This general view of the valley of the Loire, and all its branches, is perhaps too extensive to be admitted in this reasoning from effect to cause; we must approximate it by an intermediate step, which will easily be acknowledged as entering within the rule. It is in Forrez, near the head of the Loire. There we find the plain of Mont Brison, 40,000 toises or 22 miles long and half as wide, surrounded by a ridge of granite mountains on every side. Here the river, which is a small branch of the Loire, enters at the upper end of the plain (as M. de Bournon has described)[29] «Par une gorge très étroite et tortueuse,» and goes out in like manner at the under End.

Footnote 29:[ (return) ] Journal de Physique, Mai 1787.

Those French philosophers, who have seen this plain, have little doubts of this having been a lake, that is to say, they easily admit of the original continuity of those ridges of mountains in which the gaps are now found, through which the river passes. But upon those principles it must be evident, that the river has hollowed out that plain, at the same time that it had formed the gaps in those ridges of the granite mountains. The only solid part, or original stratum, which M. de Bournon has described as having seen in this plain, is a decomposing grès or sandstone; but there is reason to suppose, that there had been both calcareous and argillaceous or marly strata filling the hollow of that space which is inclosed by the granite mountains; consequently, no difficulty in conceiving that the river, which must wear away a passage through those mountains, should also hollow out the softer materials within, and thus form the plain, or rather a succession of plains, in proportion as the level of the water had been lowered with the wearing mountains.

If we are allowed to make this step, which I think can hardly be refused, we may proceed to enlarge our view, by comprehending, first, the Vallais of the Rhône, secondly, the countries of the Seine and Rhône, above the mountains through which those two rivers in conjunction have broke, below Lyons; and, lastly, that country of the Rhône and Durance which is almost inclosed by the surrounding mountains, meeting at the mouth of the Rhône. But this reasoning will equally apply to the countries of the Garonne, the Loire, and the Seine.

One observation more may now be made with regard to the courses of great rivers, and the fertile countries which they form in depositing the travelled soil; it is this. That though those rivers have hollowed out their beds and raised their banks; though they are constantly operating in forming fertile soil in one place and destroying it in another; and though, in many particular situations, the fertile countries, formed at the mouths of those rivers, are visibly upon the increase, yet the general progress of those operations is so slow, that human history does not serve to give us information almost of any former state of things. The Nile will serve as an example of this fact.

The river Nile, which rises in the heights of Ethiopia, runs an amazing tract through desert countries, and discharges its waters near the bottom of the Mediterranean sea, fertilizes a long valley among barren countries with which it is surrounded, and thus lays the foundation of a kingdom, which, from its situation and the number of people it can maintain and easily bring together for any manner of action, is perhaps the strongest that can well be imagined. Accordingly, it has been of old a great kingdom, that is to say, a powerful state within itself; and has left monuments of this power, which have long been the admiration of the world. The most ancient Grecian Histories mention these monuments as being no better known, with regard to their dates and authors, than they are at this day.

The conclusion here meant to be drawn is this, that, in a period of time much more ancient than the most ancient periods in human history, Egypt had been a country formed and watered by the Nile in like manner as it is at present; that though continual changes are making in this as well as in every other river, yet, on the whole, no sensible alteration can be discerned within the compass of human experience, consequently, it is only by considering, in a scientific manner, the nature of things, and making allowances for operations which have taken place in time past, that any competent judgment can be formed of the present shape and condition of countries, or of any particular place upon the surface of this earth, so far as regards its date, its causes, or its future state. Nothing, almost, but the kingdom of Egypt would have formed those stupendous monuments of art and labour; and nothing but the present state of Egypt, fertilised by the Nile, could have formed that powerful kingdom which might execute those works.

Thus there is a system of mountains and valleys, of hills and plains, of rivulets and rivers, all of which are so perfectly connected, and so admirably proportioned, in their forms and quantities, like the arteries and veins of the animal body, that it would be absurd to suppose any thing but wisdom could have designed this system of the earth, in delivering water to run from the higher ground; or that any thing could have formed this beautiful disposition of things but the operation of the most steady causes; operations which, in the unlimited succession of time, has brought to our view scenes which seem to us to have been always, or to have been in the original construction of this earth.

To suppose the currents of the ocean to have formed that system of hill and dale, of branching rivers and rivulets, divided almost ad infinitum, which assemble together the water poured at large upon the surface of the earth, in order to nourish a great diversity of animals calculated for that moving element, and which carry back to the sea the superfluity of water, would be to suppose a systematic order in the currents of the ocean, an order which, with as much reason, we might look for, in the wind. The diversity of heights upon the surface of the earth, and of hardness and solidity in the masses of which the land is formed, is doubtless governed by causes proper to the mineral kingdom, and independent either of the atmosphere or sea; but the form and structure by which the surface of the earth is fitted peculiarly to the purpose of this living world, in giving a fertility which sustains both plants and animals, is only caused by those powers which work upon the surface of the earth,—those powers, the operation of which men in general see with indifference every day, sometimes with horror or apprehension.

The system of sustaining plants and animals upon a surface where fertility abounds, and where even the desert has its proper use, is to be perceived from the summit of the mountain to the shore within the region of the sea; and although we have principally taken the Alps, or alpine situations, for particular examples, in illustrating this operation of the waters upon the surface of the earth, it is because the effects are here more obvious to every inquirer, and not because there is here to be acknowledged any other principle than that which is to be found on all the surface of the earth, a principle of generation in one sense, and of destruction in another.