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    Chapter 42 - Page 2

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    through a spy-glass, and
    correspond with a rifle.

    In Switzerland the farmer's plow is a wide shovel, which scrapes up and
    turns over the thin earthy skin of his native rock--and there the man of
    the plow is a hero. Now here, by our St. Nicholas road, was a grave, and
    it had a tragic story. A plowman was skinning his farm one morning--not
    the steepest part of it, but still a steep part--that is, he was not
    skinning the front of his farm, but the roof of it, near the eaves--when
    he absent-mindedly let go of the plow-handles to moisten his hands, in
    the usual way; he lost his balance and fell out of his farm backward;
    poor fellow, he never touched anything till he struck bottom, fifteen
    hundred feet below. [1] We throw a halo of heroism around the life
    of the soldier and the sailor, because of the deadly dangers they are
    facing all the time. But we are not used to looking upon farming as a
    heroic occupation. This is because we have not lived in Switzerland.

    1. This was on a Sunday.--M.T.

    From St. Nicholas we struck out for Visp--or Vispach--on foot. The
    rain-storms had been at work during several days, and had done a deal of
    damage in Switzerland and Savoy. We came to one place where a stream had
    changed its course and plunged down a mountain in a new place, sweeping
    everything before it. Two poor but precious farms by the roadside were
    ruined. One was washed clear away, and the bed-rock exposed; the other
    was buried out of sight under a tumbled chaos of rocks, gravel, mud,
    and rubbish. The resistless might of water was well exemplified. Some
    saplings which had stood in the way were bent to the ground, stripped
    clean of their bark, and buried under rocky debris. The road had been
    swept away, too.

    In another place, where the road was high up on the mountain's face, and
    its outside edge protected by flimsy masonry, we frequently came across
    spots where this masonry had carved off and left dangerous gaps for
    mules to get over; and with still more frequency we found the masonry
    slightly crumbled, and marked by mule-hoofs, thus showing that there had
    been danger of an accident to somebody. When at last we came to a
    badly ruptured bit of masonry, with hoof-prints evidencing a desperate
    struggle to regain the lost foothold, I looked quite hopefully over the

    dizzy precipice. But there was nobody down there.

    They take exceedingly good care of their rivers in Switzerland and other
    portions of Europe. They wall up both banks with slanting solid stone
    masonry--so that from end to end of these rivers the banks look like the
    wharves at St. Louis and other towns on the Mississippi River.

    It was during this walk from St. Nicholas, in the shadow of the majestic
    Alps, that we came across some
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