A sentimental & practical guide to Amesbury and Stonehenge by Antrobus

(13 User reviews)   2662
By Hayden Bonnet Posted on Mar 30, 2026
In Category - Found Works
Antrobus, Florence Caroline Mathilde Sartoris, Lady, 1856-1923 Antrobus, Florence Caroline Mathilde Sartoris, Lady, 1856-1923
English
Hey, I just read this weird little book from 1899 that feels like two different guides fighting for the same cover. It's called 'A Sentimental & Practical Guide to Amesbury and Stonehenge,' and it's exactly what it sounds like. The author, Lady Antrobus, tries to do two things at once. On one hand, she wants to give you the straight facts: train times, hotel prices, the best walking routes. On the other, she can't help but get swept up in the raw, ancient magic of Stonehenge. She gives you the cost of a carriage ride, then immediately launches into a poetic rant about the Druids and the eternal mystery of the stones. The real charm is watching this proper Victorian lady wrestle with the place. She's part tourist, part romantic poet, and part frustrated historian trying to make sense of a site that defies explanation. It's a short, charming time capsule that shows how people over a century ago tried to package the unexplainable for a day trip. If you've ever stood at Stonehenge feeling both awe and a bit silly, you'll totally get where she's coming from.
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Published in 1899, this book is a curious hybrid. Lady Antrobus, a woman of her time, sets out to create a useful handbook for the growing number of tourists visiting Wiltshire. She provides clear, no-nonsense advice on how to get there, where to stay, and what to see in the nearby town of Amesbury. It’s the Victorian equivalent of a travel blog’s ‘Plan Your Visit’ section.

The Story

There isn’t a plot in the traditional sense. Instead, the ‘story’ is the author’s own journey of describing a place she clearly loves. The book is neatly split, mirroring its title. The ‘Practical’ half is all business: lists of inns, distances between landmarks, notes on local flora. Then, as we approach Stonehenge, the tone shifts completely. The ‘Sentimental’ guide takes over. Here, Antrobus abandons train schedules for speculation about ancient ceremonies, the purpose of the stones, and the haunting beauty of the landscape. She quotes poetry, wonders about the builders, and lets her imagination run wild against the stark facts of archaeology known at the time. The book’s structure itself tells the tale of a rational mind encountering something profoundly irrational and beautiful.

Why You Should Read It

I loved this book for its honesty. Lady Antrobus doesn’t pretend to have all the answers. Instead, she captures the exact dual feeling many of us have at historical sites today. One minute you’re checking your phone for the cafe opening time, the next you’re struck silent by the weight of centuries. Her voice is wonderfully relatable—she’s fussy about good lodging but unafraid to be emotionally moved. Reading her descriptions, written before the era of crowds and fences, lets you imagine Stonehenge as a quieter, more personal experience. It’s a reminder that our desire to both understand and feel history is nothing new.

Final Verdict

This is a perfect, quick read for anyone who loves history, travel, or quirky old books. It’s especially great for people who have visited Stonehenge and felt its strange pull. You’ll smile at the outdated practical tips, but you’ll be surprised by how modern her emotional reaction feels. Think of it less as a factual guide and more as a postcard from a past traveler, sharing her genuine wonder and confusion. If you enjoy time-traveling through books and hearing a clear, personal voice from over a century ago, Lady Antrobus’s little guide is a delightful detour.



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Oliver Robinson
2 months ago

Having read this twice, the plot twists are genuinely surprising. I will read more from this author.

Liam Brown
10 months ago

Very interesting perspective.

Robert Scott
1 year ago

Essential reading for students of this field.

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4.5 out of 5 (13 User reviews )

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