“Goblin, lead them up and down.”
The ruddy glow of sunset was already
fading into the sombre shadows of night, when two
travellers might have been observed swiftly at
a pace of six miles in the hour descending
the rugged side of a mountain; the younger bounding
from crag to crag with the agility of a fawn, while
his companion, whose aged limbs seemed ill at ease
in the heavy chain armour habitually worn by tourists
in that district, toiled on painfully at his side.
As is always the case under such circumstances,
the younger knight was the first to break the silence.
“A goodly pace, I trow!”
he exclaimed. “We sped not thus in the ascent!”
“Goodly, indeed!” the
other echoed with a groan. “We clomb it
but at three miles in the hour.”
“And on the dead level our pace
is ?” the younger suggested; for
he was weak in statistics, and left all such details
to his aged companion.
“Four miles in the hour,”
the other wearily replied. “Not an ounce
more,” he added, with that love of metaphor so
common in old age, “and not a farthing less!”
“’Twas three hours past
high noon when we left our hostelry,” the young
man said, musingly. “We shall scarce be
back by supper-time. Perchance mine host will
roundly deny us all food!”
“He will chide our tardy return,”
was the grave reply, “and such a rebuke will
be meet.”
“A brave conceit!” cried
the other, with a merry laugh. “And should
we bid him bring us yet another course, I trow his
answer will be tart!”
“We shall but get our deserts,”
sighed the elder knight, who had never seen a joke
in his life, and was somewhat displeased at his companion’s
untimely levity. “’Twill be nine of the
clock,” he added in an undertone, “by
the time we regain our hostelry. Full many a mile
shall we have plodded this day!”
“How many? How many?”
cried the eager youth, ever athirst for knowledge.
The old man was silent.
“Tell me,” he answered,
after a moment’s thought, “what time it
was when we stood together on yonder peak. Not
exact to the minute!” he added hastily, reading
a protest in the young man’s face. “An’
thy guess be within one poor half-hour of the mark,
’tis all I ask of thy mother’s son!
Then will I tell thee, true to the last inch, how far
we shall have trudged betwixt three and nine of the
clock.”
A groan was the young man’s
only reply; while his convulsed features and the deep
wrinkles that chased each other across his manly brow,
revealed the abyss of arithmetical agony into which
one chance question had plunged him.