[324]. For a remarkable later development of the veranda outside England, see Robertson, E. G., ‘The Australian Verandah’, Architectural Review, CXXVII (1960), 238-45.
[325]. There are many examples in various English books of the first third of the century; characteristic are those offered by T. F. Hunt, J. B. Papworth, and P. F. Robinson. See Note [[134]] to Chapter [6].
[326]. See Note [[132]], Chapter [6].
[327]. See Note [[128]], Chapter [6].
[328]. See Note [[133]], Chapter [6].
[329]. See Note [[308]], Chapter [14].
[330]. See Note [[132]], Chapter [6].
[331]. In the Builder for 15 January 1859 and in the Supplement to Kerr, R., The Gentleman’s House, 2nd ed., London, 1865.
[332]. Contemporaries saw this house rather as a reaction towards the ‘Old English’ after the ‘modernism’ of the High Victorian Gothic and the Second Empire of the preceding decade. How conscious Shaw himself was of the significance of his own innovations it is difficult to say.
[333]. The plan was first published by Muthesius in 1904; this does not mean that its character was not known to contemporary architects, however.