Up the Country Volume 1; Letters Written to Her Sister from the Upper Provinces of India. by the Hon. Emily Eden (Paperback)


This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1866 Excerpt: ...they are at least a month off, and in the meantime the unpacking of these was immense fun. There were two boxes of books, and I had just come to an end of the last set, and now there is Mrs. Gore's 'Stokeshill Park, ' and 'My Aunt Dorothy, ' and some French novels, and, above all, dear Charles Lamb's letters, which I have been sighing for and have begun upon instantly. I cannot imagine what number of hill-bearers will take our goods up to Simla. Major J. has written for 1,500, and they are already at work taking the first division of goods up. Our camp will break up almost entirely in a few days. We three, with two aides-de-camp, the doctor, and one secretary, are going through the Dhoon, a sort of route that will not admit of a large party. It is a very pretty road and likely to be cooler than the actual plains. The rest of the camp and most of the servants will pursue the straight road. I long to get into the hills more than ever. It is grown so very hot now, quite as bad as Calcutta in May. I believe we shall not be able to take Wright and Jones this route, which will make them very unhappy. St. Cloup told me yesterday that he had at last had a letter from Madame St. Cloup, which had made him very happy, and that she was in an excellent place with a relation of ours. Poor woman she little knows what a faithless man he is. However, he bought her a beautiful gold chain at Delhi, and he said that now he had had this letter, he had 'quelque envie de lui acheter des boucles d'oreilles, ' but that he thought it would be better to take them home. It would make her more glad to see him. CHAPTER XIV. Camp, Kurnaul, March 5 1838. It goes much against the grain with me to begin a fresh journal on half a sheet, but it is an odd time for writing, so I must take what I ...

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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1866 Excerpt: ...they are at least a month off, and in the meantime the unpacking of these was immense fun. There were two boxes of books, and I had just come to an end of the last set, and now there is Mrs. Gore's 'Stokeshill Park, ' and 'My Aunt Dorothy, ' and some French novels, and, above all, dear Charles Lamb's letters, which I have been sighing for and have begun upon instantly. I cannot imagine what number of hill-bearers will take our goods up to Simla. Major J. has written for 1,500, and they are already at work taking the first division of goods up. Our camp will break up almost entirely in a few days. We three, with two aides-de-camp, the doctor, and one secretary, are going through the Dhoon, a sort of route that will not admit of a large party. It is a very pretty road and likely to be cooler than the actual plains. The rest of the camp and most of the servants will pursue the straight road. I long to get into the hills more than ever. It is grown so very hot now, quite as bad as Calcutta in May. I believe we shall not be able to take Wright and Jones this route, which will make them very unhappy. St. Cloup told me yesterday that he had at last had a letter from Madame St. Cloup, which had made him very happy, and that she was in an excellent place with a relation of ours. Poor woman she little knows what a faithless man he is. However, he bought her a beautiful gold chain at Delhi, and he said that now he had had this letter, he had 'quelque envie de lui acheter des boucles d'oreilles, ' but that he thought it would be better to take them home. It would make her more glad to see him. CHAPTER XIV. Camp, Kurnaul, March 5 1838. It goes much against the grain with me to begin a fresh journal on half a sheet, but it is an odd time for writing, so I must take what I ...

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Rarebooksclub.com

Country of origin

United States

Release date

May 2012

Availability

Supplier out of stock. If you add this item to your wish list we will let you know when it becomes available.

First published

May 2012

Authors

Dimensions

246 x 189 x 3mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback - Trade

Pages

56

ISBN-13

978-1-150-91013-5

Barcode

9781150910135

Categories

LSN

1-150-91013-5



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