دانلود کتاب Frolics in the Face of Europe: Sir Walter Scott, Continental Travel and the Tradition of the Grand Tour
by Iain Brown
|
عنوان فارسی: Frolics in the Face of Europe: Sir Walter Scott ، Continental Travel and the Tradition of the Grand Tour |
دانلود کتاب
جزییات کتاب
All these European trips are full of interest for the modern reader. But equally, and almost more so, are the many other schemes Scott entertained for wider traveling, notably in the Iberian Peninsula and in Switzerland and Germany. In this book, all these actual and projected journeys are examined in the context of the Grand Tour tradition, and also in that of the new kind of ‘romantic’ travel that, after 1815, came to succeed older, prescribed forms.
Frolics in the Face of Europe (the phrase derived from a letter of Scott’s of 1824) draws on his vast correspondence and moving journal; on his verse, and his prose fiction; and on the literature of travel which gave him such a wide knowledge of the world without even leaving his study in Edinburgh or his library at Abbotsford. A series of vignettes or pen-portraits emerges of journeys completed, and voyages merely dreamed of. Many social, literary and artistic connections are made; events, places and personalities are linked, often in surprising ways. Walter Scott emerges as a man with ambiguous ideas about travel: one who knew that he ought to travel, and to have traveled more than he did. But he was a writer of profound imaginative power, whose vicarious traveling allowed him to spend most of his time where he really wanted to be: in his native Scotland. This book offers a fresh view of Scott as the 250th anniversary of his birth approaches.
Table of Contents
Preface; Acknowledgements; Note on Sources; Fairy-Lands and Regions of Reality; ‘Milordi Scozzesi’ and Home-Keeping Youth; Ideas of Iberia; A Sudden Frisk to Paris; ‘To Roll Little About’; Irish Interlude: a ‘Grand Tour’ in Microcosm; Painting Scenery in Words – or, Travels in the Library; ‘Methinks I will Not Die Quite Happy…’; A Cast in a King’s Ship; ‘The Glory of Scotland, Sent to Visit Strangers’; ‘Let Us to Abbotsford’; Notes and References; Index.