
A lively travel memoir traces a young woman’s first steps from bustling London onto a French steam‑vessel, through the misty Channel and into the ports of Havre and Rouen. From there she journeys by rail and river, sketching the charm of Parisian boulevards, the rolling vineyards of Lyon, and the glittering lights of Marseille. Her observations blend practical details of customs officials and lodging with vivid impressions of the landscape, making the early European leg feel both adventurous and grounded.
Crossing the Mediterranean, the narrative shifts to the exotic ports of Malta, Alexandria and the Nile‑side town of Boulak, where the author records the colors of local dress, the hum of bustling bazaars, and the first awe‑inspiring glimpse of the pyramids. The desert crossing is rendered with a calm, almost lyrical tone, describing the rhythm of caravan life, the stark beauty of the sands, and the sunrise over the Red Sea. Throughout, the memoir offers a thoughtful, detail‑rich portrait of mid‑19th‑century travel and the cultures encountered along the way.
Language
en
Duration
~8 hours (469K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-04-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
d. 1840
A 19th-century English poet and travel writer, she is best remembered for vivid books about India that mixed observation, storytelling, and social detail. Her work gave many British readers one of their first lively glimpses of colonial life abroad.
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