Little Dorrit - Page 376/462

In the autumn of the year, Darkness and Night were creeping up to the

highest ridges of the Alps.

It was vintage time in the valleys on the Swiss side of the Pass of the

Great Saint Bernard, and along the banks of the Lake of Geneva.

The air there was charged with the scent of gathered grapes. Baskets,

troughs, and tubs of grapes stood in the dim village doorways, stopped

the steep and narrow village streets, and had been carrying all day

along the roads and lanes. Grapes, split and crushed under foot, lay

about everywhere.

The child carried in a sling by the laden peasant

woman toiling home, was quieted with picked-up grapes; the idiot sunning

his big goitre under the leaves of the wooden chalet by the way to the

Waterfall, sat Munching grapes; the breath of the cows and goats was

redolent of leaves and stalks of grapes; the company in every little

cabaret were eating, drinking, talking grapes. A pity that no ripe touch

of this generous abundance could be given to the thin, hard, stony wine,

which after all was made from the grapes!

The air had been warm and transparent through the whole of the bright

day. Shining metal spires and church-roofs, distant and rarely seen, had

sparkled in the view; and the snowy mountain-tops had been so clear that

unaccustomed eyes, cancelling the intervening country, and slighting

their rugged heights for something fabulous, would have measured them as

within a few hours easy reach. Mountain-peaks of great celebrity in the

valleys, whence no trace of their existence was visible sometimes for

months together, had been since morning plain and near in the blue sky.

And now, when it was dark below, though they seemed solemnly to recede,

like spectres who were going to vanish, as the red dye of the sunset

faded out of them and left them coldly white, they were yet distinctly

defined in their loneliness above the mists and shadows. Seen from these

solitudes, and from the Pass of the Great Saint Bernard, which was one

of them, the ascending Night came up the mountain like a rising water.

When it at last rose to the walls of the convent of the Great Saint

Bernard, it was as if that weather-beaten structure were another Ark,

and floated on the shadowy waves.

Darkness, outstripping some visitors on mules, had risen thus to

the rough convent walls, when those travellers were yet climbing the

mountain. As the heat of the glowing day when they had stopped to drink

at the streams of melted ice and snow, was changed to the searching cold

of the frosty rarefied night air at a great height, so the fresh beauty

of the lower journey had yielded to barrenness and desolation. A craggy

track, up which the mules in single file scrambled and turned from

block to block, as though they were ascending the broken staircase of

a gigantic ruin, was their way now. No trees were to be seen, nor any

vegetable growth save a poor brown scrubby moss, freezing in the chinks

of rock.