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page 71
were strictly followed, the house must also be of a glaring
red; in other places it must be of a sullen black; which
would only be adding annoyance to annoyance. The rule,
however, as a general guide, is good; and, in agricultural
districts, where large tracts of soil are laid bare by the
plough, particularly if (the face of the country being
undulating) they are held up to view, this rule, though not
to be implicitly adhered to, should never be lost sight of;
- the colour of the house ought, if possible, to have a cast
or shade of the colour of the soil. The principal is, that
the house must harmonise with the surrounding landscape:
accordingly, in mountainous countries, with still more
confidence may it de (sic) said "look at the rocks and those
parts of the mountains where the soil is visible, and they
will furnish a safe direction." Nevertheless, it will often
happen that the rocks may bear so large a proportion to the
rest of the landscape, and may be of such a tone of colour,
that the rule may not admit, even here, of being implicitly
followed. For instance, the chief defect in the colouring of
the Country of the Lakes (which is most strongly felt in the
summer season) is an over-prevalence of a bluish tint, which
the green of the herbage, the fern, and the woods, does not
sufficiently counteract. If a house, therefore, should stand
where this defect prevails, I have no hesitation in saying,
that the colour of the neighbouring rocks would not be the
best that
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