George Borrow's Second Tour in Wales

audiobook

George Borrow's Second Tour in Wales

by T. C. (Thomas Crosbee) Cantrill, George Borrow, J. (John) Pringle

EN·~22 minutes·1 chapter

Chapters

1 total
1

Transcribed from the 1910 Y Cymmrodor edition by David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org

22:26

Description

This audio edition brings to life a long‑forgotten travel journal of a mid‑Victorian wanderer as he trekked the rugged south‑west of Wales in 1857. The original notes, written in a hurried hand and barely legible, were painstakingly deciphered from the author’s own notebooks and supplemented with modern observations. Listeners will follow his route from the coastal ports of Milford Haven through the Brecon hills to the remote hamlets of Carmarthen and Pembroke.

Accompanying the narrative are the editors’ footnotes that identify the obscure place‑names, describe the inns where he lodged, and share anecdotes gathered from descendants of the people he met. The blend of original 19th‑century prose and contemporary commentary paints a vivid picture of Welsh landscape, language, and hospitality at a time of great change. It offers a rare glimpse into the spirit of adventure and the everyday life of a nation on the brink of modernity.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~22 minutes (21K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2020-05-09

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the authors

TC

T. C. (Thomas Crosbee) Cantrill

1867–1931

Best known as a geologist who also wrote with real curiosity about Wales, he spent decades studying landscapes, coalfields, and ancient sites. His work blends field science with a strong feel for local history and place.

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George Borrow

George Borrow

1803–1881

An adventurous 19th-century English writer, traveler, and gifted linguist, he turned years of wandering into vivid books that still feel energetic and unusual today. He is best known for "The Bible in Spain" and for the semi-autobiographical works "Lavengro" and "The Romany Rye."

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J(

J. (John) Pringle

1877–1948

A Scottish geologist and palaeontologist, this writer spent decades with the Geological Survey and became known for clear, practical work on Britain’s regional geology. He was awarded the Lyell Medal in 1938 for his contributions to the field.

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