登陆注册
37798800000061

第61章 CHAPTER XI--THE WORLD$$$$$S END(2)

We will go down the bay some day and look at those moraines, some of them quite hills of earth, and then you will see for yourself how mighty a chisel the ice-chisel was, and what vast heaps of chips it has left behind. Now then, down over the lawn towards the bridge. Listen to the river, louder and louder every step we take.

What a roar! Is there a waterfall there?

No. It is only the flood. And underneath the roar of that flood, do you not hear a deeper note--a dull rumbling, as if from underground?

Yes. What is it?

The rolling of great stones under water, which are being polished against each other, as they hurry toward the sea. Now, up on the parapet of the bridge. I will hold you tight. Look and see Madam How's rain-spade at work. Look at the terrible yellow torrent below us, almost filling up the arches of the bridge, and leaping high in waves and crests of foam.

Oh, the bridge is falling into the water!

Not a bit. You are not accustomed to see water running below you at ten miles an hour. Never mind that feeling. It will go off in a few seconds. Look; the water is full six feet up the trunks of the trees; over the grass and the king fern, and the tall purple loose-strife -

Oh! Here comes a tree dancing down!

And there are some turfs which have been cut on the mountain. And there is a really sad sight. Look what comes now.

One--two--three.

Why, they are sheep.

Yes. And a sad loss they will be to some poor fellow in the glen above.

And oh! Look at the pig turning round and round solemnly in the corner under the rock. Poor piggy! He ought to have been at home safe in his stye, and not wandering about the hills. And what are these coming now?

Butter firkins, I think. Yes. This is a great flood. It is well if there are no lives lost.

But is it not cruel of Madam How to make such floods?

Well--let us ask one of these men who are looking over the bridge.

Why, what does he say? I cannot understand one word. Is he talking Irish?

Irish-English at least: but what he said was, that it was a mighty fine flood entirely, praised be God; and would help on the potatoes and oats after the drought, and set the grass growing again on the mountains.

And what is he saying now?

That the river will be full of salmon and white trout after this.

What does he mean?

That under our feet now, if we could see through the muddy water, dozens of salmon and sea-trout are running up from the sea.

What! up this furious stream?

Yes. What would be death to you is pleasure and play to them. Up they are going, to spawn in the little brooks among the mountains; and all of them are the best of food, fattened on the herrings and sprats in the sea outside, Madam How's free gift, which does not cost man a farthing, save the expense of nets and rods to catch them.

How can that be?

I will give you a bit of political economy. Suppose a pound of salmon is worth a shilling; and a pound of beef is worth a shilling likewise. Before we can eat the beef, it has cost perhaps tenpence to make that pound of beef out of turnips and grass and oil-cake; and so the country is only twopence a pound richer for it. But Mr. Salmon has made himself out of what he eats in the sea, and so has cost nothing; and the shilling a pound is all clear gain. There--you don't quite understand that piece of political economy. Indeed, it is only in the last two or three years that older heads than yours have got to understand it, and have passed the wise new salmon laws, by which the rivers will be once more as rich with food as the land is, just as they were hundreds of years ago. But now, look again at the river. What do you think makes it so yellow and muddy?

Dirt, of course.

And where does that come from?

Off the mountains?

Yes. Tons on tons of white mud are being carried down past us now; and where will they go?

Into the sea?

Yes, and sink there in the still water, to make new strata at the bottom; and perhaps in them, ages hence, some one will find the bones of those sheep, and of poor Mr. Pig too, fossil -

And the butter firkins too. What fun to find a fossil butter firkin!

But now lift up your eyes to the jagged mountain crests, and their dark sides all laced with silver streams. Out of every crack and cranny there aloft, the rain is bringing down dirt, and stones too, which have been split off by the winter's frosts, deepening every little hollow, and sharpening every peak, and ****** the hills more jagged and steep year by year.

When the ice went away, the hills were all scraped smooth and round by the glaciers, like the flat rock upon the lawn; and ugly enough they must have looked, most like great brown buns. But ever since then, Madam How has been scooping them out again by her water-chisel into deep glens, mighty cliffs, sharp peaks, such as you see aloft, and ****** the old hills beautiful once more. Why, even the Alps in Switzerland have been carved out by frost and rain, out of some great flat. The very peak of the Matterhorn, of which you have so often seen a picture, is but one single point left of some enormous bun of rock. All the rest has been carved away by rain and frost; and some day the Matterhorn itself will be carved away, and its last stone topple into the glacier at its foot. See, as we have been talking, we have got into the woods.

Oh, what beautiful woods, just like our own.

Not quite. There are some things growing here which do not grow at home, as you will soon see. And there are no rocks at home, either, as there are here.

How strange, to see trees growing out of rocks! How do their roots get into the stone?

There is plenty of rich mould in the cracks for them to feed on -

"Health to the oak of the mountains; he trusts to the might of the rock-clefts.

Deeply he mines, and in peace feeds on the wealth of the stone."

How many sorts of trees there are--oak, and birch and nuts, and mountain-ash, and holly and furze, and heather.

And if you went to some of the islands in the lake up in the glen, you would find wild arbutus--strawberry-tree, as you call it. We will go and get some one day or other.

How long and green the grass is, even on the rocks, and the ferns, and the moss, too. Everything seems richer here than at home.

同类推荐
  • 士冠礼

    士冠礼

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 重送白将军

    重送白将军

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 荔枝

    荔枝

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 浣纱石上女

    浣纱石上女

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Jack and Jill

    Jack and Jill

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 笨小孩成长记

    笨小孩成长记

    在迷惘的人生里,曾经多少次感叹青春逝去的残酷而无力挽回,用一部原创小说,记录我逝去的青春,安放那彷徨不安的灵魂。
  • 镂骨

    镂骨

    六岁的年龄是不被接受的么?虽然很不想承认这个世俗的判定,但是李时霖后退了。一退便是离开,离开了那个人,那个城市,以及那个世界。或许吧!她在玩弄司储谌的感情,可谁又能说清楚?“走了也好,是该如此,抓不住就算了。”那是司储谌第一次不断的劝服自己,忘记。几个小时的时间,一个人从他的世界消失。他没有找,反而平静的跟从来没有这个人似的。
  • 一生梦 篮球梦

    一生梦 篮球梦

    文章主人公从一个普通家庭出身,为了自己的篮球事业努力拼搏奋斗。在此期间经历了初中高中大学以及省会生活阶段,在学校中也成了学校的风云人物,吸引了许多女生的爱慕,男生们也为之佩服,但主人公仍然低调行事,在日常生活中为了自己的理想始终坚持不懈的努力,最终成为了国内以及世界上著名的篮球运动员。
  • 万字绝杀咒之谜

    万字绝杀咒之谜

    巫师界着名企业——展天集团发生一起凶杀案。财务总监萧正成为“万字绝杀咒”的牺牲品。巫师大战之后,万字绝杀咒已经成为禁咒,究竟是谁在暗中制造新的恐慌?白领巫师东方溯,受被害人女儿之托,与身为巫警的高中同学毛逑合作,对案件展开侦破调查。
  • 快穿攻略:渣男不渣,女主眼瞎

    快穿攻略:渣男不渣,女主眼瞎

    “攻略谁由我来定,刷错好感删存档。如果让攻略主之外的人碰你,哪怕是不小心……恭喜你,任务失败,从头再来。”男人如是说完,看着暴走的女人,唇角翘的更加微妙。姜问月,你完了!
  • 偏执首席放过我

    偏执首席放过我

    十年前的一次相遇,让偏执占有欲极强的简唯轩偏执到非她不可,只因温以沫是简唯轩不可放手的温暖,十年的守候换来的温以沫被别的人抢走,偏执的简唯轩终于坐不住了,在这场博弈中谁先丢了心,温以沫不知简唯轩在克制自己的情绪,不想伤害她。。。不想伤害,不敢靠近。。小心翼翼。。
  • 我就问你浪不浪

    我就问你浪不浪

    穿越,就是从自己活腻了的世界,来到别人活腻了的世界,干一点活腻了的人该干的事儿……
  • 超级大老板

    超级大老板

    迫于压力,小职员陆明磊肩负着公司的使命,独自会见富豪女总,由此,拉开了他成为超级大老板的序幕……
  • 道术之奇门遁甲

    道术之奇门遁甲

    故事讲述了我的一段人生经历,从一个普通人变成一个具有道术的修仙人。长大后进入一家私立大学担任体育老师,后来我才知道,这世界上,和人类外貌一样的,不一定是人类。奇门遁甲,多年来修行不过只是皮毛。
  • 血色珞樱

    血色珞樱

    从5岁就开始杀手训练的凌珞樱成长后做出了一系列大事业。却被不知情的母亲唤回从读初中。遇见儿时玩伴,闹了矛盾的男友......