• Home
  • Browse All Audiobooks
    • All US Titles
    • All UK Titles
    • All CA Titles
    • All AU Titles
    • All FR Titles
    • All DE Titles
  • Codes Redeem Center
  • Buy Title/Membership Codes
  • FAQs
  • Send Note To Us
0 items / $0
Login / Register
Sign inCreate an Account

Lost your password?
AudibleOne - Premium Audiobooks Listening Platform
Menu
Login / Register
HomeAll AU Titles Wild Wales
Previous product
Children's Short Works, Vol. 032
Children's Short Works, Vol. 032 $0
Back to products
Next product
Short Science Fiction Collection 077
Short Science Fiction Collection 077 $0

Wild Wales

$0

Author By George Borrow

  • Description
Description

Description

audible1 recording of Wild Wales by George Borrow.
Read in English by Steve Gough.

Wild Wales: Its People, Language and Scenery is a travel book by the English Victorian gentleman writer George Borrow (1803–1881), first published in 1862 and now a classic travel text on Wales and the Welsh. The book recounts Borrow’s experiences, insights and personal encounters whilst touring Wales alone on foot after a family holiday in Llangollen in 1854. Although contemporary critics dismissed its whimsical tone, it quickly became popular with readers as a travel book and more importantly as a very lively account of the literary, social and geographical history of Wales. Borrow’s engaging character comes across especially in his meetings with various itinerants – mostly native and peasant – along the muddy Welsh path. Borrow’s keen ear for dialogue may remind us of a Dickens or Trollope, and like the latter his wit and wisdom are rarely absent. Indeed the author has been described as an “eccentric, larger-than-life, jovial man whose laughter rings all through the book”. Borrow makes much of his self-taught Welsh and how surprised the natives are by his linguistic abilities – and also by his idiosyncratic pronunciation of their language. He loves to air his knowledge of Welsh culture, especially the Bardic tradition. And like his contemporary, William Wordsworth, he has a habit of quoting verses to the heavens as he walks. As the author finally reaches South Wales towards the end of his account, we meet for the first time evidences of modern industrialism, introduced to the reader in the form of a Dante’s Inferno of coal mines and iron foundries. Today, most will remember and value the book for these and other vivid nineteenth-century landscapes – along with Borrow’s gallery of fascinating, human characters. (SUMMARY BY STEVE GOUGH BASED ON WIKIPEDIA)

For further information, including links to online text, reader information, RSS feeds, CD cover or other formats (if available), please go to the audible1 catalog page for this recording.

Related products

Close

G.K. Chesterton in The Open Road

All AU Titles
$0
Close

The Brownies and Prince Florimel

All AU Titles
$0
Close

Triplanetary

All AU Titles
$0
Close

Aspects Of Love – An Anthology

All AU Titles
$0
Close

The Dream: a novel

All AU Titles
$0
Close

North and South2

All AU Titles
$0
Close

The Border Riflemen

All AU Titles
$0
Close

The Hound of the Baskervilles (dramatic reading)

All AU Titles
$0
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
Copyrights 2025 AUDIBLE ONE | All Rights Reserved
  • Codes Redeem Center
  • Buy Title/Membership Codes
  • Browse All US Titles
  • Browse All UK Titles
  • Browse All CA Titles
  • Browse All AU Titles
  • Browse All FR Titles
  • Browse All DE Titles
  • FAQs
  • Send Note To Us
  • Login / Register

Sign in

close

Lost your password?

No account yet?

Create an Account