Running Water

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A. E. W. Mason 1907
English
  • 01 - Shows Mrs. Thesiger in Her Home
  • 02 - Introduces one of Strood\'s Successors
  • 03 - The Finding of John Lattery
  • 04 - Mr. Jarvice
  • 05 - Michel Revailloud Expounds His Philosophy
  • 06 - The Pavillon de Lognan
  • 07 - The Aiguille de l\'Argentière
  • 08 - Sylvia Parts From Her Mother
  • 09 - Sylvia Makes the Acquaintance of Her Father
  • 10 - A Little Round Game of Cards
  • 11 - Sylvia\'s Father Makes a Mistake
  • 12 - The House of the Running Water
  • 13 - Chayne Returns
  • 14 - An Old Passion Betrays a New Secret
  • 15 - Kenyon\'s John Lattery
  • 16 - As Between Gentlemen
  • 17 - Sylvia Tells More Than She Knows
  • 18 - Both Sides of the Question
  • 19 - The Shadow in the Room
  • 20 - On the Down
  • 21 - Chayne Comes to Conclusions
  • 22 - Revailloud Revisited
  • 23 - Michel Revailloud\'s Führbuch
  • 24 - The Brenva Ridge
  • 25 - A Night on an Ice-Slope
  • 26 - Running Water
Although A.E.W. Mason is best known for The Four Feathers, an adventure novel of 1902 set in Egypt and the Sudan (and filmed several times), he was a prolific and popular writer of the period. Running Water, published in 1907, is, like its predecessor, a tale of romantic adventure. Though much of the story takes place in England, the real setting here is in the high Alps, in the range of Mont Blanc near Chamonix and Courmayeur. Here it is that Captain Hilary Chayne arrives, having spent the prior four years of his army service on the shores of the Red Sea, dreaming all the time of his return to the Alps, to the world of rock, ice, and snow, to mountaineering with all its challenges and joys, and to its comradeship. And here it is too that he meets the young and beautiful Sylvia Thesiger, a girl already in love with the high mountains, and seeking in them an escape, as far as possible, from her unpleasant and domineering mother.
Is it necessary to add that disappointments. problems, misunderstandings, and outright villainies, ensue to complicate the course of true love? After the twists and turns of novel's English midsection, the setting shifts back to the high Alps, and the final, climactic scene is played out on the heights of the Italian face of the Mont Blanc. This is the Brenva -- where thousands of feet of rock and glacier sweep steeply up to reach the highest point in western Europe. It is an Alpine route that today, over century later, even experienced climbers still find a challenge. There are not many novels given over to mountaineering, and some consider Mason's descriptions of climbing among the finest in fiction. Unlike The Four Feathers, Running Water has never been filmed – though given the quality of some of Hollywood's mountaineering movies, that may actually be a blessing.
Finally, for those unfamiliar with the teminology, several French terms are customarily used by alpinists and appear in Mason's book. An aiguille (needle) is a peak, usually sharp pointed, often of rock, sometimes of ice and snow. The Chamonix aiguilles, many of which are mentioned here, are famous among climbers and lovers of alpine scenery. A col is a pass between two mountains, or ranges, and in the High Alps often of steep ice and snow, sometimes of rock. And an arête is a ridge, or spur, of a mountain, sometimes of ice or snow, sometimes of rock, and often of all three. Historical note: The first ascent of the Brenva face was made by A.W. Moore and a party of three other British climbers and two Swiss alpine guides, in July, 1865. The account was published in Moore's book, The Alps in 1864, and it is this book that Garratt Skinner is reading in Chapter XII, as he lies in his Dorsetshire hammock. In 1943, another great British climber, T. Graham Brown published his Brenva, describing the various routes on the great southern face, on two of which had had made first ascents. Brown credits Running Water as first turning his attention to the face, and has high praise for its descriptions of mountaineering. (The second ascent for the Brenva route was made by W.A.P. Coolidge and others in 1870).
A further note: in Chapter XIII, Mason twice refers to Switzerland when he means France. Perhaps he was dozing; or perhaps he was drawing some of his material from Baedeker's Guide to Switzerland, whose earlier editions included the range of Mont Blanc, a chain shared by France, Italy, and Switzerland.

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