A glacier, when really understood,
is one of the most astonishing and impressive spectacles
which the whole face of Nature exhibits. Mr.
George and Rollo explored quite a number of them in
the course of their travels in Switzerland; and Rollo
would have liked to have explored a great many more.
A glacier is a river of ice, really
and truly a river of ice, sometimes two
or three miles wide, and fifteen or twenty miles long,
with many branches coming into it. Its bed is
a steep valley, commencing far up among the mountains
in a region of everlasting ice and snow, and ending
in some warm and pleasant valley far below, where the
warm sun beats upon the terminus of it and melts the
ice away as fast as it comes down. It flows very
slowly, not usually more than an inch in an hour.
The warm summer sun beams upon the upper surface of
it, melting it slowly away, and forming vast fissures
and clefts in it, down which you can look to the bottom,
if you only have courage to go near enough to the
slippery edge. If you do not dare to do this,
you can get a large stone and throw it in; and then,
if you stand still and listen, you hear it thumping
and thundering against the sides of the crevasse until
it gets too deep to be any longer heard. You
cannot hear it strike the bottom; for it is sometimes
seven or eight hundred feet through the thickness
of the glacier to the ground below.
The surface of the glacier above is
not smooth and glassy like the ice of a freshly-frozen
river or pond; but is white, like a field of snow.
This appearance is produced in part by the snow which
falls upon the glacier, and in part by the melting
of the surface of the ice by the sun. From this
latter cause, too, the surface of the glacier is covered,
in a summer’s day, with streams of water, which
flow, like little brooks, in long and winding channels
which they themselves have worn, until at length they
reach some fissure, or crevasse, into which they fall
and disappear. The waters of these brooks many
thousands in all form a large stream, which
flows along on the surface of the ground under the
glacier, and comes out at last, in a wild, and roaring,
and turbid torrent, from an immense archway in the
ice at the lower end, where the glacier terminates
among the green fields and blooming flowers of the
lower valley.
The glaciers are formed from the avalanches
which fall into the upper valleys in cases where the
valleys are so deep and narrow and so secluded from
the sun that the snows which slide into them cannot
melt. In such case, the immense accumulations
which gather there harden and solidify, and become
ice; and, what is very astonishing, the whole mass,
solid as it is, moves slowly onward down the valley,
following all the turns and indentations of its bed,
until finally it comes down into the warm regions
of the lower valleys, where the end of it is melted
away by the sun as fast as the mass behind crowds
it forward. It is certainly very astonishing
that a substance so solid as ice can flow in this way,
along a rocky and tortuous bed, as if it were semi-fluid;
and it was a long time before men would believe that
such a thing could be possible. It was, however,
at length proved beyond all question that this motion
exists; and the rate of it in different glaciers at
different periods of the day or of the year has been
accurately measured.
If you go to the end of the glacier,
where it comes out into the lower valley, and look
up to the icy cliffs which form the termination of
it, and watch there for a few minutes, you soon see
masses of ice breaking off from the brink and falling
down with a thundering sound to the rocks below.
This is because the ice at the extremity is all the
time pressed forward by the mass behind it; and, as
it comes to the brink, it breaks over and falls down.
This is one evidence that the glaciers move.
But there is another proof that the
ice of the glaciers is continually moving onward which
is still more direct and decisive. Certain philosophers,
who wished to ascertain positively what the truth was,
went to a glacier, and, selecting a large rock which
lay upon the surface of it near the middle of the
ice, they made a red mark with paint upon the rock,
and two other marks on the rocks which formed the
shore of the glacier. They made these three marks
exactly in a line with each other, expecting that,
if the glacier moved, the rock in the centre of it
would be carried forward, and the three marks would
be no longer in a line.
This proved to be the case. In
a very short time the central rock was found to have
moved forward very perceptibly. This was several
years ago. This rock is still on the glacier;
and the red mark on it, as well as those on the shores,
still remains. All the travellers who visit the
glacier look at these marks and observe how the great
rock on the ice moves forward. It is now at a
long distance below the place where it was when its
position was first recorded.
Then, besides, you can actually hear
the glaciers moving when you stand upon them.
It is sometimes very difficult to get upon them; for
at the sides where the ice rubs against the rocks,
immense chasms and fissures are formed, and vast blocks
both of rock and ice are tumbled confusedly together
in such a manner as to make the way almost impracticable.
When, however, you fairly get upon the ice, if you
stand still a moment and listen, you hear a peculiar
groaning sound in the moraines. To understand
this, however, I must first explain what a moraine
is. On each side of the glacier, quite near the
shore, there is usually found a ridge of rocks and
stones extending up and down the glacier for the whole
length of it, as if an immense wall formed of blocks
of granite of prodigious magnitude had been built
by giants to fence the glacier in, and had afterwards
been shaken down by an earthquake, so as to leave
only a confused and shapeless ridge of rocks and stones.
These long lines of wall-like ruins may be traced
along the borders of the glacier as far as the eye
can reach. They lie just on the edge of the ice,
and follow all the bends and sinuosities of the shore.
It is a mystery how they are formed. All that
is known, or rather all that can be here explained,
is, that they are composed of the rocks which cleave
off from the sides of the precipices and mountains
that border the glacier, and that, when they have
fallen down, the gradual movement of the ice draws
them out into the long, ridge-like lines in which they
now appear. Some of these moraines are of
colossal magnitude, being in several places a hundred
feet broad and fifty or sixty feet high; and, as you
cannot get upon the glacier without crossing them,
they are often greatly in the traveller’s way.
In fact, they sometimes form a barrier which is all
but impassable.
The glacier which most impressed Mr.
George and Rollo with its magnitude and grandeur was
one that is called the Sea of Ice. It is called
by this name on account of its extent. Its lower
extremity comes out into the valley of Chamouni, the
beautiful and world-renowned valley, which lies near
the foot of Mont Blanc. In order to reach this
glacier, the young gentlemen took horses and guides
at the inn at Chamouni, and ascended for about two
hours by a steep, zigzag path, which led from the valley
up the sides of the mountain at the place which formed
the angle between the great valley of Chamouni and
the side valley through which the great glacier came
down. After ascending thus for six or eight miles,
they came out upon a lofty promontory, from which,
on one side, they could look down upon the wild and
desolate bed of the glacier, and, upon the other,
upon the green, and fertile, and inexpressibly beautiful
vale of Chamouni, with the pretty little village in
the centre of it. This place is called Montauvert.
There is a small inn here, built expressly to accommodate
travellers who wish to come up and go out upon the
glacier.
Although the traveller, when he reaches
Montauvert, can look directly down upon the glacier,
he cannot descend to it there; for, opposite to the
inn, the valley of ice is bordered by cliffs and precipices
a thousand feet high. It is necessary to follow
along the bank two or three miles among stupendous
rocks and under towering precipices, until at length
a place is reached where, by dint of much scrambling
and a great deal of help from the guide, it is possible
to descend.
Rollo was several times quite afraid
in making this perilous excursion. In some places
there seemed to be no path at all; and it was necessary
for him to make his way by clinging to the roughnesses
of the rocks on the steep, sloping side of the mountain,
with an immense abyss yawning below. There was
one such place where it would have been impossible
for any one not accustomed to mountain climbing to
have got along without the assistance of guides.
When they reached this place, one guide went over
first, and then reached out his hand to assist Rollo.
The other scrambled down upon the rocks below, and
planted his pike staff in a crevice of the rock in
order to make a support for a foot. By this means,
first Mr. George, and then Rollo, succeeded in getting
safely over.
Both the travellers felt greatly relieved
when they found themselves on the other side of this
dangerous pass.
In coming back, however, Rollo had
the misfortune to lose his pike staff here. The
staff slipped out of his hand as he was clinging to
the rocks; and, after sliding down five or six hundred
feet to the brink of the precipice, it shot over and
fell a thousand feet to the glacier below, where it
entered some awful chasm, or abyss, and disappeared
forever.
Mr. George and Rollo had a pretty
hard time in scrambling over the moraine when they
came to the place where they were to get upon the
glacier. When they were fairly upon the glacier,
however, they could walk along without any difficulty.
It was like walking on wet snow in a warm day in spring.
Little brooks were running in every direction, the
bright waters sparkling in the sun. The crevasses
attracted the attention of the travellers very strongly.
They were immense fissures four or five feet wide,
and extending downward perpendicularly to an unfathomable
depth. Rollo and Mr. George amused themselves
with throwing stones down. There were plenty
of stones to be found on the glacier. In fact,
rocks and stones of all sizes were scattered about
very profusely, so much so as quite to excite Mr.
George’s astonishment.
“I supposed,” said he,
“that the top of the glacier would be smooth
and beautiful ice.”
“I did not think any thing about it,”
said Rollo.
“I imagined it to be smooth,
and glassy, and pure,” said Mr. George; “and,
instead of that, it looks like a field of old snow
covered with scattered rocks and stones.”
Some of the rocks which lay upon the
glacier were very large, several of them being as
big as houses. It was remarkable, too, that the
largest of them, instead of having settled down in
some degree into the ice and snow, as it might have
been expected from their great weight they would have
done, were raised sometimes many feet above the general
level of the glacier, being mounted on a sort of pedestal
of ice. The reason of this was, that when the
block was very large, so large that the beams of the
sun shining upon it all day would not warm it through,
then the ice beneath it would be protected by its
coolness, while the surface of the glacier around
would be gradually melted and wasted away by the beams
of the sun or by the warm rains which might occasionally
fall upon it. Thus, in process of time, the great
bowlder block rises, as it were, many feet into the
air, and remains there perched on the top of a little
hillock of ice, like a mass of monumental marble on
a pedestal.
In excursions on the glaciers the
guides take a rope with them, and sometimes a light
ladder. The rope is for various purposes.
If a traveller were to fall into any deep pit, or
crevasse, or to slip down some steep slope or precipice,
so that he could not get up again, the guides might
let the rope down to him, and then when he had fastened
it around his waist they could draw him up, when,
without some such means of rescuing him, he would
be wholly lost. In the same manner, when a party
are walking along any very steep and slippery place,
where if any one were to fall he would slide down
into some dreadful abyss, it is customary for them
to walk in a line with the rope in their hands, each
one taking hold of it. Thus, if any one should
slip a little, he could recover himself by means of
the rope, when, without such a support, he would perhaps
have fallen and been dashed to pieces. Sometimes,
when the place is very dangerous indeed, so that several
guides are required to each traveller, they tie the
rope round the traveller’s waist, so that he
can have his hands free and yet avail himself of the
support of the rope in passing along.
The ladder is used for scaling low
precipices, either of rock or ice, which sometimes
come in the way, and which could not be surmounted
without such aid. In long and dangerous excursions,
especially among the higher Alps, one of the guides
always carries a ladder; and there are frequent occasions
where it would not be possible to go on without using
it.
A hatchet, too, is of great advantage
in climbing among the immense masses of ice which
are found at great elevations, since, by means of
such an implement, steps may be cut in the ice which
will enable the explorer to climb up an ascent too
long to be reached by the ladder and too steep to
be ascended without artificial footholds. In ascending
Mont Blanc the traveller sometimes comes to a precipice
of ice, with a chasm of immense depth, and four or
five feet wide, at the bottom of it. In such
a case the foot of the ladder is planted on the outside
of the chasm, and the top of it is made to rest against
the face of the precipice, ten or fifteen feet perhaps
from the brink. One of the boldest and most skilful
of the guides then ascends the ladder, hatchet in
hand, and there, suspended as he is over the yawning
gulf below, he begins to cut steps in the face of
the precipice, shaping the gaps which he makes in
such a manner that he can cling to them with his hands
as well as rest upon them with his feet. He thus
slowly ascends the barrier, cutting his way as he
advances. He carries the end of the rope up with
him, tied around his waist; and then by means of it,
when he has reached the summit, he aids the rest of
the party in coming up to him.
Mr. George and Rollo, however, did
not venture into any such dangers as these. They
could see all that they desired of the stupendous
magnificence and awful desolation of these scenes without
it. They spent the whole of the middle of the
day on the glacier or on the slopes of the mountains
around it; and then in the afternoon they came down
the zigzag path again to Chamouni, very tired and
very hungry.
To be tired and hungry, however, when
you come home at night to a Swiss inn, is a great
source of enjoyment on account of the admirable
arrangements for rest and refreshment which you are
sure to find there.