by
that mass of half-digested knowledge of many styles that has led astray so many
of the builders of modern days, by a natural instinct cast these dwellings into
forms that we now seek out and study in the effort to regain our lost
innocence, and that in many cases we are glad to adopt anew as models of what
is most desirable for comfort and for the happy enjoyment of our homes. Still,
in these days we cannot build such houses anew without a suspicion of strain or
affectation. When they were reared, oak was the building material most readily
to be obtained, and carpenters' work, already well developed in the
construction of roofs, now given free scope in outer walls as well, seemed to
revel in the new liberty, and oak-framed houses grew up into beautiful form and
ornament in such a way as has never been surpassed in this country. SPEKE HALL From the picture in the possession of Mr George S. Elgood It
was satisfying and beautiful because every bit of ornamental detail grew out of
the necessary structure. The plainer framing of cottage and farmhouse became
enriched in the manor-house into a wealth of moulding and carving and other
kinds of decoration. External panel ornament gained a rich quality by the
repetition of symmetrical form, while the overhanging of the successive stories
and the indentations between projecting wings and porches threw the various
faces of the building into interesting masses of light and shade. Then, in
delightful and restful contrast to the " busy " wall-spaces, are the
roofs, with their long quiet lines of ridge and their covering of tile or
stone, painted by the ages with the loveliest tinting of moss and lichen. Within,
these fine old wooden houses show the good English oak as worthily treated as
without. For the whole structure is of wood from end to end, built as soundly
and strongly as were the old wooden ships. The inner walls, where they were not
panelled with oak, were hung with tapestry. Ceilings of the best rooms were
wrought with plaster ornament; lesser rooms showed the beams and often the
thick joists that fitted into them and upheld the floor above. Where, as was
usual, there was a long gallery in the topmost floor, its ceiling would show a
tracery of oak with plaster filling, partly following the line of the roof. The
whole structure, blossoming out in its more important parts into beautiful decorative
enrichment, showed the worker's delight in his craft, and his mastery of mind
and hand in conceiving and carrying out the possibilities offered by what was
then the most usual building material of the country. Such
another house as Speke is Moreton Old Hall in Cheshire, but the latter is still
more richly decorated, with carved strings, some of which were painted, and
wood and plaster panels of great elaboration, and lead-quarried windows of
large size and beautiful design. The
destruction of large numbers of these timber buildings in the eighteenth
century can never be sufficiently deplored. There was a time when the fashion
for buildings of classical form was spreading over England, when they were
considered barbarous relics of a bygone age, and when the delightful gardens
that had grown up around them were alike condemned and in many cases destroyed.
There is not a large garden at Speke, but just enough of simple groups of flowers to grace the beautiful timber front. The picture shows that the gardening is just right for the place; not asserting itself overmuch but doing its own part with a restful, quiet charm that has a right relation to the lovely old dwelling. |