[3] See Lucerne in this series.
[4] This was at a time when the bulls were let out by day. Now there is restriction upon the liberty of these uneven-tempered animals.
[5] Geologists hold that in the remote past these two mountains were connected and formed a continuous chain.
[6] Goethe, who visited St. Maurice with the Duke of Weimar in 1779, probably saw this treasure, as do most visitors, but his mind seems to have been greatly occupied by the bad state of the roads.
[7] The Croix de Javernaz may be seen in the picture of the Dent de Morcles taken from Bex in spring.
[8] The hot, drying south wind from Italy. Sometimes up at Villars one can hear it roaring down below in the valley as it rushes through the gap at St. Maurice.
[9] See Lausanne in this series.
[10] Hopeless pessimists there are everywhere and in every domain, but if there is one quarter of the globe where their unqualified discourse is out of place it is in the Alps. On the fiftieth anniversary (1913) of the Swiss Alpine Club there were those who did not hesitate to say: “Close your doors; your usefulness is past!” Just fancy! Why, the club was never more virile in its life; never more youthful; never more useful! The Alps have still much to give and tell men; in fact, as regards the generality of mankind, they are a mine of physical health and mental wealth that so far has only been scratched. And the club is needed to this end.
[11] There are a number of Forclazs in the Alps. This one is a small village below the Chamossaire and facing Sépey.
[12] The rare excellence of the ice is in no small measure due to the insistent care of the Vice-President of the Skating Club, Mr. A. G. Topham. Colonel Cobbett, Hon. Sec. of the National Skating Association, is a member of the Villars Sports Club.