Page:History of a Six Weeks Tour.djvu/152

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142

from Mont Saléve to the base of the higher Alps. The country is sufficiently fertile, covered with corn fields and orchards, and intersected by sudden acclivities with fiat summits. The day was cloudless and excessively hot, the Alps were perpetually in sight, and as we advanced, the mountains, which form their outskirts, closed in around us. We passed a bridge over a stream, which discharges itself into the Arve. The Arve itself, much swollen by the rains, flows constantly to the right of the road.

As we approched Bonneville through an avenue composed of a beautiful species of drooping poplar, we observed that the corn fields on each side