III.
TUTOR.—True. Vipers frequent[1] those turfy, boggy grounds[2] pretty much, and I have known several turf-cutters bitten by them.
WILLIAM.—They are very venomous, are they not?
TUTOR.—Enough so[3] to make their wounds painful and dangerous, though they seldom prove fatal.
WILLIAM.—Well, I then took my course[4] up to the windmill on the mount. I climbed up the steps of the mill, in order to get a better view of the country round[5]. What an extensive prospect! I counted fifteen church steeples; I saw several gentlemen’s houses[6] peeping out from the midst of green woods and plantations[7]; and I could trace the windings[8] of the river all along the low grounds, till it was lost behind a ridge of hills[9]. But I will tell you what I mean to do[10], if you will give me leave.
TUTOR.—What is that[11]?
WILLIAM.—I will go again and take with me Carey’s county map[12], by which I shall probably be able to make out most of the places.
TUTOR.—You shall have it; and I will go with you, and take my pocket spying-glass.
WILLIAM.—I shall be very glad of that. Well, a thought struck me, that, as the hill is called Camp-Mount, there might probably be some remains of ditches and mounds[13] with which I have read that camps were surrounded. And I really believe I discovered something of that sort[14] running one side of the mount.
TUTOR.—Very likely you might[15]. I know antiquaries have described such remains as existing there, which some suppose to be Roman, others Danish[16]. We will examine them when we go.
WILLIAM.—From the hill I went straight down to the meadows below, and walked on the side of a brook that runs[17] into the river. It[18] was all bordered with reeds and tall flowering-plants (S. 16, N. 10), quite different from those I had seen on the heath. As I was getting down[19] the bank to reach one of them, I heard something plunge into the water near me. It was a large water-rat, and I saw it swim over to the other side, and go[20] into its hole. There were[21] a great many large dragon-flies all about the stream. I caught one of the finest, and have him here in a leaf. But how I longed to catch a bird that I saw hovering[22] over the water, and every now and then darting into it! It was all over a mixture of the most beautiful green and blue, with some orange colour[23]. It was somewhat less than a thrush, and had a large head and bill, and a short tail.
[1] = live in.
[2] +Gegenden.+
[3] = venomous enough.
[4] = thereupon I went.
[5] I had a fine view of the country round, +ich konnte die Umgegend gut überblicken+.
[6] +herrschaftliche Häuser.+
[7] +Parkanlagen.+
[8] +der sich schlängelnde Lauf+, as Nom.; low grounds = meadows.
[9] +Hügelrücken+, m.
[10] = will do. Supply ‘+dazu+’ after ‘leave’.
[11] +Was denn?+
[12] +Bezirkskarte+; by which = by (+mit+) the help of which; ‘to make out’, here +bestimmen+, w. v. tr.; places, +Ortschaften+.
[13] Well — mounds. This passage may be construed thus: ‘Now, since (+Da nun+) the hill is called Camp-Mount, a thought struck me that there are (+sich befinden+) probably some remains of ditches and mounds (+Erdwall+, m.)’. I have read = as I have read.
[14] +etwas derartiges+; running one side = on the one side.
[15] = That is quite (+gerne+) possible.
[16] to be — Danish, +daß sie römischen, andere aber, daß sie dänischen Ursprungs sind+.
[17] +sich ergießen.+
[18] = The brook; bordered = overgrown, +bewachsen+.
[19] +hinuntersteigen+; to reach = to pluck.
[20] = creep. Read S. 78, N. 14, _B_.
[21] +Es waren dort+, after which place the words ‘all — stream’, +am Bache+.
[22] +umherfliegen+; every — then, +dann und wann+; ‘to dart’, here +hinunterschießen+; into it = into the same.
[23] It — colour = His plumage (+Gefieder+) consisted of (+aus+) a mixture of the finest green and blue with a small addition (+Zusatz+, m.) of orange colour (+Orangengelb+).
_Section 204._
THE TWO SCHOOLBOYS, OR EYES AND NO EYES.