Saturday, February 9, 2019
A Commentary on the Travel Writing of Pierre Jean Grosley and Ramond de
A description on the Travel Writing of capital of South Dakota blue jean Grosley and Ramond de Carbonnires severally summer, for the past five years, I view as traveled to Savary Island, B.C. to repose my fag spirit on the mountains, the ocean, and especially on the absence of civilization and the rhythmical amenities thereof. The island is divided the western sandwich half submits to residents who wish for large homes and lawn tennis courts while the east half (Indian Point) supports those who want to escape from those very things. thither are only a handful of permanent residents on the eastern half and they have built their homes and gardens with a respect and reverence for reputation that is rarely found in the city, or Savary Shores (the western half). The visitors to the island fit, generally, into the same western and eastern categories all escaping the city, but only some willing to bring out the city behind. It is a modern distinction between the tourist and the tr aveler. It is insuffer competent to engage with reputation without engaging with the concourse on Savary Island. I have found that encounters with both visitors and residents, negative or positive, have influenced my experience of nature and, in turn, knowledge of myself. Therefore, the effects of our Romantic Travelers encounters with people (tourists, travelers or inseparable residents) on their experience of nature have interested me greatly. Pierre Jean Grosley and Ramond de Carbonnires travel writing provides two perspectives (the tourist and the traveler) of both nature and its piece inhabitants. How each man engages with the people he meets mirrors the way he engages with his inseparable surroundings. My desire to blend in with the residents of Indian Point place my travelling experiences on par with de Carbonnires... ...gages with nature beyond his initial scientific attempts. He accesses nature, and in turn increases his knowledge of self by engaging with the people he encounters, specifically the shepherds of the Pyrenees. I find I am able to relate my own experiences on Savary Island with both of these travelers, although more so with Ramond de Carbonnires. working Cited de Carbonnires, Ramond. Travels in the Pyrenees containing a description of the principal summits, passes, and vallies. Trans. F. Gold. London Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Browne, 1813. (Original work Observations faites dans les Pyrenes, 1789) Grosley, Pierre Jean. New Observations of Italy and its Inhabitants. Trans. Thomas Nugent. London L.Davis and C. Reymers, 1769. Vol.1 Noyes, Russell. English Romantic Poetry and Prose. Oxford Oxford University Press, 1956. Introduction, xxii.
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