A Tramp's Sketches eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 220 pages of information about A Tramp's Sketches.

A Tramp's Sketches eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 220 pages of information about A Tramp's Sketches.

SOME PRESS OPINIONS.

DAILY TELEGRAPH.—­“A deeply interesting volume that will stimulate in many readers a desire for that fuller work on his trampings which Mr. Graham promises....  He is gifted with rare ability to write of that which he has experienced.  It may safely be said that few readers would wish, after taking up this volume and reading one of the sketches at random, to put it aside without having read the rest....  It is always something pertinent, fresh, and interesting that the writer has to tell us.”

DAILY NEWS.—­“Mr. Graham has given us in this robust book a classic of educated yet wild vagabondage.”

ACADEMY.—­“To have read A Tramp’s Sketches is to have been lifted into a higher and rarer atmosphere....  A book that, if we mistake not, is destined to endure.”

ENGLISH REVIEW.—­“A delightful book, redolent of the open air, of the night, of the great silences of expanse, and yet full of incident, of apercus into Russian conditions and the minds of peasants, revealing a real spiritual and material sympathy, both with the ’black earth’ and the monks of monasteries, whose hospitality he enjoyed, and with his fellow-comrades of the road.  It is life that interests the author.  Here we can get it, and it is like splashing about in a clear pool on a warm summer’s day, spontaneous in inspiration, mature in philosophic contemplation.  This sort of book gives a man honest pleasure.  More, it sets his heart beating in unison with the author, in harmony with the awe and beauty and simplicity of Nature.”

QUEEN.—­“The whole book is full of beautiful things....  Mr. Graham may feel sure that we look forward eagerly to his next book, in which he promises to tell the full story of his pilgrimage to Jerusalem.”

LITERARY WORLD.—­“A book to read, to cherish, and to turn to again and again for the renewal of the moods of exaltation which it distils like dew upon a hillside.”

T.P.’S WEEKLY.—­“A charming book of travel and philosophy.  This tramp is a stylist, and if you have a friend who can appreciate really intimate and beautiful writing, buy it, and read it carefully word by word yourself.  The pages are cut, and by this means you have a fund for reverie and talk that is not chatter.  In an age of ‘topics’ and ‘masterpieces’ this quiet volume is the more delightful.”

GLOBE.—­“Of the true vagabond spirit Mr. Graham possesses a very abundant share, and it is this sheer delight in tramping for tramping’s sake—­the only real joy of living—­that, visible in every word he writes, makes his book so fascinating to read.”

BY THE SAME AUTHOR.

WITH THE RUSSIAN PILGRIMS TO JERUSALEM

With 38 Illustrations from Photographs by the Author, and a Map. 8vo.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
A Tramp's Sketches from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.