No, this isn't a blog about how to give your home
or garden a makeover - unless you want it to look like it came out of a book!
A few weeks ago I was sent an email by a company
asking me to put a link on my website for their company. At first I was
interested. The company appeared to be a publisher and publiciser of books and
ebooks. But it was only after I received a second email that I followed the
link that had been sent to me and realised that they were in actual fact a
curtain and upholstery company. Needless to say, I won't be advertising their
company on my website because most people come to my site for information about
me rather than who I'd recommend to make their new curtains! But for some
reason the website did have a page on fictional homes, which was quite
intriguing and gave me the idea for this blog...
Homes and gardens feature significantly in
literature. There are homes that would be amazing to live in, others that I'd
want to visit, and some that I'd only look at from a distance! Here are some of
my favourites.
Top of my list is Bag End in The Hobbit. Bag End is a Hobbit-hole, but it is definitely no
dirty, smelly hole in the ground. It's a place of warmth and comfort, a smial as Tolkien calls it, and it has
always brought a smile to my face. Given the choice, I'd definitely make an
offer on this property!
Location:
Bagshot Row, Hobbiton, The Shire
The owner:
Bilbo Baggins. Bag End was built to a luxuriously high standard by Bilbo's
father Bungo Baggins for his wife, Belladonna Took.
Specs: countless
rooms all situated on one floor with original features, panelled walls, tiled
floors, polished furniture, round windows with views over lush gardens and
meadows. There are ample pantries, large wine cellars, and several guests
rooms. Bag End is a cosy property in an idyllic setting amongst green fields
and orchards. Be prepared for the unexpected visitor - short of stature, wide
of girth, possibly wielding an axe, or an exceedingly tall gentleman dressed in
grey robes, who may lead you astray!
The Hobbit was one of my favourite books when I
was young, and it still is, so Bag End is full of memories for me. I would very
happily live there, and being only five foot tall, I would have no problems
with the low ceilings, although Tolkien does tell the reader that taller
visitors would have no problems, so perhaps the ceilings are actually not as
low as people might think.
Misselthwaite Manor in The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett has over a hundred
rooms, but I'm not sure I'd like to live in such a huge property, and with a
recent death in the family, a shadow hangs over the manor. It's the gardens
that hold all the allure - from their winter bleakness to their summer bloom.
Location:
Yorkshire.
Owner:
Archibald Craven. Occupants: Colin Craven, Mary Lennox, Martha Sowerby and Ben
Weatherstaff.
Both the house and the garden are full of secrets,
which Mary gradually uncovers. She finds a key in the garden, and it unlocks
not only a door, but other hidden secrets too. I loved the book when I read it many
years ago. I wanted to find a key that would open hidden doors. I wanted a
garden like the one in the book. I still love exploring old houses and gardens,
and making up stories about them - I suspect I still haven't grown up yet!
Anne of Green
Gables, by Lucy Maud Montgomery, was about a young orphan girl adopted by
brother and sister Marilla and Mathew Cuthbert. It was set in a small farming
community and followed Anne and her adventures as she tried to make this place
her home.
Location:
Green Gables, Avonlea, Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia, Canada
Occupants:
Marilla Cuthbert, Matthew Cuthbert, Anne.
Green Gables is a farmhouse surrounded by orchards
and fields and woods, with a view over the Lake of Shining Waters and the
Haunted Wood.
Avonlea and Prince Edward Island have become a
tourist attraction by developing the area based on Montgomery's books, but I
don't need to see the actual place where Anne Shirley grew up, or sit in the
real Avonlea and drink raspberry cordial soda. Green Gables and the trials and
tribulations of Anne Shirley have a special place in my memories.
Hill House in The
Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson, is definitely not a place I'd
like to live in. I'm not sure I even want to visit it. "Hill House, not
sane, stood by itself against its hills, holding darkness within; it has stood
so for eighty years and might stand for eighty more." So you can
understand why I might only look upon it from a great distance, but venture no
closer!
Location: Remote, near the village of Hillsdale.
Occupants
for the summer: Dr. John Montague, an anthropologist with an interest in the
paranormal, and Luke Sanderson (heir to the house). Staying visitors: Eleanor
and Theodora, Mrs. Montague and Arthur Parker - all share an interest in the supernatural.
In daylight, the house seems like any other large
house. Surrounded by large gardens, pretty paths, bubbling brooks, and a cosy
living room with an open fire to retreat to when the light begins to fade. But
do not be fooled.
I probably read this book too young. No, I
definitely read this book too young, which is why very large empty houses on
huge estates hold no appeal to me - especially at night. I would never live in
Hill House even if it was going for a song, but if you have a special interest
in haunted houses then this is the one you should consider - just be prepared
for creaking doors, strange cold spots, and the occasional bump in the night!
My website - savitakalhan.com
Bag End is definitely my kind of home! But also in that book is the wonderful Rivendell. That's another place I would love to live in.
ReplyDeleteRivendell would be amazing to visit, beautiful but too austere compared to a smial. I'd make my home in Bag End.
ReplyDeleteThe Swiss Family Robinson tree house for me!
ReplyDeleteI'm going to nominate Moonacre Manor, and Maria's room in particular, in The Little White Horse.
ReplyDeleteWhich makes me think of another Maria, and the decaying mansion in Mistress Masham's Repose.
Or Kay's house in The Midnight Folk or the manor house in Susan Cooper's The Dark is Rising...
Right, going to stop now.
No, carry on Emma! All great choices! Are there any that you definitely wouldn't want to live in?
ReplyDeleteI'll take Hill House - I'd get it cheap, and I think a robust approach to the ghost - rather like that taken by Colonel Fazackerley-Butterworth-Toast - would soon whip it into line.
ReplyDeleteI was wondering who would take Hill House, and I think you are the perfect buyer, Susan! I'm not sure any ghost would dare to dine in your awesome presence - especially without an appropriately formidable 'encore' performance, far beyond the meagre rattling of chains, lined up! The poem is inspired and made me laugh, after I googled it, of course! Thank you!
ReplyDeleteAnd Hogwarts, but only if I could get the Internet running and make the library computerised. Poor Madam Pince could do with some assistance.
ReplyDeleteAs I recall, Savita, Rivendell was described as a place that was good if you wanted to work or read or just sit around. It would be a bit like living in an artist colony, I suppose, and there would be a great view and certainly a library, that would clinch it for me. Bilbo retired there, so I suppose it must have been a place where even a hobbit could go when Hobbiton got a bit much, with everyone gossiping about everyone else. But Bag End is certainly the nicest as a home. They did a great job of it in the movies!
I wouldn't mind living at Will Stanton's house in The Dark Is Rising, the manor would be a bit big for me.