In Pursuit of Spring (1913) follows Edward Thomass bicycle ride from London to the Quantock Hills of Somerset as winter loosens. In lucid, finely cadenced prose, he records lanes, hedgerows, inns, birdsong, weather, and place-names, blending topographical exactitude with lyrical restraint. Set within the English peripatetic tradition of Cobbett, Borrow, and Jefferies, the book also registers the modernroads, telegraph wires, the bicycle itselfwith poised ambivalence, reading the countryside as both archive and living present. Thomas (18781917), a London-born critic of Welsh parentage, had long written about the countryside while burdened by hackwork. Walking and cycling were his release; soon after this journey, friendship with Robert Frost would usher his turn to poetry. His love of maps and place-names, and his minute knowledge of birds and rural labor, shape the books inquiry into language, memory, and belonging. For readers of nature writing, travel literature, and the environmental humanities, this is a quietly bracing companion: attentive, unsentimental, and restorative. Whether cyclist, walker, or armchair traveler, you will find a luminous meditation on how to see a landscape in time, and why such seeing matters.Quickie Classics summarizes timeless works with precision, preserving the authors voice and keeping the prose clear, fast, and readabledistilled, never diluted. Enriched Edition extras: Introduction · Synopsis · Historical Context · Brief Analysis · 4 Reflection Q&As · Editorial Footnotes.
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