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Through Spain to the Sahara
From Madrid to the mosques and malaria of North Africa, Betham-Edwards introduces readers to relics, edifices and exotic landscapes.
Matilda Betham-Edwards (Author)
9781108020688, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 30 September 2010
330 pages, 2 b/w illus.
21.6 x 14 x 1.8 cm, 0.42 kg
Journalist, children's author and translator, Matilda Betham-Edwards inspired a generation of writers. A correspondent of Henry James and a friend of George Eliot, she belonged to a literary network that spanned the globe. Published in 1868, her account of her journey to the Sahara received immediate critical acclaim for its graceful prose and intelligent insights. Leading readers through the Dordogne to Madrid and on to the mosques and malaria of North Africa, Edwards introduces her audience to relics, landscapes and ancient edifices that reflect a wide spectrum of religions and societies. A farmer's daughter, she pays special attention to the living and working conditions of agricultural communities and their struggle for survival in nineteenth-century Europe. As one reviewer for the Examiner explained, 'stay at home readers can hardly do their travelling by proxy more easily than by running through her entertaining pages'.
1. Sunday at Tours
2. The misconceptions of luggage
3. The gaiety of Madrid
4. Velasquez, the painter of men
5. A Lear of cities
6. A midnight halt
7. 'The sweetest morsel of the peninsula'
8. 'A boat, a boat, my kingdom for a boat!'
9. Days in the Alhambra
10. Pigs, vulgar and aristocratic
11. The archbishop blesses the engine, and we help him
12. We get to Algeciras, and are made wretched
13. A bridal party
14. Tclemcen, the Granada of the West
15. Hospitable Oran
16. Opinions, civil and military
17. Rain.
Subject Areas: Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900 [DSBF]
