登陆注册
15441900000062

第62章 CHAPTER XI--THE WORLD$$$$$S END(3)

Of course it is. You are here in the land of perpetual spring, where frost and snow seldom, or never comes.

Oh, look at the ferns under this rock! I must pick some.

Pick away. I will warrant you do not pick all the sorts.

Yes. I have got them all now.

Not so hasty, child; there is plenty of a beautiful fern growing among that moss, which you have passed over. Look here.

What! that little thing a fern!

Hold it up to the light, and see.

What a lovely little thing, like a transparent sea-weed, hung on black wire. What is it?

Film fern, Hymenophyllum. But what are you staring at now, with all your eyes?

Oh! that rock covered with green stars and a cloud of little white and pink flowers growing out of them.

Aha! my good little dog! I thought you would stand to that game when you found it.

What is it, though?

You must answer that yourself. You have seen it a hundred times before.

Why, it is London Pride, that grows in the garden at home.

Of course it is: but the Irish call it St. Patrick's cabbage; though it got here a long time before St. Patrick; and St. Patrick must have been very short of garden-stuff if he ever ate it.

But how did it get here from London?

No, no. How did it get to London from hence? For from this country it came. I suppose the English brought it home in Queen Bess's or James the First's time.

But if it is wild here, and will grow so well in England, why do we not find it wild in England too?

For the same reason that there are no toads or snakes in Ireland.

They had not got as far as Ireland before Ireland was parted off from England. And St. Patrick's cabbage, and a good many other plants, had not got as far as England.

But why?

Why, I don't know. But this I know: that when Madam How makes a new sort of plant or animal, she starts it in one single place, and leaves it to take care of itself and earn its own living--as she does you and me and every one--and spread from that place all round as far as it can go. So St. Patrick's cabbage got into this south-west of Ireland, long, long ago; and was such a brave sturdy little plant, that it clambered up to the top of the highest mountains, and over all the rocks. But when it got to the rich lowlands to the eastward, in county Cork, it found all the ground taken up already with other plants; and as they had enough to do to live themselves, they would not let St. Patrick's cabbage settle among them; and it had to be content with living here in the far-west--and, what was very sad, had no means of sending word to its brothers and sisters in the Pyrenees how it was getting on.

What do you mean? Are you making fun of me?

Not the least. I am only telling you a very strange story, which is literally true. Come, and sit down on this bench. You can't catch that great butterfly, he is too strong on the wing for you.

But oh, what a beautiful one!

Yes, orange and black, silver and green, a glorious creature. But you may see him at home sometimes: that plant close to you, you cannot see at home.

Why, it is only great spurge, such as grows in the woods at home.

No. It is Irish spurge which grows here, and sometimes in Devonshire, and then again in the west of Europe, down to the Pyrenees. Don't touch it. Our wood spurge is poisonous enough, but this is worse still; if you get a drop of its milk on your lip or eye, you will be in agonies for half a day. That is the evil plant with which the poachers kill the salmon.

How do they do that?

When the salmon are spawning up in the little brooks, and the water is low, they take that spurge, and grind it between two stones under water, and let the milk run down into the pool; and at that all the poor salmon turn up dead. Then comes the water- bailiff, and catches the poachers. Then comes the policeman, with his sword at his side and his truncheon under his arm: and then comes a "cheap journey" to Tralee Gaol, in which those foolish poachers sit and reconsider themselves, and determine not to break the salmon laws--at least till next time.

But why is it that this spurge, and St. Patrick's cabbage, grow only here in the west? If they got here of themselves, where did they come from? All outside there is sea; and they could not float over that.

Come, I say, and sit down on this bench, and I will tell you a tale,--the story of the Old Atlantis, the sunken land in the far West. Old Plato, the Greek, told legends of it, which you will read some day; and now it seems as if those old legends had some truth in them, after all. We are standing now on one of the last remaining scraps of the old Atlantic land. Look down the bay. Do you see far away, under, the mountains, little islands, long and low?

Oh, yes.

Some of these are old slate, like the mountains; others are limestone; bits of the old coral-reef to the west of Ireland which became dry land.

I know. You told me about it.

Then that land, which is all eaten up by the waves now, once joined Ireland to Cornwall, and to Spain, and to the Azores, and I suspect to the Cape of Good Hope, and what is stranger, to Labrador, on the coast of North America.

Oh! How can you know that?

Listen, and I will give you your first lesson in what I call Bio- geology.

What a long word!

If you can find a shorter one I shall be very much obliged to you, for I hate long words. But what it means is,--Telling how the land has changed in shape, by the plants and animals upon it. And if you ever read (as you will) Mr. Wallace's new book on the Indian Archipelago, you will see what wonderful discoveries men may make about such questions if they will but use their common sense. You know the common pink heather--ling, as we call it?

Of course.

Then that ling grows, not only here and in the north and west of Europe, but in the Azores too; and, what is more strange, in Labrador. Now, as ling can neither swim nor fly, does not common sense tell you that all those countries were probably joined together in old times?

Well: but it seems so strange.

So it is, my child; and so is everything. But, as the fool says in Shakespeare -

"A long time ago the world began, With heigh ho, the wind and the rain."

同类推荐
  • 全齐文

    全齐文

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Boyhood

    Boyhood

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 红铅入黑铅诀

    红铅入黑铅诀

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 芙蓉镜寓言

    芙蓉镜寓言

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • ABC's of Science

    ABC's of Science

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 过去的经历

    过去的经历

    她因小时候的意外,脑子不灵光不聪明。但她一样活了下来。只因她要证明给大家看,哪怕不聪明的人也能活得好好的。她做过学生,但后来不读了,街坊都劝她继续读。但她不听,只因她累了。不想读了,从小到大成绩都不好,读那么多书只对聪明的人有用不是吗?她会找到自己的幸福吗?因为这些过往,因为自卑。欢迎加入小说读者群,群号码:549474807
  • 乐桥以西

    乐桥以西

    1911年的吴县,“碎锦”戏班首席小花旦沈佩佩老是看到一些恐怖的东西,一日,s神秘青年徐踵羽拿着一个黑色木盒找到她,从此开启了一段奇幻的旅程......
  • 轮回不归路

    轮回不归路

    兄弟的背叛,天下的唾骂,还有对恋人的不舍;天命之下皆蝼蚁,谁能拜托命运的枷锁?假如上天给你一次重新来过的机会,是后悔的机会,还是命运的轮回,或者,是悲剧的重演?
  • 重生之鬼医倾城

    重生之鬼医倾城

    她是二十一世纪令人闻风丧胆的霸主,也是杀人不眨眼的第一杀手修罗,更是震惊世界的商业女王顾卿染,还是医术惊才绝艳的鬼医。她变成她,一样的名字,不一样的人生。前世的她是令人遗弃的孤儿,重生的她拥有家人,更拥有一生一世的爱情。
  • 三月初恋

    三月初恋

    某某机场中“我说了不用你送”刘星不耐烦的看着眼前的帅气男人,看起来斯文又儒雅时尚的男子推了推鼻梁骨上的镜框∶“我是你的主治医生也就是你的监护人,所以我必须将你安全送到家门儿口”文艺优雅的女子眉角直抽“未满十八岁的的人才需要监护人而我已经超龄了”开什么国际玩笑二十多岁的成年女性还会需要什么监护人吗?这简直是她今年听过最好笑的笑话……
  • 云起云落

    云起云落

    我承诺女主虽然会的技能多了一点但绝对不是玛丽苏,出现所有王子都喜欢她的情况,本文男主冰殿,不喜勿入
  • 无极求生

    无极求生

    于浮华凡世,只为乱世求生。铁骨铮铮,剑锋所指不见柔情。弱肉强食,唯群雄立于异界以傲然。踏遍轮回,观求生之无极!
  • 新婚时代

    新婚时代

    她做了他三个月的情人,愉快分手以后再见面,他却成了她的姐夫,在酒会上,他目睹了她在男人当中游刃有余。“真没看出来,我曾经的情人,现在的妹妹,竟然是如此有心机的人,为了接近我,可以不择手段。”厉景琛眼底淬着危险的笑意。她浅笑妍妍,眼眸里升起冷意,“我也没想到厉先生也是一只狡猾的狐狸,我不过是一个平凡的女人,竟然能令厉先生费劲心思毁了我一生的幸福。”她以为这个男人对她只不过是一场无聊的追逐,她更没兴趣在他身上多做停留,只是当两人牵牵绊绊,一颗心早已步步沦陷,更没想到她曾经那段刻骨铭心的感情伤痛竟然是这个男人一手制造的。面对残酷的真相,她究竟是去是留?
  • 终极神医

    终极神医

    妙手神针,仁心慈面,中医集大成者钟厚在繁华都市谱写的一曲风流情歌。几大中医流派,明争暗斗,谁能一统中医江湖?中医西医对碰,火花四溅,钟厚奋起力挽狂澜。萝莉熟妇都有,美女多多,无边艳福名医风流!
  • 穿越王妃天下无敌

    穿越王妃天下无敌

    一次意外求婚她穿越了,为救师兄潜入王府偷盗,谁料被腹黑王爷逮住收为高级侍卫,由此展开了一场爆笑互虐大战。。。