Page:Whymper - Scrambles amongst the Alps.djvu/288

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242
SCRAMBLES AMONGST THE ALPS.
chap. xi.

very mysterious below. It was not until eventide she allowed us to approach her; then, as darkness came on, the curtains were withdrawn, the light drapery was lifted, and we stole up on tiptoe through the grand portal framed by Mont Sue. But night advanced rapidly, and we found ourselves left out in the cold, without a hole to creep into or shelter from overhanging rock. We might have fared badly, except for our good plaids. But when they were

OUR CAMP ON MONT SUC.[1]

sewn together down their long edges, and one end tossed over our rope (which was passed round some rocks), and the other secured by stones, there was sufficient protection; and we slept on this exposed ridge, 9700 feet above the level of the sea, more soundly, perhaps, than if we had been lying on feather beds.

We left our bivouac at 4.45 a.m., and at 9.40 arrived upon the

  1. From a sketch by Mr. Adams-Reilly. This camp was immediately at the foot of the snow seen upon the map to the N. W. of the words Mont Sue.