
Transcribed from the 1903 Seeley & Co. Ltd. edition by David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org
CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTORY.
CHAPTER II. OLD TOWN—THE LANDS.
CHAPTER III. THE PARLIAMENT CLOSE.
CHAPTER IV. LEGENDS.
CHAPTER V. GREYFRIARS.
CHAPTER VI. NEW TOWN—TOWN AND COUNTRY.
CHAPTER VII. THE VILLA QUARTERS.
CHAPTER VIII. THE CALTON HILL.
CHAPTER IX. WINTER AND NEW YEAR.
Step into a city that balances on three ancient hills, where the North Sea stretches beyond a wind‑swept estuary and the distant lights of the May lighthouse flicker at sunset. Robert Louis Stevenson paints Edinburgh as a place of striking contrasts: commanding vistas of sea and soaring peaks beside a climate that can be raw, rainy, and relentlessly foggy. His prose captures the ache of a resident who loves the city's unique silhouette even as the weather tests the spirit.
Beyond the hills, the city unfurls as a curious blend of Gothic shadows and Classical columns, each corner humming with centuries of history. Stevenson guides the listener through the storied walls of Holyrood Palace, the bustling bridge linking Old and New Town, and the ever‑present drum of military life, revealing why Edinburgh feels both a monumental marble and a living, breathing town. The narrative invites you to hear the city's romance, its humor, and its stubborn charm, all delivered in the author's unmistakable, observational voice.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (123K characters)
Release date
1995-12-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1850–1894
Known for unforgettable tales of adventure and divided selves, this Scottish writer brought both restless imagination and real-world travel into his fiction. His books still feel lively, suspenseful, and surprisingly modern.
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