Days In Cornwall By C. Lewis Hind Originally published in 1907. 396 pages. Many of the earliest books, particularly those dating back to the 1900s and before, are now extremely scarce and increasingly expensive. Home Farm Books are republishing these classic works in affordable, high quality, modern editions, using the original text and artwork. Contents Include The Tamar boundary : Saltash to the North coast The North Marsland Mouth to St. Ives Round Land's End : St Ives to Newlyn The South Newlyn round the lizard to Saltash Inland Cornwall : Launceston to St. Erth Valley Western Cornwall : Trencrom Hill to chapel Carn Brea
Charles Lewis Hind (1862 - 1927) was an English journalist, writer, editor, art critic, and art historian.
He served as the deputy editor of The Art Journal (1887–92) and the Pall Mall Budget. In 1893 he co-founded The Studio: An Illustrated Magazine of Fine and Applied Art. Three years later, Hind became the editor of The Academy and, after it merged with Literature, he continued with the editorship of The Academy and Literature, retiring in 1903. Hind then became a contributor to several magazines and newspapers including the Daily Chronicle, and wrote numerous articles on post-impressionism.
Eight colour photographic illustrations by Hind featured in Days with Velasquez (1906). His 1911 book The Post Impressionists was described by the Shirakaba group as "a most substantial book on the Post-Impressionists in English." After World War I, he compiled various anthologies and published several books on the art of landscape and continued with his art criticism. He interviewed Rockwell Kent on his Alaskan drawings in the June 1919 issue of International Studio.