NOBWAY. 



CHAPTER IV. 



DAY AND NIGHT. 



fllEEE farther north you go in voyaging along the coast 

 -*- during the months of June and July the brighter 

 and longer becomes the daylight, until at last you arrive 

 at the regions of perpetual day. 



The charm of this state of things is beyond the com- 

 prehension of those who have not experienced it. Apart 

 altogether from the gladdening influence of sunshine, 

 there is something delightfully reckless in the feeling that 

 there is no necessity whatever for taking note of the 

 flight of time no fear lest we should, while wandering 

 together, or perchance alone, among the mountains, be 

 overtaken by night. During several weeks we lived in 

 the blaze of a long nightless day. 



While we were in this bright region most of us laid 



