登陆注册
15441900000073

第73章 CHAPTER XII--HOMEWARD BOUND(8)

But, lo and behold, not expecting to have to bore so deep, he had made his bore much too small; and the sand out of the Thanet beds "blew up" into the bore, and closed it. The poor manufacturer spent hundreds of pounds more in trying to get the sand out, but in vain; and he had at last to make a fresh and much larger well by the side of the old one, bewailing the day when he listened to the well-sinker and not to the geologist, and so threw away more than a thousand pounds. And there is an answer to what you asked on board the yacht--What use was there in learning little matters of natural history and science, which seemed of no use at all?

And now, look out again. Do you see any change in the country?

What?

Why, there to the left.

There are high hills there now, as well as to the right. What are they?

Chalk hills too. The chalk is on both sides of us now. These are the Chilterns, all away to Ipsden and Nettlebed, and so on across Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire, and into Hertfordshire; and on again to Royston and Cambridge, while below them lies the Vale of Aylesbury; you can just see the beginning of it on their left. A pleasant land are those hills, and wealthy; full of noble houses buried in the deep beech-woods, which once were a great forest, stretching in a ring round the north of London, full of deer and boar, and of wild bulls too, even as late as the twelfth century, according to the old legend of Thomas e Becket's father and the fair Saracen, which you have often heard.

I know. But how are you going to get through the chalk hills? Is there a tunnel as there is at Box and at Micheldever?

No. Something much prettier than a tunnel and something which took a great many years longer in making. We shall soon meet with a very remarkable and famous old gentleman, who is a great adept at digging, and at landscape gardening likewise; and he has dug out a path for himself through the chalk, which we shall take the liberty of using also. And his name, if you wish to know it, is Father Thames.

I see him. What a great river!

Yes. Here he comes, gleaming and winding down from Oxford, over the lowlands, past Wallingford; but where he is going to it is not so easy to see.

Ah, here is chalk in the cutting at last. And what a high bridge.

And the river far under our feet. Why we are crossing him again!

Yes; he winds more sharply than a railroad can. But is not this prettier than a tunnel?

Oh, what hanging-woods, and churches; and such great houses, and pretty cottages and gardens--all in this narrow crack of a valley!

Ay. Old Father Thames is a good landscape gardener, as I said.

There is Basildon--and Hurley--and Pangbourne, with its roaring lasher. Father Thames has had to work hard for many an age before he could cut this trench right through the chalk, and drain the water out of the flat vale behind us. But I suspect the sea helped him somewhat, or perhaps a great deal, just where we are now.

The sea?

Yes. The sea was once--and that not so very long ago--right up here, beyond Reading. This is the uppermost end of the great Thames valley, which must have been an estuary--a tide flat, like the mouth of the Severn, with the sea eating along at the foot of all the hills. And if the land sunk only some fifty feet,--which is a very little indeed, child, in this huge, ever-changing world,--then the tide would come up to Reading again, and the greater part of London and the county of Middlesex be drowned in salt water.

How dreadful that would be!

Dreadful indeed. God grant that it may never happen. More terrible changes of land and water have happened, and are happening still in the world: but none, I think, could happen which would destroy so much civilisation and be such a loss to mankind, as that the Thames valley should become again what it was, geologically speaking, only the other day, when these gravel banks, over which we are running to Reading, were being washed out of the chalk cliffs up above at every tide, and rolled on a beach, as you have seen them rolling still at Ramsgate.

Now here we are at Reading. There is the carriage waiting, and away we are off home; and when we get home, and have seen everybody and everything, we will look over our section once more.

同类推荐
  • 太上洞渊辞瘟神咒妙经

    太上洞渊辞瘟神咒妙经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 坊记

    坊记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Heidi

    Heidi

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 拔陂菩萨经

    拔陂菩萨经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说时非时经之二

    佛说时非时经之二

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 青霜之殇

    青霜之殇

    青,取之于蓝而青于蓝;冰,水为之而寒于水。一人,一剑,虽千万人亦往矣。(掺杂同人,看官勉强看吧。)
  • 谁做了谁的旁观者

    谁做了谁的旁观者

    很多年后,我曾鼓起勇气给周梅打过一个电话,想问问她当年齐梦到底和她说了什么,让她做出那样的选择,以至于亲手将自己至于一个众矢之的,造了一个天大的误会。
  • 凡心

    凡心

    他是战功累累,皇后的养子,凌月国唯一一位外姓王爷。他风流倜傥,却为丞相女所倾倒。她是左相音隼的女儿,她黯然无光,她宁静若水,她是左相最不宠爱的女儿。他时而勃然大怒,时而却轻率调笑,她分不清他重重面具下隐藏着怎样的心。她倔强的个性让他又爱又气,她活在生活的夹缝中,每一步走的艰辛,他看在眼里,疼在心中。命运的线将他们牵到一起。
  • 圣骑士之歌

    圣骑士之歌

    一个出生名门的少年,再一次晕倒之后,身体出现了异常,机缘巧合的加入了皇家骑士,再一次抓捕逃犯的过程中和他一起去的十位骑士都挂了,最后他找到了逃犯……
  • 和外星人在一起的时光

    和外星人在一起的时光

    李云腾是一个小说作者,在城市郊外租了一个农民看守鱼塘的房屋写小说。一天晚上,外星人来到地球,后来她就去到李云腾的房屋。李云腾接纳了外星人,在交往的过程中,他产生了很多的疑惑,后来他终于知道对方是外星人。他和外星人成为了好朋友。李云腾的朋友朱跃海知道外星人后也非常的高兴,他们一起到地球各处去旅游,一起离开地球去外星球。期间他们遇到了很多意想不到的事情,很多的危险和困难,他们一起渡过了非常难忘的时光。
  • 醉残阳2

    醉残阳2

    她是现实底层的一名普通老年妇女。她是中国农村的一名普通空巢老人。从小讨饭被卖到凤凰塬的她,在夕阳之际,却相继失去儿子,失去男人,眼见着这个家庭的顶梁柱倒了一根,又倒一根,面对生活,她何去何从?……这是一部农村独守老人的历史写实,它渗透出浓浓的乡愁,它更烛照现实,映衬历史,直达读者内心。
  • 千年生

    千年生

    一个机密任务将我和战友带进一个古墓,经历了生死的的考验。当我走出古墓的那一刹那,我以为一切都结束了,可没想到这仅仅只是一个开始!一本《长生诀》引发了无数人的贪欲,到最后才发现竟是一个千年阴谋!千年生,生千年......
  • 噬天神帝

    噬天神帝

    星空圣者的战场!苍穹王道的张扬!我本张狂,哪管你身死离殇!我是陈煜,只活这一世的嚣张!
  • 隐婚老公,太腹黑

    隐婚老公,太腹黑

    “你在吃什么?”顾司霆问。“事后药!”雷洛一头黑线。“你想害死我的孩子?”顾司霆怒了。“……”一夜荒唐后,雷洛被顾司霆扛着进了民政局。雷洛望着红红的结婚证,一脸纠结的问:“小叔,你觉得叫我老婆真的合适吗?”顾司霆没羞没臊:“昨夜试过了,不大不小正合适……”
  • 断弦的黑架琴

    断弦的黑架琴

    昨日的重逢,又如何经受得起离别,赤裸裸的心灵骨刺,你究竟是躲开,还是依然弹奏着断弦的黑架琴。