The Innocents Abroad


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she'd have had to break her oath or die up there."  
On the topmost pinnacle of Gibraltar we halted a good while, and no doubt  
the mules were tired. They had a right to be. The military road was  
good, but rather steep, and there was a good deal of it. The view from  
the narrow ledge was magnificent; from it vessels seeming like the  
tiniest little toy boats were turned into noble ships by the telescopes,  
and other vessels that were fifty miles away and even sixty, they said,  
and invisible to the naked eye, could be clearly distinguished through  
those same telescopes. Below, on one side, we looked down upon an  
endless mass of batteries and on the other straight down to the sea.  
While I was resting ever so comfortably on a rampart, and cooling my  
baking head in the delicious breeze, an officious guide belonging to  
another party came up and said:  
"Senor, that high hill yonder is called the Queen's Chair--"  
"Sir, I am a helpless orphan in a foreign land. Have pity on me. Don't  
--now don't inflict that most in-FERNAL old legend on me anymore today!"  
There--I had used strong language after promising I would never do so  
again; but the provocation was more than human nature could bear. If you  
had been bored so, when you had the noble panorama of Spain and Africa  
and the blue Mediterranean spread abroad at your feet, and wanted to gaze  
and enjoy and surfeit yourself in its beauty in silence, you might have  
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Page
74 75 76 77 78

Quick Jump
1 187 374 560 747