A vivid travel memoir of 19th‑century South America, detailing the author’s year in Potosi and the broader voyage across Peru.
It blends personal observation with historical context, revealing mining life, colonial commerce, and the challenges of crossing wild landscapes.
From the appointment as secretary to a mining venture to the day‑to‑day realities of travel, the book presents a grounded view of people, places, and work. It captures the practicalities of frontier life, the rhythms of markets and inns, and encounters with miners, officials, and travelers along the route to the silver mines and beyond.
- Scenes from long journeys across deserts and high plateaus, exploring frontier towns and rugged routes.
- Portraits of miners, workers, and local communities, including firsthand notes on labor and wages.
- Observations on governance, emigration, and the social climate of old South American frontiers.
- Reflections on the era’s mining industry, economics, and the human stories behind the mines.
Ideal for readers of historical travelogues and anyone curious about early explorations of Peru’s mining heartlands.