43 items found
Sort by:
Relevance
Relevance
Publication year ascending
Publication year descending
Title A - Z
Title Z - A
Books
Category:
Geography, Travel guides
Year:
1875
Italian Alps : sketches in the mountains of Ticino, Lombardy, the Trentino, and Venetia
/tessmannDigital/presentation/media/image/Page/206418/206418_85_object_4609413.png
Page 85 of 425
Author: Freshfield, Douglas William / by Douglas W. Freshfield
Place: London
Publisher: Logmans
Physical description: XVI, 385 S. : Ill., Kt.
Language: Englisch
Subject heading: g.Italienische Alpen;f.Reisebericht ; <br>g.Trentino-Südtirol;f.Reisebericht
Location mark: II 173.701
Intern ID: 206418
PASSO DI MONTE SISSONE. 65 steep, and afforded an exciting scramble. As we worked up a gully the first man put Iiis arm round a large and apparently firmly-wedged stone, which, tottered with his weight. Had it fallen, we should have had a sensa tion something like that of jumping out of the way of a cannon-ball. When our heads rose above the level of the ridge, we were glad to see snow-slopes on the other side,falling away steeply to a great glacier basin. Now wo felt our pass was secured

. A pile of broken crags still rose above us.; a short race, and we were seated on the highest boulder, one of the corner-stones of the Bernina chain. The Monte Sissone, although insignificant in height compared with the giants which encircle the Mor- teratsch, claims an important place in the oro graphy of the group. It stands at the angle of the range, where the main ridge is met by the spur which connects the Disgrazia with the rest of the chain. This mighty outlier was the one object which riveted

our eyes, quite eclipsing the more distant glories of the Bernina. The noble mass (scarcely three miles from us as the crow flies) rose tier above tier out of the great glacier which extended to our feet ; its rocky ribs pro truded sternly out of their shimmering ice-mail, and the cloud-banner which was now flung out from the crowning ridge augured no good to its assailants. Deep below lay Chiareggio and the Muretto path, so that the mountain was visible from top to bottom. For massive grandeur

1