Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Further Reading
- A Richard Jefferies Chronology
- A Note on the Text
- After London; or Wild England
- Part I The Relapse into Barbarism
- Part II Wild England
- I Sir Felix
- II The House of Aquila
- III The Stockade
- IV The Canoe
- V Baron Aquila
- VI The Forest Track
- VII The Forest Track Continued
- VIII Thyma Castle
- IX Superstitions
- X The Feast
- XI Aurora
- XII Night in the Forest
- XIII Sailing Away
- XIV The Straits
- XV Sailing Onwards
- XVI The City
- XVII The Camp
- XVIII The King's Levy
- XIX Fighting
- XX In Danger
- XXI A Voyage
- XXII Discoveries
- XXIII Strange Things
- XXV Fiery Vapours
- XXV The Shepherds
- XXVI Bow and Arrow
- XXVII Surprised
- XXVIII For Aurora
- Appendices Supplementary writings by Richard Jefferies
XIV - The Straits
from Part II - Wild England
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 December 2017
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- Further Reading
- A Richard Jefferies Chronology
- A Note on the Text
- After London; or Wild England
- Part I The Relapse into Barbarism
- Part II Wild England
- I Sir Felix
- II The House of Aquila
- III The Stockade
- IV The Canoe
- V Baron Aquila
- VI The Forest Track
- VII The Forest Track Continued
- VIII Thyma Castle
- IX Superstitions
- X The Feast
- XI Aurora
- XII Night in the Forest
- XIII Sailing Away
- XIV The Straits
- XV Sailing Onwards
- XVI The City
- XVII The Camp
- XVIII The King's Levy
- XIX Fighting
- XX In Danger
- XXI A Voyage
- XXII Discoveries
- XXIII Strange Things
- XXV Fiery Vapours
- XXV The Shepherds
- XXVI Bow and Arrow
- XXVII Surprised
- XXVIII For Aurora
- Appendices Supplementary writings by Richard Jefferies
Summary
THE passage contracted there to little over half a mile, but these nar-rows did not continue far; the shores, having approached thus near each other, quickly receded, till presently they were at least two miles apart. The merchant vessel had passed the narrows with the aid of her sweeps, but she moved slowly, and, as it seemed to him, with difficulty. She was about a mile and a half distant, and near the eastern mouth of the strait. As Felix watched he saw her square sail again raised, showing that she had reached a spot where the hills ceased to shut off the wind. Entering the open Lake she altered her course and sailed away to the north-north-east, following the course of the northern mainland.
Looking now eastwards, across the Lake, he saw a vast and beautiful expanse of water, without island or break of any kind, reaching to the horizon. Northwards and southwards the land fell rapidly away, skirted as usual with islets and shoals, between which and the shore vessels usually voyaged. He had heard of this open water, and it was his intention to sail out into and explore it, but as the sun now began to decline towards the west, he considered that he had better wait till morning, and so have a whole day before him. Meantime, he would paddle through the channel, beach the canoe on the islet that stood farthest out, and so start clear on the morrow.
Turning now to look back the other way, westward, he was surprised to see a second channel, which came almost to the foot of the hill on which he stood, but there ended and did not connect with the first. The entrance to it was concealed, as he now saw, by an island, past which he must have sailed that afternoon. This second or blind channel seemed more familiar to him than the flat and reedy shore at the mouth of the true strait, and he now recognised it as the one to which he had journeyed on foot through the forest. He had not then struck the true strait at all; he had sat down and pondered beside this deceptive inlet thinking that it divided the mainlands. From this discovery he saw how easy it was to be misled in such matters.
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- Richard Jefferies, After London; or Wild England , pp. 113 - 117Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2017