Page:Whymper - Scrambles amongst the Alps.djvu/47

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chap. ii.
NATIONAL SENTIMENTS.
21

Nothing prevented our starting at once but the absence of Macdonald and the want of a bâton. Reynaud suggested a visit to the postmaster, who possessed a bâton of local celebrity. Down we went to the bureau; but it was closed: we halloed through the slits, but no answer. At last the postmaster was discovered endeavouring (with very fair success) to make himself intoxicated. He was just able to ejaculate, "France! 'tis the first nation in the

MONT PELVOUX FROM ABOVE LA BESSÉE.

world!" which is a phrase used by a Frenchman when in the state that a Briton begins to shout, "We won't go home till morning"—national glory being uppermost in the thoughts of one, and home in those of the other. The bâton was produced; it was a branch of a young oak, about five feet long, gnarled and twisted in several directions. "Sir," said the postmaster, as he presented it, "France! 'tis the first—the first nation in the world, by its"—he stuck. "Bâtons?" I suggested. "Yes, yes, sir; by its bâtons, by its—its," and here he could not get on at all. As I looked at this and here he could not get on at all. As I looked at this