Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- CHAP. I PARENTAGE AND INHERITANCE
- CHAP. II FIRST TRAVELS AND PUBLICATIONS
- CHAP. III EDINBURGH AND WORK
- CHAP. IV IN JOURNEYINGS OFT
- CHAP. V THE WIDE EAST
- CHAP. VI “AN TAON BHEANNICHT” (“THE BLESSED ONE”)
- CHAP. VII MARRIAGE
- CHAP. VIII LOSS
- CHAP. IX “THROUGH MANY LANDS”
- CHAP. X NATIONS THAT SIT IN DARKNESS
- CHAP. XI PUBLIC WORK
- CHAP. XII THE FAR EAST
- CHAP. XIII THE CHANGING EAST
- CHAP. XIV LAST JOURNEYS
- CHAP. XV “I AM GOING HOME”
- APPENDIX
- INDEX
- PART OF NORTH AMERICA
- Plate section
CHAP. XV - “I AM GOING HOME”
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2011
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- CHAP. I PARENTAGE AND INHERITANCE
- CHAP. II FIRST TRAVELS AND PUBLICATIONS
- CHAP. III EDINBURGH AND WORK
- CHAP. IV IN JOURNEYINGS OFT
- CHAP. V THE WIDE EAST
- CHAP. VI “AN TAON BHEANNICHT” (“THE BLESSED ONE”)
- CHAP. VII MARRIAGE
- CHAP. VIII LOSS
- CHAP. IX “THROUGH MANY LANDS”
- CHAP. X NATIONS THAT SIT IN DARKNESS
- CHAP. XI PUBLIC WORK
- CHAP. XII THE FAR EAST
- CHAP. XIII THE CHANGING EAST
- CHAP. XIV LAST JOURNEYS
- CHAP. XV “I AM GOING HOME”
- APPENDIX
- INDEX
- PART OF NORTH AMERICA
- Plate section
Summary
Mrs. Bishop went to Houghton, on her return from Morocco, and seems to have regarded the Elms as her home rather than Hartford Hurst, where that summer she slept only one night—on August 13. The house had, as yet, no associations to draw her to it as to a home, and at the Elms she found unwearied care and tenderness, the beauty of grassy glades filled with flowers, the song of birds, a “chamber of the sunrise” which was kept for her, and the unvexed tranquillity of tested friendship.
Mrs. Bishop paid many visits during July and August, then travelled north to Peterculter, to spend six weeks with the Miss Kers, on the River Dee, and with other friends in the north. On the whole she rested, and enjoyed her rest. Her article on Morocco, for The Monthly Review, was written just before she began another arduous round of missionary addresses. She writes:
I had to go on to Sheffield to give twelve lectures on China, New Japan, and Morocco, and thence to the Bishop of Wakefield's, to lecture in seven of the Yorkshire towns, and afterwards here, there, and everywhere, having actually given forty-five lectures and addresses since October 17. I have only slept once in my own house for thirteen months!
On December 10 she continues:
I shall never cease to grieve over having given up The Cottage. No house without memories and associations can ever be home to me, and I liked the free, quaint winter life, and going over to Aros on stormy afternoons, and being able to help the really poor.
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- Information
- The Life of Isabella Bird , pp. 369 - 393Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011First published in: 1906