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Saturday 12 May 2018

Miscellany 79

MISCELLANY No 79

Another technical literary term: II



Last week I promised that today I would get Henry Knight out of the palaver he had got himself into, on his clifftop.  However, it has come to my attention, as they say, that Mr Hardy (writing in 1872) borrowed elements of his account from Sir Leslie Stephen’s ‘Bad Five Minutes in the Alps’, so here I offer you his rather similar account (published in 1862).  Sir Leslie used the experience, whether from his imagination or for real, to lead into a very lengthy piece of religious philosophy, as well one might if in his tricky position, which I have edited out.  

I promise I really will return next week to get Knight out of his uncomfortable position, one way or another.  I have not forgotten that we are looking for a newly-minted literary term to describe this particular stitherum.

 

From A BAD FIVE MINUTES IN THE ALPS (1862)

By Sir Leslie Stephen (1832–1904), the founding Editor of the Dictionary of National Biography and writer on philosophy, ethics, and literature,


... I resolved to take a stroll in spite of the rain. Leaving the little Babel of distracted life, I was soon breasting a steep slope behind the village. Every tree and every blade of grass was soaked and saturated in wet; the path was a series of puddles rapidly connecting themselves into rivulets; the veil of rain first softened the outlines of the houses, and then speedily blotted out the whole village from my sight. An hour or two of resolute tramping and I was wet to the skin—a mere animated sponge, living on my supplies of internal warmth. Vigorous exercise soon put a stop to all cerebral action except that which was concentrated on finding the way—no very easy task in the pervading gloom. I had, however, reached a little upland glen well known to me as offering, in fine weather, a grand view of distant snow-peaks through the jaws of the cliffs. It was time to return, and the demon who amuses himself by beguiling Alpine travellers suggested the memory of a certain short cut which involved a bit of amusing scrambling. I was speedily occupied in fighting my way downwards through a steep ravine, cloven by a vicious little torrent from a lofty glacier, when—how it happened I know not, for all forms of earth and grassy slope were obliterated at a few yards by the descending showers—I suddenly found that I had left the right track and was descending too sharply towards the stream. At the same time I saw, or thought I saw, that by crossing the face of a cliff for a few yards I should regain the ordinary route. The first step or two was easy; then came a long stride, in which I had to throw out one hand by way of grappling-iron to a jutting rock above. The rock was reeking with the moisture, and as I threw my weight upon it my hand slipped, and before I had time to look round I was slithering downwards without a single point of support. Below me, as I well knew, at a depth of some two hundred feet, was the torrent. One plunge through the air upon its rugged stones and I should be a heap of mangled flesh and bones. 

Instinctively I flung abroad arms and legs in search of strong supports; in another moment I was brought up with a jerk. My hands now rested on the narrow ledge where my feet had been a moment before, and one foot was propped by some insecure support whose nature I could not precisely determine. During the fall—it can hardly have lasted for a second—I had space for only one thought; it was that which had more than once occurred to me in somewhat similar situations, and might be summed up in the single ejaculation—' at last!' Expanded to greater length, it was the one startled reflection that the experience which I had so often gone through in imagination was now at length to be known to me in the bitter reality. It was the single flash of emotion which—as one may guess—passes through the brain of the criminal when the drop falls, or the signal is given to the firing party. I had often made my way along dangerous ridges bounded by cliffs of gigantic height; I had clung to steep walls of ice and passed shiveringly across profound crevasses; a partial slip in such places had given me some faint foretaste of the sensation produced by an accident, and the single thought—if it may be called a thought—that occurred to me was this electric shock of colourless expectation. I call it colourless, for the space was too brief to allow even of conscious alarm or horror. Another half-second, and all thought would have been summarily stopped; but when I suddenly felt that I was no longer falling, the next wave of emotion was compounded of vehement excitement and a sort of instinctive sense that everything might depend on my retaining presence of mind.

 Desperately choking back the surging emotions that seemed to shake my limbs, I sought for some means of escape. By slowly moving my left hand I managed to grasp a stem of rhododendron which grew upon the ledge of rock, and felt tolerably firm; next I tried to feel for some support with the toe of my left boot; the rock, however, against which it rested, was not only hard, but exquisitely polished by the ancient glacier which had forced its way down the gorge. A geologist would have been delighted with this admirable specimen of the planing powers of nature; I felt, I must confess, rather inclined to curse geology and glaciers. Not a projecting ledge, corner, or cranny could I discover; I might as well have been hanging against a pane of glass. With my right foot, however, I succeeded in obtaining a more satisfactory lodgement; had it not been for this help I could only have supported myself so long as my arms would hold out, and I have read somewhere that the strongest man cannot hold on by his arms alone for more than five minutes. I am, unluckily, very weak in the arms, and was therefore quite unable to perform the gymnastic feat of raising myself till I could place a knee upon the ledge where my hands were straining.
Here, then, I was, in an apparently hopeless predicament. I might cling to the rocks like a bat in a cave till exhaustion compelled me to let go; on a very liberal allowance, that might last for some twenty minutes, or, say half an hour. There was, of course, a remote chance that some traveller or tourist might pass through the glen; but the ordinary path lay some hundred yards above my head, on the other side of a rock pinnacle, and a hundred yards was, for all practical purposes, the same thing as a hundred miles; the ceaseless roar of the swollen torrent would drown my voice as effectually as a battery of artillery; but, for a moment or two, I considered the propriety of shouting for help. The problem was, whether I should diminish my strength more by the effort of shouting than the additional chance of attracting attention was worth. If the effort shortened my lasting powers by five minutes, it would so far diminish the time during which succour could be brought to any purpose. I had not the necessary data for calculation, and was not exactly in a frame of mind adapted for cool comparison of figures; but a spasm of despair kept me silent. Help in any form seemed too unlikely to be worth taking into account; the one thing left was to live as long as I could, though, to say the truth, five minutes' life on such a rack was a very questionable advantage. The vague instinct of self-preservation, however, survived its reason; all that I could really hope was that, by husbanding my strength as carefully as possible, I might protract existence till about the time when the dinner-bell would be ringing for my friends—a quarter of an hour away. 

Well, I would protract it—indeed, at times, a thought almost emerged to consciousness that I would make it as agreeable as might be under the circumstances; but that, I need not say, was a thought which, however sensible, had too much of mockery in it to be explicitly adopted. In dumb obstinacy I clung as firmly as might be to the rocks, and did my best to postpone the inevitable crash. Yet I felt that it was rapidly approaching, and felt it at times almost with a sense of relief. It is often said that persons in similar situations have seen their whole past existence pass rapidly before them. They have lived again every little incident of their lives which had been forgotten in ordinary states of mind. No such vision of the past remains engraved upon my memory; and yet I have a vivid recollection of the general nature of the thoughts that jostled and crowded each other in my mind. For the most part, I seemed to be a passive agent, utterly unable to marshal my ideas or to exercise any choice as to the direction my speculations should take. My will seemed to be annihilated, and I felt like a person to whom, by some magic, the operations of another man's mind should be thrown open for inspection. I was at once the actor and the spectator of a terrible drama—the last moments, for so I then supposed them to be, of a human being under irrevocable sentence of death.
A puff of wind had driven aside the wreaths of mist; and high above me I could see towering into the gloomy skies a pinnacle of black rock. Sharp and needle-like it sprang from its cloud-hidden base, and scarcely a flake of snow clung to its terrible precipices. There was I, cut off from my kind, with black rocks frowning above me and the pitiless chasm beneath. No angelic vision was required to announce my approaching fate. Death was coming with all but visible strides. Nature looked savage enough, marking my sufferings with contemptuous indifference.

Years ago I had rowed and lost a race or two on the Thames, and there was a certain similarity in the situations, for there comes a time in a losing race when all hope has departed, and one is labouring simply from some obscure sense of honour. The sinews of the arms are splitting, the back aches, and the lungs feel as though every blood-vessel in them were strained almost to bursting point. Whatever vital force is left is absorbed in propelling the animal machine; no reason can be distinctly given for continuing a process painful in a high degree, dangerous to the constitution, and capable of producing no sort of good result; and yet one continues to toil as though life and happiness depended upon refraining from a moment's intermission, and, as it were, nails one's mind—such as is left—down to the task. Even so the effort to maintain my grasp on the rock became to me the one absorbing thought; this fag end of the game should be fairly played out, come what might, and whatever reasons might be given for it. It was becoming tempting to throw up the cards and have done with it. Even the short sharp pang of the crash on the rocks below seemed preferable to draining the last dregs of misery. And yet, stupidly or sensibly, my mind fixed itself on at least holding out against time, and discharging what seemed to be a kind of duty. All other motives were rapidly fading from me, and one theory of the universe seemed to be about as uninteresting as another. The play should be played out, and as well as it could be done. 

Yet, before the end, I gave one more frantic glance at the position, and suddenly, to my utter astonishment, a new chance revealed itself. Could I grasp a certain projection which I now observed for the first time, I might still have a chance of escape. But to gain it, it was necessary to relax my hold with the right hand, and make a slight spring upwards. If the plan had occurred to me at the first moment, it might not have been difficult. But my strength had ebbed so far that success was exceedingly doubtful. Still it was the one chance, and at worst would hasten the crisis. I gathered myself up, crouching as low as I dared, and then springing from the right foot, and aiding the spring with my left hand, I threw out my right at the little jutting point. The tips of my fingers just reached their aim, but only touched without anchoring themselves. As I fell back, my foot missed its former support, and my whole weight came heavily on the feeble left hand. The clutch was instantaneously torn apart, and I was falling through the air. The old flash of surprise crossed my mind, tempered by something like a sense of relief. All was over! 

The mountains sprang upwards with a bound. But before the fall had well begun, before the air had begun to whistle past me, my movement was arrested. With a shock of surprise I found myself lying on a broad bed of deep moss, as comfortably as in my bed at home. As my bewildered senses righted themselves, I understood it all. The facts were simple and rather provoking. Before attempting the passage across the rock-face, I had noted, though without much conscious attention, that beneath my narrow ledge there was a broader one, some ten feet lower down. The sudden alarm produced by the slip, whilst reviving so much else, had expunged this one practically useful memory completely and instantaneously. But now, as it came back to me, I easily convinced myself not only that I had never been in danger, and thus that all my agony had been thrown away, but that I had never even done anything rash. It was rather humiliating, but decidedly consoling, and in some sense comforting to my self-esteem. As I slowly picked myself up, I looked at my watch. It followed, from a comparison of times, that I had not been stretched on the rack for more than five minutes. Besides the obvious reflection that in such moments one lives fast, it also followed that I might still be in time for dinner. I got on my legs, trembling at first, but soon found that they could carry me as fast as usual down the well-known path. I was in time to join my friends at the table d 'hôte, joined in the usual facetiousness about the soup, and spent the evening—for the clouds were now rolling away—in discussing the best mode of assaulting our old friend the Teufelshorn.