The Princess Passes Volume 56, Alice Muriel Williamson, Charles Norris Williamson [primary phonics txt] 📗
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Which Were Not New, And Altogether He Did Not Appear To Be A Personage
Who, From The Hotel-Keeper's Point Of View, Would Be Of Supreme
Importance. Yet The Landlord And Another Besieged The Quiet Man With
Compliments And Pleadings, To Which He Did Not Seem Inclined To
Listen. Bowing Gravely, He Told His Coachman To Drive On, And In A
Moment Had Passed Us As We Stood In The Road.
But When He Had Gone, The Landlord And His Assistant Still Had No Eyes
For Us. "Mark My Words," Exclaimed The Former, In A Tone Of Anguish,
"We Shall Lose Our Star."
Were They Astrologers, That They Should Fear This Fate?
Our Curiosity Was Excited, And Seeing A Head-Waiterly Person, Who Wore
A Mien Between Awe And Stifled Amusement, I Called For Beer Which I
Did Not Wish To Drink. It Was Served On A Table In The Shady Garden,
And I Enquired If The Carriage Just Out Of Sight Had Contained A
Troublesome Guest.
"Troublesome Is Not The Word, Monsieur," Replied The Waiter. "But A
Thing Has Happened. That Gentleman Whom You Saw, Arrived A Few Days
Ago, Giving The Name Of Karl. He Took The Cheapest Room In The House;
He Drank One Of The Cheapest Wines, Having Satisfied Himself That The
Price Was Within His Means. To-Day, He Said That He Was Leaving, And
Asked For His Bill. When It Was Made Out, The Wine Came To A Franc
More Than He Thought It Ought. 'I Do Not Complain,' Said He To Our
_Patron_; 'If That Is The Price Of The Wine, I Will Pay, But I Was
Told At The Table It Was Less. I Do Not Consider The Wine Good Enough
For The Price.' This Vexed The _Patron_, Because One Does Not Think
The More Of A Person Who Haggles Over A Franc, Especially If That
Person Has Studied Cheapness In All Ways During His Visit. Perhaps The
_Patron_ Spoke Somewhat Irritably, For He Did Not Care Whether The
Monsieur Ever Came Back To His House Or Not. Then The Monsieur Paid
The Bill, Without Another Word, And Was Going Away, When A German
Gentleman, Who Had Been Sitting Here In The Garden, Said To The
_Patron_: 'Do You Know Who That Is?' No,' Replied Our _Patron_, 'I Do
Not Know, Nor Do I Care.' 'It Is Baedeker,' Said The Gentleman. This
Was Terrible; And The Patron Flew To Correct The Little Mistake About
The Wine, With A Thousand Apologies; But The Monsieur Would Not Have
His Money Back, And You Saw Him Drive Away. Now, It Is Possible That
Our Hotel Will No Longer Keep Its Star, And That Would Be No Less Than
A Catastrophe."
Evidently, What His Cherished Peacock-Feather Is To A Chinese
Mandarin, That Is A Baedeker Star To A Hotel-Keeper; And The Boy And I
Chapter 17 (The Little Game Of Flirtation) Pg 131Were So Tickled At The Little Tragi-Comedy That We Forgot, As We
Walked On Side By Side, That We Had Been Upon Official Terms Only.
Again We Were Struck By The Extraordinary Individuality Which
Differentiates One Valley Or Mountain-Pass From Another. We Had Seen
Nothing Like This; Nothing, Perhaps, So Purely Beautiful. One Could
Not Imagine That Winter Snow And Ice Could Still The Pulse Of Summer
Here. It Was As If We Wandered From One Green Glade To Another In
Fairyland, Where All The Little People Who Owned The Magic Land Had
Turned Themselves Hurriedly Into Strangely Delicate Ferns And
Bluebells To Watch Us, Laughing, As We Went By.
The Village Of Trient Lay In Deep Shadow When We Reached It, And Found
The Others Waiting For Us In The Carriage In Front Of The Chief Hotel;
But There Was No Gloom In The Shadow; It Was Only A Deeper Shade Of
Green, With A Hint Of Transparent Blue Streaked Across It. Another
Remote, Dream-Village On The Long List Of Places Where I Really
_Must_ Stay For A Lazy Summer Month--When I Have Time! The List Was
Growing Long Now, Almost Worryingly Long, And The Boy Felt It So, Too,
For He Also Had A List, And Strange To Say, It Was Much The Same As
Mine.
We Had Tea, And Were Vaguely Surprised To See A Number Of People Of
Our Own Kind, Most Of Them English And American, Engaged In The Same
Occupation, And Evidently At Home In The Place. Trient Was On Their
List As Well As Ours, And Now, If They Liked, They Could Cross It Off,
And Begin With The Next Place.
The Contessa Thought The Boy Looked Tired, And Urged Him To Drive
Again, But Though His Manner Was Still Flirtatious He Found An Excuse
To Keep To His Feet. He Was Not Really Tired, Not A Bit; How Could One
Be Tired In So Much Beauty? The Poor Horses Were Fagged Though, For
The Carriage Was Heavy; He Would Not Add To Its Weight.
"You _Are_ Getting Rather White About The Gills," I Said To Him When
The Driving Party Had Once More Left Us Behind. "Why Didn't You Take
Up Your Flirtation Where You Left It Off, Like A Serial Story To Be
'Continued In Your Next'? Your Weight Is Nothing."
"It Wasn't That, Really," Replied The Boy.
"What, Then?"
"Do You Remember Why I Wanted To Come Over The Tête Noire?"
"To Have The Sensation Of Mont Blanc Suddenly Bursting Upon You."
"Well, I--To Tell The Truth, I Had A Whim--Just A Whim, And Nothing
More--To Be With You And Not With The Contessa When The Time For That
Sensation Should Come."
My Heart Warmed; But Perhaps I Was Flattering Myself Unduly. "You
Were Afraid That Her Fascinations Might Overpower Those Of Mont Blanc,
Chapter 17 (The Little Game Of Flirtation) Pg 132I Suppose, Whereas I Am A Mere Stock Or Stone?"
"That's One Way Of Putting It," Replied He Calmly. But When The
Sensation Did Come, He Caught My Arm, With A Quick-Drawn Breath, And
No Word Following.
Our Worship Of Other Mountains Had Been A Serving Of False Gods. There
Was The One White Truth, Dwarfing All Else Into Insignificance; Not A
Mere Mountain, But A World Of Snow Sailing Moon-Like In Full Sky. It
Was, Indeed, As If The Moon, Gleaming White And Bathed In Radiance,
Had Come To Pay Earth A Visit. Surely It Would Not Stay; Surely It Was
A Secret That She Had Come, And We Had Found It Out, Just When This
Great Dark Rock-Door Through Which We Looked, Opened By Accident To
Show The Sight. But If It Were A Secret, There Was No Fear That We
Would Ever Tell It, For It Soared Beyond Words.
The First Glimpse Gave This Impression; Afterwards We Could Not Have
Recalled It If We Had Tried. We Grew Used To The White Majesty Which
Faced Us, By-And-Bye, As Alas! One Does Grow Used To Beauty While One
Has It Within Reach Of The Eye. But Just As The Boy Had Begun To
Confess Himself Tired, And To Lag In His Walk, Resting An Arm On My
Shoulder, A New Wonder Came, Like A Draught Of Tonic Wine. Sunset,
With King Midas' Touch, Transformed The Whole Mountain To Gold, So
That It Burned Like A Lamp To Light The World, Against A Violet Sky.
In The Foreground Was A Low Rampart Of Green Mountain, Down Which
Poured A Huge Glacier Like An Arrested Cataract. It Glimmered With A
Faint Radiance, Greenish-Blue, And Pale As The Gleam Of A Glow-Worm.
The Violet Of The Sky Deepened To Amethyst-Purple, And The Snow On The
Waving Line Of Mountains Turned From Gold To Pink, As If There Had
Been A Sudden Rain Of Rose Leaves.
For A Long Time Lasted The Changing Play Of Jewelled Lights, And Then
The Magic Colour Was Swallowed At A Gulp By The Descending Night.
Far Away, And Far Down In The Deep Valley, The Lights Of Chamounix And
Its Satellite Villages Sparkled Like A Troupe Of Fallen Stars. They
Lay In A Bright Heap, Clustered Together; And Innocentina, Coming Up
With Us At This Moment, Said That They Were Like Raisins Sunk Together
At The Bottom Of A Pudding. The Late Rain Had Set All The Little
Torrents Talking, And We Were Silent, Listening To Their Gossip Of The
Mountains' Secrets.
Chapter 18 (Rank Tyranny) Pg 133
"Thou Art Past The Tyrant's Stroke."
--Shakespeare.
We Seemed To Have Formed A Habit, The Boy And I, Of Steering Always
For A Hôtel Mont Blanc, If There Were One In A Town; So That Now We
Had Come To Look Upon A Hostelry With Such A Name As A Sort Of Second
Home, A Daughter Of A Mother House. There Were Still Two Other Reasons
Why We Should Select The Mont Blanc In Chamounix: The First, Because
The Contessa Was Going There And Had Asked Us To Do Likewise; The
Second, Because At Martigny We Had Seen An Advertisement Of The Hotel
Which Stated That It Was Situated In A "_Vaste Parc Avec Chamois_."
Our Imagination Pictured An Ancient Château, Altered For Modern Uses,
Shut Away From The Outer World In A Mysterious Forest Of Dark Pines,
Where Wild Chamois Sported Gracefully At Will, Leaping Across Chasms
From One Overhanging Rock To Another.
It Was Long Past Twilight When Our Little Procession Of Four Human
Beings And Three Beasts Of Burden Straggled Through A Lighted Gateway
Which We Had Been Told To Enter For The Hôtel Mont Blanc. With One
Blow Our Ancient Castle Was Shattered. At A Hundred Metres Distant
From The Street Rose An Enormous Modern Hotel, Blazing With Light At
Every Window. Where Was The Vast Park With Its Crowding Pines And Its
Ravines For The Wild Chamois? It Must Be Somewhere, Since The
Advertisement Certified Its Existence, And So Must The Chamois.
Perhaps The Forest Lay Behind The Hotel; But The Boy Was Too Tired To
Care, And To Us Both Baths, Food, And Rest Were For The Moment Worth
More Than Parks Or Chamois. The Hotel Struck A High Note Of
Civilisation, And I Had Seen Nothing So Fine Since London Or Paris.
The Boy And I Dined Late And Sumptuously, Tête-À-Tête, For The Hot Sun
And The Long Drive Had Sent Gaetà To Bed, Chastened With A Headache;
And, Weary As He Was, The Little Pal Had Pluck Enough Left To Suggest
An Appointment For Early Next Morning. "I Shall Want To Know How Mont
Blanc Looks From My Window, So I Won't Waste My Time In Bed," Said He.
"Besides, I'm Rather Keen To See The Chamois,
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