[Over Strand and Field by Gustave Flaubert]@TWC D-Link bookOver Strand and Field CHAPTER XI 1/8
CHAPTER XI. MONT SAINT-MICHEL. The road from Pontorson to the Mont Saint-Michel is wearying on account of the sand.
Our post-chaise (for we also travel by post-chaise), was disturbed every now and then by a number of carts filled with the grey soil which is found in these parts and which is transported to some place and utilised as manure.
They became more numerous as we approached the sea, and defiled for several miles until we finally saw the deserted strand whence they came.
On this white surface, with its conical heaps of earth resembling huts, the fluctuating line of carts reminded us of an emigration of barbarians deserting their native heath. The empty horizon stretches out, spreads, and finally mingles its greyish flats with the yellow sand of the beach.
The ground becomes firmer and a salt breeze fans your cheeks; it looks like a vast desert from which the waters have receded.
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