The sodden flag won’t fly in the rain no matter which way the wind blows They’ve hung it upside down without thought or care except to state some kind of patriotism their piece of earth which they can still call home
I could tell them I suppose let them get to know their pedantic neighbour who only speaks to complain like all the other tethered goats staring blankly out at swelling puddles which spoil the well tended lawns
Only half an hour earlier George had placed her picture on the summit, as promised, then posed for the photograph, the proof that they had made it, exhausted, breathless, though more overcome by the view, that vast panorama, daunting and deadly. Sandy had been certain he saw in George the same chilling sense he felt, that this was
no place for Man.
It had caught up with them, quickly, while they began the long descent. George must have slipped. Sandy had tried to hold the rope, to get some grip, but his friend was gone before he knew it. Even all those years rowing at Merton didn’t give him the strength to hold on, for long, the kinetic weight tearing at his muscles. He crashed onto the slope and slid until a rock severed his speed, his chance of survival. Fate had deemed this gully of shadows was to be his grave. The pain, though intense, was eased by the creeping cold through his torn clothes. Hadn’t George told him, be mindful on the descent, of its dangers? Only last night they’d talked about Edward Whimper, conqueror of the Matterhorn, how tragedy struck on that other treacherous face. But Sandy knew it was tales like these that first fired up George, made him into the man he was.
He thought of George’s wife, Ruth, apologising to her for their predicament, his broken body and his dwindling life, the fact that he couldn’t make out her husband anywhere in that eerie, receding light. At least there was time to collect his thoughts, acquaint himself with the Mother of the World, as the Sherpas knew this place. Sandy heard it said that they believed to die peacefully, mindfully, was a good thing. He asked that Chomolungma might bless his migrating soul.
In memory of George Mallory and Sandy Irvine, who died on Mt. Everest, June 1924. Here I speculate what might have happened.