Up the Country' Letters Written To Her Sister From The Upper Provinces Of India
By:Emily Eden Published By:Double9 Books
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Up the Country' Letters Written To Her Sister From The Upper Provinces Of India
About the Book
"Up the Country" is a charming and witty travelogue written by way of Emily Eden, an outstanding English writer and sister of the Governor-General of India, Lord Auckland. The book chronicles her reviews and observations all through her travels via India, in particular in the northern regions of the usa throughout the 1830s. In "Up the Country," Emily Eden's storytelling style is marked by way of its humor, eager wit, and astute observations. She affords readers with a delightful and candid account of her interactions with an extensive range of humans, from colonial officials and Indian royalty to local residents and British expatriates. Through her enticing narrative, she gives a brilliant and insightful window into the social and political panorama of the time. While the book is lighthearted in its tone, it also delves into the complexities of British colonial rule in India, losing light at the challenges and absurdities of governance in a foreign land. Eden's work is not only a travelogue however a social statement that explores the interactions and cultural clashes between the British and the Indian populace.
Emily Eden (3 March 1797 – 5 August 1869) was an English poet and novelist who wrote amusing portrayals of early-nineteenth-century English life. She wrote a well-known account of her adventures in India, as well as two successful books. She was also a skilled amateur artist. Eden was the sixth daughter of William Eden, 1st Baron Auckland, and Eleanor Elliot, and was born in Westminster. She was Prime Minister Anthony Eden's great-great-great-aunt. She and her sister Fanny traveled to India in her late thirties, where her brother George Eden, 1st Earl of Auckland served as Governor-General from 1835 to 1842. Up The Country: Letters Written to Her Sister from the Upper Provinces of India (1867) was a collection of her accounts of her time in India. While the emphasis of her Indian writings was on journey descriptions, local color, and details of the ceremonial and social occasions she attended, Eden also offered an insightful record of the key political events that transpired during her brother's stint in power. These included the utter annihilation of a British and Indian army during the retreat from Kabul in 1842, for which George Eden was partly blamed.