Posted on: 22 August 2015

Digital Rare Book:
The Modern Traveller - India
Volume 3
By Josiah Conder (1789-1855)
Published James Duncan, London - 1830

Read Book Online:

http://bit.ly/1PFP0jP

Download pdf Book:

http://bit.ly/1hR6Vc3

Image:
Poona - 1809

This aquatint is taken from plate 13 of Henry Salt's 'Twenty Four Views in St. Helena, the Cape, India, Ceylon, the Red Sea, Abyssinia and Egypt'. Poona (now Pune, in Maharashtra) was the capital of the Marathas and the seat of the Peshwa, the head of the Maratha confederacy. In the centre of this scene, on the confluence of the Mula and Mutha rivers, is the home of the British Resident at Pune. This bungalow had been erected to celebrate a festival at which the Peshwa assisted when he was restored to Poona by British arms. According to Annesley, 'suttee' (sati, the practice of burning a Hindu widow on her husband's funeral pyre) was performed at the pagodas nearby.

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Josiah Conder, (17 September 1789 – 27 December 1855), correspondent of Robert Southey and well connected to romantic authors of his day, was editor of the British literary magazine The Eclectic Review, the Nonconformist and abolitionist newspaper The Patriot, the author of romantic verses, poetry, and many popular hymns that survive to this day. His most ambitious non-fiction work was the thirty-volume worldwide geographical tome The Modern Traveller; and his best-selling compilation book The Congregational Hymn Book. Conder was a prominent London Congregationalist, an abolitionist, and took an active part in seeking to repeal British anti-Jewish laws. Although Josiah Conder never travelled abroad himself, he compiled all thirty volumes of The Modern Traveller, his non-fiction publishing epic covering the geography of many of countries of the world. It sold well, but was outsold by his Congregational Hymn Book, some 90,000 copies of which were ordered in its first seven years. - Wiki

As Marcel Proust's life, work & his quote says - " The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes, but in having new eyes." ( http://www.theguardian.com/travel/2015/aug/19/new-attitude-to-travel-skip-the-iconic )