Show Up The Himalayas To the north and west what a glorious spread before us Some panorama was twentyfive miles to the north the mighty wall of Kainet rose in the air its gray cranite precipices shining like gold m the setting sun Round it were set at least a dozen aiguilles not one of which was less than 20000 feet and whose precipitous snowless sides no animal could eyen scale Due west towered the Gangootri peaks prominent among them the gigantic gigan-tic Rudru Himaleh Pure ice are these but ice lying at such an angle as none of had imagined possible Here again us the rock aiguilles all secondclass came as compared with their giant neighbors neigh-bors peaks all equally black and all equally impossible I know from my limited experience that impossible is a strong perience limited of man are word but the powers while the forces of nature are hardly so the aiguilles which Switerland even rarely more than I 000 feet of hard rArely give long resisted the assaults of the cnmbing experienced and daring chmbers most attack and only Yielded after alongdaysattack be said of these rock th shall then That which are at least equally steep turrets the Matterhorn itself and beside which mockery and a dwarf would stand a the of nice o men SnJelv the present Surely for stillretained 5Sl3 Jiside may be stIll word impossible i As I sat and I in the Alpine dictionary medley of Sad on thc view a strange mind III thoughts passed through of this my height there I the intense sIlence which almost appalled was something speechGood HTords forbade I and which i |