Armchair Travel
Wednesday, February 06, 2008
  Masterful Descriptive Writing From Isabella Bird
I've been re-rereading A Lady's Life in the Rocky Mountains by Isabella Bird about her trip to Colorado in 1873 and I am constant struck by the power of her descriptions. She's the only writer I've ever read who uses the word "empurpled."

She doesn't just see a horse, she sees "a high-bred, beautiful creature, stable-kept, with arched neck, quivering nostrils, and restless ears and eyes."

Then she mounts up and we get descriptions of the trails and the scenery. "It's not easy to sit down and write after ten hours of hard riding," she writes to her sister, "especially in a cabin full of people, and wholesome fatigue may make my letter flat when it ought to be enthusiastic."

Doesn't sound so flat to me:

"Very fair it was, after the bare and burning plains, and the variety was endless. Cotton-wood trees were green and bright, aspens shivered in gold temulousness, wild grape vines trailed their lemon-colored foliage along the ground, and the Virginia creeper hung its crimson sprays here and there, lightening green and gold into glory.

"Sometimes from under the cool and bowery shade of the colored tangle we passed into the cool St. Vrain [Valley], and then were wedged between its margin and lofty cliffs and terraces of incredibly staring, fantastic rocks, lined, patched, and splashed with carmine, vermillion, greens of all tints, blue, yellow, orange, violet, deep crimson, coloring that no artist would dare to represent, and of which, in sober prose, I scarcely dare tell."
 
Comments:
But he knew witchcraft in its basic form stalked the Dinee. He saw it in people who had turned deliberately and with malice from the beauty of the Najavo way and embraced the evil that was it opposite. He saw it ever day he worked as a policeman-in those who sold whiksey to children, in those who bought videocassete recorders while their realative were hungry, in the knife fights in a Gallup alley, in beaten wives and abandoned children.
 
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Literary gadfly Stephen Hartshorne writes about books that he finds at flea markets and rummage sales.

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Stephen Hartshorne worked in newspapers and magazines around New England for many years and served as Information Officer in the New Hampshire Senate under Senate President Vesta Roy. He worked as a material handler for nine years at the Yankee Candle Company until the company was taken over by corporate weasels. He is currently the associate editor of GoNOMAD.com, an alternative travel website, which gives him the opportunity to correspond with writers and photographers all over the world. He lives in Sunderland, Massachusetts, with his daughter Sarah, a student at Drew University, and their cat, Dwight D. Eisenmeower. This blog is dedicated to his mom, who made him bookish.

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