登陆注册
20026000000060

第60章 CHAPTER XI--THE WORLD$$$$$S END(1)

Hullo! hi! wake up. Jump out of bed, and come to the window, and see where you are.

What a wonderful place!

So it is: though it is only poor old Ireland. Don't you recollect that when we started I told you we were going to Ireland, and through it to the World's End; and here we are now safe at the end of the old world, and beyond us the great Atlantic, and beyond that again, thousands of miles away, the new world, which will be rich and prosperous, civilised and noble, thousands of years hence, when this old world, it may be, will be dead, and little children there will be reading in their history books of Ancient England and of Ancient France, as you now read of Greece and Rome.

But what a wonderful place it is! What are those great green things standing up in the sky, all over purple ribs and bars, with their tops hid in the clouds?

Those are mountains; the bones of some old world, whose poor bare sides Madam How is trying to cover with rich green grass.

And how far off are they?

How I should like to walk up to the top of that one which looks quite close.

You will find it a long walk up there; three miles, I dare say, over black bogs and banks of rock, and up corries and cliffs which you could not climb. There are plenty of cows on that mountain: and yet they look so small, you could not see them, nor I either, without a glass. That long white streak, zigzagging down the mountain side, is a roaring cataract of foam five hundred feet high, full now with last night's rain; but by this afternoon it will have dwindled to a little thread; and to-morrow, when you get up, if no more rain has come down, it will be gone. Madam How works here among the mountains swiftly and hugely, and sometimes terribly enough; as you shall see when you have had your breakfast, and come down to the bridge with me.

But what a beautiful place it is! Flowers and woods and a lawn; and what is that great smooth patch in the lawn just under the window?

Is it an empty flower-bed?

Ah, thereby hangs a strange tale. We will go and look at it after breakfast, and then you shall see with your own eyes one of the wonders which I have been telling you of.

And what is that shining between the trees?

Water.

Is it a lake?

Not a lake, though there are plenty round here; that is salt water, not fresh. Look away to the right, and you see it through the opening of the woods again and again: and now look above the woods. You see a faint blue line, and gray and purple lumps like clouds, which rest upon it far away. That, child, is the great Atlantic Ocean, and those are islands in the far west. The water which washes the bottom of the lawn was but a few months ago pouring out of the Gulf of Mexico, between the Bahamas and Florida, and swept away here as the great ocean river of warm water which we call the Gulf Stream, bringing with it out of the open ocean the shoals of mackerel, and the porpoises and whales which feed upon them. Some fine afternoon we will run down the bay and catch strange fishes, such as you never saw before, and very likely see a living whale.

What? such a whale as they get whalebone from, and which eats sea- moths?

No, they live far north, in the Arctic circle; these are grampuses, and bottle-noses, which feed on fish; not so big as the right whales, but quite big enough to astonish you, if one comes up and blows close to the boat. Get yourself dressed and come down, and then we will go out; we shall have plenty to see and talk of at every step.

Now, you have finished your breakfast at last, so come along, and we shall see what we shall see. First run out across the gravel, and scramble up that bank of lawn, and you will see what you fancied was an empty flower-bed.

Why, it is all hard rock.

Ah, you are come into the land of rocks now: out of the land of sand and gravel; out of a soft young corner of the world into a very hard, old, weather-beaten corner; and you will see rocks enough, and too many for the poor farmers, before you go home again.

But how beautifully smooth and flat the rock is: and yet it is all rounded.

What is it like?

Like--like the half of a shell.

Not badly said, but think again.

Like--like--I know what it is like. Like the back of some great monster peeping up through the turf.

You have got it. Such rocks as these are called in Switzerland "roches moutonnees," because they are, people fancy, like sheep's backs. Now look at the cracks and layers in it. They run across the stone; they have nothing to do with the shape of it. You see that?

Yes: but here are cracks running across them, all along the stone, till the turf hides them.

Look at them again; they are no cracks; they do not go into the stone.

I see. They are scratched; something like those on the elder-stem at home, where the cats sharpen their claws. But it would take a big cat to make them.

Do you recollect what I told you of Madam How's hand, more flexible than any hand of man, and yet strong enough to grind the mountains into paste?

I know. Ice! ice! ice! But are these really ice-marks?

Child, on the place where we now stand, over rich lawns, and warm woods, and shining lochs, lay once on a time hundreds, it may be thousands, of feet of solid ice, crawling off yonder mountain-tops into the ocean there outside; and this is one of its tracks. See how the scratches all point straight down the valley, and straight out to sea. Those mountains are 2000 feet high: but they were much higher once; for the ice has planed the tops off them. Then, it seems to me, the ice sank, and left the mountains standing out of it about half their height, and at that level it stayed, till it had planed down all those lower moors of smooth bare rock between us and the Western ocean; and then it sank again, and dwindled back, leaving moraines (that is, heaps of dirt and stones) all up these valleys here and there, till at the last it melted all away, and poor old Ireland became fit to live in again.

同类推荐
  • 因明义断

    因明义断

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 内功四经

    内功四经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 随园食单

    随园食单

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Romantic Ballads

    Romantic Ballads

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 巧冤家

    巧冤家

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 冷漠王爷妃本轻狂

    冷漠王爷妃本轻狂

    她是相府不受宠的嫡女,却因一纸婚约命丧黄泉。她是冷酷杀手,从不相信爱情,却因一次意外丧命,当她成为她时会有怎么样的遭遇。当她成为她,遭遇炎王府的冷漠王爷,会发生什么样的妙事。(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)
  • 田园小福妻

    田园小福妻

    方灿灿穿越成了乡下的小寡妇,还有了一个便宜儿子,相公上了战场从此便没有丝毫音讯。被婆家给扫地出门,栖身破庙五年。看着可爱的儿子她欲哭无泪,从此咱们娘俩相依为命了。扮猪吃老虎让想要欺负他们母子的人自食恶果,做点儿小生意,养好小包子。一切都很美好,只是这已经死掉的相公是从哪里冒出来的,怎么突然间她又不是寡妇了?
  • 人要比钱跑得快

    人要比钱跑得快

    你不理财,财不理你。现在有钱并不能保证你将来就一定生存能力强、生活状况好。真正决定生存能力和财富数量的关键是养成良好的理财习惯,它是测算你能留住多少钱以及让这些钱为你工作多久的指标。一个好的理财习惯胜过成百上千次漫无目的的打拼。阅读本书,感情富人的理财习惯,洞察富人的理财思维,会让你像富人一样思考,像富人一样问鼎人生苍穹,成就财富梦想。本书最大的特点是通过通俗易懂的语言,将大众所熟知的富人的有关理财习惯展示给广大读者,力求让每一位读者都能从中得到一点启发,帮助他们对照自己,有意识地去培养这些成就富人的理财习惯。
  • 教授威武,小妻入豪门

    教授威武,小妻入豪门

    她夹着书本去上课,他骑着单车去教学,学校门口上演狗血戏,她的衣服被拆成一堆毛线她风中凌乱,“赔我衣服!”他深眸如井,淡定处理——“我的脱下来,赔你~~”再见面,狗血场景重又上演他长身玉立,淡然轻嗤:“你是说,你的肉,需要我负责?”她心肝儿猛颤,恨恨咬牙......想啥呢,人家说的是肉肉,多肉植物好不好~~再然后,她不小心弄破他的户口本,他无语......“终于轮到你赔我了!”“好,我赔你......”她学着他的样子,和颜悦色,一本正经递过自己户口本,“来我的户口本,或者,让它住进你的户口本里。”
  • 小优日记

    小优日记

    学生小优来到新学校,见到了老同学又认识了新朋友,一个从夏天到冬天的故事,注定不平凡
  • 冰血残温:前世今生

    冰血残温:前世今生

    一世究竟有多长?轮回,再遇,彼此的心跳是否还能一致?她与他的前生,她和他的今世,命运主宰者一切,即使想要逃离却仍然逃不开那羁绊,前生她为他死,今世他为她会怎样?一张嗜血的契约将她又带回到了他的身边,究竟这场阴谋谁能赢的爱情?
  • 归有园麈谈

    归有园麈谈

    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。
  • 重山烟雨诺

    重山烟雨诺

    苏伊诺一个什么都懂的逗B女,季曜沂一个一根筋的大好青年。携手经历了一些不敢想象的人生,出现了各种不忍直视的狗血桥段。从一个武功高强的高手,变成一个打架除了看就只能跑的逗B女,从一个天赋异禀的大好青年,变成快当配角的小男子。请看小女子和大,大,大豆腐的爱情和不同常人的人生。
  • 末日独奏

    末日独奏

    这作品以前宅起点发布过,人气不错!可惜本人无意再写!现在发在这里看看,抱歉!也学会续写!
  • 差一点我就错过你了

    差一点我就错过你了

    那一年他们相遇,此次他们的命运相绊。梁墨:“菲儿,我们再也不要分开,我要像这样一直牢牢抱住你。......”芳菲儿紧紧地回抱着梁墨,眼泪像断了线的珍珠:“再也不分开,再也不会放手。......”