General Books LLC
Published: 2012-01
Total Pages: 274
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Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: CIR MHOR FROM GLEN SANNOX. By W. W. Naismith. THE circuit of Glen Sannox, by Messrs Campbell and Lester, as described in an interesting paper (Journal, vol. i., p. 31), fired at least two of their fellow-clubmen with the ambition to follow their example. On the last day of September, accordingly, Mr Gilbert Thomson and the writer arrived at the snug hotel at Corrie, after crossing from Ardrossan in a southerly gale, which caused our steamer, the Marchioness of Lorne, to ship a good deal of water. During the evening rain fell in torrents. We wanted a good sleep in preparation for a hard day's work, and retired early, one of us being provided by our hostess with an alarm-clock, warranted to go off at 3.45 A.M. Tyndall remarks, in connection with his historic ascent of the Weisshorn, that the goddess of sleep flies most shyly when most intensely wooed; and all climbers have doubtless proved the truth of this for themselves, and wished they were Swiss guides with no nervous systems to speak of. On such occasions all sorts of expedients are tried in the hope of inducingslumber, ?such as the time-honoured dodge of counting sheep passing through a hole in a wall; or, again, endeavouring strenuously to think of nothing at all. Those plans being unsuccessful, you try to delude yourself with the idea that you are not going to climb to-morrow, because the weather will likely put climbing out of the question, and therefore you may as well take your usual night's sleep, it being of no consequence whether you awake early or not To give this device a chance of success, it is essential to keep the eyes tightly closed; for if you unwittingly catch a glimpse of a stray moonbeam, or a bit of starlit sky, the fraud is at once detected, with the result that a rush of hopes and fears ...