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    My First Flight - Page 2

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    top of a cliff or high tower
    feel some slight qualms of dread, many feel a quite sickening dread.
    Even if men struggled high into the air, we asked, wouldn't they be
    smitten up there by such a lonely and reeling dismay as to lose all
    self-control? And, above all, wouldn't the pitching and tossing make
    them quite horribly sea-sick?

    I have always been a little haunted by that last dread. It gave a little
    undertow of funk to the mood of lively curiosity with which I got
    aboard the waterplane this morning--that sort of faint, thin funk that
    so readily invades one on the verge of any new experience; when one
    tries one's first dive, for example, or pushes off for the first time
    down an ice run. I thought I should very probably be sea-sick--or, to be
    more precise, air-sick; I thought also that I might be very giddy, and
    that I might get thoroughly cold and uncomfortable None of those things
    happened.

    I am still in a state of amazement at the smooth steadfastness of the
    motion. There is nothing on earth to compare with that, unless--and that
    I can't judge--it is an ice yacht travelling on perfect ice. The finest
    motor-car in the world on the best road would be a joggling, quivering
    thing beside it.

    To begin with, we went out to sea before the wind, and the plane would
    not readily rise. We went with an undulating movement, leaping with a
    light splashing pat upon the water, from wave to wave. Then we came
    about into the wind and rose, and looking over I saw that there were no
    longer those periodic flashes of white foam. I was flying. And it was as
    still and steady as dreaming. I watched the widening distance between
    our floats and the waves. It wasn't by any means a windless day; there
    was a brisk, fluctuating breeze blowing out of the north over the downs.
    It seemed hardly to affect our flight at all.

    And as for the giddiness of looking down, one does not feel it at all.
    It is difficult to explain why this should be so, but it is so. I
    suppose in such matters I am neither exceptionally steady-headed nor is
    my head exceptionally given to swimming. I can stand on the edge of
    cliffs of a thousand feet or so and look down, but I can never bring

    myself right up to the edge nor crane over to look to the very bottom. I
    should want to lie down to do that. And the other day I was on that
    Belvedere place at the top of the Rotterdam sky-scraper, a rather high
    wind was blowing, and one looks down through the chinks between the
    boards one stands on upon the heads of the people in the streets below;
    I didn't like it. But this morning I looked directly down on a little
    fleet of fishing boats over which we passed, and on the crowds
    assembling on the beach, and on the bathers who stared up at us from the
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