And So to Bath is a novel by Cecil Roberts first published in 1940.[1]

First edition
(publ. Hodder & Stoughton)

Roberts lived in Oxfordshire and was familiar with the Old Bath Road as far as Maidenhead at which point he would turn off.

Plot edit

After meeting the apocryphal Austrian Rudolph, Roberts has a revelation that there is an untold story of the old coaching route. Rudolph visits Roberts in London wishing to see the house of Samuel Richardson in Hammersmith. Together they find a hidden gem and this and Rudolph's naive belief that the signs "To Bath" indicate swimming-pools spur Roberts on to take the road to Bath. He takes three months for the journey (instead of the three hours it can be motored in) and gives potted histories of the people and places en route.

These include people such as Alfred Guillaume Gabriel, Count D'Orsay and Sir William Herschel, and places including Kensington, Brentford, Slough, Newbury and Calne.

References edit

  1. ^ Best, Geoffrey (May 2001). "Best Foot Forward". History Today. 51 (5): 62. The other book made no such permanent mark and, looking again at it recently, I can see that it was an altogether flimsier construction. ... This book was Cecil Roberts, And so to Bath (1940), a chatty ride along the old Bath road, commenting whimsically on what and who were once to be found there, and what of them still remained.