
In this vivid portrait of the western Highlands, a traveler and a bright‑eyed guide row along a shimmering loch, their boat cutting through the tide as craggy peaks loom overhead. The guide, a diligent student raising funds for his studies, shares the region’s haunting legends—mountains formed from lovers turned to stone—infusing the journey with a sense of ancient wonder. As the pair navigate the serpentine waters, the landscape unfolds in dramatic bursts of waterfalls, mist‑clad glens, and rugged road ledges, inviting listeners to feel the fresh mountain air and the pull of untamed nature.
Their expedition brings them to a modest “house of refreshment,” a humble stone hut perched at the glen’s mouth, where the scent of hot oat‑cake and whisky mingles with the laughter of local children. Here, simple hospitality and the rhythm of daily Highland life offer a brief reprieve, hinting at the deeper struggles of a community that must balance abundance with the ever‑present threat of famine.
Language
en
Duration
~55 minutes (52K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
United Kingdom: B. Wertheim, 1847.
Credits
Bob Taylor, Fay Dunn and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Release date
2023-05-16
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
d. 1866
A 19th-century British writer with a strong social conscience, she wrote fiction and nonfiction shaped by religious conviction and concern for women’s lives. Her work ranges from moral tales like The Highland Glen to prison reform writing connected with the British Ladies’ Society.
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