The weekly Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1913-19??, March 17, 1914, Page 12, Image 12

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RNS ‘\ RBO A R// g & "!’l”,/’/’,'h I VA Re R e ;;:’::’,’.-_ E_-"‘\'& NRS S / /,/% . ; W.\// \ gBi R e : e .‘.\“" o 3 SR e e /// ///f’/ G=, A . o&SR Py T _.é R, .""ii:jf'f‘»‘;iiw ; Y /% o ‘ OS PR . kR et f_' Y : 7i = bAT ST e\ \"‘o, ;’,"é.g;v.._-‘._. 2 _.‘_-:_:;:_‘. / ’/% v ReS Y s e) N -‘-'fi_a :_t';‘:‘- e 12y 5 ,\‘%? : //[/" T e .. PR ',",' 7 “‘f' \ . ‘;‘\ ‘»‘;"‘fl ,&- A =.3 “(YPy K Lo, %= = " e ~— SRR ""é’i‘“ RU 7z EP— : Y R L No - 5 St. Patrick’ NELEE W ST o 6 7 01. Fatrick's av i ; eeeot SO [ 2 Z, i e . son of Old l(“l'in ‘\ \. ]?d,\ 18- nll(: day in the veln and o 0 Al orfflm(@ : . 4 urns tl) th(\ l“n“'l'ill(l l ] .7‘ . / lele¢ are manv ()th‘ B 11¢ ‘lt “' a \\':‘l'ln‘h(‘:ll't(\(i . e S ‘"1(”]]('(1 in sone ‘ll](l <t .. ' er's W l’(‘“ tl)(' tl]{)‘ln‘llt* “l‘ o , Jovial people. g ¢ storv—and about which 1-lh R every frue usters the senti- %2 The Romance of the Aeroplane & i romance of science cer tainly seems to have touched its climax in the recent exploits of the ' French aviators, Vedrines, Bonnier, Dau court and Marc Pourpe, who, aft er flying in vast swoops® across murope from Paris to Constanii nople, and passing over ihe Gold en Horn, Asia Minor, Palestine and the delta of the Nile, wound up their modern Arabian Nights Dream by soaring —great birds of mystery—ahove the crumbling tops of the Pyramids and around the head of the Sphinx. The statues of Memnon, the halls of Karnak, and the hills where the Pharaohs slept, until science dug them out, have all echoed the whir o 7 the aeroplane and been shacowed by its overpassing wings. 2 This surpasses all the wonder stories collectéd by Herodotus, and all the myths invented about the age of the demigods, It brings Antiquity and Modernity face to face as they have never before been made to stand. A Marvelous Feat, What is older than the ‘Pyra mmids, which were already ancient “Where the River Shannon Flows” when the Father of History saw them? What is newer than the aeroplane, which, when we of this generation were middie-aged, was still hidden, unguessed, in the pocket of the twentieth century? What. distils the mouldy atmos phere of the Past like the mys terious, unanswering Sphinx? What breathes the restless spirit of the nervous, wide-awuke Pres ent like the Flying Machine, which has no riddle but that of its own tuccess? ¢ The bringing of these two typi cal creations of man together is one of the most dramatic epi sodes in history. And then to think of an aero plane that has flown through the air all the way from modern Paris, alighting like a tired eaglp for a moment's rest, in a field near the Mount of Olives and in sight of ancient Jerusalem! Or an a'erupllne v hich has flown over the mountains of Asia Minor, and made photographs in passing of the historic lands be neatn it—lands where Cyrus, and Xerxes, and Alexander, and Xeno- THE GEORGIAN'’S NEWS BRIEFS. phon and Sylla, and Lucullus and (‘rassus, and Mark Antony strug gled and fought. When Bonnier was flying over Asia Minor, his engineer (for two human beings were borne under the wings of that wonderful bird) pointed his camera backward, over the long tail and the rudder of the speeding monoplane, and took a photograph which has few rivals. It shows the endless ex panse of barren mountains and rocky, tangled ravines and gorges, with here and there a snowy peak rising out of the con fusion, over -which they were traveling without any place to alight, and where their safety de pended upon their speed as well as upon the faithfulness of their little motor, Many a Kking and conqueror had looked up out of that scene in the past 4,000 years, but no man had ever looked down upon it, as they were doing, It is difficult not to envy theso men for the sensations that they experience when they bring the newest things of invention into the presence of the oldest scenes of history. They appreciate it; they feel the thrill of their un paralleled situation, as witness the words of Mare Pourpe after he had flown round and over the pyramids: “In itself this raid is nothing; it borrows its impor tance from the time and the place.” In the Future. But these flights, which will soon have been extended to cover Africa and Asia, and the oceans themselves, are bringing on with increasing swiftness the unifica tion of the world, which so many people think the most desirable of all things. But will it seem so de sirable after it has been achieved?® When 1l men of all races dress alike, live alike, travel : ike and think allke, this planet is likely to be a dreary, monotonous place, where nobody ran feel any par ticular intercst, because there will be nothing for anybody to won der at, Then, if history survives so long, people will read with the liveliest emotion of the good old interesting times, when the won der-struck natives of Amenia prostrated themselves before the aviator Daucourt, invoking the name of Allah at the sight of the “man-bird,” who had descended upon them out of the sky with his ~ “lowd-hissing swan."