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Lost Horizon Novel Study Unit: Lost Horizon Novel Study Unit:

Lost Horizon Novel Study Unit: - PowerPoint Presentation

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Lost Horizon Novel Study Unit: - PPT Presentation

Chapter Summaries Lost Horizon SHORT PLOT CHAPTER SUMMARY Synopsis SHORT PLOT CHAPTER SUMMARY Synopsis The narrator reads a manuscript written by Rutherford telling the story of four travelers experiences after being hijacked in a mysterious ID: 692249

chapter conway chang summary conway chapter summary chang depth mallinson valley shangri lamasery rutherford high lama man life notes

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Slide1
Slide2

Lost Horizon

Novel Study Unit:Slide3

Chapter Summaries

Lost HorizonSlide4

SHORT PLOT / CHAPTER SUMMARY (Synopsis)Slide5

SHORT PLOT / CHAPTER SUMMARY (Synopsis)

The

narrator

reads a manuscript written by

Rutherford

telling the story

of four travelers’ experiences, after being hijacked, in a mysterious

valley known as

Shangri-La

.

Conway

, the main character of the four, falls in love with the

Valley of

Blue Moon

and eventually is named the new High Lama.

Barnard

and

Miss

Brinklow

also find happiness in staying there. Only

Mallinson

desperately wants to leave and his negativity creates an

Imbalance there for all the characters. Eventually,

Conway

agrees to

lead him out of the valley, but he is the only one who survives the trip.

Then, once he overcomes amnesia,

Conway

disappears again in a bid

to return to the paradise he had come to love. In the end, the

narrator

and

Rutherford

come to believe in the existence of

Shangri-La

and

desperately hope that

Conway

finds his way there again.Slide6

The story of the

LOST HORIZON

begins in a social meeting of some old classmates who all knew

Hugh Conway

while in school

.

It appears that each of them was more affected by having known Conway than they consciously realized.

Prologue AbstractSlide7

Prologue

The

prologue

lays down the background to how the narrator comes across a

manuscript

which

reveals something

mysterious concerning Conway and later, Rutherford.

There

are many strange events connected

to

Conway

:

first

, the plane that is stolen;

second

, the

Chopin piano piece

which no one has ever heard; third,

the loss

of

Conway’s

memory and its return after he plays the piano;

and finally

,

Conway’s

strange story and

his stranger

decision to catch a boat to

Fiji

and head northwest.

All

of these events are

foreshadowing

for

the manuscript

that the

narrator

is about to read.Slide8

Prologue: In Depth Summary

The

narrator

, a neurologist, opens the novel with this prologue; where he explains that he, a writer named

Rutherford

, an Embassy secretary named

Wyland

Tertius

, and a stranger to the narrator named

Sanders

, a pleasant young pilot, have all sat down for cigars after dinner at

Templelhof. The first three, he says, are three celibate Englishmen in a foreign capital, Berlin. Sanders, who knows Wyland, joins their party after the first three have already dined. They are sitting in the restaurant watching the Luft-Hansa machines arriving at the aerodome and enjoying the evening.Slide9

Prologue: In Depth Summary

They all drink a great deal of beer, and then

Rutherford

questions

Sanders

about his comment that he had been at

Baskul

and that something interesting had happened there.

Sanders

tells them that an Afghan or an

Afridi

had stolen control of one of their planes and taken off in it. The interesting thing about the event was that the thief never came back. There also were three men on board and one woman missionary. One of the men is “Glory” Conway, a name that Rutherford first mentions. The narrator asks Sanders why it was never in the papers, and Sanders says he has given out more information than he was supposed to, because the event was “hushed up.”Slide10

Prologue: In Depth Summary

Wyland

had stepped away from the table before

Sanders

told this information, so when he returns,

Sanders

reveals what he has said and asks

Wyland

whether it matters that he said it.

Wyland

seems somewhat offended that the pilot gave away this information and snubs him a bit. However, he willingly discusses

Conway

and how Rutherford knew him. Then, they all decide to make it an evening. Rutherford suggests that since the narrator is not leaving until very early in the morning that he spend the time in his hotel. They can talk in his sitting room.Slide11

Prologue: In Depth Summary

They spend the time discussing

Conway

who had evidently left a significant impression on them both.

Rutherford

reveals that he had already heard about the affair at

Baskul and had thought it only a myth. He also says that since he has traveled a great deal around the world, he has seen strange things, a comment that confuses the narrator.

Then,

Rutherford

reveals that

Conway

isn’t dead, because he had traveled with him on a Japanese liner from Shanghai to Honolulu the November before. While he was on the Pekin express, he had spoken to a Mother Superior of some French Sisters of Charity. She had mentioned that a fever case had shown up at the mission hospital at Chung-Kiang, a European male with no papers and unable to give any account of himself. He spoke fluent Chinese and French and English with a refined accent. Rutherford had found this hard to believe and politely bid the nun good-bye.Slide12

Prologue: In Depth Summary

Ironically, he found himself right back at

Chung-Kiang

when the train broke down a mile or two farther on the track. He decided to take the

Mother Superior

up on her offer to visit her mission. They prepared a meal for him, and a young Chinese Christian doctor sat down with

Rutherford

. They also took him for a tour of the hospital. When they introduced him to the foreigner she had told him about, he was astonished to discover that the man was

Conway

. Unfortunately,

Conway

didn’t remember

Rutherford, because he was suffering from amnesia. Rutherford decided to stay there for a few days to try to help Conway recover his memory. He was unsuccessful, but he did make arrangements to take Conway home.Once they were on the Japanese liner, Rutherford spent the time telling Conway as much as he could about his life. Slide13

Prologue: In Depth Summary

At the port of Yokohama, a new passenger came on board. His name was

Sieveking

, and he was a concert pianist. He was prevailed upon to give a recital for the passengers with emphasis on

Chopin

, a musician

Sieveking

specialized in.

After he got up to leave at the end of the recital,

Conway

sat down at the piano and began to play a rapid, lively piece which drew

Sieveking

back to the piano in excitement. Conway was unable to tell the pianist what he had been playing, only that he thought it was a Chopin study. Sieveking refused to believe that it was by Chopin, because he knew everything that Chopin had ever written, and he had never heard this piece. Conway then remembered that it had never been published, and that he only knew it himself from meeting a man who had been one of Chopin’s

pupils. Many witnesses saw this exchange between the two men and heard Sieveking

say that the piece was so important as to be a part of every virtuoso’s repertoire within six months if it were ever published. Slide14

Prologue: In Depth Summary

The two men promised to meet again and even made arrangements to make some phonograph records of the piece.

Rutherford

tells the

narrator

that he often thought it a pity that

Conway

was never able to keep his promise to

Sieveking

.

That night after the recital,

Conway

regained his memory. During the next twenty-four hours, Conway told Rutherford everything that had happened to him, and then they had drinks in Rutherford’s cabin about 10:00 PM the night before they were expected to dock in Honolulu. Rutherford never saw Conway again, because he gave him the slip and joined a crew of a banana boat heading south to Fiji. Three months later,

Rutherford received a letter from Conway

thanking him for his care, paying him for any expenses

Rutherford

may have incurred, and telling him that he was about to set out on a long journey to the northwest. That was all he said.Slide15

Prologue: In Depth Summary

The

narrator

is most confused about how

Conway

arrived at

Chung-Kiang

, and how he lost his memory.

Rutherford

reveals that after

Conway

had told his story over those twenty-four hours on the Japanese liner, he had written it all down into a manuscript. He brings it out for the

narrator and tells him to read it and make of it whatever he will. The narrator asks if he’s not supposed to believe it. Rutherford says that Tertullian’s phrase “quia impossibile est” ('I believe because it is impossible\absurd' ) is not a bad argument.

Later,

Rutherford

sends a short note to the

narrator

saying he was off on his wanderings again would have no settled address for some months. Not surprising to the

narrator

,

Rutherford

is heading to

Kashmir

and then east. Perhaps he believes his own manuscript more than he is willing to admit.Slide16

CHAPTER ONE: NotesSlide17

CHAPTER ONE: Notes

This is the first part of the

manuscript

Rutherford

had written.

It

reveals that the

rumours

about the plane

being hijacked

were true, and that there were three men and one woman on board, one of whom was

Conway. The chapter prepares the reader for a mysterious destination somewhere in the mountains to the northeast. It also shows the reader how Conway becomes the character looked to for help and advice as well as bravery, should it be needed. He is the voice of calm and comfort for the other three passengers. Meanwhile, the pilot

remains an unknown element of this equation in which they’ve found themselves.Slide18

CHAPTER ONE: In Depth Summary

The

manuscript

begins by explaining that the situation begins during the third week in May (probably in 1930) in

Baskul

, Afghanistan, when events become so precarious that British Air Force machines arrive to evacuate the white residents.

A miscellaneous aircraft is also employed, one owned by the Maharajah of

Chandapore, to evacuate four passengers: Miss Roberta

Brinklow

of the Eastern Mission;

Henry D. Barnard

, an American;Hugh Conway, H. M. Consul; and Captain Charles Mallinson, H. M. Vice-Consul.At the time, Conway is thirty-seven years old and has been at Baskul for two years. He has no idea where he will be sent next which is a precarious characteristic of his profession as a foreign diplomat. He has been working this profession for ten years. He is so tired at the time of the flight from destroying and packing documents that he stretches out in the plane to sleep.Slide19

CHAPTER ONE: In Depth Summary

About an hour after the flight began,

Mallinson

notices that the pilot isn’t keeping a straight course. He also notices that the pilot isn’t

Fenner

, the man they thought would be flying them

out.

Conway isn’t upset by this possible development, because he isn’t all that eager to go to Peshawar

.

Then, the plane begins to descend, and when the two men look out the window of the plane, they see an opaque mist veiling an immense sun-brown desolation

with long, corrugated

mountain ridges and

frontier scenery. There looks to be no place to land, but the pilot does so into a small space opened by the side of a gully. That is followed by a swarm of bearded, turbaned tribesmen surrounding the machine and preventing anyone from getting out of it except the pilot. The plane is re-fueled, and then the flight commences again. To the four passengers, it is totally extraordinary and bewildering.Slide20

CHAPTER ONE: In Depth Summary

Mallinson

comes to the conclusion that they are being kidnapped for ransom which in light of the mysterious events seems the most believable of any theories.

Conway

begins to gather all the scraps of paper he can find to compose a message in as many of the various native languages as he can and then drop them from the plane along the way. It is a slender chance, but one worth taking.

Miss

Brinklow

just sits tight-lipped and straight-backed, while

Conway

and

Barnard

determine how easy it would have been to hijack the plane. They all agree that if anyone can get them out of this situation it will be Conway. Conway lies half asleep, turning over in his mind whether he is a brave as his companions have judged him. He has, since WWI, been reluctant to face danger unless it promises extravagant dividends in thrills. He just feels an enormous distaste for whatever trouble might be in store for them. Slide21

CHAPTER ONE: In Depth Summary

The flight continues all afternoon, steadily eastward, but

Conway

cannot judge where they are headed with any accuracy.

Mallinson

is eager to smash the panel and demand answers from the pilot, but

Conway

reminds him that the pilot is armed, and that none of them will know how to bring down the plane if they hurt him.

There is nothing for them to do but sleep, which they all manage to find a way to do.

Soon,

Conway

begins to feel the same sensations of shortness of breath that he had experienced once when he had flown in the Swiss Alps. He looks out the window and sees they are flying amidst range upon range of snow-peaks and glaciers. Slide22

CHAPTER TWO: In Depth SummarySlide23

CHAPTER TWO: In Depth Summary

Conway

tells the other passengers as they awaken that they are probably still in India, and that they have probably been flying along some river valley, stretching roughly east and west. If his memory suffices, they are probably in the valley of the upper Indus which would have brought them to this spectacular part of the world.

He also thinks the mountain they are looking at is probably

Nanga Parbat

and the range is the

Karakorams

. He knows there are several passes through these mountains if the pilot intends for them to cross them.

Mallinson

insists that the kidnapping theory is no longer applicable, because there are no tribes this far that would seek a ransom. Now the purpose of this flight becomes once again even more frightening.

Conway

has no answers for their fears, but is secretly satisfied that there are still such beautiful places on earth. Slide24

CHAPTER TWO: In Depth Summary

Dusk soon falls which lowers their spirits once again, and

Conway

comes to the conclusion that they are heading towards

Tibet

.

Soon, the plane gives a lurch, and they realize that the engines have been turned off, and the plane is rushing against a gale. The

pilot then lands the plane badly with crashing and swaying jolts to the passengers and a broken tail-skid.

They tear open the cockpit and discover the

pilot

is unconscious.

Conway

assumes finally the strong role of the leader, and they lift the man out and down to the ground. Then, they realize that the environment will be dangerous for them all and return the pilot and themselves to the cabin of the plane. Miss Brinklow surprisingly produces a bottle of brandy, and they give the pilot some. Slide25

CHAPTER TWO: In Depth Summary

Conway

now believes that they have flown far beyond the western range of the

Himalayas

towards the less known heights of the

Kuen-Lun

. They have reached the loftiest and most inhospitable part of the earth’s surface, the

Tibetan plateau. The next day, they take the

pilot

out of the plane, hoping the sun will revive him, but he becomes weaker and finally dies about mid-morning.

The man muttered in his final delirium enough information to let them know that they

were

in Tibet, and that there is a lamasery nearby called Shangri-la. The dying man had been very emphatic that they go there. They argue about whether this is the best plan for them to follow, but finally come to the conclusion that their best chance of survival is to find humans. Just as they finally all agree to the plan, they see coming down a faraway slope the figures of men.Slide26

CHAPTER THREE: NotesSlide27

CHAPTER THREE: Notes

Much of this chapter is a series of

foreshadowing

:

Conway

preferring not to be a leader, but accepting the role anyway;

Chang

, a Chinese, who speaks perfect English;

Chang’s

comments that they may not be away from civilization at all and that they will ultimately have no regrets about coming to

Shangri-La

;

seeing a new mountain, Karakal; Conway’s feeling that he has at last found a place which is an end, a finality; and Chang’s explanation for his nap that he has to take care of himself. All of these events indicate that Shangri-La is a mysterious unknown place that will bring all four of these “captives” to discover a world that may or may not bring them peace and happiness.Slide28

CHAPTER THREE: In Depth Summary

As the four passengers await the arrival of the men in the distance,

Conway

takes on the role of onlooker, refusing to be drawn into being a leader or being forced to decide what to do or not to do.

Then, the figures reveal themselves to be a part of a dozen or more men carrying with them a hooded chair. Inside the chair is a figure robed in blue.

Having lived in China for a few years,

Conway

understands the ritual of meeting and how ceremonial it must be. As a result, he steps forward to follow the proper procedure, and the stranger follows suit and says he is from the lamasery of

Shangri-La

and his name is

Chang

. He speaks perfect English and insists that he guide them back to the lamasery.

Conway agrees, but Mallinson insists that their stay won’t be long, because they want to return to civilization as soon possible. Chang responds, “Are you so very sure that you are away from it?” It is a significant comment foreshadowing the future. He further declares that the four passengers will be honorably treated, and that ultimately, they will have no regrets.Slide29

CHAPTER THREE: In Depth Summary

Chang

then sees to it that they have wine and mangoes, a fruit that

Conway

cannot believe could be cultivated so high in the mountains.

Once they are refreshed, the party begins its climb towards the lamasery, viewing a mountain that

Conway

has never heard of before – Karakal

– in the distance.

Conway

wonders if the lamas

have surveyed its height, and

Chang only comments that there’s nothing incompatible between monasticism and trigonometry.Slide30

CHAPTER THREE: In Depth Summary

They walk all morning and into the afternoon,

with the air becoming thinner and harder to

breathe, while

Change

sleeps in his chair.

They eventually reach the summit of the ridge and then link themselves together with heavy mountaineering ropes in order to be protected as they follow a track consisting of a traverse cut along the flank of a rock wall. The height above it is obscured by the mist, and below is an abyss.

Meanwhile, most of the way on this track,

Mallinson

is begging

Conway

to decide what they are going to do.

Conway replies that there are times in life when the most comfortable thing is to do nothing at all. He reminds the younger man that they may have just exchanged one lunacy for another, given that they have just escaped the torturous nightmare of Afghanistan.Slide31

CHAPTER THREE: In Depth Summary

Suddenly, being first of the four passengers,

Conway

sees the lamasery appear out of the

mist. It is absolutely superb and exquisite,

seeming to hang on the side of the next ridge.

Meanwhile, in the valley below, is a delightfully flavored place awash in green. He feels

“the deeper sensation, half mystical, half visual, of having reached at last some place that is an end, a finality.”

Chang

then awakes and makes the mysterious comment that he has slept, because he

“has to take care of himself.”

He indicates that they will be given the opportunity to bathe and refresh themselves, and then he will be honored if they all join him for dinner.

Mallinson agrees, but only if Chang will help them make plans for their departure.Slide32

CHAPTER FOUR: NotesSlide33

CHAPTER FOUR: Notes

This chapter is basically a study in the determination of

Mallinson

to depart from

Shangri-La

and

Conway’s

growing fascination with the lamasery. One represents the

frustration and the impetuous demands of

youth

while the other is

a study in patience and complacency

and even a desire to just find some peace in his life.These two contrasting characters will be the ultimate determiners of the outcome of this story and the lessons the reader will learn in the end: one being fear of the unknown and the other, the search for a meaningful life.Slide34

CHAPTER FOUR: In Depth Summary

Later that evening as they are all seated at dinner,

Chang

observes that they are not as uncivilized as the four may have expected.

Conway

is unable to deny it as he had noticed at his bath that the tub is made of delicate green porcelain made in Akron, Ohio. He readily enjoys the meal, because he likes the Chinese and their ways.

Chang

eats only a salad and once again explains his behaviour by commenting that

he must take care of himself

.

Conway

comments in return that the lamas seem a “very fortunate community, and hospitable to strangers.” He observes that they must not receive strangers very often, and that a separate culture might flourish there without contamination from the outside world. Slide35

CHAPTER FOUR: In Depth Summary

Miss

Brinklow

speaks up and assertively asks

Chang

to tell them about the monastery. In his ensuing commentary, the reader discovers that there are fifty who are considered full lamas and a few others, including himself, who have not yet obtained full initiation, an amazing piece of information, given that

he seems to be elderly although not yet old. He also explains that there are representatives among them from a great many nations, although Tibetans and Chinese make up the majority.

When

Miss

Brinklow

, in her missionary attitude, asks him to explain what the lamas believe, he explains that there are many religious beliefs among them, but

what they most believe in is moderation. They avoid excesses of all kinds in the valley. Conway observes that Chang applies the idea of moderation to the people of the valley, but is careful not to apply it to the priesthood.When he asks Chang why, the elder man replies that it is a matter which he may not discuss, another mysterious comment about life at the lamasery. Slide36

CHAPTER FOUR: In Depth Summary

Mallinson

continues to question

Chang

about arranging for porters to lead them out as early as the next day. But

Chang

says that he is not the proper person to approach about the matter, and that he doesn’t believe the matter can be arranged immediately.

Mallinson continues to press the point, trying to get

Chang

to help them, while

Chang

is readily amenable to anything

Mallinson asks for, including maps, but is short of agreeing to make the arrangements. Chang eventually gets to the point where he just doesn’t answer Mallinson, and the young man, in his anger and anxiety, collapses. Chang blames his collapse on the thin air and insists he will better the next day. Slide37

CHAPTER FOUR: In Depth Summary

Conway

then steps forward to patiently encourage

Chang

to answer

Mallinson’s

questions. Because he is

so patient and less demanding, Chang observes that

he is wiser than his companions and explains that they will not be able to hire men from the valley to be their porters, because they will refuse to leave the valley.

Conway

also observes to

Chang

that it was not a chance meeting when Chang and the men had come across their plane and that they must have known beforehand about their arrival. He wonders how? For a moment, Chang shows stress, something that Conway had not noticed before. He insists to Conway that none of them are in any danger at Shangri-La, but they may have to face some delay in their departure. Conway is agreeable to a short delay, because he feels so comfortable at the lamasery. As Chang moves to depart from the dinner table, Conway asks him the literal interpretation of Karakal. Chang whispers that it means “Blue Moon.” Slide38

CHAPTER FOUR: In Depth Summary

When morning comes,

Conway

muses on his role at the lamasery now. He thinks about his position as a leader who had safely evacuated the British personnel from

Baskul

. He feels that it is not a bad achievement, and that gives him comfort.

However, he does have some slight worry about whether the others can achieve their departure, given the strangeness of this place.

As for himself, the puzzle

of

Shangri-La

is beginning

to exercise over him

“a charming fascination.” He is far from grumbling about their situation. Slide39

CHAPTER FOUR: In Depth Summary

When

Mallinson

once again inquires of

Chang

about porters,

Chang

tells him what he had told Conway the night before: there are no men willing to accompany the group so far from their homes.

Conway

smoothly intercedes again to avoid any ugliness by asking

Chang

what he proposes they do.

Chang seems to be willing to answer Conway just about anything and offers the suggestion that they wait approximately a month or two for delivery men expected at the time. He thinks they will be willing to take the four with them on their return journey. Of course, he offers no exact date, claiming they never know exactly when a delivery will occur. But he insists again that the lamasery will continue to offer its utmost hospitality. This information infuriates Mallinson, but Conway restrains the younger man in order that he not insult Chang. Slide40

CHAPTER FIVE: NotesSlide41

CHAPTER FIVE: Notes

This chapter is devoted to the four travelers coming to terms with their predicament.

Mallinson

has given in to the thought of a two month stay,

Barnard

feels their loss will not affect him at all, and

Miss

Brinklow

sums it all up to the mysterious force of

Providence

.

Conway

is happy there and is content to solve the puzzle of their arrival in Shangri-La. He is wiser than the other three and soon comes to some important conclusions about the flight there, and how it obviously had been planned. Now he is eager to learn why.Slide42

CHAPTER FIVE: In Depth Summary

For the remainder of the morning, the four discuss the matter of leaving the lamasery.

Mallinson

is somewhat mollified and more accepting of their fate, but still determined to leave this strange place that he labels “

crooked

.”

Conway

is the

voice of reason

, logically deciding that it can’t be any worse than two months in any other isolated part of the world.

Miss

Brinklow

is fatalistic, saying that she has been called to the Lord’s service and is agreeable to whatever Providence brings her. Barnard, the American, isn’t the least concerned about their being posted as missing, because he doesn’t believe that affects him one way or another, a puzzling statement to say the least.Slide43

CHAPTER FIVE: In Depth Summary

Conway

then remarks that the first rule of their stay must be to avoid getting on each other’s nerves. The others agree, and then they observe that it will at least be comfortable there, even if it is a mystery.

Chang

enters after a while and offers to guide them on a tour of the lamasery while

Mallinson

and

Miss

Brinklow

comment that they never thought they’d end up in a place like this nor why they have.Slide44

CHAPTER FIVE: In Depth Summary

The grand tour is an interesting moment for them all.

Conway

is becoming even further enchanted with the

rich amenities of the place.

There is a delightful library, filled with the world’s best literature and hundreds of maps of the area, although

Chang

comments that they will not find Shangri-La on any of them.

Miss

Brinklow

wonders if they will see the lamas at work, but

Chang replies that her request is impossible as they are very rarely seen outside the lamahood. When she asks what they do, Chang says that they “devote themselves to contemplation and to the pursuit of wisdom.” To Miss Brinklow, that’s doing nothing.Slide45

CHAPTER FIVE: In Depth Summary

Then, they follow

Chang

through several

courtyards to come upon a scene of

unmatched loveliness. It is an open pavilion

fringing a lotus pool surrounded by sculptures

of lions, dragons and unicorns. In the pavilion are a harpsichord and a modern grand piano. This pavilion inspires comments and questions about the lamas love of western music and the fact that they might someday order a phonograph delivered to the lamasery. For now, there is no need for them to hurry in this request.

Barnard

observes that “No hurry” must be the slogan of the lamas. When he then questions

Chang

about how they pay for all this,

Chang again closes up and refuses to answer. Conway sees this as once again edging the visible border-line between what might and what might not be revealed.Slide46

CHAPTER FIVE: In Depth Summary

At this point, an agile, lithe-limbed Chinese girl appears and plays the harpsichord.

Conway

is fascinated by her and realizes that she is a Manchu.

Chang

says her name is

Lo-

Tsen, and like

Chang

, she has not yet achieved full initiation. He says there are no sex distinctions among the lamas. However, when

Conway

asks her age,

Chang once again says he cannot tell him. Later that evening, after dinner, Conway strolls into the moon-lit courtyards and as he gazes on Karakal, he realizes he is physically happy, emotionally content, and mentally at ease. He is puzzled by Shangri-La, but even though he cannot understand it yet, he feels it will somehow be understood eventually. Then, he hears sounds from far below in the valley. Slide47

CHAPTER FIVE: In Depth Summary

Using his understanding of the Chinese

language which is near in structure to

the Tibetan language, he realizes that

the people in the valley are burying

Talu

, the man who had hijacked their plane and flown it into the valley.

Now

Conway

knows for sure that their flight was not a meaningless exploit of an insane man. It had been planned, prepared and carried out at the instigation of the lamasery. The question still is: what is the purpose of their being brought to

Shangri-La

?He decides that his discovery, however, must not be communicated to the other three of his group, who could not help him solve the puzzle, nor to their hosts, who probably would not help him.Slide48

CHAPTER SIX: NotesSlide49

CHAPTER SIX: Notes

This chapter helps the reader understand how three of the travelers are coming to love the lamasery and the valley.

Only

Mallinson

is still discontented and wants badly to go home.

Conway

is more and more at home and has many wise and interesting conversations with

Chang

. He is impressed with the life there, fascinated by the mystery behind it, and reluctant to leave. He has even impressed the lamas as seen in his unprecedented invitation to speak to the

High

Lama

. Now he will begin to learn the truth behind the travelers’ arrival at Shangri-La.Slide50

CHAPTER SIX: In Depth Summary

By the end of the first week, the group has settled into somewhat of a routine.

Chang

is tireless in his efforts to smooth all their rough spots. He even allows them access to the valley.

Conway

finds it nothing less than an enclosed paradise, spanning the whole gulf between temperate and tropical. The people are a blend of

Tibetan

and

Chinese

and are clean and handsome as well as hospitable. It is one of the pleasantest communities he’s ever seen.

Miss

Brinklow

sees it as an opportunity to begin a mission among these people and to that end, she asks Chang for a book so she can study and learn the language. Slide51

CHAPTER SIX: In Depth Summary

Conway

continues to make good use of the library and the music room. However, he notes to

Chang

that it is not quite up-to-date. Many things from the year before have not made it into their library.

Chang

says in response, “

Nothing of importance that could not have been foreseen in 1920, or that will not be better understood in 1940

.”

Conway

tells

Chang

that he thinks he’s beginning to understand him: time means less to him than it does to most people. However, when he asks how long it’s been since they had visitors to Shangri-La, Chang is once again unable to say. Slide52

CHAPTER SIX: In Depth Summary

The conversation then moves to that of the little

Manchu

.

Conway

cannot determine if she is a student of music or merely plays for pleasure. He wonders aloud if she likes being there, and

Chang

observes that she doesn’t seem to dislike it. She is like an ivory doll more than a human being to

Conway

, but he is more fascinated by her than he has ever been by any other woman.

They also discuss the valley people, and

Conway

questions the ultimate basis of law and order there. Chang says that crime is rare, because everyone has everything they need.The lamasery does have the power to expel anyone, but it is rarely used, because it is such an extreme and dreadful punishment. He says that the use of courtesy, as everyone in the valley is taught, smoothes out any problems. Slide53

CHAPTER SIX: In Depth Summary

Later, in a conversation with

Mallinson

, the two men observe first how happy

Barnard

seems to be and then,

Mallinson’s

discovery that he is traveling on a forged passport. In fact, Mallinson

has also seen some newspaper clippings that

Barnard

dropped, and from the pictures in them, he’s convinced that

Barnard

is Chalmers Bryant.Chalmers Bryant had been the head of the Bryant group in New York and had lost about 100 million dollars and then disappeared. That night, Barnard admits who he is and Conway finds it hard to think this genuinely good humored man is the world’s biggest swindler. Barnard explains how the whole financial deal fell through, and how easy it was to lose all that money without meaning to do so. He says he intends to stick around the lamasery for a long time and let what will happen, happen. Slide54

CHAPTER SIX: In Depth Summary

Conway

observes that they shouldn’t argue over this point or any other. He sees that three of them, minus

Mallinson

, have come to feel very comfortable there, and he, especially, is not looking forward to any porters arriving to take them back to the real world.

He thinks to himself that he could keep people out there entranced for a long time with any stories he brought back about

Shangri-La

, but he wonders if he would enjoy it.

His thoughts are then interrupted by

Chang

who is bearing important news: the

High Lama

wishes to see Conway immediately. Chang tells Conway that this is extraordinary and unprecedented. He reveals that Conway now will learn the answers to many of his questions. Slide55

CHAPTER SEVEN: NotesSlide56

CHAPTER SEVEN: Notes

What the reader learns alongside

Conway

is some very important information about the

Valley of Blue Moon

:

it has always been a hidden place where the people in the valley are prosperous and happy;

the present lamasery and its rules are the result of the work of

Father Perrault

and

Henschell

who had worked to keep them safe but comfortable;

people are allowed, even encouraged, to come into the valley, but they are not allowed to leave to keep them from revealing the valley to the world; and those who live at the lamasery are very old, including Perrault who came to the valley in 1719 and is still there in 1930, making him well over 200 years old. These facts reinforce the idea of the name Shangri-La when it’s invoked to this day: it represents mystery and paradise. Slide57

CHAPTER SEVEN: In Depth Summary

As

Conway

is lead by

Chang

to meet the

High Lama

, he becomes more and more eager to learn the answer to the puzzle he has been trying to work out in his head since arriving at Shangri-La: why were they deliberately brought to the lamasery?

As he enters the room of the

High Lama

, he notices that it is much warmer than the rest of the lamasery, and that it is simply furnished with low tables and chairs.

On one of the chairs sits a small, pale, wrinkled figure, motionlessly watching

Conway approach. He is a little old man in Chinese dress, and he is obviously emaciated. Yet, he speaks to Conway in flawless English and his voice is soft and soothing. Slide58

CHAPTER SEVEN: In Depth Summary

The two men talk aimlessly while enjoying the tea ceremony.

Conway

admits to the

High Lama

that he had lived for some years in China, a fact he had withheld from

Chang

. They both take great pleasure in the tea even though Conway

is so eager to find the answers to his questions.

He recognizes the Chinese sensibility in himself to follow the correct etiquette and just take pleasure in the company of the other.

However, the

High Lama

is soon enough ready to begin his story. Slide59

CHAPTER SEVEN: In Depth Summary

He begins by reminding

Conway

of the Tibetan history that he had been studying in the lamasery.

In 1719, four

Capuchin friars

set out from

Pekin to search for any remnants of the Nestorian Christianity

first established in Tibet in the Middle Ages.

Three died along the way, and the fourth was near death when he stumbled across the pass into the

Valley of Blue Moon

.

He found the people of the valley living prosperously there, and they offered the same hospitality that Conway and his friends enjoy. Slide60

CHAPTER SEVEN: In Depth Summary

The man, named

Perrault

, was brought back to life and decided to establish a Christian monastery on the spot of an ancient Buddhist lamasery.

He had the people of the valley restore the old buildings and offered them a religion different than Buddhism. He was not bigoted, so he had no desire to replace their religion; rather, he just offered them a choice.

He also willingly worked alongside them in re-building and adding onto the lamasery. However, after awhile, his desires changed as he fell under the spell of the valley, and he even eventually stopped sending messages to the

Bishop of

Pekin

to avoid placing any of the people in any hazard.

He began to study Buddhism himself at the age of 98 and wanted to spend the rest of his life writing a book which argued against the precepts of this religion from the standpoint of Christianity. Slide61

CHAPTER SEVEN: In Depth Summary

In 1789, the word came down into the valley that

Perrault

was dying. He gathered his friends around him to bid them good-bye, and they then left him alone to face his fate. But he did not die. For many weeks, he lay without moving or speaking, and then he slowly began to recover. He was by this time 108 years old. From his experience with death, he came away with a new vision for his life, and he plunged into rigorous self-discipline.

When the last of the old monks died in 1794, he was still living.

However, he also became a hermit and veiled in mystery. A rich and fantastic folklore grew up around him that he could do all kinds of impossible things, but most was untrue except for an acquired skill in telepathy.

He began to feel that that there was no reason why he shouldn’t look toward the future, and so he began to live the kind of life he had always wanted to live. He seemed to be able to learn everything with far greater ease as well. Slide62

CHAPTER SEVEN: In Depth Summary

In 1804, a second stranger arrived at the

Valley of Blue Moon

, an Austrian named

Henschell

.

When he saw the gold deposits in the valley, he had the idea immediately to enrich himself and return home, but the peacefulness of the valley and the utter freedom from worldly cares made him delay his departure again and again.

He finally decided to climb up the mountain to the lamasery and discover for himself the truth about

Perrault

.

The two men immediately became fast friends, and

Perrault

shared with the younger man the wild dream that had become the only reality he had left in the world (a piece of information the High Lama doesn’t reveal to Conway right away). Slide63

CHAPTER SEVEN: In Depth Summary

Henschall

took it upon himself to devise the system by which the lamasery could ever after obtain anything they needed from the outside world. He brought in treasures of all kinds and thousands of books. The porters who brought them were never allowed into the valley, and the pass that led to their existence was always guarded.

He then came to the

conclusion

that they weren’t in any danger from outside armies because of the difficulty of crossing the pass, but he did come up with an important rule to keep them safe

: any new arrivals would be welcome, but they would not be allowed to leave to give away their position on the map

.

As a result, many people over the next century from many different backgrounds stumbled into the valley and stayed.

Henschell

helped

Perrault develop his idea that led to the kind of place the lamasery was to that day. Unfortunately, Henschell was killed when he was shot by an Englishman in a quarrel over some porters. The High Lama then shows Conway a sketch of Henschell which shows a young man, but Henschell would have been over 100when the sketch was drawn. From all this, Conway learns not only the rule about coming to the valley – that you could not then leave – but also the truth about the High Lama. He is Perrault!Slide64

CHAPTER EIGHT: NotesSlide65

CHAPTER EIGHT: Notes

This is the most important chapter in understanding the concept of

Shangri-La

.

The valley doesn’t offer just long life; it offers a life in which the lamas will learn how to be in such harmony with each other and the people of the valley that they will be able to withstand any outside evil that might eventually penetrate their little paradise.

The four travelers have been brought here to help reinforce this idyllic haven and to prepare for whatever the future will bring from the outside world.

It is the perfect way for

Conway

to fulfill his life and protect the heritage of the beauty of life. Slide66

CHAPTER EIGHT: In Depth Summary

For a moment,

Conway

is so amazed at his realization that the

High Lama

is

Father Perrault

that he is unable to speak. However, the conversation begins again, this time about music which Father Perrault

seems to read in

Conway’s

mind.

Conway

then repeats what he has come to realize: they will be forbidden to leave. But he still wonders why the four travelers were chosen to be brought to the valley over all other people. Perrault reveals that one of the men in the valley, Talu, had come up with the idea to bring back people to infuse into the life of the lamasery by bringing them in by air. Conway still wonders what the idea is behind it all. So Perrault explains that the idea Henschell and he had developed so carefully had to do with Time: they would learn to slacken the tempo of their lives, achieve calmness and wisdom; and develop their interests in learning. If they have left relatives and friends behind, they will soon feel their loss less sharply. This will fulfill the wish for the lamasery. It is not a place to worship God and pray or learn more about a specific religion unless that’s what they want to do. Instead, it’s a place of timeless exploration always with an emphasis on moderation. Slide67

CHAPTER EIGHT: In Depth Summary

The

High

Lama

then expresses his belief that

Conway’s

best quality is his passionlessness. Conway admits that the

High

Lama

is correct and that no doubt he has become this kind of man because of his experiences in the First World War.

He says that he came out of that time chiefly wanting just to be left alone. However, he continues to insist to Perrault that even though he’s attracted by the timelessness of Shangri-La, he would still want a life beyond the age of 100 to have a point. Perrault then tells him the ultimate purpose of the Valley of Blue Moon: to preserve and protect the heritage of all the beauties of life when the doom interlaced in the outside world threatens them. He believes that with this ideal in place the meek will truly inherit the earth.Suddenly, Conway understands everything Father Perrault has been trying to explain to him, and without realizing why he does so, he kneels before the ancient man and says he understands. Slide68

CHAPTER NINE: NotesSlide69

CHAPTER NINE: Notes

Conway’s

understanding of life at the lamasery continues in this chapter.

Chang

explains the stages of his life there, and he meets other lamas who have been hidden to that point.

There are several significant moments

:

the three travelers are still immersed in what they are becoming or what they still are (

Barnard

and

Miss

Brinklow

like life there, and Mallinson is still angry that he can’t leave); Chang insists that Lo-Tsen has come to accept life without love (this foreshadows how she will later leave the valley for love of Mallinson); and Conway begins to visit the High Lama regularly, a totally unprecedented event at the lamasery (this foreshadows how the High Lama will name Conway High Lama at his death). Slide70

CHAPTER NINE: In Depth Summary

Conway

has been warned by the

High Lama

to not yet reveal to the other three travelers the truth of

Shangri-La

, so when they greet him at breakfast with many questions, he finds himself easily prevaricating and falling naturally into the beliefs of

Perrault and the other lamas.

He just tells them that it isn’t an ordinary monastery, and that the

High Lama

still has given no answers about porters or departure from the valley.

Miss

Brinklow and Barnard seem unfazed by this lack of news, but Mallinson, of course, is frustrated and angry. Slide71

CHAPTER NINE: In Depth Summary

So

Conway

begins to live a kind of double life:

with his friends, he pretends to be waiting for porters and departure to India while the rest of the time, the horizon seems to lift a curtain on the future.

He spends many hours with

Chang

discussing the rule and routine of the lamasery. He learns that for the first five years he will live a normal life without any special regimen to enable his body to become accustomed to the thin air and for his mind to adjust to his mental and emotional regrets.

After those five years, the process of retarding age would begin, and he would stay at the physical age of forty for at least fifty years or more.

Eventually, like

Chang

will soon do, he will be a candidate for initiation. He will then have a century or more to fulfill the purpose of the lamasery.

Chang also explains that this is only possible in the valley of the Blue Moon, but that the people of the valley do not possess the same possibility of long life. Slide72

CHAPTER NINE: In Depth Summary

Conway

then begins to meet other lamas who have not made an appearance:

a German named

Meister

and a Frenchman named

Alphonse

Briac

who had been a pupil of

Chopin

.

They both possess a calm intelligence and measured well-balanced opinions. Conway notes to Chang that they seem immersed in their own pasts which Chang explains is important for the clarification of the mind. Conway, too, will soon come to the realization of the significance of past events in his life. Slide73

CHAPTER NINE: In Depth Summary

One daily event that

Conway

especially comes to enjoy is listening to

Lo-

Tsen

play Mozart and other composers and he eventually questions

Chang about her. She was of royal Manchu stock and had come to the valley when her party was lost in the mountains on the way to her wedding.

This happened in 1884 at which time she was 18. She still looks that age even though she is actually 65.

Chang

says that she soon came to accept her inability to return to the outside world, and that she hadn’t given up love, because she had not yet met her husband, Instead, she had given up the idea of ever being in love.

He also explains that even though

Briac is initiated already, he is still obsessed with his past with Chopin. Chang allows that this is good, because when he becomes one of the older lamas, he will spend his life appreciating his past, yet looking toward the future. The High Lama spends his time in clairvoyant meditation in order to prepare for the future. Conway wonders when he will see the High Lama again, and Chang says that it will doubtless not be until his first five years have passed. Slide74

CHAPTER NINE: In Depth Summary

Ironically, less than a month after he has arrived at

Shangri-La

, the

High Lama

calls for

Conway

again. The elderly man sincerely enjoys Conway’s

company and he looks forward to appreciating his sense of humour in all the years to come. Slide75

CHAPTER TEN: NotesSlide76

CHAPTER TEN: Notes

Once again,

Conway’s

wisdom gained as a result of his war experiences is emphasized which

foreshadows

how the

High Lama

will name him the new High Lama.

There is also

foreshadowing

in the discussion of

Lo-

Tsen who has been the object of the love of many who live at the lamasery. The fact that she has not loved in return, but has only offers friendship, is ironic in the end when she chooses to leave with Mallinson, knowing that she will lose her youth the minute she steps outside the valley. The High Lama’s predictions for the future are also ironic in that we who are reading this in 2012 know how the world fell into the worst war in history. Yet James Hilton, the author, is writing this from the year 1933. He has the same premonition as the character he has created. Slide77

CHAPTER TEN: In Depth Summary

The

High Lama

tells

Conway

that he has never met anyone like him before.

They especially discuss how

Conway seems wise beyond his years, perhaps because of the intense and premature experience of the war.

Conway

emphasizes that he had exhausted his passions during the war, and that was the beginning of his wisdom.

The

High

Lama remarks that he has just expressed the doctrine of Shangri-La. Slide78

CHAPTER TEN: In Depth Summary

Conway

also comes to the realization that he has fallen in love with

Lo-

Tsen

.

It is not a love he feels he must urgently act on; instead, he sees her as a delicate, fragrant promised jewel that he is certain, given all the time they have ahead of them, will be fulfilled.

As for his traveling companions,

Miss

Brinklow

and Barnard both decide to stay, at least for awhile, as they feel a mysterious power working behind the scenes to make them want to be in the Valley of Blue Moon. Mallinson furiously remarks at this news that Shangri-La is a prison to which Conway notes that there people all over the world who would give everything they have to live in this valley. So, he says, “Are we in prison or are they?” Mallinson still insists that they are monkeys in a cage. Slide79

CHAPTER TEN: In Depth Summary

Conway

has become fond of

Mallinson

as a kind of son and discovers that young man,

too

, is in love with Lo-Tsen. This doesn’t anger

Conway

, but instead worries him about how

Mallinson

will accept the truth about his future at Shangri-La. Chang shows little worry about this, because he feels that the porters – who will come – won’t be willing to take Mallinson with them. He also explains that no one will hold Mallinson back if he chooses to leave, but that past experience has convinced anyone who has tried that they are fools after one night on the plateau. As for Lo-Tsen, Chang says that Conway’s love for her is quite suitable as long as he pursues it in moderation. He himself had once loved her, but she showed only an appreciation for the compliment he paid her by loving her, and they instead developed a deep friendship with each other over the years. She has been living in the past and still is a comfort to the “sorrowful exile” who learns there is to be no return. Instead of being like Shakespeare’s Cleopatra who “makes hungry where she most satisfies,” Lo-Tsen removes hunger where she least satisfies. Slide80

CHAPTER TEN: In Depth Summary

Barnard

tells

Conway

that he has found the perfect job at

Shangri-La

:

he will prospect the gold supplies and make it available for the lamasery to fulfill its purpose.

The man has found immediate and satisfactory comfort in a job that is perfectly suited for him. Slide81

CHAPTER TEN: In Depth Summary

The

High Lama

is also happy about

Barnard’s

ability to become accustomed to life in the valley, but he indicates that

Mallinson

will be Conway’s

problem, because he, the High Lama, is going to die.

He tells

Conway

he only has time for one more thing: he is naming

Conway the new High Lama and placing the heritage and destiny of Shangri-La in his hands. He has waited a very long time for Conway to come along. He has looked in every face that has come to the lamasery looking for a man just like Conway: one who is gentle and patient, who cares for the riches of the mind, who agrees to reside in wisdom and secrecy while the storm rages in the outside world. The storm he indicates is a premonition of the Second World War, and he feels that there will be a kind of Dark Age from which there will be no escape. Out of this will come the saving grace of Shangri-La, a saving grace that will rise out of the ashes to create a new renaissance. With these final words, The High Lama – Father Perrault – dies. At this point, as if in a dream, Conway feels himself the Master of Shangri-La. He eventually ends up in the courtyard with the lotus pool, and it is here that Mallinson finds him and drags him away by the arm. Slide82

CHAPTER ELEVEN: NotesSlide83

CHAPTER ELEVEN: Notes

This chapter reveals that even though he has become so acclimated to the slow passionless life of

Shangri-La

,

Conway

still has a strong sense of responsibility for

Mallinson

. He hasn’t completely purged the feelings of the outer world, and when part of his dream – to live as the

High Lama

and slowly express his love for

Lo-

Tsen

– comes to end with the news that Lo-Tsen and Mallinson are lovers, he is willing to help the young man leave the valley. He feels a definite sense of loss, but he does what he feels he must. It’s perhaps true as well that he fears for the integrity of Shangri-La if Mallinson and Lo-Tsen remain there. They have destroyed what makes it special by their physical relationship. Even though he cares for them both, they no longer belong in the Valley of the Blue Moon. Slide84

CHAPTER ELEVEN: In Depth Summary

Mallinson

excitedly informs

Conway

that the porters have come at last and are about five miles away from the pass.

Conway

cautions the younger man that the porters may not want to take him with them, but

Mallinson

reveals that they have been paid in advance by

Lo-

Tsen who is waiting to go with them. Conway insists that Lo-Tsen doesn’t want to leave, but Mallinson insists she’ll be better off with him than in Shangri-La. Mallinson believes that there’s something dark and evil about Shangri-La, and that Lo-Tsen feels the same way. Slide85

CHAPTER ELEVEN: In Depth Summary

Conway

tries to make

Mallinson

understand the truth of

Shangri-la

by telling the whole story as he had heard it from the High Lama.

The only thing he doesn’t reveal is that he has been named the successor to

Father Perrault

.

Mallinson thinks Conway has gone mad, but Conway holds fast to his story and tells Mallinson he has no desire to leave the valley. The younger man insists that Conway cannot hold him back, and that the men who had said the war had ruined Conway were right. Slide86

CHAPTER ELEVEN: In Depth Summary

Mallinson’s

commentary as he leaves

Conway

makes

Conway

realize even more that “all the loveliest things were transient . . . and that the two worlds were finally beyond reconciliation and that one of them hung, as always, by a thread.”

Soon, however,

Mallinson

is back. He hadn’t the nerve to walk across the place where they had all been roped together. He’s so angry that he can’t get beyond that point that he declares

that he’d love to fly over the valley with a load of bombs. Conway feels badly about Mallinson’s fear, but he continues to warn him that Lo-Tsen will lose her beauty if she leaves. Slide87

CHAPTER ELEVEN: In Depth Summary

Mallinson

wants proof of

Conway’s

story, but the only piece of information he can give him is the example of

Briac

as

Chopin’s

student.

Unfortunately,

Mallinson’s

arguments have well-made points, and Conway must admit that he has argued well. Then, Mallinson admits that he is not only in love with Lo-Tsen, but that they have made love. With that, a dream dissolves for Conway, because he realizes that this wonderful world of Shangri-La is also in peril if such corruption has entered. It is enough to make him regain some of the sense of who he was before they had come to the Valley of Blue Moon: a man who was a leader and had obligations to those who follow him. He offers to go with Mallinson and help him over the place where they will need the ropes. Slide88

CHAPTER ELEVEN: In Depth Summary

However, as they are preparing to leave,

Conway

feels such an emptiness in himself and is amazed that the one who found such happiness here is now leaving it behind.

Because he feels responsible to help

Mallinson

go home, he also feels doomed like millions who flee from wisdom in order to be a hero.

The porters are waiting, and so is

Lo-

Tsen

who looks upon

Mallinson

with adoring eyes. The manuscript ends here. Slide89

EPILOGUE: NotesSlide90

EPILOGUE: Notes

Like all

epilogues

, this one attempts to tie up any loose ends of the story.

Rutherford

had searched hard for

Conway

and found some pieces of information that seemed to corroborate Conway’s story.

He and the narrator can only surmise what happened to

Mallinson

, but learn from the doctor’s story that the promise of

Shangri-La

is lost once a traveler leaves it: Lo-Tsen had grown old and lost her beauty. They both admire the character of Conway and their final thought indicates their hope that he will find the paradise he left once again.Slide91

Epilogue: In Depth Summary

The story returns to the viewpoint of the

narrator

rather than that of

Conway’s

manuscript.

He has met up again with

Rutherford in Delhi,

India

.

Rutherford

has just returned from

Kashgar. When they go to Rutherford’s suite, the narrator notes immediately that Rutherford had gone in search of Conway. The trail ended somewhere in Upper Siam. Rutherford has come to the conclusion that Shangri-La lies somewhere inside the area of Baskul, Bangkok, Chung-Kiang and Kashgar. He never was able to enter Tibet, and he knows that Mallinson couldn’t have just walked out, because the terrain was so formidable. He had met an American who had tried to cross the Kuen-Lun Mountains, but could not find a pass even though he knew there were passes there. Rutherford questioned the man about a cone-shaped mountain almost as high as the Himalayas. He said there was a legend about it, but he didn’t really believe it. He also said there were plenty of lamaseries, but that the monks there were corrupt and dirty even though they appeared to have odd powers of bodily control.Slide92

Epilogue: In Depth Summary

The most interesting thing the American had to say was about the time he met a

Chinese

, being carried in a chair, who offered to be a guide to a nearby lamasery, but the American had refused.

It is an interesting connection to

Conway’s

experience, but both

Rutherford and the narrator agree that they couldn’t imagine how an expedition so well-equipped could have been held against their will like the

Conway’s

group.

Perhaps it is no connection to

Shangri-La

at all.Slide93

Epilogue: In Depth Summary

Rutherford

finds out that the story of the plane

Conway

took from

Baskul

is true, but he couldn’t trace the passengers. They had disappeared just as Conway had said.

Rutherford

had traced the German named

Meister Conway

mentioned who visited Tibet in 1887 and never came back. However, he was unable to find out anything about

Perrault or Henschell. They both are confused by what happened to Conway after he left the valley with Mallinson and Lo-Tsen. They guess that some sort of tragedy must have happened: it seems obvious that Mallinson never made it to China, but how Conway made it to the nun’s mission at Chung-Kiang is still unexplained. They can only conclude that he wandered there. When Rutherford questioned the nuns about Conway, one said that the doctor who had worked there told them he was brought there by a woman. Slide94

Epilogue: In Depth Summary

Rutherford

traced down the doctor who agreed that that’s what happened, and that the woman who had brought him there was Chinese and had died of the fever not long after they arrived at the mission. The doctor further said that the Chinese woman was not young, but very, very old.

The

narrator

and

Rutherford

then discuss

Conway

and

how the war had altered him

, as well as the many mysteries of the

Blue Moon. The narrator can only leave the story with a significant question: “Do you think he will ever make it?”Slide95