This essay was published in the Eagle,
Vol. 1, No. 5. in the Easter Term, 1859. It
describes a holiday trip made by Butler in June, 1857,
in company with a friend whose name, which was Joseph
Green, Butler Italianised as Giuseppe Verdi.
I am permitted by Professor Bonney to quote a few
words from a private letter of his referring to Butler’s
tour: “It was remarkable in the amount
of ground covered and the small sum spent, but still
more in the direction taken in the first part of the
tour. Dauphine was then almost a TERRA INCOGNITA
to English or any other travellers.”
[From the Eagle, Vol. 1, No. 5.
Easter Term, 1859, p. 241.]
As the vacation is near, and many
may find themselves with three weeks’ time on
their hand, five-and-twenty pounds in their pockets,
and the map of Europe before them, perhaps the following
sketch of what can be effected with such money and
in such time, may not come amiss to those, who, like
ourselves a couple of years ago, are in doubt how
to enjoy themselves most effectually after a term’s
hard reading.
To some, probably, the tour we decided
upon may seem too hurried, and the fatigue too great
for too little profit; still even to these it may
happen that a portion of the following pages may be
useful. Indeed, the tour was scarcely conceived
at first in its full extent, originally we had intended
devoting ourselves entirely to the French architecture
of Normandy and Brittany. Then we grew ambitious,
and stretched our imaginations to Paris. Then
the longing for a snowy mountain waxed, and the love
of French Gothic waned, and we determined to explore
the French Alps. Then we thought that we must
just step over them and take a peep into Italy, and
so, disdaining to return by the road we had already
travelled, we would cut off the north-west corner
of Italy, and cross the Alps again into Switzerland,
where, of course, we must see the cream of what was
to be seen; and then thinking it possible that our
three weeks and our five-and-twenty pounds might be
looking foolish, we would return, via Strasburg to
Paris, and so to Cambridge. This plan we eventually
carried into execution, spending not a penny more money,
nor an hour’s more time; and, despite the declarations
which met us on all sides that we could never achieve
anything like all we had intended, I hope to be able
to show how we did achieve it, and how anyone else
may do the like if he has a mind. A person with
a good deal of energy might do much more than this;
we ourselves had at one time entertained thoughts
of going to Rome for two days, and thence to Naples,
walking over the Monte St. Angelo from Castellamare
to Amalfi (which for my own part I cherish with fond
affection, as being far the most lovely thing that
I have ever seen), and then returning as with a Nunc
Dimittis, and I still think it would have been very
possible; but, on the whole, such a journey would not
have been so well, for the long tedious road between
Marseilles and Paris would have twice been traversed
by us, to say nothing of the sea journey between Marseilles
and Civita Vecchia. However, no more of what
might have been, let us proceed to what was.
If on Tuesday, June 9 [i.e. 1857],
you leave London Bridge at six o’clock in the
morning, you will get (via Newhaven) to Dieppe at
fifteen minutes past three. If on landing you
go to the Hotel Victoria, you will find good accommodation
and a table d’hote at five o’clock; you
can then go and admire the town, which will not be
worth admiring, but which will fill you with pleasure
on account of the novelty and freshness of everything
you meet; whether it is the old bonnet-less, short-petticoated
women walking arm and arm with their grandsons, whether
the church with its quaint sculpture of the Entombment
of our Lord, and the sad votive candles ever guttering
in front of it, or whether the plain evidence that
meets one at every touch and turn, that one is among
people who live out of doors very much more than ourselves,
or what not—all will be charming, and if
you are yourself in high spirits and health, full of
anticipation and well inclined to be pleased with
all you see, Dieppe will appear a very charming place,
and one which a year or two hence you will fancy that
you would like to revisit. But now we must leave
it at forty-five minutes past seven, and at twelve
o’clock on Tuesday night we shall find ourselves
in Paris. We drive off to the Hotel de Normandie
in the Rue St. Honore, 290 (I think), stroll out and
get a cup of coffee, and return to bed at one o’clock.
The next day we spent in Paris, and
of it no account need be given, save perhaps the reader
may be advised to ascend the Arc de Triomphe, and
not to waste his time in looking at Napoleon’s
hats and coats and shoes in the Louvre; to eschew
all the picture rooms save the one with the Murillos,
and the great gallery, and to dine at the Diners de
Paris. If he asks leave to wash his hands before
dining there, he will observe a little astonishment
among the waiters at the barbarian cleanliness of
the English, and be shown into a little room, where
a diminutive bowl will be proffered to him, of which
more anon; let him first (as we did) wash or rather
sprinkle his face as best he can, and then we will
tell him after dinner what we generally do with the
bowls in question. I forget how many things
they gave us, but I am sure many more than would be
pleasant to read, nor do I remember any circumstance
connected with the dinner, save that on occasion of
one of the courses, the waiter perceiving a little
perplexity on my part as to how I should manage an
artichoke served a la francaise, feelingly removed
my knife and fork from my hand and cut it up himself
into six mouthfuls, returning me the whole with a
sigh of gratitude for the escape of the artichoke
from a barbarous and unnatural end; and then after
dinner they brought us little tumblers of warm lavender
scent and water to wash our mouths out, and the little
bowls to spit into; but enough of eating, we must
have some more coffee at a cafe on the Boulevards,
watch the carriages and the people and the dresses
and the sunshine and all the pomps and vanities which
the Boulevards have not yet renounced; return to the
inn, fetch our knapsacks, and be off to the Chemin
de Fer de Lyon by forty-five minutes past seven; our
train leaves at five minutes past eight, and we are
booked to Grenoble. All night long the train
speeds towards the south. We leave Sens with
its grey cathedral solemnly towering in the moonlight
a mile on the left. (How few remember, that to the
architect William of Sens we owe Canterbury Cathedral.)
Fontainebleau is on the right, station after station
wakes up our dozing senses, while ever in our ears
are ringing as through the dim light we gaze on the
surrounding country, “the pastures of Switzerland
and the poplar valleys of France.”
It is still dark—as dark,
that is, as the midsummer night will allow it to be,
when we are aware that we have entered on a tunnel;
a long tunnel, very long—I fancy there must
be high hills above it; for I remember that some few
years ago when I was travelling up from Marseilles
to Paris in midwinter, all the way from Avignon (between
which place and Chalon the railway was not completed),
there had been a dense frozen fog; on neither hand
could anything beyond the road be descried, while
every bush and tree was coated with a thick and steadily
increasing fringe of silver hoar-frost, for the night
and day, and half-day that it took us to reach this
tunnel, all was the same—bitter cold dense
fog and ever silently increasing hoar-frost:
but on emerging from it, the whole scene was completely
changed; the air was clear, the sun shining brightly,
no hoar-frost and only a few patches of fast melting
snow, everything in fact betokening a thaw of some
days’ duration. Another thing I know about
this tunnel which makes me regard it with veneration
as a boundary line in countries, namely, that on every
high ground after this tunnel on clear days Mont Blanc
may be seen. True, it is only very rarely seen,
but I have known those who have seen it; and accordingly
touch my companion on the side, and say, “We
are within sight of the Alps”; a few miles farther
on and we are at Dijon. It is still very early
morning, I think about three o’clock, but we
feel as if we were already at the Alps, and keep looking
anxiously out for them, though we well know that it
is a moral impossibility that we should see them for
some hours at the least. Indian corn comes in
after Dijon; the oleanders begin to come out of their
tubs; the peach trees, apricots, and nectarines unnail
themselves from the walls, and stand alone in the
open fields. The vineyards are still scrubby,
but the practised eye readily detects with each hour
some slight token that we are nearer the sun than
we were, or, at any rate, farther from the North Pole.
We don’t stay long at Dijon nor at Chalon,
at Lyons we have an hour to wait; breakfast off a basin
of cafe au lait and a huge hunch of bread, get a miserable
wash, compared with which the spittoons of the Diners
de Paris were luxurious, and return in time to proceed
to St. Rambert, whence the railroad branches off to
Grenoble. It is very beautiful between Lyons
and St. Rambert. The mulberry trees show the
silkworm to be a denizen of the country, while the
fields are dazzlingly brilliant with poppies and salvias;
on the other side of the Rhone rise high cloud-capped
hills, but towards the Alps we strain our eyes in vain.
At St. Rambert the railroad to Grenoble
branches off at right angles to the main line, it
was then only complete as far as Rives, now it is
continued the whole way to Grenoble; by which the reader
will save some two or three hours, but miss a beautiful
ride from Rives to Grenoble by the road. The
valley bears the name of Gresivaudan. It is very
rich and luxuriant, the vineyards are more Italian,
the fig trees larger than we have yet seen them, patches
of snow whiten the higher hills, and we feel that
we are at last indeed among the outskirts of the Alps
themselves. I am told that we should have stayed
at Voreppe, seen the Grande Chartreuse (for which see
Murray), and then gone on to Grenoble, but we were
pressed for time and could not do everything.
At Grenoble we arrived about two o’clock, washed
comfortably at last and then dined; during dinner a
caleche was preparing to drive us on to Bourg d’Oisans,
a place some six or seven and thirty miles farther
on, and by thirty minutes past three we find ourselves
reclining easily within it, and digesting dinner with
the assistance of a little packet, for which we paid
one-and-fourpence at the well-known shop of Mr. Bacon,
Market-square, Cambridge. It is very charming.
The air is sweet, warm, and sunny, there has been
bad weather for some days here, but it is clearing
up; the clouds are lifting themselves hour by hour,
we are evidently going to have a pleasant spell of
fine weather. The caleche jolts a little, and
the horse is decidedly shabby, both qua horse and
qua harness, but our moustaches are growing, and our
general appearance is in keeping. The wine was
very pleasant at Grenoble, and we have a pound of
ripe cherries between us; so, on the whole, we would
not change with his Royal Highness Prince Albert or
all the Royal Family, and jolt on through the long
straight poplar avenue that colonnades the road above
the level swamp and beneath the hills, and turning
a sharp angle enter Vizille, a wretched place, only
memorable because from this point we begin definitely,
though slowly, to enter the hills and ascend by the
side of the Romanche through the valley, which that
river either made or found—who knows or
cares? But we do know very well that we are
driving up a very exquisitely beautiful valley, that
the Romanche takes longer leaps from rock to rock
than she did, that the hills have closed in upon us,
that we see more snow each time the valley opens,
that the villages get scantier, and that at last a
great giant iceberg walls up the way in front, and
we feast our eyes on the long-desired sight till after
that the setting sun has tinged it purple (a sure
sign of a fine day), its ghastly pallor shows us that
the night is upon us. It is cold, and we are
not sorry at half-past nine to find ourselves at Bourg
d’Oisans, where there is a very fair inn kept
by one Martin; we get a comfortable supper of eggs
and go to bed fairly tired.
This we must remind the reader is
Thursday night, on Tuesday morning we left London,
spent one day in Paris, and are now sleeping among
the Alps, sharpish work, but very satisfactory, and
a prelude to better things by and by. The next
day we made rather a mistake, instead of going straight
on to Briancon we went up a valley towards Mont Pelvoux
(a mountain nearly 14,000 feet high), intending to
cross a high pass above La Berarde down to Briancon,
but when we got to St. Christophe we were told the
pass would not be open till August, so returned and
slept a second night at Bourg d’Oisans.
The valley, however, was all that could be desired,
mingled sun and shadow, tumbling river, rich wood,
and mountain pastures, precipices all around, and
snow-clad summits continually unfolding themselves;
Murray is right in calling the valley above Venosc
a scene of savage sterility. At Venosc, in the
poorest of hostelries was a tuneless cracked old instrument,
half piano, half harpsichord—how it ever
found its way there we were at a loss to conceive—and
an irrelevant clock that struck seven times by fits
and starts at its own convenience during our one o’clock
dinner; we returned to Bourg d’Oisans at seven,
and were in bed by nine.
Saturday, June 13.
Having found that a conveyance to
Briancon was beyond our finances, and that they would
not take us any distance at a reasonable charge, we
determined to walk the whole fifty miles in the day,
and half-way down the mountains, sauntering listlessly
accordingly left Bourg d’Oisans at a few minutes
before five in the morning. The clouds were
floating over the uplands, but they soon began to rise,
and before seven o’clock the sky was cloudless;
along the road were passing hundreds of people (though
it was only five in the morning) in detachments of
from two to nine, with cattle, sheep, pigs, and goats,
picturesque enough but miserably lean and gaunt:
we leave them to proceed to the fair, and after a
three miles’ level walk through a straight poplar
avenue, commence ascending far above the Romanche;
all day long we slowly ascend, stopping occasionally
to refresh ourselves with vin ordinaire and water,
but making steady way in the main, though heavily
weighted and under a broiling sun, at one we reach
La Grave, which is opposite the Mont de Lans, a most
superb mountain. The whole scene equal to anything
in Switzerland, as far as the mountains go.
The Mont de Lans is opposite the windows, seeming
little more than a stone’s throw off, and causing
my companion (whose name I will, with his permission,
Italianise into that of the famous composer Giuseppe
Verdi) to think it a mere nothing to mount to the
top of those sugared pinnacles which he will not believe
are many miles distant in reality. After dinner
we trudge on, the scenery constantly improving, the
snow drawing down to us, and the Romanche dwindling
hourly; we reach the top of the Col du Lautaret, which
Murray must describe; I can only say that it is first-class
scenery. The flowers are splendid, acres and
acres of wild narcissus, the Alpine cowslip, gentians,
large purple and yellow anemones, soldanellas, and
the whole kith and kin of the high Alpine pasture
flowers; great banks of snow lie on each side of the
road, and probably will continue to do so till the
middle of July, while all around are glaciers and
precipices innumerable.
We only got as far as Monetier after
all, for, reaching that town at half-past eight, and
finding that Briancon was still eight miles further
on, we preferred resting there at the miserable but
cheap and honest Hotel de l’Europe; had we gone
on a little farther we should have found a much better
one, but we were tired with our forty-two miles’
walk, and, after a hasty supper and a quiet pipe,
over which we watch the last twilight on the Alps above
Briancon, we turn in very tired but very much charmed.
Sunday morning was the clearest and
freshest morning that ever tourists could wish for,
the grass crisply frozen (for we are some three or
four thousand feet above the sea), the glaciers descending
to a level but little higher than the road; a fine
range of Alps in front over Briancon, and the road
winding down past a new river (for we have long lost
the Romanche) towards the town, which is some six
or seven miles distant.
It was a fete—the Fete
du bon Dieu, celebrated annually on this day throughout
all this part of the country; in all the villages there
were little shrines erected, adorned with strings of
blue corncockle, narcissus heads, and poppies, bunches
of green, pink, and white calico, moss and fir-tree
branches, and in the midst of these tastefully arranged
bowers was an image of the Virgin and her Son, with
whatever other saints the place was possessed of.
At Briancon, which we reached (in
a trap) at eight o’clock, these demonstrations
were more imposing, but less pleasing; the soldiers,
too, were being drilled and exercised, and the whole
scene was one of the greatest animation, such as Frenchmen
know how to exhibit on the morning of a gala day.
Leaving our trap at Briancon and making
a hasty breakfast at the Hotel de la Paix, we walked
up a very lonely valley towards Cervieres. I
dare not say how many hours we wended our way up the
brawling torrent without meeting a soul or seeing a
human habitation; it was fearfully hot too, and we
longed for vin ordinaire; Cervieres seemed as though
it never would come—still the same rugged
precipices, snow-clad heights, brawling torrent, and
stony road, butterflies beautiful and innumerable,
flowers to match, sky cloudless. At last we
are there; through the town, or rather village, the
river rushes furiously, the dismantled houses and
gaping walls affording palpable traces of the fearful
inundations of the previous year, not a house near
the river was sound, many quite uninhabitable, and
more such as I am sure few of us would like to inhabit.
However, it is Cervieres such as it is, and we hope
for our vin ordinaire; but, alas!—not a
human being, man, woman or child, is to be seen, the
houses are all closed, the noonday quiet holds the
hill with a vengeance, unbroken, save by the ceaseless
roar of the river.
While we were pondering what this
loneliness could mean, and wherefore we were unable
to make an entrance even into the little auberge that
professed to loger a pied et a cheval, a kind of low
wail or chaunt began to make itself heard from the
other side of the river; wild and strange, yet full
of a music of its own, it took my friend and myself
so much by surprise that we almost thought for the
moment that we had trespassed on to the forbidden ground
of some fairy people who lived alone here, high amid
the sequestered valleys where mortal steps were rare,
but on going to the corner of the street we were undeceived
indeed, but most pleasurably surprised by the pretty
spectacle that presented itself.
For from the church opposite first
were pouring forth a string of young girls clad in
their Sunday’s best, then followed the youths,
as in duty bound, then came a few monks or friars or
some such folk, carrying the Virgin, then the men
of the place, then the women and lesser children,
all singing after their own rough fashion; the effect
was electrical, for in a few minutes the procession
reached us, and dispersing itself far and wide, filled
the town with as much life as it had before been lonely.
It was like a sudden introduction of the whole company
on to the theatre after the stage has been left empty
for a minute, and to us was doubly welcome as affording
us some hope of our wine.
“Vous etes Piedmontais, monsieur,”
said one to me. I denied the accusation.
“Alors vous etes Allemands.” I again
denied and said we were English, whereon they opened
their eyes wide and said, “Anglais,—mais
c’est une autre chose,” and seemed
much pleased, for the alliance was then still in full
favour. It caused them a little disappointment
that we were Protestants, but they were pleased at
being able to tell us that there was a Protestant minister
higher up the valley which we said would “do
us a great deal of pleasure.”
The vin ordinaire was execrable—they
only, however, charged us nine sous for it, and on
our giving half a franc and thinking ourselves exceedingly
stingy for not giving a whole one, they shouted out
“Voila les Anglais, voila la generosite des Anglais,”
with evident sincerity. I thought to myself
that the less we English corrupted the primitive simplicity
of these good folks the better; it was really refreshing
to find several people protesting about one’s
generosity for having paid a halfpenny more for a bottle
of wine than was expected; at Monetier we asked whether
many English came there, and they told us yes, a great
many, there had been fifteen there last year, but
I should imagine that scarcely fifteen could travel
up past Cervieres, and yet the English character be
so little known as to be still evidently popular.
I don’t know what o’clock
it was when we left Cervieres—midday I
should imagine; we left the river on our left and began
to ascend a mountain pass called Izouard, as far as
I could make out, but will not pledge myself to have
caught the name correctly; it was more lonely than
ever, very high, much more snow on the top than on
the previous day over the Col du Lautaret, the path
scarcely distinguishable, indeed quite lost in many
places, very beautiful but not so much so as the Col
du Lautaret, and better on descending towards Queyras
than on ascending; from the summit of the pass the
view of the several Alpine chains about is very fine,
but from the entire absence of trees of any kind it
is more rugged and barren than I altogether liked;
going down towards Queyras we found the letters S.I.C.
marked on a rock, evidently with the spike of an alpine-stock,—we
wondered whether they stood for St. John’s College.
We reached Queyras at about four very
tired, for yesterday’s work was heavy, and refresh
ourselves with a huge omelette and some good Provence
wine.
Reader, don’t go into that auberge,
carry up provision from Briancon, or at any rate carry
the means of eating it: they have only two knives
in the place, one for the landlord and one for the
landlady; these are clasp knives, and they carry them
in their pockets; I used the landlady’s, my
companion had the other; the room was very like a
cow-house—dark, wooden, and smelling strongly
of manure; outside I saw that one of the beams supporting
a huge projecting balcony that ran round the house
was resting on a capital of white marble—a
Lombard capital that had evidently seen better days,
they could not tell us whence it came. Meat they
have none, so we gorge ourselves with omelette, and
at half-past five trudge on, for we have a long way
to go yet, and no alternative but to proceed.
Abries is the name of the place we
stopped at that night; it was pitch-dark when we reached
it, and the whole town was gone to bed, but by great
good luck we found a cafe still open (the inn was shut
up for the night), and there we lodged. I dare
not say how many miles we had walked, but we were
still plucky, and having prevailed at last on the
landlord to allow us clean sheets on our beds instead
of the dirty ones he and his wife had been sleeping
on since Christmas, and making the best of the solitary
decanter and pie dish which was all the washing implements
we were allowed (not a toothmug even extra), we had
coffee and bread and brandy for supper, and retired
at about eleven to the soundest sleep in spite of our
somewhat humble accommodation. If nasty, at any
rate it was cheap; they charged us a franc a piece
for our suppers, beds, and two cigars; we went to
the inn to breakfast, where, though the accommodation
was somewhat better, the charge was most extortionate.
Murray is quite right in saying the travellers should
bargain beforehand at this inn (chez Richard); I think
they charged us five francs for the most ordinary
breakfast. From this place we started at about
nine, and took a guide as far as the top of the Col
de la Croix Haute, having too nearly lost our way
yesterday; the paths have not been traversed much
yet, and the mule and sheep droppings are but scanty
indicators of the direction of paths of which the
winds and rain have obliterated all other traces.
The Col de la Croix Haute is rightly
named, it was very high, but not so hard to ascend
until we reached the snow. On the Italian side
it is terribly steep, from the French side, however,
the slope is more gradual. The snow was deeper
at the top of this pass than on either of the two
previous days; in many places we sank deep in, but
had no real difficulty in crossing; on the Italian
side the snow was gone and the path soon became clear
enough, so we sent our guide to the right about and
trudged on alone.
A sad disappointment, however, awaited
us, for instead of the clear air that we had heretofore
enjoyed, the clouds were rolling up from the valley,
and we entirely lost the magnificent view of the plains
of Lombardy which we ought to have seen; this was our
first mishap, and we bore it heroically. A lunch
may be had at Prali, and there the Italian tongue
will be heard for the first time.
We must have both looked very questionable
personages, for I remember that a man present asked
me for a cigar; I gave him two, and he proffered a
sou in return as a matter of course.
Shortly below Prali the clouds drew
off, or rather we reached a lower level, so that they
were above us, and now the walnut and the chestnut,
the oak and the beech have driven away the pines of
the other side, not that there were many of them;
soon, too, the vineyards come in, the Indian corn
again flourishes everywhere, the cherries grow ripe
as we descend, and in an hour or two we felt to our
great joy that we were fairly in Italy.
The descent is steep beyond compare,
for La Tour, which we reached by four o’clock,
is quite on the plain, very much on a level with Turin—I
do not remember any descent between the two—and
the pass cannot be much under eight thousand feet.
Passports are asked at Bobbio, but
the very sight of the English name was at that time
sufficient to cause the passport to be returned unscrutinised.
La Tour is a Protestant place, or
at any rate chiefly so, indeed all the way from Cervieres
we have been among people half Protestant and half
Romanist; these were the Waldenses of the Middle Ages,
they are handsome, particularly the young women, and
I should fancy an honest simple race enough, but not
over clean.
As a proof that we were in Italy we
happened while waiting for table d’hote to be
leaning over the balcony that ran round the house and
passed our bedroom door, when a man and a girl came
out with two large pails in their hands, and we watched
them proceed to a cart with a barrel in it, which
was in a corner of the yard; we had been wondering
what was in the barrel and were glad to see them commence
tapping it, when lo! out spouted the blood-red wine
with which they actually half filled their pails before
they left the spot. This was as Italy should
be. After dinner, too, as we stroll in the showy
Italian sort of piazza near the inn, the florid music
which fills the whole square, accompanied by a female
voice of some pretensions, again thoroughly Italianises
the scene, and when she struck up our English national
anthem (with such a bass accompaniment!) nothing could
be imagined more incongruous.
Sleeping at La Tour at the hotel kept
by M. Gai (which is very good, clean, and cheap),
we left next morning, i.e. Tuesday, June
16, at four by diligence for Pinerolo, thence by rail
to Turin where we spent the day. It was wet
and we saw no vestiges of the Alps.
Turin is a very handsome city, very
regularly built, the streets running nearly all parallel
to and at right angles with each other; there are
no suburbs, and the consequence is that at the end
of every street one sees the country; the Alps surround
the city like a horseshoe, and hence many of the streets
seem actually walled in with a snowy mountain.
Nowhere are the Alps seen to greater advantage than
from Turin. I speak from the experience, not
of the journey I am describing, but of a previous
one. From the Superga the view is magnificent,
but from the hospital for soldiers just above the
Po on the eastern side of the city the view is very
similar, and the city seen to greater advantage.
The Po is a fine river, but very muddy, not like
the Ticino which has the advantage of getting washed
in the Lago Maggiore. On the whole Turin is well
worth seeing. Leaving it, however, on Wednesday
morning we arrived at Arona about half-past eleven:
the country between the two places is flat, but rich
and well cultivated: much rice is grown, and
in consequence the whole country easily capable of
being laid under water, a thing which I should imagine
the Piedmontese would not be slow to avail themselves
of; we ought to have had the Alps as a background
to the view, but they were still veiled. It was
here that a countryman, seeing me with one or two
funny little pipes which I had bought in Turin, asked
me if I was a fabricante di pipi—a pipe-maker.
By the time that we were at Arona
the sun had appeared, and the clouds were gone; here,
too, we determined to halt for half a day, neither
of us being quite the thing, so after a visit to the
colossal statue of San Carlo, which is very fine and
imposing, we laid ourselves down under the shade of
some chestnut trees above the lake, and enjoyed the
extreme beauty of everything around us, until we fell
fast asleep, and yet even in sleep we seemed to retain
a consciousness of the unsurpassable beauty of the
scene. After dinner (we were stopping at the
Hotel de la Poste, a very nice inn indeed) we took
a boat and went across the lake to Angera, a little
town just opposite; it was in the Austrian territory,
but they made no delay about admitting us; the reason
of our excursion was, that we might go and explore
the old castle there, which is seated on an inconsiderable
eminence above the lake. It affords an excellent
example of Italian domestic Gothic of the Middle Ages;
San Carlo was born and resided here, and, indeed,
if saintliness were to depend upon beauty of natural
scenery, no wonder at his having been a saint.
The castle is only tenanted by an
old man who keeps the place; we found him cooking
his supper over a small crackling fire of sticks,
which he had lighted in the main hall; his feeble old
voice chirps about San Carlo this and San Carlo that
as we go from room to room. We have no carpets
here—plain honest brick floors—the
chairs, indeed, have once been covered with velvet,
but they are now so worn that one can scarcely detect
that they have been so, the tables warped and worm-eaten,
the few, that is, that remained there, the shutters
cracked and dry with the sun and summer of so many
hundred years—no Renaissance work here,
yet for all that there was something about it which
made it to me the only really pleasurable nobleman’s
mansion that I have ever been over; the view from the
top is superb, and then the row home to Arona, the
twinkling lights softly gleaming in the lake, the
bells jangling from the tall and gaudy campaniles,
the stillness of the summer night—so warm
and yet so refreshing on the water; hush, there are
some people singing—how sweetly their voices
are borne to us upon the slight breath of wind that
alone is stirring; oh, it is a cruel thing to think
of war in connection with such a spot as this, and
yet from this very Angera to this very Arona it is
that the Austrians have been crossing to commence
their attack on Sardinia. I fear these next summer
nights will not be broken with the voice of much singing
and that we shall have to hush for the roaring of
cannon.
I never knew before how melodiously
frogs can croak—there is a sweet guttural
about some of these that I never heard in England:
before going to bed, I remember particularly one amorous
batrachian courting malgre sa maman regaled us with
a lusciously deep rich croak, that served as a good
accompaniment for the shrill whizzing sound of the
cigales.
My space is getting short, but fortunately
we are getting on to ground better known; I will therefore
content myself with sketching out the remainder of
our tour and leaving the reader to Murray for descriptions.
We left Arona with regret on Thursday
morning (June 18), took steamer to the Isola Bella,
which is an example of how far human extravagance
and folly can spoil a rock, which had it been left
alone would have been very beautiful, and thence by
a little boat went to Baveno; thence we took diligence
for Domo d’Ossola; the weather clouded towards
evening and big raindrops beginning to descend we
thought it better to proceed at once by the same diligence
over the Simplon; we did not care to walk the pass
in wet, therefore leaving Domo d’Ossola at ten
o’clock that night we arrived at Iselle about
two; the weather clearing we saw the gorge of Gondo
and walked a good way up the pass in the early morning
by the diligence; breakfasted at Simplon at four o’clock
in the morning, and without waiting a moment as soon
as we got out at Brieg set off for Visp, which we
reached at twelve on foot; we washed and dressed there,
dined and advanced to Leuk, and thence up the most
exquisitely beautiful road to Leukerbad, which we reached
at about eight o’clock after a very fatiguing
day. The Hotel de la France is clean and cheap.
Next morning we left at half-past five and, crossing
the Gemini, got to Frutigen at half-past one, took
an open trap after dinner and drove to Interlaken,
which we reached on the Saturday night at eight o’clock,
the weather first rate; Sunday we rested at Interlaken;
on Monday we assailed the Wengern Alp, but the weather
being pouring wet we halted on the top and spent the
night there, being rewarded by the most transcendent
evening view of the Jungfrau, Eiger, and Monch in
the clear cold air seen through a thin veil of semi-transparent
cloud that was continually scudding across them.
Next morning early we descended to
Grindelwald, thence past the upper glacier under the
Wetterhorn over the Scheidegg to Rosenlaui, where
we dined and saw the glacier, after dinner, descending
the valley we visited the falls of Reichenbach (which
the reader need not do if he means to see those of
the Aar at Handegg), and leaving Meyringen on our
left we recommenced an ascent of the valley of the
Aar, sleeping at Guttannen, about ten miles farther
on.
Next day, i.e. Wednesday,
June 24, leaving Guttannen very early, passing the
falls of Handegg, which are first rate, we reached
the hospice at nine; had some wine there, and crawled
on through the snow and up the rocks to the summit
of the pass—here we met an old lady, in
a blue ugly, with a pair of green spectacles, carried
in a chaise a porteur; she had taken it into her head
in her old age that she would like to see a little
of the world, and here she was. We had seen
her lady’s maid at the hospice, concerning whom
we were told that she was “bien sage,”
and did not scream at the precipices. On the
top of the Gemini, too, at half-past seven in the morning,
we had met a somewhat similar lady walking alone with
a blue parasol over the snow; about half an hour after
we met some porters carrying her luggage, and found
that she was an invalid lady of Berne, who was walking
over to the baths at Leukerbad for the benefit of her
health—we scarcely thought there could be
much occasion—leaving these two good ladies
then, let us descend the Grimsel to the bottom of
the glacier of the Rhone, and then ascend the Furka—a
stiff pull; we got there by two o’clock, dined
(Italian is spoken here again), and finally reached
Hospenthal at half-past five after a very long day.
On Thursday walking down to Amstegg
and taking a trap to Fluelen, we then embarked on
board a steamer and had a most enjoyable ride to Lucerne,
where we slept; Friday to Basle by rail, walking over
the Hauenstein, {2} and getting a magnificent panorama
(alas! a final one) of the Alps, and from Basle to
Strasburg, where we ascended the cathedral as far
as they would let us without special permission from
a power they called Mary, and then by the night train
to Paris, where we arrived Saturday morning at ten.
Left Paris on Sunday afternoon, slept
at Dieppe; left Dieppe Monday morning, got to London
at three o’clock or thereabouts, and might have
reached Cambridge that night had we been so disposed;
next day came safely home to dear old St. John’s,
cash in hand 7d.
From my window {3} in the cool of
the summer twilight I look on the umbrageous chestnuts
that droop into the river; Trinity library rears its
stately proportions on the left; opposite is the bridge;
over that, on the right, the thick dark foliage is
blackening almost into sombreness as the night draws
on. Immediately beneath are the arched cloisters
resounding with the solitary footfall of meditative
students, and suggesting grateful retirement.
I say to myself then, as I sit in my open window,
that for a continuance I would rather have this than
any scene I have visited during the whole of our most
enjoyed tour, and fetch down a Thucydides, for I must
go to Shilleto at nine o’clock to-morrow.