Page images
PDF
EPUB

To make these felt and feelings, well may be
Things that have made me watchful; the far roll
Of your departing voices, is the knoll

Of what in me is sleepless,—if I rest.

But where of ye, oh tempests! is the goal?
Are ye like those within the human breast?

Or do ye find, at length, like eagles, some high nest ?"

Byron.

The Lake of Geneva, called by the Romans Lacus Lemanus, has nearly the shape of a half-moon, its horns being turned towards the S. It is the largest lake in Switzerland, being 55 miles long, measured close to its N. shore, and about 40 miles along its S. bank; it is 6 miles wide at the broadest part (between Rolle and Thonon), and its greatest depth (between Evian and Ouchy) is 900 ft. Its waters often vary in one year more than 50 inches, being usually lowest in the winter, between January and April, and highest in August and part of July and September, owing to the supplies then derived from the melting snows and glaciers. Besides these periodical variations, the lake is subject to other more arbitrary changes of level, called seiches. This phenomenon consists of a sudden rise and fall of the water in particular parts of the lake, independently of the agency of the wind or of any other apparent cause. It is most common in the vicinity of Geneva. During these oscillations the waters sometimes rise 5 ft., though the usual increase is not more than 2; it never lasts longer than 25 minutes, but is generally less. The cause of these seiches has not been explained with certainty, but it is believed to depend upon the unequal pressure of the atmosphere upon different parts of the surface of the lake; and they are observed to occur most commonly when the clouds are heavy and low. The lake never freezes entirely, owing to its great depth; but in severe winters the lower extremity is covered with ice. The sand and mud brought down by the Rhone and deposited around its mouth have caused considerable encroachments upon its upper extremity: even within the records of history Porte Vallais stood on its margin, and its basin is reported to have originally extended upwards as far as Bex.

"Mon lac est le premier" are the words in which Voltaire has vaunted the beauties of the Lake of Geneva; and it must be confessed that, though it wants the gloomy sublimity of the Bay of Uri and the sunny softness of the Italian lakes, with their olive and citron groves, it has high claims to admiration. It also possesses great variety of scenery. The vine-covered slopes of Vaud contrast well with the abrupt, rocky precipices of Savoy. Near Geneva the hills subside, admitting an exquisite view of Mont Blanc, whose snowy summit, though 60 miles distant, is often reflected in its waters.

"Lake Leman woos me with its crystal face,
The mirror where the stars and mountains view
The stillness of their aspect in each trace

Its clear depth yields of their far height and hue."

At its eastern or upper extremity it extends to the very base of the high Alps, which by their close vicinity give its scenery a character of increased magnificence.

The boats on the lake are very picturesque, having latine sails like the craft of the Mediterranean.

Steam-boats, 1838.-There are 4 steamers on the Lake of Geneva. The best and swiftest of these, the Aigle and Vaudois, run from Geneva to Villeneuve and back in 8 1/2 hours, almost as quickly as the other two perform the voyage from one end to the other. The Leman and Winkelried (the first is the best) set out from either end of the lake daily, and reach the opposite extremity in 7 or 8 hours. The fare is 65 batz. They stop to land and receive passengers at Coppet, Nyon, Rolle, Morges, Ouchy (the port of Lausanne), Vevey, and Villeneuve-all situated on the N. shore of the lake, and described in the next route. The S. or Savoyard shore is described in Route 57.

[blocks in formation]

GENEVA TO MARTIGNY, BY LAUSANNE, VEVEY, CHILLON, BEX, AND ST. MAURICE.

17 1/4 posts=71 Eng. miles.

This is a post-road, tolerably supplied with post-horses, the charges being the same as in France, viz. 1 fr. 50 c. for each horse per post, and 75 c. to the postilion, except that for every person in the carriage above the number of horses 1 fr. 50 c. is charged instead of 1 fr. (as in France). The postboys expect 40 sous a post.

Diligences go twice a day to Lausanne, and four times aweek to Martigny. A voiturier will take about 6 1/2 hours to Lausanne, exclusive of stoppages. The tolls at each post are heavy.

N.B. The road by the S. shore of the lake (Route 57) to St. Maurice is 2 1/2 posts shorter than this by Lausanne.

The greater part of the first stage out of Geneva lies among villas and pleasure - grounds not unlike English countryseats. Few spots in Europe présent so many admirable sites for a dwelling as the shores of Lake Leman in full view of Mont Blanc. About a mile from Geneva the Hotel of Sécheron is passed. After a mile or two Mont Blanc is hid behind the intervening mountains of Voirons, and does not reappear until near Nyon.

The parish of Versoix, through which the road passes, formerly belonged to France. The Duke de Choiseul, minister of Louis XV., irritated with some proceedings of the inhabitants of Geneva, proposed to raise a rival city at Versoix which should deprive Geneva of its trade. A pier was projected into the lake, to form a port, a grand place was laid down, and streets running at right angles were marked out; but beyond this the plan was never carried into execution. Hence the verses of Voltaire :

"A Versoix nous avons des rues,

Mais nous n'avons point de maisons."

A little beyond Versoix (now an inconsiderable village) we pass out of the Canton of Geneva into that of Vaud.

1 3/4 Coppet, a small village of 600 inhabitants, only remarkable for the Château, which belonged to Madame de Staël, immediately behind it. It is now the property of the Duc de Broglie, her son-in-law. It is a plain edifice, forming three sides of a square, the front towards the lake being flanked with a tower at each end. It was the residence of Madame de Staël as well as of her father, the French minister Necker. There is a portrait of her by David, and a bust of Necker. One room is pointed out as the study in which the author of Corinne composed many of her works. Her inkstand and desk are still preserved. The grounds are traversed by shady walks; and a clump of trees surrounded by a wall, in a field a little to the W. of the house, shrouds from view a sort of chapel in which Necker and his daughter are buried.

1 1/2 Nyon-(Inn: Soleil)-a town of 2682 inhabitants, stands on a height; but its suburb, through which the high road runs, extends down to the lake. It was the Roman Novidunum.

An excellent carriage-road ascends the Jura from this in zigzags to St. Cergues (Route 53). From the top of the Dôle, on the left of this road, and 15 miles from Nyon, there is an exquisite view (see p. 182).

1 1/2 Rolle. (Inn: Tête Noire small and not first rate.) The hills around this village are covered with vineyards, producing a tolerable wine. One of the best Vaudois wines is grown on the slope between Rolle and Aubonne, called La Cote. On the opposite shore of the lake is discerned the Gulf of Thonon, and the snowy head of Mont Blanc peering over the mountains of the Chablais. A little further on the rocks of Meillerie and the entrance of the Valais appear.

1 3/4 Morges. (Inn: La Couronne.) Behind this little town of 2800 inhabitants rises the old castle of Wufflens, distinguished by its tall square donjon and group of minor turrets, built of brick, with deep machicolations. It is said to have been built by Queen Bertha in the tenth century. It is well preserved and highly picturesque. On the next stage the river Venoge is crossed.

The distant view of Lausanne, seated on sloping hills and surmounted by its cathedral and castle, is pleasing. Between it and the lake, at the distance of 3/4 of a mile, stands the suburb or village of Ouchy (Inn: Anere, at the water-side), which may be termed the port of Lausanne. Lord Byron wrote the Prisoner of Chillon in this little inn, in the short space of two days, during which he was detained here by bad weather, June, 1816: "thus adding one more deathless association to the already immortalised localities of the lake."

Traversing the shady promenade of Montbenon we enter

1 1/2 LAUSANNE. (Inns: Faucon, excellent, but rather expensive; a new house, to be called Hôtel de Gibbon, is in progress (1838); Lion d'Or, a comfortable and not expensive house.) Lausanne, capital of the Canton Vaud, contains 14,120 inhabitants. The Pays de Vaud (Germ. Waadtland), was originally subject to the Dukes of Savoy, but having been conquered by the Bernese, remained tributary to the republic for 2 1/2 centuries, until 1798, when it purchased its own independence. The town stands on the lower slope of the Mont Jorat, which sinks gradually down to the lake, but is intersected by several ravines, giving it the form of distinct eminences. From this cause the streets ranging over broken ground are a series of ups and downs; many are very steep, and run in a direction parallel to the lake, so as to exclude all view of it. They are mostly narrow and not very clean, and few of the houses stand on the same level. If the stranger would emerge from this labyrinth of dusky buildings to look about him, he must climb up the steep ascent behind. A very good point of view is the

Terrace of the Cathedral. At the foot of the flight of steps leading to it from the market-place ask for the keys of the door, kept at the sexton's house, No. 6. The Cathedral,

a very extensive building, and internally the finest Gothic church in Switzerland, was founded A. D. 1000, and some traces of the original edifice may perhaps be traced in the round arches behind the high altar. With this exception the existing building dates from the 13th century, 1275. Some of the pillars supporting the nave are detached. The circular window in the N. transept, 30 ft. in diameter, is remarkable. Among the monuments within the church are a mailed effigy of Otho of Gransom, whose ancestor, Otto de Grandeson, held several important offices in England, under Henry III. and Edward I.; the monument of Victor Amadeus VIII. (Voltaire's "Bizarre Amédée"), who was duke of Savoy, Bishop of Geneva, and pope under the title of Felix V., but resigned in succession all these dignities, preferring to end his days as a monk in the convent of Ripaille, on the opposite shore of the lake. His tomb is much mutilated. The monument of Mrs. Stratford Canning, a vase with a bas-relief, by Bartolini (not by Canova, as most guidebooks have it), is not very remarkable. Here also is interred the venerated Bernard de Menthon, founder of the Hospice of the Great St. Bernard, which is named after him.

On another platform, a little way behind the Terrace of the Cathedral, stands the Castle, a picturesque, massive square tower with four turrets at the angles. It was originally the residence of the Bishops of Lausanne, but is now the councilhouse of the canton.

Lausanne possesses a College, founded 1587, and a Cantonal Museum, in which are some objects of interest-such as a collection of minerals from Bex and a model of the saltmines there. It is not deficient in the other branches of natural history. A specimen of the silurus glanis, one of the largest fresh-water fishes, came from the Lake of Morat. Many antiquities discovered within the canton, at Aventicum and on the borders of the Lake Leman, are preserved here.

The house of Gibbon the historian is in the lower part of the town, behind the church of St. Francis, and on the right of the road leading down to Ouchy. It is said not to be changed. It has a garden, a terrace overlooking the lake, a summer-house, and a few acacias; but another summer-house, in which he is said to have finished his history, and his berceau-walk, have been removed. He alludes to them in the following remarkable passage:

"It was on the day or rather the night of the 27th of June, 1787, between the hours of eleven and twelve, that I wrote the last line of the last page in a summer-house in my garden. After laying down my pen I took several turns in a berceau, or covered walk of acacias, which commands a prospect of

« PreviousContinue »