<h2><SPAN name="Letter_45" id="Letter_45"></SPAN>Letter 45.</h2>
<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Lausanne.</span></p>
<p><span class="smcap">Dear Charley</span>:—</p>
<p class="text">We left Basle on a bright morning, at six o'clock,
having places in the <i>coupé</i> of the diligence for
Berne, a distance of seventy-six miles. We took
this route in order to enjoy the remarkable scenery
which marks the Moutiers Valley, which is the most
romantic in the Jura Mountain range. This journey
entirely takes the palm, for enjoyment, of any in
our tour; and I think I am more surprised and
gratified than I was on the Rhine. Certainly the
prospect was more constantly grand and awe inspiring.
We started with six horses,—three abreast,—and
jogged on, at about six miles the hour, over
as good roads as I ever travelled. They are, also,
the cleanest you ever saw. All along, at intervals,
we saw men with badges on their hats, who appeared
to have charge of the highway. Every thing on the
road is scraped up; and at every quarter of a mile,
or less, there is at the wayside an enclosure for manure,
into which every thing is turned. On all the
line of travel in Switzerland, we were struck with
the careful way in which heaps of manure are protected
by large bands of corded hay, twisted around.
Then, too, in the villages and towns we were all interested
with the enormous stone troughs for watering
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN class="page" name="Page_294" id="Page_294" title="294"></SPAN></span>cattle. Some of these appeared to me full twenty
feet long, and two or three deep. On our way from
Basle we passed the battle ground of St. Jacob; and
some way farther on we saw the battle field of
Dornach, at which place the Swiss obtained a victory
over the Austrians in 1499. A little before
reaching Tavannes we ascended a hill, and came
to a wonderful archway across the road—perhaps
natural. On it is a Roman inscription. The arch
is, I should think, nearly fifty feet high and fifteen feet
in depth. We then went on to Bienne; and a pretty-looking
place it is. We left it on our right, and our
road was very hilly, really mountainous, and the air
was sharp. As we walked for two or three miles
to help the horses, we found the wild strawberries
offered for sale very pleasant. We reached Berne
late in the evening; and the entrance to the town,
through a noble avenue of trees called the Engæ,
was very pleasant. We repaired to the Faucon, and
enjoyed the repose of a long night.</p>
<p class="text">Berne is a large town, with a population of nearly
thirty thousand. It lies on the banks of the Aar,
which goes almost round the city. The great elevation
of the city—seventeen hundred feet above
the sea—gives it quite an appearance on approaching
it. Then the houses are all built upon arched pathways,
and they form arcades, very much like the old
city of Chester, in England. We noticed several
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN class="page" name="Page_295" id="Page_295" title="295"></SPAN></span>watch towers, evidently very ancient; and one in the
town, near our hotel, has a queer clock, which, like
that at Strasburg, is mechanical. On striking, out
comes a cock and flaps away with his wings, and
then little images appear, and bears pass by a puppet,
seated on a throne. Bears seem to be the
guardian angels of the place, and are the arms of
the town. We were very much pleased with an extensive
prospect of the Bernese Alps, from a terrace
overhanging the rapid river. I cannot tell you how
many peaks we saw covered with snow. Our panorama,
purchased here, enumerates more than a
dozen; and among these are the Wetterhorn, Stockhorn,
and Jungfrau. We greatly enjoyed a fine sunset
from this spot. The Cathedral is a noble structure,
built between 1421 and 1573, and from designs
by the son of the architect of the Cathedral at Strasburg.
Some of the work here is exceedingly fine.
The great entrance is very imposing, and has rich
sculptures. Here, too, are some beautifully-painted
windows—one describing the pope grinding the four
evangelists in a mill, out of which comes wafers, is
very curious. The organ is very fine, and the case
one of the richest in Europe. It has four rows of
keys and sixty-six stops. The font is of black granite,
and has the date of 1525, which is three years
previous to the church reformation in this canton.
It has some finely-sculptured images of the Trinity,
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN class="page" name="Page_296" id="Page_296" title="296"></SPAN></span>Virgin Mary, and St. Vincent, the patron saint of
the church. We were pointed out the communion
table, of marble, which is an immense block, and
before the reformation it was an altar at Lausanne.
There are some fine monuments, having great
antiquity.</p>
<p class="text">In the choir we were delighted with the old prebendal
stalls, over which were figures of Christ and
his apostles, and on the opposite side prophets, all
in carved wood. One of the prophets was a capital
likeness of Luther.</p>
<p class="text">As we were leaving this noble edifice, we met a
minister coming in; he wore a short, black gown,
and had a deep white ruff on his shoulders.</p>
<p class="text">The library of the town embraces about forty-five
thousand volumes—and well assorted, too.
What a reproach it is to us that, excepting in
Providence, hardly any small city has what can be
called a library!</p>
<p class="text">The Museum we could not examine. I spoke
of bears: well, the town keeps several of these
fellows at a place called the Bärengraben.</p>
<p class="text">Much did we long to take a trip into the Bernese
Oberland, but it was not practicable; so we started
for Lausanne by diligence, a distance of fifty-six
miles, and were eleven hours on the way. We saw
much fine scenery, but nothing that would compare
with the Munster Thal or Valley of Moutiers, and
<span class='pagenum'><SPAN class="page" name="Page_297" id="Page_297" title="297"></SPAN></span>which I think would pay any lover of nature to
come from America to look at and travel through.
The places we went through were Morat, famous
for its battle in 1476; Avenches, the Roman Aventicum;
Payerne, &c. The last few miles were of
great labor in ascent; and as it was pitch dark for
some miles, I cannot tell much about what is said
to be beautiful.</p>
<p class="text">At Lausanne we went to the Hotel Gibbon, and
a lovelier spot than the rear of this mansion eye
never rested upon. Again we were weary, and
found good beds very inviting.</p>
<p class="center">Yours, &c.,</p>
<p class="right"><span class="smcap">james.</span></p>
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