Sunday, 5 May 2013

1000 Miles Up the Nile - Joan Lennon


A Thousand Miles up the Nile by Amelia B. Edwards
first published 1876

Okay, this is the plan.  Don't get distracted.  Just nip in, grab a little local colour, and get out fast.  You know how the research can get out of hand - you really want to be writing this new book - it's all very well, Miss Edwards doing and seeing things you'd love to see, or have seen, since so many of them are gone now, but that's not the point ...

Nip, grab, scarper.  Right?  

Right.

I started to read the description of her first morning in Egypt:

"It was dark last night, and I had no idea that my room overlooked an enchanted garden, far-reaching and solitary, peopled with stately giants beneath whose tufted crowns hung rich clusters of maroon and amber dates.  It was a still, warm morning.  Grave grey and black crows flew heavily from tree to tree, or perched, cawing meditatively, upon the topmost branches.  Yonder, between the pillared stems, rose the minaret of a very distant mosque; and here where the garden was bounded by a high wall and a windowless house, I saw a veiled lady walking on a terraced roof in the midst of a cloud of pigeons."

Damn.  Hooked.

The bazaar in Cairo - "a noisy, changing, restless, particoloured tide, half European, half Oriental, on foot, on horseback, and in carriages.  Here are Syrian dragomans in baggy trousers and braided jackets; barefooted Egyptian fellaheen in ragged blue shirts and felt skullcaps; Greeks in absurdly stiff white tunics, like walking penwipers; Persians with high, mitre-like caps of dark woven stuff; swarthy Bedouins in flowing garments, creamy-white with chocolate stripes a foot wide, and head-shawl of the same bound about the brow with a fillet of twisted camel's hair; Englishmen in palm-leaf hats and knickerbockers, dangling their long legs across almost invisible donkeys ..."

But it's not all long descriptions - sometimes just a sentence reaches out and takes your hand.

"Everyone takes Herodotus up the Nile."

"The lights twinkled and flitted, like wandering sparks of stars."


"Every breath is laden with the fine grit of the desert."

I will get on with writing.  Very soon.  Any minute now.  But first, just a few more pages ...




Amelia Ann Blanford Edwards (1831-1892)
Seductive writer.  Be warned.

Joan's website.
Joan's blog.

11 comments:

Ms. said...

Oh, I must read this, and you will get back to writing that book soon enough. What a treat. Thanks

Annis said...

And look at that glorious cover - reminiscent of the great pulp fiction adventures which lurked in my grandfather's bookshelves and redolent of exotic places.

Penny Dolan said...

Yes, exactly what happens when reading such wonderful prose. Three cheers for the power of Amelia, a century and more later.

michelle lovric said...

I read it a few years ago researching a book about her period, and loved every word.

Theresa Breslin said...

Brilliant Joan! The honey trap I've been caught in a dozen times or more. I did take Herodotus up the Nile - wish I'd had Miss Edwards book with me too.

Jean Bull said...

Fabulous! I'd love to read it too.

Mavis said...

Great blog, Joan. Really interesting. It's hooking me too.

Leslie Wilson said...

She sounds well worth chasing up!

Joan Lennon said...

Thank you - a beguiling companion, then and now!

Dianne Hofmeyr said...

Came to your Blog late Joan and oh yes she's wonderful! I have a book called The Nile – A traveller's anthology,.. full of accounts but hers rise above all others. Do we have her in the History Girls Anthology?

Joan Lennon said...

Not this time - but if we ever do a HG Anthology Take Two, that would be a fabulous idea! (I baggsy!)