CHAPTER XIII - CONCLUSION
It is not possible to describe in
such a volume as this more than a small part of the
excursions which Mr. George and Rollo made or the
adventures which they met with in the course of their
tour in Switzerland. They remained in the country
of the Alps more than a fortnight; and they enjoyed,
as Rollo said, every moment of the time. There
was no end to the cascades and waterfalls, the ice
and snow-clad summits, the glaciers, the romantic
zigzag paths up the mountain sides, the picturesque
hamlets and cottages, and the groups of peasants toiling
in the fields or tending flocks and herds in the higher
pasturages. Rollo’s heart was filled all
the time that he remained among these scenes with
never-ceasing wonder and delight. The inns pleased
him, too, as much perhaps as any thing else; for the
climbing of mountains and the long excursions on foot
gave him a most excellent appetite; and at the inns
they always found such nice breakfasts, dinners, and
suppers every day that Rollo was never tired of praising
them.
Rollo found the cost, too, of travelling
in Switzerland much less than he had expected.
He did not expend nearly all the allowance which his
father had granted him. When he came to settle
up his accounts, after he had got back to Paris, he
found that he had saved about seventy-five francs,
which made nearly fifteen dollars; and this sum he
accordingly added to his capital for
that was the name by which he was accustomed to designate
the stock of funds which he had gradually accumulated
and reserved.
Just before Mr. George and Rollo left
Switzerland, on their return to Paris, they received
a letter from Mr. Holiday, who was still in Paris,
in consequence of which they concluded to make a short
tour on the Rhine on their way to France. The
adventures which they met with on this tour will form
the subject of another volume of this series.