
A gentle yet richly detailed tour of the Anglo‑Scottish Border unfolds through the eyes of two brothers, whose shared love of the land’s history and folklore shapes every page. The narrative weaves together vivid descriptions of ancient abbeys, crumbling castles, and the winding rivers that have long inspired ballads and legends, inviting listeners to wander the hills, glens, and bridges as if they were strolling beside the authors themselves.
Complementing the prose are finely rendered sketches by a dedicated artist, captured during the unusually low waters of the 1911 drought. These illustrations bring the landscape to life, from the solemn stone arches of Kelso Abbey to the tranquil flow where the Tweed meets the Teviot. As the guide moves from one historic site to the next, it offers glimpses of the region’s cultural memory, hinting at the stories that still echo across the borderlands.
Full title
Highways and Byways in the Border Illustrated
Language
en
Duration
~11 hours (676K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Widger from page images generously provided by the Internet Archive
Release date
2014-12-29
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1844–1912
Best known for the beloved Fairy Books, this Scottish writer brought folk tales, myths, and legends to generations of readers. He was also a remarkably wide-ranging man of letters whose work stretched across poetry, fiction, history, and anthropology.
View all books1849–1917
A restless 19th-century adventurer, this Australian-born novelist was also a barrister and newspaper founder who built an unusual life in colonial India. His fiction and journalism are remembered for their energy, sharp observation, and remarkable real-world experience.
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