[58] See [Appendix E] on the nomenclature of this group.
[59] We may possibly have mistaken the Dosson di Genova or Corno Bianco for this peak.
[60] See [Appendix C].
[61] This view is engraved as the frontispiece to the Jahrbuch for '69-70 of the Swiss Club; but the artist, fancying himself to have before him the snow-fields of the Lobbia Glacier, has gone hopelessly wrong in his identification of the peaks. His Crozzon di Lares is the Carè Alto, his Crozzon di Fargorida the Corno Alto, his Lobbia Alta the Corno di Cavento, and his Lobbia Bassa the Crozzon di Lares.
[62] Six Englishmen visited it in 1873; of these my own party supplied three, a fourth was a friend whom I directed thither.
[63] Alpine Journal, vol. v. p. 111.
[64] This part of the road was being remade in September 1874.
[65] Canale is a frequent synonym for 'Valle' in the Venetian Alps, and travellers have been led to suppose that a fanciful analogy between the glens of the mountain provinces and the water-streets of the capital led to the use of the word. But 'canale' was used in the sense of valley before the period of Venetian rule, and it is found at the present day in mountain districts of the Apennines near Spezzia, far removed from any Venetian influences. See Du Cange's 'Glossarium' for some curious details and quotations as to this word.
[66] An inn will probably be established before long at Gares. The ascent of the Cima di Vezzana from that side is a fine expedition, free from the slightest difficulty.
[67] Not the hamlet of the same name subsequently mentioned.