Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- LIST OF PHOTO-STEREOGRAPHS
- PART I THE VOYAGE AND THE CLIMB
- PART II ON THE CRATER OF ELEVATION
- PART III ON THE CRATER OF ERUPTION
- CHAP. I SCALING THE CENTRAL CONE
- CHAP. II EARLY EXPERIENCES AT ALTA VISTA
- CHAP. III BRINGING UP THE TELESCOPE
- CHAP. IV BATTLE OF THE CLOUDS
- CHAP. V SUMMIT OF THE PEAK
- CHAP. VI AUTUMN IN EXCELSIS
- CHAP. VII THE REITERATED QUESTION
- CHAP. VIII THE ICE CAVERN
- CHAP. IX LAST OF THE MOUNTAIN
- PART IV LOWLANDS OF TENERIFFE
- INDEX
CHAP. VIII - THE ICE CAVERN
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2011
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- LIST OF PHOTO-STEREOGRAPHS
- PART I THE VOYAGE AND THE CLIMB
- PART II ON THE CRATER OF ELEVATION
- PART III ON THE CRATER OF ERUPTION
- CHAP. I SCALING THE CENTRAL CONE
- CHAP. II EARLY EXPERIENCES AT ALTA VISTA
- CHAP. III BRINGING UP THE TELESCOPE
- CHAP. IV BATTLE OF THE CLOUDS
- CHAP. V SUMMIT OF THE PEAK
- CHAP. VI AUTUMN IN EXCELSIS
- CHAP. VII THE REITERATED QUESTION
- CHAP. VIII THE ICE CAVERN
- CHAP. IX LAST OF THE MOUNTAIN
- PART IV LOWLANDS OF TENERIFFE
- INDEX
Summary
On the morning of September 17, a file of men and horses having arrived from Orotava, the telescope, repacked in its many boxes, was sent down the mountain side under charge of the sailors. After duly depositing their burden with Mr. Goodall, they were to rejoin the yacht, and assist in repairing the unlucky damage that had been reported by the captain.
Their tales of the ups and downs they had been through, we were afterwards informed, were almost endless; and for three days they talked continuously. If they spoke of their doings as well as their sayings, they must have described much excellent work that they had both performed, and in the best spirit; though the circumstances had not been nautical; and the position, two miles above the sea level, not a usual one for sailors. At the time that Mr. Stephenson so kindly allowed us to take his men up the Peak, I had no idea of how much use they would become; and even he, perhaps, did not know all the varieties of labour that they were capable of; for the genius of the place, and the necessities of a strange style of life, were required to develope them. As the worthy fellows left us that morning, I could not but shake them both heartily by the hand, and thank them for their co-operation; wishing them well, as I still do, in their climbing the mountain of life.
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- Teneriffe, an Astronomer's ExperimentOr, Specialities of a Residence Above the Clouds, pp. 348 - 371Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1858