THE TALE OF THE LOST LAND
CHAPTER 22: THE HOLY FOUNTAIN
 (continued)
I was gradually coming to have a mysterious and shuddery reverence
 for this girl; nowadays whenever she pulled out from the station
 and got her train fairly started on one of those horizonless
 transcontinental sentences of hers, it was borne in upon me that
 I was standing in the awful presence of the Mother of the German
 Language.  I was so impressed with this, that sometimes when she
 began to empty one of these sentences on me I unconsciously took
 the very attitude of reverence, and stood uncovered; and if words
 had been water, I had been drowned, sure.  She had exactly the
 German way; whatever was in her mind to be delivered, whether a
 mere remark, or a sermon, or a cyclopedia, or the history of a war,
 she would get it into a single sentence or die.  Whenever the literary
 German dives into a sentence, that is the last you are going to see
 of him till he emerges on the other side of his Atlantic with his
 verb in his mouth. 
We drifted from hermit to hermit all the afternoon.  It was a most
 strange menagerie.  The chief emulation among them seemed to be,
 to see which could manage to be the uncleanest and most prosperous
 with vermin.  Their manner and attitudes were the last expression
 of complacent self-righteousness.  It was one anchorite's pride
 to lie naked in the mud and let the insects bite him and blister
 him unmolested; it was another's to lean against a rock, all day
 long, conspicuous to the admiration of the throng of pilgrims
 and pray; it was another's to go naked and crawl around on all fours;
 it was another's to drag about with him, year in and year out,
 eighty pounds of iron; it was another's to never lie down when
 he slept, but to stand among the thorn-bushes and snore when there
 were pilgrims around to look; a woman, who had the white hair of
 age, and no other apparel, was black from crown to heel with
 forty-seven years of holy abstinence from water.  Groups of gazing
 pilgrims stood around all and every of these strange objects, lost
 in reverent wonder, and envious of the fleckless sanctity which
 these pious austerities had won for them from an exacting heaven. 
By and by we went to see one of the supremely great ones.  He was
 a mighty celebrity; his fame had penetrated all Christendom; the
 noble and the renowned journeyed from the remotest lands on the globe
 to pay him reverence.  His stand was in the center of the widest part
 of the valley; and it took all that space to hold his crowds. 
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