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. XI - PUBLIC WORK
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
On New Year's Day, 1891, Mrs. Bishop went to Mull for a glimpse at the only spot on earth which she could now call home; but she did little more than alight and leave, returning to Edinburgh on January 3 to spend two days with Professor and Mrs. Blackie. She left for London on the 7th, stopping at Huntingdon on the way. On the 8th she wrote to Mrs. Macdonald:
The Ouse was hard frozen at Houghton; I went to see Mrs. Brown, and the two girls skated and Percy pushed me four miles on a chair sled—at the rate of 16 miles an hour! Thirty-five years ago I used to skate with numbers of the village folk on that river, and now all but myself and one other are in eternity.
One object of her journey to London was to arrange with Mr. Murray about her book on Persia, one of the most difficult and certainly one of the most valuable books she ever wrote. Its difficulty was due to her repeated losses of notes, diary-letters, and sketches from robberies at Baghdad, Julfa, and in Turkish Kurdistan. A certain number of the diary-letters reached Miss Clayton safely and were locked away. But besides straining her memory, Mrs. Bishop had to consult books of reference and to secure correction of her statements from many residents in the countries traversed.
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- The Life of Isabella Bird , pp. 244 - 269Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011First published in: 1906