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    Chapter 16 - Page 2

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    engineer officer on the Himalaya-Tibet Road--'You white men gain
    nothing by not noticing what you cannot see. You fall off the road, or
    the road falls on you, and you die, and you think it all an accident.
    How much wiser it was when we were allowed to sacrifice a man
    officially, sir, before making bridges or other public works. Then the
    local gods were officially recognised, sir, and did not give any more
    trouble, and the local workmen, sir, were much pleased with these
    precautions.'

    There are many local gods on the road through the Rockies: old bald
    mountains that have parted with every shred of verdure and stand wrapped
    in sheets of wrinkled silver rock, over which the sight travels slowly
    as in delirium; mad, horned mountains, wreathed with dancing mists;
    low-browed and bent-shouldered faquirs of the wayside, sitting in
    meditation beneath a burden of glacier-ice that thickens every year; and
    mountains of fair aspect on one side, but on the other seamed with
    hollow sunless clefts, where last year's snow is blackened with this
    year's dirt and smoke of forest-fires. The drip from it seeps away
    through slopes of unstable gravel and dirt, till, at the appointed
    season, the whole half-mile of undermined talus slips and roars into the
    horrified valley.

    The railway winds in and out among them with little inexplicable
    deviations and side-twists, much as a buck walks through a forest-glade,
    sidling and crossing uneasily in what appears to be a plain way. Only
    when the track has rounded another shoulder or two, a backward and
    upward glance at some menacing slope shows why the train did not take
    the easier-looking road on the other side of the gorge.

    From time to time the mountains lean apart, and nurse between them some
    golden valley of slow streams, fat pastures, and park-like uplands, with
    a little town, and cow bells tinkling among berry bushes; and children
    who have never seen the sun rise or set, shouting at the trains; and
    real gardens round the houses.

    At Calgary it was a frost, and the dahlias were dead. A day later
    nasturtiums bloomed untouched beside the station platforms, and the air
    was heavy and liquid with the breath of the Pacific. One felt the spirit

    of the land change with the changing outline of the hills till, on the
    lower levels by the Fraser, it seemed that even the Sussex Downs must be
    nearer at heart to the Prairie than British Columbia. The Prairie people
    notice the difference, and the Hill people, unwisely, I think, insist on
    it. Perhaps the magic may lie in the scent of strange evergreens and
    mosses not known outside the ranges: or it may strike from wall to wall
    of timeless rifts and gorges, but it seemed to me to draw out of the
    great sea that washes further Asia--the
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