国立情報学研究所 - ディジタル・シルクロード・プロジェクト
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Peking to Lhasa : vol.1 | |
北京からラサへ : vol.1 |
THE END 255
at 51 miles the Jya-rei La, about 13,650 feet, is
crossed. After which there are rolling grassy
downs, and at 81 miles is the Sa-ma La, about
13,750 feet. Then there was a descent to the great
Jara - güng plain, some 5 or 6 miles wide, on the
north - west corner of which Pereira camped at
13,450 feet.
" I felt seedy and wretched ", he writes at the
end of his diary for the day.
On October 15 he marched 84 miles to a camp
in the Chao-lung valley. The way lay up and
down over grass downs. At 5 4 miles was the
Chao-lung La, about 13,500 feet, on the far side of
which the way lay down a narrow valley, in which
he first met the Nyarong (or Chan-tui) nomads,
the Wa-shi having ended at the Jara-güng plain.
The elevation of the camp was 12,885 feet. It
was slightly warmer here, and Thompson says that
an attack of vomiting seemed to give him relief,
and some bismuth and other drugs with which he
treated Pereira eased him slightly. But he was
more disturbed than he usually was at the rumours
of brigands ahead which they heard here. It was
said that the brigands had killed two men and
driven off some animals. Pereira asked Thomp-
son's opinion, and the doctor voted for pushing on,
as they were then only a few days from Kanze, and
he was anxious to get his patient into some kind
of shelter where food could be cooked in some
better way than by rough camp - fires ; for all
this time he was eating very little. Milk, biscuits,
Bovril and cornflour was all Thompson could get
him to take ; and even these only in very small
quantities.
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