Althorp looks its finest at this time of year. September sunshine adds lustre to a scene already rich in Arcadian grandeur: a scene unchanged since the time, 20-odd years ago, Diana, Princess of Wales, last laid eyes on it.
She rests there now, on an island in the Round Oval lake. People come each year to visit and pay their respects, by the thousand.
Or did. Althorp shut its doors yesterday and when they re-open next spring virtually all trace of the Spencers' best-loved daughter will have disappeared. Remnants of that singular life, from toys, schoolbooks and scrawled notes in girlish hand down to the couture dresses she made famous, will have dispersed to leave merely a stone temple bearing her name, and an elegant column marking the place of her burial.
Some historians would argue it's time to dispose of the Diana cult. You'd have a hard time convincing the crowds at Althorp of that this week. Eager as ever to touch the hem of the most famous woman in the world, they queued with eager anticipation to view the exhibit known as "Diana: A Celebration".