The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Islets of the Channel, by Walter Cooper Dendy
BY THE SAME AUTHOR.
THE PHILOSOPHY OF MYSTERY.
“We have the greatest pleasure in recommending the elegant and
laborious work of Mr. Dendy.”—Times.
“Drawn with fancy and elegance.”—Athenæum.
PSYCHE:
A Discourse on the Birth and Pilgrimage of Thought.
THE
BEAUTIFUL ISLETS OF BRITAINE.
Illustrated by 45 Woodcuts.
“We are delighted to join Mr. Dendy in his trip.”—Athenæum.
THE
ISLETS
OF
THE CHANNEL.
THE ISLETS
OF THE
CHANNEL.
By WALTER COOPER DENDY,
PAST PRESIDENT OF THE MEDICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON;
CONSULTING SURGEON TO THE ROYAL INFIRMARY FOR CHILDREN AND WOMEN,
AUTHOR OF “THE PHILOSOPHY OF MYSTERY,”
“THE BEAUTIFUL ISLETS OF BRITAINE,” “PSYCHE,” ETC.
“A thing of beauty is a joy for ever.”—Endymion.
Described and Illustrated from Sketches on the spot
by the Author.
LONDON:
LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, LONGMANS, AND ROBERTS.
1858.
LONDON:
SAVILL AND EDWARDS, PRINTERS,
CHANDOS STREET.
ISLETS OF THE CHANNEL.
From Southampton (Mail), Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, 11 p.m.
Fare from London, 1l. 11s. and 1l. 1s.
" " Southampton, 1l. 1s. and 14s.
From the Islets on same days, at 8 a.m.
Other Boats, Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday.
Return from the Islets, hour uncertain.
Fare from London, 1l. 5s. 6d., 17s., and 11s. 6d. Steward, 2s. and 1s.
" " Southampton, 16s. and 11s.
Half-fare for children from two to twelve.
Return tickets, 1 Month, 45s. and 35s.
From Weymouth, Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, at 8 a.m.
Return Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, at 7 a.m.
Other Boats, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, at half-past 8 a.m.
Return Monday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday, at half-past 7 a.m.
Fare from London, 1l. 11s. and 1l. 1s.
Boat from Jersey to St. Malo’s, in 3 to 5 hours, Tuesday about noon.
Boat to Granville on Saturday.
Excursions from Jersey to Sark and Alderney and round the Islet.
In Guernsey, chiefly French money: Jersey, chiefly British. Chief circulation in Island one-pound notes. 12 British shillings equal to 13 Jersey.
Hotels of all grades. Lodgings in town-houses and garden-villas. Poultry and Fish cheap, especially in Guernsey. Tobacco and Tea moderate. Milk plentiful, even in many cottages.
Wine, per doz.:—Port, 18s. to 40s. Sherry, 18s. to 36s. Madeira, 50s. Marsala, 15s. Claret, 16s. to 75s. Burgundy, 30s. to 55s. Champagne, 30s. to 60s. Mountain, 20s. Hock and Moselle, 35s. to 55s. Muscat, 25s. Chablis and Barsac, 20s. Sauterne, 12s. to 15s. Grave, 18s. Champagne Brandy, 49s.
Horses, 6s. or 7s. a-day. One-horse carriage, 8s. Two-horse carriage, 12s. to 15s.
Table of Contents
ILLUSTRATIONS.
[GUERNSEY AND SERK, FROM JERSEY]
THE
ISLETS OF THE CHANNEL.
It was in the tenth century that the French King, Charles IV., granted to Rollo the Pirate, who had married his daughter, the Dukedom of Normandy, together with the islets of “the wide bay of St. Michael’s;” a guerdon for his conversion to Christianity. When William, the descendant of Rollo, won the field of Hastings, the islets became an appanage of Britain, by the right of being conquered, and so they remain to this day politically subject to Britain, although geographically a parcel of France. The discovery of Roman, Celtic, Runic, and Gallic relics and coins, and the ruins of temple and fortress throughout the islets, reflect their history on the olden time. Jersey, it seems, was the isolated retreat of Ambiorix, a rebel to Julius Cæsar, if we rightly interpret the sixth book of the “Commentaries.” These Norman rocks, however, have not been held unchallenged. The French descents date from Henry I., through the reigns of John—who established the “Royal Courts,” on a visit to the isles—of Edward I., Edward III., Henry VII., Edward VI., George II., and George III., but they were all failures, although Du Guesclin, who was commissioned by Charles the Wise, seized and held Mount Orgueil Castle. In the dilemma of “the Roses,” the Norman Pierre de Breze assumed the title of “Lord of the Isles” until the blending of these royal emblems. The last attempt was on Jersey, in 1779-80, by the Duke of Nassau, when Pierson fell in its successful defence.
During the joyous months of summer and autumn, this fair group of islets will become more and more attractive as the facility of communication increases, especially as they possess the elements both of the salubrious and the beautiful in a very high degree. Soft and health-breathing gales are wafted along their very lovely and bloom-spangled valleys; they are belted by magnificent cliffs, indented by sheltered coves and deep and darksome caverns, and by outlying rocks of the most fantastic forms, and they are enriched, moreover, by quaint and antique structures, emblazoned in remote history and romantic legend.
There is a charm, also, in feeling that they are our own, and that the genial atmosphere and the luscious fruits and the light wines of France may be so perfectly enjoyed without the inquisitorial annoyance of the system of Passe-porte.
There are hotels and lodging-houses adapted to the most economic purse, the direction to which may be learned on board; and the markets will supply all the delicacies an island appetite can desire. For the votaries of health and joy the islets are thus exquisitely fashioned by the bounty of the Creator, and the invalid and convalescent may with confidence adopt them as a resort, especially as the facility of sailing and boating on genial waters offers delightful recreation without the exhaustion of fatigue and the consequent evil of reaction.
The islets are fanned by southern breezes, yet the tidal currents in their rock-bound channels, often running seven knots in the hour, foam over the breakers in very wild magnificence. The floods of the Race of Alderney, Les Ras de Blansharde, between that islet and Cape la Hogue, and even those of the Swinge between the islet and the porphyritic rock of Berhou are proverbial, and in very foul weather the boat may roll and ship heavy seas in the passage of the Ortac within the crags of the Caskets.
Through the Race run the boats from the Thames: those from Southampton chiefly through the Swinge or the Ortac: those from Weymouth direct in the open channel to Porte St. Pierre in Guernsey, the most rapid and pacific course for the languid and the delicate.
The geologic arrangement of the islets is in three pairs. Jersey and Guernsey are inclined planes, shelving from magnificent cliffs to a flat beach studded with rocklets; Jersey trending southward, Guernsey northward; the granite rocks of Jersey enclosing one-half, those of Guernsey one-third.
Alderney and Serque are table-lands, raised on bases of rock; Alderney irregularly belted—Serque completely framed. Herm and Jedthou are mounds isolated by the waves. Satellite blocks and ledges are lying in profusion in the channels, some overwhelmed at high water. These groups are exquisitely bold in outline and deep and rich in colour, from the incessant play of wind and wave, the pencils and the washes with which elemental art is still heightening the wildness and the beauty of the creation.
The valleys and downs are prolific in bloom, and flowers of the brightest and deepest colours adorn the more cultivated parterres. In the deep, deep caverns, with which the cliff and the bays are darkened, sport in their almost sacred solitude the acephalæ and the actiniæ. In the watery bosom of the cave, the male syngnathus may nurse its infant brood in safety, and the delicate comatula unfold its feathery tentaculæ. In the hollow cups scooped in the granite and glittering with brine, the daisy actinia, that Clytie of the rocks so loving of the light, may unfold her enamoured florets to the sun. Then what profusion and what variety in form and colour of deep sea-weeds are thrown by the billows on the pebbles and the sand; a spot richer both in these cast-away treasures of the deep and in the living botany of the ocean, may not be found than the caverned bays of eccentric Serque.
ALDERNEY