【Halinghing】
Ice—It’s More Than Just Frozen Water!
Look

Lower Glacière of the Pré de S. Livres, 1865, an illustration from Ice-caves of France and Switzerland.
If ice has lost all its wonder and the world feels to you like little more than a refrigerated truck, spend a few minutes with Ice-Caves of France and Switzerland: A Narrative of Subterranean Exploration, George Forrest Browne’s 1865 account of his journeys into the glacières of Chappet-sur-Villaz, La Genollière, and other such exotic Continental locales. The book’s tone is, as its title might suggest, implacably British, and Browne makes for an almost risibly agreeable narrator. The man simply loves to describe ice.
It did not separate under the axe into misshapen pieces, with faces of every possible variation from regularity, that is, with what is called vitreous fracture, but rather separated into a number of nuts of limpid ice, each being of a prismatic form, and of much regularity in shape and size.
A contemporary reader might expect some harrowing brush with fate, but this is not Into Thin Air. Browne is largely content to stay out of harm’s way:
It would be very imprudent to go straight into an ice-cave after a long walk on a hot summer’s day, so we prepared to dine under the shade of the trees at the edge of the pit, and I went down into the cave for a few moments to get a piece of ice for our wine.
And lest you tire of his meticulous accounts of ice formations, you’ll find relief in the more mundane details of his travelogue:
A counter-irritant appeared in the shape of a fellow-traveller, whose luggage consisted of a stick and an old pair of boots. The man was not pleasant to be near in any way, and he was evidently not at all satisfied with the amount of room I allowed him. He kept discontentedly and doggedly pushing his spare pair of boots farther and farther into my two-thirds of the seat, and once or twice was on the point of a protest, in which case I was prepared to tell him that as he filled the whole banquette with his smell, he ought in reason to be satisfied with less room for himself.
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
Best MacBook deal: Save $200 on 2024 M3 MacBook Air
2025-06-27 09:175 rumored tech dropping in 2024
2025-06-27 08:24Harry Mathews’s Drifts and Returns by Daniel Levin Becker
2025-06-27 07:30Amazon Prime members gets 10% off Grubhub orders through Feb. 17
2025-06-27 06:50Popular Posts
Dating app happn launches AI
2025-06-27 08:38Ex texting you over the holidays? You're being 'Marleyed'
2025-06-27 08:35Never Childhood to a Child by Peter Orner
2025-06-27 08:09Sleep and the Dream by László F. Földényi
2025-06-27 07:25Apple is advertising on Elon Musk's X again
2025-06-27 06:39Featured Posts
NYT Strands hints, answers for December 30
2025-06-27 09:15Another Siberia by Sophy Roberts
2025-06-27 08:45Long Weekend by Michael DeForge
2025-06-27 07:46Wordle today: The answer and hints for December 27
2025-06-27 07:31We tried Sony's new XYN headset: a game
2025-06-27 07:16Popular Articles
Touring Logitech's Audio HQ
2025-06-27 08:23On the Timeless Music of McCoy Tyner by Craig Morgan Teicher
2025-06-27 08:20Poetry Rx: Poems for Social Distancing by Claire Schwartz
2025-06-27 08:08Whiting Awards 2020: Genevieve Sly Crane, Fiction
2025-06-27 07:33Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (595)
Co-creation Information Network
A new Pope has been chosen. Here's what his X posts say about him.
2025-06-27 08:50Wisdom Convergence Information Network
How to watch Texas State vs. Rice football livestreams: kickoff time, streaming deals, and more
2025-06-27 08:05Neon Information Network
Whiting Awards 2020: Jake Skeets, Poetry
2025-06-27 07:44Inspiration Information Network
Staff Picks: Menace, Machines, and Muhammad Ali by The Paris Review
2025-06-27 07:41Inspiration Information Network
Will Oracle take over TikTok? Trump says he'll make a decision in 30 days
2025-06-27 06:34