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anā€™ itā€™s by no means a misplaced affection. It would be well for the Count if he could fall in the same direction. Did you ever look steadily at the Count, Susan?ā€

ā€œI canā€™t say I ever did; at least not more so than at other people. Why?ā€

ā€œBecause, if you ever do look at him steadily, youā€™ll see care a-sittinā€™ wery heavy on his long yeller face. Thereā€™s somethinā€™ the matter with that Count, either in ā€™is head or ā€™is stummick, I ainā€™t sure which; but, whichever it is, it has descended to his darter, for that galā€™s face is too anxious by half for such a young and pretty one. I have quite a sympathy, a sort oā€™ feller-feelinā€™, for that Count. He seems to me the wictim of a secret sorrow.ā€

Susan looked at her small admirer with surprise, and then burst into a hearty laugh.

ā€œYouā€™re a queer boy, Gillie.ā€

To an unsophisticated country girl like Susan Quick, the London street-boy must indeed have seemed a remarkable being. He was not indeed an absolute ā€œArab,ā€ being the son of an honest hardworking mother, but being also the son of a drunken, ill-doing father, he had, in the course of an extensive experience of bringing his paternal parent home from gin-palaces and low theatres, imbibed a good deal of the superficial part of the ā€œwaifā€ character, and, but for the powerful and benign influence of his mother, might have long ago entered the ranks of our criminal population. As it was, he had acquired a knowledge of ā€œthe worldā€ of Londonā€”its thoughts, feelings, and mannersā€”which rendered him in Susanā€™s eyes a perfect miracle of intelligence; and she listened to his drolleries and precocious wisdom with open-mouthed admiration. Of course the urchin was quite aware of this, and plumed himself not a little on his powers of attraction.

ā€œYes,ā€ continued Gillie, without remarking on Susanā€™s observation that he was a ā€œqueer boy,ā€ for he esteemed that a compliment ā€œthe Count is the only man among ā€™em who hasnā€™t falled in love with nothink or nobody. But tell me, Susan, is your fair buzzum free from theā€”the tenderā€”you know what?ā€

ā€œOh! yes,ā€ laughed the maid, ā€œquite free.ā€

ā€œAh!ā€ said Gillie, with a sigh of satisfaction, ā€œthen thereā€™s hope for me.ā€

ā€œOf course there is plenty of hope,ā€ said Susan, laughing still more heartily as she looked at the thing in blue and buttons which thus addressed her.

ā€œBut now, tell me, where are they talking of going to-day?ā€

ā€œTo the Jardang,ā€ replied Gillie. ā€œIt was putt off to please the young ladies tā€™other day, and now itā€™s putt on to please the Professor. It seems to me that the Professor has got well to windā€™ard of ā€™em allā€”as the Cappen would say; he can twirl the whole bilinā€™ of ā€™em round his little finger with his outlandish talk, which I believe is more than half nonsense. Howsā€™ever, heā€™s goinā€™ to take ā€™em all to the Jardang, to lunch there, anā€™ make some more obserwations and measurements of the ice. Why he takes so much trouble about sitch a trifle, beats my understandinā€™. If the ice is six feet, or six hundred feet thick, what then? If it moves, or if it donā€™t move, wotā€™s the odds, so long as yer ā€™appy? If it wonā€™t move, wā€™y donā€™t they send for a company of London bobbies and make ā€™em tell it to ā€˜move on,ā€™ it couldnā€™t refuse, you know, for nothinā€™ can resist that. Howsā€™ever, they are all goinā€™ to foller the lead of the Professor again to-dayā€”them that was with ā€™em last timeā€”not the Count though, for I heard him say (much to the distress apperiently of his darter) that he was goinā€™ on business to Marteeny, over the Tait Nwar, though what that is I donā€™t knowā€”a mountain, I suppose. Theyā€™re all keen for goinā€™ over things in this country, anā€™ some of ā€™em goes under altogether in the doinā€™ of it. If I ainā€™t mistaken, that pleasant fate awaits Lord whatā€™s-ā€™is-name anā€™ Mr Lumbard, for I heard the Cappen sayinā€™, just afore I come to see you, that he was goinā€™ to take his Lordship to the main truck of Mount Blang by way of the signal halliards, in preference to the regular road.ā€

ā€œAre the young ladies going?ā€ asked Susan.

ā€œOf course they are, from wā€™ich it follers that Mr Lewis anā€™ the mad artist are goinā€™ too.ā€

ā€œAnd Mrs Stoutley?ā€ asked Susan.

ā€œNo; itā€™s much too far and difficult for her.ā€

ā€œGillie, Gillie!ā€ shouted a stentorian voice at this point in the conversation.

ā€œAy, ay, Cappen,ā€ yelled Gillie, in reply. Rising and thrusting his hands into his pockets, he sauntered leisurely from the room, recommending the Captain, in an undertone, to save his wind for the mountainside.

Not long afterwards, the same parties that had accompanied the Professor to the Montanvert were toiling up the Mer de Glace, at a considerable distance above the scene of their former exploits, on their way to the Jardin.

The day was all that could be desired. There were a few clouds, but these were light and feathery; clear blue predominated all over the sky. Over the masses of the Jorasses and the peaks of the GĆ©ant, the Aiguille du Dru, the slopes of Mont Mallet, the pinnacles of Charmoz, and the rounded white summit of Mont Blancā€”everywhereā€”the heavens were serene and beautiful.

The Jardin, towards which they ascended, lies like an island in the midst of the Glacier du TalĆØfre. It is a favourite expedition of travellers, being a verdant gem on a field of whiteā€”a true oasis in the desert of ice and snowā€”and within a five hoursā€™ walk of Chamouni.

Their route lay partly on the moraines and partly over the surface of the glacier. On their previous visit to the Mer de Glace, those of the party to whom the sight was new imagined that they had seen all the wonders of the glacier world. They were soon undeceived. While at the Montanvert on their first excursion, they could turn their eyes from the sea of ice to the tree-clad slopes behind them, and at the Chapeau could gaze on a splendid stretch of the Vale of Chamouni to refresh their eyes when wearied with the rugged cataract of the Glacier des Bois; but as they advanced slowly up into the icy solitudes, all traces of the softer world were lost to view. Only ice and snow lay around them. Ice under foot, ice on the cliffs, ice in the mountain valleys, ice in the higher gorges, and snow on the summits,ā€”except where these latter were so sharp and steep that snow could not find a lodgment. There was nothing in all the field of vision to remind them of the vegetable world from which they had passed as if by magic. As Lewis remarked, they seemed to have been suddenly transported to within the Arctic circle, and got lost among the ice-mountains of Spitzbergen or Nova Zembla.

ā€œIt is magnificent!ā€ exclaimed Nita Horetzki with enthusiasm, as she paused on the summit of an ice-ridge, up the slippery sides of which she had been assisted by Antoine Grennon, who still held her little hand in his.

Ah, thoughtless man! he little knew what daggers of envy were lacerating the heart of the mad artist who would have given all that he possessedā€”colour-box and camp-stool includedā€”to have been allowed to hold that little hand even for a few seconds! Indeed he had, in a fit of desperation, offered to aid her by taking the other hand when half-way up that very slope, but had slipped at the moment of making the offer and rolled to the bottom. Lewis, seeing the fate of his rival, wisely refrained from putting himself in a false position by offering any assistance, excusing his apparent want of gallantry by remarking that if he were doomed to slip into a crevasse he should prefer not to drag another along with him. Antoine, therefore, had the little hand all to himself.

The Professor, being a somewhat experienced ice-man, assisted Emma in all cases of difficulty. As for the Captain, Gillie, and Lawrence, they had quite enough to do to look after themselves.

ā€œHow different from what I had expected,ā€ said Emma, resting a hand on the shoulder of Nita; ā€œit is a very landscape of ice.ā€

Emmaā€™s simile was not far-fetched. They had reached a part of the glacier where the slope and the configuration of the valley had caused severe strains on the ice in various directions, so that there were not only transverse crevasses but longitudinal cracks, which unitedly had cut up the ice into blocks of all shapes and sizes. These, as their position shifted, had become isolated, more or less,ā€”and being partially melted by the sun, had assumed all sorts of fantastic shapes. There were ice-bridges, ice-caves, and ice obelisks and spires, some of which latter towered to a height of fifty feet or more; there were also forms suggestive of cottages and trees, with here and there real rivulets rippling down their icy beds, or leaping over pale blue ledges, or gliding into blue-green lakes, or plunging into black-blue chasms. The sun-light playing among these silvery realmsā€”glinting over edges and peaks, blazing on broad masses, shimmering through semi-transparent cliffs, and casting soft grey shadows everywhereā€”was inexpressibly beautiful, while the whole, looming through a thin golden haze, seemed to be of gigantic proportions.

It seemed as if the region of ice around them must at one time have been in tremendous convulsions, but the Professor assured them that this was not the case, that the formation of crevasses and those confused heaps of ice called seracs was a slow and prolonged process. ā€œDoubtless,ā€ he said, ā€œyou have here and there the wild rush of avalanches, and suchlike convulsions, but the rupture of the great body of the ice is gradual. A crevasse is an almost invisible crack at first. It yawns slowly and takes a long time to open out to the dimensions and confusion which you see around.ā€

ā€œWhat are those curious things?ā€ asked Nita, pointing to some forms before her.

ā€œThey look like giant mushrooms,ā€ said Captain Wopper.

ā€œThey are ice-tables,ā€ answered Antoine.

ā€œBlocks of stone on the top of cones of ice,ā€ said the Professor. ā€œCome, we will go near and examine one.ā€

The object in question was well suited to cause surprise, for it was found to be an enormous flat mass of rock, many tons in weight, perched on a pillar of ice and bearing some resemblance to a table with a central leg.

ā€œNow,ā€ said Captain Wopper emphatically, ā€œthat is a puzzler. How did it ever get up there?ā€

ā€œI have read of such tables,ā€ said Lawrence.

ā€œThey are the result of the sunā€™s action, I believe.ā€

ā€œOh, itā€™s all very well, Lawrence,ā€ said Lewis, with a touch of sarcasm, ā€œto talk in a vague way about the sunā€™s action, but itā€™s quite plain, even to an unphilosophical mind like mine, that the sun canā€™t lift a block of stone some tons in weight and clap it on the top of a pillar of ice about ten feet high.ā€

ā€œNevertheless the sun has done it,ā€ returned Lawrence. ā€œAm I not right Professor?ā€

The man of science, who had listened with a bland smile on his broad countenance, admitted that Lawrence was right.

ā€œAt first,ā€ he said, ā€œthat big stone fell from the cliffs higher up the valley, and it has now been carried down thus far by the ice. During its progress the sun has been shining day by day and melting the surface of the ice all round, with the exception of that part which was covered by the rock. Thus the general level of the ice has been lowered and the protected portion left prominent with its protector on the top. The sides of the block of ice on which the rock has rested have also melted slowly, reducing it to the stalk or pillar which you now see. In time it will melt so much that the rock will slide off, fall on another part of the ice, which

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