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
Developments Is Creditably Large, But In My Present "Lowness Of Mind,"
As Molly Would Say, A Long Procession Of Cold, Majestic Cathedrals
Chapter 3 (My Lesson) Pg 20Would Have Reduced Me To A Limp Pulp. "No," Molly Went On, "I Can't
Help Thinking That The Churches Would Be A Sort Of Anticlimax After
Our Beloved, Warm-Blooded Châteaux. It Would Be Like Being Taken To
See Your Great-Grandmother's Grave When You'd Been Promised A Matinée.
You Know We Engaged To Get Lord Lane Into His Lonely Fastnesses As
Soon As Possible----"
"I Don't Believe Monty's In Any Hurry For Them," Said Jack,
Crestfallen. "You Ask Him If----"
"He'd Be Too Polite To Be Truthful. No, I'm Sure That Edelweiss Will
Do Him More Good Than Rose Windows, And Mountain Air Than Incense."
As She Thus Prescribed For My Symptoms, She Gazed Through Her Talc
Window With Marked Particularity Into Her "Lightning Conductor's"
Un-Goggled Face. It Wore A Puzzled Expression At First, Which Suddenly
Brightened Into Comprehension. "Do They Repent Having Brought Me
Along, And Want To Get Rid Of Me?" I Asked Myself. I Could Scarcely
Believe This. They Were Too Kind And Cordial; Still, Something In That
Look Exchanged Between Them Hinted At A Secret Which Concerned Me, And
My Curiosity Was Pricked. Nevertheless, I Was Grateful To Molly,
Whatever Her Motive Might Be For Hurrying On To Paris. Fond As I Was
Of The Two, Their Happy Love, Constantly Though Inadvertently
Displayed Before My Eyes, Was Not A Panacea For The Wound Which They
Were Trying To Cure, And I Still Longed For High Alpine Solitudes.
I Had Let Myself Drift Into A Gloomy Thought-Land, When It Occurred To
Jack That I Had Better Learn To Drive. No Doubt The Clear Fellow
Fancied That I "Wanted Rousing" And Certainly I Got It. Luckily, As A
Small Boy, I Had Taken An Interest In Mechanics, To The Extent Of
Various Experiments Actively Disapproved Of By My Family, And The Old
Fire Was Easily Relit. I Listened To His Harangue In Mere Civility At
First, Then With A Certain Eagerness. Molly Sat In The Tonneau, Jack
Driving, Full-Petrol Ahead, And I Beside Him. We Talked Motor Talk,
And He Forgot The Churches, Except When They Seemed Actually To Come
Out Of Their Way To Get In Ours. I Listened, And At The Same Time
Gathered Impressions Of Roads--Long, Strange, Curiously Individual
Roads.
Someone Has Written Of The "Long, Long Indian Day." I Should Like To
Write Of The Long, Long Roads Of France. They Had Never Before Had Any
Place In My Thoughts. Paris And The Riviera Had Been France For Me
Till Now. I Had Never Been Intimate, Never Even Got On Terms Of Real
Friendship With Any Country Save My Own; And I Had Sometimes Been
Narrow Enough To Take A Kind Of Pride In This. The Sweet English
Country Had Yielded Up Her Secrets To Me; I Knew Her Spring Whimsies,
Her Soft Summer Moods, Her Autumn Dreams, Her Wintry Tempers, And I
Had Vaunted My Faithfulness And Love. But Here Was France In Prime Of
Summer, Giving Me Of Her Best. My Heart Warmed To Her Loveliness, And
I Sniffed The Perfume Of Her Breath, Mysteriously Characteristic As
The Chosen Perfume Of Some Loved Woman's Laces. It Was Glorious To
Spin On, On, Between The Rows Of Sentinel Poplars, Bound For The
Horizon, Yet Never Reaching It, And Regarding Crowded Haunts Of Men
Chapter 3 (My Lesson) Pg 21More As Interruptions Than As Halting Places.
Harfleur Was A Mere Mirage To Me, A Vision Of A Gently Decaying Town
Left Stranded By The Stream Of Civilisation, Flowing Past To Busy
Havre. Some Lines From "Henry The Fifth" Made Elusive Music In My
Brain, Mixed With A Discussion Of Carburetters, Explosion Chambers,
And Sparking-Plugs. At Lillebonne, Winston Deigned To Break Short His
String Of Motor Technicalities And Point Out The Position Of The Roman
Theatre, Almost The Sole Treasure Of The Sort Possessed By Northern
Europe. I Stared Through My Goggles At The Castle Where The Conqueror
Unfolded To The Assembled Barons His Scheme For Invading England; And
I Begged For A Slackening Of Speed At Ancient Caudebec, Which, With
Its Quay And Terrace Overhanging The Seine, And Its Primly Pruned
Elms, Had Such An Air Of Happy Peace That I Wished To Stamp It Firmly
In My Memory. Such Mental Photographs Are Convenient When One Courts
Sleep At Night, And Has Grown Weary Of Counting Uncountable Sheep
Jumping Over A Stile.
Beyond Caudebec We Sailed Along A Road Running High On The Shoulder Of
The Hill, With Wide Views Over The Serpentine Writhings Of The Seine.
Here, Jack Urged A Turning Aside For St. Wandeville Or, At Least, For
The Abbey Of Jumièges, Poetic With Memories Of Agnes Sorel, Whose
Heart Lies In The Keeping Of The Monks, Though Her Body Sleeps At
Loches. But Molly Would Countenance No Loitering. _Her_ Body, She
Said, Should Sleep At Paris That Night.
We Held Straight On, Therefore, Keeping To A Road At The Foot Of White
Cliffs, Sometimes Near The River, Sometimes Leaving It. Quickly Enough
To Please Even This Unaccountably Impatient Molly, We Had Measured
Off The Fifty Miles Separating Havre From Rouen, And Slowed Down For
The Venerable Streets Of The Norman Capital.
"I Suppose Even You Will Want To Give Half An Hour To The Cathedral
Which I Love Best In France?" Jack Inquired, Looking Back At Molly As
He Turned From The Quay Up The Rue Grand Port, And Stopped In The
Mellow Shade Of An Incomparable Pile Which Towered Above Us.
Molly's Mushroom, However, Was Agitated In Dissent. She Has An
American Chin, And An American Chin Spells Determination. We Could Not
See It, But We Knew That It Meant Business. "You And I Will Spend
Hours In The Cathedral Another Time," She Said. "But Now--" She Did
Not Finish Her Sentence, Nevertheless A Look Of Comprehension Again
Lighted Up Jack's Face, Which For The Moment Was Innocent Of Goggles.
"Molly's So Keen On The Maid," Said He, "That She Can't Forgive Rouen
For Not Really Being The Scene Of The Trial And Burning. But Never
Mind, Since She Wills It, We'll Shake The Dust Off Our Michelins, And
When We're Outside, You Will Have Got Far Enough In Your Motoring
Lesson, I Think, To Try Driving."
What The Last Hour Had Not Taught Me (Thanks To Him) In Theory Of
Coils And Accumulators, Electromagnets And Other Things, Was Scarcely
Worth Learning. I Seemed To Have Looked Through Glass Walls Into The
Chapter 3 (My Lesson) Pg 22Cylinders, At The Fussy Little Pistons Working Under Control Of The
"Governor,"--A Tyrant, I Felt Sure. I Had Already Formed A Mature
Opinion On The Question Of Mechanically Operated Inlet Valves (Which
Sounded Disagreeably Surgical), And Was Able To Judge What Their
Advantage Ought To Be Over Those Of The Old Type Worked By The Suction
Of The Piston. I Could Imagine That More Than Half The Fun Of Owning A
Motor Car Would Lie In Understanding The Thing Inside And Out; And I
Said So.
"It's A Little Like Controlling The Elements," Jack Answered. "Think
Of The Difference In This Machine, When It's Asleep--Cold And Quiet,
An Engine Mounted On A Frame, A Tank Of Water, A Reservoir Of Cheap
Spirit, A Pump, A Radiator, A Magnet, Some Geared Wheels Fitting
Together, A Lever Or Two. My Man Twists A Handle. On The Instant The
Machine Leaps Into Frenzied Life. The Carburetter Sprays Its Vapour
Into The Explosion Chamber, The Magnet Flashes Its Sparks To Ignite
It, The Cooling Water Bathes The Hot Walls Of The Cylinders--A Thing
Of Nerves, And Ganglions, And Tireless Muscles Is Panting Eagerly At
Your Service. You Move This Lever, You Press Your Foot Lightly On This
Pedal; The Engine Transfers Its Power To The Wheels; You Move. The
Carriage With You And Your Friends Is Borne At Railway Speed Across
Continents. You Can Hurl Yourself At Sixty Miles An Hour Along The
Great Highroads, You Can Crawl Like A Worm Through The Traffic Of
Cities."
By The Time Jack Had Finished This Harangue We Had Climbed The Hill
Out Of Rouen And Were On The Fine But _Accidenté_ Highroad That Leads
Past Boos And Pont St. Pierre. Soon We Would Reach Les Andelys And
Château Gaillard. Still Jack Was Not Quite Ready To Let Me Put My
Newly Acquired Knowledge Into Practice. There Was A Hill Of Some
Consequence Before Mantes, Which We Had To Reach By Way Of La Roche
Guyon And Limay. After That There Would Be Only What The Route Book
Calls "_Fortes Ondulations_"; And Under The Stronghold Of Lion Heart
Himself (An Appropriate Spot, Forsooth!), I Was To Try My Hand At
Dragon-Driving.
Winston Brought The Car To A Standstill At The Foot Of The Mouldering
Ruins Of Richard's "Saucy Castle," And As We Looked Up At The Towering
Battlements, The Huge Flanking Towers, And The Ponderous Citadel, The
Dark Mass On Its Lofty Rock Set In The Sunny Landscape Like A
Bloodstone In A Gold Ring, Seemed To Be An Epitome In Stone Of Life In
The Middle Ages.
I Uttered Every Idea That Came Into My Mind Concerning The Ruin, And
Squeezed My Brain For More, Till My Head Felt Like A Drained Orange;
Not That I Enjoyed Hearing Myself Talk, Or Thought That Jack And Molly
Would Do So, But Because They Could Not Well Interrupt The Flow Of My
Eloquence To Remind Me Of The Reason For Our Stop.
At Last, However, Silence Fell Upon Us. It Was A Shock To Me When
Molly Broke It. "Oh, Lord Lane, Have You Forgotten That This Is Where
You're To Begin Driving? The Road Is Nice And Broad Here."
Chapter 3 (My Lesson) Pg 23
I Put On
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