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CHAPTER II. FOOT-TRAVELLING.
 Tell me, my soul, why art thou restless? Why dost thou look forward to the future with such strong desire? The present is thine,--and the past;--and the future shall be! O that thou didst look forward to the great hereafter with half the longing1 wherewith thou longest for an earthly future,--which a few days at most will bring thee! to the meeting of the dead, as to the meeting of the absent! Thou glorious spirit-land! O, that I could behold2 thee as thou art,--the region of life, and light, and love, and the dwelling-place of those beloved ones, whose being has flowed onward3 like a silver-clear stream into the solemn-sounding main, into the ocean of Eternity4.  
Such were the thoughts that passed through thesoul of Flemming, as he lay in utter solitude5 and silence on the rounded summit of one of the mountains of the Furca Pass, and gazed, with tears in his eyes, and ardent6 longing in his heart, up into the blue-swimming heaven overhead, and at the glaciers7 and snowy mountain-peaks around him. Highest and whitest of all, stood the peak of the Jungfrau, which seemed near him, though it rose afar off from the bosom9 of the Lauterbrunner Thal. There it stood, holy and high and pure, the bride of heaven, all veiled and clothed in white, and lifted the thoughts of the beholder10 heavenward. O, he little thought then, as he gazed at it with longing and delight, how soon a form was to arise in his own soul, as holy, and high, and pure as this, and like this point heavenward.
 
Thus lay the traveller on the mountain summit, reposing11 his weary limbs on the short, brown grass, which more resembled moss12 than grass. He had sent his guide forward, that he might be alone. His soul within him was wild with a fierce and painful delight. The mountain air excited him; the mountain solitudes14 enticed15, yet maddened him. Every peak, every sharp, jagged iceberg16, seemed to pierce him. The silence was awful and sublime17. It was like that in the soul of a dying man, when he hears no more the sounds of earth. He seemed to be laying aside his earthly garments. The heavens were near unto him; but between him and heaven every evil deed he had done arose gigantic, like those mountain-peaks, and breathed an icy breath upon him. O, let not the soul that suffers, dare to look Nature in the face, where she sits majestically18 aloft in the solitude of the mountains; for her face is hard and stern, and looks not in compassion19 upon her weak and erring20 child. It is the countenance21 of an accusing archangel, who summons us to judgment22. In the valley she wears the countenance of a Virgin23 Mother, looking at us with tearful eyes, and a face of pity and love!
 
But yesterday Flemming had come up the valley of the Saint Gothard Pass, through Amsteg, where the Kerstelenbach comes dashing down the Maderaner Thal, from its snowy cradle overhead. The road is steep, and runs on zigzag24 terraces. The sides of the mountains are barren cliffs; and from their cloud-capped summits, unheard amid the roar of the great torrent25 below, come streams of snowwhite foam26, leaping from rock to rock, like the mountain chamois. As you advance, the scene grows wilder and more desolate27. There is not a tree in sight,--not a human habitation. Clouds, black as midnight, lower upon you from the ravines overhead; and the mountain torrent beneath is but a sheet of foam, and sends up an incessant28 roar. A sudden turn in the road brings you in sight of a lofty bridge, stepping from cliff to cliff with a single stride. A fearful cataract29 howls beneath it, like an evil spirit, and fills the air with mist; and the mountain wind claps its hands and shrieks30 through the narrow pass, Ha! ha!--This is the Devil's Bridge. It leads the traveller across the fearful chasm31, and through a mountain gallery into the broad, green, silent meadow of Andermath.
 
Even the sunny morning, which followed thisgloomy day, had not chased the desolate impression from the soul of Flemming. His excitement increased as he lost himself more and more among the mountains; and now, as he lay all alone on the summit of the sunny hill, with only glaciers and snowy peaks about him, his soul, as I have said, was wild with a fierce and painful delight.
 
A human voice broke his reverie. He looked, and beheld32 at a short distance from him, the athletic33 form of a mountain herdsman, who was approaching the spot where he lay. He was a young man, clothed in a rustic34 garb35, and holding a long staff in his hand. When Flemming rose, he stood still, and gazed at him, as if he loved the face of man, even in a stranger, and longed to hear a human voice, though it might speak in an unknown tongue. He answered Flemming's salutation in a rude mountain dialect, and in reply to his questions said;
 
"I, with two others, have charge of two hundred head of cattle on these mountains. Throughthe two summer months we remain here night and day; for which we receive each a Napoleon."
 
Flemming gave him half his summer wages. He was glad to do a good deed in secret, and yet so near heaven. The man received it as his due, like a toll-keeper; and soon after departed, leaving the traveller alone. And the traveller went his way down the mountain, as one distraught. He stopped only to pluck one bright blue flower, which bloomed all alone in the vast desert, and looked up at him, as if to say; "O take me with you! leave me not here companionless!"
 
Ere long he reached the magnificent glacier8 of the Rhone; a frozen ca............
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