Sir H Rider Haggard, Maurice Greiffenhagen, Nicholas Williams
Rider Haggard a screfas an novel-ma in nebes dedhyow termyn cot wosa y sowena gans "Balyow Mytern Salamon" hag ev ow qwil devnyth unweyth arta a'y experyens a Afryca hag a'y skians a'n fug-whedhlow coth. Saw yma downder brAssa ha moy grysyl dhe verkya i'n lyver-ma kefrEs. I'n whedhel yma an try den dhyworth Kergraunt ow codhevel torrva gorhal, fevyr ha debroryon tus in udn whelas "Honna," towl ha pedn aga viaj, kemynys dhedhans dyw vil vledhen alena. "Honna" yw an carnacyon a onen a'n fygurs moyha puyssant ha moyha omborthus in omwodhvos an West: benyn neb yw in kettermyn dynyores ha skyla...
Rider Haggard a screfas an novel-ma in nebes dedhyow termyn cot wosa y sowena gans "Balyow Mytern Salamon" hag ev ow qwil devnyth unweyth arta a'y ...
Sir H Rider Haggard, Maurice Greiffenhagen, Michael Everson
Rider Haggard wrote this novel in a few days shortly after his success with "King Solomon's Mines," and in it he again uses his African experiences and his familiarity with old legends. But there is a greater and more frightening depth in this book. In the story the three men from Cambridge endure shipwreck, fever, and cannibals as they search for "She," the object and end of their adventure, bequeathed to them two thousand years previously. "She" is the incarnation of one of the most powerful and most ambiguous figures in Western consciousness: a woman who is at the same time a seductress...
Rider Haggard wrote this novel in a few days shortly after his success with "King Solomon's Mines," and in it he again uses his African experiences an...