'...a consistently illuminating and eloquent study of landscape perception and its metaphoric resonances throughout the visual and literary arts of nineteenth-century Europe. The remarkable breadth of reference and the inter-media range of the book will engage a wide academic audience concerned with the prevailing and interwoven tropes of nature, the visual imagination, and cultural identity during this period...' Brian Lukacher, Vassar College, USA ’In shuttling across the field of landscape and visual culture, Charlesworth does not restrict himself to landscape painting, but rather widens his view, developing, as a result, a highly inter-textual treatment of the field of landscape and visual culture. The resulting volume is a rich exploration of the intersections across the registers of cultural media, taking in painting, literature novels, gardens and public entertainments. ...the result of reading this volume is a sense of time well spent and of many things having been learned, the sort of polymathical education that too few contemporary volumes manage to deliver.’ Landscape History