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From time immemorial Afghanistan has been both a fortress of faith
and a mountainous crossroads. Through its high valleys merchants
traded Chinese porcelains, bundles of indigo cloth, sacks of lapis
lazuli, golden jewellery, emeralds and fine carvings from both east
and west. Ancient scrolls and beliefs entered the land in the
satchels of Buddhist pilgrims and in the baggage of military
invaders - from Alexander the Great to Mughal, Persian and Arab
conquerors and even the ill-fated armies of the British Raj. In
this resonant account, Peter Levi seeks the clues which each
migration left, in the company of the young Bruce Chatwin. Since
his journey in the 1970s, Afghanistan has suffered forty years of
invasion and civil war, making it all the more poignant to
rediscover, with Levi, not a rocky wilderness guarded by fearsome
tribes, but 'this highway of archangels/this theatre of heaven/the
light garden of the God-forgiven angel King.'
In "The Hill of Kronos", Peter Levi paints a radiant portrait of
the Greece he came to know through a lifetime of exploration. As a
young scholar he sought out its ancient spirit, the keys to its
mythology and civilisation, in its ruined cities and majestic
mountains. Later, as a priest working as a diplomat and a friend of
the oppressed, he lived in Athens through the dark days of the
dictatorship. Then the sinews of political life led back to secret
alliances made during the civil war and the earlier occupation of
Greece, back to murder, starvation and corpse-filled quarries.
Lastly, it is seen through the mature eyes of a family man, with
the ripened sensibility of an acclaimed poet. This is a precious
fusion of experience, a gift of insight from one philhellene to all
those who have come to love Greece.
'I mentioned our design to Voltaire,' wrote Boswell. 'He looked at me as if I had talked of going to the North Pole . . .' As it turned out, Johnson enjoyed their Scottish journey (although the land was not quite so wild and barbaric as perhaps he had hoped), and Boswell delighted in it. The year was 1773, they were sixty-three and thirty-two years old, and had been friends for ten years. Their journals, published together here, perfectly complement each other. Johnson's majestic prose and hawk eye for curious detail take in everything from the stone arrowheads found in the Hebrides, to the 'medicinal' waters of Loch Ness and 'the mischiefs of emigration'. Meanwhile, it is very lucky that as Johnson was observing Scotland, Boswell was observing Johnson. His record is perceptive, highly entertaining and full of sardonic wit; for him, as for us, it is an appetizer for The Life of Johnson.
"Children swarmed to him like settlers. He became a land." W.H.
Auden Edward Lear - beloved nonsense poet, author of such adored
poems as The Owl and the Pussycat, inventor of otherworldly
characters like Quangle Wangles and of the modern limerick; lauded
artist and illustrator - was a genius who defies classification.
Gregarious and popular, Lear had a wide circle of friends, but was
often lonely and subject to frequent bouts of depression and
debilitating epilepsy, the shame of which he struggled with all his
life. In this captivating biography, fellow poet Peter Levi renders
descriptions of Lear's sketches and watercolours (of which he
painted some 10,000 in the course of his career) and provides
incisive portraits of his classic poems, such as 'The Jumblies',
'The Owl and the Pussycat' and 'The Yonghy-Bonghy-Bo', setting them
in the wider context of traditional nursery rhymes. Lear belonged
to the great tradition of adventurous British travellers,
undertaking extensive journeys in Italy and Greece, in Albania,
Turkey, Egypt, Palestine and India and these always-eventful
journeys are related here, alongside extracts and quotations from
his letters and diaries - an essential biography for all lovers of
this remarkable British literary figure and now recognised as one
of the greatest nineteenth-century landscape painters.
Pausanias's classic account of every Greek city and sanctuary includes historical introductions and a record of local customs and beliefs. Volume 1 covers central Greece, the country around Athens, Delphi, and Mycenae; Volume 2 describes southern Greece, including Olympia, Sparta, Arcadia, and Bassae.
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