1816 Byron
Summer Tour
In
the summer of 1816,
Shelley, Mary, and Claire
visited Byron at his
Villa Diodati in Coligny.
The villa is high on
a hill, overlooking
Lake Geneva (also known
locally as Lac Leman).
About halfway down
the hill was a modest
cottage, where the trio
stayed from May until
the end of August.
Shelley and Byron enjoyed
boating, and in June
toured the lake to
its easternmost border
including a visit the
castle of Chillon—a
round trip of roughly
ninety miles.
The party first stayed at the Hotel Angleterre in Geneva. The
building
is currently undergoing a rather drastic renovation. The building
company, however, has draped the building site with early images of
the hotel, including the one below, which shows the hotel in 1800.
The group moved to Cologny, where Byron lived at the Villa Diodati,
and the Shelley party occupied a cottage between the villa and the
lake.
Byron’s
Villa Diodati still
stands in Coligny on
a private road (the
Champs du Parc-de-Montelegre).
The building is on
a high slope overlooking
Lake Geneva. Below
it, a nineteenth-century
villa has been built
on the site of Shelley’s
cottage. Members of
the Byron Society
were allowed inside
Diodati a few years
ago, but the property
is privately owned
and not available
to visitors.

The
Coach House.

The
northeastern view from
Byron’s
home in Coligny.
Villa
Diodati—eastern
face.
North
view from the site of
Shelley’s
cottage at Coligny.

The
wall surrounding Diodati.
North
face of Diodati, overlooking
the lake.
Although "Mont
Blanc" was
appended to the History
of a Six Weeks’ Tour,
the Shelleys did
not actually see
the Chamonix glaciers,
Mer de glace, and
Vale of Arve until
the 1816 trip two
years later. They
of course can still
be found, although
the best views of
the glaciers are
reserved for the
intrepid hiker who
follows the three-mile
trail leading up
from the Mont Blanc
tunnel car park.
A
four-lane highway now
borders the Vale of
Arve, but there are
ample pullouts that
allow tourists to descend
(the descent is a bit
scary in spots) and
have something approaching
Shelley’s
own view in "Mont
Blanc."
After
making twenty or so
stops, I found the
site which best seemed
to approximate the
view described in the
poem—complete
with a nest of clouds
partially obscuring
Mont Blanc’s
summit.
