An English Girl's First Impressions of Burmah
Beth Ellis
Read by Carol Fullerton-Samsel
An English Girl's First Impressions of Burmah, by Beth Ellis, is a well-edited, turn-of-the-century journal documenting a young woman’s visit to Burma. The account documents her ocean voyage to Rangoon, and her stay in a small, jungle-embedded, European community in Remyo. The author, who travelled to Asia alone to visit her brother, is quick to laugh at her own exaggerated fears. She gives us a glimpse into the less-than-glamorous lives to Myanmar’s British occupiers. The book was published in 1899, just thirteen years after the conclusion of the third Anglo-Burmese war, when Britain took formal control of Myanmar and made it a province of India. (Summary by Carol Fullerton-Samsel) (4 hr 22 min)
Chapters
Introduction and I. The Voyage | 29:29 | Read by Carol Fullerton-Samsel |
II. Rangoon | 19:40 | Read by Carol Fullerton-Samsel |
III. The Road to Mandalay | 15:43 | Read by Carol Fullerton-Samsel |
IV. The Journey to the HIlls | 27:46 | Read by Carol Fullerton-Samsel |
V. The Up-country Station | 17:16 | Read by Carol Fullerton-Samsel |
VI. The European Inhabitants | 40:54 | Read by Carol Fullerton-Samsel |
VII. The Burmese | 27:16 | Read by Carol Fullerton-Samsel |
VIII. Entertaining | 10:28 | Read by Carol Fullerton-Samsel |
IX. Adventures | 15:16 | Read by Carol Fullerton-Samsel |
X. Beasts and Reptiles | 26:23 | Read by Carol Fullerton-Samsel |
XI. Sport | 20:39 | Read by Carol Fullerton-Samsel |
XII. The Return | 11:24 | Read by Carol Fullerton-Samsel |
Reviews
tea lady
Humorous entertaining story well written and great leader