The journey to the new home
Rudy was just eight years old, when his uncle, who lived on the other
side of the mountain, wished to have the boy, as he thought he might obtain
a better education with him, and learn something more. His grandfather
thought the same, so he consented to let him go. Rudy had many to say farewell
to, as well as his grandfather. First, there was Ajola, the old dog. "Your
father was the postilion, and I was the postilion's dog," said Ajola. "We
have often travelled the same journey together; I knew all the dogs and
men on this side of the mountain. It is not my habit to talk much; but
now that we have so little time to converse together, I will say something
more than usual. I will relate to you a story, which I have reflected upon
for a long time. I do not understand it, and very likely you will not,
but that is of no consequence. I have, however, learnt from it that in
this world things are not equally divided, neither for dogs nor for men.
All are not born to lie on the lap and to drink milk: I have never been
petted in this way, but I have seen a little dog seated in the place of
a gentleman or lady, and travelling inside a post-chaise. The lady, who
was his mistress, or of whom he was master, carried a bottle of milk, of
which the little dog now and then drank; she also offered him pieces of
sugar to crunch. He sniffed at them proudly, but would not eat one, so
she ate them herself. I was running along the dirty road by the side of
the carriage as hungry as a dog could be, chewing the cud of my own thoughts,
which were rather in confusion. But many other things seemed in confusion
also. Why was not I lying on a lap and travelling in a coach? I could not
tell; yet I knew I could not alter my own condition, either by barking
or growling. This was Ajola's farewell speech, and Rudy threw his arms
round the dog's neck and kissed his cold nose. Then he took the cat in
his arms, but he struggled to get free. "You are getting too strong for
me," he said; "but I will not use my claws against you. Clamber away over
the mountains; it was I who taught you to climb. Do not fancy you are going
to fall, and you will be quite safe." Then the cat jumped down and ran
away; he did not wish Rudy to see that there were tears in his eyes. The
hens were hopping about the floor; one of them had no tail; a traveller,
who fancied himself a sportsman, had shot off her tail, he had mistaken
her for a bird of prey. "Rudy is going away over the mountains," said one
of the hens. "He is always in such a hurry," said the other; "and I don't
like taking leave," so they both hopped out. But the goats said farewell;
they bleated and wanted to go with him, they were so very sorry. Just at
this time two clever guides were going to cross the mountains to the other
side of the Gemmi, and Rudy was to go with them on foot. It was a long
walk for such a little boy, but he had plenty of strength and invincible
courage. The swallows flew with him a little way, singing, "We and you-
you and we." The way led across the rushing Lutschine, which falls in numerous
streams from the dark clefts of the Grindelwald glaciers. Trunks of fallen
trees and blocks of stone form bridges over these streams. After passing
a forest of alders, they began to ascend, passing by some blocks of ice
that had loosened themselves from the side of the mountain and lay across
their path; they had to step over these ice-blocks or walk round them.
Rudy crept here and ran there, his eyes sparkling with joy, and he stepped
so firmly with his iron-tipped mountain shoe, that he left a mark behind
him wherever he placed his foot. The earth was black where the mountain
torrents or the melted ice had poured upon it, but the bluish green, glassy
ice sparkled and glittered. They had to go round little pools, like lakes,
enclosed between large masses of ice; and, while thus wandering out of
their path, they came near an immense stone, which lay balanced on the
edge of an icy peak. The stone lost its balance just as they reached it,
and rolled over into the abyss beneath, while the noise of its fall was
echoed back from every hollow cliff of the glaciers. They were always going
upwards. The glaciers seemed to spread above them like a continued chain
of masses of ice, piled up in wild confusion between bare and rugged rocks.
Rudy thought for a moment of what had been told him, that he and his mother
had once lain buried in one of these cold, heart-chilling fissures; but
he soon banished such thoughts, and looked upon the story as fabulous,
like many other stories which had been told him. Once or twice, when the
men thought the way was rather difficult for such a little boy, they held
out their hands to assist him; but he would not accept their assistance,
for he stood on the slippery ice as firmly as if he had been a chamois.
They came at length to rocky ground; sometimes stepping upon moss-covered
stones, sometimes passing beneath stunted fir-trees, and again through
green meadows. The landscape was always changing, but ever above them towered
the lofty snow-clad mountains, whose names not only Rudy but every other
child knew- "The Jungfrau," "The Monk and the Eiger." Rudy had never been
so far away before; he had never trodden on the wide-spreading ocean of
snow that lay here with its immovable billows, from which the wind blows
off the snowflake now and then, as it cuts the foam from the waves of the
sea. The glaciers stand here so close together it might almost be said
they are hand-in-hand; and each is a crystal palace for the Ice Maiden,
whose power and will it is to seize and imprison the unwary traveller.
The sun shone warmly, and the snow sparkled as if covered with glittering
diamonds. Numerous insects, especially butterflies and bees, lay dead in
heaps on the snow. They had ventured too high, or the wind had carried
them here and left them to die of cold. Around the Wetterhorn hung a feathery
cloud, like a woolbag, and a threatening cloud too, for as it sunk lower
it increased in size, and concealed within was a "fohn," fearful in its
violence should it break loose. This journey, with its varied incidents,-
the wild paths, the night passed on the mountain, the steep rocky precipices,
the hollow clefts, in which the rustling waters from time immemorial had
worn away passages for themselves through blocks of stone,- all these were
firmly impressed on Rudy's memory. In a forsaken stone building, which
stood just beyond the seas of snow, they one night took shelter. Here they
found some charcoal and pine branches, so that they soon made a fire. They
arranged couches to lie on as well as they could, and then the men seated
themselves by the fire, took out their pipes, and began to smoke. They
also prepared a warm, spiced drink, of which they partook and Rudy was
not forgotten- he had his share. Then they began to talk of those mysterious
beings with which the land of the Alps abounds; the hosts of apparitions
which come in the night, and carry off the sleepers through the air, to
the wonderful floating town of Venice; of the wild herds-man, who drives
the black sheep across the meadows. These flocks are never seen, yet the
tinkle of their little bells has often been heard, as well as their unearthly
bleating. Rudy listened eagerly, but without fear, for he knew not what
fear meant; and while he listened, he fancied he could hear the roaring
of the spectral herd. It seemed to come nearer and roar louder, till the
men heard it also and listened in silence, till, at length, they told Rudy
that he must not dare to sleep. It was a "fohn," that violent storm-wind
which rushes from the mountain to the valley beneath, and in its fury snaps
asunder the trunks of large trees as if they were but slender reeds, and
carries the wooden houses from one side of a river to the other as easily
as we could move the pieces on a chess-board. After an hour had passed,
they told Rudy that it was all over, and he might go to sleep; and, fatigued
with his long walk, he readily slept at the word of command. Very early
the following morning they again set out. The sun on this day lighted up
for Rudy new mountains, new glaciers, and new snow-fields. They had entered
the Canton Valais, and found themselves on the ridge of the hills which
can be seen from Grindelwald; but he was still far from his new home. They
pointed out to him other clefts, other meadows, other woods and rocky paths,
and other houses. Strange men made their appearance before him, and what
men! They were misshapen, wretched-looking creatures, with yellow complexions;
and on their necks were dark, ugly lumps of flesh, hanging down like bags.
They were called cretins. They dragged themselves along painfully, and
stared at the strangers with vacant eyes. The women looked more dreadful
than the men. Poor Rudy! were these the sort of people he should see at
his new home?