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Shon Mcgann’s Tobogan Ride
by
“‘Nom de Dieu,’ the higher we go the faster we live, that is something.”
“Sometimes we live ourselves to death too quickly. In my schooldays I watched a mouse in a jar of oxygen do that;” said the Honourable.
“That is the best way to die,” remarked the halfbreed–“much.”
Jo Gordineer had been over the path before. He was confident of the way, and proud of his office of guide.
“Climb Mont Blanc, if you will,” said the Honourable, “but leave me these white bastions of the Selkirks.”
Even so. They have not seen the snowy hills of God who have yet to look upon the Rocky Mountains, absolute, stupendous, sublimely grave.
Jo Gordineer and Pretty Pierre strode on together. They being well away from the other two, the Honourable turned and said to Shon: “What was the name of the man who wrote that song of yours, again, Shon?”
“Lawless.”
“Yes, but his first name?”
“Duke–Duke Lawless.”
There was a pause, in which the other seemed to be intently studying the glacier above them. Then he said: “What was he like?–in appearance, I mean.”
“A trifle more than your six feet, about your colour of hair and eyes, and with a trick of smilin’ that would melt the heart of an exciseman, and O’Connell’s own at a joke, barrin’ a time or two that he got hold of a pile of papers from the ould country. By the grave of St. Shon! thin he was as dry of fun as a piece of blotting paper. And he said at last, before he was aisy and free again, ‘Shon,’ says he, ‘it’s better to burn your ships behind ye, isn’t it?’
“And I, havin’ thought of a glen in ould Ireland that I’ll never see again, nor any that’s in it, said: ‘Not, only burn them to the water’s edge, Duke Lawless, but swear to your own soul that they never lived but in the dreams of the night.’
“‘You’re right there, Shon,’ says he, and after that no luck was bad enough to cloud the gay heart of him, and bad enough it was sometimes.”
“And why do you fear that he is not alive?”
“Because I met an old mate of mine one day on the Frazer, and he said that Lawless had never come to Cloncurry; and a hard, hard road it was to travel.”
Jo Gordineer was calling to them, and there the conversation ended. In a few minutes the four stood on the edge of the glacier. Each man had a long hickory stick which served as alpenstock, a bag hung at his side, and tied to his back was his gold-pan, the hollow side in, of course. Shon’s was tied a little lower down than the others.
They passed up this solid river of ice, this giant power at endless strife with the high hills, up towards its head. The Honourable was the first to reach the point of vantage, and to look down upon the vast and wandering fissures, the frigid bulwarks, the great fortresses of ice, the ceaseless snows, the aisles of this mountain sanctuary through which Nature’s splendid anthems rolled. Shon was a short distance below, with his hand over his eyes, sweeping the semi-circle of glory.
Suddenly there was a sharp cry from Pierre: “Mon Dieu! Look!”
Shon McGann had fallen on a smooth pavement of ice. The gold-pan was beneath him, and down the glacier he was whirled-whirled, for Shon had thrust his heels in the snow and ice, and the gold-pan performed a series of circles as it sped down the incline. His fingers clutched the ice and snow, but they only left a red mark of blood behind. Must he go the whole course of that frozen slide, plump into the wild depths below?
“‘Mon Dieu!–mon Dieu!'” said Pretty Pierre, piteously. The face of the Honourable was set and tense.
Jo Gordineer’s hand clutched his throat as if he choked. Still Shon sped. It was a matter of seconds only. The tragedy crowded to the awful end.