![]() Travels with a Donkey in the Cévennes by Robert Louis Stevenson, read by Billy Hartman, Naxos, 2hr 38min, 2 CDs £10. ![]() It inspired John Steinbeck’s Travels With Charley, which became, to my mind, the best travel audiobook yet. Monastier is notable for the making of lace, for drunkenness, for freedom of language, and for unparalleled political dissension. I N a little place called Le Monastier, in a pleasant highland valley fifteen miles from Le Puy, I spent about a month of fine days. The result is a romantic, funny classic of travel literature that Billy Hartman’s soft Edinburgh accent suits very well. THE DONKEY, THE PACK, AND THE PACK-SADDLE. His 120-mile journey took him a dozen days, much of it spent cursing and goading the recalcitrant Modestine. To carry it he acquired Modestine, a “she-ass not much bigger than a dog, the colour of a mouse, with a kindly eye and a determined under-jaw a faint resemblance to a lady of my acquaintance”. Like all novice travellers, he took too much with him, stuffed into a sheepskin-lined sleeping bag of his own design. “I travel not to go anywhere, but to go,” he says in his opening chapter. So in that year he set off for his next foray - touring the mountainous Cévennes region in the Midi, sleeping under the stars and wandering at will. ![]() ![]() ![]() In 1878 Robert Louis Stevenson had published only one book, An Inland Voyage, the tale of a canoeing trip through France. Saturday March 10 2018, 12.01am, The Times ![]()
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