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one mass, behind which was a lake of considerable size.

ROUTE 84.

GRINDELWALD TO MEYRINGEN, BY THE GREAT SCHEIDECK.

HIS route is about 18 miles in length. Three miles up the valley, a little to the right of the path, is the Upper Glacier of Grindelwald.

From Grindelwald to the top of the Scheideck is a third of the journey to Meyringen. On the right, at every point of the way, the Wetterhorn (“Storm-peak”) rises in a bare wall, apparently close to the path; from which however, its base is distant a quarter of an hour's walk. The ground is by no means difficult. From the height of the Great Scheideck the view back upon Grindelwald is very fine.

From the Great Scheideck, down into the valley of Hasli, at Meyringen, the trip is one of exceeding magnificence. Before reaching the baths of Rosenlaui, a footpath to the right leads to the glacier of Rosenlaui, so denominated from the extreme beauty of its roseate and azure colours. It lies between the great masses of the Wellborn and Engelhörner ("Angels' peaks"), its fir-clad base, and its gigantic craggy frame, forming a most remarkable scene. In summer a torrent comes roaring down an almost fathomless rent in the mountain. We descend beside the torrent, which is impetuously plunging and foaming to take the leap of the Reichenbach, when suddenly, the vale of

Meyringen is disclosed far beneath us, with its villages and meadows, church-steeples, and clumps of trees, and the Alpbach cascade pouring over the crags on the other side. From this point the descent into the valley is nearly 2,000 feet, rugged and precipitous; and from nearly this level, the Reichenbach torrent takes its great leap down a gorge to the left of the path making the celebrated Reichenbach Falls. Afterwards, by a succession of leaps, it falls down into the valley, where it joins the Aar.

About a mile and a half from the last fall, and on the right bank of the Aar, is the MEYRINGEN, containing 2,525 inhabitants. (Hotels: SAUVAGE, excellent; Couronne). The view of the Reichenbach Falls, the Engelhörner, the snow-clad Wetterhorn, and the Rosenlaui glacier, from the village, is very charming. The Hasli vale, of which Meyringen is the capital, is reckoned a model of an Alpine valley. The climate is soft; the view includes numberless hamlets, waterfalls, and hills covered with verdure, glaciers, and snow-clad

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ROUTE 85. MEYRINGEN TO HOSPENTHAL, BY THE GRIMSEL HOSPICE AND THE FURCA PASS.

(To Grimsel, 7 hours; horse, 20 francs.)

CARRIAGE - ROAD has been completed from Meyringen over the Kirchet, to Im-Hof; passing Reichenbach Baths, it ascends the steep sides of Kirchet in zigzags. Descending the hill it traverses the meadows at the bottom of the valley, and crosses the Aar near Im-Hof (Hotel: Im Hof), just beyond which the carriage-road terminates. Pursuing the well-kept bridle-path, we reach in 2 hours

GUTTANEN (Hotel: Bür), which lies in a wild and narrow valley, surrounded with crags and cliffs. A walk of two hours brings us to the path which, leading out of the main path to the left, conducts us to the FALL OF THE HANDEK. The view from the chalet lower down is finer, as the cataract is then seen from below. This fall is considered the finest in Switzerland, and in point of impetuosity and quantity of water resembles Schaffhausen; its height is about two hundred feet. The body of the water is very great during the summer, when the snow from the mountains and the glaciers has been melted. At the same spot is seen the stream of the Erlenbach, running nearly at a right angle with the Aar: it falls as if in humble rivalry with its more noble associate, and throws its

sheet of water into that of the Aar, long before the latter reaches the ground, thus producing a beautiful effect.

A walk of 24 hours brings us to the Hospice of the Grimsel, which stands about 800 ft. below the summit of the Pass. It is a rough, strong rock building, and is now used as an inn. It is much thronged with tourists in summer. Its entourage is the most dreary in all Switzerland. On all sides and above, it is frowned upon by shapeless mountains, covered with ice and snow. Its elevation above the sea is more than 7,000 ft., and the peaks rise nearly to the height of another thousand.

The distance from Grimsel to Hospenthal is about 19 miles.

The distance from the Hospice to the Rhône glacier is about six miles. Three-quarters of an hour's walking up a tolerable path brings us to the top of the pass, where, at a height of 8,400 ft. above the sea-level, the way skirts the left margin of a little, dark, still lake, into which the bodies of French and Austrian soldiers, killed in the skirmish which took place here in 1799, were thrown. It therefore goes by the name of the "Lake of the Dead."

Beyond the lake the road leads down a steep declivity. At a little distance we come suddenly upon the view of the glacier of the Rhône, very far below; a grand object, with the furious Rhône issuing from the ice, and then leaping and dashing through the valley. The glacier is a stupendous mass of ice, extending clear across the valley, propped against an overhanging mountain (the Gallenstock), with snowy peaks towering to the right and left.

From the Rhône glacier to the Furca is about 24 hours. The

traveller, keeping the east side of the valley, has the glacier on his left for some distance. The path then turns to the right, and enters a wild-looking, treeless defile, where the only traces of human habitations to be met with are a few goatherds' huts.

On the Furca Pass is the boundary between the Cantons Valais and Uri, and within a circle of little more than 10 miles around are the sources of five prominent rivers, some of them among the largest in Europe: the Rhine, the Rhone, the Reuss, the Ticino, and the Aar. The Furca is about 8,200 ft. above the sea-level, and in clear weather commands a fine view of the Oberland range, which is seen on the side exactly opposite that discerned from the Minster platform at Berne.

A carriage road from Ober Gesteln and the Rhone Glacier, over the Furca was finished in 1866. A diligence crosses daily from Brieg, on the Simplon Pass, to Andermatt, on the St. Gothard Pass. The descent from the inn at the Furca to Hospenthal is made in 13 hours.

Descending the Furca, on the other side, the road leads frequently along the verges of dangerous banks; the country is devoid of trees, the grass is stunted and short, and no human abode is met with until the traveller comes to the little hamlet of Realp, which is about four miles from Hospenthal, and consists of four or five houses and a convent.

HOSPENTHAL (see Route 81).

ROUTE 86.

GENEVA TO LAUSANNE AND VEVAY, INCLUDING THE LAKE OF GENEVA.

ENEVA (Hotels: see "HOTEL APPENDIX"), population (1877), 48,500, is situated at the southern extremity of the Lake, at the point where the Rhone emerges. The two halves into which the city is divided by the river are connected by six bridges, the finest of which is the Pont du Mont Blanc, leading from the Rue du Mont Blanc to the English garden. Next below it is the Pont des Bergues, and from it a suspension bridge extends to the little island called Rousseau's Island, in the centre of which is Pradier's statue of Rousseau, erected by the citizens of Geneva in 1834. Fine quays, upon which are the best shops, extend along both banks of the Rhone in the vicinity of these bridges. On the left bank is the Grand Quai, and on the right the Quai des Bergues. The Quai du Mont Blanc extends along the right bank of the lake, commencing at the Pont du Mont Blanc. Beyond, and in a line with it, is the Quai des Paquis, which is handsomely planted with trees. It extends to the Pier. From both the last-named quays fine views of the Mont Blanc group may be enjoyed. On the south bank of

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GRAND HOTEL DE RUSSIE, GENEVA (including Mont Blanc).

GRAND HOTEL DE RUSSIE AND ANGLO-AMERICAN HOTEL.

This splendid modern Hotel, enjoying the most beautiful situation in Geneva, facing the Pont du Mont Blanc and steamboat landings; commands the finest uninterrupted view of Mont Blanc and the whole scenery of the Alps and the Lake. First-class Establishment, with every modern accommodation and real comfort. Reading Room, with all the principal foreign newspapers. Smoking Room, Billiard, Private Saloons, etc. Charges very moderate.

A. ADRION, PROPRIETOR.

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