Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
Excerpt from A Road-Book to Old Chelsea
Cheyne House, which also belonged to Dr. Phe'ne, was less highly esteemed by him than his Renaissance effort, and has been allowed to drop into grievous ruin: it is the house of ancient gravity and beauty of which Mr. E. V. Lucas writes so affectionately in his Wanderer in London. It sits back, with its eyes Closed, wrapped in its ancient vine, and no one will ever know its three hundred-year-old secrets. For in the old maps it shows bravely in the centre of its park, and a little narrow walk, called Tudor Lane, led from it to the river, where possibly it had its own landing - stage a beautiful state reception room at the back had seven windows giving on the terrace. It is sad and strange that SO little is known of its inhabitants in the past.
No. 4 Upper Cheyne Row is a modern interpolation, filling up the Tudor Lane aperture; but No. 6 is another really old house, dating by its leases from 1665, and having a splendid mulberry tree, which in a document 'of i7oz is mentioned as unalienable from the property.
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