"At eighteen, just out of and desperate for freedom, I set off alone wandering around France for several months. My mother sent me her old copy of Robert Louis Stevenson’s ', as a kind of good-luck charm. A little red with a tiny map in the front. I still have it. Suddenly I thought, Here is the map and this is the journey I must make. So I went down through the , following Stevenson’s track, on foot with a , sleeping rough—but no donkey. It only lasted a couple of weeks, but for me, it was tough, very lonely, a kind of initiation. The is like a French version of the , wild and remote. I saw no one for days, but I somehow believed I saw Stevenson and met him. I slept à la belle toile and bathed in the mountain streams. I had a for fifty s in my shoe. I started keeping a notebook about Stevenson’s trip, and that’s how it all began."
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Academics from EnglandBiographers from EnglandFellows of the Royal Society of LiteratureAmerican Book Award winnersFellows of the British Academy
Original Language: English
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as quoted by Lucas Wittman in:
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Richard_Holmes_(biographer)
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Richard Holmes (biographer)
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