The Princess Passes Volume 56 by Alice Muriel Williamson, Charles Norris Williamson (book recommendations .TXT) 📖
Book online «The Princess Passes Volume 56 by Alice Muriel Williamson, Charles Norris Williamson (book recommendations .TXT) 📖». Author Alice Muriel Williamson, Charles Norris Williamson
Bodies," Remarked Molly Coldly.
"It Would Be Rather Sport To Rush The Pass At Night," Said Jack.
"Oh, You Darling!" Cried Molly, "I've Never Loved You So Much."
This Naturally Settled It.
We Walked Down To The Town By An Exquisite Path Leading Through Dark,
Mysterious Pine Forests; Where The Slim, Straight Trunks Of The Tall
Trees Seemed Tightly Stretched, Like The Strings Of A Great Harp, And
Where Melancholy, Elusive Music Was Played Always By The Wind Spirits.
In Lucerne We Did Not, As Molly Had Suggested, Ask Everybody To Stand
And Deliver Information, But We Compromised By Visiting Tourists'
Bureaux. At These Places The Verdict Was An Echo Of Our Landlord's,
And I Saw That Molly And Jack Were Glad. Having Scented Powder, They
Would Have Been Disappointed If The Midnight Battle Need Not Be
Fought.
Molly Had Never Seen Lucerne, Which Was Too Beautiful For A Fleeting
Glance. It Was Arranged That, After Driving Me Over The Pass, For Weal
Or Woe, They Should Return. They Would Leave Most Of Their Luggage At
The Sonnenberg, And Come Back To Spend Some Days, Before Continuing
Their Tour As Originally Mapped Out.
We Slept That Night In Peace (It Is Wonderful How Well You Do Sleep,
Even With A "Mind Diseased," After Hours Of Racing Through Pure, Fresh
Air On A Motor Car); And Next Day We Began Stealthy Preparations For
Our Adventure.
Chapter 6 (The Wings Of The Wind) Pg 39
"Oh, Still Solitude, Only Matched In The Skies;
Perilous In Steep Places,
Soft In The Level Races,
Where Sweeping In Phantom Silence The Cloudland
Flies."
--R. Bridges.
The Wind Howled A Menace To Mercédès, As She Glided Down The Winding
Road Towards The Comfortable, Domestic-Looking Suburbs Of Lucerne.
Banks Of Cloud Raced Each Other Across The Sky, And, Crossing The
Bridge Over The Reuss, We Saw That The Waters Of The Lake, Turquoise
Yesterday, Were To-Day A Sullen Indigo. The Big Steamers Rolled At
Their Moorings; White-Crested Waves Were Leaping Against The Quays,
And Thick Mists Clung Like Rolls Of Wool To The Lower Slopes Of
Pilatus.
Molly's Spirits Rose As The Mercury In The Barometer Fell. "Would You
Care For People If They Were Always Good-Tempered, Or Weather If It
Were Always Fair?" She Asked Me (We Were Sitting Together In The
Tonneau, Jack Driving). "I Revel In Storms, And If We Have One
To-Night, When We Are On The Pass, One Of The Dearest Wishes Of My
Life Will Be Gratified. 'A Storm On The St. Gothard!' Haven't The
Words A Thunder-Roll? Sunlight And Mountain Passes Don't Belong
Together. I Like To Think Of Great Alpine Roads As The Fastnesses Of
Giants, Who Threaten Death To Puny Man When He Ventures Into Their
Power."
It Had Been Arranged That We Should "Potter" (As Winston Called It)
Round The Arms Of The Star-Fish Lake, Until We Reached Flüelen; That
From There We Should Steal As Far As We Dared Up The Reussthal While
Daylight Lasted, Dine At Some Village Inn, And Then, Instead Of
Returning To The Lowlands Of Lucerne, Make A Dash Across The Mighty
Barrier That Shut Us Away From Italy. Under A Lowering Sky, And
Buffeted By Short, Sharp Gusts Of Wind, Which Seemed The Heralds Of
Fiercer Blasts, We Swung Along The Reedy Shores Of The Narrowing Lake,
The Broken Sides Of The Rigi Standing Finely Up On Our Right Hand.
Winston Was Satirical About The Poor Rigi And Its Railway, Calling It
The Primrose Hill And The Devil's Dyke Of Switzerland, The Paradise Of
Trippers, A Mountain Whose Sides Are Hidden Under Cataracts Of
Beer-Bottles; But From Our Point Of View, The Vulgarities Of The
Maligned Mountain Were Mellowed By Distance, And I Neither Could Nor
Would Look Upon It As Contemptible.
Leaving The Lake Of The Forest Cantons, We Spun Along The Margin Of
The Tamer Sheet Of Zug, To Pass, Beyond Arth, Into The Great
Wilderness Caused By The Fearful Landslide Of A Century Ago, When A
Mighty Mass Of Rock And Earth Split Off From The Main Bulk Of The
Rossberg And Thundered Down Into The Valley. The Slow Processes Of
Nature Had Done Much To Cover Up Decently All Traces Of The Titan's
Rage, But The Huge, Bare Scar On The Side Of The Rossberg Still Told
Its Tale Of Tragedy. By The Peaceful Lowerzer See The Road Undulated
Chapter 6 (The Wings Of The Wind) Pg 40Pleasantly, And At Schwyz (The Hub Of Swiss History) We Had Tea, The
Torn And Imposing Pyramids Of The Two Myten Bravely Rearing Their
Heads Above The Mists That Encumbered The Valleys.
There Was No Need To Hurry, For We Had The Night Before Us, So We
Passed Slowly, Halting Often, Along The Marvellous Axenstrasse, While
Jack Distilled Into Molly's Willing Ears Legends From The Old Heroic
Days Of Switzerland, Before It Became The Happy Haven Of
Hotel-Keepers. From The Car We Could Note The Characteristics Of The
Cantons Which Had Entered Into The Famous Bond; Pastoral And Leafy
Unterwalden, With Green Fields And Orchards; Schwyz, Also Green And
Fertile; But Uri (The Cold, Highland Partner In This Great Alliance),
A Country Of Towering Mountains And Savage Rocks. Molly Wanted To Get
A Boat, And Row Across To The Rütli To Stand On That Spot Where, In
1307, Walter Fürst, Arnold Of Melchthal, And Werner Stauffacher Took
The Famous Oath, And Very Reluctantly She Gave Up The Wish When Jack
Pointed To The Rising Waves, Painting In Lurid Colours The Sudden And
Dangerous Storms That Sweep The Lake Of Uri. When He Went On, However,
To Insinuate Doubts As To The Historic Accuracy Of These Old Stories,
And To Hint That Even William Tell Might Himself He An Incorporeal
Legend, Molly Clapped A Little Hand Over His Mouth, Crying Out That
Even If He Had Tried To Destroy The Maid Of Orleans He Must Spare
William Tell. Further On, She Made Us Confide The Car To Gotteland On
The Axenstrasse, While We Descended The Path To Tell's Chapel And Did
Reverence To The Hero's Memory. On Such A Day As This Must It Have
Been That Tell Leaped Ashore From The Boat, Leaving Gessler To Look
After Himself; For The Blasts Were Shrieking Down The Lake, And The
Waves Dashed Their Foam Over The Ledge Where Stands The Chapel.
Jack Stopped Several Times In The Rock Galleries Of The Axenstrasse
Before We Reached Flüelen; Consequently It Was Evening When We
Slipped Into Little Altdorf, Where Molly Insisted On Making A Curtsey
To The Statue Of Tell And His Agreeable Little Boy. Winston Predicted
That We Should Probably Not Be Challenged Until We Got To Göschenen,
As Up To That Point The Road Does Not Take On A True Alpine Character.
The Storm (Which Seemed Rising To A Point Of Fury) Was In Our Favour,
Too, For No One Would Choose To Be Out On Such A Night, Save Mad
English Automobilists And Wilful American Girls.
Dusk Was Beginning To Shadow The Reussthal, As We Ran Past The Railway
Station At Erstfeld, And Began At Length The Ascent Of The St. Gothard
Road. The Great Railway (Of Which We Had Caught Glimpses As We Came
Along The Lake) Was Now Our Companion, While On The Other Hand Roared
The Tumbling Reuss. So Hoarse And Insistent Was The Voice Of The
Stream That Molly Suggested It Should Be "Had Up For Brawling." It Did
Us The Service, However, Of Drowning The Noise Of Our Motor, At All
Times A Discreetly Silent Machine; And As Jack Had Given Orders That
The Big Bleriots Should Not Be Lighted (Two Good Oil Lamps Showing Us
The Way), We Had High Hopes That We Might Fly By Unnoticed, On The
Wings Of The Storm. In Amsteg No One Seemed To Look Upon Us With
Surprise, And Here The Road Turned, To Worm Itself Into The Heart Of
The Mountains, While The Railway, Often Disappearing Into Tunnels, Ran
Far Above Our Heads.
Chapter 6 (The Wings Of The Wind) Pg 41By The Time We Had Reached Gurtnellen Night Had Fallen Black And
Close, And Molly Issued An Edict That We Should Dine In The Open Air,
Instead Of Seeking The Doubtful Comforts Of A Village Inn, Where, Too,
We Might Suffer From The Solicitude Of Some Officious Policeman. The
Car Accordingly Was Run Under The Lee Of A Great Rock, The
Ever-Inspired Gotteland Extemporised A Shelter With The Waterproof
Rugs, And The Blue Flame Of The Chafing-Dish Presently Cheered Us With
Its Glow. The Wind Bellowed Along The Precipices, The Reuss Shouted In
Its Rocky Bed, And Once An Express From Italy To The North Passed High
Above Us, Streaming Its Lights Through The Darkness Like Sparks From A
Boy's Squib. Yet Those Plutocratic Travellers Up In The _Wagons Lits_
Were Not Having Anything Like The "Good Time" We Enjoyed, Warm In Our
Motor Coats, Sitting Snug Behind Our Rock, A Lamp From The Car
Illuminating Our Little Party And Shining On Molly's Piquant Profile
As She Brewed Savoury Messes In Her Magic Cauldron. This Was Testing
Thoroughly The Resources Of The Automobile, Which Was Playing The Part
Of Travelling Kitchen And Larder As Well As Travelling Chariot, And
Could No Doubt Be Made, With A Little Ingenuity, To Play The Parts
Also Of Travelling Bed And Tent. Yet, As I Said All This Aloud To
Jack, My Mind Leaped Forward To Other Nights Which I Should Soon Be
Spending Alone Tinder The Stars, And I Thought Tenderly Of My
Aluminium Stove And Tent, My Sleeping-Sack, And The Other Camping
Tools I Had Bought In Bern.
From Where We Lay Hid Behind Our Rock To Airolo Was Only Some
Thirty-Two Miles, And The Car Ate Up Distance With So Voracious An
Appetite, That It Was Clear We Should Arrive In The Little Italian
Town In The Dead Waste And Middle Of The Night. To Travel A Forbidden
Road On An Automobile, And Then To Knock Up A Snoring Innkeeper At One
In The Morning, To Ask Him Where We Could Find A Donkey, Seemed To Be
Straining Unduly The Sense Of Humour; So After Consultation We Decided
That We Should Leave Airolo To Its Slumbers And Speed Down The Pass
Into Italy Until We Ran To Earth The Object Of Our Quest.
Molly Had Produced Excellent Coffee; The Smoke Of Our Cigarettes
Mingled Its Perfume With The Night Air. Our Position Had In It
Something Unique, For While We Were "In The Heart Of One Of Nature's
Most Savage Retreats" (As Said A Guide-Book Of My Boyhood), We Were At
The Same Time
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