David Herbert Lawrence

Two village men went by. I was tired, I did not want to go to the inn.

So I went to bed, in the silent, wooden house. I had a small bedroom,

clean and wooden and very cold. Outside, the stream was rushing. I

covered myself with a great depth of featherbed, and looked at the

stars, and the shadowy upper world, and went to sleep.

In the morning I washed in the ice-cold water, and was glad to set out.

An icy mist was over the noisy stream, there were a few meagre, shredded

pine-trees. I had breakfast and paid my bill: it was seven francs--more

than I could afford; but that did not matter, once I was out in the air.

The sky was blue and perfect, it was a ringing morning, the village was

very still. I went up the hill till I came to the signpost. I looked

down the direction of the Furka, and thought of my tired Englishman from

Streatham, who would be on his way home. Thank God I need not go home:

never, perhaps. I turned up the track to the left, to the Gothard.

Standing looking round at the mountain-tops, at the village and the

broken castle below me, at the scattered debris of Andermatt on the moor

in the distance, I was jumping in my soul with delight. Should one ever

go down to the lower world?

Then I saw another figure striding along, a youth with knee-breeches and

Alpine hat and braces over his shirt, walking manfully, his coat slung

in his rucksack behind. I laughed, and waited. He came my way.

'Are you going over the Gothard?' I said.

'Yes,' he replied. 'Are you also?'

'Yes' I said. 'We will go together.'

So we set off, climbing a track up the heathy rocks.

He was a pale, freckled town youth from Basel, seventeen years old. He

was a clerk in a baggage-transport firm--Gondrand Frères, I believe. He

had a week's holiday, in which time he was going to make a big circular

walk, something like the Englishman's. But he was accustomed to this

mountain walking: he belonged to a Sportverein. Manfully he marched in

his thick hob-nailed boots, earnestly he scrambled up the rocks.

We were in the crest of the pass. Broad snow-patched slopes came down

from the pure sky; the defile was full of stones, all bare stones,

enormous ones as big as a house, and small ones, pebbles. Through these

the road wound in silence, through this upper, transcendent desolation,

wherein was only the sound of the stream. Sky and snow-patched slopes,

then the stony, rocky bed of the defile, full of morning sunshine: this

was all. We were crossing in silence from the northern world to

the southern.

But he, Emil, was going to take the train back, through the tunnel, in

the evening, to resume his circular walk at Göschenen.

I, however, was going on, over the ridge of the world, from the north

into the south. So I was glad.

We climbed up the gradual incline for a long time. The slopes above

became lower, they began to recede. The sky was very near, we were

walking under the sky.

Then the defile widened out, there was an open place before us, the very

top of the pass. Also there were low barracks, and soldiers. We heard

firing. Standing still, we saw on the slopes of snow, under the radiant

blue heaven, tiny puffs of smoke, then some small black figures crossing

the snow patch, then another rattle of rifle-fire, rattling dry and

unnatural in the upper, skyey air, between the rocks.

'_Das ist schön_,' said my companion, in his simple admiration.

'_Hübsch_,' I said.

'But that would be splendid, to be firing up there, manoeuvring up in

the snow.'

And he began to tell me how hard a soldier's life was, how hard the

soldier was drilled.

'You don't look forward to it?' I said.

'Oh yes, I do. I want to be a soldier, I want to serve my time.'

'Why?'I said.

'For the exercise, the life, the drilling. One becomes strong.'

'Do all the Swiss want to serve their time in the army?' I asked.

'Yes--they all want to. It is good for every man, and it keeps us all

together. Besides, it is only for a year. For a year it is very good.

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