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Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
In 1816, architect and botanist Joseph Woods (1776-1864) embarked
on a two-year journey through France, Switzerland, Italy and
Greece, documenting interesting flora as well as buildings of note.
This two-volume work first appeared in 1828. The account stands
apart from other contemporary travelogues owing to the application
of Woods' architectural insight. By critically assessing ancient
and modern buildings for strengths and defects, Woods hoped to
inform fellow architects as to how they might produce beautiful
buildings through the study of different modes of construction and
decoration. Accordingly, the text is accompanied by Woods' drawings
of important buildings and architectural features. In Volume 1, he
charts his year-long journey through France and Switzerland to
Rome, including discussion of the notable ecclesiastical edifices
of Notre Dame and the Vatican.
In 1816, architect and botanist Joseph Woods (1776-1864) embarked
on a two-year journey through France, Switzerland, Italy and
Greece, documenting interesting flora as well as buildings of note.
This two-volume work first appeared in 1828. The account stands
apart from other contemporary travelogues owing to the application
of Woods' architectural insight. By critically assessing ancient
and modern buildings for strengths and defects, Woods hoped to
inform fellow architects as to how they might produce beautiful
buildings through the study of different modes of construction and
decoration. Accordingly, the text is accompanied by Woods' drawings
of important buildings and architectural features. In Volume 2, he
records his travels through Italy, Greece and Malta, and examines
such notable locations as the Athenian Acropolis and the ruins of
Pompeii.
In this third collection of his poems, Irish poet Joseph Woods
again returns to the theme of travel, at once deepening and
expanding the concerns of his earlier work, while he also explores
the meaning of return and homecoming, of being abroad in one's own
place and of seeing the familiar from a new perspective.Childhood
memories and experiences are renewed and refreshed, the past and
the future echoing each other, from the child in the opening poem
"imagining myself in some ship's open hold / while Morse code
drifted in from the kitchen" to the closing poem where an old man
on "a wet lane of fuchsia-laden hedges / on the damp island of
Chilo " might have "stravaged out / of my country decades ago."
This is a new release of the original 1954 edition.
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Joseph Woods
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Irish poet Joseph Woods' first two collections of poems, Sailing to
Hokkaido (2001) and Bearings (2005), both originally published in
the UK, have been unavailable now for some time. In advance of the
publication of his third collection in 2011, Dedalus Press
publishes in a single volume the poems from those first two titles,
making them available to a new and wider readership. "A poet with
the whole world in his hip-pocket," is how James J. McAuley has
described him, and Woods is certainly among the most widely
travelled of the younger generation of Irish poets, resulting in
poems of detached, lucid observation that yet go far beneath the
surfaces and situations which prompt them, whether on the far side
of the world "Where the word for beautiful is clean," as the title
of one poem has it, or closer to home where the complex history of
an Irish Big House or a sequence of small holdings on a nondescript
roadside may provide the opportunity for an "airing of dark
interiors."
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