We followed an Alpine path for some
four miles, now hundreds of feet above a brawling
stream which descended from the glaciers, and now nearly
alongside it. The morning was cold and somewhat
foggy, for the autumn had made great strides latterly.
Sometimes we went through forests of pine, or rather
yew trees, though they looked like pine; and I remember
that now and again we passed a little wayside shrine,
wherein there would be a statue of great beauty, representing
some figure, male or female, in the very heyday of
youth, strength, and beauty, or of the most dignified
maturity and old age. My hosts always bowed their
heads as they passed one of these shrines, and it
shocked me to see statues that had no apparent object,
beyond the chronicling of some unusual individual
excellence or beauty, receive so serious a homage.
However, I showed no sign of wonder or disapproval;
for I remembered that to be all things to all men
was one of the injunctions of the Gentile Apostle,
which for the present I should do well to heed.
Shortly after passing one of these chapels we came
suddenly upon a village which started up out of the
mist; and I was alarmed lest I should be made an object
of curiosity or dislike. But it was not so.
My guides spoke to many in passing, and those spoken
to showed much amazement. My guides, however,
were well known, and the natural politeness of the
people prevented them from putting me to any inconvenience;
but they could not help eyeing me, nor I them.
I may as well say at once what my after-experience
taught me—namely, that with all their faults
and extraordinary obliquity of mental vision upon
many subjects, they are the very best-bred people that
I ever fell in with.
The village was just like the one
we had left, only rather larger. The streets
were narrow and unpaved, but very fairly clean.
The vine grew outside many of the houses; and there
were some with sign-boards, on which was painted a
bottle and a glass, that made me feel much at home.
Even on this ledge of human society there was a stunted
growth of shoplets, which had taken root and vegetated
somehow, though as in an air mercantile of the bleakest.
It was here as hitherto: all things were generically
the same as in Europe, the differences being of species
only; and I was amused at seeing in a window some
bottles with barley-sugar and sweetmeats for children,
as at home; but the barley-sugar was in plates, not
in twisted sticks, and was coloured blue. Glass
was plentiful in the better houses.
Lastly, I should say that the people
were of a physical beauty which was simply amazing.
I never saw anything in the least comparable to them.
The women were vigorous, and had a most majestic gait,
their heads being set upon their shoulders with a
grace beyond all power of expression. Each feature
was finished, eyelids, eyelashes, and ears being almost
invariably perfect. Their colour was equal to
that of the finest Italian paintings; being of the
clearest olive, and yet ruddy with a glow of perfect
health. Their expression was divine; and as they
glanced at me timidly but with parted lips in great
bewilderment, I forgot all thoughts of their conversion
in feelings that were far more earthly. I was
dazzled as I saw one after the other, of whom I could
only feel that each was the loveliest I had ever seen.
Even in middle age they were still comely, and the
old grey-haired women at their cottage doors had a
dignity, not to say majesty, of their own.
The men were as handsome as the women
beautiful. I have always delighted in and reverenced
beauty; but I felt simply abashed in the presence of
such a splendid type—a compound of all that
is best in Egyptian, Greek and Italian. The
children were infinite in number, and exceedingly
merry; I need hardly say that they came in for their
full share of the prevailing beauty. I expressed
by signs my admiration and pleasure to my guides,
and they were greatly pleased. I should add that
all seemed to take a pride in their personal appearance,
and that even the poorest (and none seemed rich) were
well kempt and tidy. I could fill many pages
with a description of their dress and the ornaments
which they wore, and a hundred details which struck
me with all the force of novelty; but I must not stay
to do so.
When we had got past the village the
fog rose, and revealed magnificent views of the snowy
mountains and their nearer abutments, while in front
I could now and again catch glimpses of the great
plains which I had surveyed on the preceding evening.
The country was highly cultivated, every ledge being
planted with chestnuts, walnuts, and apple-trees from
which the apples were now gathering. Goats were
abundant; also a kind of small black cattle, in the
marshes near the river, which was now fast widening,
and running between larger flats from which the hills
receded more and more. I saw a few sheep with
rounded noses and enormous tails. Dogs were there
in plenty, and very English; but I saw no cats, nor
indeed are these creatures known, their place being
supplied by a sort of small terrier.
In about four hours of walking from
the time we started, and after passing two or three
more villages, we came upon a considerable town, and
my guides made many attempts to make me understand
something, but I gathered no inkling of their meaning,
except that I need be under no apprehension of danger.
I will spare the reader any description of the town,
and would only bid him think of Domodossola or Faido.
Suffice it that I found myself taken before the chief
magistrate, and by his orders was placed in an apartment
with two other people, who were the first I had seen
looking anything but well and handsome. In fact,
one of them was plainly very much out of health, and
coughed violently from time to time in spite of manifest
efforts to suppress it. The other looked pale
and ill but he was marvellously self-contained, and
it was impossible to say what was the matter with
him. Both of them appeared astonished at seeing
one who was evidently a stranger, but they were too
ill to come up to me, and form conclusions concerning
me. These two were first called out; and in
about a quarter of an hour I was made to follow them,
which I did in some fear, and with much curiosity.
The chief magistrate was a venerable-looking
man, with white hair and beard and a face of great
sagacity. He looked me all over for about five
minutes, letting his eyes wander from the crown of
my head to the soles of my feet, up and down, and
down and up; neither did his mind seem in the least
clearer when he had done looking than when he began.
He at length asked me a single short question, which
I supposed meant “Who are you?” I answered
in English quite composedly as though he would understand
me, and endeavoured to be my very most natural self
as well as I could. He appeared more and more
puzzled, and then retired, returning with two others
much like himself. Then they took me into an
inner room, and the two fresh arrivals stripped me,
while the chief looked on. They felt my pulse,
they looked at my tongue, they listened at my chest,
they felt all my muscles; and at the end of each operation
they looked at the chief and nodded, and said something
in a tone quite pleasant, as though I were all right.
They even pulled down my eyelids, and looked, I suppose,
to see if they were bloodshot; but it was not so.
At length they gave up; and I think that all were
satisfied of my being in the most perfect health,
and very robust to boot. At last the old magistrate
made me a speech of about five minutes long, which
the other two appeared to think greatly to the point,
but from which I gathered nothing. As soon as
it was ended, they proceeded to overhaul my swag and
the contents of my pockets. This gave me little
uneasiness, for I had no money with me, nor anything
which they were at all likely to want, or which I cared
about losing. At least I fancied so, but I soon
found my mistake.
They got on comfortably at first,
though they were much puzzled with my tobacco-pipe
and insisted on seeing me use it. When I had
shown them what I did with it, they were astonished
but not displeased, and seemed to like the smell.
But by and by they came to my watch, which I had
hidden away in the inmost pocket that I had, and had
forgotten when they began their search. They
seemed concerned and uneasy as soon as they got hold
of it. They then made me open it and show the
works; and when I had done so they gave signs of very
grave displeasure, which disturbed me all the more
because I could not conceive wherein it could have
offended them.
I remember that when they first found
it I had thought of Paley, and how he tells us that
a savage on seeing a watch would at once conclude that
it was designed. True, these people were not
savages, but I none the less felt sure that this was
the conclusion they would arrive at; and I was thinking
what a wonderfully wise man Archbishop Paley must have
been, when I was aroused by a look of horror and dismay
upon the face of the magistrate, a look which conveyed
to me the impression that he regarded my watch not
as having been designed, but rather as the designer
of himself and of the universe; or as at any rate
one of the great first causes of all things.
Then it struck me that this view was
quite as likely to be taken as the other by a people
who had no experience of European civilisation, and
I was a little piqued with Paley for having led me
so much astray; but I soon discovered that I had misinterpreted
the expression on the magistrate’s face, and
that it was one not of fear, but hatred. He spoke
to me solemnly and sternly for two or three minutes.
Then, reflecting that this was of no use, he caused
me to be conducted through several passages into a
large room, which I afterwards found was the museum
of the town, and wherein I beheld a sight which astonished
me more than anything that I had yet seen.
It was filled with cases containing
all manner of curiosities—such as skeletons,
stuffed birds and animals, carvings in stone (whereof
I saw several that were like those on the saddle,
only smaller), but the greater part of the room was
occupied by broken machinery of all descriptions.
The larger specimens had a case to themselves, and
tickets with writing on them in a character which
I could not understand. There were fragments
of steam engines, all broken and rusted; among them
I saw a cylinder and piston, a broken fly-wheel, and
part of a crank, which was laid on the ground by their
side. Again, there was a very old carriage whose
wheels in spite of rust and decay, I could see, had
been designed originally for iron rails. Indeed,
there were fragments of a great many of our own most
advanced inventions; but they seemed all to be several
hundred years old, and to be placed where they were,
not for instruction, but curiosity. As I said
before, all were marred and broken.
We passed many cases, and at last
came to one in which there were several clocks and
two or three old watches. Here the magistrate
stopped, and opening the case began comparing my watch
with the others. The design was different, but
the thing was clearly the same. On this he turned
to me and made me a speech in a severe and injured
tone of voice, pointing repeatedly to the watches
in the case, and to my own; neither did he seem in
the least appeased until I made signs to him that he
had better take my watch and put it with the others.
This had some effect in calming him. I said
in English (trusting to tone and manner to convey my
meaning) that I was exceedingly sorry if I had been
found to have anything contraband in my possession;
that I had had no intention of evading the ordinary
tolls, and that I would gladly forfeit the watch if
my doing so would atone for an unintentional violation
of the law. He began presently to relent, and
spoke to me in a kinder manner. I think he saw
that I had offended without knowledge; but I believe
the chief thing that brought him round was my not
seeming to be afraid of him, although I was quite
respectful; this, and my having light hair and complexion,
on which he had remarked previously by signs, as every
one else had done.
I afterwards found that it was reckoned
a very great merit to have fair hair, this being a
thing of the rarest possible occurrence, and greatly
admired and envied in all who were possessed of it.
However that might be, my watch was taken from me;
but our peace was made, and I was conducted back to
the room where I had been examined. The magistrate
then made me another speech, whereon I was taken to
a building hard by, which I soon discovered to be
the common prison of the town, but in which an apartment
was assigned me separate from the other prisoners.
The room contained a bed, table, and chairs, also
a fireplace and a washing-stand. There was another
door, which opened on to a balcony, with a flight of
steps descending into a walled garden of some size.
The man who conducted me into this room made signs
to me that I might go down and walk in the garden
whenever I pleased, and intimated that I should shortly
have something brought me to eat. I was allowed
to retain my blankets, and the few things which I
had wrapped inside them, but it was plain that I was
to consider myself a prisoner—for how long
a period I could not by any means determine.
He then left me alone.