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the hot weather and the monsoon, shrouded always in mist, drenched with continual rain, living on their flocks and on what the ridges can furnish, and, save for a rare visit to a distant bazar to replenish their stock of grain, content with the companionship of their sheep. In September, when the water-courses dry up and the weather grows cool, they return to their valleys. Everywhere, up to the very shoulders of Kangchenjunga, wherever there was a patch of pasture and a little water, we found the remains of their rude shelters and traces of recent habitation. This particular shepherd was the last of the descending rearguard. He took our arrival as a matter of course, politely gave us entrance, and went about his immediate business of making fire with flint and steel with an air of complete detachment. His flock of 200 sheep browsed on the hillside, unwatched apparently, but never wandering afield, and an occasional strange sound from the shepherd conveyed instant meaning to an errant sheep. Conversation was limited, and when we departed he accepted in silence a small gift of matches and cigarettes.

The weather broke as we left. The mist came down and olung depressingly throughout an uninteresting and tiring march. It took just three times as long as the coolies predicted to reach our first camp beyond Niatang. The hillman is an incurable optimist in his estimate of distances. Whether it is a sense of distance or a

sense of truth that is wanting, or whether it is merely a desire to speak comforting things, I have never discovered. We crawled wearily into camp, with a thirst that the world rarely gives, and found that the only water available was a filthy little tarn that in happier circumstances one would have hesitated to wash in. We drank it, faintly disguised in the form of tea, and bitterly repented the thoughtlessness that omitted a case of beer from the store list. Then the problem of fitting three men of normal size and their personal belongings into a tiny green tent 6 feet by 5 had to be faced. It was imperfectly solved at the cost of frequent seizures of cramp. Then the rain came on. And, lastly, we awoke with a shock to the fact that our tent and bedding were crawling with leeches, great, cold, well-nourished fellows. With heads and necks wrapped in scarves we went fearfully to sleep. But either the leeches had dined or they were not true children of the horse-leech, for we awoke unscathed.

The uneasy night ended at last, and we were out before sunrise. Night was still in the black and formless valleys, and dawn "walked tiptoe on the mountain-tops." Our reward was a unique view of Everest, humped between a broad-backed snow mass and a range of white, serrated peaks. In a glorious morning we breakfasted on a provision-box and watched the snows turn from cold gray to pink, and

from rose-colour to the white glare of full day. Then with incredible swiftness down came the mist. All day we tramped through billows of it driven before a snell north wind. The ridge is like a gigantic, irregular saw, and the road is one long switchback, rising and plunging steeply between 12,000 to 13,000 feet. Occasionally it dips into Nepal. At the anxious request of our sirdar, prompted apparently by some vivid past experience, we had procured an imposing pass from the Durbar. But one might as soon expect to meet an Abor in Piccadilly as a Nepalese official on that hungry and desolate frontier. The circle of vision was narrow, but always beautiful-thick woods of rhododendron and juniper and mountain-ash, green hollows of pasture, corries overgrown with bushes of what must be first cousin to heather, purple aconite in profusion, and quantities of more innocent yellow and red flowers for which our meagre botanical vocabulary held no names. noon it began to rain, and poured steadily and increasingly. The camp at Mingutang was a drenched and sorry sight. After dark the floods descended and the wind blew and beat upon the tent till it leaked mournfully; and the three cramped and shivering inmates crept into sleepingbags and slept soundly.

At

At Mingutang the ridge widens. One leaves the steep V-shaped gorges of the lower hills and enters a generous, open, upland country. Across

a low col and one is looking up a noble Highland glen. On the west precipitous green hills cleft into corries and seamed with waterfalls, on the east long easy slopes of pasture and trees, where the burns have leave to wind and trickle over pebbles. It was a soft, gray, West-Highland morning when we sauntered sentimentally up the glen, where every corner was reminiscent of homely places. Among the rhododendrons and rowans we shot a brace of blood - pheasants, a demurely coloured hen and handsome cock with gaudy plumage of red and green and yellow. The woods give place to a russet moor which ends in a steep scree-slope. The glen leads to a high plateau, between 14,000 and 15,000 feet, where several great ridges are knit together, forming a fourfold watershed. A string of lochans feeds the streams,

gray sheets of water with granite shores encircled by green hills, We lunched coldly on & wet rock by

the side of one: the rain plashed drearily on the wan water, and the mist crept along the hillside, and one could have sworn that both the loch and the weather were of Galloway. It is undulating country, long slopes of grass and rocks and scree. Our constant companion the mist was with us again, but one was dimly conscious of a succession of wide green hollows streaming with water, and narrowing to ledges over which the water poured into rocky gorges. From the edge

of the plateau there is a breath- steps was the proper course, less descent of 2000 feet to Gamathang in the valley of the little Rathong. Once a considerable yak-station, Gamathang has now only a ruined hut to tell the tale. It is an exquisite spot, a patch of green at the meeting-place of five glens, with towering pine-clad hills literally overhanging it on every side. Our camp there lingers pleasantly in the minddry sand for the tent floor, the luxury of a bath in an ice-cold stream, a fine evening, and roast pheasant for dinner.

but again guided by a mis-
taken sense of direction we
decided to force a way down
the valley to where it joins
the Rathong, which flows be-
neath the Jongri ridge. In
open country this might have
been a sound plan, but not in
forest. Lightheartedly we com-
menced to carve out a path
with kukris, hoping for open
ground ahead, which never
came. Underfoot the going
was a detestable mixture of
mould and mud and soaking
decay. It rained incessantly.
Drenched to the skin we strug-
gled on for five hours, hack-
ing at trees, dodging branches,
plunging through torrents, con-
fident that each shoulder would
disclose the Rathong, and al-
ways disappointed. Towards
evening we abandoned the un-
equal contest and started up
hill in hope of finding a dry
place to camp. The forest
grew thicker and the mist
denser and the ridges more
confusing. It became un-
pleasantly clear that we had
lost ourselves, and
we had
just accepted the certainty of
a night of extreme discomfort
when suddenly through the
mist and trees we caught sight
of a thin trail of smoke.
record piece of jungle-cutting
brought us to the source of it.

The traveller in the Himalayas, to whom time is an object, should be careful to have either clear weather or some one in his retinue who knows the road. From Gamathang to Jongri we had neither. The survey map is a broken reed, as it shows only the main ridges, and to take the wrong valley may mean days of unnecessary labour. It is equally useless to work by direction when the snows and all landmarks are hidden in mist. We made our first mistake at Bhoktu, the summit of the ridge above Gamathang. Instead of keeping along the Kangla road and making a detour which the map, correct in this instance, marked, we turned to the right, which reason indicated was the direcIt was a rough log-cabin. tion of Jongri. The light of The little clearing in front was reason and a clear path, which piled a foot deep with birds' unfortunately led to the right, feathers. The owner was a were our undoing. In a few wild creature of the woods, a miles the track faded into Limbu from Nepal, who lived nothingness, and we were by trapping musk-deer and stranded in a forest of thick selling the musk. Whether rhododendron. To retrace our there are more of his astonishVOL. CXCI.-NO. MCLVIII.

2 K

A

ing kind in these forests I know by a laggard coolie. At night not. We were too weary and their brushwood fires were the day was too far spent for cheerful with laughter and inquiries into his strange and music. solitary existence. Negotiations were difficult at first. He sat crouched over his smoking fire whittling a stake for one of his traps and stoutly refused to move. Finally, by a promise of bakshish and other arguments which we could not follow, the sirdar persuaded him to show us the path to Jongri. Having got him started, the difficulty was to keep him in sight, for the man was a marvel of muscle and sinew, and he took these punishing slopes like an antelope. The road led up the side of a long fence of brushwood, with every few yards a gap set with a cunning and most effective trap. The ascent was probably not much over 1500 feet, but it seemed endless and the pace was killing. At last he put us on a narrow track, and just at nightfall we reached some water and fuel and a possible camping-ground. No European, so far as I know, has crossed the hills from Gamathang to Jongri. In any case our route was a new one; but it is not recommended to future travellers.

Here a word must be said in praise of the coolies. They were splendid fellows, and throughout the trek never gave a moment's trouble, Their cheerfulness was amazing. Each carried a load of sixty pounds. They swung downhill singing and whistling, uphill they groaned Ram Ram in mock distress. The camp arrangements were never delayed

It

The perpetual mist and rain never damped their spirits. Nights spent in wet cloths under flimsy leaking shelters they took as a matter of course; in the morning they rolled out smiling and cheerful as ever to take up their packs made heavier by the rain. Throughout the episode of the jungle-cutting they never grumbled, and I can imagine no greater trial of temper than to carry a load through thick undergrowth. They were walking steadily for ten hours up and down many thousand feet of very trying country. was an inspiration from heaven that made them play at being a flock of sheep. The head coolie played the shepherd, uttering weird seductive calls, and the rest baa-ed in chorus. Mercifully the childish jest never grew stale. The steeper the ground the louder and more pathetic rose the bleating. At the end of the day, when the shepherd limped into camp ahead of his flock, halfdead with exhaustion, he informed us gravely that the bheri-walla was very tired, and he had lost all his sheep. Our troubles seemed now to be at an end. Another day of mist and rain did not disturb us. We even debated whether we need carry tiffin, so certain were we of reaching Jongri by midday. But it had been ordained that we should explore yet another nameless glen. When we arrived at what we rightly thought was the valley

of the Churung Chu we hesi- reached the very base of the tated fatally. The sirdar, who snows. Above the camp a had once come this way from stream issued from a pure the Kangla, thought that the white glacier, flowed sedately path to Jongri led down the through a broad green fold in valley. But a broader and the hills and poured over a high clearer track led up the hill- waterfall into our nameless side in the same direction. If valley. At sunrise we climbed we were inclined to take the the ridge to the south and for low road, the coolies, acutely an hour forgot a ravenous apmindful of yesterday, were petite. On the west were the more than determined to take precipices and powdered snow the high road, and while we of the Kangla and an unknown debated they took a firm line peak above our valley, then and disappeared in the mist. little Kabru and, fronting us, We followed meekly. The the splendid mass of Kabru path crossed the ridge and itself, running out to the Dome descended to the next valley, and the Forked peak; then the for two hours it gave the im- gap where lay the Guichala; pression of having a definite then Pandim and the peaks to object, and then it vanished the east, a noble line of dazzling abruptly into thin air. The sunlit snows sparkling in the one thing clear in our perplexed frosty morning air. So near minds was a determination were we that Kabru completely that there should be no more hid the peaks of Kangchenjunga. jungle-cutting. But the sirdar Only those who for days have was confident that we had but had their horizon bounded by a to climb the ridge on our left narrow circle of gray mist can to strike Jongri. We did so appreciate the full glory of that wearily, only to hear the roar vision. We walked on closeof another torrent in a farther cropped turf studded with blue valley. We seemed to be gentians. A herd of startled wandering in a nightmare of mountain - sheep surveyed the parallel glens. Had we pushed intruders on we would have found the Rathong, and might have struck the sheep-path from Kabru to Jongri. But it was late, and we had learnt caution, so we retraced our steps and camped coldly in the valley, very peevish at the thought of a precious day wasted.

But all regret vanished when we awoke next morning to find a cloudless sky and a world white with hoar-frost. We even ceased to resent the mist which had veiled our eyes till we

on their feedinggrounds for a moment, and in another second were far away on a snow - slope. The camp below smoked cheerfully, and a field of wet clothes lay drying in the sun. It was a heartening morning after five days of rain. There was no mistaking the line of country now, and the mist that was already rising held no terrors for us. We crossed into the valley of the Churung Chu and descended steeply through thick rhododendrons by the side of its

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