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;»/ -..''>• Or NEW YOEK HARPER & BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS FRANKLIN SQUARE 1880 TBI UBRAIIT •r CONGRESS WASHINGTON Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1879, by HARPER & BROTHERS, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. Vv i'l ;\ TO THIS RECORD OF OUR WANDERINGS I0 ^ffectionatelj) Inscribe!) —IN ATONEMENT. CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. p^cjE Ukder the Watzmann 13 CHAPTER H. Pass Lueg and the Pinzgau 24 CHAPTER IH. Zeller-See and Ziller Thal 30 CHAPTER IV. Those whom we Met, and their Ways 39 CHAPTER V. The City of the Inn 44 CHAPTER VI. The People and their Life 54 CHAPTER VII. Across the Brenner 59 CHAPTER VIII. The City of the Bells 65 CHAPTER IX. Into the Grodner Thal = .... 73 10 CONTENTS. CHAPTER X. PAGE A Day on the Seisser Alp 86 CHAPTER XL At the Foot of the Great Eange , . . 96 CHAPTER Xn. The Portals of the Dolotmites 102 CHAPTER XHI. Cortina D'Ampezzo 106 CHAPTER XIV. The Ascent of Monte Tofana 116 CHAPTER XY. To THE Mesurina Alp 127 CHAPTER XVI. From the Great Peaks to the Lagunes 131 CHAPTER XVII. A Morning in the Streets of Venice 136 CHAPTER XVIII. Circumlocution 142 CHAPTER XIX. The Lakes 147 CHAPTER XX. The Vaudois Valleys. — The Waldenses 160 CHAPTER XXL Into the Higher Valleys „ 166 ILLUSTRATIONS. VAGB Berg uud Thai Frontispiece The Watzmann, overlooking Berchtes- gaden 15 Peasant Girl 16 Peasant 17 Entrance to the Konigs-See .... 18 Konigs-See 19 Lake in Salt-mine, Berchtesgaden . . 21 Costume of the Salt-mine .... 22 Pass Lneg 25 Schloss Fischhorn 28 The Wilde Kaiser 31 Hopfgarten . 32 Farm-house 35 Costumes of the Ziller Thai .... 37 Edelweiss 44 Maria Theresa Strasse, Innsbruck . . 45 Goldenes Dach 46 King Arthur 47 Andreas Hofer 48 Philippine Welser, Countess of Tyrol . 49 Terra-cotta Stove at Amras .... 51 Telfs 52 "Wrestling." — [From a Painting by Defregger] 56 PAGE " Finger-hacking." — [From a Paint- ing by Defregger] 57 Profile of the Brenner Kailway . . 59 Parish Church, Botzeu 62 Meran, from the Kuchelberg ... 63 Schloss Tirol 69 Vineyard Watch ....... 72 Alpen Eosen 74 A Village Street 75 St. Ulrich and the Lang Kofel . . 76 Costume of Bride in the Grodner Thai 79 The Wood-carver 81 Tyrolese Costume, Val Sugana . . 82 A Mountain Porter 84 The Lang Kofel, from the Seisser Alp 87 Tyrolese Costume, Sarn Thai ... 88 Costume of the Dux Thai .... 91 The Glacier of Marmolata .... 94 William Howitt 98 Lienz, Puster Thai 100 The Inn at Landro 103 Schluderbach and the Croda Eossa . 104 Cortina and Monte Tofana .... 107 12 ILLUSTRATIONS. Fresco on tlie outside of the Aquila Nera 109 Monte Antelao 112 Civita and Lake Alleghe .... 114 Cinque Torre and Nuvalau . . . 117 Mesurina Lake and the Drei Ziu- nen 128 "The Women with their busy Dis- taffs" 133 Fireplace in Italian Inn at Fadalto. 135 Balcony Marketing 138 At the Public Well. — A Morning Scene in Venice 140 Kiva, from the Pouale Koad . . . 148 Tremosine, by Lake Garda .... 149 Lemon Garden, Lake Garda . . . 150 Limone, Lake Garda 152 San Giovanni, Bellaggio, on Lake Como 154 Lecco 155 A Street in Bellaggio 157 From the Villa Serbelloni .... 158 TTEO L, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS, CHAPTER I. UNDER THE WATZMANN. OtJR first look into the promised land was from the far crest of the Kapnzinerberg, where the balcony of the odd old bastion restaurant overlooks the broad and beautiful valley through which the Salzach pours its milky glacier torrent. Guarding its entrance stands the mag- nificent high -perched fortress of Salzburg. On either hand, coming close to the foreground, are the great gray peaks of the Gaisberg and Untersberg. Behind these, stretching away into the distance, rises crest after crest of the Salzburg Alps. The fear seemed reasonable that we had made a grave mistake in choosing this entrance to Tyrol, for we could not hope again to see such a combination of beauty and gran- deur as this far-stretching, fertile plain and yonder snow-clad peaks. The fear abated before a day had passed, and it never recurred. Climb- ing down again to the low- lying town, we soon engaged an " Einspan- ner " to take us to Berchtesgaden. One's first Einspanner is a memorable vehicle — queer-shaped, with a comfortable back seat, having its top thrown back in fair weather, and only a rudimentary front seat, from which tlie driver's feet fall di- rectly upon the whiffletree. As tlie name indicates, it is drawn by one horse — harnessed, not between shafts as with us, but at the left side of a pole, with a cat-a-corner sort of traction by no means economical of 14 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALFS. power. Behind is a "magazin," in which smaller articles of baggage are locked, larger trunks being strapped upon its top. This is the uni- versal one-horse vehicle of South-eastern Germany and Austria, We trundled out of the town and over the country road at a pace which was to consume three hours in making tlie fourteen miles' dis- tance. Half an hour out, at a foddering and beer-drinking station, we fell in with a "Zweispanner" — a comfortable two-horse landau — re- turnine; to the hotel for which we were destined. Our driver made a shrewd contract, by which we were to be carried the remaining long pull for one-half of our three-dollar fare. The change was in every way advantageous. Our road soon left the Salzach plain, and led up the wild and beautiful valley of the Aim ; up hill and down dale, past chalets with stone-laden roofs, past the little fields of peasant farms, through groves of fir and white birch, and along the brink of the rapid white- watered river. Frequent hay for beast and frequent beer for man are constant incidents of Tyrol travel. Every few miles the team must be drawn up for baiting, and the blue-eyed Kellneriu brings beer as a matter of course ; but the beer is good and the fare is cheap, and the hours thus dawdled away are by no means lost to one who comes fresh to all tins unaccustomed beauty and interest. Time thus spent at way-side inns among costumed peasants here in the foot-hills of the great Alpine chain is time gained for the memories of all future years. We may have been three hours, or we may have been four hours, in going from Salzburg to Berchtesgaden ; but should we live for fifty years, no time can dim the charming recollections of that drive. Scattered along the road at very frequent intervals are the shrines and stations and crucifixes with which this whole land is disfigured. To the South German mind the tears of the Virgin and the cruel bodi- ly suffering on the Cross seem to be the only effective emblems of Christianity. Generally absurd, often painful, and always coarse, these tokens are too frequent to excite reverence, and can have little other effect than to maintain the routine of the formal observances of the Church. The Madonna often wears hoops of enormous dimensions ; she frequently weeps behind a painted handkei'chief : in one instance, wliere she was of wood and of life size, she held the fresh-ironed linen with printed border of our own time. So little does the real character VNDEB TEE WATZMANN. 15 of the Crucifixion impress itself upon the popular mind, that it is by no means uncommon for the bleeding wound of the wooden Christ to be decked with flowers or ribbons on festival days. In one case a bunch of cat-tails was stuck between tlie knees. It is perhaps well for the tourist that these shrines occur so frequently, for their shock is weakened by familiarity, and one soon comes to pay little heed to them. The valley of the Aim is too narrow, and offers too little chance for cultivation, for its agriculture to be more than the pettiest farming of a very poor and hard-worked people ; but as it bends at last around the THE W VT/M ^NS ()\ 1 1 I grand southern sweep of the Untersberg it widens out into broad and rich farms, overlooking which, occupying a higli plateau, and itself overlooked by the gigantic Watzmann, lies the ideal Tyrolean village of Berchtesgaden.* No doubt there are other places as charming, but none ever touched us quite so nearly as this. Its situation, its air, its evidence of having pleasure for its cliief industry, and, above all, its picturesque people, * This district is politically in Bavaria, but in all its characteristics it belongs to Austrian Tyrol, which it joins. 16 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. combine to make it quite a village by itself. It has to the stranger almost a suggestion of theatrical effect, greatly due to the marked costumes of the peasantry, who form so conspicuous an element of its population. Both men and women adhere to their national dress as firmly as though no Ein- spanner had ever brought a trav- eller from Salzburg to see them. On week-days it is sobered by the rust of long use, but it is still the same in its essential parts; on Sunday it is gay galore, and it is worth while to rise early and look out from a front window of the Hotel Watzmann as the people are gathering for early mass at the old church opposite. The accompanying illustra- tions give the dress of the whole peasant community, not touched up for artistic effect, but precise- ly as worn. The maidens de- pend much on color and on their broad silver necklaces with gau- dy clasps, but the men's dress re- sembles that with which we are familiar only in coat and shirt. The breeches are of black leath- er, with green cord down the seams and green embroidery at the hip and knee; they reach only to the top of the knee, and are so loose that in the sitting posture half the thigh is exposed. No stockings are worn under the heavy hob-nailed shoes, but a very thick woollen stocking leg, often orna- mented with green figures, covers the calf, the top being rolled down over the garter. For a length of about six inches at the knee the leg is quite bare, tanned, ruddy, and hirsute with life-long exposure PEASANT GIRL. UNDER THE WATZMANN. 17 in a climate of great winter severity. The liat varies but little from the form shown, and is decorated with feathers at the back — nsnally the half of a black cock's tail. This is the daily gear of these hardy mountaineers, and is the type of the national costume of the whole of North Tyrol. Nothing could be more artistic; but it must be a deeply planted artistic feeling which sustains the wearers in fierce winter weather. Grohmann {Tyrol and the Tyrolese) says that at a wedding rifle match, when the thermometer was at 4° Fahrenheit, he saw men come in tlieir sliirt sleeves and with bare knees from the hot dancing-room, and stand shooting for an hour, heedless of the cold. Pleasant as Berchtesgaden is in itself, it owes its great attractive- ness to the beautiful Konigs-See, three miles away, at the end of a charming brook-side walk through a deep and thickly wooded valley. This lake is the pearl of Tyrolean waters. Statistically speaking, it is six miles long and a mile and a half wide. It is about two thou- sand feet above the level of the sea. Its inclosing mountains rise almost vertically from its shore, the snow -clad Watzmann to a height of nine thousand feet, and the others far above the line of vegetation. The deep water of the lake is emerald -green, cold, and clear. It was on the stillest and sweetest of summer Sunday mornings that we first saw it. We shared a boat with a Vien- nese doctor and his pretty wife, and a kindly engineer of the salt- mines. For rowers we had a , . Till l"JiA8ANT. comely wiry-armed damsel and two tough-sinewed, bare-kneed, cock-feathered young men — one stand- ing at his oar after the manner of a gondolier. They were a silent and steady-pulling crew, ready with information, but entirely unob- 2 18 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. trnsive. The l)oat-landing opens upon a beautiful fore-bay, shut in by higli hills which form a bold foil for the gray and white mountains beyond them. This bay is soon crossed, and a turn to the right, around the steep rocks, brings the grand main stretch of the lake into view. On either hand rise the sheer mountain-sides, and straight ENTEANOE TO THE K0NIG8-SEE. to the front the snow-clad Stuhlgebirge stands like a vast wall. Be- liind this chain is the head of the Schonfeldspitz, but little lower than the Watzmann, which dips its feet in the lake, and holds its snow-filled notch nearly a mile and a half overhead. It had rained heavily the day before, and the little rills which usually trickle down the moun- tain-sides were swollen to gran.d cascades, leaping from point to point of their quick descent. We climbed into the deep ravine of the Kesselbach, where a moun- tain torrent has torn its rugged way and filled its path with huge blocks wrenched from the mountain. Again we landed to walk over to the l")retty little Obersee, which lies in a lap of the hills at the far end of the lake; and again to eat the renowned Saibling, or lake trout, at St. Bartholomae — a toothsome sj^ecialite of the Ivonigs-See — and to drink UNDER THE WATZMANK 19 the perennial beer of the Vaterland. St. Bartholomae is a royal hunt- ing chateau, wliich brings pence to tlie royal purse througli the hunger and thirst of the visiting public. It is a grim old chateau, with a pious annex in the form of a gloomy little chapel, which invites many pil- grims on St. Bartholomew's Dav. Its main hall is hung with rude O I/O portraits of giant Saibling taken in the lake during the past centur}^, the honored name of its captor being given with each. These land- ings were not without interest — a large element of human interest, too, for the travellers to the Konigs-See are various — but we always floated gladly back into the calm green deep lake, whence tlie en- chanted setting of this enchanted mountain mirror seemed like a fairy- land of the giants, reaching high overhead, and reflected far down in the still waters below. %t "it KONIGS-SEE. Each boat carries an old blunderbuss of a horse-pistol with which to awaken the echoes at the narrower part of the lake. These are quite remarkable. The pistol, being loaded with loose powder, gives only a thud of a report, which is instantly returned from the nearest shore by a land cracking detonation, which is repeated with a muflled 20 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. roar again and again, like the roll of receding thunder. I am quite at a loss to explain the single sharp first echo which was invariably heard. It had been onr privilege to go in a boat with three rowers for onl}'' five persons, and onr four hours' trip — ever to remain unequalled — cost what the Schiffmeister regarded as an extra price — forty-four cents for each person. For variety, and by way of indulgence to inexperienced feet, we took an Einspanner for onr return home. The variety made it quite worth while, for the valley between Konigs-See and Berchtesgaden is beautiful from every point of view, and the carriage-road takes quite a different course from that of the foot-path. We were driven by a young lout from a distant province, whose stock of information was exhausted when he had told us that a pretty modern villa near the road-side was owned by a Jew. We complimented the Jew upon his good taste and good fortune, and were quite content to accept the remaining miles of onr road for their constant and changing beauty, without further detail. It mattered little who owned this or that; it sufiiced that at every turn there opened a new picture. The Watzmann was our constant attendant, and it seemed strange that while he looked so near, our whole journe}^ kept him ever at the same angle. In the clear sky of that Sunday it was impossible to realize his distance, and only the eternal snow lodged between his two great bare peaks indicated his height. The guide-books give detailed instruction for reaching the summit of this mountain, and there are in Berchtesgaden stout-limbed and intelligent guides to carry one's kit and food and lead the way to the summit. But the mountain-climb- ing passion is an uncultivated one in my breast, and I am quite con- tent to leave nature's great peaks all unbereft of the mystery and grandeur which they shed over those who wander wondering through the valleys at their feet. I do not intimate that familiarity with their crests would breed contempt, and I admire the enterprise and vigor which scorn the fatigue and suffering their ascenti must entail; I only beg to be permitted for myself to confine my wanderings over this great and s})lendid world to fields which rew^ard one with something different from the view of mountain-tops from mountain-top. This UNDER THE WATZMANN. 21 I.AKE IN SALT- JUNE, BERCHTK8GADEN. II ] 111! well be born ot I gladly accept such familiarity with the moun- tains as one gains from the rich- ly cnltivated slopes and vales of Tyrol as quite sufficient. On one of the days of onr stay \ve explored, so far as the public is permitted to explore them, the great salt-works of Berchtesgaden, which are the property of the King of Bavaria. This is the show salt- mine of the world, and the act of visiting it was invested by old King Ludwig with the artistic and dramatic air of which he was so fond. There is little reason why the ten thousand who enter its galleries every year should not go in the every-day dress of the outer air; but party after party is dally clad in the garb of the miners, the ladies in a corresponding costume, as though the tour were attended with the dirt and discomfort of a coal-mine. The galleries are quite dry— so dry that where timber is used for supporting the roof it needs to be renewed only once in a century. The deposit is in the heart of a hio-h hill. There are five gangways, one above the other. Yisitoi-s are taken in at the entrance of the lowx^st one, and only to the work^ ed-out galleries of the second, but this suffices to give a good idea of the methods. The hill is entered for a distance of more than a mile. 90, TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. part of tlie way np a stairway of more than one hundred steps, and then on and on into the very bowels of the mountain. Salt exists in a very pure state to an unknown height above, and a shaft sunk one hundred and fifty metres below the lowest excavation fails to find its bottom. The workings are of two sorts, the quarrying of rock-salt for cattle _^__ (four thousand tons per annum), and the extraction and trans- portation of pure salt, in solu- tion in water, whicli is let in fresh from the hills above, left from four to six weeks to be- come impregnated, then drawn to a lower reservoir, whence it is pumped to Feisterleite, sev- en hundred feet hio-lier on the monntain-side. Thence it flows through pipes to Ilsang, about four miles distant, where it is again lifted, this time twelve hundred feet, to the top of the mountain. From this point it flows through pipes, always on a descending grade, to Keiclien- hall, twenty nailes distant. Here it is evaporated, the crystallized salt being ground for table use (from twenty -five to thirty thou- sand tons per annum). The av- erage daily flow is over two thou- sand hectoliters. The pump by which this is raised is worked by a water-engine of brass (six-inch cylinder), constructed precisely like a steam-engine, and propelled by a column of water thi-ee hundred and seventy-four feet high. One hundred pounds of fresh water dissolves about twenty-seven pounds of salt, so that, in view of the abundant water-power, this system of transportation is most economical. OUSTDMK OF THE BAI,T-MINE. UNDER THE WATZMANN. 23 The large pools in the mine in which the salt is dissolved are most interesting. One which is no longer used is encircled with several hundred miner's lamps, which only make its darkness visible. Visitors are ferried over this pool in boats, and landed opposite an illuminated transparent block of salt inscribed with the miner's greeting, " Gllick auf." The descent from here is by a steep slide over polished wooden rails, pitching at a sharp angle into the great pit where i-ock-salt was formerly quarried. A guide goes first in the line, and regulates tlie speed by a rope slipping under his arm. The visitors, sitting, on the rails, make a close-packed train behind him. The exploration of the work completed, we are mounted, men and women together, astride the elevated cushion of a little car which runs at great speed down the descending track through the mile-long gallery, and out into the broad daylight and the heated open air. For those who care to per- petuate their absurdity, a photographer has set up his atelier hard by. However short one's stay, Berchtesgaden must be quitted with re- gret, and in our case at least there came the feeling, repeated at so many places, that we should some day return here for a longer stay and a closer familiarity with its varied interests. We were as yet only at the threshold of Tyrol, and with at best time for only a sketchy run among its mountains and valleys. 24 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. CHAPTER IL PASS LUEG AND THE PINZGAU. We departed, again in an Einspanner, with a driver who became friendly and instructive after his sharp bargain had once been driven. Onr drive to Hallein did not differ greatly from that from Salzburg, save that at one of our halting-places we saw, perhaps for once and all, and only through a telescope at that, the agile chamois feeding quietly on the very face, as it seemed to ns, of the perpendicular Un- tersberg. Hallein is a dull and dingy old town on the Gisela rail- way, by which we made the half hours run to Gelling, From GoUing the glory has all departed. In the good old post- coach days it had much renown as a chief starting-point of the wild and beautiful ways into Eastern Tj'rol. It is a long, straight Alpine village on the mountain-side. Our windows commanded nearly the whole street, with its curious people and its unfamiliar customs. Where mountain brooks and springs are plenty the rain -fall is not caught and stored as with us. It rained hard the whole night through, and the long eave- troughs, reaching far beyond the wide overhanging roofs, poured their torrents into the roadway from a height of three or four stories, until it seemed as though the town itself must be washed into the valley. I am fond of the Landsleute of German villages, and the country people who congregate of an evening in the beer-room of every Gast- haus have far more interest for me than their betters who travel, and who fill the guests' eating-room with bad tobacco-smoke. I sat at table with half a dozen of the wiseacres of the village, who were in warm dis- cussion with a wandering Handwerker as to the propriety of the invest- ment by the Golling community of tln-ee thousand gulden in making a better pathway into the renowned Oefen, a marvellous chasm in the 'J .4 PASS LUEG AND THE PINZGAU. 27 mountain, thi'ongli wliich the whole Salzach pours its flood. In"o city ever discussed the improvement of its harbor with more heated ani- mation than was brought out by the two-sided question of spending $1500 on a local betterment, which, it was argued, would restore to Golling the cloud of visitors that the railway had diverted. My next neighbor was a tall, ]-aw- boned, grimy -faced, clieerful shoemaker of the village, who soon made known the fact that he was Johann Kain, a licensed mountain guide (Bergfiihrer) of the province. He produced from a wallet at his belt the book containing his author- ity, the established tariff of charges, the obligations of the Bergfiihrer, the penalties for his misconduct, and the signatures and commendatory remarks of his many patrons for long years past. As Baedeker tells ns, one clearly needs no guide for the plain path over the Oefen and along the high-road through Pass Lueg to Sulzau ; but a few hours witli an original character like Kain would be well worth his fee of less than a dollar, and I was glad to engage him for the next day. The trip was the more interesting for his company, and it must be a marvellons two hours' walk under any circumstances. The Oefen by far outmatches all other mountain goi'ges of which I have knowledge. The Salzach is really a great mountain river, fed by far-away glaciers and countless hill- side brooks. It drains the whole northern slope of the Alpine range from beyond the Grosser Yenediger on the west to far east of Bad Gastein. During the pre- ceding week nnwonted rains had swollen every rill to a torrent, and the river itself was a boiling, rushing flood of turbid waters. It has torn its way through the high granite barrier, and mighty rocks from its higher cliffs have fallen across its chasm, forming natural bridges over the torrent, which are covered Math grass and trees. Here and there, through great clefts, the river is to be seen surging far below with a deafening roar. The descent from the heights of the Oefen strikes the highway at the entrance of Pass Lueg opposite the curious Croaten Loch — a strongly fortified and almost inaccessible cleft in the vertical moun- tain-side, large enough for a garrison of five hundred men, and an im- pregnable position until artillery was brought to bear upon the splin- tei'ing rock which forms its roof. It was held by the Croatians in 28 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. S0UL0B8 FlSCnilOKN. 174:2, aiK triotic war of 1809 it plaj'ed an inipoi-taut part. I'ur luoderii war- fare it has no value, ' ^'•'-^^-"' and is only a relic of the past; but Pass Lueg itself, six miles long, and often only wide enough for the river and the road, is an easil}^ defen- sible pass, and the only practicable opening through the mountain east of the valley of the Inn. The Gisela railway passes its narrowest part by a tunnel. At the east the pass is dominated by the Tannengebirge, nearly eight thousand feet high. During the whole walk to Snlzau my old guide talked of the hills and valle3'S aiid passes within walking- distance of Golling, which to him constitute the whole world, and be- yond which he has never set his sturdy foot. Having taken places in the observation car at the rear end of the train — a car with an open gallery looking to the I'ear and sides — we nuide a most memorable journey up the steep Salzach Yalley and into PASS LVEG AND TEE PIXZGAU. 29 the Piiizgan. At Werfen the road, leaving the narrow gorge, passes under the shadow of the high-perched fortress of Hohe Werfen, which is not nnhke the one which at Salzburg guards its northern entrance. A writer cannot, without laying himself open to the charge of ex- travagance, repeat so often as the description of such a journey de- mands the superlative expressions which alone are adequate. The reader's highest imagination will surely not overpass the grand and beautiful reality. A little further on we stop at Lend, the station for the renowned — Tyroleans think overrenowned— Wildbad Gastein ; and as evening closes in, always looking back over the same succession of mountains, and always beside the tumbling stream, we round Schloss Fischhorn — Prince Liechtenstein's beautifully restored castle — -commanding the Upper and Lower Pinzgau, the valley of the Zeller-See, and the Fusch Thai. 30 TYROL, A2\'D THE SKIIiT OF THE ALFS. CHAPTER III. ZELLER-SEE AND ZILLER THAL. The Zeller-See differs from the Konigs-See as much as one moun- tain lake can differ from another. At the first view it is disappoint- ing, but a short stay at its bordering village of Zell restores all of its well-reputed glorj'. Its shores are evei'jwhere low, and its surround- ing mountains are distant; but as seen from the middle of the lake, their grand forms, and their bare crests, or snow-clad peaks under the ever-changing light and shadow of a cloud-tilled skv, inclosing a vast and fertile basin, make a perfect combination of Tyrolean beauty. At the north, beyond the plain of Saalfelden, rises the rugged wall behind which lies the south-eastern projection of Bavarian Tyrol. Far away to the south, peering above the high green hill- tops, and hiding from sight the glacier crest of the Gross Glockner, is the snow-covered Ivitzsteinhorn. In a certain sense Zell has been spoiled by the railway'. It is full of tourists, and its lake is alwaj^s busy with pleasure-boats; but we have nowhere found more simplicity and quaintness than in the peas- ant's house where we were billeted, the hotels being overfull. The roaming visitors have made very little impression upon the native population. Outside tiie modern hotels a kreutzer counts for as much as ever, and the cheerful " Guten Tag" of all whom we meet in the streets is as frank as in the remotest valley. Our handmaiden, Teresa, was as amazed at our desiring more than a pint of water for our ablu- tions as though she had never seen a ti'aveller before. She brought, quite cheerfully, a huge bread-bowl in place of the pudding-dishes we had found inconveniently small, and a third carafe of water! She did this with so much the air of having performed her whole duty that we wei'e fain to restrict our needs to the insufficient supply. So far was ZELLEE-SEE AND ZILLEB TRAL. 31 slie from expecting a gratuity for her prompt attendance tliat she bhishinglj added to our bill a charge of six cents for shoe-cleaning. Our large room, inclosed in thick stone walls, with iron -barred win- dows and heavy oaken door, was as safe as a fortress. One corner was occupied with a huge green glazed earthen-w^are stove, set on a high stone foundation. The beds were good, the linen was clean, and the furniture included two cabinets — one filled with Christmas-tree decorations, and the other with Schiitzenfest prizes won by our host in the sharp - shooting days of his youth. Gaudy religious prints TUB WtLDE KAIBEB. adorned the walls, and comfortable and well-kept furniture made up the outfit of this " best chamber," for the use of which, with attend- ance, we were charged forty cents per day. The boats of the Zeller-See are different from any that we have elsewhere seen. They are long, flat-bottomed craft, rising high at stem and stern, with comfortable high-backed seats amidships. They are propelled, like a gondola, with a single oar near the stern, where the oarsman stands at his work, facing forward. The oar has a most cu- rious spoon-shaped blade, about two feet long and eight inches wide. It is considerably curved in the direction of its lengtli, and slightly ^,9 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. UOPFGAETEN. hollowed laterally. Its convex surface is its propelling surface. The rowlock is a foot liigh above the gunwale, and has an ingeniously con- trived universal joint of iron. The end of the oar, about opposite the rower's breast, has a cross-handle. This is held in the left hand, and is used for giving tlie lateral movement needed to preserve the straight course in rowing at one side of the boat. The riglit hand is held low- er down the stem. At first sight this struck me as the most out- landish and absurd paddle I had ever seen. Watching it at work, it seemed one of the best. During the greater part of the stroke its bearing acvaiust the water is at a ris-ht ano-le with the boat's course, ZELLEE-SEE AND ZILLEB THAL. 33 and as it leaves the water the clownward-tnrning blade seems to follow the exact curve needed to bring it out without splash and without re- sistance. So far as I could analyze its positions, it was doing effective work from the time the blade touched the water until it had entirely left it, and this can be said of no other oar that I have seen. These boats have a very holiday look, their sides and the broad oar blades being painted with corresponding figures and colors, usually diamonds of blue or red on white. The effect is complete when the boat is freighted with girls in light dresses, and carrying the blue or red para- sols which here prevail, and is rowed by a costumed peasant. We were fortunate iu hearing the Tyrolean zither played by an accomplished master at a concert given during our stay at ZcU. The capabilities of this instrument are far greater than would be supposed. In principle it is like a combination of the guitar and the harp. The route from Zell to Worgl on the Inn is best made by rail, the open observation car giving a view usually better than that from the lower-lying and frequently shaded highway. It is rich from end to end with grand mountain scenery, culminating in the great rugged masses of the Wilde Kaiser, and then toning down to the more round- ed forms, the fertile slopes, and the placid valley where lies the Arca- dian village of ITopfgarten. As a convenient point from whicli to visit the Ziller Thai, we put np at the beautifully placed Gasthaus on the hill above Jenbach— a modern Swiss house, with a chalet gallery in front of our windows commanding a long stretch of the Inn Valley, its enclosing mountains, and the high snow peaks beyond Innsbruck, The Ziller Thai is the most renowned, and I am ready to believe one of the most beautiful, of the pastoral valleys of Tyrol. It is pure- ly pastoral, its two considerable towns having no industry not con- nected with agriculture, and its steep hill -sides being bright with farms and pasture alps to their summits. Kich woodlands occupy the rougher and steeper slopes and its deep - cut side valleys, which are noisy with tumbling M^ater. Even more than other Tyrolese, the peo- ple of the Ziller Thai have always been given to seeking their fortunes through itinerant trade and minstrelsy. The money thus gained and •3 34: . TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. t.lie extreme fertility of the land have given them great prosperity. Farmers own their own farms, and tliere is an air of comfort and cheerfulness about their homes — notably a great profusion of flowers in the rich dark w^ood galleries of the chalets — which we do not see equalled among many more obviously wealthy people. Frugality and industry seem to go hand -in -hand with cheerfulness and activity. Among the older of both sexes there is much goitre, and the evidence of a hard-worked life ; but the young girls especially are remarkably well-looking. On the whole, the Ziller Thai presents as favorable an example of a happy agricultural community as can be met with. Zell, the capital of the upper valley, had been visited a week be- fore our arrival with a devastating flood, the equal of which had not been known for centuries, and had suffered enormous damage. The water had risen in a single night higher than the tops of the door-ways ; the church-yard in the centre of the town had been submerged ; whirl- pools had eaten great holes in the roadways ; every bridge on the river had been swept away ; and thousands of acres of the valley lands had been covered with slime, from which the water had even yet not en- tirely receded. Such a calamity befalling a less prosperous people would be well-nigh fatal ; but here the loss can be borne without suf- fering, and the ultimate effect upon the valley lands will be beneficial, the detritus from the granite mountain-sides beino; of great fertilizing: value. It must be some years before the beauty of the landscape is restored. We found at Fligen a capital example of the Tyrolean "Wirth" in Samuel Margreiter, who keeps the Gasthaus zum Stern. Both he and his wife were members of Ludwig Rainer's company of Tyrolese musicians, and in their travels they have acquired a good knowledge of English. He is a handsome, hearty, cordial fellow, and a man of substance, to whom the traveller may be cordially commended. His musical specialty is the FIolzener-Gelachner (laughing-wood), known to us as the Zillerphone. It is made of sticks of fir-wood of different lengths, properly tuned by hollowing out their lower sides, loosely strung together, and resting on thin withes of straw. They are rung with little hard-wood mallets. Margreiter boasts that he taught the use of the instrument to the Princess of Wales and Princess Louise. ZELLER-SEE AND ZILLEB TEAL. 35 C Jrattjl^ FAKM-HOUSB. He tells ns that the costume of the valley in its full development is only to be seen on fetes^ as at rifle matches and weddings. To our foreign eyes marked traces of it were to be seen on every hand. The women almost universally, young and old, wear broad-brimmed, small- crowned, black felt hats, with thick gold or silver tassels lying on the front part of the brim; and the singular custom, not much noticed elsewhere, of carrjnng a carnation or other bright flower over the ear, prevails quite generally. In the towns Zell and Fiigen, and occasionally along the main road, the houses are large stuccoed stone structures, witli projecting 36 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF TEE ALPS. roofs and galleries, the stucco whitened and the wood-work sometimes painted. The detached farm-houses differ from those generally seen in other parts of the country in being almost invariably mipainted, their rich mellow -toned wooden npper stories and gables and their gray stone -laden roofs harmonizing perfectly with the landscape. Their mason-work, if colored at all, is either gray or buff. Kude fres- coes of the Madonna or the Crucilixion are very common on the outer walls. The combination of house and stable nnder the same roof is in strong contrast to our customs; but the living-rooms of these houses are tidy and comfortable, and often more home-like and inviting than average agricultui-al interiors of our native land. There is a complete separation, by stone partition w^alls, between the house and its belong- ino;s. The main entrance and the rooms leadino; off from it are a sort of crypt with vaulted arches supporting the stone floor of the main story, where are the chief living-rooms. Under the roof are garrets, store-rooms, and bedrooms. Each floor opens on to its narrow gallery, and these are far overshadowed by the wide projecting roof, the ridge- pole of which is longer than the lower edges, so that the top of the gable reaches forward considerably beyond the lower line of the eaves. Added to this forward pitch of the gable end, there is often a decided "batter" or bnttress-like spread of the stone-built part of the house. Even those lines which are intended to be vertical or horizontal have had only the inadequate guide of the country carpenter's eye, so that parallellines and right angles do not exist. The whole structure is a sort of free-hand drawing, which agrees charmingly with the combina- tion of rounded and rugged forms that makes the whole landscape. Tucked away in grassy nooks far up among the clouds, accessi- ble only by the hardest climbing, are the little chalets of the Senners, or cow-herds, who pass tlie summer months in butter and cheese mak- ing, and who, especially when of the female sex, furnish the material for much of the romance and poetry of Tyrolean literature. This is the native home of the Jodel, the clear, penetrating language by which alone these widely separated and hard-worked hermits are able to greet each other across the valleys and noisy gorges, and by which at the end of the week the lusty youth of the valleys proclaim their comino; to their mountain maidens. . ZELLEB-SEE AND ZILLER THAL. 37 Probably no purely rural expedition would give more curious in- struction, and surely none would be attended with more picturesque and romantic accompaniment, than a thorough exploration of the fer- tile slopes and the rugged high alps of the Ziller Thai. COSTUMES OF TUB ZILLEK THAL. We had another chief motive for halting at Jenbach in an inten- tion to visit the Aachen-See, which lies eleven hundred feet up in the mountains, over seven miles of rough road. The descriptions, the photographs, and the reports of returning visitors indicated that while it is well worthy of a vsit, and while its introduction would be neces- 38 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. sary into any complete picture of Tyrolean travel, it did not so mncli differ from what we had already seen that we need face a steady and persistent rain for the sake of it. Then, too, we had been long enongh in the country for the impres- sion of the great cities of the world to have faded, and we had little by little accepted the local estimate of the great metropolis of Tyrol, the chief centre of its civilization and tlie great source of its artificial supplies. We cherished, also, a charming recollection of a single au- tumn evening passed in its mountain-guarded streets, and of the twi- light vesper service in the Hofkirche among the bronze shades of Maximilian and his chosen attendants. Better a day of what Inns- bruck has to offer than the Aachen-See under low clouds and driz- zling rain. Our route lay up the valley of the Inn — a fast -flowing stream which drains the north slope of the Alps from the head waters of the Salzach to the borders of Switzerland — a stream which has torn its broad way through the mountains, and has filled its valley with rich deposit. As seen from the hill-tops, it is a thread of a river winding through a wide and fruitful valley which rises gently to the feet of its enclositig walls. Here, as everywhere, agriculture is the life and soul of the industry, and a constant succession of broad fields of In- dian-corn filled it with the air of luxuriance which this alone of north- ern crops can give. The valley is rich in shade and fruit trees, its higher slopes are beautifully wooded, and its smiling modern houses and dull old castles indicate the age and persistence of its prosperity. THOSE WHOM WE MET, AND THEIIi WAYS. 39 CHAPTER IV. THOSE WHOM WE MET, AND THEIR WAYS. We were the more struck with the cheapness and rusticity of our entertainment, because many who have written in these later years complain that Tyrol, filled with travellers from all countries, has been bereft, even in its remotest hamlets, of all its original simplicity-: tliat bumptious Americans and Englishmen have driven the modest Kell- nerin from the dining-room, and substituted the garco7i of the Swiss hotels. So far as I can judge, this is not at all the case. Even in much-frequented Gasthausern the waiting is almost universally done by the Oberkellnerin and her maidens, the old customs of kitchen and table are still adhered to, and the prices charged preclude the idea of an advance having been made. The Hotel Krone, on the bank of the lake at Zell, is entirely mod- ern, sufficiently good and sufficiently costly; its men -waiters wear dress-coats, and it has nothing in common with the native Gasthaus. But one need not lodge at the Krone— we did not, because we could not — and it has had no more influence over the customs of the village, nor even over those of the old Gasthaus Krone, of which it is an out- growth, than if it wei-e twenty miles away. On the whole, I think it has been too much the custom to decry " tonrists." Of course it is pleasanter to have a whole compartment to yourself on the railway, and to find hotel servants devoted to you only. If you are of a certain constitution, it is gratifying to feel that you alone of all the enlightened world have been permitted to gaze upon this water-fall, to drink beer at this remote Gasthaus, or to tread this mountain path. But neither railway carriages, nor hotels, nor water- falls, nor beer, nor monntain paths, were created only for ns. No word so lacks a definition as that one over whose illustration Thack- 40 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. eray expended a volume without yet clearly fixing its meaning. I have sometimes wondered whether the real snob may not be the ulti- mate development of that incipient feeling which the best of us must recognize among the emotions with which we greet a stranger coming to the vacant seat beside us. For my own justification, I am glad to believe that all mankind has this same instinctive distaste for encroach- ment. The remarkable feature of the case is that so many intelligent persons capable of enjoying travel to the fullest extent, and capable of communicating their enjoyment to otliers, should fail to see that the only field wherein to exercise their passion for original advent- ure is in those undeveloped wilds which are always open for their exploration. The inhabited world- — -certainly the whole of Tyrol — is public ground. It has been a favorite field for travelling since travelling began. No one can say how much of its very essence it owes to its long communication with the outer world. Even the remotest val- leys furnish their quota to that great army of Tyrolese peddlers and wandering minstrels which has for centuries overrun all Christendom, generally returning to end their days on their native hill-sides. If external intercourse has "spoiled" this people, we surely have not to blame the occasional foreign sojourners among them. My own idea is that they are and will remain less affected by the encroachments of travel than most other peoples. The returning wanderer, bringing back no foreign ways, resumes at once his Tyrolean life and character. Quite naturally, about the large towns and much -frequented health resorts, costumes and l(Jcal customs recede somewhat to the back- ground ; but in Tyrol it is still a very near background. In the busi- est street of Innsbruck, and about the Kursaal at Meran, broad neck- laces, bright colors, bare knees, and hat feathers are by no means ex- ceptional. In the side streets of either town there is no more sugges- tion of any foreign influence than there was before railroads had been invented. While pleading in behalf of the inevitable, I must say a word, too, in defence of the mu(;h-abused railway; even more, I confess my pro- found obligation to it. Bat for its kind intervention I should pass this calm and peaceful Sunday morning not here, writing this record THOSE WHOM WE MET, AND THEIR WAYS. 41 under the vine-clad hills and beside a swift-rnnning Tyrol river; I should probably be writing long-neglected letters at Newport — if, in- deed, without the railroad's help I had ever emigrated even so far as that from my native Connecticut village. The railways of Tyrol pass through most charming scenery, and the device has yet to be invented which is to equal in its value to the pleasure-seeker the "Breakwagen" and observation car of the Gisela road. Having once taught ourselves not to detest our fellow-travellers, we have come to regai-d them with great interest. They are almost exclusively Germans, and most largely from the very large middle class — probably persons in small business and small professions who have economized throughout the year for the sake of a frugal excursion in summer. It is not clear that they interest us more than we interest them, but they have certain characteristics which to the American ob- server are verj^ marked. I have long been familiar, in literature and in fact, with the pran- dial methods of Continental Europeans, but each new experience de- velops new possibilities of the art. As a study of the adaptation of the means to the end, no field of investigation is richer. Photography has still one achievement to make in securing an unsuspected instan- taneous view of the table -(T hole of a German hotel. The processes beggar description. I make no question that there is a class of European society which partakes of its food in a manner according with our conventions, but it sends very rare representatives over any road which we have trav- elled. Among the coarser and uncultured of every society we expect little deference to the requirements of delicacy. But to see a pretty, dainty, tastefully dressed, sweet -looking young woman bearing both elbows hard on the table, stabbing her meat by a backhanded blow with a fork, twisting her wrist and lowering her mouth to a con- venient pitching distance, with the alternate by-play of a knife -blade charged with softer viands, produces a shock which no familiarity can soften. Only yesterday I saw a mild-eyed bride thus engaged, with the occasional interpolation of a pickled onion by her fond and admir- ing husband's deft harpoon. The effect was heightened by her vigor- ous quaffing of a full liter of beer during the meal. Taking this ex- 42 TYBOL, AXD THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. ample — by no means an isolated one — from the more refined sex and class as a standard, I may safely leave to the reader's imagination the athletic exercises in a like direction of stalwart, hungry, and ambidex- trous men. Vale ! This, however, by the way. I speak of it only as a noticeable cus- tom of the people. It is a custom only ; it is not rooted in any de- fect of character. Accepted in a kindly spirit, our German fellow- travellers seem amiable, happy, kindly, affectionate — and too often noisy. They evince far more pleasure in their travel than do the rarer English and the very exceptional Americans who cross our path. The appreciation of fine scenery which draws the English to this land is not a demonstrative appreciation. As a rule they go sedately, si- lently, and most respectably on, without touching with even the hem of their garments the real essence of the people among whom they wander. The Americans are more varied and individual, but by no means always more admirable. As an exanjple : we encountered on the Brenner railway two of our compatriots, clearly an Eastern mer- chant and his new wife, pretty and well dressed. Their language and enunciation indicated fair education, and their silence suggested prop- er breeding. Their occasional speech was marvellous to hear. The man's sole observation concerning Innsbruck was that he had "never had a better meal at a way-station." Through the most majestic parts of the valleys of the Sill and the Adige he slept soundly. IsTever a Schloss or Schlucht did they notice. She, justified in her opinion that she had a very pretty hand and rings, spent much time in drawing on and off her gloves. After doubling the great ox-bow at Gossensass, by M'hich a descent of over five hundred feet is accomplished in a di- rect distance of a few hundred yards, she expressed her disapproba- tion of such a waste of travel. She did not see " why the engineer couldn't let us go straight on." Ai-rived at Brixen, she roused her drowsy lord with, " Oh, here's one of those queer things Maggie told us about!" Without rising to look, he asked, "What is it?" "Why! don't you remember? A priest" — pointing to a huge brown-frocked Franciscan friar, and giggling merrily. All else that they said and did was equally appreciative, and one THOSE WHOM WE MET, AND THEIB WAYS. 43 could readily imagine the satisfaction with which they would return to the more congenial surroundings and companionship of their native life, and assert their clear conviction that Continental travel offers lit- tle that need tempt an American to a second trial. I have made this digression touching the people whom we meet, parti}' to show that the encountering of them is by no means an un- mixed evil. No human soil is so barren as not to yield fruit of way- side entertainment. jSTo nation and no class fails to produce its food for reflection. EDELWEISS. CHAPTER V. THE CITY OF THE INN. All travellers have their fancies and their predilec- tions. I am by no means alone in giving the brisk little Innsbruck a high place among my own. Heine rmig its praises fifty years ago : " Innsbruck ist eine unwohn- liclie, blode Stadt." Another has called it a " pearl in Austria's beautiful crown of cities." It was the Em- peror Maximilian's favorite town, and the beautiful Philippine "Welser loved it hardly less than she graced it. A single autumn twilight and starlight glimpse, years ago, im- pressed upon our own minds a picture of quaint and curious interest, of bright and cheerful beauty, and of grand and noble surroundings, which had lasted undimmed through the intervening time, and which is now only brightened and freshened and more deeply imprinted by familiarity with scenes which then were only suggested. In detail, there is not very much to describe, but the little that there is is most notcM^orthy. The tout ensemble is lively, bustling, cleanlj', and hand- some. Our w^indows look out upon the broad main thoroughfare of THE CITY OF TEE INX. 45 the town — a street of great width and finely bnilt. In front of ns stands a tall marble shaft bearing the statue of St. Anna, its high base surmounted by life-sized figures. Far away to the left, over the tops of the houses and over the triumphal arch of the time of Maria Tlieresa, are the blue peaks bordering the Brenner Pass. To the right, rising like a vertical wall, as if from the very heart of the town, is the sturdy snow-streaked mountain, whence the wolves, as is told, nsed to look down into the streets and startle the citizens with their hungry howling. From the cab-stand below ns the drivers of the odd little three-cornered Einspanners beckon us to drive. Yonder, above the dim arcades of the older town, beside the broad roof of the palace, rises the tower of tliat little court church which is more full of historic and artistic interest than many a great cathedral — a church whose broad nave is nearly filled with the superb sarcophagus of the great Emperor Maximilian I, MAEI,V TIIERES.V 8TKA8SB, INNSBRUOK. The chief of Innsbruck's street sights is the " Goldenes Dach :" a heavily gilded copper balcony roof, which Count Frederick of Tyrol — snrnamed " of the empty pocket " — built against the front of his pal- 46 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. ace in 1500, at a cost of $70,000, as a substantial refutation of the popular taunt. The palace is long out of date, and the old quarter in which it stands is given over to the commoner walks of trade ; but this beautiful balcony, with its gilded I'oof, still remains the richest monument of the city's streets. The large park and the shaded walk beside the swift- rolling Inn might well grace a larger and richer town ; but these and all else that Innsbruck has to offer must give way be- foi'e the attractions of Maximil- ian's tomb. Subsequent visits have served to define but not to materialize the unearthly impression remain- ing from the first one, made in the dusk of a warm Novem- ^^^^ ber evening, when the gloom of the church was deepened by the solitary altar light and the faint glimmer of candles in a hidden chapel where vespers were being chanted. High up in the middle of the church the kneel- ing form of the robed monarch faces the altar. At the corners of the slab on which he rests are beautiful figures, and the sides and ends of the sarcophagus are panelled with twenty-four reliefs in marble, repre- senting prominent events of his life. Most of these are by Alexander Colin (sixteenth century), and were said by Thorwaldsen to be the most perfect existing work of their class. The sarcophagus is enclosed by a light grille of the most graceful and delicate iron-work, richly gilded. Seen from the entrance of the church, this fine traceiy is in harmony with the exquisite wood -carving of the first line of pews. At each side of the nave, between the large pillars, and at the ends of the altar GOLDENES DAOH. TRE CITY OF THE INJST. 47 steps, stand colossal bronze statues of the emperor's family, his chosen friends, and his most admired heroes — twenty-eight in number. Both the tomb and these surrounding figures were made in accordance with his own instructions, and in compliance with his last wilh Aside from his relatives and family connections, the company includes ClCvis, King of France, Rudolph of Hapsburg, Theodoric, King of the Ostrogoths, King Arthur of England, Godfrey de Bouillon, and Ferdinand of Ara- gon. Of these, the Theodoric and Arthur, by Peter Vischer, of Nurem- berg, are of great artistic merit, the Arthur especially so. The others, by different artists, are often gro- tesque and curious ; but as a compa- ny of guardian spirits about a great man's tomb they lend a dignity which iio other device could compass. They certainly give an interest to this small church which distinguishes it in a very marked way from all others. Without this tomb and its acces- saries the church would still be memorable as being the burial-place of the great Tyrolean patriot, An- dreas Hofer, who, rising from the position of a village iimkeeper (al- ■ways a position of distinction among Tyrolean peasants), became the leader in the uprising against the Bavarians. lie was to Tyrol what Garibaldi has been to Italy. His house in the Pas- seier Thai is a chief historic centre of the country, and the rooms in which he slept during his campaigns possess a similar interest for the people to that of those in which Washington slept in his campaign through New England. His portrait in the museum at Innsbruck represents a sturdy Teutonic countryman, gor- KliSG AUTUUB. 43 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. geons with the embroicleiy and green and red of the costume of his valley. The engraving here given is after the miniature which is con- sidered the most faithful likeness. Here, too, are tablets commemo- rating the death of Ilofer's comrades, Ilaspinger and Speckhacher, and a fine modern monument to those who fell under their lead. ANDKEAS UOFEB. In a chapel adjoining the chnrcli. founded by Ferdinand II., Count of Tyrol, are his grave and that of his wife, Philippine Welser. The central figure about which the interest of this region most gathers is that of this beautiful daughter of an Augsburg merchant, who made here her cherished home, whose virtues and crentle char- TEE CITY OF THE INK 49 acter no less than her beauty so fixed hei- memory in the hearts of tlie people, that she is as real a personage to them now as when she lived among them three hundred years ago, and who has rescued her worthy husband from the oblivion which, in much less than three cen- tui'ies, so few escape. riui.ii'i'i.M, u i.i.-^i.;;, (II vi i.^iu Their castle, Amras, stands on a superb hill an honr's drive from the town. The view fi'om it reaches from the highlands of Bavaria to the lofty peaks of the Tipper Iim, and stretches across the fertile maize- grown plain to the great snow-covered mountain back of Innsbruck. It is now the property of the Emperor of Austria, and the principal parts of its ai'tistic collection, formed by Ferdinand, as well as the 4 50 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. best portrait of its beantifnl mistress, tlie original of the preceding cut, ]]ave been removed to the Imperial Mnsenm at Yieiina. It is still, however, rich in objects of great interest, having a line collection of armor and arms, and the best of the furniture of Philippine's apart- ments. Among these are rare cabinets, organs, spinets, and wi'iting- tables of the choicest workmanship, and of extravagant cost. In many of the rooms the tine old carved four-posters are still standing, and the countess's bedroom is still furnished as when she used it, including the cradle in which her babies were rocked. The collection of portraits is of great interest, among them one of Philippine Welser at llftj-two, still beautiful, and a late portrait of Maria Theresa in her widow's dress. Most of the rooms were heated with highly ornamented terra- cotta stoves. Even in these minor details the profuse expenditure, which is everywhere noticeable, is conspicuous. The whole castle is beautifully maintained, and one needs to be told, so rich is it still, for the time when it w^as occupied, that its chief treasures have been taken away. It is not the least good thing about Innsbruck that its surroundings afford most charming walks and drives. We drove one afternoon up the zigzag course of the great Brenner highway, climbing always, but always genth", up the valley of the Sill, made more interesting now by the remarkable construction of the Brenner railway, whose cut- tings and tunnels and arches and embankments, seen from the oppo- site heights, look like toy marvels of Lilliputian engineering. Such a combination of rich hill- side, wooded slope, deep gorge, rushing glacial river, rocky mountani top, and peaceful sunlit beauty is rarely seen. Closing the view before us, and rising like a barrier against the apparent trend of the valley, stands the great pointed peak of the Series Leaving the road and climbing a short, steep cart path, we come suddenly upon the deep and steep-sided Stubaier Thai, at whose liead, lapping over the edge of a great mountain-top, hangs the eternal Stu- baier Glacier. This is the very heart of the mountains — a valley scored deep among their highest peaks. The group by which it is sur- rounded carries no fewer than eighty glaciers, four of them of the first thjj: city of tee I^w. 51 rank. ISTo less tliaii forty peaks to which its side valleys lead are close to the ten thousand-foot line of elevation. Other members of the Oetz Thai group, and other gorges draining their glacial floods away, hel^i to make up this wildest centre of the Tyrolean Alps. Our view into this valley of grandeur was from a sweet-smelling hay -field, where cheerful women and girls were raking the windrows. TERKA-COTTA STOVE AT AMKAS. where fragrant-breathed cows were drawing hay-wagons, and where sturdy men were busy loading the fresh-cured crop. Far down in the valley, high up on its little alps, and clinging to its steeper acclivities, farm-houses and Sennerin's huts and peaceful 52 TYROL, AND THE SKIBT OF THE ALPS. villages shelter a population to ^\hoin this moniitain val- ley is the centre of the uni- verse, ^\ ho here toil and weep and love and die, all nncon- scions of the great world which lies beyond their almost impassable cliffs. The field where we sat belongs to the great mountain Gasthaus, where Andreas Hofer held liis last head-quarters. It is a very large house, and its cheerful Kellnerin showed us all its mysteries : its clean bedrooms; its " Speise-Saal ;" its quaint old wood-finished "Sitz," where the peasants gather for their evening beer; its milk- room, with brimming pans and well-scoured utensils; its stables for horses and cattle — all under the same huge roof; its ornamental gar- den, with a little fountain, and the saints and Madonnas frescoed on its outer walls. It would be ungrateful to dismiss the subject of Innsbruck without THE CITY OF THE INN. 53 referring to Mr. Franz Unterberger and liis shop, whicli is a sort of travellers' head -quarters, stored with wood -carvings, Tyrolean knick- knacks, and the beautiful collection of photographs which his enter- prising camera has brought from all quarters of the land. " Bild-hau- ing" (picture-hewing), or ornamental wood-carving, is nowhere more artistic than in this part of Tyrol, and Unterberger's exhibits at Phila- delphia and at Paris gave evidence of the great excellence here at- tained. The relief carvings of Tyrolean character scenes are incom- parably fine. To a stranger the best thing about the shop is Mr. Un- terberger himself. He speaks English perfectly, and is a man of the quickest intelligence, and learned in Tyrolean matters. We found him always ready, without the least reference to his interest in us as cus- tomers, to give us the fullest information and advice. The valley of the Inn above Innsbruck — the Oberinn Thai — lies out of the route of ordinary travel, the Brenner road striking off to the left and winding up the wild Sill Thai. The upper valley presents the same general character as that below the city, save that its moun- tains are drawn closer together, and its bed, rising higher and higher, comes nearer to their sum.mits. It is essentially a part of this " Yal Deliciosa," fertile, populous, bus}^, and cheerf uL Telfs, one of its con- siderable villages, is a charming example of the larger valley centres. In its remoteness it promises to remain forever unconscious of the march of more modern improvement. The summer heats of the Inn Thai are far greater and more per- sistent than would be supposed from its position on the northern slope of the Alps and its considerable elevation (Innsbruck is nearly two thousand feet above the sea). Its intervale for miles is almost exclu- sively occupied with broad fields of Indian-corn, giving it a home-like air to the American eye. 54: TYROL, AND THE SKIET OF THE ALPS. CHAPTER yi. THE PEOPLE AND THEIR LIFE. A GOOD idea of the characteristics of tlie conntrj and the people of North Tyrol is given by Grohrnann in his "Tyrol and the Ty- rolese," from which one may gather information concerning the win- ter climate and occupations nnknown to those who only make a holi- day run throngli the country in the summer months. Mr. Gi'ohmann is half Tyrolese himself, and seems to be as familiar with the hardy sports of the country as with those of England, where his other half belongs. He describes vividly the terrible straits to which the frugal Tyr- olese peasants are I'ednced by the deep and persistent snow, which en- tirely cuts off many of the valleys from communication with the outer world for months together. Mountain huts ai'e sometimes entirely buried. He recounts the rescue of an aged couple who had been imprisoned for nine days, with only a goat and a few loaves of bi-ead for their support. Chamois-hunting and the shooting of the black- cock, both confined to the higher and more remote mountain-tops, are sports involving the greatest fortitude and power of endurance, and are always attended with danger. For a picture of Tyrolean life in the remoter valleys I know of nothing so striking and effective as a little story called Geier -Wally — nothing the reading of w^hich so exactly anticipates the impressions which one's first ti'ip produces. The persistence with which humanity attaches itself to fertile land without regai'd to danger is illustrated elsewhere than here. The peas- ants on the slopes of Vesuvius push their cultivation and platit their homes in the very track of a possible lava stream, and, all the world over, facility for ol)taining a livelihood blinds the cultivator to all risks. Grohmann says : " In the Wild-Schouau, North Tyrol, not a few THE PEOPLE AND THEIR LIFE. 55 of tlie houses are built on sncli steep slopes that a heavy chain has to be laid round the lionses and fastened to some firm object — a large tree or bowlder of rock higlier up. ... In one village off the Puster Thai, and in two others off the Oberinn Thai, many of the villagers come to chnrcli with crampons on their feet, the terrible steep slopes on which their huts are built, somewhat like a swallow's nest on a wall, requiring this precautionary measure. ... In Mops — a village not very far from the Brenner, having a population of eight hundred inhabitants — more than three hundred men and women have been killed since 1758 by falls from the incredibly steep slopes npon which the pasturages of this village are situated. So steep are they, in fact, that only goats, and even they not everywhere, can be trusted to graze on them, and the hay for the larger cattle has to be cut and gathered by the hand of man." I have myself seen, in walking among tlie hills, little stores of hay piled against the upper side of protecting trees, where it had been brought in armf uls when cut and cured by the spike-shod hay-makers, who gather their little ci-ops here and there on the steep grass-patches, almost at tlie liuiit of vegetation, pack it in nets or in sheets, and briug it on their shoulders down the steep and dangerous paths. My earlier idea of an "alp" was that of a level plateau at the top of the lower mountains. Alps which ai-e even nearly level are very rare, especially among the higher elevations. Genei-ally they are so steep, so broken, and so inaccessible that one wouders how cattle are got to them, and how they can be trusted to graze oyer them. These alps ai-e boimded by no fences, and it m.ust be an anxious task for those who have tlie herds in charge to get them safely together at milking- time. Each animal wears its bell, not the hollow -sounding- dull cow- bell with which we are familiar, but musical in tone, and heard for a much greater distance. The Alpine hut, and the Sennerin, or dairy-maid, who spends the whole sunnner in nearlj^ solitary atten- tion to her hard duties, are not altogether what one's imagination might depict. She is not the dairj^-maid of poetry, nor is her teuipoi'ai-y jionie filled only Avith the more ethei'eal pastoi'al associations. Yet these people, too, have a romantic and imaginative side to their lives, and are happy and wdiolesome and content. 56 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. The agriculture of North Tyrol, outside of the valley of the Inn, is mostly confined to very small operations. A few cattle, a few sheep, a little poultry, a few small fields, and a mountain pasture constitute the stock in trade on which the industrious and frngal pair bring up their family in comfort and decency, accumulate portions for " WEESXLING." — [FKOM A PAINTIWG BY DEFEEGGBE.J their daughters, and lay aside a provision for their own old age. La- bor-saviug hardly exists. Everything is accomplished by unmitigated and unremitted toil. In 3"outh and in early life the people are stal- wart, active, and hearty ; but old age comes very early, and at forty the vigor of manhood and womanhood is passed — the activity and vigor, but by no means the- endurance: up to really old age even slight little women carry enormous loads in the baskets at their backs up and down steep rough hill -sides and mountain paths, where an untrained tourist must puff and toil to move his own unencumbered person. It is not easy to see how in a country so broken as this, and wliere so many farms and even whole villages have no access to market ex- cept over mountain foot-paths, any system could be introduced which TEE PEOPLE AND THEIR LIFE. 57 would lighten the labor of the people. On not one farm in fifty in the mountain valleys could the mowing-macliine be nsed, and from at least one-half of the hay and grain fields the whole crop has to be car- ried away on the heads and shoulders of the people. Something might be gained by the introduction of a better race of cattle, but it is a question whether these too would not deteriorate nnder the constant exercise needed to pick up a living on these broken pastures. The conditions of living are very much modified by the wandering propensity which is so common among the Tyrolese. As musicians, as peddlers, as cattle-dealers, and as mechanics, they travel over the wide world, bringing home a comfortable profit and a quickened in- telligence. "fINGEK-HAOKING."— [fKOM a painting Hi- DEFliEGGEK.] The mental and moral characteristics of any people can of course be only very imperfectly measured by a casual traveller. The Tyi^o- lese are represented as being extremely superstitious and priest-ridden, but no evidence of this was obvious to me. They are unquestionably 58 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. honest and faithful, and universally temperate. Pi-obably every man, woman, and child in Tyrol drinks beer and wine as constantly and as freely as we drink water; but during all of my journeyings in all parts of the country I have not seen a single person either drunk or under any considerable influence of drink. There are, too, very sliglit evi- dences of poverty, and beggars are rare. Among themselves, especially at the Gasthausern in the evening, the younger men are noisy and up- roarious, and much given to bad music and harsh play. Some of their games are rough to brutality, and it is not long since the use of the knife was a constant accompaniment of their quarrels. Wrestling and " finger -hacking" (liooking the middle fingers and twisting for the mastery, even at the risk of the joint) are still com- mon, and are watched by comrades with the same interest which at- taches to a cock-fight or a dog-fight in England. Among a people the conditions of whose life make physical endurance a cardinal virtue, these trials of strength and of the ability to endure pain are regarded as tests of manliness, and even the women who witness them applaud their most brutal manifestations. ACROSS THE BRENNER. 59 CHAPTER VIT. ACROSS THE BRENNER. Thkre are few railways more interesting to a traveller familiar with the construction of public works than that which crosses the Brenner Pass from Innsbruck to Botzen. It is nearly eighty miles long, and was built in four years. The natural dithculties were even greater than tliose of the Semmering, or of the Apennine road from Pistoja to Bologna. Within a distance of little more than twenty miles it makes an as- cent of 2500 feet, with a nearly uniform gradient of one in forty. Its escarpments and embankments are prodigious, and their protection 20.0'JO 40.030 60.000 80.0'JO 100.0 Scale for Height 1000 20'JU 3U'J0 4000 feet. _ PROFILE OF THE BKENNEE EAILWAV. against the wash of ihe mountain-side is admirably provided for. At one point, wliere the banks of the Sill offered only an insecure foun- dation for the abutments of a bridge, the river itself was turned by a tunnel through the rock, the old bed being crossed on an embankment. The road passes through twenty-two tuimels, the longest of them 2750 feet. Several of these tunnels are built on considerable curves, and of 60 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. one near Gossensass both of the mouths are in sight from the car win- clows at the same time. The scenery traversed throughout the whole distance is of the wildest and most romantic character ; and as the road follows the course of the old highway between Germany and Italy, it is full of historic interest, from the repeated and stoutly contested struggles for its possession from the time of tlie Komans down to that of Andreas Hofer. Old castles and monasteries, some in ruins, some still occupied by private families, some turned to Stadthauses and some to breweries, give that marked difference Avliich always exists be- tween European scenery and our own. After crossing the Brenner Pass the course of the road strikes the valley of a little brook which gathers re-enforcements as it goes, and becomes a roaring river — the Eisacli— long before it falls into the Adige at Botzen. Botzen lies 3500 feet below the summit of the pass, deep down be- tween the red porphyry cliffs by winch its plain is bordered, and in the luxuriant climate of North Italy. The hill-sides and the valley are covered witli abundant vines, grown on thickly covered sloping trellises; and, by slow-turning wheels of Egyptian device, the Eisach lifts up its water to irrigate the grass that grows beneath them. As Innsbruck is the metropolis of North Tyrol, so is Botzen that of Soutli Tyrol. But what a suffocating, close, stuffy, foul -smelling metropolis it is ! It has the credit of having been founded by the Bomans, and its business streets are bordered by the heavy and gloomy arcades common to hot climates. Many have spoken of it as a charm- ing town ; but in our repeated experiences we have found ourselves assailed by such indescribable odors and oppressed by such an ab- sence of lio;ht and clieerf ulness that we have come to regard it rather as a necessary stopping-place on the road to other points. Whence its smells come, — its street smells, I mean, the source of its liouse smells is too obvious to be doubted, — I have never been able to discover; for Botzen is essentially a city of clean streets. It is Avell supplied witli fountains of clear water, and the turbid tide of the Adige sends a copious and rapid flow through all its streets. Tliis latter runs througli covered gutters with openings at frequent intervals, where women kneel over their wash-boards as at a brook-side. It was a stifling hot night when we arrived, and we supped in the ACROSS THE BEENNEB. 61 open air in front of a restaurant. The broad sidewalk was already filled with gnests, and onr table was set out in the open roadway, where friendly dogs assisted at our meal, and made themselves and us much at home. The fare w^as unusually good, and I had tlie curiosity to make a memorandum of our tnenu and of our bill, which is as fol- lows (for two persons) : English fillet of beef, with egg 0.430 Potatoes, sautees 0. 043 Macaroni a ritalienne 0.043 Salad , with cheese 0. 1 56 Omelette aux confitures 0.112 Tyrol red wine (one bottle) 0.120 One cup of coifiPee with milk 0.016 One cup of black cofi'ee 0.008 One cigar 0.030 Fee to waiter 0.125 Making a total of one dollar, five cents, and three mills. Botzen has a church of somewhat celebrated beauty, and the piiizza commands a glorious view of the high-perched Rosengarten, one of the most characteristic groups of the whole dolomite formation, more completely a collection of grand "pinnacles" than any other that we have seen. The view of this followed us well out on the road towaid Meran, through the broad and fertile Adige Yalley, luxuriant with fig- trees and vines, with olives, tall cypresses, and all the characteristic vegetation of the South, walled in and sheltered on both sides by grand porphyry mountains, high up on whose slopes the hardy cultivators of its rich soil have planted their farm-houses and their hamlets. We were still in Tyrol, near the castle, indeed, which gave its name to the country, but in the richest valleys of Lombardy and Yenetia we could not have been surrounded by a landscape of more thoroughly Southern aspect. The nobles and the monks of the olden time knew well how to select the most beautiful and commanding sites for their hab- itations, and the high hill -sides of the Adige Yalley are as rich as the banks of the Ehine with the ruins of their castles and their monasteries. 62 TYROL, AND THE SEIET OF THE ALPS. PAKISU OllUEOU, BOTZEN. At Terlan, an hour's drive from Botzen, the village church has a conspicuous leaning tower, said to have been built by the architect of the tower of Pisa, who is claimed by the Tyrolese as a countryman. If the tower of Pisa is no more successful in its architectural effect than the tower of Terlan, it is a shabby builder's trick, without beauty and without special interest. The Terlan tower is a very large one, and is inclined at an awkward and nncomfortable angle; but its centre of gravity falls well within its base, and no especial skill was needed in its construction. The tradition of the neigliborhood says that it was built erect, and has taken its inclinatio]i from a settlement of the J CROSS THE BRENXEB. 63 foundation, which rests in the alluvial deposit of the valley, and is often deeply submerged by the floods of the Adige. The Einspanner horse seems to be unacquainted with oats, but he takes his hay at \ery short stages of his journey. "Lisa," our com- fortable bay mare, was hauled up at the tumble-down little inn of a tumble-down little village, among the vines and olives, for her habit- ual refreshment. We found the interior comfortable and clean, and the Terlaner wine delicate and good. The gradations of rank among the working- people always ■^'~ ?^ struck us as curious. The peasant drivers of our humble drags seemed never to perform the ofiice of groom. The stable-boy of tlie Gasthaus always takes charge of the feeding and w^atering, the driver while taking his quarter liter of red wine, and tipping the MEEAN, FEOM TUB KUCUELiSEBG. mean- hostler 64 TYBOL, AXD IRE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. M-ith a petty fee, like a gentleman. As the afternoon wore on, onr wrinkled and antiqnated Jehu grew commnnicative. He was prond of his age (seventy -two), and he needed little encouragement to wan- der back to the old days before the time of railroads, when he rode postilion with the diligences over the great post -routes. Of all the hard -riding company to which he had belonged, he alone is left. He seemed to regard himself as the sole remaining monument of a period that has gone never to retui-n. The present, with its swift travel and frequent changes, had no interest for him. He was a dreamy old Rip Van Winkle, with whom the interest of life lay only in the past — until, we being discharged and a return freight from Meran being in order, the present, with its daily bread, came bravely to the front. THE CITY OF THE BELLS. 65 CHAPTER VIII. THE CITY OF THE BELLS. Few places along the southern slope of the Alpine range have snch a reputation, and few deserve it so well, as the bean4;ifnl health-resort of Meran. It lies at the north side of the broad valley of the Adige, close under the shelter of the mountains, and where a bend of the val- ley carries the protection well around toward the west and east. Its drawback to those in robust health lies in the prominence everywhere given to its restorative characteristics. It is emphatically and con- spicuously a "Kurort" — a resort for invalids. On the other hand, many of the appliances for the comfort and entertainment of the sick are of a sort to increase the attractions for the well. Through the town runs the very swift and copious torrent of the Passeier, the banks of which are pleasantly laid out — the sunny side as a winter promenade with sheltered basking places, and the shady side (the summer promenade) with cool retreats and rustic seats under the cover of dense trees and immediately over the rapids. By municipal regulation every guest, whether a Kur subject or not, must contribute his weekly fee for the support of the Kursaal, the readiug-room, the brass-band, etc. He enjoys them all the more, perhaps, for his sound condition. Xo community of Yankees could have turned the M^hims and fan- tasies of invalids to better account than have the physicians and the lodging-house keepers of Mei'an. They seem to have. left no curative stone unturned. The grape cure, the whey cure, the cow-milk cure, the sheep -milk cure, water cure, pneumatic cure, and everything which may tickle the fancy of a malade imaginaire is worked up to its last pitch ; and if faitli in means is equal to the abundant and va- rious healing provision, Meran must be a sick man's very paradise. It may, indeed, well be that without any of these artificial accompani- 5 66 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. ments; for its pure moniitain air, its great freedom from wind and dust, and its most eqnable climate (save in the heat of summer), must combine with its abundant vegetation and its most charming Landscape to stimulate nature to her own best restorative processes. Whatever may be its effect upon the sick, I can vouch most heartily for its value to the well, for in few places have I found myself so incited to the best mental and bodily effort as here — not the stimulus and excitement of the higher, crisper mountain air, where one may perhaps be led to tax life's powers inordinately, but a wholesome feeling of energy which fits a man for his best and steadiest work. And not work onlj^, for nowhere else does solid and uninterrupted idleness, the dolce far niente of able-bodied and vigorous manhood, come so naturally and leave so little regret. It seems as though time spent in the purest loafing here were i-eally time gained in one's life and memory. There is no rose without its thorn. Mei'an, the charming, the sunny, the serene, the health-giving, the life -cheering Meran, has a skeleton in its closet — a skeleton whose dry bones rattle and send a shudder through the nerves, through the very marrow, even of its most robust visitors. IIow much more must it affect those who are ah-eady unstrung by I'eal illness, or, still worse, by fancied invalidism ! The deep sleep which its pure fresh air so fosters is broken as' with tlie very falling of the heavens. The tranquil reverie to which its soft acacia shade invites the happy soul is crushed as with the angry voice of devils. The idle saunter beside its noisy, tumbling Passeier Bach, the complete absence of thought to which the most active mind is wooed by its ceaseless swirl, is changed to torture as M-ith the sudden crashing of the very ear-drums. In the still sweet hour of the night and in the- broad light of serene day it comes, all unawares and unex- pected, and grinds the soul-with its hai"sh turmoil. The enterprising doctors and landlords, and the nuinicipality itself, may do their bravest and best to make their town a haven of health and rest : the priests, whose hand seems tui'ued against all mankind, liold the instrument of torture with a firm grasp, and turn it remorselessly in every suffei-ing breast. By day and by night, in season and out of season, and with- out rhyme or reason, the " harsh iron clangor of the bells, bells, bells," leaves no rest for body or soul, and makes life here, M-liere all else is THE CITY OF THE BELLS. 67 calm and quiet and peaceful, a constant alternation of delight and misery. Indolence, revei-ie, sleep, and all tranquillity are hour by hour jarred and broken by a senseless jangle of brazen noise, as church tow- er after cliurch tower takes np the oft-repeated alarm, and sends its fiendish vibrations through every nnwonted braui. In all parts of Tyrol the conunon people adhere to their native characteristics, little influenced by any tide of foreign travel that may flow past them. Nowhere else is this more true than at Mei-an. The streets are filled with bare -kneed peasants wearing pointed brigand hats, leather breeches, embroidered belts, and broad green suspenders covering them like vests ; the shabbiest hats are decked with feathers and flowers, and in the smallest detail of their life and conversation the people are purely and only Tyrolean. They trudge through the streets with heavily laden baskets at their backs, or drive their oddlv yoked cows l)efore the clumsy basket-bodied wagons, as their ancestors may have done, and probably did do, a hundred years ago. Surely few other peoples could live thus for years side by side and face to face with money-spending and modern-dressed strangers from all cor- ners of Christendom and remain so entirely unaffected by the contact. A gentleman to whom I took letters introduced me to one of the largest farmers of the district, who kindly explained to me many de- tails of the metliods of cultivation in vogue. The land is extremely fertile. Not only in the valley, but everywhere on the liills and moun- tain-sides, wherever a little land is free from rock and stone, all the usual Northern farm crops thrive remarkably; and not only these, but the vine, the fig, and the Spanish chestnut as well, save in too high or too exposed situations. The statement, often made, that the lemon grows out-of-doors here and ripens its fruit well is practically a mis- statement. It does grow ont-of-doors (in the summer-time), and it does ripeu its fruit (in warm sunny corners), but the tubs in which it grows have to be moved into glass houses for winter. The land is al- most exclusively owned by those who till it. As is always the case with an industrious people farming its own rich land, the whole agri- cultural community is in a very prosperous condition, and individuals of more than comfortable wealth are by no means rare. 68 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. The grape is the most conspicuous crop, and very fair red wine is abundant and cheap. Here, as in much of Northern Italy, the vines are grown on trellises, forming, with their thick foliage, what may best be described as a series of "lean-to" roofs, facing toward the sun, and supported by substantial timber at a height which makes it possible to cultivate Indian-corn under them. Excepting a strip a few feet wide along the rows of vines which is kept clean and well hoed, the inter- vening ground is occupied by grass or corn, or occasionally by other crops. These vineyards are far more picturesque and attractive than the Lima-bean-like plantations along the Ehine and the Mosel, but it is possible that the dense shading of the whole ground, and the culti- vation of grain and grass on the intervening spaces, have much to do with the quality of the wine made, which, though wholesonje and pala- table, is by no means comparable to wine of a corresponding grade gi-own in the Rhineland, or in France, where, also, the bean-pole sys- tem prevails. Not only in the valley, but almost equally on the hills, even to a great height, irrigation seems to be the sheet-anchor of the farmer. Water is abundant, and, as the streams are fed from the mountain-tops (often from glaciers), it is constant throughout the season of growth : during the summer months there is never a lack. It is applied to the vines at certain seasons, and to wheat and other grain crops ; but the great use of this aid is upon the grass fields, which are copiously flood- ed about once a week. I have read so much about the processes of iri-igation for years, without getting anything like a clear idea of its methods of practical operation, that I shall not attempt any complete description of them here. All of its details are extremely simple. On other than quite flat land the inclination given to the gutters, and the consequent rapidity of the flow, is much greater than I had supposed. Even in the minor channels in a grass field the current runs nimbly on, and the main feeder for a ten-acre field is a babbling brook. The quantity of water used is more than I had thought, but not so great that (by the use of simple methods of storing and occasional dischai-ge) the process might not be adopted very widely in our Eastern States. I had equally failed to realize the eifect to be obtained by thorough irrigation ; it is one of those things which " must be seen to be appre- TRE CITY OF THE BELLS. 69 ciated." I think tliat there was hardly a day, from the time when we left Salzburg niitil we reached Tu- rin, when we did not see irrio-ation o-oinir on, and quite np to the end of September there was hard- ly a day when we did not see hay -making. In many cases the fourth and sometimes the fifth crop was being cut, and always crops of very respect- able yield. If I had learn- ed no other lesson from my ^ journey, I should be amply re- paid by the realization it has given the great importance of irrigation, on the very small scale as well as on the large ; of the almost universal ability to make use of it in one way or another ; and of the extreme simplicity and cheapness of its methods. 60HL0SS TIKOL. 70 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF TEE ALPS. Our short stay only sufficed for the merest taste of the excui'sious M'hicli are one of the chief attractions of the region. We were told that we might renew every day for a month the dehghtful experiences in walks and rides and drives which made our sojourn in tliis land of tlie vine aud the fig and the snow-capped peak seem quite unique among our adventures. The great object of interest — that which is first pointed out by the arriving coachman, whicli holds the most prominent place among the vanities of the community, and whicli real- ly deserves all its praise — is the venerable Schloss Tirol. Curious and interesting, but not in itself especially remarkable, it trembles on the border line between ruin and restoration, between neglect and care. Standing on a low hill with an indifferent outlook, it would be no more than any ordinary castle in Tyrol ; but planted on the crest of a grand spur of the mountain, 1200 feet above the town, with an out- look up and down the valley of the Adige, it commands a view of un- rivalled beauty and variety. To. the left, the broad deep trough where the Adige flows to join the Eisach at Botzen is a very paradise of fer- tility and luxm-iance, bordered by the deep green vegetation and the grand red rocks of the porphyry mountains through which it has been cut. Standing sentinel over this valley is the high sharp profile of the Mendel Spitz. To the right, far below, is the tumbling white torrent of the river tearing its way over sharp rocks and among great bowl- ders, and nuiking a rapid descent of nearly a thousand feet. Farther on stretches the colder and higher but still rich agricultural vale of the Vintchgau. Over and beyond this are seen the Ortler Spitz, the Laaser Glacier, and other white-shrouded members of the Oetz Thai group. The whole transition from the warm and fertile plains of the South to tlie dead reign of eternal snow is covered by a mere turu- • ing of the eyes from left to'right. This old stronghold has the unusual distinction of having given its name to the land to which its possessions were added by the man-iage of one of its daughters, Margheretta Maultasch ("Pocket-mouth Meg,") to the reigning count. Seen from the town, it seems neither very far away nor very high, but I found it a hard hour's scramble for my little mountain horse from the hotel to its dependent village, Dorf Tirol. At first the road- THE CITY OF TRE BELLS. 71 -w-av — paved witli long stones laid across it — was almost like a stair- case, and its steep course continued so long that when we came out upon the crest we met the curious illusion of water running up hill. The irrigation ditch at the roadside was flowing rapidly toward us, but tlie sudden change in the grade of the road, and the steep moun- tain side in front of us, made it hard to realize that we were not de- scending. The old lords of Schloss Tirol added to the inaccessible steep on which they founded tlieir fortress the further security of a long tun- nel through the hill as an easily defensible entrance, with tlie inscrip- tion, "Iniperator Gloriosus Viae istius Autor." The hill is of a sort of hardened clay or softened stone, which is slowly washed away by rain. Here, as in other similar formations, there occurs the curious "phenomenon" of earth pyramids. The whole hill- side is flanked by tall pinnacles of earth, each surmounted by a large bowlder. These stones have served as umbrelhis to protect the eartli under them from the reach of the rain, which has gradually washed away the interven- ing mass, and left them standing like light-houses with black rocks in the place of lanterns. They are a weird -looking company to come upon at twilight, and one almost hesitates to leave them behind un- questioned as he dives into the dark Knappenloch, and rides on among the shades of the Middle -Age bandits and marauders who used to make its vault echo with tlieir riotous jeers, as they rode home, booty-laden, in the old barbarous days of the robber knights. Another castle, "Schloss Trautmansdorf," to which we were taken quite unawares by a driver who gave us a twilight airing, is, in its very different way, hardly less interesting. It is a real castle of very old date, but it has been preserved from decay, and kept fresh and most habitable. Like all of its contemporaries, it stands on a cliff which is difficult of access. It was on our way to this castle that we first saw the traditional vineyard guardian of the Tyrol — an example of "costume" in its maddest development — wearing the Tyrolese dress, resplendent with unusual colors, and a huge head-dress of feathers and fox tails and all manner of outlandish decoration. The ancient purpose of this "get- up " was to strike terror into the hearts of grape-loving boys and girls. 72 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. More recently its object is said to be the amusement of tourists, the more serious business of protecting property depending on the fact that the guardian carries fire-arms, and has authority to use them. JSTotwithstanding all the inviting journey that lay before us, and despite its miserable and incessant bells, the temptation was strong to lay aside all energy and ambition, and to idle away the rest of our holiday in lovely Meran ; but it would be as hard to tear ourselves away a month later, and we drove back one fine morning toward Botzen. But w^hat a freight we took with us ! what a fund of new- found impressions ! what memories of the sweet vale of Meran, and of the mountains and hills, and of the great Yintchgau portal to the high Alpine country where the Oetz Thai group guards the western frontier of Tyrol ! VINEYAKD WATQU. INTO THE GBODNEB TEAL. 73 CHAPTER IX. INTO THE GRODNER THAI. It is curious to observe liow a great railway throws into obseiiritv the country through whi(;h it passes. It plants widely separated cen- tres of civilization here and there along its route, but practically it cuts off tlie wayside villages from intercourse with the world. In the old diligence days every village between Innsbruck and Botzen was familiar with frequent travel; its post-house was enlivened with throngs of passengers, and its special industry or interest had a public upon which to thrive. The Brenner railway has changed all this. The great flood of travel between the north and the south is swept unheed- ing through the valley, only here and there a tourist, tempted by beauty or romance, halting to awaken once more the echoes which have so lonsf been stilled in tlie ecuest rooms of the abandoned Gasthaliser. Eailway travel down the valley of the Eisach is eminently satisfy- ing; the rate of speed is slow enough for one to take in intelligently the most attractive features of the landscape; its halts are frequent enough and long enough for one to study the character and the cos- tumes of the peasants gathered about the stations, and one arrives at Botzen with the satisfactory feeling of having "done" the Brenner. Such was our own impression after repeated trial — an impression which miffht have lasted throuo-li life had we not had occasion to learn its inadequacy. How often, I wonder, has our blissful ignorance blinded us to the best our journeyings have had to offer? In this instance our enlightenment came with the drive from Botzen to Waidbruck on such an afternoon as seems generally to be reserved for the occasion of our expeditions. I say it with bated breath, lest the fates should overhear me and break the charm, and I even whisper the German's cautionary " nicht beruf en." But it is a secret which I cannot withhold TYROL, AND TEE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. ansitioii from my readers that though those who precede us and those who fol- low us may be sad- dened with rain and gloom, when we travel*ie clouds part before our pathway, and give ns sunshine and bright flowers and sweet breezes. The interest of the road begins im- mediately on leav- ing the town. The com its sombre streets and its arid piazza to the roses and the vine trellises is instant Soon the narrow plain is passed, and the great walls of the valley draw closer together, leaving at times barely room for road and river and railway. The monn- tains grow higher and steeper as the valley narrows, and we pene- trate a deep and majestic gorge, winding abruptly to right and to left ; now veiled in the shades of twilight, now bursting again into sunshine, tilled always with the river's roar, and always rich with a grandeur and beauty which one can no more appreciate from the windows, or even from the observation car of a railway train, than one can appreciate Niagara from the Suspension -Bridge. The form and the substance we may get; but the spirit, the sweetness, the sing- ALPEN EOSEN. INTO THE GRODNER TEAL. 75 ing of the birds, the flntteriiig of the leaves, the climbing of the shad- ows, the life and the still-life — these need the calm and delibei-ation of slow locomotion. The pleasant greeting of travelling peasants; tlie clambering of scared goats np the sheer cliffs ; the snggestions of the fire -blackened rock where gypsies have camped; the liawk's nest at the top of a dead tree; the strongholds wliere Hofer and his A VILLAGE 8TUEET. hardy men contested the passage of the gorge, as the Eomans and the Goths had done before them ; the degree to which natnre, nnheed- ino; all the heroic record of history, has drunk np the wasted blood with the simplest vegetation, and liolds all these rocks and ravines as 76 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. f "^ *■» *■*, ^ J' m 6T. ULllIOH AUD THE LAKG KOFEL. pnre and fresh as though thej' had known only the grazing of goats and the soaring of hawks — these come to the apprehension by processes too slow for the railway ; not coming, they leave ns ignorant of the real essence of remote travel. The great Gasthans at which we stopped for hay and coffee is a great ghost-house now, peopled with the memories of the post- INTO THE GEODNEB TEAL. 77 ing days. It still maintains a brave front, gay with flowers, fresh with scrubbing, and always ready for the hurrying throngs which now, alas ! sends it but rare and transient representatives. How long this old post-house of Atzwang will continue under its old impetus no one can say. It gets a little foot-weary travel by the higli-road, and it is the starting-point for the Kastelruth entrance to the Dolomites; but all this is little for so great a house, and sooner or later "Ichabod" must be written over its door-way. How many of my readers have ever heard of Waidbruclc ? If they are told that it is an odd little Tyrol village under the shadow of the mighty Schloss Trostburg, the Roman Acropolis of Snblavione, and the birthplace of Oswald von Wolkenstein, the Minnesinger, and that at the end of its single street a white picket gate opens to let ns into the Grodner Thai, they will still have much to learn ; for AVaidbruck is its only entrance, and though one of the smallest, the Grodner is one of the most curious and most interesting of the valleys of all Tyrol. Phj^sically, it is a deep score in the steep side of the mountain, eighteen miles long, and 3600 feet higher at its upper than at its lower end. Its population numbers about 3500, which number has not ma- terially varied for ages. Until 1856, this people — always known and always noted — kept up their frequent intercourse with the world, and carried to it their abundant wares over the roughest of mountain foot- paths. Now a good carriage -road — a marvel of difficult and costly communal engineering — leads down the steep valley to Waidbruck : for ns it led up from Waidbruck. Day had deepened to dnsk, and dusk to dark, long before we reached its capital village of St. Ulrich — locally and gutturally " Sanght Hulhrich." The Grodner Bach is a roaring torrent, swirling its Avay between and around angular rocks, and falling in frequent cascades. The close-lying hill-sides are steep and craggy. Here and there, where a little clearing has been possi- ble, a thrifty farm-house and overflowing barn cling to the acclivity. Everywhere else thick forest clothes the rocky slopes, and through this humming valley we climb higher and higher, past the little village of St. Peter, past occasional level fields, and through still higher and higher forests of pine and black fii-, and more frequent clearings and L'ghted windows. The tall straight pines are trinnned of their side 78 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. brandies to iTisike bedding for cattle, but often branches are left near the top to sinuilate the cross. These stood in frequent silhouette against the clear sky. At a bend of the road there rises suddenly 1)efore us, high beyond the great iir-clad mountain-side, towering above the very woi'ld, and illumined with the golden glow of sunset, the majestic column of the Lang Kofel, the giant king of the Western Dolomites. Separated from its own surroundings, standing out like red gold above the dark forest and against the deep blue, solitary and unmeasured, a shining blaze of glory, it beckons us on, like the pillar of lire by night, to the wonders of the Promised Land. At last the hills part, the starry sk}^ opens, and the sparkling house-lamps of St. Ulrich stretch high up the sides of the broad basin in which the village lies. At the "White Pony" we found an amiable lisping landlord, and an intelligent and friendly Kellnerin, ready to serve our comfort and to minister to our wants. All the appliances of maps, horses, guides, and luncheons, and wise advice, were at our disposal for the days of our stay, and all the marvels to which the Grudnei' Thai leads were before us for a choice. The Groduer Thai itself engaged our earliest interest. Its hidden and so long inaccessible fastnesses caught 2000 years ago the reflux of the tide of jSTorthern barbarians which swept down into Italy only to be driven back by Roman valor, and- — save where such a sheltered nook as this caught fragments of the fleeing band — to be wiped from the face of the earth. The eddy of Rlioetian fugitives, resting among these hills, stayed to transmit to our own time the blood, and the hardy personal qualities, and the roots of a language which only here and there besides have escaped total destruction. The Northmen held to the mountain valleys — the Grodner, the Gader, and the Fassa — and spread out over the intervening hills. The Romans held the fertile lands along the rivers, and guarded the en- trance to the valleys. In time, tempted by the accumulated crops and herds, and by the fertile fields of the Rhoetian bands, they encroached upon their domain, usurped their homes, and absorbed their national- ity. Hence the mixed race and the mixed speech, which hold their own here better than in the Pvrenees, the Eno-adine, and elsewhere where INTO THE GRODNEB THAR 79 the tongue of tlie troubadoui-s has told of the mingling of Southern and Northern blood, as the two races beat themselves together in mountain warfare. Here, to-day, well within the Austrian domain, and in close intercourse with the world by tlieir active traffic, the de- scendants of tlie old E-hoeti-Itomaii heathen liold to tlieir old Romance COSTUME OF BKIDE IN THE GKODNEK TUAL. language with the pride of birthright possessors. And not only here, but all the world over, wherever a Grodner has settled, though lie may never see his native hills again, he cherishes his native speech, and makes it the mother-tongue of his children. It is a musical tongue, and a mixed. There must have been sol- so TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. diers of fortune in those days as in ours, for Spanish and French roots are plenty in the speech, and these conld liave come to this distant quarter only by the chance fortune of war. Naturally German words have crept into it by contact, and tlie Italian of the valleys to the south has also made its mark. But these influences have not sufficed to change its fundamental character, any more than neigliborhood, i-elig- ion, and commmiity have modified the fundamental character of the people themselves ; the Gi'odner is still distinct among Tyrolese, and his valley is still unique. "A Eesident" — evidently a priest with a soul above his beads — has recently published a considerable treatise {Groden, der Grodner, tmd seine Sj)rache), which might serve to make the "Ladin," as the people call it, a written language. The composite character is appar- ent at the very outset. The numerals are : Unjn, doi, trel, catter, cinch, sies, soti, btt, nu\f, dios ; vint {20), cent (100). Other examples are: Prim il'&i), second (2d), seni/pl (single), doj)l (double). Jo sonj — I am. Titj'es — thou art. El eilaje — he is. N'ous sonj — we are. Yo seis — you are. J^i ellesje — they are. Jo foe — I was. Jo soy stdt — I have been. Jo foe stdt — I had been. Jo save — I shall be. i!l ivo mel da — he does not give it to me. ''N' mel dis — I am told (one tells me). Here is the beginning of the parable of the Prodigal Son : " 'l figliuol peodigo. " Unj p^re ova doi flonjs. 'L plu soun va unj di da si p^re, y dis : Pere ! daseme la pert, che me tocca, ch^ he la intenzionj de men si da tlo demoz. 'L pere partes la roba, y da al fi chell, che je tuccova. 'L fi pocche 1' lia abu si arpesonj, sen jel sit da tgesa demoz tenj pais dalonc. 116 ha el scumenca a mene na sldtta vita, y in puech temp s' ha '1 doffatt dutt chell, che I'ova giata da si pere." It is evident at a glance that there is some special source of pros- perity in this valley which marks it ver}^ distinctly from other parts of Tyrol. It has its own thrifty agriculture and its frugal liabits, its untiring industry and its simple mode of life, which go so far to make INTO THE GRODNEB TEAL. 81 am- people comfortable; but here is more than the comfort of even the best agricultural valleys. A spruce New England air is seen on every hand-in fresh paint, new houses, trim-looking door-yards, and the many minor evidences of good fortune. The secret of it all is that in the last century the art of Bo/b- .chnit^erel was introduced among the people, and the manufacture ot wooden tovs soon becan.e general among them. For a long tune this industry has thriven, and has occupied the attention of nearly the THE WOOD-OAKVEE. whole popnlation. Even the children, on coming Lome from school sit at the hench and cnt bnsily away at the special ob,ect to winch the talent of their family 1-s been devoted for generations I maj' be horses, or cows, or dor.heys, or sheep, or cats, or jomted doll , o. soldiers. It is never a variety. The most skilful cat-maker wonld stand 6 82 TYROL, AND TEE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. defeated before tlie smallest wooden soldier. If the mother and the grandmother made donkeys, tradition and family honor compel the .child to make donkeys, and donkeys only, and to transmit the species TYKOLESE COSTUME, VAL BUGANA. vmchanged to sncceeding generations. In this way a certain skill, or rather a qnick deftness, has been acqnired, wliich has led to most abnndant production. Ordinarily the quality of the work is extremely rude ; it rarely leads to anything like artistic performance ; but it has sufficed to fill the whole civilized world with the painted wooden toys of the Grcidner Thai. For a century or so these wares found their way to market in the packs of the peddlers, who regularly visited all the principal fairs of Eiu-ope. Later, dealers in toys established themselves at St. Ulrich, INTO THE GBODXER TEAL. 83 and bought the wliole product for ready monev. The peddlers turned their attention to other merchandise, and to-dav furnish a verv laro-e quota of tlie pack-carriers who peddle the lighter appliances of do- mestic life. With the attachment to their homes which is chai-acteristic of all Tyrolese — and, indeed, of all mountaineers — the profit of their ti-affic, saved with rai-e economy, generally serves to increase the comfort of their native homes, and to improve the condition of their families. In this way, as well as directlj^, the toy industry has been a chief ele- ment in the prosperity of the people. Since the i-oad has been opened the shipment of toys in large packages has been carried on directly from the valley, which is visited by buyers from most distant lands. We saw huge cases marked for Spain, Sydnej', and Brazil. Along the valley road and on all the mountain paths we constantly met women and children and old men with back-])askets filled with freshly painted toys, all bound for Herr Purger's great Noah's ark of a ware- house. It indicates what frugal life in Tyrol implies when we find that the evidence of marked prosperity in the Grodner Thai, as contrasted with small valleys where agriculture is the onlj^ resource, is chiefly due to a petty industry which brings a return of less than one dollar per week for each member of the population. This is supplemented by the savings of the wandering peddlers, and there is a certain amount of domestic weaving which ekes out the income of many a family; but when all is reckoned, we shall find that the art of money- saving has been a larger factor in the accumulation of Grodner wealth and comfort than the art of money-making. The wood-carving is not entirely confined to the rude toy-making in which nearly the whole peasantry is employed. There are many carvers of Madonnas and saints — some of them skilful — who find their market wherever the Catholic Church exists. The chief dealer in St. Ulrich has some examples of artistic work, inferior, however, to that of Innsbruck. We visited a carver's shop where an old man and his wife were busy with church eflngies, large and small. They were ex- tremely deft and clever in the handling of their many tools, and in the pi-ecision with which they cut to the exact line where the desired S4 TYBOL, AND THE SEIBT OF THE ALPS. expression lav hidden. We selected an unfinished group — "The Edu- cation of the Virgin" — and sat by while the gi'ave and responsible maternal look was developed in St. Anna's face, and a real learner's interest and curiosity were awakened in the Virgin. It is a rude lit- tle block, and we declined to have it "finished;" but it is full of ex- ' ^' 1.- < .< A MOUNTAIN POKTEE. pression. Made without model or draAving, it is real, honest sculptor's work. The trained eye of these people sees the statue in the unhewn wood, and they know how to cnt away the chips Avliich conceal it. During our wanderings we made quite a complete collection of photographs of Tyrolese costumes, some of them belonging to this val- INTO THE GRODNEB TEAL. 85 ley. The liabit with regard to dress varies with the locality. Here and in the Ziller Thai the every-day gear is not especially marked, the full costume being reserved for Sundays and festivals. In other val- leys, at Meran and at Berchtesgaden, the "world's" dress is hardly worn at all by the peasants. Everywhere the climate seems peculiarly adapted to the growth of flowers and feathers in the hat-bands of men of all classes and of all nations. It is especially pleasing to see a staid, smooth-shaven Englishman, who at home would reprehend the wear- ing of anything less than a stiff hat, unbend his rigid lines, deck him- self with light and rolling felt, and sport a cock feather or a bunch of Edelweiss at his crown. It is good, too, to see his sidelong glances at the mirrors, and the little wreath of pleasure that winds about his lips at the thought of such rare indulgence. The costumes are everywhere interesting. Many of them depend mainly on color, and cannot be well reproduced in engraving; but others, as tliose of Val Sugana and the Sarn Thai, are of curious form. Most of them are very old, and they are all worn with traditional pride. Although the Grodner Thai is the seat of a special industry, its agriculture has all the minuteness and care of that of the rest of Tyrol. The wood-carving does not supplant, it oidy supplements, the usual w^ork of the farmer. The land is good, irrigation is universal, and the little hill-side fields are veiy productive. There is only the one wagon-road, which leads to the head of the valley, with a few side routes to the lateral gorges, where rude mountain carts — with wheels in front and runners behind— are occasionally used. Neai-ly the whole ti-ansportation of hay and grain from the fields to the commodious barns is over foot-paths, immense loads being laboriously carried on the shoulders of the people, sometimes in large coarse sheets, some- times in baskets, and sometimes on a sort of rack resting on the head and the back. 86 TYROL, AND TEE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. CHAPTER X. A DAY ON THE SEISSER ALP. St. Ulricii is the best pc)int from which to visit the Seisser Alp, and the Seisser Alp is deemed the best worth visiting of all the high pastures of Tyrol. Its iir-growii brink forms the southern horizon of the Grodner Valley for many a mile, and its great eastern barrier, the Lang Kofel, is nowhere more imposing than here, flanked as it is by the grand Dolomite bank of the Meisules which incloses the head of the valley. I have been able thns far to withhold my personality and my per- sonal belongings from the attention of my readers. I can do so no longer. The day's adven.ture which I am about to describe owes some of its important features to m,y relations with the gentler sex. I am a married man, and my wife, who is large, and whose name is Jane, is the constant companion, the guide — and the check- — ^of my travels. Jane is a person of i-are virtues, of quick intelligence, of great force of character, and a conscientious disciplinarian. In m}' case, if ever, the somid motto is true, that " Ce que femme vent, Dieu le vent." I cher- ish no hope for long, I indulge no ambition openly, which has not had the stamp of her approval. The well-regulated, middle-aged current of ni}^ life owes to her sage judgment its even course. The deviations into which, unguarded, I am' sometimes led, are bent quickly and gent- ly back to the straight path b}^ her soft firm touch. It needs not to be stated that my walk and conversation are unimpeachable. Jane is in all things intellectual and spiritual my superior. In the art of equitation she is my inferior. Here is my one triumph over her, and henceforth, when I see evidence of undue assumption, I hope that reference to the Seisser Alp will bring her meekly back to her just level. A DAY OX THE SEISSER ALP. ST TUK LANG KOFEL, FEOM THE SEISSEIi ALP. As M'e first entered the hall of the Wliite Pony we noticed a side- saddle whose generons measurements seemed to set at rest certain doubts with which we had contemplated the ascent to the flowery meadows. The morning after our arrival a stalwart black horse — Moro — built after the model of the knights' horses in the days of iron armor, stood at the door, his broad loins caparisoned with that noble hog-skin. I never hesitate to put up a nimble girl who floats to the saddle with a 88 TYEOL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. toncli, but I allowed Moro to be brought along-side a carpenter''s bench, whence my stnrdj Jane sat down upon liini with ease and dignity. Tlie stont back settled to an unaccustomed sway, but nothing broke, and we mai'ched bi'avely out on our venturesome way. Being mount- ed, inconvenient doubts began to arise as to dismounting. One who rides for the first time in twenty years cannot ride all day without intermission. Having dismount- ed, how to mount again ? We were bound for a region where carpenters' benches do not pre- vail. The question annoj'ed us — I say " us " from sympathy — until we had gone quite up to the neighborino; villao;e of Santa Kristina, and had left the high- road to cross the brook and take the bridle-path which leads ob- liquely up the mountain -side. AVas it a steep path? Ask Jane if it was steep. I see her now clutching that hoi-n with her bruised knee, that nuine with her weary fingers, that apparent sum- mit of the climb with her anxious eyes. I am guiltless of all wish for revenge ; our small by-gones may be by-gones ; old scores soon heal in my wonted heart ; but if there had been reckonings to settle, how that long and weary hill would have fed my heart with satisfaction ! At last the zigzag course — each zio- harder than the last zas; — brought us out upon a plain, an inclined plain, beyond whose distant rim projecting tree-tops told of level ground. Our guide — voluble in Ladin, but halting in German — was a mute spectator of our woe. The TVKOI.ESE iliN TUAL. A DAY OX THE SEISSER ALP. 89 only comfort he could suggest was a cooling spring in the edge of the Alp where we might rest and be consoled. In time we had finished our first two hours' travel, and were fairly on the first pastures of the Seisser Alp, 2000 feet above St. Ulrich, and only 4000 below the sum- mit of the Lang Kofel, which rose like a huge fortress tower alnpst across our path. The spring reached, my own thirsty lips lay easily over its brim- ming flow; but tlie memories of even twice twenty years gave Jane no precedent for this method of imbibition, and she sat like Tantalus at the brink of the flood without the power to drink. My life has been marked by many acts of conjugal devotion, but the humility with which I carefully ate out a hard-boiled egsc from its shell with the point of ]ny penknife, and filled the tiny cup again and again, until the cravings of my bride had been sated, must stand recorded against the day when I shall need special indulgence. We di-ank and we ate, and we held council. We stood at the entrance of a land whose praises had long been sung in our eai's — a land of many cattle, of flowers uncounted, and flowing with a very tide of the rich- est milk. The air was filled with the melody of tinkling bells, the sun rode warm in the September sky, and the smoke of Sennerin's huts floated over the trees. To go on or to turn back — that was the question Avhich racked us. The other descent was not harder than tlie way by which we had come, but it lay miles on beyond the hills and valleys we had come to see. Too wise for that, I ventured no advice, but I rejoiced in her stout heart when my tried wife decided to mount her steed and follow her venturesome day to its end. Even a woman's decision is not always achievement, and to place that form again in its seat needed more tlian mental exertion. The fences, the bar-ways, the stumps, and -the stones which we tried and found inadequate, it would be tedious to recount. At last we succeeded, the guide and I, by dint of our combined pushing, in forcing Moro close along-side a sufficient rock, and in holding him there until his chai'ge was seated. On level ground all went well, and down -hill work was easy enough, but the frequent steep climbs, as we came out of gullies and np the banks of deeply furrowed brooks, tested the endurance of that 90 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. fond frame, and lined the kind face with anxious thonglit as to the coming hours. Yet even personal inconvenience and dread could not dull us to the glories by which we were surrounded. For miles away to the south and west, accentuated by dark tree-filled valleys, rolled the green bil- lows of this glorious summer pasture, dotted with cattle, radiant with wild flowers, and traversed by the slow- moving shadows of clouds. Hundreds of huts and barracks shelter its people and its hay, and thousands of cattle feed over its unfenced expanse. |k. The Lang Ivofel, the Plat Kofc-el, and the jagged little peaks of the y Horse Teeth guard its eastei-n side, and the Rosengarten and the pon- derous horned reef of the Schlern wall out the world at the south. One is more in the heart of the Dolomites at Cortina, but nowhere more impressed with their characteristic and solitary grandeur than here. "We had counted largely upon milk for our food in this excursion, and we made our next halt at the hut of a Sennerin who combines the entertainment of chance travellers with her dairying industry. We took seats on a porch at the shady side of the house, and at a table where two cow-herds sat facing each other, eating "Schmarn"* and milk from the same earthen basin. A similar basin of milk was set between us, and two iron spoons were furnished ns. Pj-eceding writ- ers on Tyi'olean travel liad emphasized the badness of the food, and a thoughtful friend in New England had kindly urged on our accept- ance a dyspeptic preparation of parched and sweetened wheat meal with which to supplement our insuflicient provender. This had lain nnnsed and unneeded in our satchel all the way from home. Its time had now come, and we soaked it, according to prescription, in our milk, eating to the memory of friends who fancy there are mountains in Massachusetts, The cow-herds, finishing their meal, rose from the table, crossed themselves, stood facing the east, and devoutly repeated a long prayer, with due genuflection and bowing of the head, and then trudged away to their work. The woman of the house showed us her simple sum- * A compound of grease and Indian-meal. A DAY ON THE SEISSEB ALP. 91 mei' dairy and her loom, inspected our novel outfit, and sent ns on our way rejoicing. She could spare no hay for our hoi'ses, and we marched on to the hut of a bald and barefooted little old man, who made ns welcome, and stood in blue-eyed wonder as we told him we had come from beyond the great sea. His loft not only fed our beasts, it fur- OOST0ME OF THE DUX THAL. nished Jane a fragrant couch, where for two hours she slept away the weariness of her saddle, and awoke refreshed for her fnrtlier ride. This was my first Alpine dairy, and a very good example it was of the summer home of the mountain cow-tender, with an open hearth ill the smoky front-room, and a comfortable-looking bed in the milk- 92 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. room. The old ninn makes both butter and cheese from a herd of a dozen cows, and his employer sends regularly from Kastelruth to fetch the product to market. For five months the cows are kept here in the mountains, and dur- ing the hay-making season the whole vast Alp is gay with throngs of young men and women, with work and music and dancing. When we saw it the harvest was over, and only the cattle-teiiders were left. In another month it w^ould be quite deserted, its great elevation — from 5000 to 7000 feet — subjecting it to early killing frosts. It is a compact rolling plateau o£ the richest grass land, varied by occasional woods, thirty-six miles in circuit, and belongs mainly to the neighbor- ing communes of Seiss and Kasteh-uth. "VVe took up our honieward march about the middle of tlie after- noon, and struck across over the hills toward the rough cart track which leads down through the wild Saltaria Gorge into the Groden Valley some distance below St. Ulrich. Jane's couifort did not increase — indeed, her sufferings did not cease — but she is a woman, and when she had given to her sensations the varied articulate expression with which she is so richly gifted, she relapsed into her most eloquent con- dition of silent and enduring fortitude, Avhicli, more than any spoken words, tears my heart with the consciousness that I have, all by my own blundering, masculine obtuseness, led her a sad and sorry dance, whose last echoes I am far from having heard. However, the magnificent view we gained of the far-away snow- fields of the Oertler Mountains, bordered at one side by the great gray precipice of the Schlern, and at the other by the green slope and pine- clad crest of the Puflatsch, could be trusted to remain and delight her memory long after the bruising and straining of the ride had been for- gotten ; so I was sure of my'final recompense. Then, too, with all her greater qualities, she has feminine traits which are always available, under skilful manipulation, to divert her attention from her own dis- comfort. Babies, dogs, cats, and donkeys hold the key to her most hidden Iieart, and even horses are extremely useful in emergency. I have never found that horses are especially fond of clover heads. Of- fered a handful of grass containing them, it is not these which they first select. Yet so firm is her conviction that a tuft of red clover A DAY OX THE SEISSEB ALP. 93 blossoms is tlie last desire of the horse's palate, that I can calm her wildest moods by indulging her in this j)et fiction. How she would ever have made the long and really trying descent to the valley, had I not kept her Moro supplied with these talismanic tidbits, I do not know. Thns diverted, she came blandly down, and I laid her bruised form, sore with seven hours' riding, on the best feather-bed at the Pun}', hap[)y in the thought that I had mitigated to a marked degree her unexpressed chidings for my ill-judged exploit. The next expedition I made by myself with a guide. Two hours of slow driving took us up the steep road through Santa Ivristina and Santa Maria to Plan, at the very head of the valley, where at a height of over five thousand feet a curly-headed Pip Yan Winkle keeps a pleasant-looking inn and a small farm. While my horse was being fed we sat on the balcony together, and chatted about his possessions and his easy-going life. It Wds with real glee that he lay back in his chair and pointed to a little army of women and girls, gay with all the colors of Grodner clothing, reaping merrily in his small grain -field. He was evidently in the earl}' stages of inherited prosperity, and life was all "happy-go-lucky" for him. Hidden away in this obscure cor- ner of the world, he is likely to be his own most frequent customer, and his sturdy Gretchen already shrugs her shoulders over his un- thrifty ways. My destination, the Coll di Rondella, was an hour and a half away — up in the sky. It is a "compromise" ascent, an ascent to be made in the saddle, where a guide is taken only as a matter of courtesy, an easily reached eminence which suffices to save the reputation of one who visits a mountain region without tempting the Fates by crag scrambling. It suited my own ambition precisely, and I rode up the steep, rough bridle-path with the feeling that I was performing an easy and pleasant duty. Much of the route lies over the broken Alps, between the Lang Kofel and the Meisules — here close neighbors and infinitely grand — and touches nearly the summit of the Sella Pass. Close beside the pass rises a steep mamelon of a hill, grass-grown to its summit, and so much lower than the greajt peaks about it that it seems only recently to have attracted the notice of travellers. Its last ac- 94 TYROL, AND THE SEIET OF THE ALPS. clivitv is too steep for riding, and it is trj'ing to nidiardened legs. I was beginning to toil and blow when the guide tauglit nie quite a new use of tliat noble animal the horse. Hitherto I had regarded his tail as a merely ornamental, or at best as a fly-whipping, member. I now, for the first time, learned its value as a tow-line. Grasping it with both hands, I found it an efficient mitigator of my labor, and I came fresh and happy to the top. The skj? was clear, and I stood literally amidst the glories of the THE iSLAOIEB OF MARMOLATA. upper world. The tin}' houses of Campidello nestled in the sunshine far down in the Fassa Thai. A little stretch of dull Alpine grass and moss lay all about ; and beyond this, to the far-away horizon on every side, was spread out a turmoil and wilderness of mountain more mag- nificent and impressive than any sight that had ever greeted my eyes before. The vast grim glacier of the Marmolata was close before us, the conical peak of Tofana shut out the Ampezzo Valley, and the A DAT OX THE SEISSEB ALP. 95 giants of Tyrol, from Vorarlberg to the Carintbian border, from the Ober Piiizgau range to tbe Yeuetiaii Alps, stood in tbick array on every side. Witb a later and more diflKcult experience in my mind, I commend tbe Coll di Rondella to tbose who would see tbis company of mountains all unshorn of their grandeur, their majesty measured hy tbe stern scale of tbe overtopping Lang Kofel and tbe Titanic peaks of the Sella, which stand out a full half mile above their fringe of stunted pines. Its easy climb was tbe best-rewarded excursion that I made in Tyrol. Tbe constant down-bill drive to Waidbruck in broad daylight re- vealed the superb details of this most charming of mountain roads, w^iicli our evening ascent bad hardly more than suggested. It is as picturesque as the Wissabickon and as grand as the White Mountain Flume, and everywhere noisy witb the rush of the mad Grodner Bach, which ponrs its foaming flood through a channel piled witb huge rocks. Its scenei-y is miique among mountain valleys, as are its people among the secluded communities of the far-away corners of tbe world. 96 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF TEE ALPS. CHAPTER XT. AT THE FOOT OF THE GREAT RANGE. We hud regarded the Pnster Thai too h'ghtly. One is disposed to consider a valley wliere a railway has been built as necessarily tame and nnromantic. Even our knowledge of the wild route of the Bren- ner road had not chastened us of this heresy. The Puster Thai is in its way unsurpassed. Beginning at Fran- zensfeste, 2500 feet above the sea, it climbs on to a height of over 4000 feet at the Toblacli plain, and thence descends to 2250 feet at Lienz. It is the main stem of the chief system of valleys in South-eastern Tyrol ; the entrance to the Pfunder Thai, Gader Thai, Taufers Thai, Antholzer Thai, Pragser Thai, Hollensteiner Thai, Sexen Thai, Villgrat- ten Thal,l3el Thai, Moll Thai, Kaiser Thal,Virgen Thai, and Tauren Thai. "And tliese vales have smaller vales, And these have vales to feed 'em." They are the main arteries of a vast net-work of mountain valleys reaching up to the region of the scantiest summer grass, peopled Avith eager farmers, who cling to the last patch of ground, no matter how high or how steep, which promises e\en the most meagre means of subsistence. Whence these peoples came it would be hard to trace, even through their dialects, and the dialect sometimes changes in the same valle^'. Like the Groduer Thalers, they are probabl}' the descendants of the mixed crowds of refugees who were stranded liere when the Northern armies were driven back by the Romans. Whatever they are in ori- gin, they have become genuine Tyrolese, Avith all the acquired cliarac- tei'istics of a hardy mountain race. They have yielded to the condi- AT THE FOOT OF THE GEE AT MANGE. 97 tions which have everywhere moulded the natures of their fellow-coun- trymen. Yet the inherent gerui lias not been changed, blood and tra- dition still assert their force, and the distinctions which are indicated by speech and by costnme have their root in fundamental distinctions of character. It adds very much to the interest of all Tyrolean travel, which looks beneatli the mere surface show of scenery and dress, to inquire into the composite influences by which mankind has been made what it is in these valleys, what original traits still assert their vitality, and what force "environment" has exerted to mould different races toward a common type. Physically, the Pnster Thai yields nothing in grandeur or in inter- est to its most noted rivals. It is quite different — different from them all — and it would be senseless to attempt a detailed comparison be- tween it and them. It is idyllic, grand, pastoral, gorge-like, broad, sim- ple, and romantic by turns, but even in its simplest phases it is never without the charm of the finest mountain surroundings. Its northern side valleys run quite up into the heart of the Grosser Yenediger and Gross Glockner range, and tap its glaciers for their brooks. At the south it skirts along the outlying spurs of the Dolomites, which lift their mysterious fronts far over its bordering hills, and shed into its bosom the uncanny light with which they reflect each setting sun. Beautiful though the Puster Thai is in itself, it borrows even great- er beauty from tlie branches which it sends back into the mountains. Every point is full of interest. It has no considerable industry save its agriculture, and a few quiet small towns scattered here and there suffice for its commerce. Yet Amthor's Tyrol Guide devotes nearly a hundred closely printed pages to little else than an abbreviated cata- loguing of what it has to ofl^er to the tourist. A wliole busy summer Avould not nearly suffice for the exploration of most enticing attrac- tions, to which it is the principal entrance. It served in our case as the road to the Ampezzo Yalley, and it at- tracted us by another object of pilgrimage, interesting in every corner of the world where the English language is read. William and Mary Ilowitt — the most married names of our litera- ture — have long set up their summer tent at Dietenheim, at the mouth 7 98 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. of tlie Taufers Thai. Thither we went to claim one ray of tlieir genial sunshine before their declining clay shall have set forever. In a fine old chateau, from which the high -well -born owners have fled, and which now serves the modest uses of a farm-house, they have taken tlie handsomei- apartments for their cool and quiet retreat. WILLIAM IIOWITT. Their salon might be, for its size, the Rittersaal of a castle, but it is filled now with flowers and fresh air and smiling light, and w^th the simple furniture of the temporary houie, where these genial, active, and happy octogenarians speed away the mellow days of summer with their books and their friends. One gets from an hour passed with them an insight into the happy possibilities of ripe old age, and looks AT THE FOOT OF THE GREAT RANGE. 99 forward witli a fresh interest to the time when one's own loiii;- down- liill of life shall bring good and sweet reward for the work of the bus- ier years. We certainly turned away from their door forever happier for the light they had shed across onr path. The Tanfers Thai — a broad flat plain reaching back into the foot of the snow mountains — had just now been the scene of a geologic event -which spread wide disaster through its community. The same deluge of i-ain which did such havoc in the Ziller Thai, on the opposite slope of the mountain, so saturated the hanging bank of one of the narrower goi-ges of this valley that its added weight tore tlie earth away from the rock, and it fell, in an enormous land-slide, forming a high dam across the chasm. The waters I'ose behind the barrier and accumulated in a vast lake, burying deeply the farms and houses of the people. Eising to the brink of the dam, it poured over the soft and unstable deposit. It was like "the beginning of anger." The soft earth melted away, and the whole accumulated flood canie pour- ing down into the plain, dealing destruction on every hand, washing away field and forest, sweeping long-established houses from the face of the earth, covering miles of cultivated land with the barren wash of the hills, and filling the valley with desolation. Unlike the people of the Ziller Thai, these peasants had little accumulated wealth, and their misfortune is absolute. It will take generations of toil and fru- gality to repair the damage of this swift calamity. European communities have one great advantage of which we are deprived, in the fact that they had been long established before the advent of the railway, and had provided themselves with good and permanent carriage roads. There runs through the Puster Thai, all the way from Franzensfeste to Lienz, a smooth, hard, macadamized road, over which the post -service used to be performed, and which, now that through travel and transportation have taken to the rail, re- mains as a last connecting link between the thrifty villages with which it is lined. It is a most charming tourist's drive-way, and its many old posting inns are still ready with their couifortable cheer. Miihlbach, Bruneck, Toblach, Innichen, and Lienz, and the many minor villages, offer each its own attractions, and each is surrounded by its peculiar points of interest. 100 TYROL, AND THE SKIBT OF THE ALPS. With two good horses and a travelling-carriage for the main jonr- nev, and saddles for side excursions, a congenial couple might find in this vale of beauty the means for passing the pleasant months of the year in most serene and satisfying enjo^-ment. The notable wonders ■a*, , LIENZ, PCSTEK TUAL. of the country are available to the more rapid tourist ; but time, the chiefest element of a real appreciation of such characteristic scenery and of such a characteristic population, can be secured only by the compulsory slowness of driving or walking. Travellers by rail are never absorbed by the country through which they pass. Speed car- AT THE FOOT OF THE GREAT RANGE. 101 ries one unheeding over the surface of all local life, and scenes change too swiftly for us to get the local flavor. The best of all is to walk, to halt and chat at the doors of peasants' houses, to dawdle away the hours at way-side Gasthauser, and to burrow slowly into the tranquil spirit of the people. But Jane is averse to walking, and I am glad to compromise with the Einspanner. I get the compensation that we need not halt for every baby of this prolific land, nor pull clover heads for every sage donkey that we meet. It is not every valley that ends so charmingly as does the Paster Thai, which spreads out into a broad and fertile plain at Lienz — a mountain-embowered Arcadia, quite at the far end of the active woi'ld — through which a railway passes, it is true, but where even the cur- rent of tourists is unknown. Few valleys, too, end at the gates of such magnificence ; for at Lienz is the entrance to the wild pass of Ileiligenbl at, where a veri- table phial of the blood of the Crucifixion works its miracles at the high altar, and whence starts the rugged climb to the Franz Joseph Plohe, and that greatest of all Tyrol peaks, the Gj'oss Golckner, which dominates the M^iole land. Wliere else than at Tolbach can one step out from the door of a good modern hotel and stroll into such a deep slit in the mountain- side as that which opens the way to the vQvy heart of the Ampezzo Dolomites? 102 TYROL, AND TEE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. CHAPTER XIL THE PORTALS OF THE DOLOMITES. At the edge of Sonth-easfern Tyrol, within an area of forty miles by thirty, stand all of the great peaks of the dolomite formation: it is par excellence the region of the dolomite Alps. It has been known to geologists since Dolomien, at the close of the last centnry, described the mineral which was to bear his name, and identified it with this raonntain formation. So far as secular travel is concerned, the dis- trict remained practically unknown nntil the publication of the work of Gilbert and Churchill describing their explorations of 1S61-63. Other more popular writers followed tiiem, applying to the remarkable features of the region more or less appropriate expressions of descrip- tion and admiration. Tiie glimpse of the Rosengarten from Botzen, the bald liead of tlie Lang Kofel as seen from St. Ulrich, and the majestic broadside of this rock and the Piatt Kofel, the jagged spikes of the Ross Zahne, and the flat ridge and sharp horn of the Schlern, which bound the Seisser Alp on the east and south, had given us an entirely characteristic and com- prehensive idea of the varied formation. These were majestic senti- nels guarding the outposts of the stronghold. Far np in the Puster Thai, spectre crests, under the rosy light of fading day, beckoned ns on to the citadel. We entered the portals at Toblach, through the grand defile which gives entrance to the Ainpezzo Valley. Before ns, a sharp high jieak, almost over our heads, shut out the morning sun, which gave a fringe of silver to every twig of the firs and bushes at its top, and poured down into the valley in opaline streams of light. After passing the Toblacher-See the walls of the valley grew steeper, the bare mountain-tops rose higher, and we peneti-ated into the very heart of the grand peaks — streaked M'ith red and yellow, seamed with THE PORTALS OF THE DOLOMITES. 103 angry sears and fissures, and set in pines almost black in their som- bi'e line. Near the first habitation, a comfortable iim at Landi'o, the Hollen- stein, with Monte Piano and the Drei Zinnen, stood high before ns. Beyond the Dlirren-See rose the tilted masses of Monte Cristallo, which the lake miri'ors like a glass. At Schlnderbach another way-side inn is busy with coming and going travellers. Before it I'ises the Crotla Rossa, one of the Iiighest of the dolomites, its prec- ipices stained with broad bright red patches. Gilbert says that it is "streaked as with the red drip of a mighty sacrifice." The road has j-isen constant- ly from Toblach, and almost nn- interruptedly from Botzen, At its highest point it is very near- ly 5000 feet above the level of the sea, having insensibly con- sumed nearly one -half of the nominal height of the highest mountains of the region, carried ns neai'ly to the limit of grad- ual slope and of vegetation, and brought ns close to the barren rock and precipitous walls, and filling our lungs with the clear and invigorating air of a high Alpine valley. We had come far enough to compare our precon-ceived ideas of the dolomites with the majestic reality with which we were surround- ed. AVe were in no respect disappointed — far from it ; but we were made to realize the inadequacy of language and of human imagery to convey a true impression of these scenes. "Cathedrals," "flying-but- / i# ^*^ TilJS INN AT LANDKO. 104 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. tresses," " watch- towers," "lions conchant," " bas- tions," "needles," "bayonets," and the multiform expres- sions leading to a comparison with the insignificant works of man, seemed only a feeble attempt to define and measure in language created for worldly things - ^ - a grandeur which is really inexpi'essible, and which even requires a certain familiar- ity to be appreciated by the eye which gazes upon it. Through a clear air and un- der a cloudless sky the mountain- tops all seem undnly near. It needs the half-con- •^'^^ cealment and the shadow of floating clouds to throw them back to their i-eal distance aiid to lift SOHLTOEUBACH ANB THE ^]jg,,,j J^ ^J^^Jj. j.g^| J^^- J^^^ J^ ^^,^^ ^^^^.^ ^J^^^^ OBODA K088A. " ' i*'' among mountains of ordinary form, partial con- cealment and the vast contrast between nearness and distance best de- velop the grandeur of tlie greater peaks. The Lang Kofel nowhere seems so far, so large, and so high as when its pale, clear-cut, yellowish shaft reaches up far above and far behind the dark and sharply de- fined fir-clad mountains which shut in the Grodner Thai. Monte Pelmo, as it lifts its great head into the distant sky far beyond the ser- rated top of the high Becco di Mezzodi, is vastly more impressive in magnitude and in elevation than when its whole side has come into view. Something of the effect may be due to the mystery of sugges- tion, but more to the fact that we need the majestic scale of an inter- THE FORTALS OF THE DOLOMITES. 105 terveuing mountain to measure riglitly such enormous heights and masses. I sliall refrain from all attempt to express in words the remarkable and various forms and effects of the dolomite peaks, further than to say that in their general characteristics — and there are many excep- tions even to this — they are full of sharp angles, fantastic serrations, and knife-like edges. So little does the eye appreciate relative dis- tance that two mountains rising one behind the other, and having a wide valley between them, look like a single slope, until a cloud, lilling the valley, brings the nearer summit into clear relief. In certain lights, and especially in tlie gray following the sunset, they frequently look like vertical sheets of gray pasteboard, with a jagged edge standing in sharp proKle against the lighter sky ; again, they seem a mass of cold gray stone rising high out of the fields and forests, pitiless, cheerless, baleful, and cruel ; again, under strong sunlight, they are modelled with infinite sharp shadow, and mellowed with the warmest creamy and ruddy glow, even the broad blackened patches of the older expos- ures assuming a warm blue tone. The first impression received may well belie all that we have read, for aspect, medium, light and shadow, and all the infinite variations of atmospheric effect, change the tone, the feeling, and almost the very form itself. What we see to-day we shall not see to-morrow ; a description true now may never be true again. It seems to me that this constant and endless change of effect is more characteristic of the scenery than any other of its peculiarities. The same forms are scattered through the calcareous mountains as far as the plain of Yenetia and Lombardy. They look down upon Eiva from the precipitous west wall of Garda, they haunt the traveller by the Lecco arm of Lake Como, they appear again at Lugano, they are conspicuous in the Pyrenees, and they are a very frequent accom- paniment of limestone ranges the world over, but only here in Tyrol have they their full characteristic effect. 106 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF TEE ALPS CHAPTER XIII. CORTINA D'AMPEZZO. Near the liead of the Ainpezzo Yalley, in the ganglion centre from which reach out the various systems of mountain and valley toward the north, south, east, and west, high up among the barren rocks, and close to their frowning and beetling and broken edges, there exists a combination of direction, of exposure, of distorted form, of light and shade, and of atmospheric condition, wliich turns the weird kaleidoscope from hour to hour, and produces the unusual and chang- ing effects with which literature has grappled so much in vain. It is, no doubt, safe to say that the rapid gi-owth of the Dolomites in popular favor is founded on real merit, and tliat it will continue and increase. An envious admirer of the superb landscapes of North Tyi'ol said to us, half contemptuously : " Yes, the Dolomites ai'e in fasliion now." While yielding nothing to him in appreciation of his beloved native hills, which must ever liold tlieir own as being unri- valled in their own way, I must freely confess that the doubts with M'hich I first entered tiie Ampezzo Yalley have all been dispelled, and that I accept the wonders and glories it has to offer with um-eserved and unstinted admiration. They are glories and they are wonders which enchant and which glow the more as familiaritj' brings us ac- quainted with their secret spirit. With this feeling, it is almost amus- ing to hear the fear expi-essed that the region will soon become "hack- neyed " and overrun with tourists, like Switzerland. I trust it to with- stand, all untarnished, the gaze of clouds and generations of tourists and pleasure-seekers. The ants which buri-ow its hillsides and build pitfalls for unwaiy feet affect as nnicli these grand old rocks above them as will all the men and women who may come to clamber about their lower slopes, and marvel over their inaccessible steeps. Per COBTINA D'AMPEZZO. 107 11 1 < 1 ii 1 1 1 OOllTINA ANB MONTE TOFANA. patlis, to the diffusion of comfort, to tlie decrease of discomfort, and to ease of access ; stiU more, the travellers M'ill be made happy and liealthier; and, if man continues an imitative animal, hei'e and there one may carry back to liis remote home a knowledge of certain manners at table which do not now ob- tain there. The adliei-ents of exclnsiveness in the enjoyment of moun- tains may rest happy in the hope that no railroad will ever climb the liigh Ampezzo Pass, for neitlier commercial nor military needs indi- cate such danger. It seems altogetlier likely that Cortina will remain the central point of interest of the district. It is a snug little Italio-German town in the midst of tlie straight stretch of the valley at its broadest and richest part, four thousand feet above the sea, and most delicious in climate — without the chill of the Eno-adine or the heat of more en- 108 ' TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. closed valleys. It is a climate where exercise is a delight, where sleep is a revelation, and wliere appetite finds wholesome stimulns, and gives good sauce to abundant food. Happily this is not a guide-book, and I am not called upon to dis- cuss the relative merits of the Golden Star and the Black Eagle. The tidy and still fine-looking sisters Barbaria, and the lustj^ and stalwart brothers Ghedina, have and will continue to have their warm adher- ents and their plentiful patrons. It is not as advice to my readers — only as a tribute to merit — that I commend the Aquila Nera for its open situation, its airy and generally lai'ge rooms, and the Teutonic profusion of its table. It is not often that the Kellnerin of a hotel, crood and obliffino- though she may be, can claim more than passing notice; but Filo- mena, the earnest-faced, calm-minded, gentle, and unflagging maiden who holds the comfort of each guest and the welfare and mainspring of the whole establishment in her active hands and willing heart, deserves more than thanks from all to whose wants and to whose whims she has uncomplainingly ministered. Doubtless at the Stella d'Oro or at the Croce Bianca we should have fallen in with the varied tide of human nature by which the ex- periences of the traveller are always so much enriched, but at the Ghe- dinas' not only did we have the advantage of the society of most agree- able compatriots, and of some English of the rarer and better sort, and of cultivated Germans, but we renewed our experience of M'hab may be called the "absorptive" type of English tourist — those who create every landscape before which they stand, whose presence fills every room into which they come, and whose ceaseless self-consciousness is an oppression to all about them. Surely, with all their faults, other nations do not inflict upon the modest travelling world the equals of these loud -talking, all -pervading, ever- prominent, and egregiously wooden persons. They are typical, but happily they are rare. It is but fair to say that the}' are as objectionable to their fellow-country- men as to others. Cortina was rich in examples of the type. The world can hardly furnish a grander road for driving or for walking than the Ampezzo highway from the mouth of the Yal Grande to Cortina. It was recommended to one of these gentry as the best way CORTINA D'AMPEZZO. 109 home from an excursion. He replied, in loud, leaden tones : " It is poorish business to walk on a highway, you know." Another had crossed the Fedaia Pass. It is one of the grand excursions of the Dolomites. He characterized it as " a remarkably jolly pass," and he had " made " it in an hour less than Ball's time. This was all that he had to say about it, but he was voluminous on the subject of a mistake lilt A k-arfeiL-^iiii-i ^lajst FlMOSl'o ON THE OUTSIDE OF THE AQUILA. NBBA. concerning his boots, and a "thorough-going raw" on his heel. He reappeared at intervals during several days, and we were kept ad- vised as to the condition of his "raw." Instances might be multi- plied, but these will suffice. Two of the brotliers Ghedina are artists of considerable merit. Across the street from the hotel is a "Dependence" containing a 110 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. dozen or more rooms. The outside of this building, which is new, is being entirely and very artistically frescoed — the front with very good allegorical pictui-es after the manner of Kaulbach, and the south side with really excellent representations of Tyrolean domestic life. Here and there, in out-of-the-way places, appear vai'ious smaller pictures, one room being decorated with clever imitations of framed photo- graphs, line engravings, and cheap chromos — a whimsical conceit capitally carried out. The people of Cortina are simple, industrious, and obviously cheer- ful and contented. Like all mountaineers, they are to the last degree hard-working. From early dawn until the last ray of daylight every one seems to be at work. The commune includes a number of small villages or hamlets of a few houses each, scattered about among the hills, many of them high up at the end of steep, rough roads hardly passable for the smallest vehicles. The farm-houses of which these hamlets are made up are large and evidently populous, and the barns are often detached. Already, early in September, with many of the crops still to be harvested, they seemed full to ovei'Howing. The whole country, at least wherever I traversed it, is covered with a thick peaty soil, which holds water like a sponge. In many places even grain in sheaves is not cured on the ground, but hung upon the forks of poles cut with the branches projecting, and standing in rows at the edges of the fields. Large crops are grown of what in England is called the horse-bean — tall-growiug stalks, with pods along their sides. Even these cannot be cured on the ground; they are tied in bundles, which are hung in pairs over long poles, racks of which, twenty or thirty feet high and equally long, are an accompaniment of every barn, sometimes standing independently, supported by high poles, and sometimes resting on brackets built out from tlie front of the structure. Much of the land is so steep that I found difficulty in crossing it. From such fields the crops are removed in coarse linen sheets, making huge bundles, which are cari'ied home on the heads of the people. As many women as men are seen at work in the fields, and they do all manner of work equally, save that the ploughing and mowing- are more often done by men, and the hoeing and reaping by women. CORTINA D'AMPEZZO. Ill The frngality of their lives is equal to tlieir industry; and with a fertile soil and a ready market, it is easy to understand the substantial prosperity which, for people of their class, is everywhere conspicuous. Their methods of life and work differ greatly from our own ; their implements ai'e rude and clumsy; their cattle are poor, cows being generally worked in the yoke ; and it is easy to see many ways in which our example miglit be followed with great advantage. With a predilection, howevei-, for village life for an agricultural people, I believe that, making allowance for their inferior education, the people in the villages abont Cortina are more cheerful and contented than those of the corresponding class wuth us. I have already referred to the accidents which o(!casionally befall workers upon the veiy steep mountain -sides of Tyrol. A very sad one occurred upon the day of our arrival at Cortina. A mother and her daughter and a young man were w'orking in a hay-field which sloped steeply down to the edge of a precipice five or six hundred feet high. Tlie mother slipped, but was arrested by a slight obstruc- tion; the young man succeeded in reaching her, and might ha\e saved her, but the child, becoming excited, hastened to them, fell, and carried them both with her over the fatal brink. The approaches to the Ampezzo Yalley from the north and west are over high passes, or tlirough narrow defiles of the wildest and most rugged character, so that on arriving at Cortina from either direction one does not at first realize the splendor of its surroundings. The enclosing mountains are in such harmony in their grandeur, the valley itself is so smiling and peaceful, and the town is so distant from the immediate hill-tops, that the views are less striking than at Campitello or Caprile. Gilbert and Churchill, on the occasion of their first visit, passed but a single night here, and only recognized after they had left, the fact that they had passed unnoticed the grand- est combination of the dolomite peaks. So far as one could judge from simple appearance, the base of Monte Tofana was not half a mile from our windows. It is really more than two miles away, with a sturdy mountain and a deep valley intervening. A man on its sum- mit cannot be seen with a stronoc field-o-lass. A Ions; walk toward it 112 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. soon tells the tale of its distance, and the distance reveals its stupen- dous height. Still farther away are the Cinqne Torre and the Croda del Lago; and Antelao, which seems almost to peer over onr shoulders, is ton miles distant. Eveiy excui-siou that one makes and every dif- ferent view obtained widens and lifts the horizon, until, after a few days' acquaintance, the surround- ings of Cortina impress the im- aoi nation as does no other part of the dolomite region. Tlie social travel- ler will find his best entertainment, ■-^W* especially for a short stay, at one of the hotels in the town ; but one " whose hab- its are studious and lonely " might pi-efer the pretty little bath- house (Ghedina's) nestled away among the trees at the mouth of a mountain valley two miles from Cortina. Its lower story is a little Italian o-rist-mill, whose rumbling wheels and stones and whose foam- ing brook sing a constant soothing lullaby. The upper story, M-itli generous bath-rooms, tidy sleeping-rooms, and shaded galleries under MONTE ANTELAO. CORTINA D'AMPEZZO. 113 tlie broad roof, is little frequented by strangers, and the dense woods and steep hills are close at hand. The younger Ghedina's ready pen- cil has been busy all over the house, inside and out. It is from the neighborhood of this house that the best view is obtained of Monte Antelao, the highest mountain in sight from the Ampezzo Yalley, and second only to the Marmolata. In the foreground is a little Alpine village, with its board-roofed crucifix, "Over the hills and far away" to the south-west, in the valley of rich and beautiful Cordevole, lies the Italian village of Caprile, less com- fortable and attractive than Cortina, but a capital centre for many ex- cursions. Its dominant mountain is the Civita. Near it is the new- formed lake of Alleghe, created only in 1771 by the tumbling in of a great corner of Monte Pezza, burying two entire villages in the dead of night, and drowning two others in the suddenly dammed flood of the river. A few months later another slide falling into the lake drove great waves far up the shore, and worked even more destruction to property, if not to life. Where formerly all was activity and fertility and industry and frugal domestic happiness there is now only a sea of placid water, breathing no whisper of the vast calamity — a beauti- ful mountain lake, delighting the eye with the images of the smiling fields and dark woods and gray peaks in whose lap it lies. Like the Bergfall of the Taufers Thai only a few weeks since, and the great land-slide of Santa Croce centuries ago, the formation of Lake Alleghe instances the hazard attending the life and industjy of these higli- M'alled valleys. One of the most serious drawbacks of travel lies in the need of leaving, perhaps forever, the new-found charms of so many halting- places. To pass all September and the early weeks of October among the dolomite Alps seemed far more attractive than the fni-ther wan- dering and the rough voyage to which we were destined ; but the des- tiny was fixed, and we must leave Cortina. IIai')pily our smooth road- M-ay led ever on among these gloi'ious mountains, and Cadore, with its beauty and its associations, lacked nothing of the interest, nor, in its way, of the charm, of the higher vallej's we had left. Mi's. Edwai'ds says: "For myself, looking back in memory aci'oss 114 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. f%1#H -r- ™#'.%1 OIVITA AND LAKE ALLEttUE. that iiitenen- nio sea of peaks and pass- es which lies between Bozen and Cortina, I am inclined to place the Ampezzo Dolomites in the very first rank both as regards position and structure. The mountains of Primiero are more extravagantly wild in outline, the Marmolata carries more ice and snow, the Civita is more beau- tiful, the solitary giants of the Seisser Alp are more imposing; CORTINA D'AMPEZZO. 115 but taken as a group, I know nothing, whether for size, variety, or picturesqneness, to equal that great circle which, within a radius of less than twelve miles from the doors of the Aquila Nera, includes the Pelmo, Antelao, Marmarole, Croda Malcora, Cristallo, and Tofana." My own retrospection of a mucli more limited experience confirms Mrs. Edwards's judgment. Comparing Cortina not only with other dolomite regions, but witli all the crowed of cliarming and beautiful corners of Tyrol, and with the grandest of its other mountains, it seems to me facile j)ri7tceps. Neitlier have I found elsewliere such a combi- nation of qualities which invite to a longer acquaintance. 116 TYROL, JND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. CHAPTER XIV. THE ASCENT OF MONTE TOFANA. I HAD had serious misgivings since writing as I did about peak- climbing. It was obviously presumptuous in one wlio had only made the ascent of Mount Washington — in an omnibus — to question a prac- tice which has so many intelligent devotees. TJie gentle climb to the Coll di Rondella, and its charming nplook to the great dolomite peaks, had added to my apprehension that 1 had overstepped the limits of good judgment, if not of good taste; for surely, if this moderate ele- vation could so magnify the grandeur of the surrounding mountains, it seemed possible that a still higher position might increase the effect in like proportion. If so, then mountain-climbing must be its own exceeding great reward. It was no easy matter to convince myself of the pi'udeuce of un- dertaking a task of such notorious difficulty. With limbs untrained to up-hill work, with lungs gauged by long residence to the sea-level scale, with more pounds avoirdupois tlian any " Bergf iihrer " or Alpine Club man tliat I had seen in Tyrol, and with no consuming ambition for the cragsman's exploits, the weight of the argument would have been strongly against the attempt, but for that unfortunate paragTaph, which made it a matter of lionor for me to try what I had questioned, and to make open confession if the event should prove me wrong. The conviction came slowly but surely that, despite all drawbacks, I must at least make an earnest attempt to get to the top of a higli mountain. The beautiful jpergola where I iiow write, opens north, east, and west upon one of the loveliest of valleys, a valley shut in by Ci'istallo, Antelao, Croda Malcora, Monte Pelmo, the Roclietta, the Becco di Mez- zodi, Monte Gusella, Monte Nuvolau, and Monte Tofana, the noblest THE ASCENT OF MONTE TOFANA. 117 f^ CINQUE XORKE AND NUVALAU. group of Tyrolean peaks. The triple head of Monte Tofana challenges the carrying out of my growing resolution. Seven of the surrounding mountains named above are over 10,000 feet high (Antelao, 10,890). The middle peak of Tofana is 10,724 feet above the sea. Ball says that its ascent is " for the practised mountaineer one of the most attractive expeditions to be made in this district." Baedek- ker says, " The ascent of the higlier mountains requires experience ; that which best repays the fatigue is Monte Tofana." Amthor calls it "schwer." On the whole, it seemed that, should I succeed in mak- ing this ascent, I should have done my whole duty, and the decision was definitely fixed. Late one night, when the bright starlight follow- ing a week of beautiful September weather gave good promise for the morrow, I sent for Giuseppe Ghedina, who liad been recommended by a friend as a skilful and judicious guide, and arranged for the expe- lis TTBOL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. dition. Diligent Filomena, of the Aqiiila Nera, undertook tlie prepa- ration of supplies with an air which savored the least in the world of doubt as to the result of my effort. I asked the landlord whethei there was any difficulty about my making the ascent, and he asked whether I had ever made a " Bergpartie " before. My negative an- swer was met with an involuntary shrug of the shoulders, and brought no other reply. The guide said that I could at least go a part of the way. With these doubtful assui-ances, I M-ent early and not alto- gether confidently to bed. We were to start at half-past three, and I was called at three. By way of economizing my untried forces, I had engaged a mule for the first two hours and a half; and here a saddle-mule implies a man to lead it. I had provided myself overnight with a sturdy glass of milk, with a dash of Cayenne pepper, to begin the day. In the kitchen of the hotel I found the cook well advanced with her day's work, coffee and hot milk ready, and Kaisersemmeln freshened in the oven — so the usual Tyrolean breakfast was added to the milk. Then came a delay about eggs. Giuseppe could not find them among the abundant prov- ender. He advised waiting until a supply of ten could be boiled. These being ready, it was found that Filomena had already- furnished four — a number which lie regarded as entirely insignificant. In his search he had mistaken them for a package of salt. All being ready, he slung his " Rucksack " containing the food and two bottles of wine. On top of this was strapped an ominous coil of half-inch rope some fifty feet long, and three pairs of heavy sharp-pointed iron cram- pons, the whole weighing about twenty pounds. Over his shoulder he carried a short iron-pointed alpenstock, with an ice-pick at its upper end. A second alpenstock was carried by the mule-leader. We set out at four o'clock. It was still quite dark, no gleam of dawn appearing in the sk}^, which, studded with stars, was only less black than the liigh mountains whose serrated edges were cut in sharp silhouette against it. Two black pedestrians and one black man on a black mule were hardly distinguishable between the black house fronts along the main street of Cortina, The stars shone brightly over the gray roadway, and far away to the south, over the crest of the Croda Maleora, Jupiter twinkled with weird green light. We were soon THE ASCENT OF MONTE TOP ANA. 119 climbing a country road, past farm-houses and barns and rnnning fountains, through fields studded with rows of wheat-sheaves or redo- lent with the odor of half-cured liay. As we crept up the side of the valley the great gleam of the morning-star came suddenly over the sharp mountain-top, big and briUiant, like a fire-balloon just launched from the crest of Sorapis. Little by little the gray dawn, which had already lighted the sum- mit of Tofana, touched one after another the edges of the crags, and poured slowly over into the valley, picking out its whitened house fronts, and gradually defining the breaks and gorges in its rocks. Star after star faded from view, until Yenus alone was left shining over the hills. Lights sparkled here and there from the scattered houses, the varied hum of awakening day came up from the valley, and the whole hill-side was filled with the music of tinkling bells as the cattle and sheep roused to their morning grass. The steady droning flow of gossip between my Italian attendants suggested no ideas to interrupt ray morning reverie, and my thoughts naturally turned to the expedi- tion on which I was bent. The outlook was entirely changed. Under the stimulus and excitement of the early start, and the cliarm of unfamiliar daybreak, I came to take a new view of moun- taineering. I could well imagine that no occupation of a manly life, save fox-hunting alone, could oifer so much of what a vigorous and sound-bodied man should enjoy. Climbing slowly and steadily up the steep bridle-path toward a peak which only the sturdiest and most patient effort could reach, I felt for the moment how puerile had been my earlier conceptions, and I was ready to enroll myself as a perma- nent member of the stalwart band of Alpine climbers. Two hours and a half brought us to the foot of the steep mass of debris which filled the gorge of the mountain to a height of over three thousand feet above us. It was now broad day, but the gorge was shaded from the morning sun. The mule and leader were dismissed,. my poncho was strapped to Ghedina's rucksack, I took the alpenstock, and we started stoutly up the steep mass of large stones which had rolled down over the gravel, and piled themselves up as a buttress against it. This passed, we struck the finer drift — a loose mass of stones, precisely such as are used for macadamizing roads,, angular 120 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. and sliarp, but with a remarkable facility of movement. Indeed, it has adjusted itself at the angle where its movement ceases, and it needs only the slightest impulse to set it moving again, so that each step up was followed by a downward slip, and the miles of advance needed to take ns over that single mile of our way can be measured only by the st]-ained nmscles and the deep and quickened breath they entailed. Here, as throughout the whole ascent, the view was by no means what one would imagine. One's eyes were bent alone upon the next spot where foothold must be found. At constantly shortening inter- vals, as the toil accumulated, and as the air grew lighter, it became necessary to halt and sit, pant and take breath. Two hours of hard, monotonous, weary, breathless toil took us to a point, still far below the top of the slide, where foothold could be gained, on a narrow ledge of sharp rocks running up at its side. It was curious to notice how, during the course of this task — the hardest labor (not compulsory) that man can undertake — the enthu- siasm which had overtaken me while in the saddle had oozed away. It gradually ga^■e place to a conviction that he who would thus apply the severest physical effort of which his nature is capable, must be actuated by some higher and sti'onger motive than I had in my wild- est anticipations connected with the achievement I had attempted. But for that instinct which leads us not to turn back when once the plough is set in its furrow, I fear that I might have abandoned the project, and left the top of Tofana food for my imagination alone. But the motive which impels us to pursue to the bitter end a self- imposed task prevailed. We had started up the drift at half-past six, and it was now nearly nine. Two hours more would bring us to the top. I now learned the use of the rope. One of its ends was tied se- curely round my waist, the other forming a noose over Ghedina's shoulder. The primary object M'as for security against a fall, most of the length being coiled and held in the guide's hand. But as my knees grew weak, and as my breath grew short almost to gasping, then I would sit on the sharp edge of the fractured cliff, brace myself with the alpenstock against some crevice below, clutch with the other hand THE ASCENT OF MONTE TOFANA. 121 a sharp corner of stone above, and wait nntil Ghedina had paid out the whole length of the rope, and fixed himself in some secure po- sition above rae. Then he woidd gradually toll me up with a steady and friendly pull, cautioning me how to step, how to plant my prod, and how to test the ci-aclded rock before I trusted myself to hold by it. A wonderful help was that rope — a moral and yet a physical help too. It showed how nearly I liad come to tlie end of my force that so slight an added impulse should make such vast difference in my progress and in the husbanding of my wind. The regular intermitting of the work, too, and the considerable pauses, were a great help. The progress was not less, and the ease was much greater. No, not ease. Heaven forbid that I should use that word anywhere in tliis connec- tion ! I mean simply that the actual musculai-, synovial, cardiac, and pulmonary suffering was abated. A hard half-hour of this "ride-and-tie" business brought us to the first low crest, or Jock, between two peaks. Here, so far as I was able to divert my attention from the various unusual manifestations of my own person — ears crackling, limbs trembling, mouth parched, every vein throbbing, and every pore perspiring — I became conscious of the most majestic sui-roundings. Not only the Yal Travernenze, which opened amidst the wildest turmoil of distorted mountain-sides before us, and the enormous glacier which fills the vast hollowed slope of the Marmolata, but almost equally the immediate mountain-sides behind us, under which we had crept, intent only upon the ground beneath our feet, would, observed in a serener mood, iustifv one's hio-hest imaa-- ination of mountain wildness and grandeur. They impress me more in recollection than they did in the actual but disturbed observation. No time could be spared for sights by the way-side, however im- posing, and we pressed on, now on a narrow ledge at the side of a precipice at what would have been a giddy height had the attention not been fixed upon foot-hold and hand-hold at every step. Indeed, it seems to me that herein lies the safety of the mountain climber's work. He must be unconscious of all that is above and of all that is below him, holding his attention closely to his immediate surroundings, so that the sense of elevation is lost. We came out later upon a crest from which' there was a vast slope of debris reaching down to the edge 122 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. of a precipice far below, and stretching on before us to tlic wide and steep glacier which fills the northern slope below the twin peaks. Here came the most disheartening part of the trip. After all our toil- some and weary struggle upward, it seemed more than discouraging to have to go six or eight hundred feet lower down to reach the foot of the glacier, from which point only we could make the final ascent. Fortunatel}^ the debris was tolerably firm, and in spite of the precipice to which it led, the passage was not especially dangerous. Tlie emo- tions with which I looked back up our steep oblique track, and thought of the retni-n, wei-e anything but cheering. At the end of this part of the route lay a patch of hard snow some twenty feet wide, in which the guide had to chop footholds as we progressed. The glacier is in shape like a section of a funnel, thirty feet wide at the base, six or eight hundred feet wide at the top, and perhaps a thousand feet high. It is quite regularly curved laterally, is crossed by several crevasses of little width, and is spotted with stones which have rolled on to it from the rocks above. We drank copiously of the cold stream which flows out below it, and about which the rocks were all covered with a thin film of ice. Crossing the stream, and climbing up the far side of the gorge through which it runs, we halted to adjust the crampons. These are stout iron frames reaching from the middle of the heel to the ball of the foot, with a sharp spike three- quarters of an inch long at each corner, and with a stout loop turned up at each side of the foot. Througli these loops a strap is passed, and this is bound over the instep, in my case with the utmost strength of Ghedina's wiry fingers and strong teeth. Those of my readers who skated in the old days of rude strapping will understand the energy with which I protested against the severity of his work. But he in- sisted that absolute tightness was essential to safety, and I accepted this further infliction of pain with trained submission. We now began the steep ascent of the glacier, the process being to strike the point of the alpenstock into a firm hold, then to advance one foot and make snre that its crampon was fast fixed in the ice, then to advance the alpenstock again, and then the other foot. This continued for twenty minutes, with an occasional halt for breath, and with a con- stant wounding of the feet by the tightly bound straps. In spite of THE ASCENT OF MONTE TOFANA. 123 the tiglitness, one of my irons came loose, and we had to stop in mid- ice to readjust it, this time without regard to protests. I liad listened with curious interest to the jingling of those irons throughout the morning. I had inspected their long sharp points, and had looked forward with some impatience to the moment when they should be added to my experiences. I have not often felt such real pleasure as I did when we came again upon the hard rock, and they were removed. I will not sa}^ that when Ghedina tucked them away under a stone by the path-side, I hoped that he would not be able to find them again ; but even their loss would not have been entirely without compensation. Such pleasure and elation as I felt from treadnig again upon terra fyrma soon yielded as the further climbing began. It is not worth while to describe it. It only lasted about forty minutes, panting spells included, and m.uch of my upward course was steadied, if not assisted, by the kindly tension of the stout arm at the other end of the rope. At last we came to a point where the strata of the mountain are crumbled by the sharp angle at which they were bent. It is as though the finger-point of a Titan had been pressed up under the stiff leaves of this great volume of geologic history, raising them to a peak and cracking them at the bend. The air had become very light, and the breathing induced by such exertion grew painful. Three thousand feet below, the nostrils had become too small, and the open mouth had to help to pump in the needed supply. Lips, tongue, palate, and throat were parched and tired. We halted only fifty feet below the peak. Had it been a hun- dred feet, i- faith I fear I should have failed to reach it ; at fifty feet I did reach it — the absolute top. Ghedina began to discourse upon the many distant peaks within sight. I begged him to wait. The air was perfectly clear, and not at all cold, the breeze only fresh. Being warm and exhausted, I threw the poncho over my shoulders, took the coiled rope for an arm rest, and stretched out over a sloping couch of precisely the composition one sees in a stone -breaker's half -finished heap at the roadside. I have had few so restful half-hours as that passed on this unsybaritic bed. Ghedina gave me a tumbler of wine. I drank a single swallow, took the glass from my lips, looked in vague and half-unconscious wonder over the billowy clouds resting in a shel- 124: TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. tered valley below, and was startled from my sleep by spilling the M'ine over my other hand. That was all — probably not fifteen seconds — but it gave the mysterious change which comes only with absolute sleep. Tlie blood coursed with a quieter impulse; the eye became steadier, and the brain clearer. I was able to give attention to the details of all that one sees from a mountain-top. The long road of the Ampezzo Valley looked like narrow bobbin trailed over the dark green iields and among the specks of houses. Cortina, three miles and a half distant bj' the line of sight, looked, through the clear air, like a toy village out of a wooden box. We fan- cied that with the strong glass we saw a nian in its streets. The bell calling the people to mid-day mass rang clear in our ears. Except for tliis little stretch of inhabited valley, all else was an un- meaning mass of distorted rock, desolate, cruel, Dantesque, incoherent chaos, without expression, witiiout interest, and witliout charm. The great peaks of Eastern Switzerland, the sharp point of the Oertler, the Oetzthal group, the Stubaier Ferner, the Grosser Venediger, the Gross Glockner, and the peaks of the Carinthian and Ulyrian Alps, stretch- ing over more than two hundred miles of the horizon from west to east, were all in clear view, all near, and all low. Their height barely brought them into the plane of vision. They and the gi-eat ice-field of the Marmolata all seemed lower than Tofana itself. And Tofana had lost its majesty. Seen from below, it was sublime. Conquered by the toiling tread of two insignificant men, it became mere stone beneath our feet. We stayed at the summit an hour and a half, I wrapped in extra clothing, the hardy Ghedina witli his coat off and his breast bare, as unconcerned as though he had onl}^ mowed his swath through a liay- field. Inserted in a crevice of the rock is a wide -mouthed bottle, corked with a stone, containing a roll of papers bearing the names of those who have made the ascent. It is uninteresting to those wlio have added their own names to the list, and unknown to the rest of tlie world. The descent, at first easv-, soon involved the previous trials taken in the inverse direction. Going down the glacier, the crampons hurt dif- ferently, but they hurt equally. Climbing from the foot of the glacier THE ASCENT OF MONTE TOFANA. 125 to tlic crest of the lower pass called for a renewed exercise of a strength that was already worn and overtaxed. From near this pass the descent is directly down the slide, a steep and endless incline of sharp road metal. At iirst it is novel and inter- esting, this quick descent. The angular gravel lies on a pitch at which its movement barely stops. Set in motion again by any cause, it slips and rattles and rolls as though it would go to the very bottom of the valley. Standing npon it and bearing heavily backward against the alpenstock whose point is buried in it, a slight movement of the feet sets the mass rolling. Faster and faster it goes, deeper and deeper sink the feet, nntil the very mountain-side moves like a stream of bro- ken stone and carries us along with it. Wlien the feet are buried more than ankle-deep, when the shoes are filled with sharp pebbles, and when the speed becomes too great for safety, we step aside and stand until the avalanche is stilled, and then begin a new movement on a fresh course. Occasionally we couje upon an accumulation of larger and fii-raer stones, over which it is necessary to walk. After en- durance had ceased to be a virtue, I would take off my shoes and pour out the accumulated geological specimens which had made even rest- ing a penance. By the time we had reached the point where the mule had been left — now about two o'clock — I was convinced that the only reason why the coming down a mountain is not so bad as the going up is that it takes less tiuie. Here, sitting under the shade of the first fir-trees, and somewhat suffused with the satisfaction that comes of the finishing of a serious task, I was able to regard this face of Tofana in a friendly spirit. Viewed as mere rock-work, the steep-walled sides of this the entrance jiall, and the majestic crest beyond it, are probably unsurpassed by an}'- thing that Nature has done in her sternest stone-building mood. There is nothing fantastic, but there is a grandeur and solidity and directness of purpose which seemed to me to ally this great pile of rectangular strata more closely with tlie work of the pigmy architects than any other rocks of this region. If I might offer a word of guidance to those who are led to visit this mountain, especially tliose who have seen its opposite side from the Coll di Kondella, it would be to come here to this foot of the great avalanche of stone, to this last reach of 126 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALFS. tlie hardy fir, and fill the soul and the memory full with the stupen- dous masses and the marvellous colors of these great bastions ; to con- template from below, and from below only, that rising stretch of deso- late, helpless, impending debris, and the noble crags which tower above it, and then, unwearied and not disenchanted, to go back over the well- grown slope and through the sunny fields to cheery Cortina. Of my further descent I will only say that all the miles of down- hill walking, added to the down-hill climbing, made by far the severest strain upon the hold-back part of my harness to which it was ever sub- jected. I hailed with pleasure the steep little hill which rises from the bridge over the Boita to the main street of the village. At five o'clock I sat down to beer and tranquil tobacco and entire rest. Tlie questions and the interest of friends kept me from sleep- ing, and little by little the more acute sensations subsided in my joints. Later, food and a long night's sleep, and, above all, the pure and in- vifforatino; air of this enchanted vallev, restored me to the condition of a sore and stiffened but a rested and cheerful being. I would not give up my recollection of tliis ascent for the price of a first-rate hunter, but I would not make it again for the finest horse that ever followed hounds. TO THE MESVBINA ALP. 127 CHAPTER XV. TO THE MESURINA ALP. The best-rewarded excursion that I made was eastward over the Tre Croce Pass, a higli saddle between the Croda Malcora and Monte Cristallo, two thousand feet higher than Cortina. Here is a little hos- pice for the shelter of storra-overlaken travellers — a rude stone hut, with a hearth and chimney in one corner. Though the day was warm, I could not resist the temptation to gratify a passion inherited fi'om boyhood, and build a roaring fire with the dried pine boughs with which the floor was strewn. Mistaking the directions of the guide-book, I made a needless steep ascent and immediate descent of an extra thousand feet, being reward- ed, however, with a rich harvest of wild flowers, with which the little alp at the summit is studded in great variety. In many excursions and along many roadsides we were constantly struck with the rich masses of September flowers, and especially with the great preponderance of every shade of blue. The greenish-gray Edelweiss and the red Alpen Eosen are the typical Alpine flowers, but we found their blue sisters in far greater abundance, among them many varieties of gentian, but none so beautiful as our own fringed one. Another hour's hard tramp brought me to the Mesurina Alp, a vast open pasture surrounded by flr woods, and these by the great mountain- peaks, stretching down at its northern end to the pretty little Mesurina Lake. Two hundred and fifty cows were jingling their bells and feed- ing over its short green gi'ass. They were a very pretty and pictur- esque herd, almost universally of a solid gray color, with black muzzles and switches. Could they be baptized as Jerseys and sent to England, their color would make their fortune. They had little else to recom- 12S TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. mend tliein. Like all the cows of this region, and of Tyrol generally, they are thin, without the evidence of great milking to justify their thinness. A good udder is rarely seen, or, in fact, a good cow. At the upper side of the pasture an enormous octagonal shed, the outer JlKSUlilNA LAKE AND TUE UEEl ZIMNEN. wall of which is of stone masonry and very high, furnishes shelter for this entire herd, and encloses an open yard where all may lie comfort- ably in the sun. The chalet of the establishment is a large, low, rambling, dingy stone TO THE MESURINA ALT. 129 house, given over mainly to buttery and clieese-room. At one corner a low-walled room about twelve by eighteen feet, running np into a liigh I'oof, is tlie living-room of the cow-herds and dairy-men. A broad low sliclf snri'onnding the room serves as a seat by day and as a conch at night. In the middle of tlie floor, on the rough stone hearth, a wood iire boils a large kettle in which iho. 2:>olenta (hasty-pndding) — the sole food of these men, except skimmed milk — is cooked. The open door and one very small nnglazed window fm-nisli the only entrance for light and air and the only exit for smoke, tlie rafters and shingles of tlie roof being l)lack as coal. They gave me a two-qnart kettle of milk to drink, and entertained themselves with an interested criticism of my dress, bnt this in low-voiced Italian, lest it should give offence. I gave twenty kreutzei-s (less than nine cents) for my entertainment, which boundless liberality opened their hearts, and they took me over the whole dingy establishment. By far the larger part of the house is occupied by the drying-room, where several tons of Schweitzer and Parmesan cheese were spread out npon shelves. The cheese was good, but the butter, of which at least half a ton was on hand await- ing shipment, was anything but inviting. Should any of my readers happen to have a moderate capital, agri- cultural tastes, and delicate lungs, I commend to his attention the ex- ploitation of this high-lying and beautiful alp, sheltered on all sides by great dolomite mountains. A mile beyond the chalet, at the edge of the lake, stands a little Italian inn, well known to travellers among these hills for its stock of capital Asti wine, its hard gray bread, and wholesome cheese — and nothing else save dii't and smoke and dismal discomfort. However, with such a lake as the Mesurina, and such peaks as Monte Piano and the Drei Zinnen, and such a great fringe of fir and weird monntain- top, and such wine as Asti, the pedestrian may well be content. Following the shorter direct road, I came into Cortina at dusk, lit- erally nn fatigued, after a walk of twenty-seven miles, including a climb of three thousand feet, and much steep up-and-down work among the foot-hills. This, be it understood, was on the second day after climbing Tofana. It indicated better than anything else could the great value of the air of these mountains as a help to bodily exercise ; for I am 9 130 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. not a practised walker, being rarel}^ afoot an hour out of the t^Yenty- four. Delicate persons with whom we conversed sav that here, in the absence of oppressive heat, and in the exhilarating atmosphere, they find themselves tempted to constant exei'cise, and vastly benefited by it. Being of sound body, 1 cannot myself speak from the invalid point of view, but I found myself constantly stimulated for severe work which at home I should shun even iu the finest weather. Before taking leave of the Dolomites it may be useful to refer to the theories concerning their formation, still a moot question among cjeoloffists. The weight of the argument seems to favor the conclusion of Baron Richthofen, that they are the work of coral insects, formed upon the lower rocks at the bed of a deep salt sea, and I'aised by slow upheaval to their present elevation. He bases his hypothesis upon the correspondence of their forms and their surroundings with what is known concerning the coral reefs of the Pacific, the isolation of their masses from other corresponding formations, tlie improbability of their peculiar shapes being due to meteoric denudation, the undisturbed beds beneath them and occasionally above them, and the very unequal thickness of the deposit at different points — an inequality in which it would seem that the other rocks in their neighborhood would have shared had it been due to erosive or atmospheric action. FROM THE GREAT PEAKS TO THE LAGUNES. 131 CHAPTER XVI. FROM THE GREAT PEAKS TO THE LAGUNES. We were sleeping at the very Italian Albergo di Cadore, at Tai, ten minutes' walk from Pieve di Cadore, higher up in the hills. There, in a dingy little stone house, now occupied by uncleanly peasants, its floors begrimed with dirt and its ceilings blackened with smoke, the great Venetian, Tiziano Vecellio, four hundred years ago entered upon his illustrious life. The outer wall bears the inscription : NEL MCCCCLXXVII ERA QUESTE VMILI MUllA TIZIANO VECELLIO VENE A CELEBRE VITA DONDE VSCOVA GIA FRESSO A CENTO ANNO IN VENEZIA ADDI XXVII AGOSTO MDLXXVI A longer life of industrious labor has not been led in modern tiuies, and the world is still glorious with his woi-k. AVe were roused before the first gleam of day. Over the black, fir-clad hills peered the weird moon-lit peaks of the Antelao, Manna- role, Pelmo, and Civita. Against the dark woods the face of the cam- panile and the scattered house fronts stood white and clear. Tlie river rolled far below us through a dark mysterious cleft, toward which wound the white Ampezzo road. By the time that the gray light of morning had filled the sk}', and thrown tlie morn-light into shadow and bathed the mountain-tops in a rosy glow, we were comfortably packed away in our little Einspanner and rolling out of the town. In our day's drive we were to descend nearl}^ three thousand feet. The mountains were high and steep, and 132 TYROL, AXD TUE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. the valleys were deep and dai'k. The road now clung to the hill-sides, now crossed high arches of line masonry, now zigzagged back and forth down the hill-side, or di'ove far up into a valley — always descend- ing, but always gently — always winding, and always protected at its outer side by mason-work. It often showed as a broad white band far below us, and often as a terrace boi'ne upon strong arches above us. At every step and at every turn it brought into view new beauties and new marvels of these wonderful Dolomite walls. Through all this majesty, through the many stone-built and smoke- blackened villages, among the cheerful, graceful, much -soiled, and happy Italian people, the attention is ahyays interested, but never more than by this great Austro-Italiaii highway itself, over which we roll as over a floor. It must have been more costly than any railroad, and its maintenance in its universally good condition must be a serious matter. A railroad gets over many natural difficulties by tunnelling, and this ffives it a 2:reater command over its o-rades. On a carriaije road long tunnels are not admissible, and the grade has to be taken on such ground as offers itself. The Breimer road presented many engineering obstacles, and is a masterly work; but the more sudden angles and deeper valleys of the Dolomite country offer greater difficul- ties, and this work, from Toblach to Conegliano, impressed me as tlie most interesting of its class that I have seen. It has the fault so com- mon in public roads of being too wide, generally about twenty-five feet. The used portion — that which seems to contain all the wheel tracks, including turning out — is rarelj' more than fifteen feet, and it need never be more. The remaining ten feet have to be kept free from weeds by lioeing. In manj' places fully ten feet of the widtli on one side or the other is occupied with heaps of road metal, proving that the remaining space is sufficient. It would, of course, have been cheaper in construction and maintenance to make a road fifteen feet wide with occasional bays for stone-breaking. The Piave, down Avhose valley our course lay, is a \ev\ consid- erable stream, winding through a broad bed of desolate gray stone brought down by the floods, a dismal setting for its beryl-colored wa- ters. It passes many villages built of the stone against whose solid masses they cling. Little fertile land is to be seen, and one wonders FEOM THE GREAT PEAKS TO TEE LAGUNES. 133 how tlie population, even with its obvious severe labor, subsists. The lumber-driving and the frequent saw-mills cmplo}^ many men, and the constant rectification of the course of the river and the maintenance of the frequent shoots through which the logs are driven occupy many women with most arduous stone-carrying — in baskets at their backs. Despite their hard life, they seem cheerful and careless and happy. The children gathering manure on the highway, and the women, with their busy distaffs, at the doorways, showed little evidence of absolute 'to-' "V, 5r \ 1.V-M' ■■■3 nil uoijN wuii mil 11 V dhjtafiu. ' poverty. Of beggars we sa'w very few. The children who followed the carriage, calling for kreutzers, begged from inclination rather than from necessity. Longarone, a large, dull town, where we breakfasted, had its streets filled with stands of beautiful fruit; but the land about it seemed bar- ren, and the reason for its being was not obvious. We were still in the midst of dolomite mountains, but no longer among tiie great peaks. 131 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. The characteristic forms of the hill-tops could still be traced, but thoy had come down beneath the extreme limit of vegetation, and were modified by the growth of trees, and by the more frequent action of freezing and thawing. Later, near Belluno, we left the swift-flowing Piave, and followed its long -abandoned original course through a valley which a great land-slip, possibly in preliistoric times, dammed to a height of six iiun- dred feet, forcing the river to find exit through another gap in the mountains, and turning a part of its old bed into the broad bright blue lake of Santa Croce. The old lower valley of the Piave is fed with oidy the mountain rills which were formerly its insignificant branches. Here begins the little brook which, filling the basins of a series of little lakes, grows to a respectable stream by the time it leaves the hills at Serravalle, irrigates the rich meadows of Venetia, and pours into the Adriatic far to the east of the new mouth of the Piave. At the summit of the broad dam stands Fadalto — a few houses and the little inn where w^e dined. It is a memorable inn, tidy in its appointments, and though thoroughly Italian, very passable as to its table. Its kitchen was the most picturesque and the pi-ettiest that we had anywhere seen — a long room with tables for the commoner guests, with huge whitewashed beams hung with shining utensils of embossed copper, with a latticed screen, behind which the handsome and smiling and cleanly padrona herself prepared the food. It Avould have been a noticeable room without the great bay containing the ])uge hearth of the country, which was its chief feature. This hearth is a white mar- ble pedestal about twenty inches high and seven feet square, with its corners cut away. Its centre is of brick. On this burns a wood fire open on all sides. Above, a funnel of wood painted black, and as large as the hearth, gathers the smoke to the chimney. From its border there hangs a woollen curtain eight inches wide. Tlie sides of the bay under the windows are furnished with a broad high seat, to which the edges of the hearth serve as a footstool; under this are the wood-boxes. Enormous polished iron andirons and numerous cop- per vessels stand upon the hearth, a great black soup-kettle hanging fi"ora its chain completing the picture. A cosier nook for winter even- ing gossip could not be desired. FEOM THE GREAT PEAKS TO THE LAGUNES. 135 riSEPLACE IN ITALIAN INN AT FADALTO. Our joni'iiey, which had begun at six, led us on througli the lower- ing hills, and iinally out on to the fertile plain of Venetia, where the twin towns of Serravalle and Cenada, with their well-planted connect- ing allee and spacious half-way theati'e and casino, brought us sudden- ly into an atmosphere all Italian, and where already oar Tyrol Ein- spanner was rciiarded with curious interest. At half-past eight Jane and I were in a gondola, nnder the liglit of the full harvest-moon and a cloudless sky and breathless air, floating down the Grand Canal. 136 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. CHAPTER XVII. A MORNING IN THE STREETS OF VENICE. We first touched the shore of inoderii civihzation at Yenice — a shore washed by the waters of antiquity and of quaint provinciahsni, and, strewn witli the flotsam and jetsam of all times and of many strange peoples. It is an entirely new land to one who comes from the haunts of the simple Tyrolese. My rustic pen must refrain from a description of this sweet city of the sea. Where so many of the world's best artists have laid their smoothest verse and their most graceful periods in hon:iage, no word of mine need seek a place. To tlie solenm, spell-bound spirit-city of the past I offer oid}' the tribute of silent love and admiration. Its crumbling balconies and its slime-grown and waterrlapped thresholds, the mellow glow of its over-ripe fagades, and the soft shimmer of its color -fed lagunes, will attract and enchant the beauty -loving world withont my help. One of its aspects, however, seems to me to have received inade- quate notice. Wreathed within the city of the canals and the gon- dolas, co-extensive with it, and growing from the same core of hu- nmnity, lies unobserved the qniet and hidden city of the streets — a city full of strange people, busy with the indolence and unthrift of Italian daily life. Hoping to catch the first njovement of the day, I went out at half- past six. In France it should have been quite two hours earlier, but here I struck the veiy beginning of the morning life. A sleepy and uncombed waiter was giving coffee to a few straggling guests on the Riva, drowsy fishermen were just hoisting their painted sails, and one after another the gondoliers of the Piazzetta were creeping fi'om un- der their awnings and stretching their languid arms in regret for the A MORNING IN THE STREETS OF VENICE. 137 ended iiiglit. About the steps of tlie Campanile, and in every sliel- tei-ed corner, beggars were still dreaming on the pavement. The Piazza was piled here and there with the chairs and tables at which last night delegates from all nations had sat under the moonb'ght, sipping coffee and ices, and drinking in the mellow glory of the gold- en mosaic poi'tals of San Marco. The pigeons, lineal descendants of Dandolo's carriei's, were picking the last crumbs from the clean pave- ment, and broad day filled the whole deserted square. Turning the corner of the church, and crossing the canal which passes under the Bridge of Sighs, I left the Venice of the gondola, and penetrated a labyrinth of narrow streets — footways only, for no hoof ever awakens their echoes — which led in and out among the houses and garden-walls ; up and down over narrow bridges ; into lit- tle squares where fruit-women were setting up their stands, and where seedy men were taking morning cocktails of black coffee and brandy at the tables in front of the caffe ; to the doors of grand churches where matutinal women were attending mass; and into many a cul-de- sac whence the steps must be retraced. I met respectable middle-aged clerks, in well-worn black, who bought their morning papers and trudged on to their desks — men who had come out from their own homes, and were going to their regular bread-winning work, whose I'ound of life lies in tliis strange place, and whose familiar daily scenes are these marvels which we come so far to see — men to whoni the name America brino-s only vao-ue suffo'estions O CO oo of New York and Bi'azil. I think this impresses me more than any- thing else. To have a foreigner in the streets turn and look at me as thongli not he but I myself were the interesting object — this is the most unsettling sight of all my seeings. Little by little business began to take possession of the streets. Bakers' shops and butchers' shops and lish-stalls were op'ened ; the din of countless blacksmiths and coppersmiths filled the air at every turn, as though the making of locks and kettles and chimney-pots were the one nsurping industry of the world; loud-voiced women called all the people to come and partake of baked pumpkin, fresh and hot, and the melody of mingled street cries swelled to a chorus of supplication. Lately risen maidens lowered baskets from their balconies, and 138 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. iisliecl lip cat -meat, or bread, or onions, or other household supplies, lowered the coppers for payment, gathered their scanty raiment about BVIOOJI JIVKKETINCt them, and withdrew. The vend- er — we knew him at the opera M$i 111. WW — pocketed his money, tossed his Cliti-'' load to his head, and yelled his *|| noisy way down the alley. iSllJlljjiii in the Piazza be- yond the Kialto, M'here early activity most centres, I took up a commanding position A MOENma IN THE STREETS OF VENICE. 139 at an out-of-door table, and ordered my "white coffee" and bread- and-butter. WJiat a wonderful place it was for breakfasting — just for once ! What pretty but carelessly powdei-ed women, in black lace head-dresses, those were who came from each street and w-ent toward the church; w-hat a clatter the wooden pattens made, and what a gabble the newsboys; what loads of fresh fruit and vegetables the women carried past; how the urchins gambled for soldi; how unlike everything was to what we see at home ; and how unreal one grew to feel himself in watching it all ! The cheap dealers of the Rialto were taking down their shutters as I crossed it, and displaying their low-pri(;ed wares. Boys sat on the broad steps munching bi-ead and revelling in the yellow luxurj^ of broad wedges of hot and savory pumpkin. The purveyors of the adjacent quarters were climbing tlie steps with whole head-loads of grapes, or fish, or vegetables. Over the hand-rail, filling the whole width of the Gi'and Canal, lay a fleet of barges unloading prod- uce from beyond the lagnues, or stowing aw^ay assorted cargoes of white and purple grapes, peaches, figs, lettuce, chiccory, radishes, shin- ing white onions, carrots, beets, potatoes — the whole fresh-coloi'ed as- sortment of green -grocery. On shore the market people filled the streets and the arcades with fish, and flesh, and fowl, and fruit, and flowers, and the M'hole air with a tumult of noisy traflic. I descended among the throng, where customers were being importuned on every hand, and where sharp bargains wei"e being driven in sprats and snails and in fractions of the smallest fowl. Entering a little square shut in by high houses, and, like most Yenetian squares, dominated by the nnflnished fagade of a time-stain- ed church, I noticed a singular activity among the people. They were scui'i-ying in from eveiy alley, and hastening from every house-door, with odd -shaped copper buckets on hook -ended wooden bows, and \x\i\\ little coils of rope. Old men and women, boys and girls, all gathered closely about a covered well -curb in the middle of the square ; and still they hurried on, until they stood a dozen deep around it. Presently the church tower slowly struck eight, and a lit- tle old man forced his way through the ci'owd, passed his ponderous ii-on key through the lid, and nnlocked the well. The kettles went 140 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. jangling into it, and came slopping out again at an amazing rate, and the people trndged off home, each with a pair of them swnng from the shoulder. Tlie wells are deep cisterns, wliich are tilled during the night, and it is out of amiable con- sideration for tliose who love their „ , i i , morning nap that they are given a*- '"^'^ ^y good a chance as their neigh- bors of iiettino; an unroiled suii » AT THE rUULIO WKLL. — A MOUNINS SCKNE IN Yr:MOE. ply. This is the first instance that has come to my notice of a com- mendable municipal restraint upon the reprehensible practice of early rising. Few, very few, of those who came for water had had time for A MORXIKG IN THE STREETS OF VENICE. 141 tlieir toilets. Their day evidently begins with this excursion to tlic public I'eservoir. Later in my Avalk I saw a cistern being replenished. A barge filled with fresli-water lay in a canal near by, and a steam-pump forced the supply through a hose to the square, wliere a gutter carried it to the well. The water is of excellent quality. It is brought through conduits from the Euganean Hills, near Padua, but its distribution through the city is carried on in the original manner here indicated. For a city M'here the salt sea is the scavenger, where abbitions are not de rigueur, where tires cannot rage, and where water is not a bever- age, the cost of laying distributing mains lias wisely been spared. By nine o'clock I liad walked some miles, ar.d had seen the popu- lace subside from its brief spasm of activity and settle down to the sweet do-nothing of its daily life, and I turned my face homeward. I sought in vain for a ferry over the Grand Canal. I was lost in a maze of confusing streets. Defeated of my purpose, I called a gondola, and was rowed ignominiously back to my hotel. 142 TYROL, AND TEE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. CHAPTER XVIII. CIRC UMLOCUTION. From Botzen I had sent a tniiik to Venice by freight-train, and I went to the station to get it. I M'as met by a porter who had served in the Austrian army, and who spoke German. lie kindly took my case in hand. Armed with my receipt, I was conducted to a freight clerk's ofii(;e. lie looked through many pigeon-lioles, and shrugged his shoulders — my trunk had not arrived. I expostulated. lie looked again, and again shrugged. Fourteen days should have sufficed, but he had as yet received no notice of the ari-ival. My porter took me to the custom-house; there stood the trunk, covered with a week's dust. Back to the freight clerk; lie looked again. No, the freight letter had not arrived. I did not want the letter, I wanted the truidc. He shrugged his shoulders; we must wait until the c/ie/ should come. At last the chef came. He remembered having seen the letter, and lie looked through the pigeon-holes. lie must be mistaken ; it could not have come. No matter about the letter, my receipt was a duplicate, and I wanted the trunk. The cAi^ shrugged his shoulders. Then he went off to rummage through a desk at another corner of the room, and at last he found the unlucky letter. Then we must take the letter to the custom-house. Ofldcial number one vised it, and sanded it, and turned me over to official number two. This oue looked at the trunk, wrote something on the paper, blotted it with a pinch of dust from the floor, and sent us to ofiicial number three, who did a long sum on it, in triplicate, opened a little drawer, took out some sand with an iron spoon, and sprinkled it again. Then number four wrote an illegible signatui'e on each of the three sections, sprinkled on some sand from a box, poured most of the sand on to his desk, and sent us to number Ave, who verified the computation, wrote his name three times, sanded. CIRCUMLOCUTION. 143 and despatclied us to iniinber one. The circumlocution was complete. Number one wrote something more, sanded the newspaper he had been reading-, and set us free. Now we would get the trunk and be off. By no means; we must trudge back to the station, wait for the clerk to come back from somewhere, pay him some money, give him tlie letter, and get his permit, duly signed and sanded, and tlien go to the custom-house and carry away the property. It has taken the read- er^ — who has not skipped — some minutes to read this tale. It took me fifteen minutes to write it; it took me six times fifteen minutes to go thi'ough the evolutions which it describes. Feeling sure that I should never climb anotlier mountain, I had brought from Cortina — as a trophy to hang under my Mosel oar — the alpenstock with which I struggled up Tofana : value, twenty-two cents. For convenience I would send it as freight to Ilavi'e. To allow for the slowness of the clerks, we assigned an extra three-quarters of an hour for the business of getting it off our hands, besides a half-hour for buy- ing tickets and registering the baggage. In front of the station stands a little guard-house, with the deluding legend," Expedizioue." "Might I send this stick to Havre?" " Sicuro !" " How much will it cost ?" We must ask. The expeditor goes with us to the freiglit clerk, who answers, " More than it is worth."' " Probably, but how much ?" " How much does it weigh ?" " I don't know." " Weigh it." The expeditor hung it to the hook of a steelyard which another man held up : " One kilo " (two pounds). Then, after a calculation : " Two francs." " Yery well ; I will stand two francs. No matter about the receipt. Here is the money. Mark it ' Paid,' and send it as soon as possible." But they manage these things better in Italy. I must go back and see what "Expedizioue" really means. I must give the details very clearly, and the official must make out the papers. I might go and get my tickets and fight my baggage through, and then come back. I 144 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. caine back, at tlie end oi a lialf-liour and of all m}^ patience, and found him still writing. Tliere were tliree "fi-eight letters," each as long and intricate as a poljcy of insurance, and two long " declara- tions" for tlie custom-house — giving a description, value, etc., etc.* Then we went to the freight clei'k, and he signed something, and I signed something (sanded), and the " Expedizione " man demanded three francs and a half. I referred to the contract foi- two francs. "Ah ! mais! tlie 'Expedizione' costs a franc and a half." At last I was free. Everything was attended to, and we had still seven minutes to get our seats. I separated Jane from a poodle with which, and with whose mistress, of course, she had made fi-iends, gath- ered up my hags and bundles, and started gayly for the train. As we tui-ned into the corridor we saw the great doors swing to, and our porter shrugged his shoulders. "But what does it mean?" " Troppo tardi !" "It is only ten minutes ])ast nine, and the train leaves at quarter past." "The doors are closed five minutes befoi'e the ti'ain starts." " Tiien why in — !" But no, the man did not understand English, and no poor words of mine could do justice to the situation. Jane thought otherwise ; hut then her words are never poor, and on this oc- casion she sliowed an approach to genius. As a piece of sketchy char- acterization, the estimate she expressed of Italian executive ability was worthy of permanent record ; but she is overfastidious in such matters, and prefers that her achievement should be permitted to remain our private possession. The train gone, we demanded to see the station-master. We were taken to his office, and we-re most politely received. He is a large man and a handsome man, with that suavity and grace of manner for which his race is noted. lie listened to oni- plaint — our vituperation had ex- pended itself behind that closed door — and he enconraged us to ex- press our frank opinion of the administration of Italian I'ailways. I * All ooiiceniing twenty-two cents' worth of wood and iron, which has never reached Ilavie. One of those freight letters has got into a wrong pigeon-hole. CIliCUMLOCUTION. 145 told him of my trunk, and of the stnpid fuss about my stick, of the miseries of liis baggage-room, and of much incident which one who is traveling in Italy finds ready to his tongue. In such a presence I could not give my opinion its ruder expression, but he took my mean- ing, and lie accepted it in a sympathizing spirit. Unfortunately he could only execute his orders : he deeply regretted that they were such as to cause much annoyance to passengers; he could tell us of other things in which their system was still more at fault; they had made the grave mistake of copying the methods of France, which were full of imperfections, instead of those of England, which were so admirable. " We are not English ; we are American." "Ah! You are American? I am glad to meet you. Kindly take seats, and tell me of your systems." Thus the shrewd man turned our thoughts into the didactic chan- nel, always so soothing, and he gave us, by his attention as a listener, almost a compensation for our annoyance. Ilis iuterest in us grew warm. We had intended to lunch at Verona, and to go on by the next train to Lake Garda, and take the boat for Riva. We would have made a great mistake; for the king and queen were at Verona, and there would be a "' f esta," which we surely should not miss. Really — we knew our own plans best, but so it seemed to him — we ought by all means to pass the night at Verona. lie actually dismissed us in a happy frame of mind. In a calmer mood I return to my conviction that all we hear of the much- vaunted "regeneration of united Italy" is a mere enthusiast's delusion. No nation tolerating such a system of railway administra- tion as hers holds the germ of regeneration anywhere in its organiza- tion. If she is ever to acquire it, she must seek it in the blood of a race to which the management of our best I'ailroads is possible. Now listen to the tale of our sorrows. See what it implies to lose a train in Venice, and give us your sympathy. We rowed back to the Piazza; attended the splendid full mass at San Marco; wandered through the unequalled halls of the Ducal Pal- ace — the gorgeous seat of the government of the great republic; lunched at Elorian's Caffe ; went to A^erona in the afternoon; spent 10 146 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. the moonlight evening in its vast Roman amphitheatre, and in the crowded sqnare, where the whole town turned out for its promenade, and where a good band gave an open-air concert; passed the next morning among the tombs of the Scaligers, and in the noted Veronese churches; and went comfortably to Feschiera in time for the after- noon boat. Tlie king and queen had left Verona, and of course the "capo di stazione" knew it; but he had made them serve his appeas- ing purpose all the same. THE LAKES. 147 CHAPTER XIX. THE LAKES. We sat for two honrs on tlie deck of the little steamei', moored to the wharf, and dined there, watching the w^iile the manoeuvre of boats with painted lateen-sails, and tlie work of red-capped sailors; gossiping with the cook, and playing with his dog, and dreaming over the shim- mering bine water, and the hot, hazy, far-away shore, where Catnlhis lived and wrote, and over the fairy crests of the mountains which lead Tyrol down to bathe its feet in the blue waves of Garda. Some one at the British Association's meeting at Dublin read a paper on the intellect of animals. He cited no case so remarkable as that of Cucino's dog,Avhich lives on this boat. This, and the steamer which runs to Desenzano — fifteen miles away, at the south-west corner of the lake — start from Riva, at the north end of Garda. The dog was familiar with the crews of both, and with the other craft, but he had never made a trip by her. For a long time he watched her course down the other side of the lake, and saw her drawing farther and farther away, until she was hidden by the projecting point. One day, his mind fully settled to its theory, he proceeded to verify^ it. Pie marched deliberately over to Desenzano, took passage by the other steamer, came safely to Riva, and went back to his familiar kitchen with an air of entire satisfaction. He could not be induced to make another trip by that boat. He had " done " it, and had no more worlds to conquer in that direction. He had reasoned out a plan of action, and had found his reasoning correct. Garda is the largest of the Italian lakes — thirty-six miles long. It was our first one, and it must be the bluest lake in the world. It starts in the fertile plain of Lombardy, and, piercing the grand range by which this is sheltered, it runs quite into the heart of the bare-peaked 148 TYBOL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. mountains of Austrian Tyrol. All along its eastern shore Italian vil- lages, monasteries, raomitains, cliapels, vineyards, and chestnut groves give interest to every mile of the journey. After nightfall close-nest- ling Riva welcomed us to its pleasant lake-side hotel terraces. Riva has a history such as belongs to all towns of good military position lying on the border-land between the plains of the south and V 4. KIVA, FROM THE PONALE EOAB. the mountain fastnesses of the north. But it has a beauty — an in- describable lake -side and mountain -foot charm — which attracted us more. Leaving its past to those who are fresher and more eager THE LAKES. 149 students, we contented onrselves witli a simple, inactive absorption of the nnsui-passed natnral beauty which chisters about this northern nook ;.^'a .^^ TKEMOSINE, BY LAKE GAKDA. of the high-walled l)lue Lago di Garda. "VVe were rowed to its plash- ing fall of Ponale, and at nightfall we wandered ont over its cliff-side road — a road wliich absolutely clings to the side of the steep and some- times overhanging limestone precipices, and is threaded through tun- nels like a string through its beads. In more than one place a stone dropped from its parapet falls yards out into the water, while the rock above overhangs our heads— Mr. Euskin to the contrary notwithstand- 150 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. ing. Beginning at the level of the lake, it rises by an easy but con- stant inclination to the very top of the grand rock which sweeps round into the Yal di Ledro. As 't re- cedes, it seems scarcely more than a chalk mark along the face of the cliif. Kot the least memorable inci- dent about Riva is the pleasure in leaving it — by no means the pleasure of leav- ing it,f or a more delightful halt- ing-place one need not seek. Our return was by the De- senzano boat, touching along the bold west- ern bank of the lake, which is more precipitous and far grander than the opposite shore, as it is more prosperous and more populous. Some of its villages are at the top of a precipice apparently a thousand feet above the level of the lake. One of these, , _ ' LEMON QAKnESr, LAKE OABDA. Tremosine, a village of some importance, has no other means of communication with tlie outer world than by a zig- THE LAKES. 151 zag foot-path which leads up the ahnost vertical rock from the steam- boat landing. The great indnstr}', wherever a little soil has been formed at the foot of the mountains, is the cultivation of the lemon, the gardens be- longing to the rich nobles of the ducal cities. While the summer climate is well suited to the ripening of the fruit, ^vinter shelter is imperative. The gardens are studded with tall columns of brick ma- sonry, which support the framework of the roof. This is in winter covered with boards, and the vertical openings between the columns are closed with glass. At some points, as in tlie neighborhood of the town of Limone, these gardens are so extensive as to give a most peculiar effect to the appearance of the shore. Nothing could be more thoroughly Italian than the graceful, vine- grown, lazy, larger towns at which we touched. At Maderno, where ranch of the shore front was occupied by shaded terraces set round witli pots of aloes and cacti, and where the terraces were occupied by slatternly, dull -looking women, there was a general air of abandon- ment and uselessness, after the best Italian manner. Happy this peo- ple who while away their dreamy and untidy summers under the soft breezes that sweep this widest stretch of Italian water ! Desenzano, where we landed, has not responded even to the sum- mons of the steam-whistle. Judging from the manner of those who would have relieved me of the bui-den of my lield-glass during the pleasant stroll to the station, I should say that beggary was its chief re- maining industry. Of the station it is not worth while to say more than that it belongs to the railway which leads from Ycnice, and that it possessed no time-table by which M^e could determine our route and our connections. Under this same method of administration, instead of spending tw^o hours at Brescia, as we might have done, and where we might have breakfasted like Christians, we were stranded for a longer time in an unfinished station-house in Southei-n Illinois.' They called it Rovato, the people spoke Italian, the beggars were polite, and three car-loads of Italian soldiers who belonged to our party w^ere playing morra — uno ! ott! chink! bang! thump! and there go your ten soldi. But for all that, I have never seen its match for newness and crudity save in our own benighted Egypt. 152 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. All tilings come to an end ; so did onr stifling and hungry halt, and we trundled on through the rich foot-hill country, among vine- yards and campanili, past Palazzuolo and Bergamo, then beside the premonitory and enticing waters which lead down to Lecco, thence LIMONE, LAKE GARUA. in an omnibus through unheeded streets, and hurriedly to our jour- ney's end — the deck of a Como steamer. Here at last the spirit of haste was laid. Fast or slow, early or late, it mattered nothing now. We were afloat on the Lake of Como. The afternoon was only so far gone as to give us lengthened shadows; the sky was clear, the air was soft, and M'e had gone out of THE LAKES. 153 this world into that i-ealin of fancy where prose and poetry, art and photography, had builded our visions — "A clear lake, margined by fruits of gold And whispering myrtles, glassing softest skies As cloudless, save with rare and roseate shadows, As I would have thy fate." Evening fell slowly; each headland, each hamlet, and each moun- tain-top became more and more unreal in the fading light, and as the low stars began to glimmer out of the fleeting western gold, we climbed the broad white steps of "A palace lifting to eternal heaven Its marble walls, from out a glossy bower Of coolest foliage, musical with birds. . . . The perfumed light Stole through the mists of alabaster lamps. And every air was heavy with the sighs Of orange groves, and music from sweet lutes, And murmurs of low fountains that gush forth 1' tlie midst of roses." For even this too was added to our cup. Our first halt was at the regal Villa Frizzoni, rich with every luxury that architecture and Italian lake-side gardening could, at the behest of wealth, offer for the acceptance of a wife. By that grace of good fortune by which the traveller often profits, the Yilla Frizzoni, unspoiled of all its luxury, has become the "Grand Hotel Bell aggio," and all the season througli its halls and balconies and terraces, and its orange-shaded walks, are gay with the life and dress and music of a pleasure-seeking throng. If the imagination, revelling in the charm of Como, needs the further stimulus of princes, baronen, contessi, and Ticino nurse- maids, tliey are all here, to be had for the looking. Reo-arded with the cold eye of the captions traveller, this hotel fills every requirement, and from the American stand -point its scale of charo-es is incredibly low. The best that Saratoga can offer is mean and commonplace compared with this, yet a bachelor must spend more there for his top-story cell and his caravansary feeding than need here a reasonable couple, content with a charming second story front room, 154 TYROL, AND THE SKIBT OF THE ALPS. and M itii simple claret at the deli- cate and exqnisite- cj ly served table-d'hote. We were easily tempted to bor- row from the few days assigned to Pai-is, and to tarry liere until con- science drove US forth. I had reserved for my last afternoon's walk a visit to the Villa Serbelloni, perched high np on the promontory between the Lecco and the Como arms of the lake. It was a question of taking this walk in a sad rain or not taking it at all, for in the SAN GIOVANNI, UELLAGGIO, ON LAKE OOMO. THE LAKES. 155 morning we must surely leave. Leave! As easily leave Eden itself. Conscience and duty all foi'gotten, I incontinently engaged quarters for three days more in this rambling, old nobleman's house, now trans- formed into a quiet, homely hotel. We had rowed over the lake to the meretricious Villa Carlotta, we had lounged at Cadenabbia, and w^e had drunk in all the riparian de- liglits of this delicious inland sea, but we had conceived no such wealth of beauty, of situation, of vegetation, and of scrupulous horti- culture as greeted us here at every turn. It is useless to attempt de- scription ; I simply commend this charmed spot as the best earthly representation of a veritable fairy -land. The garden of Serbelloni ' 1 -X .. Hw- is formal and artificial to the last degree ; but its formality is enno- bled by the majestic rock on whose summit it rests; and its art has made cunning use of the vegetation of every zone. Our fellow- guests, though few, were no less interesting than those we had left at the water-side. It carried us back many a long year, and brought up the memories of a mad enthusiasm, to see again, somewhat saddened by age and care, but still the same, that face which we all knew so well when her wonderful voice and her magnetic presence stirred the most hidden chords of the thousands of hearts wliich beat in unison under the great dome of Castle Garden in 1S51. She is a grandmotlier now, 156 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. but we who had heard that matcliless song saw her only as the Jenny Lind of onr youth. It is something in favor of these hotels that they lie at the edge of the quaint old town of Bellaggio. These Continental towns seem to be exempt from the influence which, with us, assimilates all communi- ties to their conspicuous surroundings. Here, whither rich and extrav- agant tourists have flocked for years, their wealth and exti'avagance have had absolutely no effect upon the simple people whom they dail}' elbow in its narrow arcaded streets. Even the arts by which the tour- ist's money is enticed into their careful pouches are practised with a simplicity and an unspoiled and unassuming politeness which make the payment of their modest demands a pleasure. I have in mind now a sturdy and hearty oarsman, rich with more or less authentic gossip of those whom he has seen and of those whom he has served, and as proud of his position of a Bellaggio peasant — a leader among the bassi gentl — as he would be of ducal honors if he wore them. He has sat face to face, and lias chatted familiarly, with thousands of men and women of every rank that travels ; yet he carries himself with the dignity of conscious M'orth, and with the grace and native elegance of an Italian country man. We crossed the hills to Lugano in the coupe of a diligence, in a light rain, which, as our occasional glimpses of the Simplon and the Bernardino showed, was the first autumn snow on the higher moun- tains. Still in the rain, we sailed down the beautiful mountain lake to the town of Lugano. This journey was made interesting and mem- orable by one of those sudden and charming companionships which spring up in the fertile soil of a traveller's experiences. We parted at the pier, and we may never meet again, but our memory of this lovely Italian -Swiss lake will alwa^^s recall our genial and most congenial Briton. It would be aside from my pui'pose to detail our experiences at Lugano and on Lago Maggiore. They continued and they varied the impressions received on Garda, and made eternal on Como. It is al- most futile to write fresh lines at this late day of what has delighted the scribes of all times. Even in the first century of our era, the THE LAKES. 157 ^ ? s * A 8TEEET IN BELLAGGIO. younger Pliny wrote to his friend Caniuins Rufus: " AVliat are yon doing at Como ? Do you study, hunt, or fish, or all three togetlier? For on our beloved lake one can do all these. Her waters afford fish, her wooded heights game, and her deep solitude quiet for study. But 158 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. whatever you do, I envy you, and I cannot restrain the confession that it makes my heart heavy not to be able to share that with you for which I pine as a sick man for a cooling drink, a bath, or a living spring. Shall I tear with violence these closely fitting bonds, if no FROM THE VILLA BEEBELLONI. THE LAKES. 159 other solution is possible ? Ali ! I fear never. For before old occu- pations are ended, new ones are thrust npon me, and thus link after link is added to the chain of endless toil which holds nie here en- thralled. Farewell." From Pliny's time to ours the literature of all lands has lingered over these beautiful lakes. Our route led us to Milan, -where we were favored with that rare clear atmosphere wliich reveals to the Lombard plain one of the most majestic of the world's sights. The Venetian Alps, the peaks of the Carinthian range, the great Dolomites, the Gross Glockner, the Oertler, the entire range of Swiss peaks to Mont Blanc, with seven -peaked Monte Rosa in the foreground, the Cottian Alps, with their pyramidal Monte Viso, the Maritime Alps, the Apennines, and the Euganean Hills, near Padua, closed almost the entire horizon with the grandest mountain chain of Europe. This vie\v in its entirety is rarely seen. Our good fortune was not evanescent, for no cloud, no slightest Him of vapor, came to screen this glorious panorama from all our long road to Turin. Thi'oughout tlie wliole day tlie grand army of mountain-tops marshalled itself for review, the majestic peaks marching slowly to their ever-changing positions as we sped swiftly on our way. The rich irrigated sub-Alphie plain M-as their parade-ground, and aganist the broad blue banner of an Italian sky stood the sharp outlines of their icy helmets. As the daylight died away, the red glory of the Alpine glow still lifted them out of the coming night. IGO TYROL, AND TEE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. CHAPTER XX. THE VAUDOIS VALLEYS.— THE WALDENSES. Turin was for iis only a lialtiiig-place, and not even the splendor of its famed Siiperga could delay us. We hastened on to those grim valleys where, resisthig the wicked might of man, the children of God through so many sad centuries withstood tlie fiercest persecutions of Rome, and handed down unspoiled, from generation to generation, the stern hard faith of the pure Apostolic Church. As the assumptions and encroachments of Rome turned the power of the Church to the worldly aggrandizement of its rulers, those who held to the primitive faith were forced to seek shelter in obscurity. The rngged mountain valleys on the borders of Piedmont and Dauphiny became their ulti- mate retreat. Here, long before the protest of Luther, they held the torch of the ancient religion which he labored to restore. Here was the birthplace of Romish persecution, and here were concentrated, from 1308 to the downfall of the Inquisition, all tlie horrors of which fiend- ish fanaticism has been capable. Once, and once only, was tlie last remnant of this chosen jjeople driven from these vallej's to the refuge of Calvinistic Switzerland ; but their Glorieitse Rentree under Arnaud re-established the old faith in its ancient seat, whence, to this day, it sends its evangelists to every corner of Italy. It is of the persecutions of this people that Milton wrote his grand- est sonnet : "Avenge, O Lord ! Tliy slanglitev'd saints whose bones Lie scatter'd on tlie Alpine mountains cold : E'en tliem, who kept Th}' truth so pure of old, When all our fathers worshipp'd stocks and stones, Forget not; in Thy book record their groans, Who were Thy sheep, and in their ancient fold Slain by the bloody Piedmontese, that roU'd THE VAUDOIS VALLEYS.— THE WALDENSES. 161 Mother with infent down the rocks. Tiieir moans The vales redoubled to the hills, and they To heaven. Their martyr'd blood and ashes sow O'er all the Italian fields, where still doth sway The triple tyrant, tiiat from these may grow ^ An hundred-fold, who, having learned Thy way, Early may fly the Babylonian woe." The liistoiy of the Piedinoutese Protestants is well told in "The Isi-ael of the Alps," by Dr. Mnston. It may be briefly sketched here. These people — the Waldeuses, or the Yaiidois — occupy what are known as the Vandois Valleys, in the Cottian Alps, about thirty miles south-west of Turin, between Mont Cenis and Monte Viso. The cen- tral valleys are Pellice, Lnzeriia, and Angrogna. The Vaudois (the Valdesi — dwellers in the valleys) are known by existing sermons of their pastors, dated 1120 ; and Peter Waldo, the reformer, of Lyons, doubtless took his name from them, not, as has been assumed, giving his name to them : he was Peter the Yaudois. The Yaudois are not to be confounded w-ith the inhabitants of the Canton de Yaud of Switzerland. Their earliest record is of the year 1100, but they be- lieve their ancestors through every age, from the apostolic time to the present, to have been protesters against the corruptions of the Church, and the depositaries of the simple Gospel faith. About the middle of the twelfth century there appeared two im- portant Yaudois documents: a translation of the New Testament and "La Nobla Leyczon." These are in the Komance language, which is the patois still spoken in the valleys. The " Noble Lesson," a poem of live hundred lines, is a summary of Scripture history and doctrines, and teaches toleration and religious freedom. In 1517, tlie year of Luther's denunciation, the Archbishop of Turin drew up an enumeration of the innnemorial belief and protest of the Yaudois Church. These are its points : The Yaudois received the Scriptures as their only rule of faith. They rejected the doctrines introduced by the popes and priests. They declared that tithes and first-fruits are not due to the clergy. They disapproved of the consecration of churches. They denied that men' needed the intercession of saints. They rejected purgatory and masses for the dead. They denied that priests have the power tO' forgive sins. 11 162 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. They opposed the confessional. They protested against the worship of the Vii'gin and saints. They rejected the use of holy-water; con- demned indulgences; and ascribed the doctrine of purgatory to the covetousness of priests. They abhorred the nse of the sign of the cross and the worship of images. They denied that wicked men could be representatives of Christ. They disowned the authority of the Church of Rome, and they believed that prayer in private houses is as acceptable as prayer in churches. The declaration of these principles brought upon them the anath- emas of Kome, and papal bulls were issued commanding Catholic princes to wage war against them. In 1485 a bull of Innocent VIIL, enjoining the extermination of the Yaudois, absolved those who should take up the cross against them " from all ecclesiastical pains and pen- alties, general and particular . . . releasing them from any oath they might have taken, legitimatizing their title to any property they might have illegally acquired, and promising remission of all their sins to such as should kill any heretic." It outlawed the Vaudois, annulled their contracts, and empowered all persons to take possession of their property. In the persecutions which followed, and which recurred at intervals for centuries, human infamy reached its climax. I quote parts of a single paragraph from Muston : " There is no town in Piedmont under a Yandois pastor w^here some of our brethren have not been put to death. Jordan Terbano was burned alive at Susa; Ilippolite Rossiero at Turin; Michael Go- neto, an octogenarian, at Sarcena ; Yillermin Ambrosio hanged on the Col di Meano ; Hugo Chiambs, of Fenestrelle, had his entrails torn from his living body at Turin ; Peter Geymarali, of Bobbin, in like mariner had his entrails taken out in Luzerna, and a fierce cat thrust in their place to torture him further; Maria Romano was buried alive at Rocca-patia; Magdalena Fauno underwent tlie same fate at San Giovaimi; Susanna Michelini was bound hand and foot, and left to perish of cold and hunger on the snow at Sarcena ; Bartolomeo Fache, gashed with sabres, had the wounds filled up with quick-lime, and per- ished thus in agony at Fenile ; Daniel Michelini had his tongue torn out at Bobbo for having praised God ; James Baridai'i perished cov- ered with sulphureous matches, which had been forced into his flesh THE VAUDOIS VALLEYS.— THE WALDENSES. 1(53 Tinder the nails, between the fingers, in the nostrils, in the lips, and over all his body, and then lighted ; Daniel Kevelli had his mouth tilled with gnnpowdei', which being lighted blew his head to pieces ; . . . Sara Rostignol was slit open from the legs to the bosora, and left so to perish on the road between Eyral and Luzerna ; Anna Char- bonnier was impaled, and carried thus on a pike from San Giovanni to La Torre." In 1630-'31 the plague invaded the valleys, and swept away more than 12,000 persons — about one-half of the whole population. In La Torre more than fifty families became completely extinct. Of the seventeen pastors, only two venerable and infirm old men escaped death. It then became necessary to import French-speaking ministers from Dauphiiiy and from Geneva. The government thereupon, as a further means of repression, prohibited the performance of the Yau- dois service in any language but French, and this tongue was learned by the whole people, and is retained by them to this day. More than once was the population reduced by war and oppression from its normal standard of about 25,000 to 4000 or 5000. Yet they always remained steadfast in their faith, and held to their ancient tra- ditions, rising stronger after each invasion, and always regaining their ruined prosperity. Some of the episodes of their wars are marvellous to read. Their most noted hero Gianavello, with a band of less than twenty followers, sometimes with only half a dozen, defeated whole armies of invaders; and the Flying Company at Pra del Tor overthrew the Count de la Trinita, who marched against them with three columns, numbering more than seven thousand men. The almost uniform success of these little bands of rude mountaineers operating against large armies of disciplined troops has naturally produced among the Yaudois the be- lief that it was not their prowess in action which prevailed, but the design of God to preserve the germ of true religion in their keeping. They gained frequent respite for the recovery of their prosperity and the restoring of their population by the contests in which the Dukes of Savoy were so often engaged with other princes. It was at the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, to which the Duke of Savo}', Yictor Amadeo II., was reluctantly forced to accede, that the remnant 164 TYROL, AND THE SKIBT OF THE ALPS. of the popnlation was compelled to accept exile into Switzerland. Of 14,000 persons 3000 only survived. They were liberally helped by the Protestants of England and Holland. Recovering their health, they were afflicted with the homesickness so peculiar to mountaineers, but were detained by force, and were widely dispersed through the Protes- tant states of Germany. "William of Orange, the liead of the Protestant League against France, was visited at the Hague by Henri Arnaud, the pastor and leader of the Yaudois. He counselled that they should return and attempt to regain their valleys by force, supplying them at the same time with considerable funds. The i-ef ugees assembled, between eight and nine hundred in number, leaving their wives and children to the care of the Swiss, crossing Lake Leman in the night of August IGtli, 1689. Led by their pastor -captain, they crossed the Alps, and de- scended into Italy near Susa. After sixteen days' march, having beaten several strong detach- ments of the enemy, they established themselves at Bobi, where they remained unmolested during the winter, but by May they were re- duced to four hundred men. They were again assailed, but they re- sisted and struggled against every force invading the valley, until the Duke of Savoy, abandoning his alliance with France, and joining the Protestant League, restored them to their homes and liberties, recalled their wives and children, and ended the last of thirty-two wars for lib- erty and conscience. One hundred and sixty 3'ears later, Carlo Al- berto, giving a constitution to his people, insured the continuance of religious liberty. It was with no ordinary traveller's interest that we went to visit the scenes of all those centuries of heroic life and more heroic death, and the renowned centre from which Protestantism in Italy is pushing- its steady advance. We drove from the railway station at Pinerolo, an hour's journey, to Torre Pellice, which is the seat of the Yaudois Col- lege and the chief town of the valleys. Though in Italy still, we found among the Protestants the univer- sal use of the French language, and among the educated classes a fa- miliarity with English, due to the Scotch education of the pastors. It THE VAUDOIS VALLEYS.— THE WALDENSES. 165 is no mild modern Protestantism which prevails here, softened by the spirit of indulgence we know so well at home, but a stern Scotch Pu- ritanism — rigid, intolerant, uncompromising, and grim — ground into the sturdy souls of the people by long generations of martyrdom and oppression. It is a faith so real and so commanding that it rings like a clarion in the zeal of the trained evangelists, who, scattered through- out the kingdom, echo the eternal reverberations of the blood-stained mountain-sides where their fathers died for the cause they advocate. It seems to me that the first impression of any considerate person coming to the Vaudois valleys with a fresli recollection of what we are taught to consider the necessary conditions of civilized life must be one of humiliation. We may find similarly hard conditions of liv- ing in many of our remote districts, but we find them accompanied by a dulness and stolidity whicli make it seem a matter of indifference whether they are ameliorated or not*, or we find them resisted or struggled against with that determination to seek improvement which makes our people so ambitious and so restless. Here in these hard, bleak valleys a frugality of wliicli we can hard- ly have conception is practised with a calmness and serenity that be- token an aim of life far other than physical improvement. In the town of Torre this is less conspicuous than elsewhere ; but even here cultivated, enthusiastic, happy men and women, eager in the great pur- suit of their lives, practise the genial graces of refined society, and ex- ert a wade -spread influence, whicli is powerful even against that of Eome, amidst an almost entire absence of the advantages which come of wealth, and which are so often regarded as indispensable. Catechised as to their belief, these people develop the most rigid formulas of orthodoxy, that ^^'hich we have known among the coldest, hardest, most nnsympathizing New Englanders. But the blood of the South runs warm in their veins, and their religion, severe though it is, can only check — it cannot cover nor repress — the geniality of their Italian natures. It is the rigidity of the North made mellow with Latin warmth, and sweetened with the grace and amiability of Italy. I know no people of great wealth who seem to get so much out of their lives that is worth the getting as do these simple, pious, God-fear- inc; Yandois. 166 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. CHAPTER XXL INTO THE HIGHER VALLEYS. Desieing to visit tlie valley of Angrogiia, the great retreat daring the invasions of the land, and the scene of tlie most terrible battles, I was commended to the pastor of the village, who has the care of the scattered population of the large parish. It was a long, hard walk up the valley, and a hot one. A very plain little Protestant " temple " and a few poor houses constitute tlie village of Angrogna, which is domi- nated by a larger Catholic church, whose priest does his worst to coun- teract the cherished heresy here in its ancient stronghold. A child directed me to the pastor's door — a great solid wooden door in a fortress-like stone wall. Entering, I was greeted pleasantly by the cheerful mother of the house, who ushered me into a scantily furnished parlor, clean, bright, and pleasant. Presently the pastor ap- peared, received me with the gi-eatest coi'diality, and lent himself at once to my desire for guidance and information. I liave rarely been more impressed in any interview. lie told me with the greatest frankness of the difKculties M'ith which he has to contend in eking out a support for his large family in a parish where all are poor, and where many can give nothing to the support of the Church beyond cordial good wishes and the scantiest contributions of food. A little money is given him by the General Synod, but it is very little, and tliis man's incessant pastoral duties make it impossiijle for him to ameliorate his condition by any form of profitable work. It is to gratify no curiosity that I repeat what he told me of his cir- cumstances, but rather to illustrate, by a striking and extreme exam- ple, what I have said of life in these valleys genei-ally. I was regaled in tlie most hospitable manner with tlie best that the house afforded — a tliin, simple wine, bread, a hard sort of cheese, and INTO THE HIGHER VALLEYS. 167 boiled cliestnuts, of wliicli I was niged to take ni}- fill, as I would find no other opportniiity to eat during tlie day's journe}". What was given nie is the best of their diet, and, except for potatoes and salad, it cov- ers the limit of its variety for all the secular days of the week. On Sundays they usually, but not always, have meat. Tliere was no sug- gestion that the diet was not sufficient and satisfactory, and the family seemed to be in robust and hearty healtli. The physical labor of the pastor himself must be very se\ere. His parish reaches for miles back on the mountains, and far up into steep and rugged valleys. He has thi-ee separate cliurches and schools under his charge, and his sick and poor are scattered far and wide on every hand. Foot-paths and bridle-paths offer the only means of communication, and he is liable, day and night, winter and summer, in good weather and in bad, to be summoned forth for a long, liard tramp to the house of a si(;k or dying parisliioner. All this he described as merely inci- dental to a life of necessary and usef nl service, in which he is content and happy. A friend had recently presented him with a youno; don- key, which is already able to give him a short lift on his journeys; and which, as it matures, and as lie grows old, will cairy him to Pia del Tor and back. He was happy o\er this acquisition, but anxious as to his ability to nourish the beast. Regarded in a ceitain light, there is nothing remarkable about this tale of a robust man's life and circumstances; but viewed with refer- ence to the stock to which he belongs, and to the histoi-y of the won- derful struggle of his race, it seems to me not far removed from hero- ism. The world is full of w^ell-paid positions, seeking for the educa- tion, intelligence, executive ability, and fortitude which mark the char- acter of this cheerful and zealous pastor of Angrogna; but the old call of the Spirit rings in his ears, and stii'S his blood as it stirred that of the martyrs of old, and he stays and finds his happiness and his delight in answering its behests. I talked with him about the condition of the people, and about the ceaseless efforts of the Catholic Church to destroy the Protestant supremacy in the valleys. Poverty, or I'ather the simplicity of living, is extreme. The climate is much more severe than at Tori'e ; the soil in the main is poor and thin ; the cattle are stunted ; and the facilities 168 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALFS. for in-ie-ation and the liabit of its nse seem to constitute the chief affi'i- cultural advantage of the country. The chestnut grows well, and is a main reliance as food. Without it there would often be much suf- fering. The Roman Catholic Church has by no means given up its effort at supremacy. Tlie best sites are secured for its churches and con- vents ; its abundant and skilfully-managed alms-giving is a powerful resource in so poor a country ; and its control over the industrial populations, which quarrying and manufactui'es have brought to the neighborhood, is shrewdly used for the corruption of the yonng men and women of the Protestant connn unities. At Pra del Tor — the Holy Land of the Yaudois — the priests have established a foundling hospital, which threatens the stability of the rising generation of na- tive children by the insidious influence of contact and companionship. This more hidden and surreptitious persecution is met as resolutely and firmly and cunningly as were the physical assaults of old ; and thus far its influence has not been great. As it was Saturday, the pastor could not go with me, as I had hoped ; but he recited the heroic deeds of which Pra del Tor liad been the theatre, and invested it with a historic sublimity which mere read- ing could not give. He lent me the keys of the temples I should see, and directed me on my way. It was a two hours' walk, mainly upward, over a rough bridle-path, with here and there a house, and here and there a little mill driven by the abundant waters of the tumbling stream. Toward the end of the journey the path passes between steep rocky banks, climbs the edge of a precipitous hill-side, and opens into the valley of Pra del Tor — that valley which more than once held all that was left of the Piedmontese Yaudois, who, driven from their farms and their villages, gathered here for mutual support and defence. Even here, while awaiting the destruction which seemed impending, they established their schools, and kept up the education of their evangelists. On a high rock, ovei-looking the cluster of houses, stands a well- built modern temple, the gift of a friend in England to commemorate the defenders of the valley against Trinita's overwhelming force. All else is mea£rre, bare, and stern. It is hard to see how even this small INTO THE HIGHER VALLEYS. 169 population can subsist in such a land, and it is almost incredible that a people who generation after generation have been subjected to such trying conditions of life should resist, as they steadily do, the seduc- tions of an organization able and ready to improve their condition, or to remove them to a more fertile district. It is these considerations which everywhere impress the visitor with the sturdiness of character w^l.iich an old faith, cemented by long ages of martyrdom, has been able to produce. My climb made it seem quite necessary that I should have food before returning. All that I could get was milk. This was served to me on the stone stair leading to a house door, and in a rude earthen- Avare pan. As I drank it, with a coarse iron spoon, a starved kitten came with a longing mew, and lapped gi-eedily the little puddle which I poured into a hollow of the stone. I never saw such a hungry cat, and evidently the family never saw such a hungry man, for they com- mented freelj' on the eagerness of my feeding. Poor though they were, and unaccustomed as they seemed to be to such a lavish use of milk, they would accept no compensation for their hospitality, and I could only make a trifling present to their child. Here, and on my return, the people whom I met were most cordial and fi'iendly, and they answered every question as to the difficulty of making a living on such a soil with an evident unconsciousness that it implies the least hardship. Those who were returning from their fields generally bore heavy burdens of firewood or grain ; and one donkey that I met taking grist to mill carried at least 800 pounds of grain, picking his way cautiously over the rocky path. Parts of the valle}'' were heavily wooded and of great beauty, but everything about the scattered villasjes and farms seemed dismal and forbiddins:. On Sunday we drove eight miles np the Pellice Valley to attend church at Bobi, where, in 1G89, after the Glorieuse Rentree, Arnaud and his followers took the oath of fidelity, and celebrated divine ser- vice in their own temple for the first time since their banishment. " The enthusiasm of the moment was irrepressible ; they chanted the 74:th Psalm to the clash of arms, and Henri Arnaud, mounting the pulpit, with a sword in one hand and a Bible in the other, preached from the 129tli Psalm, and once more declared in the face of heaven 170 TYROL, AND THE SKIRT OF THE ALPS. that he would never resume his pastoral office in patience and peace until he should witness tlie restoration of his brethren to their ancient and i-ightfnl settlements." The temple was a bare room, with nnpainted pnlpit and benches, Avhere the women sat in one place and the men in another. The women wore a costume of which a wliite cap with wide double fluted ruffles was a conspicuous part, the joung gii-ls — those who had not been confii-med — wearing black caps instead. The men were men whom I had known in my clnldliood in the orthodox churches of Western Connecticut, smooth-shaven — for Sunday — wrinkled, uncom- promising countrymen. The older men generally wore blue jean dress-coats with metal buttons and high collars. When the psalms were given out, thej' took loud-clasping iron cases from their pockets, and put on their steel-bowed spectacles. Puritanism is stronger than race, or climate, or time. It was like sitting again among the hard- handed farmers who used to throng the old Congregational church in New Canaan. The illusion was hardl}' dispelled — so strong was the resemblance in face and dress and manner — when tlie young precentor mounted to the reading-desk and read a chapter of the ISTew Testament in French. It was strengthened when he gave out the psalm, pitched the key, and started the congregation in the droning monotone of its chanted praise. The sermon was preached in the purest Fi-ench by a most Italian-look- ing pastor fi-ora Messina. It was an earnest appeal to humility, and a warning not to permit their pride in their ancestry and in the venera- ble antiquity of their faith, to blind them to the obligations to which the essence of that faith compelled them. After the service there followed the silent and hardly sociable loitering about the door which characterizes the congregations of our own country churches, but far less curiosity was evinced and more politeness was shown toward the differently attired strangers who had come to join in their service. During our stay in the valleys we were shown tlie admirable or- phanage at Torre, where Mr. Sankey's h^'mns were sung in Fi'ench and Italian, and where the most careful training is given in the little arts and industries of common life. We saw, too, the Yaudois College, INTO THE HIGHER VALLEYS. 171 ^vhel•e are trained tlie pastors wlio are to liave charge of the flocks scattered thronghont Italy, and the evangelists who are to plant in the dark corners of the land the most promising germ of Italian regenera- tion. It is a simple school, ill furnished with the modern appliances of edncation, but rich in the zeal and enthusiasm with which its lead- ers keep steadily in view the great aim of its foundation. The college, and the cause of Protestantism generally, owe most efficient aid to the liberality and earnestness of Major Beckwith, an English officer, who devoted his fortune and many of the last years of his life to their advancement. Much has been done by the liberality of other British fi-iends, and there can surely be no channel to-day into which those who have the interest of reformed religion at heart can so effectively turn their contributions. The Vaudois schools are established in all parts of Italy, even in Calabria and Sicily and in Eome itself, and tliey offer the chief existing hope of the education of the people in what is necessary to an improved civilization. Victor Emanuel — U Re Galantuoiao — in spite of his Catholicism, was a steadfast and persistent friend of the Vaudois, believing that they offered the best promise for the improvement of his people. Humbert has given fresh assurances that his father's policy in this regard shall be maintained, not in tlie interest of religion, but in the interest of liberty and of enlightenment. THE END. ILLUSTRATED BOOKS OF TRAVEL PUBLISHED BY HARPER & BROTHERS. r?" For a full list of Books of Travel published by IIakprk & Brotiikks, see Harpers' Catai.ogtjp:, ivhich may be had gratuitously on application to the Publishers personally, or by letter enclosing Nine Cents. tw- Harper & Brothers loill send any of the following works by mail, postage prepaid, to any part of the United States, on receipt of the price. Warings Tyrol. Tyrol,and the Skirt of the Alps. By GiiORGK E. Waking. Jr. Illustrated. 8vo, Cloth. (Just Ready.) Cesnoliis Cyprus. Cyprus : its Ancient Cities, Tomlis, and Temples. A Narrative of Researches and Ex- cavations during Ten Years' Residence in that Island. By General Louis Palma di Cesnola, Member of the Royal Academy of Sciences, Turin ; Hon. Member of the Royal Society of Literature, London, &c. With Portrait, Maps, and 400 Illustrations. 8vo, Cloth, Extra, Gilt Tops and Uncut Edges, $7 50. Stanley's Through the Dark Continent. Through the Dark Continent ; or. 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