49.06-09: three young athletes, Jack, Jake, and Jacques, whose copper faces he had seen grinning around her in one of the latest photographs of the fourth album: The athletic J-boy trio enters the stage as if emerging from one of Armande's albums. We heard from Mme. Chamar that they all "fitted." Jacques is a bobsled champion, but we do not know how the Blake twins fit.       
 
49.10-11: his Adam's apple: Adam and apple reintroduce the Eden motif.
 
49.16-19: *monsieur* should change into sturdier brogues, but Hugh retorted that in the States one hiked in any old pair of shoes, even sneakers: Next morning, Hugh changes the shoes following his advice. Cf. "The climb he contemplated could not be accomplished in town shoes: the first and only time he had attempted to do so, he had kept losing his footing on slippery slabs of rock" (Ch. 22).
 
49.21: tempo turns: Parallel turns (from Brian Boyd's notes to LoA TT).
 
50.26: a pearl of sweat: A fairy-tale element in concert with the last paragraph. Cf. "pearls into a blindman's cup/cap" (Ch. 12).
 
50.34: a bench, eyeless but eager, faced an admirable view: The bench is to give HP a chance to embrace Armande. "'I hate life. I hate myself. I hate that beastly old bench.' She stopped to look the way his fierce finger pointed, and he embraced her" (Ch. 15). "eyeless": suggests HP's or living people's blindness.
 
50.35-51.01: his party very high above him, blue, gray, pink, red: Cf. "Armande in a pink parka" (Ch. 12).
 
51.15-16: weird-looking, reptile-green things: "Reptile-green" is also the color of ink used for erasures and insertions on the pages of *Faust in Moscow*. The color suggests the hidden connection between Giulia and Armande. They will be one in HP's dream (Ch. 20).
 
51.16-18: Their elaborate bindings looked like first cousins of orthopedic devices meant to help a cripple to walk: reflects HP's unconscious fear of breaking legs? Cf. "their cruel ice axes and coils of rope and other instruments of torture (equipment exaggerated by ignorance)" (Ch. 23); If we believe Armande's "boasting," she broke both legs in her childhood (Ch. 17). Perhaps while she was skiing?
 
51.18-20: He was allowed to shoulder those precious skis, which at first felt miraculously light but soon grew as heavy as great slabs of malachite, under which he staggered: reminds me of the legend of St. Christopher.
 
51.24: (four small oranges): Some of them will be eaten in "a nice mossy spot" hidden by the trees and the peel will mark the place for Armande's next date (Ch. 15).
 
51.26-27: A fairy-tale element seemed to imbue with its Gothic rose water all attempts to scale the battlements of her Dragon: HP's painful climbing as far as the cable car of Draconita is, on another level of the novel, a prince's exciting adventure of freeing a princess from a Dragon. "Gothic" also directs our notice to some elements of Gothic romances in the novel--"the dungeon" (Ch. 6), "a sleeping beauty on a great platter," "a choice of tools on a cushion," (Ch. 16), "Chart of Torture" (Ch. 23), and a lot of fires as Don Johnson and John Rea have discussed.      
 
Akiko Nakata