In the Clouds
They came to the boy one night when he was abed, and said they would
take him with them in their fairy balloon.
Willie Fenton told his father and mother that he had seen the elfins,
and what they had promised him, but they only laughed at him and told
him he had been dreaming.
Our hero wasn’t to be convinced that it was only a dream. Hadn’t he
seen them—three fairy creatures no higher than his top—enter his
bedroom through the keyhole, and seat themselves on his pillow, and
begin talking about the glorious sights to be seen in the clouds?
If Willie Fenton had been born up in a balloon his youthful fancy could
not have been imbued with a greater passion for the sport. Indeed,
since he was a child of four or five years old our youthful aeronaut
had blown soap bubbles, and had watched them soar away in the sun,
glistening with all the hues of the rainbow, and his dreams at night
and aspirations by day had been to emulate those daring spirits who
surpassed the mighty eagle in his flight into the bright blue sky above
the clouds.
Willie’s home, situated on Mount Pleasant, was in the vicinity of many
a romantic spot calculated to favour the elves in their adventure, and
one fine morning, as the lad was returning from a neighbouring farm, he
espied his three nocturnal visitors seated under a large gum-tree
awaiting him. Willie recognised them in a moment, and doffing his cap
said, “Good-morning, gentlemen.”
The fairies rose and saluted him, and answered that they were quite
ready to fulfil their promises. Our hero thanked them for their
kindness, and at the same time expressed himself quite ready to
accompany them. Whereupon the three elves conducted him in silence
along a narrow ravine which opened out on a still, quiet glen on the
banks of the river. Fastened securely between two huge trees, Willie
beheld a great, pear-shaped thing, swaying to and fro with the motion
of the breeze, and at which the elves pointed and said, “Behold, our
cloud car.”
Yes, it was a grand balloon, already inflated and with a cage attached,
bordered with wild roses and creepers, that reached from the apex of
the monster down to the car beneath, which hung suspended, like a
flower-pot in a balcony. How it surged and struggled desperately with
the wind, as if it were endowed with life, and wished to escape from
fastenings that held it, and soar upward! And how frail it appeared, as
Willie approached and examined it! Was it made of cloth? No, too fine
for cloth. Cotton? Nay, it was too soft for cotton, or silk either. Yet
the whole fabric seemed no weightier than a gossamer. The fairies
smiled at the boy’s curiosity, and invited him to enter the car. Our
little hero had no sooner complied than the elfins seated themselves at
his side. And one of them, who had a bright diadem glittering upon his
breast, stood up and waved his hand as a signal, when instantly the
balloon shot aloft with inconceivable velocity.
The young mortal closed his eyes and held his breath for one brief
moment; but when he looked forth, the earth appeared to be miraculously
vanishing from his sight. Although the ascent was fearfully rapid, the
motion of the balloon was quite imperceptible. The morning was bright
and sunny, the sky a deep, Prussian blue, and as the boy craned his
neck over the cage and gazed below, what a glorious sight met his view.
There stretched beneath him were the golden valleys of his birthplace,
with hundreds of farms dotting the landscape, and no bigger than a
child’s toy. From his elevated position the houses were as so many
dots, and the people in the fields as tiny ants. The flowing Torrens,
that had seemed so broad and deep, appeared as a silver thread, and the
high cliffs and hills were on a level with the dull round earth. Willie
Fenton felt not the least alarm; on the contrary, his courage rose with
the balloon, as it sped upward to the sky. The elfin with the diadem
threw out some pieces of paper, which seemed to drop like stones. This,
however, was not so, but only the effect of the terrible rate at which
they were travelling. Higher, higher, still higher. Now they
disappeared from view, in a thick vapour forming the white clouds,
which looked so light and fleecy from earth. The balloon did not remain
long in these, but quickly rose into a clear atmosphere beyond. And
here the scene changed to one splendid in the extreme. Above them
nothing but the big round sun, and the deep azure of the heavens.
Beneath no dingy earth, dim and gloomy, but a brilliant sea of
sparkling cloud, rose tinted, dancing and flashing in the sun’s rays.
The cloud completely hid everything below, and lay beneath like a huge,
rolling billow, the top of which flashed back the sunlight till our
hero almost fancied it was a wave of driven snow spangled with
diamonds. How long Willie might have remained in his rapt trance of
wonder it is hard to say, but he was aroused by a feeling of cold, and
a difficulty in breathing.
“Our mortal friend will find it very chilly up here,” said Pippin, who
wore the diadem, answering the boy’s unspoken words.
“It has grown very cold indeed, gentlemen,” rejoined Willie, his teeth
chattering as he spoke.
“Ha, ha! Listen to him, Needle; hear him, Bobbin; he’s beginning to
cry out already!” cried Pippin to his companions. “Cold, eh? Well, we
have a cure for cold, and for frost and snow—whole mountains of it. Eh,
Needle?” As Pippin spoke, he unrolled a parcel which had been lying
unnoticed at the bottom of the car, and produced a cloak made of the
same material as the balloon. Without more ado they enveloped Willie
from head to heel in the garment, with just sufficient space left clear
about his eyes so that he could see, the rest of him being completely
covered. In a few moments he began to breathe more freely, and the
rarity of the air made no impression upon him at all.
“You feel all right now, Willie Fenton?” questioned Bobbin. Willie
mumbled, and nodded his head in the affirmative.
“Let us mount higher then, my brethren. Excelsior!” exclaimed Pippin of
the diadem. “Bold indeed the mortal who first conceived and carried out
the idea of making the unstable element water subservient to his
genius, as witness the ships that come and go on the bosom of the
ocean; but it is left to us, the elves of Australia, to curb the air
and make it do our bidding. Higher and higher go we, to show this
mortal the wonders of the upper world.”
Upward still, beyond the cloud which breaks for a moment and gives them
a glimpse of the sea, and the coast-line away to the westward seeming
no broader than a single thread. And now the cold became intense, but
the fairies and their companion felt it not, for their gaze was fixed
upon a sight that no emperor or king had ever seen—and perchance never
would. If all the diamonds in that rich valley visited by Sinbad the
Sailor, also all the gems which Aladdin’s lamp could have procured, and
all that ever have been seen in the world had been pressed into the
service—they would have failed utterly in producing one tithe of the
strange sight Willie now saw. The whole dome of the balloon was covered
as it were in a diamond mantle. A shower of glittering gems was falling
in all directions, apparently coming from the blue void above, and
sprinkling down, with a fluttering motion like that of butterflies, and
then disappearing in the vast abyss below.
Lost in amazement at this marvellous vision, the boy frees one of his
hands, and reaches to catch one of the heavenly gems; but he discovers
the diamond shower is in reality only thin sheets of newly-formed ice.
The elves laugh at him and the look of wonder on his face. And Pippin
explains in a grave tone, “Boy, we have entered a region where some
watery vapour hath been, which the cold hath turned into ice, and now
being heavier than the atmosphere falls fluttering to the earth.
Towards the earth, I say, since I know well it will never reach it,
because before it can do so it will encounter a warmer region, when the
ice will again become water and the water vapour. Do you understand?”
“Oh yes. It’s the vapour which makes the clouds, isn’t it?” answered
Willie.
“Just so,” replied the elfin. “And now having fulfilled our promise, we
will descend again to old mother earth.”
Like a streak of light the fairy balloon shot downward through the
glittering, diamond shower, through the mist and cloud, until the
bright landscape appeared in view. The elfins, Pippin, Needle, and
Bobbin, landed Willie safely by the river-bank, and the boy reached
home just in time for dinner.
The three elves still haunt that dell by the Torrens, so if any of my
readers are anxious for a trip in the fairy balloon, I have no doubt
Messrs. Pippin & Co. will be only too glad to oblige them—that is, if
they are at home.