Vestovius is a high mountain in Alaska; it is not far from Sitka. A man invited my sister and me to climb Vestovius with him. From Sitka we went to the base of the mountain in a launch, then we climbed, at first through dense, snarled woods and tall trees which got scrubbier as the mountain rose. At the top, Mount Vestovius was only bare, bleak rock.
When we got above the heavy timber the sun was scorching hot and we were very tired. At last we came to a wide mossy ledge and threw ourselves down to rest, sprawling luxuriously in soft deep moss.
I was flat on my back, spread like a starfish, aching all over. At that moment I wished the earth was as flat as a table and that there were no such things as prodigious lumps on its surface to be climbed. Views were all very well—myriads of islands floating in blue sea. People who had climbed Vestovius came back and talked all sorts of poetic stuff about “jewels set in a bed of sapphire” and “inverted skies with islands for stars”, but they rubbed their knees and shin bones as they talked, and now, being myself half up Vestovius, I knew why they had rubbed. I was staring straight up into the sky.
We were quiet, resting even our voices and groans. High, high, two eagles were soaring in great circles, swooping, diving, floating, exhibiting great power and marvellous control. Maybe they were an old pair, maybe two youngsters glorying in their first high flight, or perhaps they were playmates. I watched them for a long, long time. You could not associate tiredness with those wide-flung wings. They expressed power—power, freedom, endurance!
“I wish I were an eagle.”
The man turned.
“Why?” he asked fiercely, as if he too had entertained the same wish. “Why?”
“Power, freedom.”
“Girl,” he said, “you are as free. Aim high. Trust your wings.”
We finished climbing. On the way down we lost our way and came again to the shore at a place entirely different from what we had planned and expected. We “cooeyed” and screamed. Finally the launch heard and came round for us.
“You are free. Aim high and trust your wings.” How many times in moments of depression I have thought of that man’s words! How many times too have I lost my way, come down from my mountains on the wrong side, had to “cooey” to be picked up! Often I remember the Vestovius eagles.
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