It expresses the thoughts, the ideas that Edith had when she traveled a country without a guidebook with her.
Step-by-step explanation:
In Morocco is Edith Wharton's amazing record of her excursion to that nation during World War I. With her trademark feeling of experience, Wharton set out to investigate Morocco and its kin, going by military jeep to Rabat, Moulay Idriss, Fez, and Marrakech, from the Atlantic coast to the high Atlas.
En route, she saw strict services and ceremonial moves, visited the extravagant royal residences of the sultan, and was admitted to the secretive universe of his collection of mistresses.