Episode 3342 The Path to Rome Mon, 2026-Jun-29 00:18 UTC Length - 2:56
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The featured article for Monday, 29 June 2026, is The Path to Rome.
The Path to Rome is a 1902 travelogue by the French-English author and historian Hilaire Belloc. Belloc recounts his pilgrimage from Toul in northeastern France to Rome after encountering an extraordinary statue of Saint Mary in La Celle-Saint-Cloud, France, where he was born. The work contains his account of events in short vignettes, his thoughts on his travels, and asides about the history and geography of places he visits. Belloc also illustrates landmarks, noteworthy geographical features, and explanatory maps to frame his journey and explain his decisions to the audience. It also contains songs for which Belloc provides sheet music and lyrics.
The book is mostly written in a stream-of-consciousness style, containing several conversations between Belloc and an imagined reader (who is invariably combative and confused). The genre has been described as a carnivalesque within the tradition of literary modernism, though it foreshadows the later postmodernist style with its employment of complex literary structures, such as metalepsis, embedded narratives, and defamiliarisation. Although the book is written primarily in English, several passages and pieces of dialogue are in other languages, and language mix-ups and comments about the contemporary linguistic landscape figure prominently.
The Path to Rome was Belloc's most financially successful work and established him as a serious author. It is considered among the best in his literary canon and the quintessential example of his travel literature. Contemporary reviews were positive, focusing on Belloc's authenticity, shrewd observations, and sense of humour. Retrospectives have similarly praised the book, with much of the acclaim centring on Belloc's complex narrative structure and the focus on the minutiae of everyday life in the towns he visited. Critics have often compared it positively with the works of François Rabelais and Laurence Sterne. Belloc himself had a warm affection for the work; he later recounted that it was "the only book I ever wrote for love".
This recording reflects the Wikipedia text as of 00:18 UTC on Monday, 29 June 2026.
For the full current version of the article, see The Path to Rome on Wikipedia.
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Until next time, I'm standard Joey.
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