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Chapter 10 AN OLD TRADITION AND A NEW EXPERIENCE

Word Count: 1966    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

ne it before. I had left all technical matters to a man hired and trained for the business. No

came to the chapter "Thirty-seven reasons why the motor may not start," and feverishly read what one had better try in

e oiled weekly, some to be oiled monthly, some every thousand miles. There were also places to be greased at all these periods, and some when you happened to think of it. You had to put on your glasses and follow one of the fine

. Now, at Avignon, the new regime must begin. In the bright little, light little hotel garage we would set our car in order. I say "we" because Narcissa, aged fifteen, b

nd polish, and she went at it in her strenuous way, and hosed me up one side and down

grease all the daily, weekly, and monthly, and even the

squirted oil. Some led to a dim uncertainty, into which I squirted or dabbed something in a general way. Some led to mere blanks, and I greased those. It sounds rather easy, but that is due to my fluent style. It was not easy; it was a hot, messy, scratchy, grunting job. Those lines were mostly blind leads, and

't missed any on myself. She said I was a sight and probably never could be washed clean again. It is true that my hands were quite solidly black, and, while I did not recall wiping them on my face, I must have done so. When Narcissa asked how soon I was going to grease the car again, I said possibly in about a thousand years. But t

was said to be finest from across the river. We would then continue up the west bank-there being a special reason for this-a reason wit

in the twelfth century when they used miracles a good deal for such work. Sometimes Satan was induced to build them overnight, but I believe

tle shepherd of twelve, who received a command in a dream t

p, and I have but three

ay," said the voice, "and

op was preaching to the people. There, in the presence of the assembly, Bénézet stated clearly that Heaven had sent him to build a bridge across the Rhone. Angry at the interruption, the bishop ordered the ragged boy to

lemagne has been able to accomplish? Pick up this stone as a beginning

et, for it was a fragment of a Roman wall. It did not trouble Bénézet, however. He said his prayers, and ligh

people, carrying in that easy way a stone that reached up to the second-story windows. Bénézet carri

years the great work was finished, but Bénézet did not live to see it. He died four years before the final stones were laid, w

its original eighteen are standing. Storm and flood did not destroy it, but war. Besiegers and besieged broke down the arches, and at last, more than two hundred years ago, repairs

he right. It was a leafy way, and here and there between the trees we had splendid glimpses of the bastioned wa

we would have been taken in charge at once. At first I said it was only a little of the fresh oil burning off the engine, and that it would stop presently. But that excuse wore out. It would have taken

we found we were not in Villeneuve at all. We had not entirely crossed the river, but only h

minute. Disaster seemed imminent. The passengers were inclined to get out and walk. I said, at last, that we

ing with our gorgeous white tail filling the landscape behind us, a

h oil,"

use they were stopped with dust. Being new and green, I had not thought of that possibility. A workman poked a wire into those little cocks and drew off the fuel we had been burning in that lavish way. So I had learned something, but it seemed a lot of smoke for such a s

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Contents

Chapter 1 DON'T HURRY THROUGH MARSEILLES Chapter 2 MOTORING BY TRAM Chapter 3 ACROSS THE CRAU Chapter 4 MISTRAL Chapter 5 THE ROME OF FRANCE Chapter 6 THE WAY THROUGH EDEN Chapter 7 TO TARASCON AND BEAUCAIRE Chapter 8 GLIMPSES OF THE PAST Chapter 9 IN THE CITADEL OF FAITH Chapter 10 AN OLD TRADITION AND A NEW EXPERIENCE Chapter 11 WAYSIDE ADVENTURES
Chapter 12 THE LOST NAPOLEON
Chapter 13 THE HOUSE OF HEADS
Chapter 14 INTO THE HILLS
Chapter 15 UP THE ISèRE
Chapter 16 INTO THE HAUTE-SAVOIE
Chapter 17 SOME SWISS IMPRESSIONS
Chapter 18 THE LITTLE TOWN OF VEVEY
Chapter 19 MASHING A MUD GUARD
Chapter 20 JUST FRENCH-THAT'S ALL
Chapter 21 THE NEW PLAN
Chapter 22 THE NEW START
Chapter 23 INTO THE JURAS
Chapter 24 A POEM IN ARCHITECTURE
Chapter 25 VIENNE IN THE RAIN
Chapter 26 THE CHTEAU I DID NOT RENT
Chapter 27 AN HOUR AT ORANGE
Chapter 28 THE ROAD TO PONT DU GARD
Chapter 29 THE LUXURY OF N MES
Chapter 30 THROUGH THE CéVENNES
Chapter 31 INTO THE AUVERGNE
Chapter 32 LE PUY
Chapter 33 THE CENTER OF FRANCE
Chapter 34 BETWEEN BILLY AND BESSEY
Chapter 35 THE HAUTE-LOIRE
Chapter 36 NEARING PARIS
Chapter 37 SUMMING UP THE COST
Chapter 38 THE ROAD TO CHERBOURG
Chapter 39 BAYEUX, CAEN, AND ROUEN
Chapter 40 WE COME TO GRIEF
Chapter 41 THE DAMAGE REPAIRED-BEAUVAIS AND COMPIèGNE
Chapter 42 FROM PARIS TO CHARTRES AND CHTEAUDUN
Chapter 43 WE REACH TOURS
Chapter 44 CHINON, WHERE JOAN MET THE KING, AND AZAY
Chapter 45 TOURS
Chapter 46 CHENONCEAUX AND AMBOISE
Chapter 47 CHAMBORD AND CLéRY
Chapter 48 ORLéANS
Chapter 49 FONTAINEBLEAU
Chapter 50 RHEIMS
Chapter 51 ALONG THE MARNE
Chapter 52 DOMREMY
Chapter 53 STRASSBURG AND THE BLACK FOREST
Chapter 54 A LAND WHERE STORKS LIVE
Chapter 55 BACK TO VEVEY
Chapter 56 THE GREAT UPHEAVAL
Chapter 57 THE LONG TRAIL ENDS
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