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djornell Iniocrsitg ffiibcary 



HtlfHca. Nem fork 



WORDSWORTH COLLECTION 

MADE BY 

CYNTHIA MORGAN ST. JOHN 
ITHACA. N. Y. 



THE GIFT OF 

VICTOR EMANUEL 

CLASS OF 19t9 
1925 



THE 



LAKE COUI^TET 



BY 



E. LYNN LINTON 




With a Map 
AvT> One Hundred Illustrations drawn and Engraved bt 

W. J. LINTON 

LONDON: SMITH, ELDER AND CO., 65, CORNHILL 

1864 



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CONTENTS 



CHAPTER PAGE 

Preface ix 

Early History xiii 

I. Windermere 1 

II. Walks about Ambleside 18 

III. From Ambleside to Keswick 36 

IV. Kesmck and Denventwater 48 

V. The Keswick Walks 65 

VI. Blencathra, Sldddaw, and Bassenthwaite 85 

VII. UUswater 98 

VIII. Hawes Water and Higii Street 122 

IX. Helvellyn and Fair-field 143 

X. Langdale and the Stake 158 

XL The Tarns 171 

XII. Buttermere, Crummock, and Lowes Waters 183 

XIIL. Wastwater and Scawfell 201 

XIV. Calder Abbey, Egremont, and Ennerdale 217 



a 2 



CONTENTS. 

CUAPl-Elt PACE 

XV. St. Bees and the Sea Coast 2ol 

XVI. I'p tlie Diuldon 245 

XVII. Coiiistoii and ILuvksliead 2H1 

XVIII. Furncss Abbcv and tUe Sands : 277 



APPENDICES 

PAGE 

I. I'rovincialisms of the Lake District 295 

II. The Botany of the Lake District 318 

III. The Geology of the Lake District 336 

IV. Table of Mountains, Lakes, and Waterfalls 342 

V. Table of RainhiU 340 

Index 347 




LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 



PAGE 



Derwent and Bassenthwaite Waters, from Aslmess Bridge Frontispiece 

From Esk Hawse Title-page 

Bird's-eye Primrose ii 

Criffel, Skiddaw, and Helvellyn Tops iv 

Roadside, Crummock Water viii 

Oak Fern xii 

Initial W xiii 

Common Maiden-Hair Spleenwort xl 

AVindermere, from above Low Wood 1 

Professor Wilson's House, Elleray 4 

Barked Tree 8 

Troutbeck Bridge 8 

Windermere, from near Dove's Nest 11 

Coming Storm 16 

Windermere, from Troutbeck Road 17 

Head of Stockghyll Force 18 

Sweden Bridge 22 

Top of Kirkstone Pass 25 

28 



LIST OF ILLUSTKATIONS. 

PAGE 

The Roman Station at Ambleside 33 

Bronze Ornament to Roman Sword-hilt 35 

Rydal Water, fi-om Scandale Side 36 

Upper Force, Rydal Park 38 

Wordsworth's House, Rydal Mount 38 

Grasmere, from Loughrigg Side 41 

Thirjmere, from the Foot 46 

Derwentwater, from Castlehead 48 

Derwentwater, from Sir John Woodford's Grounds 57 

Roman Pot CO 

Crosthwaite Church 61 

Borrowdale and Glaramara 65 

Castle Crag in Borrowdale facing 67 

The Bowder Stone 68 

Lodore 73 

Watendlath Bridge 77 

The Druid Circle 79 

Bassenthwaite Water, from Faw Park Woods 85 

Razor Edge and Scales Tarn 87 

Mill Race in Brundholm Woods 91 

Skiddaw, from near Portinscale 93 

Long Side, Sldddaw 97 

UUswater, from Sharrow Bay 98 

UUswater, from Gowbarrow Park facing 101 

Ara, above the Force 104 

Deepdale Head Ill 

UUswater, fi-om Glencoin 121 

Small Water 122 

Hawes Water Vol 

Long Stile 135 

Hayes Water 140 

vi 



LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. 

PAGE 

Angle Tarn, by High Street 142 

Fairfield Top 143 

Swirrel Edge 144 

Striding Edge 145 

From Helvellyn Top, looking over Striding Edge facing 149 

Fairfield Pudges 152 

The Two Edges, from below 157 

Langdale Pikes 158 

Thrang Crag Qnarry Mouth 162 

Dungeon Ghyll 165 

Gunmer Crag 170 

Stickle Tarn, looking over Langdale 171 

Angle Tarn, under Bowfell 176 

Si)rinkling Tarn 178 

High House Tarn 179 

Sty Head Tarn 182 

Crmnmock and Buttermere, from LowfeH 183 

The Vale of Lorton 186 

Scale Force 191 

Honister, from Crummock Water 193 

Honister Quarries — Sled Roads and Quarryman's Sled 197 

Scawfell and Wastwater 201 

Sty Head Pass 204 

Wastdale Church 206 

Borrowdale Head 208 

ScawfeU Ascent (difi'erent Aspects) 209, 210 

The Screes 215 

Calder Abbey 217 

Ennerdale Water 225 

The Isle of Man, from St. Bees 230 

Fleswick Bay 231 

vii 



#. 



LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. 

PAGE 

Black Combe, from St. Bees ;M4 

Falls of the Duddon, above Seatliwaite 245 

Wordsworth's Stepping Stones 252 

From Duddon Bridge 200 

Coniston Old Man, from Brantwood 201 

Coniston Water, from tlie Head 276 

Furriess Abbey ,, 277, 285 

Sunset across the Sands 292 

Scawfell Man 294 

Buttermere 317 

Grass of Parnassus and Fringed Water Lily 885 

Geological Section 887 

Graptolites 387 

Ice-worn Rock, Ambleside 341 

Morame, Little Langdale 341 

Colmth Force 345 

Rain Clouds 340 




PREFACE 



It is long since any book was written descriptive of the Lake Country. 
Grreen, and West, and Mrs. EadclifFe, and others of the Picturesque School, 
gave their absurdly exaggerated accounts of what they saw and perilled in 
these " inhospitable regions," as it was then the fashion to call them ; but 
when the reaction against romanticism set in, and people had learnt for 
themselves that the ascent of Blencathra could be made without a fit of 
apoplexy and the necessity of blood-letting midway — that Borrowdale 
had nothing maniacal in it, and that Newlands was rather lonesome but 
not in the least degree terrifying — then all. this idealistic writing was at 
a discount, and only guide-books containing useful road- side informa- 
tion were asked for. 

Now that these have served their turn, it seemed to my husband and 
myself that a pleasant book could be made by treating the Lake Country 
with the love and knowledge — artistic and local — belonging of right to natives 
and old inhabitants. We hope that what we have done will bear out our 
design. Though a faithful description of scenes and places, it is not a tour 
made up of personal adventures ; neither is it a hand-book, telling what inns 
to go to and how much to pay for breakfast and dinner ; nor yet an exhaustive 

monograph, for which we should have needed thrice the time and space 

ix h 



PEEFACE. 

afforded ; but it is merely a Book on the Lakes, giving such of the general 
and local history as fell in with our plan and what we thought would interest 
the reader, while doing our best to worthily illustrate and describe the 
most beautiful places — both those popularly known, and those which only 
the residents ever find out. It is indeed a " Love-book " which we give 
to the world, in the earnest desire for others to share in our experiences, 
and to receive the same joy and healthy excitement as we ourselves 
have had. 

I wish to express now my most grateful thanks to Thomas 
Wright, Esq., M.A., F.R.S. F.S.A., &c., for an amount of kindly help, 
rare even in the literary world where there is so much genuine kindness. He 
took infinite pains to render my Early History free from faults, and he did 
this with a fulness and frankness of generosity that enhanced even the value 
of his scientific aid. To Edward Hull, Esq., F.G.S., &c., I would also 
add my best thanks for relieving me of the responsibility of the geological 
chapter, to the great improvement of the work, which has gained so much 
by his accurate knowledge. Of the engravings I cannot speak, as can be 
easily understood, because of the relations between the artist and myself ; 
I may however say that all the sketches were made expressly for this 
work during our rambles, and that they have the merit of absolute fidelity ; 
for the rest, they will speak for themselves more eloquently than the most 
florid praises could. The Botanical notices and the Glossary I think 
will be found to be fuller and more correct than any yet published ; and 
I have only to lament the want of authority in the comparative tables 
of lakes and waterfalls, which want however I had no possible means 
of supplying. 



E. LYNN LINTON. 



Brantwood, Conii<ton : 

September, 1864. 



THE LAKE COUNTRY 



THE LAKE COUNTRY 



EARLY HISTORY 

HEN Imperial Rome held Britain as one of her outlying pos- 
sessions, she ]iad a trouhlesome set of subjects in the Brigantes,' 
those northern "people of the heights," whose province,^ in- 
cluding among others our modern Lancashire, Westmoreland, 
and Cumberland, formed part of the larger and later division 
of Maxima Caesariensis, and of the still later Saxon kingdom 
I of Deira. Those early northern Britons were a wild race, and gave 
their conquerors no little trouble. They subsisted chiefly by hunting, 
like most savages, abjuring fish " of which they had a prodigious 
plenty," and holding hares, geese, and poultry in a kind of religious 
abhorrence — perhaps the more industrious of them keeping cattle,^ like 




' Geofirey of Monmouth, iii the time of Henry II., and Holmshed after him, say that 
the first Britons were descended from Brutus, or Bruto, son or descendant of jEneas, wlio 
settled here 1108 b.c. or 2855 a.m. Camden, indignant at tlie liomans for their ahoriginal 
theory, " as if manldnd first sprung up out of the earth like mushrooms," makes Gomer. 
the eldest son of Japliet, whose posterity became the Gomeri, or Gauls, our great ancestor. 
The Cambrian Register says that Brigantes is from Beg, a summit, hence Brigantwys, the 
People of the Summits ; and Pddpath, that it is from the goddess Briganta, whose statue 
Avas foimd in Scotland. " The interior of the island northward was occupied by the 
Brigantes, who held the extensive districts, difiicult of approach on account of their moun- 
tains and woods, extending from the Humber and the Mersey to the present borders of 
Scotland. This extensive tribe appears to liave included many smaller ones. Two of 
these are called by Richard of Cirencester, the Voluntii and the Sestuntii, the former 
in the Avest of Lancashire, the latter in Westmoreland and Cumberland. The Jugantes 
and the Cangi of Tacitus, on the borders of the Irish Sea, are also luiderstood to 
have belonged to, or been dependent upon, this tribe. The Brigantes are believed to have 
l)een the original inhabitants of the island, who had been driven nortliward by successive 
invasions and settlements, and they appear to have been the least civilized tribe of South 
Britain." — Tlw Celt, the Eoman. and the Saxon. By Thomas Wbight. 

^ "Beyond the boundary which Ostorius had formed by his line of forts, the interior of 
the island Avas inliabited by tribes aaIio Avere fiercer and less civilized tlian the southern 
nations. The chief of these Avas the great tribe of tlie Brigantes, extending through tlie 
]iiountainous and Avooded districts from the borders of Lincolnshire, through York.shire. 
Lancashire, Westmoreland, Cumberland, and Northumberland." — TJiuJ. 

^ Numbers were found in the capital of Cassivellaunus. 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

the old Norse dalesmen. Their clothing was the skins of heasts, according 
to some ; according to others, their hahit of hody was In-ute nakedness stained 
with woad for a warlike effect ; their dwellings* were " among the pillars of the 
forest, enclosed with interwoven branches," whence they came out in fierce 
hordes to harass their invaders ; their government was monarchical in form 
hut independent in individual practice; their religion druidical — "furies 
for gods," said their masters, thinking of Diana and Venus, Minerva and 
the beneficent Ceres — human sacrifices for propitiation, and eternal trans- 
migration of souls for their only hope beyond the grave ; their morality 
was lax read by the more complex social polity of the Latins, but they 
were faithful to their law such as it was, and indeed notably ol)edient to all 
laws, by which they had a due measure of self-government preserved ; they wore 
long hair both on the head and upper lip ; and they ate a certain fruit of 
the size of a bean — (Caesar's " chara ") — which allayed both hunger and 
thirst.^ 

This portrait of the fierce Britains, with every repulsive feature heightened 
in the Brigantes, is not a very inviting one ; being, in fact, simply that of 
unmitigated savages before civilization has developed or history^ ennobled 



■* Caesar says, " a town among the Britons is nothing more than a thick wood fortified 
^Adth a ditch and rampart, to serve as a place of retreat against the incnrsions of their 
enemies." 

^ This was probably the root of the Orohus tnherosus, or Tuberous bitter vetch, the 
" Leath peaseling," which Sir Wilham Hooker says the Highlanders eat to this day, and 
call Cormeille, and which the Hollanders roast or boil like a chestnut ; the analogue to 
which is the coca of the South Americans. 

•^ " The Britons of Cumbria," says Palgrave, " occupy a tolerably large space on the map, 
but a very small one in history ; their annals have entirely perished, and nothing authentic 
remains concerning them. Romance has more. In Cumbria, Merlin prophesied and Arthur 
held his court. These, and such like fantastic personages — Roderic the Magnificent, and 
Peridur, Prince of Sunshine — are, however, of importance m one point of view, showing 
that from the Ribble to the Clyde existed a dense population of Britons, even in the tenth 
centiuy inhabiting the greater part o" the western coast. Dmibritton — now Dumbarton, or 
Alcluyd, Clyde — Avas the residence of the Cumbrian kings, whose kingdom extended nearly to 
our modern Leeds, but the Saxons drove them continually fui'ther back, conquermg at a very 
early period Carlisle, ^vhich Egfrith of Northumbria bestowed upon the See of Lindisfarn. 
He extended his conquests to Furness. After the reduction of Alcluyd by Egbert (680to75(i), 
the Britons were governed by Scottish princes, who probably acquired their rights by inter- 
marriage ^\\i\\ a. British princess. The Cumbrian Britons gradually melted away into the 

xiv 



EARLY HISTORY. 

them : whether true or not is another matter. But indeed it is needful to 
take, with a very large "grain," accounts of things and people so unlike the 
ordinary home experience which was the only standard wherehy Imperial 
Rome could measure values. 

Rome got many good things out of her Britons, Brigantes and others. 
Breastplates of British pearls (haccse conchse, " shell-herries," as Camden 
calls them), which Caesar dedicated to Venus Genitrix; ship-loads of chalk, 
wicker baskets, tin, lead, iron, and other metals ; corn (the Grauls must 
have starved in 360 had not Julian, then commanding the Roman army in 
Gaul, fed them with British wheat) ; coal (as Wright has shown, there 
being coal enough left in the old Roman homes to make many a good- 
sized fire) ; fierce dogs of noble breed and glorious aspect ; soldiers'^ good 
for foreign service ; the spectacle of Caractacus bound, but more royally 
free than his captors ; the noble womanhood of Boadicea as a lesson to the 
perfumed Julias and soft-eyed Messalinas of the imperial city ; and the fair- 
haired slaves of later years, who gave a Pope occasion for two moderate 
puns, and to St. Augustine a mission ; with such gifts as these our little 
island of Albion ^ was of no mean value to the queen and mistress of the 
world. What she left would occupy too large a space in these pages. But 
though we cannot speak of all the Roman legacies to England, wo can of 



siuTOUiidiiig population, yet probably not till a very recent period. Tlio Welsh even were 
eniunerated by David tlie Lion among his subjects, and the laws or visages of the Brits or 
Biitons continued to Edward I., 1124-53, when he summoned the rex^resentatives of 
Scotland to attend liis parliament at Westminster. In some secluded districts the language 
is thought to have lingered to the Reformation. Pendragon Castle reminds the traveller of 
the fabled Uther ; and Skiddaw and Helvellyn (he might have added Blencathra, Glaramara, 
the Glenderamakin, the Glenderaterra, and Walla Crag), retain their original names, as 
the sepulchral monuments of a race which has passed away." — Note to Giles's Translation 
of Oeoffrey of Monmouth. 

"^ According to the Notitia, the fourth ala of Britons Avas stationed m Eg^^ot. The 
twenty-sixth cohort of Britons occurs in Armenia. A body of the "Invincible Younger 
Britons" was stationed in Spain; and one of the "Elder Britons" in lUyricum. The 
" Younger British Slingers, (exculcatores)" are found among the Palathie auxiliaries. Other 
bodies of Britons are found in Gaul, Italy, and other countries. — The Gelt, the Roman, 
and the Saxon. 

" The earliest mention of Albion is ui the treatise De Mundo, attributed to Aristotle, 
840 B.C. Avhere it says : " Beyond the Pillars of Hercules is the ocean Avhich flows romid 
the earth. In it are two very large islands called Britannia : these are Albi(Ui and lerne." 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 



one — the harmless amusement left to our antiquaries in the roads ^ still 
traceable, in the barrows every now and then stumbled over, in the camps 
to be still defined among the furrows of potato-fields and wheat-fields, m 
the tesselated pavements and bits of pottery, the urns and the coins, the — 

— ■ — " Fibiiliu A\'itli(.)iit a v<*l»e to clusp, 
Obsolete lamps, whose light no time recals. 
Urns without ashes, tearless lachrymals — " 

to be dug up yet by the curious at any spot famous for their occupation. 

In our special lake country we come across many such relics ; but the 
chief in point of interest are the roads, about which no two explorers can 
agree, nor does any antiquarian itinerary intelligibly or credibly trace from 
end to end. It is very certain, however, that one went from Ambleside to 
Penrith, and one from Penrith to Kendal, ^° meeting on High- street ; that 



^ It would be only a false pretence of learning if I were to attempt any detailed account 
of the Roman roads in the Lake district ; and the old county histories are so little to be 
depended on, that they cannot be quoted as reliable authorities. But for what it may be 
worth, I will give Hodgson's " Itinerary," taken from his History of Northumberland. 
Agricola's " two columns marched into Westmoreland — one by Overborough on the Liuie, 
Castlebower, Borrowdale, and the Briirs of Sliap, as far as our present Brougham Castle — 
the other by Water Crook, Kendal, to the Birrens Pang at Ambleside — where it was sub- 
divided, one party gomg by Kirkstone and High Street (the Saxon Strtet, the version of 
the Latin strata), through Patterdale and Matterdale, to the camp of Whitbarrow onHutton 
Moor, and thence to Old Penrith ; the other by Borrowdale, or the pass of Dunmail Eaise, 
down the Derwent, and along the coast to Carlisle, where it would meet the first division 
from Brougham Castle and Old Penrith, advancing by Nether by and the Birrens of 
Middleby to the large camp at Birrens- work Hill, their furthest post in this campaign." 

'° " In the sprmg of the year 80, Agricola placed himself agam at the head of the 
armjr, and, proceeding to invade and reduce the lowlands of Scotland, extended the Ptoman 
territory as far as the estuary of the river Taus (the Tay). AVhen this campaign was over, 
the Ptoman troops were employed under the eye of their leader in erectmg fortresses over 
the newly-acquired territory, and the sites were chosen with so much judgment, that it was 
a common remark that no castellum built by Agricola was ever taken by the enemy, while 
they were placed near enough together to communicate easily with each other. His foiulh 
summer (A.D. 81) was emi)loyed in the erection of a chain of forts between the two 
estuaries known to the Romans by the name of Clota and Bodotria (the Clyde and 

Forth), as a check upon the incursions of the north Highlanders LoUius Urbicus 

raised, on the same site, a new line of forts, and joined them together by an immense 
continuous rampart of earth and turf, which from the name of the emperor under whom it 
M as built, is usually called the wall of Antoninus. It is now popularly called Graham's 

xvi 



EARLY HISTORY. 

another was on the east border of Satterthwaite, poiutmg to Ambleside where 
was a camp or station, and apparently made for a by-way to Low Fm-ness ; 
and that another skirted the lower part of the township of Ulverston, from the 
White Thorn, the Spina Alba on Conishead Bank, by Lindal, Dalton, and 
Goldmire, to Roanhead on Duddon Bank. Part of this was found, not very 
•many years ago, in a small lane near Mountbarrow House. 

When the Romans finally withdrew, the Scots and Picts swarmed over 
the wall 11 into Cumberland and Lancashire, and farther south still, oppressing 
the unhappy Britons who had no longer their old power of manhood to 
protect them. They wrote to Rome for help; the "lamentations of the 
Britons unto ^gitius their consul" setting forth in piteous terms how the 
barbarians drove them into the sea, and the sea drove them back to 
the barbarians, so that of two kinds of death they must choose one — 
either to be drowned in the waves or to be butchered by the sword, if 
Rome would not help them. But the Mistress of the World, with the 
Goth at her gates and famine within her walls, had neither men nor 
money for the Britons ; and when all help from that quarter was found 
to be impossible, the Saxons were invited over instead. How they came 
to the call in their ships of hide ; how Hengist and Horsa watched their 

Dilie, and along its course are frequently found inscribed tablets commemorating the portion 
built by the different troops and cohorts of the Ptoman army. — The Celt, the Roman, and 
the Saxon. T. Wright. 

" Hadrian's wall, built in 120 a.d., was eighty miles long, of the finest masonry in the 
world, and had a ditch to defend it. " He caused that foiinidable barrier to be built 
across the island, from the Solway to the Tyne, of which we still trace the stupendous 
remains ; a massive wall, nearly seventy miles in extent, extending over plain and moun- 
tain, from Bo'^^Tiess on the Solway Frith to the now celebrated locahty of Wall's End on 
the T^me, accompanied on its southern side by an earthern vallum and a deep ditch, 
and fortified ^■\ith a formidable series of twenty-three stationary towns, vith intermediate 
mile-castles and watch-towers. It has been customary to consider the wall only as the 
structui'e raised by Hadrian, while the earthern vallum, or rampart, was ascribed to Severus ; 
but both are parts of one work, erected by the former emperor." — Ihid. 

At Moresby the 20th legion stationed at Chester (Deva), for the subjugation of the 
Brigantes, inscribed a tablet to Hadrian, which was found in digging the foundations of a 
buLldin<7 there ; and the second cohort of Lingones raised an altar, also at Moresby, 
dedicated to the god Silvanus (Deo Silvano). Most of our information respecting the 
Roman occupancy of Great Britain is taken from the Itmeraiy of Antonine —a sort of E,oad- 
Book for the empu'e — and the Notitia — a List of all the of&cers and their places of com- 
mand, or the Courc-calendar of the time. 

^c xvii c 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

opportunities and made the most of their chances, and how Rowena, the 
"blue-eyed," added the power of her fatal beauty as well; and how, in that 
meeting or "palaver" on Salisbury Plain, the cry of " nemed eure Saxes" 
gave the signal for the butchery of three hundred of the best in the land — the 
Britons having come unarmed, but the false Saxons with short skeines 
beneath their cloaks — how all this happened with the terrible ruthlessness 
of Fate, do not the youngest readers of history know ? 

But a gleam of light shot through the darkness. Tradition comforts 
us with the account of how good Ambrosius and his brother, Uther Pen- 
dragon, took matters into their own hands, repulsed the Saxons, and did 
many mighty works; though the ordinary proverb spoken of by Fuller, 
and quoted constantly since — • 

" liet Utlier Pendragon do what he can, 
The river Eden will run as it ran," 

records one failure, namely, the attempt to divert the course of the Eden 
to better fortify the castle of Pendragon. Uther was a mighty man in his 
day — the friend of Merlin, and a practiser of the black art himself; but he 
was finally overcome by the superior cunning of his enemies ; for the Saxons, 
unable to destroy him in fair fight, threw poison into his favourite spring, 
of which he, drinking, died. 

The snake was only scotched, not killed. If they had got rid of 
Uther, they had still his son Arthur at their heels. "This large island 
of Britain," says Grildas, "placed at almost the uttermost bounds of the 
earth, with her large spreading fields, pleasantly seated hills, and moun- 
tains most convenient for the changeable pastures of cattle ; watered with 
clear fountains and sundry brooks ; beating with snow-white sands, together 
with silver streams gliding forth with soft sounding noise, and leaving a 
pledge of sweet savours on bordering banks, and lakes gushing out abun- 
dantly in cold running rivers," was again to be defiled with war, Arthur, 
Uther Pendragon's son by Lady Igren, "Duchess of Cornwall" — our famous 
King Arthur, half hero half myth, but about the most popular character 
of the day — put himself at the head of the national party. His first battle 
was fought at the mouth of the Glem, and his second, third, fourth, and 
fifth by the Douglas which ran red to Wigan, in "the region of Linius, 

xviii 



EARLY PIISTORY. 

one of the cantreds or great divisions of the Sistuntian kingdom or western 
half of South Lancashire." By which four victories, and eight more to the 
back of them, Lancashire was delivered from the Saxons, the land had rest, 
and "Le roy Arthus d'Angleterre et le Due de Lancastre ordonnerent et 
firent la Table Konde." A slight anachronism, as there was no " Duke 
of Lancaster " for some centuries after. 

The Britons, who had been Christians once, but who had relapsed 
into their former heathenism, partly owing to the heathendom of the Saxons, 
were now again to be converted. Augustine cam.e over and did much, 
but not all; for a knot of old sinners lived securely at Furness, or Fore- 
nesse, where, defended by the sea before them and the mountains behind, 
they__enjoyed themselves in their own ways, and Avorshipped theiiT^stone 
dolls after their own fashion. To remedy these abuses, Egfrid, then King 
of Northumberland or Deira,^^ gg^^g gg^^^^i^ Cuthbert (686) "the land called 
Carthmell, and all the Britons in it " (including that special stronghold 
of iniquity, Furness), to be by him reduced to order and decent living, and 
appreciation generally of the blessing of enlightenment and good government. 

The next special notice of our particular land is when Egbert (825) 
united the several distinct provinces into a monarchy and it was called England ; 
he '' divided his new acquisites into seueral portions and shares, and for the 
preseruation of a future peace set over each of them a Comes, to rule 
them, whence each portion or bailiwick was styled comitatus, a scyre or 
county, sc, an earldome. . . . And on the west part from the riuer 
Solway to the riuer Duden on the south. This he cald Carliersliire, or 
Cumberland; and Avhat lay upon the west, or Durham and Lancashyre, he 
cald Aplehyschyre or Westmorland ; and from the riuer Duden to the 
riuer Mersey, upon the south, was styled Lancastcrschyre. Ouer euery 
scyre, as hath been said, he placed a Comes to rvle and gouern it, according 
to the Lawes and Customes of the country, who together with the Byshop 
of the Diocess, were to instruct and rvle the people, the one declaring to 
them the Laws of God, and the other the Laws of the Land ; and they had 

'^ This Saxon kingdom of Deira included our modern Lancashire, Yorkshire, West- 
moreland, Cumberland, and Durham, in its limits ; in fact, much of the ancient Brigantine 
territorj^ When it was divided into counties, the southern portion was called Lonkeshire 
from Loncaster, the castle on the Lone or Lime. 

xix C 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

likewise vnder them a Heretoge, chosen by the people in a folemote, who 
had the power to raise the people to compell the otherwise disobedient to 
obedience, and to inflict chastisement for offences." ^^ 

After Egbert came Alfred the Great; but neither saint nor monarch 
had as yet done much for the enlightenment of the people, if we are to 
believe the great king's oft-quoted expression, that, when he took the throne, 
very few even south of the Humber could understand their daily prayers in 
English or translate a letter from the Latin — not one south of the Thames. 
It was in Lancashire that Alfred allowed the Danes to strike root, to the 
after disaster of the country; and still, all through the northern provinces, 
axe types of pure Scandinavian beauty and manhood — features more finely 
cut, and forms more grandly framed, than in any other part of England. 

Canute entered Lancashire in revolt against him, with an army; (these 
northern counties were always the last to submit to any change of 
authority;) he took possession of Cumberland, then, as later, the Debate- 
able Land, and placed Duncan, the grandson of Malcolm, king of Scotland, 
in possession thereof, subject to England. But there was little beside 
war, and tumult, and fighting about boundaries, and private wrongs, and 
public injuries, and the revolt of this earl and of that, till William the 
Conqueror finally defeated Earls Morcar and Edwin, the great leaders of 
the Northmen, and so broke the neck of the northern insubordination.^^ 
He then built Lancaster Castle,'^ as a stronghold in case of future trouble, 
and married the sister of the offending noblemen to Ivo Tailbois, (or 
Taillebois,) whom he made Baron of Kendal, and who was the brother of 
Fulk, Earl of Anjou, his great friend and partisan. 

Lancashire is not mentioned by name in Domesday-book. The southern 
part of it is included in Cheshire ; while the northern, the south of West- 
moreland, and part of Cumberland, go into the West Biding of Yorkshire. 
The different ranks of men given are barons, thanes,^^ freemen, radmen, 

'^ Kuerdeii's impublislied Preface to his History of Lancashire. 

'* He had not many enemies to subdue, it would appear, seeing that the whole popula- 
tion of England was not two millions at the time of the Conquest. 

'^ By the end of Stephen's reign there were 1,115 castles in England. " Nests of 
Devils," Matthew Paris calls them. 

'" Thanage — service : Thane (Saxon, theinan) ministrare : the same tenure as the feudal 
Barons. 

XX 



EAELY HISTORY. 

drenches (a kind of Socmanni, having land set apart for them as hushand- 
men, and exempt from mihtary service), bordars, bondmen, and villeins. 
But Lancashire had not many of the nobler sort; for she was then a 
miserable place ^^ scarcely worth the trouble of holding. In 1086 all the land 
l}dng between the Mersey and the Ribble was valued at one hundred and 
twenty pounds : in 1814, at over two milHons and a half. But this is not to 
be taken absolutely ; a large allowance having to be made for difference in 
relative value. In that tract between the Mersey and the Eibble lay a famous 
place of safety, "Christ's Croft" : — 

" When all England is alofte, 

Safe are they in Christe's Crofte : 
And where should Christe's Crofte be 
But between Pdbble and Mersey." 

Ivo Tailbois then was the starting-point of the great House of Lan- 
caster. William, his gi-eat grandson, had the royal licence to call himself 
William de Lancastre, as well as Baron of Kendal ; Edmund Crouchback, son 
of Henry III., had granted to him the honour, earldom, castle, and town 
of Lancaster, in joyful commemoration of the royal victory at Evesham. 
His son Thomas married the sole daughter and heiress of de Lacy, Earl of 
Lincoln, possessing by his marriage, and in his own right, six several 
earldoms. Taking part in the Gaveston troubles, he was attainted and 
executed ; but his estates were subsequently restored to his brother Henry. 
Henry's son was the second Knight of the Carter, the Black Prince being 
the first. He w^as in both Crecy and Poitiers, and was the first or " good " 
Duke of Lancaster. At the same time the county was raised into a county 
palatine, " with power to have a chancery in the county, to issue out writs 
under his own seal, as well touching pleas of the crown as others relating 
to the common laws of the realm, as also all other liberties and regalities 
belonging to the county palatine." His daughter Blanche married John of 

'^ Camden, quoted in Pictorial England, speaks of the north country generally Avith 
great disdain. He approaches the people of Lancashire " with a kind of dread : may it 
forbode no ill. However, that I may not seem wanting to this county, I \\iil nm the hazard 
of the attempt." He says, too, that Lancaster is not populous, and the people are husband- 
men ; Kendal, on the contrary, is a very populous town, with two streets crossing each 
other ; Applebj"- has fallen into deca}' ; and Whitehaven is not so much as mentioned, for 
the good reason that no such town or even hamlet then existed. 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

Gaunt — " time-lionoured Lancaster," third son of Edward III. — more pro- 
perly John of Ghent, his birthplace ; and who, as king of Castile and Leon, 
impaled the Spanish royal arms with his ducal coat. During the rebellion 
of John Ball, Wat Tyler, and Jack Straw against the poll-tax, John of Gaunt 
was so unpopular, that his life Avas threatened by the people ; wherefore he 
was forced to bide in Scotland under the honourable guardianship of William 
Earl of Douglas until the tumult was stayed. Constance, his second wife, was 
left in woeful plight. She could not get admission into Pontefract, whither 
she had gone for safety ; and was fain to travel seven miles at night by torch- 
light to Knaresborough. And a midnight journey of seven miles through 
a disturbed country was not a thing most high-born gentlewomen would have 
cared to encounter. After the death of this wife Lancaster married Catherine 
Swinford a knight's daughter ; already, during his wife's lifetime, the con- 
fessed mother of two sons and a daughter by him ; "at which all marvelled," 
not at the motherhood, but at the marriage ; and the ladies of her new degTee 
rebelled against her association, and the Duke of Gloucester, "being a man 
of a high mind and a stout stomach, misliked his brother matching so meanly ; 
but Catherine bore herself so honourably, that hate gave place to love and 
dishonour to esteem." His three children by her were legitimized, and the 
marriage was a success. Nevertheless, when he died, he was laid by the 
side of the wife of his youth, Blanche the daughter of the " good." 

John of Gaunt spoke in favour of Wickliffe, "the morning star of the 
Keformation," and had to fly for his life for this too ; getting into further 
trouble by the Avild revenge which certain friends of his — Lord John 
Holland and Sir Henry Green — took on John Latimer, the Franciscan, 
who had falsely accused him of compassing the death of the king. John's 
son, Henry Bolingbroke or Bullenbroke, made himself king, as we all know ; 
and henceforth the House of Lancaster, with its red rose (John of Gaunt's 
device), became the house of royalty, and the duchy was vested in the sove- 
reignty. Henry gave his friend Henry de Percy, Earl of Northumberland, 
and his son Henry Hotspur, a grant of the Isle of Man, on condition of 
their bearing the curtana — the Lancaster short-sword — at the left shoulder 
before the king and his heirs ; the same short sword Avhich John of Gaunt 
had carried before Kichard II. 

Lancaster was not famous for its religious zeal, or its means of religion ; 

xxii 



EARLY HISTORY. 

wherefore, in consideration of its spiritual destitution,^" Stephen removed (11'27) 
to Furness, then called Bekangesgill or the Glen of the deadly nightshade, 
J he Hou se which had been founded in 1124 at Tulketh for the Cistercian 
monks of Savigny; which Furness Abbey became one of the most cele- 
brated Houses of the county, and one of the nursery places of thought 
and learning./^ But it was not all get and no give, even with the favoured 
monks of Furness ; for in the time of Edward HI., Avho knew how to keep 
people to their duty, the abbot was commanded to provide a suitable house 
for the custody of the king's pence, during that monarch's war with France 
— as the sheriff of Lancaster was commanded to provide a hundred bows and a 
thousand sheaves of arrows ; — and when a certain royal lady was married to 
a certain nobleman of high degree, an order was issued to the abbot of Furness, 
as well as to the Priors of Burscough, Up Holland, and Coningshead, to 
levy a subsidy for the maritagium or dowry. 

King John, who had been endowed by Richard with the earldom and 
honour of Lancaster, seems to have always retained a friendly feeling for his 
old estate. At Runnymede special privileges were granted to the Honour 
of Lancaster, and even before the famous Carta de Foresta, he granted a 
private forest charter to his duchy (which when he became king he con- 
firmed, in the first year of his reign), " allowing his knights, thanes, and 
freeholders, without challenge of him or his heirs, to fell, sell, and give at 
their will, the forest woods, -° without being subject to the forest regulations ; 
and to hunt and take hares, rabbits, and all kinds of wild beasts (except 



'^ Domesday records no place of worship iii Lonsdale North — the North of Lan- 
casliire — save at Hovgvn, where there was a Santa Cherche, or Santon Kirk (Avhich, 
however, is in Cumberland), and Cherchebi or Kirkbj'- Kendal. Hovgvn was a manor 
conta inin g twenty villages, known in Stephen's time as Futherness — now High Furness 
and Furness Fells. Lonsdale North included the forest of Fudernesse and Wagenei (pro- 
bably the Hovgvnai of Domesday), Dalton, and Ulverston, the lisherj and warren of which 
were given by Stej)hen to the monks of Furness. — Baines' History of Lancashire. But 
" the fact of a church not beiug mentioned in Domesday does not always prove that 
there was no church there ; there were plenty of churches not mentioned in that record." — - 
T. Wright. 

'^ The couchers' books at Furness show that considerable progress had been made in 
the arts, in the tinie of the first Duke of Lancaster even. 

^° In forest terms, vert was the covert, the trees, the herbage; and, according to Coke, 
whatever beast of the forest was good for food was vejiison. 

xxiii 



THE LAKE COU^iTRY. 

deer — bisse — goats, and wild hogs) in all parts within his forests and 
demesnes, hays of the county." This was a liberal thing of John to do, 
for the forest laws, as reduced to consistency by Canute, were horribly severe. 
A bondman, hunting a beast in the forest so as to make him pant for breath, 
was to lose his skin. Freemen only might keep greyhounds, provided the 
balls of their feet were cut. If a mad dog bit a forest beast, the fine was the 
price of a freeman ; if a royal beast, death. A solemn inquest was held on a 
dead deer ; but down to the time of the Plantagenets, these laws had been so 
far ameliorated, that at a forest assize, held in 1286, only fine and imprison- 
ment are recorded for killing the deer and " venison." John's generous 
intentions to his old subjects were not always of avail ; for once they com- 
plained of Theobald Walter who had abridged their supply of fuel, and of 
Koger Poer who had deprived them of wood and forest land used as pasturage ; 
it is to be hoped they got redress and restitution. 

In the reign of Edward I. summonses were issued to the men of the 
three counties, Lancashire, Westmoreland, and Cumberland, to join the 
king's army in Wales ; and in 1282 the sheriff of Lancashire was ordered 
to provide two hundred wood-cutters (coupiatores), each furnished with a 
hatchet to cut down the trees. They were to muster at Chester on Saturday, 
the Octaves of the Feast of St. Peter, and each cutter was to have three- 
pence a day. Not such bad pay at a time when a labourer's wages were 
three-halfpence, a harvest man's twopence, the rent of the Lord Mayor's 
house one pound, a cow six shillings, and a sheep one shilling, a pair of 
shoes fourpence, eggs a halfpenny the dozen, and arable land, even in Kent, 
threepence and sixpence per acre. 

Lancashire either sent up no Parliamentary representatives, or has not 
preserved the records, till the thirty-third year of Edward I, Then w^ere 
elected to serve in the Parliament, to assemble at Westminster on Sunday 
next after the Feast of St. Martin, Matthew de Redman and John d'Ewyas, 
" elected knights for the county, by the consent of the whole, who have full 
power to do for themselves and commonalty what our lord the king shall 
ordain. The said knights affix their marks ; not able to write." The sheriff's 
return adds : " There is no city in the county of Lancaster." In 1322 
Edmundus de Neville, miles, and Johannes de Lancastria, miles, are returned ; 
one receiving for seventeen days' attendance in Parliament at York, and six 

xxiv 



EARLY HISTORY. 

days -^ coming and returning, sixty-nine shillings, or three shillings a day ; 
the other thirty-eight shillings, or twenty-pence a day. But Parliamentary 
deputies were not always to be had, even for money. In the thirty- 
ninth year of EdAvard III. the sheriff returns : " There is not any city or 
borough from which any citizens or burgesses are able or accustomed to 
come, according to the tenure of the writ, by reason of their debility and 
poverty." Under the sixth Edward the franchise was resumed; had it 
been in abeyance ever since, and were they always in debility and poverty ? 
Yet they had a good character for honesty and liberality in those early 
days, poor as they were ; hence, in the time of the second Richard, arose 
the necessity for a law respecting uniform weights and measures, because, 
says the king, "There has always been a larger measure used in Lancashire 
than in any other part of the Idngdom ; " which would scarcely be said now, 
either of the great sellers or the small. 

Lancashu-e had her share of the troubles which every now and then 
disturbed the empire. Lambert Simnel landed at the Pile of Foudrey in 
1487 (where also they expected the Spaniards to land during the time of the 
Armada), and brought poor Sir Thomas Broughton to his ruin ; and Swart 
Moor still owes its name to Martin Swart, who mustered the impostor's 
forces there the year before. And at the battle of Flodden Field, when : — 

" The left liancl wing, with all his rout, 

The lusty Lord Dacre did lead, 

With him tlie bows of Kendal stout. 

With milk-wliite coats ^^ and crosses red." 

Lancaster was not behind, though not, perhaps, the most forward; but all 

the three north counties were well represented there. ' 

" Then for the Earle of Surry hee sente. 
And Regente of the North him made ; 

^^ The time allowed for travel from Lancaster to London was five or six days in good 
weather, eight in snow, or if foul. 

^^ Milk-white cloth was a Kendal manufacture, as was Kendal green and " Kendal 
cottons." " Master Camden termeth that town, ' Lanificii gloria et industria prsecellens.' " 
Yet thouo'h the home manufacture was so good. Fuller says that fustian of foreign make only 
was worn by the first quality among us. The knight in Chaucer who " of fustian he weared 
a o-ippon," was dressed m the height of the fasliion of the time, provided his fustian was 
not of local make, or his gippon of home art. The clothiers of Kendal were the first 
founders of Stourbridge fair. 

XXV d 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

And bad liim, if the Scoots were beiite 

The Northern Borders to Invaid, 

That he should raise a Ptoyall Band 

In Yorkshire and in Bishoppricke, 

In Westmorland and Comberland, 

In Lancashire, and Cheshire eake, 

And, if thou need, Northumberland. 

Quoth he, theare is stronge men and stoute 

There is the Bower of Kendall bold, 
Which ferce will fight, and never flee. 

And all that dim the Mountayiie came, 
Where groune from Frost is seldome free. 
With lustie ladds, and large of length, 
Which dwelt on Sommer water syde.^' 

Ill 1535 began the dissolution of tlie monasteries. Dr. Tliomas Legh 
and Dr. Eicliard Layton were appointed commissioners for Lancashire ; 
where they questioned: — 1. As to tlie immortahty of the heads of each 
monastery. 2. The name of the founder. 3. The estate of the convent. 
4. The superstitions therein. 5. Their debts. 6. The names of those 
therein wishing to be discharged. As to the first, Furness and Cartmel 
and Conishead came off but badly ; the second hurt them just a trifle ; the 
rest did not harm much. By this dissolution, says Fuller, " Ten thousand 
persons were sent to seek their fortunes in the wide world ; some had 
twenty shillings given them at their ejection, and a new goAvn, which needed 
to be of strong cloth to last till they got another. Most were exposed to 
want, and many a young man proved an old beggar." This suppres- 
sion was followed by the insurrection in the northern provinces called 
the Pilgrimage of Grace, under Eobert Askew, self-styled Earl of Poverty 
in his proclamation to the people of Hawkshead ; an insurrection in wdiich 
most of the dispossessed Heads naturally took part. The brunt of the matter 
though, fell on the east, and the poor pilgrims who had sought to brino- 
back the old faith were eventually dispersed — the Earl of Cumberland 
repulsing their attack on Skipton Castle, though their priests assured them 
that their banners were sacred and must prevail ; for on them were emblazoned 
the five w^ounds, or stigmata, and a chalice ; every pilgrim wearing on his 



^^ From an old MS. in the British Museum. 
xxvi 



EARLY HISTOEY. 

sleeve, as a badge, the five wounds, and the name of Jesus in the midst. 
But even sacred banners have to yield to superior numbers, as the Earl 
of Poverty and his followers found. The king was very scornful and 
bitter in his words. He could not understand how it was that "ye who 
be but brutes and inexpert folk " should meddle in state matters, and 
expressed himself otherwise hardly. Some abbots — they of Whalley, Jorvaux, 
Salley — and sundry priors and monks implicated, were executed ; and the 
rebellion was made cause for still more rigorous suppression of religious 
houses.-^ But Furness saved its bones, if at the expense of its skin. The 
only original surrender now to be found is that of Furness, dated the 9th of 
April, 1537, which proves that the abbot, Eoger Pyle, could read the signs 
of the times as well as most men, and knew when the oak must bend, if 
it would not be uprooted or cut down. The charges against him and his 
monks were that they had raised up a rebellion against the king's majesty ; 
that the abbot had lied to the commissioners at the time of the visitation ; 
that he had caused his monks to be forsworn ; that he had concealed the 
treason of one, Henry Salley, a monk, who had said that no secular knave 
should be head of the Church, and of another who had said that the kinsf 



^'' List of religious liouses in Lancashire at the time of tlie Dissolution (Adsitations 
1534-1540). — From Dugclale and Speed. At Cockerham a Priory. At Cockersand a 
Premonstratensian Abbey (allowed to remain for a Avliile). At Coiiisliead a Piiory of 
Austin Canons. Gabriel Pennington built, tenni. Hemy II., hj encouragement, and on the 
land of William de Lancastre, Baron of KendaU (a great benefactor), an hospital and 
priory of Black Canons, to the honour of the Blessed Vii'gin Mary, consisting of a Prior, 
seven religious, forty-eight servants, valued at Kill. 5s. 9fZ. At Fumes a Cistercian Abbey, 
to the honour- of the Blessed Virgin Mary ; the monastery begun at TuUiet, 1124, for the 
monks of Sa^dgny, in France, removed, 1127, to Furness VaUey, then caUed Bekangesgill ; 
the founder Stephen, Earl of Morton and BouloigTie, afterwards long ; value, 805Z. 16s. 5fZ. 
At Kertmel or Cartmell a Priory of Austin's Canons ; Wm. MareschaU, Earl of Pembroke, 
founder; value 1,1 18Z.; regxilar canons of Saint Austin, dedicated to the Blessed Vii-gin 
Maiy, rated 26 Henry VIII. at 91Z. 6s. M., at second valuation, 2121. lis. lOcZ. ; ten religious, 
t hir ty-eight servants ; site granted 38 Henry VIII. to Thomas Holcroft. At Lancaster, 

(1) an alien priory (Benedictine), dissolved with other aliens, and annexed by Henry V. ; 

(2) a hospital dedicated to St. Leonard, founded by King John, wliUe Earl of Morton, 
afterwards by Henry Duke of Lancaster, about 30 Edward III. annexed to the nuimery of 
Seton, ill Cumberland ; (3) a priory of Dominican or Black Friars ; (4) a Priory of Grey 
Friars — a Franciscan convent near the bridge. The lands or revenues of Furness, 
Cartmel, and Conishead, were vested in the officers of the Duchy of Lancaster, for the 
king's use. 

xxvii d 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

was not the true king, and no rightful heir to the crown. On these charges 
two monks were taken to Lancaster Castle, and the abbot having been taken 
into custody was prevailed on to sign a voluntary surrender of the abbey, 
which he did at Whalley on the date given above. That the charges were 
merely trumped-up excuses for an arbitrary act, even Henry's own tool was 
obHged to confess. "After two rigorous investigations, nothing treasonable 
or in any manner indictable could be brought against the house;" "where- 
upon," writes Sussex to Henry, "devising with myself yf one way would not 
serve, how and by what means the said monks myght be ryd from the 
said abbey, and, consequently, how the same myght be at your gracious 
pleasur, I determined to assay him as of myself, whether he would be 
contented to surrender giff and graunt unto (you) your heirs and assigans 
the sayd monastery ; which thing so opened to the abbot farely, we found 
him of a very facile and ready mynde to follow my advice in that behalf." 
The deed acknowledges " misorder and evil rule, both unto Grod and the 
king, of the brethren, and of the said abbey," and so in discharge of his 
conscience, the abbot gives all into the king's hands ; the community con- 
senting. They were provided for, as were all who voluntarily surrendered. 
To the abbot were assigned the revenues of the rectory of Dalton, value some- 
where about thirty-three pounds ^^ per annum ; and one hundred and fifty 
pounds were charged on the revenues of the Lordship for the prior and the 
twenty-eight brethren who signed the abdication. 

Li 1569, Lancaster, surely the true "cock-pit of conscience," if the 
country of games, "^ was again disturbed by the conspiracy of the Earls of 



^' A very large siim for one man's income, wlieu ten pounds a year was considered a 
good salary. 

*" The Lancashire games, from the Second Eandle Holme : — 

" And they dare chalenge for to throw the sledge, 
To jumpe, or leape ovir ditch or hedge ; 
To Avrastle, play at stoole ball, or to runne, 
To pitch the barre, or to shoote of a gimne ; 
To play at loggets, nine holes, or ten pinnes. 
To trye it out at foots ball, by the shinnes. 
At tick tacke, seize nody, maw and ruffe. 
At hot coldes, leap frogge, or blind man's bufFe ; 

xxviii 



EARLY HISTOEY. 

Westmoreland and Northumberland, for poor beautiful Mary Stuart ; and at 
that time a search was made here, as elsewhere, for vagrants, beggars, 
gamesters, rogues, or gipsies, lasting from nine o'clock on Sunday morning, 
July 10th, to four in the afternoon of next day, whereby thirteen thousand 
"masterless men," with no visible means of living but from games, bowling, 
archery, and the like, were passed to their own counties (the same process 
repeated monthly till November). After this came the battle of Thurland, as 
the next great disturbance (1643), when Colonel Rigby, the ParHamentarian, 
besieged Thurland Castle, the last stronghold of the Cavaliers in the north of 
the country. The royal force in Westmoreland and Cumberland, lying near, 
united with that from Cartmel and Furness, and assembled on the sands, 
a company of sixteen hundred men, to relieve the garrison. But Colonel 
Rigby marched into Furness on a Sunday morning, and attacked and defeated 
them without trouble, the whole affair not lasting much above a quarter of an 
hour. The Cavalier cry was, "In with Queen Mary!" the Parliamentary, 
" God with us ! " " Upon the close of the business, all our men," writes 
their commander, October 17th, " with a great shout cried out. Glory be to 
God, and we all, except one troop of horse and one foot company, which 
I left to quiet the country, returned forthwith to our siege of Thurland," 
which capitulated ten days after. The fortress was then demolished, and 
" mercy set as a crown upon the head of poor Lancashire ; " the mercy 
culminating in dividing the county (1646) into nine classical Presbyteries. 
The ninth included the parishes of Aldingham, Ursewick, Ulverstone, 
Hawxhead, Coulton, Doulton, Cartmel, Kirkby, and Winnington, of which 
the ministers were Mr. Thomas Shaw, of Aldingham ; Philip Bennet, of 
Ulverston ; Kemp, of Hawxhead ; Bryan Willow, of Coulton ; and John 



To driiik the halper pottes, or deale at tlie wliole cann 

To play at chesse or pue, and inke home ; 

To damice the moris, play at barley brake, 

At al exploits a man can think or speak : 

At shrove-groate, vanter poynte, or cross and pile, 

Or beshrew him that's last at any stile ; 

At leapinge over a Christmas bonfire, 

Or at the drawinge dame out of the m3'er ; 

At shoote cocke, Gregory, stoole ball, and what not ; 

Picke poynt, toppe and scourge, to make him hott." 

xxix 



THE LAKE COUNTHY. 

Manjolcl, of Cartmel ; since which period it may be said to have passed out 
of the limits of an early history.^^ 

Part of the history of Westmoreland — or Westmereland,"^ as it is some- 
times written, Westmorland and Westmaria — is bound up with that of 
Lancashire ; as in the barony of Kendal, which went with the earldom of 
Lancaster — belonging, indeed, to the Hundred of Lonsdale, one of the 
divisions of that county ; but the barony of Westmoreland, ^9 frequently called 
the barony of Appleby and the Bottom of Westmoreland, and which went 
with the countship of Cumberland, was an independent division altogether, 
and belonged to quite another family. Both barony and countship were granted 
by the Conqueror to Kanulph de Meschines, from whom they descended to Hugh 
de Morville, one of the assassinators of A'Becket ; and then the estates became 
divided, part going with Hugh's sister, Maud, into the family of the de 
Veteriponts (Maud's Meaburn is a manor to this day), and the castle of 
Appleby passing into the custody of Gospatric the son of Orme (one of the 
Tailbois race), when Henry was compelled to chastise those who had translated 
his wishes but too faithfully before the altar of Canterbury church. The 
family estates came back in John's time to Maud's son, old Eoger de Morville's 
grandson, though a de Veteripont ; and then, in three generations, passed by 
marriage to Eoger de Clifford, the source of a long and illustrious line. 
Among them, the eighth of his name, was the Black Clifford, he who slew 
that " fayre gentleman, and maydenly person," the young ^o Earl of Kutland, 



-^ The first potatoes growa. in England were raised in Lancashire, and it is still famous 
for tliem ; Lancashire coal is spoken of as used in 1260, temp. Henry HI. — ao-ain in the 
wars of Edward I. against Scotland, during the king's march from Preston throufdi Carlisle, 
agamst " Robertus de Brus;" and the finest wheat in Lancashire is grown by Miteside. 

^^ In the time of the Heptarchy, Westmoreland — '' The land of the Western Lakes" 

was part of the Idngdom of Northumberland, like Lancashire, and when Edward the 

Confessor divided Northumberland into six shu-es, one -was called " Appelbishire to -which 

appertained the land of Westmeiiand." In still earlier tunes it seems to have been an 
independency, for when Edgar summoned Ms vassals to Chester, we find among the kin^s 
who rowed his barge on the Dee, " the king of Westmere." 

29 The unmarried Avidow in this barony retained her husband's land, -which -^-^-as a 
marvellous privilege in those days. 

3° There is some obscurity as to the young earl's age, some making him to be between 
seventeen and eighteen, others only twelve, or indeed scarce that. He was beino- taken out 
of the battle (of Wakefield) by his chaplain and some others, when Black CUftbrd's band 
surrounded him before he reached the town, and " by reason of his apparell," seeino- liim 

XXX 



EAllLY HISTORY. 

not in the passion of the fight, for the battle was to the side, but of mere 
personal, or rather family revenge ; and there was his son, Henry the Shepherd 
Lord, whom Wordsworth has celebrated in his poem, and who was so long 
concealed among the dales and fells of Cumberland, for fear of the Yorkists, 
then in the ascendant. But Sir Launcelot Threlkeld, his stepfather, and a good 
Christian gentleman, preserved him to his rights, and when Henry VII. came 
to the throne, the Shepherd Lord — the good Lord Clifford — came also to his 
own. His son was Henry, the first Earl of Cumberland, President of the 
northern parts, and oftentimes Lord Warden of the Marches — a gallant soldier 
and a gay courtier, the friend of Henry VIIL, when Henry VIII. was young 
and unspotted with blood, and the especial foe of his gentle old father, whose 
simple tastes (perhaps, too, somewhat clownish habits for a gay courtier's 
father), ill agreed with his own. His second marriage with Mrs. Florence 
Pudsey, our mighty Earl of Cumberland could never forgive. A gentler 
Clifford was the earl's son, the alchemist, the distiller of waters, and the 
scholar, he who so narrowly escaped being buried alive when he fell into a 
trance for gi'ief at the death of his wife, Eleanor Brandon, daughter of 
Charles Duke of Suffolk and the Queen of France ; and a more noted than 
them all, was his grand-daughter Anne, Countess of Dorset, Pembroke, 
and Montgomery, and half a score titles beside, who " knew well how to 
discourse of all things, from predestination to slea silk," and who lost none 
of her natural advantages by over diffidence in setting them forth. Truly, a 
great and well endowed lady ; beautiful, intellectual, orderly, and high hearted, 
uniting in herself the best characteristics of her race, in its courage on the one 
side, and its love of literature on the other. From her the estates passed to 
the Tufton family, where they are to this hour. 



to be no common person, demanded who lie was. " The young gentleman, dismayde, had 
not a word to speake, but kneeled on his Imees, cravymg mercy and desuing grace, both 
with holdjdng up Ms hands and making a dolorous countenance, for his speacli was gone 
for fear. ' Save lihn,' said Ms chapleyn, ' for he is a prince's sonne, and peradventm^e may 
do you good hereafter.' With that worde, the Lord Chfford marked him, and sayde, ' By 
God's blood ; thy father slew mine, and so will I do thee, and all thy Idnne I ' and \\itli 
that A^'ord strake the erle to the hart with his dagger, and bad his chapleyn beare the erle's 
mother and brother worde what he had done and sayde. In this act, the Lord Cliftbrde 
was accoumpted a tyrant and no gentleman."- — Beauties of Westmorehuid, quoting either 
Pembroke MS., or Austin Vmccnt's Nobility — it is not very clear which. 

xxxi 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

The estates and fees belonging to the Barony of Kendal have not 
been kept so well together. In the seventh generation after Ivo Tailbois 
they were divided, and after then divided again, part, the Marquis Fee, 
going into the family of the Parrs, whereof Catherine, Henry's wife, was 
one, and part dwindling off into many small side-ways ; but of later gene- 
rations some becoming united again in the Lowther property, where they 
are still held under a lease, renewable, from the crown. There were no 
other very exalted names or honours belonging to the county, though 
singularly rich in old families and estates long retained in the same holding, 
and names of second-class historic interest, but nothing of so much 
county importance, however great the local, as to need -special recording as 
matter of history. 

The great military tenure of Westmoreland was by " homage, ^^ fealty, 
and cornage, which last drew after it wardship,^- marriage, and relief, and 
the service of this tenure was knight's service." Cornage seems to have 
been peculiar to the border service against the Scots, and was commuted 
to a money fine in later times : cornage, horngeld, and noutegeld (cow-tax), 
being all the same thing — an annual payment of certain horned beasts for 
the maintenance of the garrisons in the border castles. The tenants who 
held by cornage were bound to be always ready to serve the king and the 
lord of the manor upon horseback or on foot at their own charge ; and 
when the king marched into Scotland they were in the van, and when he 
marched out again they were in the rear ; which speaks something for the 

^^ 111 the old days of homage, the tenant " bared of head, unsworded, and kneeling on 
his two knees," his hands held out and clasped between his lord's, said, " I become your 
man from tliis day forward of life, and lunb, and earthly honour, and unto you will be true 
and faithful, and faith unto you will bear for the tenements that I claim to hold of you, 
saving the faith that I owe to our sovereign lord the king." And then the lord so sitting 
was to kiss his man, by which kiss he was boimd to be his vassal for ever. 

^'^ In wardship the consent of the superior lord was requisite for the marriage of a 
female vassal, and this power was distorted mto the right of disposing of the ward in 
marriage. When the king or lord was m want of money, it was by no means unusual to 
put up the wards to a land of auction — wife and land to the highest bidder : husband and 
land, in the case of a male ward. If the ward refused to fulfil the marriage so made, then 
a sum was due from the estates equal to what they would have fetched. This was a frightful 
source of abuse, and only got rid of by the famous statute of Charles II., aboUshiug the 
Court of Wards and Liveries. 

xxxii 



EARLY HISTORY. 

valour of the brave mountaineers. " Scutage," or shield money — redemption 
of the service of the shield — was another form of compensation for personal 
service against the Scots. 

The drengage tenure, which prevailed about Brougham and CHfton, as 
well as in some parts of Northumberland, was horribly servile. " They 
seem to have been drudges to perform the most laborious and servile 
offices," says Dr. Burn, and he shows that Sir Hugh de Morvile in West- 
moreland changed drengage into free service, and that Gilbert de Brougham 
gave one half of the village of Brougham to Kobert de Veteripont to make 
the other half free of drengage. One of the de Threlkelds also, who lived 
at Yanwath Hall in the time of Edward I., reHeved his tenants at Threl- 
keld of servile burdens at fourpence a head. The services were half a 
draught for one day's ploughing ; one day's mowing ; one of shearing ; 
one of clipping ; one of salving sheep ; one carriage load in two years, 
not to go above ten miles ; to dig and load two loads of peat every year — 
the tenants to have their crowdy while they worked ; the cottagers the same, 
only they found a horse and harrow instead of the half plough, and a 
footman's load not a carriage load. A knight's fee was valued at about twenty 
pounds, and the lord's rent was called white money or white rent. West- 
moreland jjaid subsidies, as well as border service and fines, and always 
came handsomely to the front whenever men or money was demanded. 
" Taking all the taxes together," says one writer, " Ave shall find that 
this county paid more to government, in proportion to its inhabitants, 
than any other county in the kingdom." From a return of horsemen 
and footmen made for Westmoreland and Cumberland during the Border 
wars (1584), out of eight thousand three hundred and fifty men jointly 
raised, Westmoreland gave four thousand one hundred and forty-two ; one 
thousand four hundred " archers furnished," and one thousand three 
hundred "billmen furnished," which was not a bad proportion for the Land 
of the Heights. 

More fortresses and castles than churches or monasteries belonged to 
the old time of Westmoreland. At the date of the Domesday Book, 
Kendal and Lonsdale were the only places that had churches at all, and 
when the religious houses were suppressed, the commissioners were not 
overweighted with a superfluity of work here. There was certainly one of 

xxxiii (? 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

some note, Vallis Magdalenae de Heppe — Sliap or Heppe-^^ Abbey — the 
Briar-fruit abbey — founded by Thomas, son of Glospatric, for the Prsemon- 
stratensian canons of Preston in Kendal, and dedicated by him to God and 
St. Mary Magdalene. ^^ He endowed them liberally, and allowed them freely. 
" The monks of Shap had what wood they liked, and all the bark that fell, 
and toll, free grinding at the lord's mills, and pasture about Swindale for 
twenty mares, sixty cows, and five hundred sheep." At the time of the 
dissolution the rated value was 154Z. 7s. 7^d. only. 

But the great political life of the county, and the artery through 
which flowed all its passions, was the Border Wars — its objects of supreme 
hatred, as with Cumberland, Scotland and the Scots. Even to this day 
they are not well regarded by the people — meaning by that the uneducated ; 
and a " Scotch body," like an " Irish body," is a term with as much 
contempt as geography in it. The boy's version of the southern lad's 
French and English is here Scotch and English — a small raid of miniature 
moss-troopers, where the clothes of the combatants, called the "wed," 
represent the gear to be lifted; and the opening of the sport — "an Englisher" 
putting his foot over the boundary line, with "here's a leg in thy land, 
dry bellied Scot " — is an insult and an incursion over the border. But all 
these local habits and traditions are fast fading away now, and Westmore- 
land is no longer the half savage wild that writers, less than a hundred 



^^ " And sweete as is the bramble floiu' 
That bereth the red hope." 

Chaucer's Ehne of Sire Tlinpns. 

^^ Other writers say, given to God and St. Mary de Bellalanda, or to the Abbey of 
Byland, iii Yorkshire. At Shap Thorn were once some beautiful Druidical remains — large 
granite stones, which were recklessly blasted, and taken away for any land of use the 
neighbours might wish to put them to — for boring into millstones, or buildmg foundations. 
" Would make beautiful clmnney-pieces," say Nicholson and Burn. The rough little 
hamlet of Wet Sleddale — where the popular belief is that it always rains, as perhaps it does 
— had an uncomfortable half houi- in 1360, when the bishop commanded the rural dean and 
various vicars of the various churches to excommunicate the people for violently breakino- 
into the house and grange of the Abbot of Heap. At High Mass, when the greatest 
numbers would be assembled, candles were to be lighted, and bells rung, and with bell, 
book, and candle, all the misdoers were to be excommiuoicated, which method would surely 
catch some among the congregation, even though they did, as Fuller said of the moss 
troopers, " come to chiu-ch as seldome as the 29th of February comes into the kalendar." 

xxxiv 



EARLY IIISTOKY. 

years ago, declared it Avas, with manners too gross to be witnessed, living 
too coarse to be endured, "a country full of infertile places, which the 
northern Englishmen call moors," ^^ a chmate unbearable because of its 
severity, and prejudices too dense for the hope of enlightenment, present 
or to come. Since 1752, when a bill was obtained for making a road 
from Burton, through Kendal and Shap, to Eamont Bridge (never, until 
the rebellion of 1715, when there was good fighting between the two 
parties in these northern wilds, had government thought of highways here 
at all) ; since 1774, when the first stage-coach, the Fly, was put on the 
road, to run between London and Glasgow, over Stanemore ; since the 
first mail was set on the Kendal and Shap road in 1786 ; since those 
times, and even since periods much nearer to our own, what an immeasur- 
able change of manners and customs, and habits and thoughts, has taken 
place. Grand hotels, first-class lodging-houses, sumptuous fare, and fashion- 
able clothing, assimilate the rugged land of the hill and fell to the most 
fashionable watering-place within the reach of London. "Nubila West- 
moreland — Saxosa et misera poor land," said a rhyming collegian with 
more love of luxury than of beauty in his young head ; but none save 
the veriest Cockney, who calls Hampstead " a wild place," would echo his 
opinion now ; while the doubt, gravely expressed so late as 1814, whether 
Bishop Watson's new plantations of oak and elm and sycamore, and other 
fair-growing forest trees at Calgarth, would ever survive the inclemency of 
the seasons, and whether hardy fir and larch were not the only trees that 
would thrive in this bleak valley of the Winandermere at all, reads strangely 
now, under the shadow of woods, luxuriant beyond ordinary course. Yet 
even old Fuller could see no charm in this, one of the loveliest and 
choicest spots of God's dear earth. Speaking of " Westmerland," he says, 
"Here is cold comfort from Nature, but somewhat of Warmth from Lidustry. 
That the Land is barren is God's Pleasure, the People painfull, their 
Praise. . . . Though sterile by general rule, it is fruitfull by some few 
exceptions, having some pleasant Vales. . . . much of Eden (running 
clean through it) yet — little of Delight!" If Fuller had written in 1864, 
when nature was better understood and more intelligently loved, he would 

^^ Speed's Theatre, representing the exact geography of 167 G. 

XXXV c 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

have given a different verdict — a verdict as loving and as full of apprecia- 
tion as our own ! 

Brave and bonny Cumberland, wedged ^° up against the frontier line of 
Scotland, had even more to do with the Border service than her more 
southward sister. Her whole life was centered in the struggle for ever 
going on between herself and those wild moss troopers and rievers across 
the Border ; and all her energies were needed to keep them in anything 
like check. Once, led by Robert de Brus, they came trooping down as 
far as Furness, firing and slaying and lifting all before them ; and once 
again they swept like a cloud of locusts through the land, till they halted 
at the Abbey of Holme Cultram, which they plundered, when they departed, 
replenished, with sacrilege as well as murder on their souls. To Gilsland 
and Penrith was but a short day's raid, and a frequent ; to Derwent Fells 
and Alston Moor almost as frequent ; Inglewood Forest they made their 
constant hunting-ground ; and once (the Earl of Douglas heading the 
raid) they swarmed down upon Penrith in fair time, and lifted a king's 
ransom as their reward. So that poor Cumberland had enough to do to 
hold her own, and found the defence of industry by valour a hard and 
heavy lesson. The result being a larger amount of individualism,^'' and 
less attention to rules and law than with most English counties. 

Kumbraland, as she is called in the old map to Thorkelin's Fragments — 
or Caerle3dshire, from the capital Caerleyl, in certain other old writers — was 
never famous for amenity of manners, but never infamous for cowardice or 

^^ Speed says, " The forme of this countie is long and narrow, pointing ^Yedge-like into 
the eouth, which part is altogether pictured with copped hills, and therefore hath the name 
of Copland. The middle is more level and better inhabited, yielding sufhcient for the 
sustenance of man; but the north is wild and solitairie, and coinhed with hilles, as Copland 
is. The air is piercing, and of a sharp temperature, and would be more biting, were it not 
that these high hilles brake off the northern stormes and cold falling snowes. Notwith- 
standing, rich is this province, and with great varieties of commodities is replenished ; the 
hilles, though rough, jet smile upon their beholders, spread with sheep and cattle, the 
vallies stored with grasse and corne sufHciente, the sea affordeth great store of fish, and 
the land is overspread with great varietie of fowl." 

^■^ This is seen, as one example, in the immense variety of landed tenures in use among 
the Cumbrians, until a little more imiformity was introduced by Act 12 Charles II. — that 
is. by the Commonwealth ; but even now there is diversity enough, and a great deal of 
locai law and usage afloat. By the way, Blackstone says that copyholders are only 
villeins improved. 

xxxvi 



EAELY HISTOPvY. 

want of manhood. Even in the time of the Heptarchy she seems to have 
been rather a self-annexing province of Nortliumberland, governed by her 
own people and in her own way, than a conquered county held by force 
or fear. Else how do we hear of the kings of the county ? and what is 
the meaning of the story of poor Dunmail? and the grant by Edmund, 
son of Athelstane, of all our fells and lakes and mountains and morasses 
to Malcolm the Scottish king, on condition that he protected the North 
of England generally, against all Edmund's enemies, both by sea and 
land? — a grant that led to nothing but bloodshed and confusion between 
England and Scotland, and wars unceasing, and boundary lines never fixed, 
and rights by no possible means to be decided, until William the Conqueror 
took the county to himself, and bestowed it on Eanulph de Meschines, with 
the Border Service to follow. It was not likely that the Scotch king''^ who 
laid claim to the county as his right would submit quietly to this. He 
entered the land and ravaged it, burning and slaying in the wild Avilful sin- 
fulness of those days ; but William Eufus came sweeping down at the head 
of his men — obliged though to sweep back again, because "they could not 
bear the severity of the seasons," — doing little good in his attempt, beyond 
that of rebuilding Carlisle, which had fallen into ruins, and settling a few 
agricultural soldiers on the land, which, since the time of the Eomans, " had 



^^ The following is a siimmaiy from tlie Scottish side of tlie history of Cimiberlaud. 
During the heptarchy, part of Northumberland was invaded by the Danes, in the reigii of 
Ethelred, at the end of the eighth century, and thoroughly conquered in 875, by HaKdin 
the Dane, when CarUsle was most probably destroyed. The Scottish King Gregory, in 
876, helped the Northumbrians to expel the Danes, but the Britons, quarrelling with their 
benefactor, invaded Scotland, were defeated, and as terms of peace ceded Cumberland and 
Westmoreland to Gregory, and retired to Wales, about 880. Cumberland, in rebellion 
against Scotland, set up a king of its own, Dummaile. Edward, son of Athelstane (945) 
laid waste the countrj-, put out the eyes of Dummaile's two sons, and restored Cumberland 
to Malcolm. 1001, Ethelred invaded Cmnberland, because Malcolm, its prince, son of King 
Kenneth (the Scottish king's eldest son was Prmce of Cumberland, as ours is Prince 
of Wales) had not paid his quota of tribute to the Danes ; Canute confirmed the county to 
the Scot on condition of homage, agreed to by Duncan, " gracious Duncan," after a struggle ; 
and young Malcolm, after Duncan's murder by Macbeth, took refuge in his own princi- 
pality, EdAvard the Confessor gave it to Seward, Earl of Northumberland, and WilHam the 
Conqueror, offended at Scottish hospitality to Saxon refugees, took the county into his oami 
hands, and made a grant of it to Ranulph de Meschines, our old friend of Westmoreland. — 
Lyson's Magna Britaiiitia. 

xxxvii 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

never liad a ploughshare through it." When Henry III. came to the throne, 
Scotland demanded back her counties, and Henry, to put off a demand for 
the moment inconvenient, gave as much land as was worth 200L about Penrith 
and Sowerby ; but took it back again directly, and the Border wars^ went on, 
as they had been going on for centuries before. 

It was Edward I. that put the Border service into its first reasonable 
shape. He made Lord Kobert de Clifford (1296) first Lord Warden of the 
Marshes, with full poAver to execute summary vengeance strict and stern on 
all offenders. That terrible but needful law of "hot trod" was a mutual 
convention between the peaceable parts of the two kingdoms ; the permission 
of pursuit for six days, into the opposite realm, of all moss troopers, rievers, 
black mailsmen, thieves, and other offenders, with horn and hound, with hue 
and cry, hunting them with blood hounds, the sleuth or slough dogs trained 
and kept for that purpose. But it was not till the time of Queen Anne 
that these border violences died finally away, for all that there had been a 
common king for three generations before her. Great names, ^^ though, are 
associated with those lawless times. The Grahams, the Howards, and the 
Dacres, Musgrave and Featherstonhaugh, even Eichard Coldale, or Dick o' 
the Cow, that border guerilla and partisan of Lord Scroop of Greystoke, so 
dreaded by all naughty children, but lying peacefully now in Penrith church ; 



^^ Fuller's Worthies grants but few notabilities to our lake land. Of saints we have 
but " Herebert, Priest and Confessor," and Saint Abricke, belonging to Carlisle, whose 
soul another hermit saw " ascend to heaven " as it Avere in a spherical form of a burning 
wind, " but we hsten unto it as luito wind." He was of very httle value anyhoAV, for he 
" did not more macerate himself mth constant fasting than time since hath consumed his 
memory, which hath reduced it to nothing more than the scelleton of his name, Mdtliout any 
historical passages of flesh to flll up the same." Of martyrs m Queen Mary's time none ; 
because of our being "mezzell'd in ignorance and superstition ; " of wortliies, only Edmund 
Grindall, of St. Bees, Sir Pdchard Hutton, "born at Penrith, of a worshipful family," and 
called by Charles " the honest judge," " Sir John Banks, of Keswick, another judge in 
Charles' time; and John Skelton, the ribald poet — king's orator, and poet laureate to 
Henry VIII. , called by Erasmus, Britannicarum Literarum Lumen et Decus. " Indeed 
he had Scholarship enough, and Wit too much ; seeing one saith truly of him, Ejus sermo 
salsus in mordacem, risus in opprobrium, jocus in amaritudinem. Yet was his satyiical wit 
unhappy to light on three Noli me tangere's : viz., the rod of a schoolmaster, the couls of 
Friars, and the cap of a Cardinal : " the schoolmaster Lilley, the Dommican Friars, and 
Cardinal Wolsey. Abbot Islip protected bun in Westmuaster sanctuary, where he died, 
June 21, 1529. And these are all the old author and philosopher allows us. 

xxxviii 



EARLY HISTORY. 

Naworth and Corby and Netlierby/° LyddaPi and Greystoke, tliey are all like 
snatches of border song in their very sound ; and who cannot realize a whole 
volume of rude poetry in such names as Clym o' the Clough, and Wyllyam 
of Cloudesle ? 

Part of the Border service consisted in the firing of beacons'*" at certain 
places, when the tenants were obliged to attend their lord for forty days 
against the Scots at their own expense ; some holding by nag tenements 
(the Manor of Bewcastle was all held by nag tenement), obliged to furnish 
a certain number of horses, or themselves to attend on horseback ; others by 
foot tenement, which involved only footmen or individual personal service, 
as the value of the holding might require. 

Many a castle rose on Cumberland ground, strong and sturdy, if not 
rich and ornamented ; '^^ bonny Carlisle, Naworth and Dacre and Brougham, 



*° About two miles from Netlierby, is a strong entrenchment, called LidduVs Strength, 
or the ]\Iote, on a lofty and steep cliff, commanding a vast extent of coiuitry. At one end 
is a high mount ; in the middle is the foundation of a square building. On the weakest 
side it is strongly entrenched, havmg a sort of half moon before it, \ntl\ a vast foss ; its 
form is circular. "This," says Leland, " was the moted place of a gentilman cawled Syr 
Walter Seleby, the which was kylled there, and the place destroyed yn King Edward the 
Thyrde time, when the Scottes went to D3T;ham." It was taken by storm by David the 
Second, who caused the two sons of Sir Walter to be strangled before their father's face, 
and then commanded their parent to be beheaded. Netherby was also a Roman station, by 
name Castra Exploratorum. 

*' The Barony of Lyddal was given b_y Ranulph de Meschines to his dependant 
Turgent Brundey, part of Arthuret going with it. 

■'^ The beacons stations in Cmnberland were Black Combe, Bootle, Muncaster Fell, 
St. Bees Head, Worldngton Hill, Moothay, Skiddaw, Sandal Top, CarUsle Castle, Lingy- 
Close Head, Beacon Hill, Penrith, Dale Raughton, Brampton Mote, and Spade Adam Top. 
In Westmoreland, they were Stanemore* Top, Orton Scar, Faiieton Knot, Whinfell Fell, 
and Hard Knot. Orton Scar is famous for dottrels, and aU maimer of wild fowl, and has 
a tarn — Sunbiggin Tarn — full of char and trout. 

"3 " This county pretendeth not to the mode of Reformed Architecture, the vicmity of the 
Scots causmg them to build rather for stretigth than state. The Cathedral of Carlisle may 
pass for the emblem of the Militant Church, black, but comely, still bearing in the complexion 
thereof the remaining signs of its fonner burning. Rose Castle, the Bishop's best Seat, hath 
lately the Rose therein withered, and the prickles, in the ruins thereof, only remain. The 
houses of the Nobility and Gentry are generally built Castle-icise ; and in the time of the 
Romans, tliis country (because a Limitary) did abound with Fortifications ; Mr. Camden 
taking notice of more Antiquities in Cumberland and Westmoreland, than in all England 
be.side." — Fuli,er's Worthies. 



XXXIX 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

Penrith and Corby, and Cockermouth, Rose, and the fortress of Kirkoswald,"*' 
and many more, if strength of wall and wealth of arms might be held to 
constitute a stronghold ; but if there were castles for the defence of bodies, 
there were prayer-houses for the salvation of souls, and when the dissolution 
of the religious houses was ordained, Cumberland had not a few in the list. 
There was Wetheral Priory, founded by Ranulph de Meschines for the 
Benedictines, or Black monks ; annual value in 1539, 130L ; and the Nunnery, 
for the Benedictine nuns, which William Rufus founded, and which, at the 
time of the dissolution, held one prioress and three nuns, and its rent-roll 
was but a poor eighteen guineas yearly ; and there was Skelwith Abbey, 
belonging to the Knights Templars ; and Abbey Holm, or Holme Cultram, 
a Cistercian monastery of the yearly value of 537Z. 3s. 7d. This was the 
monastery where the chancel of the chapel was burnt by means of a jackdaw's 
nest. And there was Calder Abbey, which Ranulph de Meschines also 
founded, worth 641. 3s. 9d. ; and Lanercost Priory, an Augustine monastery, 
worth 79L 19s. ; and the episcopal chapter of St. Austin, at Carlisle, the 
only one of its order in England, worth 513L ; and the priory of the same, 
worth 4:181., and rich in relics, having a bone of St. Peter, and another of 
St. John the Baptist, two stones from the Blessed Sepulchre, and a bit of 
the Holy Cross, for the edification of true believers. 

Ah ! but better gifts than these has old Cumberland ! — the gift of 
loveliness girt with j)Ower, of health on its moors, of freedom on its hills ; 
the gift of bravery and of manhood, of beauty and of strength, of self- 
respect which knows nothing of servility, of justice that is honest though 
not lavish, of truth that is straight if not smooth — God's better gifts than 
monkish relics to the men and women of the lakes and mountains-^to the 
dwellers in the loveliest homes of England ! 

''■' The weapon -vvitli which Hugh de Morville slew, or rather helped to slay, Thomas 
A'Becket, was long preserved as a precious relic in the fortress of Klrk-Oswald ; which does 
not look mu-ch like the assassin's remorse. 



,-Shc--«,— ^ 



THE LAKE COFITET 



I ^~, ^ ^ . 




W I N D E E M E R E 



CHAPTER I 



One of the most noticeable features of the lake district is the broad tract of 
poor land which lies like a way of separation between the loveliness hidden 
behind the hills, and the more generous beauty of the plains. If you trace 
on the map the boundaries of this district, rarely will you find the mountains 
flowing down into richness and fertility on the outer side, but generally 
subsiding into barren moors and impracticable fells : generally, though not 
always, this broad way of desolation between the grandeur of the hills, 

1 B 



TflE LAKE COUNTRY. 

witli the licart of loveliness within, and the generosity of the plains. And 
so it is that from Lancaster, which may he taken as the gateway of 
the lake district, the country has hoen gradually getting more rugged and 
less populous as it runs up towards the mountains. Past Oxenholme and 
Kendal ^ the only human habitations are scattered fell-side hamlets, bleak 
and bare, where one wonders what the people find to do, and how they 
live, and what their pleasures and emotions, and what their special uses to 
the world at large. The land is poor, with stones lying thick among the 
young crops and over the coarse grass ; the railway cuttings cleave clean 
through the solid rock ; bare stone walls, instead of hedges, mark the 
boundaries of the fields and properties ; streams as bright as crystal, but 
streams mth no fertility in them — mere brawling expressions of the waste 
and wet of the place — break in all directions over beds of rock and pebble ; 
the country on either side gets wilder and rougher, the houses fewer and 
of still poorer character, the masses of yellow broom and golden gorse and 
trailing wealth of briar yet more lovely in their contrast with the grey 
boulders breaking out through the green grass, but yet more eloquent of 
the poverty they adorn ; the crags and fells are steeper, more jagged, and 
more inhospitable ; till, as you steam rapidly on, the dim blue outlines, 



' Tlie lake country may be entered by the traveller from the south, either at Carnforth, 
takmg the branch line from Ulverston, on the other side of Morecamhe Bay, to Coniston ; 
or at Oxenholme Jimction, for Kendal and Windermere. The latter is, perhaps, the better 
■way, as Windermere, being the largest and therefore the most important of the lakes, claims 
priority of notice ; and also, because of its tamer character, ought to be seen before the 
wilder and more romantic. Before railway times, travellers generally went across the sands 
at the head of Morecamhe Bay, which Wordsworth told Mrs. Hemans he thought the finest 
entrance. Leland, in his Lahoriouse Journey and Searchefor EvglamVs Antiquities — Oeven 
of hyin as a New Yeare's Oyfte to King Henry VIII., says : " If I had kept the by Shore 
Way from Lancastre to Gumhreland, I should have gone by CarteinaUe Sand, wher a fresch 
Water dotli cum a vii Myles ; to Conyhed Sande, whither a Pdver resortith, a viij Miles ; to 
Dudden Sandes, witlier a River resortith a iiii Miles ; Furnis Abbay up in the Mountaines 
a iui Miles off. A ii IMile from Lancastre the Cunteri began to be stony, and a little to wax 
Montainious." 



WINDERMERE. 

first seen like darker clouds in the distance across the glistening breadth 
of Morecambe Bay, and which you have been watching lovingly since you 
left Kendal behind you, assume definite form and stability, and soon you 
recognize Wetherlam and Coniston Old Man — others coming out from the 
clouds and unfolding themselves in turn es you rush on. And now the 
sunlight catches the surface of a small shining tract far to the left ; in half 
a minute more, you see another shining glimpse under the wooded banks 
of Heald Brow ; and then you draw breath at the station, full in the 
narrow valley, and Windermere, the first of the lakes, lies like a dream 
of Eden at your feet. 

Say that it is a May morning when you stand on the green height just 
above the Elleray Woods ; where, being so close to the hotel, as well as 
giving one of the best views of the lake, you, like all visitors, make your 
initiatory walk. The early mists are hanging in slender wreaths about 
Heald Brow and through the Calgarth Woods, rising up in rounder and 
more cloudlike forms from the lake which they leave calm and black below, 
and heaped in broken masses all along the glorious line made by the Old 
Man and Wetherlam, Crinlde Crags, Bowfell, and the Pikes, up to the 
denser cluster behind Ambleside. But though it is the middle of May, 
the spring you left behind in London fully matured you find here shy and 
tender and undeveloped. The oaks are mere sprinklings of golden beads 
threaded through with their darker stems ; the ash is unclothed, with 
naked branches bare as in winter ; but the mountain-ash — the quicken 
or rowan — has put out leaves and flowers both, and is as rich in scent 
and blossom as the dogwood, or the bird-cherry, or the flowery spikes of 
the laurel growing everywhere so luxuriantly. The copper beeches are brave 
in their first flush of crimson or more sullen purple, and the golden 
fringe of the Scotch fir is as beautiful as if the tree hung laden with 
flowers ; the spruce-fir is reddened with the tender blush of its young 
cones, and the hawthorn, which is just beginning to blossom, is reddened 
too, as if its stems and leaf-veins were quickened with crimson blocd. 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

Among all this richness of colour the cold grey-green of the willow looks 
wan and ghastly, and the heavy gloom of the yew-trees, of the junipers 
and the hollies, hecomes hlack hy force of contrast ; but the drooping 
plumes of the larch, and the dainty leaflets of the silver birch, the full 
green and rounded symmetry of the sycamores, and the golden bursts of 
broom among the young elms and hazels, tell with increased force ; and 
not even in the gorgeous autumn are the lake-side woods so full of beauty 
as they are in the fresh young spring — never do they so gloriously enframe 
that long blue line of water lying between them, — " wooded Winandermere, 
the river-lake." For this is the characteristic of Windermere : — its narrow 
length filling up the valley, and leaving little margin between it and the 
feet of the fells ; so that, for the most part, it is feathered with wood down 
to its brink, and only at its head, where the Rydal Valley begins, are there 
broad spaces of cultivated ground, or level fields for grass and corn. 

But now you must come down from your breezy height, where the air 
blows fresh and strong, full of sweet wood-scents, and with a power of 
manhood in it, of health and vigour, only to be had from mountain air ; 
and, leaving the walls fencing in a higher head — the tufts of primroses 
among the roots of the trees — the shining tract studded with islands and 
broken by promontories below — and the 
everlasting hills above and around — you 
wind through the Elleray Woods again ; 
passing by the small, low cottage where 
Professor Wilson first lived, and which 
is now half hidden by a grand old syca- 
more ; then by his later and more sightly, 
if less picturesque, home; and on by trim, -^ ,....-. 

home-kept, shrubbery paths, to the high road and the grey, half-S^viss, 
half-Elizabethan, houses in and about the new village of Windermere. 

Here everything is modern, wealthy, and well adapted. Natural 
advantages are made the most of, and natural beauties respected ; becoming 

4 




WINDERMERE. 

sites are chosen for mansions fitted for people of deep purses and liberal 
education ; a fine old tree is left standing, perhaps even fenced round with 
rustic palings, if it accords well with the newer building ; a rough ledge 
of rock is incorporated into the garden wall ; and wild flowers are sedu- 
lously planted on gate-post toppings, on wall copings, and against garden 
boundaries, to give an air of country-bred simplicity to the whole ;^but 
it is all a wildness creditably laid out — nature under the tuition of a land- 
scape gardener, smoothed and combed and daintily trimmed — Wordsworth's 
mountain child with a perpetual Sunday frock on, and curls newly taken 
out of paper. 

Bowness,^ which all writers agree to call the "port of Windermere,"-^ is 



^ Called Buhiess (Bull's Nose or Promontory) so late as 1814. Gilpin speaks of it 
rather graiiclly as " tlie great mart for fisli and charcoal," " its harbour crowded with vessels 
of various kinds." It was to tliis same Windermere, or AVonwaldremere, according to the 
Melrose Chronicle, that " Ethred, King of the Northerns, in the year 792, convoyed Elf and 
Ed^^-in, the sons of King EKwold, piisoners from York, and assassinated them." 

3 There were some strange misapprehensions of this lake in old time. Camden, quoted 
by Coiry, speaks of it as " paved with one contmued rock," whereas the bottom is for the 
most part soft mud, save just across the head, where was the supposed Eoman harbour for 
the camp : and as " wonderfully deep or uirfathomable, as the neighbouring inhabitants 
infomied me" — its greatest depth beuig not quite forty fathoms ; but he speaks truly, even 
for tliis day, when saj-ing that it is " abounding with chare, a golden Alpme trout." These 
ehar — the speciahty of our lakes — " are of two sorts, called by some, from their colour-, the 
idver and the golden char, and, by others, fi-om a supposed anomaly that each breeding fish 
only spawns once m two years, the case char and the fjilt char, the latter being thought the 
same as the silver char, and only retaining its name for the year that it is barren : it is 
accounted the most delicious, and is baked and sent in pots to London. A Winandermere 
char ' is near twice the size of a herring. Its back is of an olive green, its belly of a light 
vermihon, softening in some parts into white, and changing into a deep red at the injection 
of the fins.' The fishery of the lake is divided into three cables, as they were called in 
Machel's time— but now cubbies. The first, or lugh cable, reaches from the Waterhead 
to the char bed half a mile above Calgarth ; the middle, from thence to below the ferr}- ; 
and the low cable, fi-om below the ferry to Newby Bridge. In each cubble are four 
iisheries. The rector has a right to a pleasure boat, and so much a boat in heu of 
his tithe iiali."— Beauties of Wesiinorelanch and some others. 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

simpler and more old-fashioned ; and, beyond Bowness again, over Cartmell 
Fells towards Newby Bridge, natm-e is left natural, and habitations are made 
picturesque by accident — by the loving grace of grooving wood and crumbling 
crag, and not by the scholarly tuition of a landscape gardener understanding 
the rules of art. The road from Bowness to Ambleside is one of the most 
beautiful in the neighbourhood ; but there is nothing in the little village itself 
to call for much attention, excepting first, — the old weather-stained church, 
with its shabby-looking cottage-like aisle windows, and its chancel panes of 
painted glass from Furness, its prelatic tomb, more unpretending than many 
a city shopman's, its belt of yews, and primitive lych-gate ; next, on the way 
to the Ferry Nab, the old parsonage — the very ideal of a parsonage — with its 
chimnied porch overgrown with ivy and large enough for a village assembly to 
be held in it ; and, last, the breezy point of the Ferry Nab itself, with its 
ghost story of the Crier of Claife in the quarry behind, and its beautiful 
panorama all round. 

Here, if you want to cross, you stand and call a boat, which comes to you 
from the ferry-house opposite ; meanwhile you may, if you are fortunate, catch 
a glimpse of some rare bird skimming over the water, or fluttering uneasily 
through the woods ; or you may sketch the beauty of that little islet of 
Crow Holm, which is now a mere golden boss like a gigantic tuft of moss on 
the water ; or you may admire the sycamores and snow-white cherry-trees 
behind the ferry-house ; or you may wander back a little way on the ferny road 
to Kendal — for the ferry is part of the highway between Kendal and Hawks- 
head — and jot down studies of rustic gates and stiles, and note the constantly 
recurring effect of the line of grey stone wall against the golden green of the 
woods. For the lake livery in the spring-time is gold and grey ; the gold of 
the young oaks and the moss and the broom and the Scotch fir- shoots ; and 
the grey of the stone houses, the stone walls, the boulders and great rocks 
bared against the green, the blue-grey hills, and the soft grey clouds above 
them all. Or else you may watch the steep road that goes up to Sawrey, over 
the shoulder of Heald Brow opposite, winding through walls and flowery 

6 



WINDERMERE. 

hedges till it is lost between the hill and the sky ; or learn by heart 
the names and aspects of the mountains clustered in increasing grandeur 
at the head across that restless span of blue — ever topped by the Pikes 
which, in the misty mornings, look like two handfuUs of unsubstantial dust 
heaped up against the sky. Or you can turn your face to the foot of the 
lake, and see how the hills slide off into mere slopes and fells, till finally they 
slide away into railroads and plains and market-gardens and the lower 
existence of the midlands, down to the roar and the tumult of the cities of the 
south. And when you have done this, turn back again and thank GrOD that 
you are breathing mountain air, and that the waves of a north-country lake 
are at your feet. If you want no ferry-boat, fill your hands with globe-flowers 
and marsh-marigolds, and then go back through the woods and the fields and 
the village, and by the Lower-road to Ambleside. 

Your way lies between stone walls golden-brown with moss, the earth coping 
besprinkled with its auburn-coloured fiJaments and the pale mountain speed- 
well, and the base bestarred with stitchwort and blue bird's-eye, the yellow 
pimpernel and the deep pink flowerets of the wild geranium. To the left 
lies the lake, and beyond it rise the blue tops of the higher mountains ; 
Wetherlam and Bowfell heading the lower sweep of Heald Brow ; with changing 
vistas of yet more distant hills caught as the road winds on. Mountain 
streams set in a broad margin of wild garlic — " ramps," as it is called 
here — so dainty to see and so evil to touch, rush through the wood on your 
right ; the close-growing small-leaved ivy clothes the w^alls and tree-stems 
with a mantle of green ; arcades of beeches overhang the road ; on either side 
are woods with oak and pine and the waving larch, black firs, flowering 
garden bushes, and sycamores of the true emerald green ; stone steps and 
walks, as in a private park, lead through groves and fields, making short cuts 
to houses on the upper road; the trees are fountains of sound with the 
rustling of the leaves and the varied song of the birds ; here the round head 
and back of a green knoll hides all the view — there the mountains are caught 
in broken outline and the water glances like silver through the fretwork of the 



THR LAKE COUNTRY. 



leaves and stems ; and now a full burst of lake and hill breaks across a 
level meadow dotted with milk-white lambs just yeaned, where a singing little 
brook winds its way through the grass to the great water. And so over Millar 
Brow and on towards Ambleside. 

By a wayside publichouse, where an old fir stretches its branches across the 
road and where a cottage, with high steps leading up to the door and twin 
chimneys covered with ivy, of which a trailing wreath swings to and fro in 
the wind, makes a pretty sketch for an artist's album, you hear the sound 
of water. Turn into a field at the left, clamber over a stone wall into a 
pleasant copse, and you will find yourself by the side of the river which 
comes down from Troutbeck Valley : the Troutbeck all above that long 
low-spanned bridge, but the Calgarth river below, and till it runs into the 

lake. They are felling and barking some of 
the young saplings in the copse, and these 
^^^^^ have fallen into strange shapes — their white 
'^sv ^=^ "^*s^;^ ' limbs branching out' like stags' antlers, 
though some of them are more like ante- 
diluvian monsters, pterodactyles and bony 
beasts with multitudinous legs ; but the smell of the bark is full of aromatic 
freshness, and you can sketch the poor naked monsters pleasantly. For there 
is an old tree with a moss-covered seat in the parted root, where you may 





troittbkob: BTitnoTi; 



WINDERMERE. 

sit for a long summer's hour looking at the branches dipping into the stream, 
and the mayflies flitting on the water, and the shy fish, so Ml of mystery 
and haste, gliding among the stones, and the water rippling about the rocks ; 
watching the restless waves with that infinite yearning — it may be with those 
infinite memories and regrets — which the flow of a river always creates. 

Returning to the highway the ground becomes more undulating, and belts 
of trees follow the undulations. Stone is quarried out of the road-side for 
road mending, and parish paupers sit hammering at the granite piled in heaps 
by the way. A castle, a hideous modern sham, is seen on the fell across 
the lake, disfiguring the height (Low Wray) on which it stands ; the Calgarth 
Woods, (in old deeds, the Calfgarth Woods,) planted by Bishop Watson, the 
Bishop of Llandaff — he whose plain, flat tombstone is in Bowness churchyard 
— continue on the left ; pleasant turns are in the road, and the scenery 
becomes wilder and yet more beautiful. In front stands Wansfell Pike by 
which a steep road leads up to Troutbeck Valley ; and immediately beyond is 
Low-wood. But before you halt there, go up that steep Troutbeck road to the 
right, to get a better view of the lake — the view given at the head of the 
chapter. The first mountain to the left, half hidden by the trees, is Coniston 
Old Man ; Wetherlam is over Heald Brow, Crinkle Crags following and the 
Pike o' Bliscow below ; yet more to the right and in front is Lingmoor — the 
round boll ; above it, in the extreme distance, Scawfell Pike ; to the right, 
seeming higher — but only seeming — Bowfell ; then, Hanging Knot, Great 
End, and Glaramara. The lowest dip to the right of the mountain next 
to Glaramara is the Stake Pass, leading from Langdale into Borrowdale ; 
Langdale Pikes — the Pike o' Stickle, and Harrison Stickle — come next, with 
the depression of Pavey Ark to the right ; and yet more to the right is 
Easedale Head, with Loughrigg Fell in front. 

The lake is at its widest here at Low-wood, broadening to a full mile 
across to Pullwyke Bay where the waterlilies grow and the lily of the valley 
is in the woods beside the shore ; and which is a long ferry towards 
Coniston ; and, just beyond, the road goes close down to the water's edge, 

9 c 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

cind winds and turns with it. And what a road ! Fringed with beeches 
dropping their golden buds quite into the ripple — globe flowers and marsh 
marigolds gilding the grey stones — little promontories jutting out, and deep 
bays indented — here a wall built up against the further encroachments of the 
lake — there a broken bit of sedgy shore, wooded and flowery — twisted roots 
of trees lying bared like snakes in the water — and at every ten yards the 
aspect of the whole scene changing — was there ever such a way of travel set 
before man for his enticement and delight ? There is not a more lovely 
bit of coach road than this through the entire breadth of England. Sometimes 
the Pikes are wholly lost, and sometimes the road turns to the foot where 
the hills go oflf into plains and the lake joins the sky ; and sometimes there 
is nothing but a screen of golden oaks standing out against the slaty sky 
and slaty water, while the waves ripple and splash musically on the beach, 
and the birds sing from the wooded bank, thick with undergrowth and white 
with wind-flowers, to the right. Now you pass Doves-nest, where Mrs. Hemans 
lived, with its cropped hedge, and wealth of yellow poppy about the garden 
gate ; and you meet, perhaps, a scattered body of otter hounds, a characteristic 
of the country, headed by a group of broad-shouldered, light-haired men in 
velveteen and fustian, talking racy Westmoreland and smacking their whips 
noisily as they pass ; or a couple of rough-mannered lads from the farther 
fells or lonely dales drive by in a small cart filled with frightened lambs ; and 
then comes the last reach, and again you are turned to the foot of the lake, 
with Ambleside* behind you. 

Now you see the glitter of a shining stream on Brow to the left, and some 
Avliite houses (Clappersgate) clustered on the side of Loughrigg Fell : now 

■* Ambleside only since Queen Elizabeth's time. In the Boundary roll of Rydal, 1273, 
Ambleside is called Amelsate, and had a park ; after then it was Hamelside, Amylside, and 
Amelside. James the Second granted to Ambleside a weekly market on Wednesdays ; two 
fairs— one, the Cow Fair, on Whit Monday ; and another, the Tip Fair, for long horns and 
tups ; also a Court of Pie powder. It is a common saying that often the market begins at 
twelve and ends at noon. Flere is also the pretty ceremony of rushbeaiing. but flowers are 
now substituted for the ancient rushes, with better eflf'ect. 

10 



WIND KEM EKE. 

you are at the tollgate, and copper l)eeches and stone houses thicken hetbre 
you, and the rich woods get richer, and the gardens are trimmer and the 
fields are greener : now you are at Waterhead, and the lake dwindles into a 
mere tarn : and then, in a few steps more, you are in the quaint, steep, 
clustered streets of Ambleside, under the lee of Wansfell Pike, and just at 
the entrance of Eydal Valley. And the first rich lake-country walk is ended. 




NEAR DOVES-NEST — LOOKING BACK 



It was a cold, chill day when we took boat at Waterhead for a row on 
the lake. The sky was partially covered by sullen-looking clouds, though 
flashes of angry sunlight broke in between, bringing out into all varied shapes 
of rock and crag the dim and indefinite grey masses which else showed nothing 
of their true forms. It was thundery in the distance, and copper-coloured 
edges and fiery spaces tinged the nearer clouds, while darker masses, swollen 
and purpled, hung above the farther mountains ; but we disregarded these 
signs, and pulled out of Waterhead Bay too rich in joy to count the probable 
cost. Streaks of light quivered across the water, or the shadows of the coming 
gusts darkened the waves as they passed; and every now and then a pale, 
watery ray dashed a line of yellow light across a mountain top or struck a 

11 c 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

distant reach of lake, throwing all else into colder gloom by the contrast. 
The houses looked marvellously picturesque, scattered on the hills and by 
the lake side. One was set like a jewel in an enamelled framework of black 
and gold against its background of fir and oak; another was almost hidden 
behind green sycamores and beeches ; a third stood like an Italian convent, 
declared and aspiring, high up on the treeless mountain side ; and a fourth 
clung to a wooded crag, where it seemed to have scarcely room to root itself 
upon the jagged ledge : wherever they were they had a special beauty of their 
own, and seemed to be in the most fitting spot that could have been chosen ; 
this peculiar gift of adaptability belonging to lake-side and mountain houses 
generally, and only to be spoiled by an architecture of violent unsightliness. 

We pulled round to the mouth of the Brathay,^ which divides Westmore- 
land from Lancashire, and which was one of the boundaries of the old Lord- 
ship of Furness;^ and we passed the "Brathay rocks" — little wave-washed 
rock-bases for a clustering of firs — and a fair-set mansion backed by wood and 
fell, with its lawn sloping down to the water and its gi'oup of children among 
the trees — their scarlet cloaks, and frocks of vivid blue, coming out powerfully 



* The Brathay comes from the Great and Little Langclale becks, and the thousand lills of 
that lofty moimtain-group up by Langdale head— its farthest source, perhaps, the stream on 
the top of the Stake Pass — forming Elterwater, at the foot of Lingmoor, by the way : fr'om 
Elterwater, whence it is the Brathay proper, flowing on by Skelwith to where it meets the 
Rothay at Three-foot Brandreth, in the fields just beyond Ambleside. The Rothay comes 
out of the Grasmere and Rydal becks — receiving the waters of StockghyU and Scandale 
Becks by the way — to wliere it merges into the Brathay. But though the two rivers join 
before they pom- into the lake, no one yet Imows why the char, Camden's " golden alpine 
trout," always go up the Brathay, and the trout up the Rothay, at spa^vning time ; and 
why never, by any chance, do they miss theu" way or change theii- routes. 

^ Though not uicluded in the Lordsliip, yet the Lake of Windermere was put to pleasant 
uses, as well as to pious ones, by the monks of the old abbey. They had too many patrons 
and benefactors among the laity not to get all they wanted. WUHam de Lancastre III., 
" for the health of his soul and the soul of Agnes de Brus, his wife, gave the monks of 
Furnes one boat to be used on Wynandermere for the carriage of thnber and other 
commodities, and one other boat to fish in that mere — one boat and twenty nets." 

12 



WINDERMERE. 

as points of colour in the landscape ; and we went into the recesses of two or 
three little bays ; and by a rocky islet — Seamew's Crag— just big enough for 
a small party of seamews to alight on ; and then to Pullwyke Bay, opposite 
Low-wood — a rich and gracious harbour of wooded loveliness. Pull Scar is 
behind the bay — a low rough crag ; and behind Pull Scar is Bowfell, and, 
more to the left, Latterbarrow, making a long soft line to the Ferry House, 
with a lake-side road passing over it. And on Pull Scar is one lonely white 
house placed high on the fell ; and the name of that house is the " Drunken 
Duck" (Drook'n Dook, if spelling went by phonography), and the mission of 
that house is beer. 

On again, past the sham castle and its castellated boat-house on Low 
Wray — High Wray above, with the pretty river, the Wray, forming Blellam 
Tarn on its way — and in by Anthony Wilson's Bay, so called because one 
Anthony Wilson once kept his boat there ; by meadows with their green 
feet in the lake, and by small wind-worn trees on the tops of small wave- 
worn crags ; by lines of grey stone wall and grey wood palings against the 
green copsewoods ; with ever the crag and the fell and the moor, and the 
tops of Wetherlam and the Old Man towering over Heald Brow, forming 
the framework of the whole. But the intermediate mountains, and indeed 
most of the hills, are strangely dwarfed seen from the breast of this long 
and narrow lake. In the Belle Grange Woods — with their wealth of silver 
birch or "birk," their black plumed junipers which are so often miscalled 
"savins," as sycamores are generally "maples," — the lake-side road comes 
creeping down to the water's edge: "up-bank" to Wray, "down-bank" to 
the Ferry. And as we passed the sun flashed out in a sudden glare and 
fell on the pretty island of Saint Mary, or Lady Holm, which once belonged 
to Furness, and where, in the time of Henry VIII. , was a chapel dedicated to 
Our Lady and service duly performed, by a monk of Furness, within, but which, 
since then, has passed from decay to total obliteration; and that wild and 
sudden sunlight almost dazzled us as it flashed full on another group of scarlet 
cloaks sitting on a felled white tree, naked of its bark. Then we came to the 

13 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

Waterloo Gardens where the daffodils (" Lent lilies " or " flocks ") grow wild 
for the universal colouring of Easter " pace eggs,"''^ but where the most notice- 
able thing at this present time was the crimson foam of apple blossom tossed 
up over the wall : and full in front were Curwen's Isle^ and all the smaller 
islands 9 clustered like a band of broken jewels between the two promontories 
of the Ferry House and the Ferry Nab. We landed at the Ferry House, 
and struck off into the woods full of globe flowers by the lake side, and of 
yellow poppies by the wood wall ; of hyacinths beneath the trees ; of the 



■^ A corru]3tion of pasclie or paschal. 

^ Once called Longholme, and, still more anciently, Wynandermere Island. " Amongst 
the escheats in the 21 Edward III. there is an order, that the wood in the Island of 
Wynander Mere, called Brendwood (that is, firewood, from the Saxon brennan, to burn), 
shaU not be several, but comraon to all the free tenants of Kirkby in Kendal, and of 
Stirkland, Crosthwaite, Croke, and others, as well to depasture all their cattle, as to take 
hausbote and heybote at their will, without view of the foresters." This island was the 
scene of the famous siege wliicli Major Robert Pliilipson — Robm the Devil, by more 
familiar baptism — the Cavalier leader, withstood from Colonel Briggs, then Parliamentarian 
major and magistrate at Kendal. Robin bore the press for ten days gallantly ; and then, 
the siege of Carlisle being raised, his brother Huddleston PhUipson, of Croke, the owner of 
the proiDerty, got together a band of men, and relieved liim. The next day, being Sunday, 
Major Robert put himself at the head of a party of horse, and rode off to Kendal ; passed 
the watch, and into the church, where he rode up one aisle and down another, looldng for 
his enemy. But Colonel Briggs, by good luck to himself, had not attended church to-day, 
so Robin rode out empty-handed, when the congregation, recovering from their stupor, made 
a dash at liim as he passed out. One cut liis saddle-girths, but paid for liis act mth his 
life ; and then Robin, clappiag the girtliless saddle on to liis horse, galloped off, slashing 
his way through the armed crowd ; and so got safely back to the island on the lake, more 
than ever " Robin the Devil " after the feat. He was lolled at the battle of Waslrford, in 
Ireland. 

^ There are ten in this centre group ; Rough Holm and Lady Hohn, Hen, Hawse, and 
Thompson's Holms, two Lily-of-the-Valley Hohns, Curwen's Isle, and Crow Hohn — our 
little golden boss — and Berkshu-e Isle, somewhat lower down. Still more towards the foot, 
and close in shore, are Ling Holm and Grass Holm, Silver Hohn, and Blake Holm Island ; 
and up at the head arc Seamew's Crag, Bee Holm, and Green Love ; but most of these are 
only like small tufts of gold set in the steel plate of waters, scarcely to be called islands at 
aU ; and some are only rocks. 

14 



WINDERMERE. 

curved crozier heads of the sprouting bracken ; of young foxglove spathes, 
thick, downy, and as yet flowerless ; of tufts of mountain fern like Indians' 
head-dresses ; of trailing brambles and yet more delicate sprays of wild- 
raspberry ; of bird's-eye, blue and lustrous ; of violets and wood-sorrel ; of 
lady's-mantles, green, gold-spotted ; of delicate wind-flowers and starry 
stitchwort, — full of all manner of sweet wood-flowers ; and then, returning, 
we saw two large carts and two large horses put into the ferry-boat, which 
a man nearly as large rowed leisurely across, according to the mode and 
manner of the place. 

The lake was bright but opaque ; slaty where the lighter clouds were 
reflected in it, steely where the darker. When the sun came out it glinted 
on the waves in broken glitter and the shine was reflected in the water below ; 
when there was no sun the under-side of the ripple was black. . There was 
no reflection to-day, save at the edges of the quietest and most deeply indented 
bays, where the water was an olive-brown in which the trees looked blackened 
masses without break or detail; but the pebbles gleamed bright and many- 
coloured, and the fish passed like streaks of light as they hurried over the 
rocks and stones. Yet, save in these still bays, the whole lake was of a 
dull, grey, troubled hue, and the flow of the waves was troubled too. But 
now they got darker in the dip and whiter in the crest and deeper in the 
curve. Up at the head of the lake black rain-clouds were gathered, with 
ragged edges torn and trailing, blotting out the farther mountains and 
throwing a smoke-coloured veil over the nearer. The water darkened and 
rose under the wind, with a wilder clash in its stroke and a fiercer hurry 
in its flow ; and the waves dashed against the boat which rocked and strained 
at each blow, while the spray flew over us, and the curling crests broke down 
the sides and swept across our feet. We were driven as if in a rapid stream, 
the oars scarcely plied at all ; but the storm flew faster than we, and we were 
soon overtaken. 

We swirled on, past Storr's Point and the bobbin-mills at the mouth of 
Cunsey Beck; Grass Holm, close to the bay, was passed, and another point, 

15 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 



scarcely discernible ; for now we could see neither hill nor wood ; the storm 
had won the race, and we were in the midst of a wild waste of blinding rain 
and stinging hail, of surging waves and sheeted mist. The mountains on 
either side disappeared as by enchantment, and there was nothing in the 




whole universe but our frail skiff — far too frail for the lake — and the lashed 
waves leaping under the hail and the wind ; nothing but the tossing water 
and the driving rain and the shroud of angry hail. In less than half an 
hour the storm passed ; and then all the hills stood out in the sun as clear 
and bright as if of glass, while the ghost-like wrath of cloud and mist hurried 
on — the sun shining on its back as it went, giving it the appearance of a 
solid body. The wind passed with it, and the waves sank back into a network 
of rippling lines, with just an under-swell heaving up from beneath in long- 
smooth curves, too smooth to break into crested edges. The woods glittered 
and sparkled in the sun, each dripping branch a spray of golden light, and 
the light was married to the loud music of the birds flowing out in rivulets 
of song. Countless flies shot through the air and vibrated on the water, 
and the fish leaped up to catch them, dimpling the shining surface with 
concentric ripples and throwing up small jets of light in the smooth black 
bays. Every crag and stone and line of wall and tuft of gorse was visible 
on the nearer hills, where the colouring was intense and untranslateable ; and 
on the more distant mountains we could see, as through a telescope, the 
scars on the steeps, the slaty shingles and the straight cleavings down the 
sides, the old grey watercourses threaded now with a silver line — those silver 

16 



WINDERMERE. 

lines, after the storm, over all the craggy faces everywhere ; we could see 
each green knoll set like an island among the grey boulders, each belt of 
mountain wood, each purple rift, each shadowed pass ; slope and gully and 
ghyll and scaur, we could count them all glistening in the sun or clear 
and tender in the shade, while the sky was of a deep pure blue above, and 
the cumulus clouds were gathered into masses, white and dazzling as marble, 
and almost as solid-looking. 

And over all, and on all, and lying in the heart of everything, warming, 
creating, fashioning the dead matter into all lovely forms, and driving the 
sweet juices like blood through the veins of the whole earth, shone the 
glad sun, free, cloudless, loving — life of the world's life, glory of its glory, 
shaper and creator of its brightest beauty. Silver on the lake, gold in the 
wood, purple over the hills, white and lazule in the heavens — what infinite 
splendour hanging through this narrow valley ! — what a wealth of love and 
beauty pouring out for the heart of all nature and the diviner soul of man ! 




17 




HEAD Ob STOC,K:GBrt-£»-* 



WALKS ABOUT AMBLESIDE 



CHAPTEK II 



Many and beautiful are the walks about Ambleside : walks within a reason- 
able distance for any fair j^edestrian, and which all but very fine ladies, or very 
delicate ones, may take without too much fatigue, and without risk or danger 
if they are but moderately careful. First, there is Stockghyll Force, just 
at the back of the town ; a rough unspoiled bit of rugged beauty, happily 
for the lake-world scarcely able to be spoilt even by Improvers, so imprac- 
ticable is it and so wild. 

Over rocks and stones, brawling and leaping in its imprisoned strength, 
the river rushes on in its mountain vigour — past the bobbin-mill, where the 

18 



WALKS ABOUT AMBLESIDE. 

barked "stags' antlers" and "antediluvians" go, and where j-ou may stand 
on the narrow plank that does duty for a bridge, and, if you have lost, any 
one among the rocks, fancy you hear their groans behind you — past the town, 
and Miller-bridge just below the town, where it makes its last leap before sub- 
siding, spent and dwindled, into the tranquil existence of the Eothay ripphng 
through the meadows to the lake. Traced up beyond the mill, following the 
wild path of rock and running water and twisted tree-roots — the rocks below 
getting larger and more broken, the rift between them deeper and sharper — 
the roar of 'the waters louder, and the rush more fierce and rapid — close 
to where an old tree bends over the ravine, with its mossy roots thrust 
through and through the pathway, while all its weight of stem and branches 
is flung across the rift — there you come upon the " loosening silver " of the 
fall, with its forked double leap of seventy feet, and its thousand little 
cataracts below. 

In the centre, and splitting up into four what else Avould have been one 
unbroken sheet, is the obstructing rock, its bordering of vivid green marking 
the point to where the waters flow in fullest seasons, and its old scarred face 
grey and naked in the centre. Down below the leap are quiet pools where 
the water fairies live ; and pools not quite so quiet which the passing rush 
of the torrent disturbs if it does not penetrate ; and desolate wastes of 
pebbles lying dry and many-coloured in the sun ; and rocks which the 
water never wholly covers but is forced to leave midway, falling like a 
mantle from their shoulders neither crowning nor concealing ; and others 
over which it is just able to lip with an effort and an almost visible strain, 
as of actual nerve and muscle, each wavelet seeming as if it must fall 
back before it reaches the edge, but each finally conquering and fretting 
painfully over ; and others, with an unchanging crest of foam as the waters 
dash on triumphantly, burying them body and soul beneath their flow, and 
planting that crest of foam as a mark of their victory — types, all three, of 
the power of the will and its several degrees of conquest and tyranny in life. 
Through the breaks in the wood may be seen the purple hills, and in the 

19 D 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

crevices of the rock, windflowers and young ferns ; and, for those who have 
stout nerves, and knoAv the pattern of the thing they seek, the pyrola media, 
a rare growth of the Winter-green, found only among the rocks in the centre 
of the falL But for every one there are sweet spring-flowers in the sheltered 
corners, and glimpses of the purple hills among the green. 

On a clouded day, rock and river and hill beyond are all soft and tender 
and subdued, with no angles or sharp outlines any^^dlere ; but when the 
sun comes out, the hills look shimmery in the light and the waters are 
blinding and gem-like ; and every pebble in the waste places, and every tuft 
of moss or clinging lichen, every channel worn by the water, and every furrow 
traced by the rain, is seen as distinctly as if it was a picture of mosaic work. 
Indeed, the Avhole thing looks like mosaic ; meaning by that, startling 
contrasts of colours and no continuity of sweep or shading, not even in the 
line of the Fall itself. The Stock, which separates the parishes of Windermere 
and Grasmere, comes chiefly from the barren heart of Eed Screes up by 
Kirkstone Pass : a desolate birthplace for so beautiful an outcome ! Bound 
about both Force and Ghyll is a charming day's ramble, with just enough 
of difficulty and danger ^ to delight a toAvn-bred tourist, and put a fine white 
feather in his mountain-cap. 

The Force and Wansfell Pike may be "done" in succession. Properly 
undertaken, this rather large grassy slope — this moderate mountain of only one 
thousand five hundred and ninety feet — is nothing ; but, attempted up his 
ridgy back and not along his softer shoulder, he is rather a tougher matter ; 
still, not tough in absolutes, according to the law of mountain nature. As 
you ascend. Red Screes comes out in rude majesty, the desolate way of Kirk- 
stone Pass winding between him and Broad End : Loughrigg, rich and 



' And yet there is danger, especially to the rash and over-confident. A fine athletic 
young man, in the very prime of his life and flower of his strength, lost his life at the Force 
wliile we ■\^'ere there. Looldng for ferns, he overbalanced himself and fell — dashed into 
eternity in a second among the rocks. 

20 



^A^\LKS ABOUT AMBLESIDE. 

beautiful, shows Silver How behind, apparently at the foot of Crinkle Crags ; 
and between Crinkle Crags and Bowfell, Scawfell's steep head appears like a 
dark point against the sky. You see the Eydal mountains, and where Ease- 
dale lies behind the Pikes, and where the Stake Pass leads over Langdale to 
Borrowdale. Then as you go higher, Kydal-mere comes into view ; and, a 
little higher still, lying behind an intervening point of Loughrigg, Grasmere 
water, looking as if it might be a continuation of the Eydal lake ; the Eothay 
winds gently through the meadows, and Brathay comes down more masterfully 
round by the foot of Loughrigg. 

The sheep-dogs are gathering the sheep on the mountains ; and you will 
probably meet an old Wordsworthian shepherd with his staff and shepherd's 
hat, with whom you stop and talk — not to much enlightenment of your 
wits ; Avhile the lambs wilfully lose themselves like wayward children, then 
bleat passionately for rescue, and the sheep — those most phlegmatic of all 
living mothers — answer with a temperate compassion, calmly confident in the 
providence of lambs. A few cows are dotted about in beautiful ordering of 
colours ; for the rich brown carries out the gold of the trees, and the slate- 
colour goes into the blue of the sky, and the white comes out as high light 
on the green, with much telling effect. On the fell itself you have to 
encounter all manner of bogs of varying intensity of boghood ; and if you 
choose a way of your own, heedless of the authorized path, you must scale an 
endless succession of stone walls, with such lightness of limb or heaviness of 
muscle as nature and training ordain ; but, by time and patience and the 
philosophy of never minding, the last barrier is scrambled over, the last bog 
tramped through, and the last stiff bit overcome ; and then your labours are 
rewarded. For suddenly you burst upon the lake lying below, Avitli its 
waistband of islands and its girdle of hills ; while far away to the right, out 
against the sky, lies a broad line of golden light — the sea and Duddon 
sands. To the left is the winding thread of the Kent Eiver ; to the right is 
Esthwaite Valley — Coniston and Black Combe beyond. Wrynose is next to 
Wetherlam, and Scawfell stands up somewhat more distinctly than before, 

21 



THE LAKE COUNTKY. 

but still only peeping over the shoulders of Bowfell. Blellam lies in the 
dip behind Low Wray, and the Brathay Valley and Little Langdale steal up 
and away into the mountains. The crags, which are so grand when you 
stand below them, are now dwarfed to molehills ; and beyond the head of 
Rydal rises a troubled sea of mountains for all present use of indistinguishable 
baptism. A steamer is on the lake, and the railroad is to the left, to remind 
you that you are not quite alone with God and nature ; but that, down below, 
the busy heart of man is toiling, and his hand is fighting, for toys and 
gewgaws — for which you, too, do your share of toil and turmoil in the great 
battle-field of the world. 







SWEDEN BBIDGB 



By a pretty home-like road in the beginning, but soon going off into stones 
and loneliness and rough walking, with a lovely view of Rydal-mere — loveliest 
when its waters are flushed with the burning sun— on, in ever-increasing 
wildness, till the music of a stream is heard from the depths of a wooded rift 
far below — wild crags about, and wilder clouds above — there lies the Scandale 
beck, tearing down that narrow gully called the Scandale valley. Every now 
and then a glimpse of the waters down in the rift is to be had ; but the rough 
road does not follow the course of the stream very closely, and it is only when 
Sweden bridge, which spans the stream higher up among the falls, is reached, 

22 



WALKS ABOUT AMBLESIDE. 

that a full view of its beauty can be had. But here is repayment for the long 

rough walking among loose stones and over boggy places and through 

uncounted mountain streams stretching across the path— repayment for false 

steps on slippery rocks, and for ancle-deep plunges into sweeping streams — 

repayment for even the heavy shower that has fallen between whiles — by the 

rich clusters of bird's-eye primrose starring the watery way, and by the beauty 

of the scene. In front are the steep mountain sides without house or 

tree, barren and bare save where stone walls enclose a gi-eener plot 

where sheep and cattle are feeding ; and behind, is the wild torrent coming 

down by Rydal Head, and resting in a broad pool beneath the little bridge 

before making its headlong journey onward. The stones are waterworn in 

cups and hollows, honey-combed some of them and white as bleached bones ; 

and the waters dash impetuously against them, with that restless look of force 

imprisoned which a mountain stream always has ; and the little bridge itself is 

one of the quaintest in the country. 

Leaving the bridge to the left, you take a sheep-track which soon widens 
out into a green lane between stone fences, through the treacherous swamps of 
which, and its thousand rills bursting over on all sides, you walk to where the 
lane ends and the living wall of mountain begins. For you come out literally 
against a mountain ; face to face with a conical, steep, bare bank, flanked on 
each side by banks still steeper and more bare, over which, however, you can 
find a path that will lead you down to Brother's Water and Kirkstone 
Pass lying on the other side. Or rather you must make the path you will 
not find. Through the one unending bog that it is, more especially if 
after rain, — up the steep ascent — over the crags — fording the streams 
swollen to quite tumultuous torrents — plashing through water all the 
way to the small stretch of level ground on the top, granted as a breathing- 
space before the descent is begun — this is what your expedition to Scandale 
Beck may end in, if you are adventurous and brave. And now you must 
clamber down as you best can. Barren screes, utterly unscaleable, hem you 
in on both sides, so that you must needs find a way doAvn this sharp descent, 

23 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

for none other is to be had. And in time, by dint of courage and firm 
footing, you splash down as you splashed up, and drop into the Patterdale 
road just above Brother's Water. 

Calm and still lies this lonely lake at the foot of the Patterdale moun- 
tains — a lonely lake at the foot of lonely mountains, cut off from the rest 
of the world, and of no account in the history of the time. The seagulls, 
so often in sullen flight above the black waters, only add to the soli- 
tude ; and seen for the first time, and unexpectedly, in the solemn grey 
of evening, the place looks the very home of desolation, — a witch-haunted 
mere whence is no beyond and no return, and where life and hope are 
caught like wandering children, and held imprisoned for ever. But now, 
leaving Brother's Water behind, toil up Kirkstone Pass to where the Kirk 
stones look like a ruined church in the distance, and the starry and the mossy 
saxifrage are in long white lines by the wayside ; up through unutterable 
desolation to the highest inhabited house in England. From here the road 
down to Ambleside lies between stone walls, which the parsley fern fringes 
with its tender green. Wansfell, on the left, is gilded with the setting sun, 
but old Red Screes lies grimly in deep shadow ; scarred, furrowed with water- 
courses where the winter torrents plough their way into the very heart of the 
rock, barred with grey stone walls, and strewn with loose shingle and scattered 
boulders. Down below lies Windermere, rich and calm, her lake-side moun- 
tains, gentle hills, her islands specks, and all her blue expanse asleep 
in the evening sun ; and the contrast between the wildness just passed 
through, and this quietness beyond, is more than can be expressed 
by words. Looks may tell it, and a few broken expressions— the flush on 
the cheek and the moisture in the eye ; but no conceivable amount of 
epithets, and no number of graven lines. Kirkstone is one of the first 
passes to be seen. There are others wilder and steeper and grander, and 
even more deserted of life ; but these are only footways, or at the best pony 
paths for the strong-headed ; Kirkstone is a practicable ordinary coach road 
— a good, broad, substantial highway on which you may drive your carriage 

24 



WALKS ABOUT AMBLESIDE. 




and pair with ease ; but, perhaps without exception, the most desolate and 
^^^ violently wild of all the coach - 

roads in England. Turning 
back when well down the pass, 
the white road is seen wind- 
ing up in a long serpentine 
track, sharper and sharper 
in its curves and wilder in 
its way as it nears the top, 
as if going off to eternal 
desolation and the end of all 
' ' human things. 

In another walk you may take in order the Eoman Station, the 
Brathay, Loughrigg Tarn (" Diana's Looking-glass "), Elterwater, and 
Loughrigg Fell ; a rich programme for a few hours' walking. This Station, 
formerly held to be the Dictis of the Notitia, but which Wright says was 
Alonse, — in Camden's time " the carcase of an ancient city, with great 
ruins of walls still remaining scattered about," and which others, later, 
speak of as "a castrum, a parallelogram of 396 feet by 240" — is now 
a ploughed field, with a slight depression in the centre, and a raised 
slope all round ; a formation still visible, though so many hundred years 
have passed since it was first tilled and ploughed, and flattened by wind 
and rain, yet even, to this day, evident to the most careless observer to 
be something not usually met with in potato-fields. Signs of the ditch, 
too, are traceable on one side ; as also a dark meandering track along the 
meadow where the course of the Rothay was turned for the uses of the 
camp; and still across the head of the lake is the great square stone 
pavement, as if for the foundation of a harbour — the only bit of stone 
bottom in the lake, the rest being mud. And, though no more gold" or 

^ In the library of the University of Oxford is a collection of coins found here, given 
bv the Braithwaites. 



25 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

silver coins, rusty swords, brass eagles, sepalcliral urns, or tesselated 
pavements^ are to be found, yet broken shards of red Roman pottery, 
and bits of old Roman cement, and small fragments of freestone with 
illegible inscriptions on them, are yet to be turned up ; and a careful and 
thorough search would, doubtless, bring even more hidden treasure to light. 

This station* was certainly, as Wordsworth says, established here as a 
check on the passes of Kirkstone and Dunmail Raise, Hard Knot and 
Wrynose ; whence the wild Brigantes sometimes came pouring down, waking 
the Romans from their day-dreams, and making the old mountains echo 
to sounds more discordant than the blare of the evening trumpet or the 
song of the evening meal. How the Mariuses and the Manliuses must 
have cursed their gods which sent them to such lonely places, away from 
the blue skies, the vineyards and the olives, the gardens and the fountains, 
of their own native Italy ! How they must have sighed for the pleasures 
of Rome again ! — for the amphitheatre and the gorgeous processions — for 
the games and the sacrifices and the pomp of imperial majesty — for the 
shining tresses of Julia and the perfumed robes of Lesbia — for the love 
and the glory, and the home more noble than all, with its matron and 
its young citizens, left behind ! Little they cared for the stern beauty of 
this desolate Brigantia, this land of wolves and wild beasts and men even 

^ Curwen's island, too, had certain remains, showing that some Roman of taste — 
perhaps the officer in command — had once made it his home, and had cared for it enougli 
to decorate and embeUish it. For when, in 1774, a Mr. Enghsh rebuilt the house, " in 
cuttmg a large drain on the west part of the building, to take away the wash from different 
parts of it, into the lake, were found several pieces of lead and old iron, and a gxeat number 
of old bricks. About six feet deep they dug through several old drains, and a hearth was 
found in a perfect state. They found, at the same time, several pieces of old armour. In 
levelling the ground on the north of the buildhig they dug through a beautiful pavement 
curiously paved ■with pebbles of a small land. They also dug through several curious 
gravel walks." 

* One paved road, still traceable beneath its Iyer of mud, branched off from this 
castrum to Keswick, by Grasmere; another to Patterdale, by Kirkstone, meeting the other 
road on High Street, and so on to Kenda and Eavenglass. 

26 



WALKS ABOUT AMBLESIDE. 

wilder than the beasts, where they were sent simply to subdue but in 
nowise to enjoy ; little they noted of the march of the clouds or the 
sunset triumphs in the sky, of the shadows lying softly on the summer 
lake or the grandeur crowning the hoary heads of the winter crag's : the 
snow upheaped in fantastic shapes across the fells was only the pathway 
of beasts of prey and stealthy-footed savages to them ; the depths of the 
summer woods masked only death and danger, and a lurking Painted One 
crouching behind the leaves, with fierce passions in his heart and murder 
in his hand : — they hid no softening influences of love and beauty in their 
tender glades ; where now we wander thrilled to the soul by this mar- 
vellous beauty, the Roman soldier shivered with dismay or burned with 
the lust for blood, as nature had given him a strong heart or a weak. 
Britain was no Elysium for him in any district ; but in these northern 
parts he foretasted the pains of hell and Hades, and, doubtless, put the 
punishment to the account of his sins and the righteous anger of the gods. 
And now this reviled Brigantia is the favourite love-temple of the king- 
dom ; and more young lovers pass here into the gladness and security of 
marriage, than Rome ever sent soldiers to curse their unlucky stars which 
set them face to face with the desolation of the Brigantine lakes, and the 
lonely savagery of the mountain passes. Times change : it is a thankful 
echo — and we change with them ! 

From the station the road leads over the Rothay bridge, and on beneath 
the fell, to the side of the Brathay dashing itself noisily among its rocks. 
Very beautiful is the Brathay, gemmed with little islands of golden mari- 
golds and " lucken gowans " (globe-flowers) set in the midst of its troubled 
waters, as if they had dropped from heaven for the good of beauty alone— 
scarcely for the good of service ; very beautiful in its turbulence, in its richness, 
in its wilfulness and wayward wanderings, and quite different to the meek and 
tranquil Rothay, which has been tamed and pruned to a home and feminine 
existence, while this wilder stream shakes the hand of man from his neck, 
and rushes through the land bound only by the will of nature and the lavf 

27 E 2 



THE LAKE COUNTKY. 

of beauty. The two rivers are like the man's life and the woman's ; but they 
meet in the quiet meadows at the end, and there flow, undivided, calm, and 
strong, into the oblivion of the still greater life beyond. 

Perched on a rock, its feet besprinkled with flowers and the mountain 
wood clothing its sides, is the Brathay Church ; more like a church of the 
old time than of the present, for the unwonted picturesqueness of its site 
and the isolation in which it stands ; a beacon of the light rather than its 
home — calling not indwelling ; and below it is the bridge flung across the 
stream under the dropping branches of the trees. Winding beneath the 
fell all green and gold and brown — catching lake-like views of the river 
now broadening out between its level banks — you go forward into the new 
valley opening before you — Skelwith Valley, with the cleft Pikes seeming 
at its head, but far beyond. Up a brant bit of road, and through a ragged 
lane with a watercourse dribbling over the stones and a carpet of purple 
butterwort to walk on, into a field blue with bird's-eye and crimsoned with 




dwarf red rattle, and there lies the tarn, sleepy and still, in the hollow of 
a green grass basin. The water is absolutely unruffled, save where the leaping 
fish sprinkle it with sprays and circlets of light; and the grand old Pikes 
are mirrored in it with a deeper purple in their shadows, while the gleam 
of light that takes the edge of Scawfell and falls across the chasm 
where Dungeon Ghyll is to be found, is translated into gold in its waters. 



28 



WALKS ABOUT AMBLESIDE. 

Dark banks of sullen clouds, touched into burning by the living sun, hang 
above the hills, but far above and beyond them ; while the rays break through 
the lighter "curl clouds" and pour down across the sky, till all the farther 
mountain-heads are lost behind a veil of gilded mist, as if it were a film of 
gold-dust between you and them. 

Partly through woods rich in their spring scents, and partly through 
the bounteous meadows, follow now the road to Skelwith Force, on the way 
to Elterwater. A perfectly beautiful, if scarcely to be called a noble, Force, 
this of Skelwith; beautiful rather for its accessories than in itself — richer 
in the chased setting than in the gem — but lovely, as a fair woman is lovely 
when her beauty is enhanced by grace. As the waters leap among the rocks — 
the sun shining on the fantastic sprays flung up into its face, or on the 
white plumes of the cascades tossed down into the river^ — the golden leaves 
mirrored in the quiet pools and the green wood throbbing to the ceaseless pulse 
of the waters, — it is as much like fairy-land as anything to be met with. 
And as you sit there old dreams and poems of Queens of Faery, of Yiviennes 
smoothing their silky shining tresses, of Titanias wilful and blinded, and of 
merry Midsummer's Night Dreams, crowd tenderly upon you ; for there are 
some places that are witch-haunted, some that are nymph-haunted, others 
that are full of elves and fairies, and others eloquent with the echoes of 
knightly romance and noble chivalry ; and this special waterfall — this Skelwith 
Force — is full of faery life, and rich in loveliness if not in heroism. And 
all the more penetrated with these sweet and subtle fancies, because of the 
pastoral simplicity of Loughrigg Tarn, and the gTim associations of the 
Koman camp, just seen. 

Now you go on by the side of the Brathay to Elterwater. Indeed, Elter- 
water is only the Brathay itself, making three resting-places, or large pools 
strung together, at the outlet of the Langdale valley, before it goes on again 
as a river should ; but, as was said before, not yet christened by its name 
of Brathay until it has strung its watery beads and issued forth by that 
reedy delta at the end. A rather dead and disheartening place this, pretty 

29 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

and peaceful but without life or motion. Even the river, which elsewhere 
is so full of joy and the capricious grace of liberty, trails here in a chained 
and melancholy kind of way, and the three pools have nothing more vigorous 
to do than to reflect, in perfect stillness and silence, the outer forms of the 
mountains set round them, and the marvel of the sunlight beyond. And 
when the sun pours down a torrent of glory and colour, making the grey 
of the hills purple, and the metallic shine of the buttercups a hyacinthine 
orange, flooding the meadows with rose-tints and gold, and blurring all the 
outlines by excess of light — when the day's cup is fdled to the brim, and 
the yellow flood overflows with largest power and unrestraint — then Elterwater 
is a place to meditate by mournfully, asking oneself an bono ? and to what 
end this pageantry of loveliness, which so few can see, and still fewer under- 
stand when they do see it ? The intense solitude and irrepressible mourn- 
fulness of feeling and thought resulting, of certain of the remoter lake country 
places, must be felt to be understood. And when once felt, never possible 
to be forgotten. 

When you have dreamt out your dream, then go through a young wood 
full of yellow pimpernel and wood sanicle of healing power : ^ full to moss- 
like closeness of growth : where are exquisite efi'ects, and glorious views, and 
walls that must be clambered over, and rough gates and uncouth stiles every- 
where, and where you are sure to find yourselves in places in which you 
have no earthly business to be ; but you will finally set yourselves straight, 
and strike the right road for a pathless scramble over the fell. 

And such a scramble ! The plovers wheel over you mth their pitiful 
cry and their heavy flight, and the young lambs start bleating from their 
couching-places behind the grey rocks bordered with the pretty little parsley 
fern, or bound from sheltered nooks where the stag's-horn moss spreads its 
elastic branches, and which the young junipers fence in and the bent heads 
of the bracken carpet. On you must go ; up one craggy knoll after 

^ " He that hath sanicle iieecleth no surgeon " — an old herbal proverb. 

30 



WALKS ABOUT AMBLESIDE. 

another, each seeming to be the last, but always showing another further and 
higher, which must for shame, and the mountaineer's pride of perseverance, 
be surmounted ; down grassy slopes, smooth and soft as a well-kept bowling- 
green, lying between high grassy banks utterly impassable, down— down — 
with a perilous swiftness, till the slope breaks suddenly off into a rift, and 
you stand some hundred feet above eternity. Back again, up more last crags 
which never are the last, through pale yellow swamps with scarlet mosses 
set in their hearts and the graceful butterwort on its frosted leaves about 
their edges ; and, if you are fortunate, to a black peat tarn, deep and unsavoury 
but glorified with exceeding glory — beautified with a living beauty, which has 
to be won at any cost — its black unsightliness clothed and veiled and trans- 
formed to splendour by the loveliness of the marsh trefoil, " the fringed 
water-lily" growing there in the wild with more than garden grace. Care 
nothing for the black, unsavoury bog-water. In for the prize, no heed given 
to soaked feet or dripping hems — in, even up to the mid leg, and think your- 
selves well rewarded by a fragile handful of the flowers, one of the loveliest 
wild-flowers in England ! 

The fells are beautiful everywhere. Those over by Wansfell, and to the 
source of the Skelghyll, and through the green road between stone walls, 
down into Troutbeck,^ though not so varied as the Loughrigg Fells, are yet 

^ Troutbeck is to Ambleside what Borrowdale is — or was — to Kesmck, tbe land of 
Gotliam, upon whose mse men is saddled every absurdity of the district — the scapegoat 
bound to bear the weight of all the rude mt afloat. In a few years this, too, will be done 
away with, and pretty, dirty, neglected Troutbeck will be cleaned, schooled, and orna- 
mented, and made fit company for ambitious Windermere and respectable Ambleside. It is 
worth seeing, however, in its dirt and neglect; its tumbledown cottages — not one among 
them all straight accordmg to the plumb-hne — with ivied walls and casements patched AA'ith 
rags and paper ; its one curious chateau-Uke house, with its formal com'tyard, and formal 
terrace, and formal yew-trees clipped and closely shaven; its destitution and peniuy; 
all so grandly enframed that its very poverty becomes a charm the more. It is one of 
the real bye-hamlets of the lake district, picturesque, wild, dirty, diseased, whicli the 
prosaic architect and schoolmaster ■s\ill sweep aAvay before many years are gone. 

31 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

very grand in tlieii- noble solitudes — noble because useful though desolate, 
because fenced into natural fields where the birds find food, and the sheep 
and cattle pasturage, and the wild-flowers root themselves, and eyen moths 
and butterflies make their home ; noble because, though deserted and un- 
tenanted by humanity, they are still brought into the service of humanity, 
and give of their strength and their substance for the uses of the world. 
Great, calm, wave-like sweep these fells at the head of Troutbeck, where 
3^ou may wander for many hours, with no more variety of scene than what 
is to be had in the relative position of the mountains, or the need of climbing 
more and more stone walls rising everywhere against you. 

The path is rough and stony enough ; but who notes the rudeness of 
the way when the world is such as it is on a bright spring day — bright 
as the days here are after rain ? A bush with the sun shining through is 
a tree of golden flowers set upon purple stems ; the distant mountains towards 
Langdale are threaded with silver where the watercourses have filled; and 
the Rothay in her even line, and the Brathay in his far-off pools sun-flecked, 
break out into spaces of light as eloquent as speech. Crinkle Crags and 
Lingmell are dusky with light ; but Silver How has caught the shadow of 
a cloud, and is dark with tenderness, not gloom. Lougiirigg is radiant 
in the sunshine, and the lake is barred with silver or blue as the 
sun or the shadow falls. Going higher the Pikes come up — Pike o' Stickle 
split in two ; and little Blellam shows itself behind Low Wray like a 
piece of glass let into the green. The Ptoman Station at the head of the 
lake is to be clearly made out now between the Eothay and the wood 
below, its square form and brown colour — the potatoes not yet covering it 
— marking it from among the green fields. Now, over a thorny dyke, 
• down the darkest and loneliest of gipsy glens, through a newly-felled wood 
where the gi'ound is blue with hyacinths, darkening to purple when broad 
patches of meadow cranesbill hold the way instead — where ladies' mantles 
trail over the earth, and matted larch twigs make a carpet many feet above 
the o-round — up through this enchanted land over the fells to Troutbeck. 



WALKS ABOUT AMBLESIDE 




THE SOMAN STAIION 



Troutbeck, the smallest and most primitive of hamlets, has its own minute 
history, both authentic and legendary, as well as the best of them. It 
was the dwelling-place of Hogarth's'^ uncle, " Auld Hoggart," as he was 
called, a satirist, a poet, and an original, whose memory is still green in 
the vale, and who was by no means an ordinary individual, " He did as 
much good as a clergyman," was the report of one old lady, fondly mindful 
of the past however cloudy. And there was, besides, a clever and home- 
made genius, by name Julius CiBsar Ibbotson, who painted a noted sign, 
called the " Mortal Man ; " one mortal man being round and rosy-gilled, the 
other cadaverous and lean ; with this distich underneath : — 

" Oh, Mortal Man, that Hv'st on hread. 
How comes thy nose to be so red? 
Thou silly ass, that looks so pale, 
It is by drinking Birkett's ale ! " 



' The Hogarths, Hoggarts, or Hoggards, were rightfully of Kirkby Thore. The eldest 
brother was a yeoman at Bampton ; the second a ploughman at Troutbeck ; the youngest, 
Richard, the painter's father, was educated at St. Bees, and went up to London, where his 
son William was born, December lOth, KiOT. 

33 F 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

The Mortal Man still exists as a not too luxurious public-liouso ; but the 
famous sign has departed, having been taken away to a place near Cartmell, 
where it gradually faded out of existence altogether ; thus proving its own 
mortality without question. There were other local worthies beside the 
Hoggarts (generally pronounced Hoggartys) and Ibbotsons ; and, for one, there 
was Huddleston Philipson of Croke (brother to Eobin the Devil), who was 
the magnate of Troutbeck in his time. Charles I. gave him a park and 
estate there, as a reward for his devotion during the Civil War. Harriet 
Martineau says it was the same estate so cleverly obtained by a giant of the 
time of Edward VI., one Hugh Hird, or, as Clarke calls him, " Grilpin, the 
cook-lad of Kentmere, from his corcousness or corpulency," whose ordinary 
diet was " Porridge so thick that a mouse could walk over them^ dryshod, 
and the sunny side of a wedder — when he could get it." This Hird, " a man 
of amazing strength," "quite uncivilized, and knowing no law but strength," 
came begging his way to Troutbeck. There he found an empty house — one 
which had been forfeited to the Crown, and of which no one cared to 
take possession, it was so valueless. But it just suited Hugh, so he 
established himself in it forthwith. When a lawful tenant appeared, the 
giant prevented his entrance ; and being sent for to London, there to 
answer for his contumacy, exhibited to his Majesty such feats of strength 

^ Porridge is always plural. You " stir them vnth. a tliivel," and you " sup tliem " witli 
a goodwill, unless they are " smeuked" or " bishopped," or " a' lumps and dozzels like 
Nanny Haikin's butter ; " and you give them to yoiu' childer, for they are " serious grand 
things for making banging bairns." When made of barley-meal they are called " kittly 
shpdowns," and kittly slipdowns, eaten with fresh cream, are among the real luxuries of 
the north. Oatmeal porridge and oatmeal cake — haver bread — are very fair tasted. Even 
Fuller, who was not over fond of the north, does not despise oatcake. " While Wheat and 
Barley tnay seem but the adopted, Oates are the natural issue of this Country. Say not 
Gates are Horse-graine, and fitter for a stable than a table ; for besides that the meal 
thereof is the distmguishing form of Gruel or Broth from Water, most hearty and whole- 
some Bread is made thereof." Anciently none other was used north of the Humber ; and 
William the Conqueror gave the manor of Castle Bithan, in Lincolnshke, to Stephen Earl 
of Albermarle and Holdernesse, to supply his infant son with wheaten bread. 

34 



WALKS ABOUT AMELESIDE. 

— lifting a beam too heavy for ten ordinary men, tying two bows together 
and breaking them, and showing how he once drove back a party of 
Scottish moss-troopers with his own bow and arrows unassisted — that 
Edward offered to grant him any reasonable petition he might present. 
Whereupon Hugh prayed for the house at Troutbeck, the field behind for 
peat-turf for his fuel, and leave to cut what wood he liked in the new 
park; which, being granted, he lived happy all the rest of his life, dying 
at forty-two, pulling up trees by the roots. 

Troutbeck was once a place of some importance, and there is still a 
hill called Gallows How, where probably the old Barons at Kendal had a 
place of execution for their rebellious and misbehaving vassals ; and another 
place called Spying How, where was once a raise, which, when opened, was 
found to contain a kistvaen full of human bones. Were they the bones of 
the poor old Brigantes, listening in their woods to the ring of the Roman 
axe and the clang of the Roman hammer, as the victorious legions of 
Agricola marched over the mountain tops to join the cohorts at Concagium ? 
The valley, now so bare of trees, was once so thickly wooded that the old 
inhabitants used to say a squirrel could have passed from the lake side 
up to Thresthwaite Mouth without once touching the ground. It is at 
Troutbeck that we are told of the three hundred bulls, and three hundred 
bridges, and three hundred constables, belonging to the parish ; the 
explanation being that the township is divided into three Hundreds, and 
to each Hundred belonged a bull, a bridge, and a constable. 




FOUND AT AMBLJirjlDK 



.35 




KYDAL WATli B 



FROM AMBLESIDE TO KESWICK 



CHAPTER III 



Rydal/ where the Le Flemings live, is the oue bit of real aristocracy 
belonging to Ambleside. The whole valley was once a park for the entertam- 
ment of the lord, when he left his richer domains for a spell of vigorous 
north-comitry hunting; and though so long since disparked and turned to 
the ordinary purposes of food and fodder-bearing, still retains traces of its 
former richness and exclusiyeness, specially about the Hall, where the care- 
fulness of ownership has never been relaxed. There, the trees are trees of 
mere beauty and ornament, with no firewood in their twigs, no bobbins in 
their branches, no masts or tables, gate-posts or window-frames in their 
stems-trees, the only functions of which are to give shelter to the rooks; 



' Rydal is said by some to mean the rye-dale or valley, which is surely a sad straiiung 
of etymolooy • by others, among whom was Mr. AVordsworth, to be a contraction of Rothay- 
dale from" the river-a more hkely reading, seeing that the old name of the lake was 
Ro^^^hmere, which seems to have been from the same root as Rothay ; hence, by ehsnm 
and contraction, Rydal, for the vale. Black gives it as Rhydle, a passage place. 

36 



FROM AMBLESIDE TO KESWICK. 

the mossy lawn has been for centuries a lawn, put to no coarse ends of 
usefulness ; the meadows, where the cattle stand knee-deep in flowers and 
grass, seem as if they might have been just what they are now hundreds of 
years ago, when De Lancastre and De Eos" held high court and revel through 
the vale ; and through the whole estate lies that unmistakeable sign of 
ancient aristocracy which no money can purchase, and no art or science can 
supply. It all seems a lord's private property, where nature is elbowed out 
of court, and where meaner people exist by sufferance. 

The cottages are as trim and picturesque as if made of Dresden china 
for Madame d'Arblay's princes and princesses, while the Falls ^ — the famous 
Rydal Falls — are so pretty and well-arranged that surely their fittest place 
is the back scene of some pastoral opera, where the shepherds dress in 
velvet tights and silk stockings, and the shepherdesses dance in muslin and 
wreaths of roses ! Certainly they are pretty — but they have been so trimmed 
and cared for— the trees have been so artistically disposed — the vistas so 
cunningly contrived — the channels have been so scientifically deepened — the 
resting-basin so tastefully arranged — and the summer-house is such a bit 
of picturesque trick, that one loses all perception of nature, and cannot but 

^ The Rydal estate was granted by Margaret, widow of Robert de Ros, of Wurk 
Castle, to Roger de Lancastre, somewhere towards the end of the thirteenth century, the 
grant being confirmed by Edward I. in 1274. From Roger de Lancastre it passed to the 
Lancastres of Howgill ; and then, by the marriage of Isabella, coheir with Sir John de 
Lancastre, to Sir Thomas le Fleming, of Coningstone. These Le Flemings were the 
descendants of the famous Sir Michael le Fleming — " Flandrensis" — the relative of 
Baldwin, Earl of Flanders, brother-in-law to WiUiam the Conqueror, and a strict clansman 
of the King. Sir Michael was the ancestor of Lady Jane Grey. He was a famous man in 
his day : good against the Scots especially, and rewarded for his prowess m that direction, 
by the grant of several manors both in Lancashire and Cumberland : among them, 
Beckermet Castle, Aldingham Castle, and Coningstone Hall. Rydal Hall suffered much 
from the Parliamentary party ; the le Flemings remaming Catholic to the reigii of James II. 

^ There are two falls — the upper and the lower — situated in the Rydal Hall grounds, 
whicli you pay a fee to see. The way leads through the park meadow and outer 
gardens by a path of sin,giilar beauty and richness ; but all made and artificial— luxury and 
tlie eifeminacy of civilization stifling everything like natural growth or freedom. 

37 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 



regard those very elegant waterfalls as artificial 
altogether; to the extent of easily believing in a 
forcing pump or a steam-engine somewhere out of 
sight and hearing. They are like a wild fawn that 
has leaped the park-palings in her play across 
the moor, and has been caught, and led about 
among the young queens and kings, with a chain 
of flowers round her neck, and her hoofs shod with 
gold. She is very lovely in her tameness, and with all 
her old grace of limb and action ; but she is no 
longer the wild fawn with the mountain wind for 
her companion, and the mountain eagle for her 
playmate — she is only a caged creature now; well- 
fed and golden-shod, but — caged. And so the free 
mountain stream that ran joyously among the fern 
and about the rude rocks, uncared for and dis- 
regarded, when it gave that one sharp leap from 
off the fell, leapt into civilization and subjection — into flowery 
wreaths and mossy banks and all the luxuries of wealth and art ; 

but it is never the free mountain water again — never anything but the toy of a 

grand domain. And, for this reason of patent artificiality, the Rydal Falls, 

though sweet, are not entirely pleasing ; like something \\ aiped from its fiist pui- 

pose and perverted from its natural meaning. 
Pass across the road, from the Hall to 

the Mount where the most famous of the 

lake poets lived ; and see there the celebrated 

terrace-walks, the garden-steps, the porch 

with its seat, the mound, and the view ; 

see and admire ; for truly it is a poet's 

fitting home, — set against Nab Scar as 

its shelter, the steeps of Loughrigg in front, Helm Crag at its side, and 

38 





FROM AMBLESIDE TO KESWICK. 

the gentle little mere at its feet. The terrace-walk along Nab Scar, with its 
desolation sometimes left bare and naked to the sky, and sometimes clothed 
with fern and moss and Hchen, is very lovely-; lovely from the first step out- 
side the poet's garden, to the last by White Moss and the little pool of 
"fringed water-lily." And then the road must be taken; and Geasmere,* 
and the churchyard, and the daisied nook where lie the Wordsworth family 
in quietness and peace, with poor Hartley Coleridge near them in death, 
as he had been in life. That quiet little nook in the churchyard among 
the mountains, with all the burning fire of passion, the light of thought, 
and the tender weight of love that lie buried there — how one could dream 
away a working day in merely looking at those stones, and remembering 
against what manner of human life they have set their solemn seal of 
"For ever!" 

Of all the lake country villages Grasmere is the most picturesque and 
the likest one's ideas of the typical English home. It has no street, properly 
so called, but is a scattered collection of human habitations — cottages, shops, 
houses, mansions — each with its own garden or special plot of gi-eenery, how- 
ever small, and all for the most part standing apart and individual. The 
postman walks daily some eight miles in and about the village in the delivering 
of his letters ; which may give an idea of its scattered and therefore picturesque 
character. And perhaps more than any other, does it impress one with 
the feeling of peace and the absence of passion or even of suffering. Though 
not trimmed and decorated as the dainty Kydal hamlet, nor so evidently 



* Grasmere, Gresmere, Giismere — the mere, or lake, of the grise, or wild swme — was 

once a chapehy only, under the mother church of Kendal. The ecclesiastical j)atronage 

was sold by Henry VIII. to Alan Bellingham, of Levins and Helsington, Gaythorn and 

Fawcet Forest, treasiu'er of Bermck, and deputy warden of the Marches, he whose pmirdng 

motto was— 

" Amicus amico Alanus, 

Belliger BelUgero Bellinghamus." 

He resold it, in Elizabeth's time, for lOOZ. to the Le Flemings of Rydal. The manor was 
formerly included in that of Windermere. 

39 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

artistic and considered as the new town of Windermere, it has a certain 
well-to-do look about it — not as of fashion and luxury and a few large 
fortunes flaring out over all the rest like the dominant notes in an orchestra 
or the master colours of a picture — but in the quiet beauty and cleanliness 
everywhere, and the absence of sordid squalor even in the poorer cottages. 
It is full of flowers and green trees and pleasant meadows and lovely little 
lanes, and the signs of human care throughout ; but not of human care 
putting a luxuriant nature too fussily to rights. As the waters have made 
a halting-place at the foot of Red Bank and Fairfield, so man has halted 
here too, and finally has settled where he rested. This is the impression 
that you have of Grasmere, on your way from Ambleside to Keswick, as 
of a lovely halting-place, where industry has forced a living from nature, 
and not as if work had been lying there from the beginning which must 
needs attract hands, sooner or later, to itself. So sheltered and so peaceful 
is it, that even in the rugged winter time it does not look cheerless or dreary, 
while in the bright young spring, in the luscious summer, and in the ripe 
and lusty autumn, it is the pleasantest spot for lotus-eating, and dreaming 
in bye arbours of Armida's garden, to be found between Windermere and 
Lowes Water. Unimportant, uncommercial, unproductive, but serene, beautiful, 
and happy, it is like some gracious lady sitting by the wayside and off'er- 
ing milk to thirsty travellers. No costly wine in a jewelled goblet, and 
yet something more loving than water in a cup of leaves, it is the real 
sweet pastoral milk in the carved beechen cup that Grasmere gives — such 
as Virgil might have drunk when he sat with Tityrus under the spreading 
beech-tree, or listened to the rivalry of Damostas and Menalcas. It is the 
place for poets and lovers and the contented aged ; but scarcely for the 
adventurous or the restless. As indeed may be said of most of these lake 
country villages, bound in the quiet bondage of love and beauty, but leaving 
no space wherein the wilder soul may "rage and ramp." Eat then your 
summer's lotus at Glrasmere, but lay aside your life's armour while there, 
and think of no battles to be fought and of no victories to be won ! 

40 



FROM AMBLESIDE TO KESWICK. 




3EASMBRE— FROM LOUGHRIOG SIDE 



Helm Crag stands out now boldly, with Dunmail Raise winding between 
it and Seat Sandal — great sentinels of the pass — and the Lion and the Lamb 
as its crest. Wordsworth called those stones the Astrologer and the Ancient 
Woman, but they are more like the old designation from this side ; perhaps 
from the other side the poet's picture may come into clearer shape. 

" Above Helm Crag a streak half dead, 
A burning of portentous red ; 
And near that lurid ligiit, full A^ell 
The Astrologer, sage Sidrophel, 
Where at his desk and book he sits, 
Puzzling aloft his curious wits ; 
He, whose domain is held in common 
With no one but the Ancient Woman, 
Cowering beside her rifted cell. 
As if intent on magic spell. 
Dread pair, that, spite of wind or weather. 
Still sit upon Helm Crag together ! " 



At any rate the lines are good if the picture is less than exact, and poets 
have even more licence than artists. 

41 a 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

But now a white stream, foaming down the deep blue recess between 
Silver How and Helm Crag, makes you diverge from the main road, choosing 
White Bridge and Butterlip Meadows instead, and a rough paved way, as 
much water-course as way, with purple geraniums and spotted orchis set 
in golden kingcups among the sedges on either side. And by this rough 
way, getting still rougher and wilder as you go on, but with snatches of 
exquisite grace interleaved — the wildness to conciliate your rougher moods, 
and the grace to harmonize with your more loving — you finally reach and 
clamber up the rocky sides hemming in Sour-Milk-Ghyll Force, otherwise 
Easedale Force. 

A broken and tumultuous fall is this ; one fall indeed not, but a 
multitude of falls — a knotted string of cascades — rushing down the black 
rocks from the lonely tarn high up in the barren hills, and pouring out its 
life with as much of untamed wildness as the Eydal Falls have of artificiality. 
Nothing can be more thoroughly contrasted than these two waterfalls, so 
few miles apart and to be seen almost within the hour ; and of the two, 
surely the untouched natural life is the nobler and more beautiful. 

A little higher up, through reaches where the pale yellow moss is 
reddened with sundew, and where stag's-horn moss and club moss and 
the cock'scomb-shaped lycopodium complanatum give worlds of delight to 
those big boys and girls, the botanists, you come upon an amphitheatre, in 
the centre of which lies Easedale Tarn as it might be the arena. The 
outline is serrated like an elephant's tooth, and the sides are folded and 
wrinkled, and there is more the appearance here of landslip than in many 
other places, and a richer manner of natural beauty. It is especially lovely 
with the sunlight lying on every rock and stone — a cup-full of sunlight indeed, 
round which the mountains are as pure and full of colour as if they were 
of metal ; the tarn reflecting every image and adding while giving back. 
Then up to Codale Tarn, of course not by the gentler way — never take the 
gentler way — but up the very face of those wild Carr's Crags ; the true rocky 
scramble, with the true rocky incidents to give it proper pleasure — the ash- 

42 



FROM AMBLESIDE TO KESWICK. 

tree growing out from a rift, and bending over the stream — the rocks bleached 
and bony — the whitened skeletons of trees stripped of their leaves by the 
wind and the hail and the frost, never to be clothed again by the smi and 
the shower — the fling of ferns across the grey — all the dear old features of 
the craggy path, till you come to Codale Tarn, lying under the shadow of 
its own particular pike. Whence, if you have a mind, you may go to Stickle 
Tarn and Dungeon Ghyll, and down into Langdale, or over the Stake, as 
you will. To-day do none of these things ; turn back by the way you came, 
to the foot of Helm Crag; and passing among farmsteads and gentlemen's 
seats, shady narrow lanes, and fenced fields full of cattle, fall into the main 
road again at the pass of Dunmail Kaise.^ 

A dreary way enough lies before you ; with Grasmere, pretty, pastoral, 
sleepy, and green, bathed in the summer sunshine, the haymakers just beginning 
their pleasant labours, and the cows and sheep dotted picturesquely about its 
pasture lands. Helm Crag is now only a corner-stone of large dimensions, — 
the Ancient Woman and Sage Sidrophel taking the place of the Lion and 
the Lamb, as expected — and Steel Fell, sharp and straight as its name, rises 
with a threatening kind of front, behind it. You have passed Fairfield which 
has been so long your landmark ; but Seat Sandal flows out perpetually into 
new lines, ever rugged and rough both in form and dip, whatever the change 

^ Hutcliiiison has a very quaint theory respecting the growth and meaning of tiiis 
name, which we will give abridged so far as we can. Popular assembHes were called 
mallnms, afterwards mallum-motes, folk-motes, ward-motes, wittenage-motes. Justice used 
to be administered by the presiding Druid, sub Dio, -^vithin the circle of the ray, equal to 
GUI' bar: hence arraign (at ray in), arrested fat ray est). Even reUgio is raj^-ligio (bound by 
the ray). Near Cockermouth is the hill Muta or Moota, and on the top Moota-man. 
Carlisle assizes are stiU held in the mote or moot-hall, and we still moot a point. A 
general meetmg was a mallum-mote ; and in these motes every arrest or act passed was 
called dim-ivallo, the wiU done or enacted, our present parliamentary phrase the outgrowth 
of the same. Dun-mallard, near UUswater, and Dun-mail-raise, evidence the same thing. 
Dun in old law records is a hill, and DunmaUo was the law of the hill. Tliat heap at 
Dimmail liaise is our only monument, says Southey, and that doubtM, because it may be 
merely a division made between the two comities. 

43 G 9 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

of position. The Raise beck, which here divides Cumberland and West- 
moreland, makes sweet mountain music at the foot of Steel Fell, singing 
its noble song with a clear, loud, freeborn voice that stirs the blood within your 
veins almost as the blast of a trumpet might, till the highest point of the 
Pass is reached, and you come upon the ancient pile of stones, now welted 
together with fern and moss and covered with the sweet charities of time and 
nature, which, they say, marks the spot where the poor county king. Dun- 
mail, was buried, when he was defeated and slain by the Saxon Edmund, 
and his kingdom given to the Scottish Malcolm. As you descend and round 
the last spur of Seat Sandal, Helvellyn, stern and fervid, sweeps down its 
barren lines in terrible majesty of power ; the upheaved mountain wall to the 
west breaks into more distinctive members, and new vistas reveal themselves ; 
and then, towering up above all the rest, and a long way off, a dim blue top 
comes out from among the grey clouds, and the dim blue top is Skiddaw. 

Below lies the little lake of Thirlmere,^ with its two promontories bound 
together by a bridge,'^ shaped like a bridge of boats set stem to stern ; and 
you pass by, not through, the City of Wythburn, a miserable hamlet with 
nothing curious about it save its ambitious name, past Thrispot, and the 
humble little church belonging to the district — 

" Wytlieburn's modest house of prayer, 
As lowly as the lowliest dwelling — " 

well in keeping with the place and people. Rough Crag and Raven Crag — 
the last is one of those richly-wooded and ringleted-looking crags so often to 
be met with in the lake country — stand boldly forward on the west of 
Thirlmere, where also is the Haunted House and the terrible ghost-story 
as reported by Harriet Martineau. And quite to the left is a mountain 
shoulder, with the well-known features betokening the probability of a tarn 

® Thirlmere has many names, Leatheswater and Wj'thbumwater, and anciently Brack- 
mere. " At the foot of Wythbm'n fells lies Brackmere." — Gough's Camden. 
^ Said to be lloman, but more than doubtful. 

44 



FROM AMBLESIDE TO KESWICK. 

within the dip ; as indeed there is— Harrop Tarn, with Dohghyll'^ proceeding, 
and that noble mass of rock. Tarn Crag, overhanging. 

Go across the hoat-hke bridge to the west side of the lake, to where 
Lancey Falls are to be found among the trees and ferns : ^ not prettily tame, 
like the Eydal Falls — not with the same amount of passion and tumult 
in their rush, as in Sour-Milk Ghyll — but with an adorned luxuriance, a 
generous and graceful beauty, whether flowing through fairy nooks, or lost 
in shy entanglement of root and rock, or leaping out in bold cascades, 
laughing so that the old hills catch up the sound and fling it back with 
dimmer music — these seldom-visited falls are as worthy of odes and pictured 
praises as many others of which so much public account has been made. 
Feathered with woods but not obscured — craggy and wild but not bleak 
or bare — bank and jutting stone moss-covered and fern-adorned but not 
softened into effeminacy, or their natural beauty crippled by false art- 
dark, cool, lonely, and lovely, their wild grace at once rich and free, — it is 
time well bestowed to take an hour or two from the journey, and spend 
them in golden moments by the side of those falling waters. If it is a 
still day, Thirlmere lies absolutely unrippled, the reflection so entire that 
you cannot, at first sight, tell where the line of water begins, and what 
is real and what only repetition. These marvellously clear reflections 
are characteristic of Thirlmere, kept by Helvellyn from the east wind, and 
by its own crags from the west, closed up by Nathdale ^° Fell and the 

^ Under Bull Crags, not far from the ghyll, is a tall flat-topped stone, called the Justice 
stone, where the dalesmen of Wythburn, Legberthwaite, and St. John's-in-the-Vale, used 
to meet to settle public matters, such as the letting of the sheep-runs, repauing roads, &c. 
An old man now living at Wythburn remembers being taken by liis father to the last of 
these meetings. The stone is half-way between the city and Armboth, and nearly opposite 
the little promontory called Clarke's Lope, where one Clarke tried to get rid of his wife, 
but was drowned himself instead. 

^ Some rare ferns are to be found here : among them the asplenium idride, or gi'een 
spleenwort, a limestone fern gi'owing on a tliin vein of Umestone running through tliis district. 

'" Pronoimced Naddle. 

45 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

St. John's Vale hills against the north, and by Dunmail Raise from even 
the tender south; and wonderfully perfect they are. The rich and stately 
trees of Dalehead, the desperate front of Helvellyn, the bounding leap of 
Brotto's Grhyll, and Eagle Crag like a bird's wing — not in its sweep but in 
its grey striated lines fringed with growth of wood for feathers, — all by turns 
appear, loaded with additional colour in the mirror below, and all are suddenly 
swept out, as an artist would sweep out a picture with one stroke of his 
brush, when a small light breeze glides swiftly across the lake, and shakes 
it mischievously into smiles. 

Keep still to the left for Shoulthwaite Moss ; passing now under Eaven 
Crag — Great How, where Wordsworth's boys built their snow man, covered 
with trees, on the right ; Wanthwaite Fell, a lower shoulder of Helvellyn, 
still further to the right ; Nathdale Fell, which runs like a hog's back between 
the vales of Nathdale and Saint John, in front ; and beyond Nathdale the 
blue mass of Blencathra ; to be soon followed in full profile by Skiddaw. 
Turn back before the scene is changed, and take in the whole of the lake, 




THIRLMEBB 



winding and river-like, to the very foot of the Raise ; a view to be well 
noted when seen, and not the less noted because not one of the more popular 
or widely known. As you descend, the Castle Rocks appear — Green Crag 
properly — where the Bridal of Triermain was held ; and where now, instead 

46 



FROM AMBLESIDE TO KESWICK. 

of Arthur's love and Guendolen's proud beauty, instead of the revehy and 
knighthood of the magic time, is only a heap of cold gi-ey stone, touched 
mto golden glory by the westering sun; which the imaginative and short- 
sighted may beheve to look like a ruined castle, but which the clear-eyed 
make to be only a heap of cold grey stone. But, from the Threlkeld side, 
and in a not too brilliant sunset, even they, the clear-eyed, may be deceived, 
and think they see the remains of a ruined castle in the broken rocks of 
Green Crag. 

Then, by sweet flowery lanes rather than an ordinary Queen's Highway, 
out from the Vale of Thirlmere (Legberthwaite properly) into the Vale of 
St. John's, and by wooded Castlerigg (which you must pronounce Castrigg if 
you wish to be understood by the vale people) where the great Derwentwater 
family had once a house on the heights above Walla Crag ; and down the long, 
steep, wooded slope to Brow Top, Skiddaw showing his huge bulk more fully, 
Latrigg standing like a watchdog by its side, Blencathra sharp and picturesque, 
the Bassenthwaite Fells distant and dim, and Bassenthwaite Lake like a silver 
line against them and the sky, the Greta, most musical, most beautiful of 
rivers, flowing on its careless way like a happy child singing in its play : all 
caught up, one after the other, as the eye wanders lovingly from each to each. 
There they all are — the lake, the mountains, the islands where the sweetest 
wild flowers are to be found and the loveliest pictures to be made, the bays 
where the water-lilies grow, and where fairies used to live in the days when 
life was young and love was not ashamed of faith — there are the sweet 
meadows, and the little golden becks running over their golden sands — there 
smile the sunny slopes of Catbells — there peers up to the sky the royal face 
of Causey Pike — Grisedale Pike, and the sharp Newland hills, tell pleasant 
tales of summer rambles — and the bold dark mass of Borrowdale's wilder 
cluster shuts in the heart of the Lake Kose against the world beyond. For 
it is in truth the Lake Eose, this Vale of Derwentwater — the loveliest flower 
in all the garland — the brightest gem of the whole grand crown ! 



47 




KESWICK AND DERWENTWATER 



CHAPTER IV 

The Vale of Derwentwater bears quite a different aspect to that of either 
Windermere or Ullswater. The first-a long narrow tongue or inlet from the 
south-modernised and beautiful, but tame, save at the head ; in all its lower 
and middle lengths rather a promise of what is to come than the fulfilment of 
hopes-strikes one as a lovely garden, or park, where the very wildness is well 
kept, and nature is constrained to neatness. A deHcious translation for the 
town-weary Cockney, but too well-dressed for the true-born mountaineer, and 
oppressive in its modern luxury to those who remember this country in its 
simple homeliness of forty years ago. The second is liker the ideal northern 
life, and has a certain savageness and solitude about it which makes one forget 

48 



KESWICK AND DERWENTWATER. 

its two grand hotels with their startling London prices, and the grim exclusive- 
ness of its one stately owner, careful rather for exclusiveness than for simplicity. 
Even its inconveniences are pleasant as a summer day's experience — its no 
market and its no shops, and the need of sending fifteen miles to Penrith for 
a cap-string or a fishing fly, its butcher's supply coming once a week, and no 
oftener, and its postman in his little cart the general Mercury and the great 
event of the day. All this is very delightful ; though, to be sure, it is only 
a playing at the life of long ago, with the steamboat hissing on the lake, and 
crinolines swelling on the mountains ; but it charms during a short stay where 
no vital inconvenience is felt, and gratifies the imagination. Still Ullswater, 
like Windermere, for all its grandeur is only partially mountainous ; noble in 
the upper reach, beautiful in the middle, but tame if lovely in the lower, going 
off into softness and rich living and the broad plains of castle-crowned 
Penrith and the flowing wealth of rivers. It is not the amphitheatre that 
Derwentwater is, though it may be that it has grander lines about it; as in the 
lines of Helvellyn, which belongs to Ullswater, and which are nobler than 
those of Skiddaw. 

Yes, Derwentwater is the gem of the whole. Whatever there is of beauty 
special to the other districts is here in ripest fulness. Crag and fell ; the 
evidence of the mountain top and the secrets of the dale ; gentle river and 
brawling stream ; the turbulent ghyll and the grander force ; the lake hiding 
itself away in bays starred with water-lilies and blue with lobelia, or dashing 
round rocky promontories where it beats up in waves that are almost billows 
in the heavy winds of winter, or bossed with islands endeared by legends 
and beautified by poems ; distant prospects leading down to the dark blue 
sea, and over to Cumberland's old enemy, Scotland, beyond; and home 
views across one's own garden that touch the heart like the face of a fair 
child : nothing is wanting, and nothing is left unfinished, as where the 
hills rise up only as a kind of hood at the head, but wander off into 
undeveloped fells at the foot. Here they are set all round the vale in 
equal majesty — a rampart or a crown, as one's mood would phrase it. 

49 H 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

Again, the Keswick lake is not all the valley, as with the narrower 
and more river-formed. Between the roots of the mountains and the 
lake-side lies a wide tract, where fields and meadows and rivers and 
hamlets and sunny slopes and secondary heights, make a pleasant world of 
human industry and love. There is the hill where Southey^ lived, in the 
midst of " great flourishing bears and monsters," as Charles Lamb called 
his " net of mountains," and its fellow fork where the Vicarage stands — 
the Greta flowing between ,• the Derwent hills out by PortinScale ; the peopled 
terraces Under Skiddaw, creeping up on to his very breast ; the hills towards 
St. John's, and those on the Threlkeld road, all lovely with gardened homes, 
and sanctified by human hopes ; the broadest district and the most populous 
in the lake country. The form of the valley, too, is so beautiful in its 
roundness— not a geometrical roundness scientifically true — but a nearly 
unbroken circling of hills ; its only visible outlet being towards the setting 
sun, where the Bassenthwaite Fells and Water are the barriers against 
the Cockermouth plains leading to the sea. Thus the lake itself is not 
such an all-absorbing feature as either Windermere or Ullswater, or yet 
Coniston. The first is ten, and the second nine, miles long ; the last six ; 
with sometimes only the road and sometimes a meadow or a lawn between 
them and the mountain bases < Derwentwater is but three miles at its 
fullest, and lies away by itself at one end of the valley, leaving the rest 
free for man. So that it is only part of the life of the place, as the 
mountains are only part, too, shared with the woods and the fields, and the 



* Besides Southey and Wordsworth — the last only collaterally — Kesmck has a claim 
on Shelley and Coleridge. Poor Shelley and his Harriet lived for some time at Chesnut 
Hill, where he used to go and see Mr. Southey, " like the ghost of his former (Pantisccratic) 
self," and eat Mrs. Southey's buttered cake, which he wanted to " eat for ever ; " and 
Coleridge, who was often at Greta Hall, wrote the second part of Christabel at Keswick, if 
not other things. Southey brought up Sara Coleridge as his own daughter, for he was a 
generous man to his own Idndred if less than loving to the world at large, and the most 
thorough-bred gentleman of the whole lake school. 

50 



KESWICK AND DERWENTWATEE. 

pleasant bye-lanes among hedges and corn-rows, and evening saunters through 
the hay-fields. 

From the little hill of Castlehead — its love-name hereabouts is Castlet 
— that wooded crag just out of Keswick on the Borrowdale road, the most 
expressive of the home views is to be had. Follow the sweet wood-path, 
winding and cool as a wood-path should be, up to the craggy apex where the 
picture bursts upon you. For it is truly a picture, of which the framework 
is the sky. Skiddaw stands to the right, isolated as ever, but with more 
sharpness of aspect than is its usual characteristic; even little Dod looks 
impudently independent, and no longer the " cub " resting by its parent, 
of ordinary times ; and that cone born of the mountain's very heart, that 
peak within a peak, Carsleddam by name, shows such a fierceness of front, 
and such a red wrath of background, that it might be a bit of Helvellyn, 
instead of a member of the mildest mountain patriarch in the country. 
Through the trees to the right Blencathra shows itself half shyly; while 
to the left Bassenthwaite Lake lies like a shining belt against the sky, 
joining Skiddaw and its own special fells. Barf and Whinlatter, with a line 
of silver. In clear weather Crifi^el's dim top is to be seen beyond that line ; 
but this is rare, and not to be expected by the every- day tourist. The 
mountains round the lonely Newlands Valley look sharp and peaked and 
full of temptation to adventurous ramblers ; full of danger, too, let it be 
distinctly understood. Causey Pike, with its royal fatuous face^ upon its 
crest, and Ghyll Mickle at its side, looks well from here ; and between it 
and Eawling End comes up a small pointed head, which, seen at the other 
side, has a noble body attached known to guides and tourists as Knot Pike. 
Eed Pike, one of the Buttermere hills and as ruddy as its name, is in the 
distance. High Stile, its companion, following ; a small bit of Robinson and 
another, still smaller, of the rich sounding Goldscope look up over their 

* George the Tliird, double chin, snub nose, recediag forehead and all, can be made out 
quite well in the crowning knobs of Causey Pike. 

.')1 H 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

neighbours' heads; and then come the slopes of Catbells, and the wilder 
fall of Maiden Mawr ;— Gait Crag and Castle Crag below. But the highest 
points of all, ScawfelP and Scawfell Pike (the Wastwater giant), are far 
away, almost as dim and blue as the sky against which they stand. 
Great End and Bowfell, belonging to the same group, are also seen, 
but indistinctly ; Glaramara is to the left of Bowfell, heading Borrowdale ; 
and then comes the Lodore range, massed into Walla Crag, so far as 
perspective goes, which completes the panorama.* Below, is the lake, 
with the reflections as clear as if shadowed in a mirror, save where a 
light breeze creeps tremulously, as if on tiptoe, just across the surface, or 
where a boat trails a comet-like stream of widening ripple in its wake ; or 
perhaps where those shadowed places called " kelds" tell of a coming storm, 
according to the saying : " It is no hay- day to-day — the kelds are on 
tne lakes." 

But ah ! how lovely is that lake ! Go down to the boat-landings, 
where the pretty wood of Cockshot on the one side and the sloping space of 
Crow Park on the other, catch the sunlight with their two expressions of 
mystery and revelation ; and go through its pleasant places one by one. 



^ Scawfell is generally said to be the centre of the Borrowdale system, perhaps, because 
it is the highest point, and so appears as if it ought to be the centre. But a careful study 
of Flintoft 's model will show Great Gable rather as the centre ; the point whence the 
Langdale ranges and the "Wastwater mountains (Scawfell itself and the Screes, and the 
rest), the Ennerdale mountains, and the Buttermere (but those last at Crummock are broken 
across, as if against the grain, in a very strange manner), all radiate as the spokes of a 
wheel radiate from the nave. This last is a simile often used, but it is too good to be 
discarded for a newer and less fittmg image. 

* Travelling from right to left, against the sun, and so coming back, save for the 
wooded knoll on which we stand, to Skiddaw, where we began. It is of course impossible 
to give this view as a panorama. Therefore, the best and most pictui-esque part has been 
taken as the heading for the chapter : namely, Walla Crag and Borrowdale, Castle Crag 
for the very centre of the picture, — Glaramara, Bowfell, Great End, and Scawfell Pike 
behmd it, — then Maiden Mawr and Catbells, with the lake and islands below. 

52 



KESWICK AND DEEWENTWATER. 

Here is Derwent Isle, wliicli has had almost as many names as owners — 
Vicar's Isle ^ when it belonged to Fountain's Abbey, Peach ey's, Pock- 
lingtou's, The Island, and now Derwent Isle ; more appropriate if less 
distinctive ; surely the loveliest water-home ever made by man, with its 
emerald lawn sloping to the south, and its tulip-tree like a bit of tropical 
life among the northern growths. Friar's Crag, that bold jut of rock and 
tree, where the monks of Lindisfarne used to come yearly to be blessed 
by St. Herbert, and where now every artist tries his hand at a sketch, 
flanks it to the left ; and beyond Friar's Crag is the largest of all the 
islands — Lord's Island, where the Derwentwaters lived. They built them- 
selves a summer bower there, out of the ruins of the old Castlerigg 
mansion, when they abandoned that estate for Dilston, on the marriage of 
Margaret, the heiress and daughter of Sir John de Derwentwater, with 
the Ratcliffe of Dilston ; ^ cutting through the connecting tongue of land at 
Strandshag,'^ which made the island part of the mainland, and throwing 



^ Alice de Romeli, the great religious benefactress of tliis valley, gave tliis island and 
the parish chiu'ch of Crosthwaite to Fountain's Abbey ; but at the dissolution of the 
monasteries it was granted to one John WiLhamson. from whom it passed, bj' successive 
translations, into the hands of its present owners. It has had many owners, and among 
others, in Camden's time, German miners, and, perhaps — but tins is a mere supposition, 
without proof or gToiuidwork — some old Roman may have set up his tent among its trees, 
and defied the Britons in fiill security fi-om its pleasant shores. 

^ It was one of these Ratcliffes who figured in the old couplet — 

" The Rat, the Cat, and Lovel the Dog, 
Ruled all England under the Hog;" 

the Rat being Sir Pdchard Ratcliffe, not one of the Derwentwater set, but belonging to the 
elder branch — the famous Sir Pdchard, of scarcely enviable notoriety. It biings one face to 
face with strange things of bygone times, to be able to connect such mighty men vnth. an 
insignificant little island good only as a show place to summer visitors. 

'' In 1769, money of Queen Elizabeth's time — sliillings and sixpences, and a half-crown 
piece of Charles I. — were found at Strandshag (hag means a wooded enclosure or copj)ice) ; 
doubtless bimed there in a moment of peiil by the Derwentwaters, or by some of their 
retainers. 

53 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

over a drawbridge instead, as a safer manner of way in troublous times 
than a level space of green. 

The flat of Stable Hills, where Southey would have built his house 
if he had had Aladdin's lamp or Fortunatus's purse, looks well from here; 
and Scarf Close Bay, under the shadow of Great Wood on Walla Crag, 
has very likely a shoal of banded perch or shy trout sleeping in the sun 
among the stones. In the spring Eamps Holm is or was once thick with 
wild garlic, as its name imphes ; for Eamps Holm is only Garhc Island when 
translated into English ; and the Scarf Stones may be dangerous in 
high-water time when their heads are covered, if you do not know their 
whereabouts. Then there is Barrow Bay, and the river inlet to Lodore, 
which takes close steering to keep the boat clear up its centre, and not 
run it aground on the mud among the reeds and rushes; and the Floating 
Island,^ that strange phenomenon of the hotter summers ; and the beautiful 
Derwent, coming in its last hour, after all its rocky clearness, through a 

^ In the summer of 1863 there were two floating islands^a thing not known before ; 
but the second was part of the same system as the first, and both were portions of 
the bottom of the lake, torn up by some agency as yet a little undetermined by the scientific. 
It is evident that one cause is the generation of gases — carburetted hydrogen and azote in 
equal parts, Tvith a little carbonic acid — underneath the lake bottom in very hot weather, by 
which means the floorhig is at last torn and lifted up bodily, and floated to the surface. 
But why those gases are generated in that one particular spot is, after aU, the real mystery. 
The older and more intelligent of the guides Tiill tell you of a Uttle stream that gets lost in 
the ground before reaching the lake, and which disappearance, they say, has something to 
do with, the subsequent upheaval of the island ; but thjs point has not been quite 
established as yet. The island is a mere soft spongy bit of vegetation and earth, such as 
the bottom of the lake close in shore would be, covered with water lobelia {Lobelia dort- 
manna), common quiUwort {Jsoetes lacustris), and shore-weed {Littorella lacustris) ; the 
same plants, in short, as grow round the margin of the lake everywhere. There seemed 
great chance at one tune this year of a very large portion of that Lodore side of the lake 
bottom rising to the surface ; for, owing to the heat and long drought, the water was 
exceedingly shallow — the yeUow part of the buh-ushes standing nearly a foot out of it ; and, 
had the same kind of weather continued, we should probably have had a floating island of 
unheard-of magnitude, shaking its loose sides upon the water. 

54 



KESWICK AND DERWENTWATER. 

mere swamp where the herons find their food, and where there used to 
be snipes and wild ducks and the like, until population and civilization 
drove them all away to wilder places. And there are the points, like 
tongues, darting up towards Grange and Borrowdale ; and the lead-mine 
at Salt Level Bay, where there is a steam-engine with heaps of grey refuse, 
and the water soiled and whitened for a broad space outward ; and the 
Brandelow Woods under Oatbells, where old-world smugglers used to live, 
and run their kegs of brandy ashore — bold Will Watches, bolder than 
honest, and with a monstrous amount of false sentiment about their 
memories. And then there is St, Herbert's Island,^ the sweetest of all. 

Every one lands on St. Herbert's Island, and wanders through the close- 
grown paths to the summerhouse, where picnic parties, needing a roof over 
their heads, spread their table-cloths and bring out their veal pies and cold 
chickens ; and every one studies the new aspect of the mountains as seen 
from this Omphalos of the lake. Catbells looks steeper than in general, if 



^ Almost every one knows the beautiful tradition attached to this island, where 
" Herebert, priest and confessor," came when he withdrew himself from the world of men 
and action, to live in the hfe of God and contemplation — retaining only one earthly 
affection : his love for St. Cuthbert of Lradisfarn, or, as Bede calls it, Farn Island. When 
St. Cuthbert came as bishop to Lugubalia, (which we now call CarUsle,) St, Herbei-t went 
over to liim for godly tali and affectionate communion ; and then it was that the elder saint 
prayed God to grant his younger brother's prayer, and to let them both depart from life on 
the same day. And the promise was given. On the same day, which was the 19th day of 
March, " their souls departed from their bodies, and were straight in union in the beatific 
sight and vision, and were transported hence to the Kingdom of Heaven by the service and 
hands of angels." For centuries after, the Vicar of Crosthwaite, attended by the priests 
and monks of every church and chapel and convent round about, went in grand procession 
up the lake on the 13th April, to celebrate mass on St. Herbert's Isle, to the joint honour 
of the two sainted fidends ; granting forty days' indulgence to all the pious who accompanied 
them. Fuller's notice of the story is this, " Herebert, Priest and Confessor, may justly be 
referred to this county ; for there is a lake therein (Bede calleth it pregrande stagnum), nigh 
Keswick, made by the river Darwent, wherein three islands are found, in the least of which 
this Herebert led an eremitical Ufe." 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

not so high, and Maiden Mawr is wilder ; Skiddaw is infinitely mild and 
paternal, and the valley between it and the lake is crumpled up into a few dotted 
lines ; Bassenthwaite seems to be endless miles away, and Blencathra is sharp 
and aggressive ; the front of Walla Crag, and the rocks about Lodore, are 
rich in colour and of threatening aspect ; and the great purple caverns of 
Borrowdale seem close at hand, as if you could fling a stone against the very brow 
of Castle Crag, blocking up the way. In some conditions of the atmosphere 
the smallest accident of the hills, whatever it may be, is as clearly marked 
and as vividly coloured as if it was a toy model you had before you. In 
others you see nothing but the presence of large masses and the shadowy 
places of the dales, while all the details are rapt away into misty dreamland, 
and that southern gorge is the home of only spirits and genii. Sometimes 
the home of pale ghosts, or of furies let loose, when the clouds come down, 
and the wind and the rain go forth to meet them. Those great purple caverns 
— that deep throat into which you plunge with such insatiable longing — how 
often have the weary-hearted stood here on the very spot where St. Herbert 
prayed, and cast down the burden of their sorrows where he took up his 
cross ! 

Now back to your boat, past the hole by the Otter-rock where the big 
eel was caught one day, and into Derwentwater Bay — or Waterend Bay, 
Waterlily Bay, or Sir John Woodford's, as you like to call it — but under any 
name the sweetest haunt to be found within the four seas. One of the chief 
beauties of Derwentwater is its clearness on account of its shallowness : and 
of all its bays and shallows this is the clearest and most transparent. The 
water lies over a pavement of jewels of all kinds and of all hues ; ranging 
from pale sea-green passing into white, to the deepest purple of the shade 
next to black. It is a "wonderwork," that lake pavement inside the bay; 
so is the lovely wood surrounding it ; so is that broad roofing of lily leaves, 
red and green, beneath which the Undines of the lake sway the white cups 
to and fro in the evening ripple ; and even the broken steps leading up into 
the private grounds, with the battered old stags upon the gate-posts — even 

56 



KESWICK AND DERWENTWATER. 

the stone arm-chair on the rock at the corner, with its rustic history belonging — 
have a fascination and a fitness not to be found anywhere beside. 

Then, skirting past pleasant Silver Hill, where the sun always seems 
to shine, — taking care not to get wrecked on either of the little Ling Holms 
at hand, but keeping within the shadow of the woods, so lovely at this par- 
ticular spot, as, indeed, they are all along the western side — steering up 
and out again the reedy stretch of the issuing Derwent, the Greta joining 
close by but not meeting in the lake — past the wooded Promontory and Crow 
Park, and then to the landing-place again ; the inventory of the lake complete. 




FROM SIB, JOHN WOODB'ORD S GROUNDS 



Of the history of Keswick ^° not much is to be said, for all that it is 
the largest and most important of the Lake Country towns — the metropolis, 
as it is the centre, of the district. It used to have three special branches 



'" Kesli is the local name fur the water hemlock, which grows very abundantly here ; so 
tliat Keswick is literally the head, or bay, or vUlage of the water hemlock. In early times, 
Keswick was not the favourite place it is now. The town was ahnost wholly inhabited by 

57 I 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 



of industry— the woollen trade, ^^ the black-lead mines in Borrowdale, and 
the gold and silver mines in Newlands ; ^^ but the woollen trade has dwindled 



miners, and Lelancl, avIio seems to have hated our iiorth comitry bitterly enough, calls it 
" a Ij^tle poore market town cawUed Keswike, a mile from St. Herberte's Isle, that Bede 
speaketh of; " but Camden's summary was more gracious : " On the edges of this lake in 
YBYj rich land," he says, " surrounded by dewy hills, and defended from the north winds by 
Skiddaw, a very high mountain, Ues Keswicke, a small market town, many years famous 
for the copper works, as appears from a charter of Kmg Edward IV., and at present 
inhabited by miners, whose smelting house is by Derwentside, which, with his forcible 
stream, and other ingenious inventions, serveth them in notable stead for easy bellows- 
works, hammer-works, forge-works, and sawmg of boards, not without admiration of those 
who behold." (This is quoted from a quotation.) A contributor to the Gentleman's 
Magazine, in 1751, is very severe. He says out boldly, with no chance of being mis- 
luiderstood, that " the poorer inhabitants of Kesmck subsist chiefly by stealing, or 
clandestinely buymg of those that steal, the black lead, which they sell to Jews or other 
hawkers." Hutchinson, in his Tour, gives his verdict, too, on the adverse side. " Keswick 
is but a mean village, wholly indebted to the amenity of its situation to the notice of 
travellers," he says ; and he sums up all that is to be said in the facts, that the 
accommodation is very indifferent, that no tradition is preserved of St. Herbert, that there 
are eagles in the cliffs near Bank Park (at the head of the lake), and on the shores a saline 
spring of very salubrious quahty (at Manesty, probably), and that a cliff, projecthig over 
the lake, is called " Eve's Crag" from its likeness to a woman. Which was his ovai dream 
surely, whatever else he may have had warranty for ! 

" There are still some hands employed in tins, but very few compared to old time, when 
spinning and weaving and carding went on in all the cottages, and home-sx^un ginghams 
and fustians were the rule, not the exception. 

'^ The Newland mines were discovered in Queen EKzabeth's time, by Thomas Thurland 
and Daniel Hetchletter, a German from Augsburg : the upshot being a law-suit between the 
Queen and Thomas Percie, Earl of Northumberland, the Lord of the Manor, which ended m 
favour of the former and her prerogative, because more silver and gold than copper was found, 
so they said, and the royal metals belonged to her, the baser only to the Lord. Fuller, in his 
Worthies, has a very quaint note on the Newland mines. " These Mines lay long neglected, 
choaked in theu' own rubbish, till renewed about the beginning of Queen Ehzabeth, when 
plenty of Copper was here afforded, both for home use and for forraign transportation. 
But Copper itself was too soft for severall mihtary services, and could not alone (no single 
person can prove a Parent) produce Brass, most useful for that purpose. Plere taste and 
see Divine Providence ; which never doth its work by lialfes, and generally doubleth gifts 
by seasonable giving them : Lapis calaminaris (whereof hereafter in due place) was then 

.58 



IvESWICK AND DEKWENTWATER. 

now, and is almost dead ; and the " rune " cut into the flagstone, which was 
to keep it flourishing for ever, 

" ]\Iay God Almiglity grant His aid 
To Keswick and its woollen trade — " 

was before the entrance to a pencil-mill when last heard of; for the pencil 
manufactory, a little slackened of late, survives all other changes, though 
the working of the wad-mines has ceased. As for the Newlands mines 
they were long abandoned, but are now in full yield again ; while a new 
lead-mine has been opened at Salt Level Bay, and a sufiiciency of ore found 
to make the working profitable. 

The buildings are not specially noteworthy. There is a town hall — 
called Moot Hall locally — very much like any other town hall in England, 
where eggs and butter are sold at the Saturday market,^'' and where certain 
courts and public meetings are held — notably the weekly petty sessions or 
magistrates' meetings, and the annual Court Leet, on the business of the 
manor and its lord. It has one or two special objects of interest : one, the 



first found in England, the Mother of Brass, as Copi^er the Father thereof." •' We mnst 
not forget the names of the tieo Dutchmen (good froggs hy Sea, but better moles by land), 
■\vho refound out these C'o2^]:er mines, -^'herein also some Silver (no neu- milk mthout some 
creame therein) — viz., Thomas Sliurland and Daniel Hotchslabter, of Auspurge, in 
Germany," whose nej)hews bought land (probably in the coimty). 

'^ This was a privilege got by Sir John de Derwentwater, the then lord of the Manoi', 
fi'om Edward I. There are also certain fairs for cattle, cheese, and hiring, held at various 
times of the year. The old Morlan fair for leather has long since been discontmued, 
though the shoemakers still get drank on the day (the 2nd of August) in memory of the 
occasion. The Morlan fair gave rise to the proverb, " Morlan fluid ne'er did giiid," because 
of the damage done to the leather by over much rain. And, indeed, the siunmer floods of 
the lake country are sometimes very terrific. One of the old chapelry priests was dro^^^led 
in the ditch near the High Hill, on a Morlan flood, not so very manj" years ago ; and there 
have been times, quite of late, when the two lakes were jouied together, and the Portuiscale 
road had to be traversed in boats. Morlan is an instance of the gradual corruption of words. 
It is Magdalen properh', first brought do^\'n to Maudhn, and then still further cUpped 
to Morlan. 

59 12 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

bell on which the clock strikes, which has an almost illegible date of 1001, 
and the letters H. D. K. 0. on it ; supposed to have been a curfew-bell of 
the period, and brought from Lord's Island; and the other, the very 
stones of which it is built, for they too came from Lord's Island, being the 
ruins of the Derwentwater House when everything went to decay after the 
attainder and that tragic execution. It has a more modern interest in 
Flintoft's masterly model which is exhibited here, and which every lake 
visitor ought to study if he wishes to understand his whereabouts. It is 
really a masterpiece, this model, perfectly truthful and admirably explained. 

,ij^^Sj-w^ Farther down the town is a museum ^* of Saxon 

^t. _ il^^ff ""^^ antiquities, and Greek and Roman remains — 

^. ■ j^?-' ^ coins, swords, celts, urns, bronze eagles, and the 

S^^^;---=^ like ; some fine geological specimens, a double 

,^^^fe';-7-^^^p| octave of musical stones — the first discovered — 

. ^B^^^^^y^ and the usual curiosities of such a place ; the 

i.^-^^.-.^.'Z^^^w^- , door flanked and guarded by two huge whale - 

""'1^ ~^^^« bones as the sup]3orters, to the eternal awe and 

~~^ ~^ wonder of the rising generation. 

Fo^ND ^TCAERMOT ^^^j ^j^g^.g is_no, tlicre was — a row of 

quaint, old-fashioned almshouses, where eighteen j^oor and indigent folk 

were supported, according to the will and bequest of Sir John Banks, Lord 

Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas in 1640, and a native of 

Keswick ; ^^ but the almshouses have been swept away now, and a Bank is 

built on the site, and the remnant of the eighteen poor and indigent folk 



'■• Better known as Crosthwaite's Museum, a really remarkable collection, not only for 
matters of intrinsic value, but as a monument of the industry and research of one of our 
Keswick worthies. Peter Crosthwaite, like Jonathan Otley, was a seK-made man ; and 
both these local celebrities do no httle honour to the self-making and self-educating system. 
They were both Dalton khid of men : not an unusual ij^e, in the north country. 

^^ Fuller says he left a sum of money " to set up a manufacture of coarse cottons in the 
town of Keswick." 

60 



KESWICK AND Dl-niWENTWATEI?. 

has been drafted off to the omiiiyorous Union, ready for the engulhng of any 
amount of hves. 

Outside the town is Southey's house, Greta Hall by name, where he 
lived the life of a gentleman and a scholar, wrote the " Doctor " and made his 
" Cottonian library," played with Dapper the dog, and flung stones for 
exercise into the Greta; and at the other, the east, end of the town, are, 
St. John's Church, pink and pretty, and the most picturesque parish library 
to be found anywhere : as well adapted to our modern ways as any of the 
most beautiful college-halls of olden times. 

And then there is the mother church, ^^ St. Mungo's, or St. Kentigern's, 
if you prefer the latter name instead — a saint much honoured in the north 
country — standing alone towards the base of Skiddaw, away from the town 
and the old church villao-e of Crosthwaite alike. It is the Lake cathedral, 




and was nobly " restored " some eighteen years ago by Mr. Stanger. Strangers 
flock round Lough's monument of Southey, with Wordsworth's sonnet at 
the base ; and archaeologists find solace in those old relics of the Derwent- 
waters — two battered figures of a knight and a lady in composite, which, in 



'^ Alice de Romeli's gift to Fountain's Abbey, so far as the rectory was concerned ; but 
the patronage of the vicarage reserved to the see of Carhsle. 

61 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

the days of ignorance, used to be called Adam and Eve, but which were 
doubtless images of the ordinary generation of man once living up at Castlerigg 
and known as the Lords de Derwentwater, but now lying under a speckled 
marble slab close to where the school children sit and make the responses. 
On this dark speckled slab are some brasses, two being the figures of a knight 
in armour and his lady, with the inscription in black letter beneath:*^ — 
' ' Of yo'' Charite f/ for the Soule of S'' John Katclif, knyglit : and for the 
state of Dame Alice his wyfe : which S"" Johii dyed y® ii Day of February 
An Di M" D" xxvii. 6 whois soule Jhu have m*'^." There are also some 
painted windows not to be passed over with disrespect ; and an old font, 
very curious, said to have been given by Alice de Romeli. A certain part 
of the church (the east end of the south aisle) is known as the Derwentwater, 
or Lord's Chapel, also the Magdalen Chantry, where the souls of the 
translated Derwentwaters were daily prayed for under the special patronage 
of " Sancta Maria Magdalena de Kes^vyke." And then there is a peal of 
bells. Such a peal ! — pouring a very cascade of music through the vale, — 
when the wind blows gustily, sinking and swelling with the breeze in mingled 
passion and suppression infinitely beautiful. The bells are all inscribed, as was 



'^ Tliis monument, and an old carved cliair in Crostliwaite's Museum, are almost all 
the remains left of the Derwentwaters, so long the chief family of the place, and even now 
regarded with romantic tenderness, perhaps hecause of the sad tragedy of the last of the 
race. For it was not the sunple fact of his execution that made the story of the young 
earl so pitiful — it ^vas his youth and gallantry and chivalric character ; it was his wife's 
devotedness, both to the cause for which she sacrificed her husband, and to that husband 
himself, when the stake for which he had played was lost, and only the player was to be 
rescued. It was the story of love and heroism — a story as old as tune, and as noble as human 
history — that has invested the name of the Derwentwaters \^'ith so much interest, and that 
has kept them stiU the traditionary heroes and local magnates of the vale, no matter what 
great name or greater wealth comes in their stead and on their land. To this day the 
Ain-ora Borealis is called " Lord Derwentwater' s Lights," because they shone with unusual 
brilliancy the night after his execution. The common people said it was a sign of the 
wrath of Heaven for his execution, but the religious said it was the liery chariot of his soul 
taken upwards ; and the last got the greater consolation. 

62 



KESWICK AND DERWPLVTWATEH. 

the custom of old time ; but if their music was no better than their poetry, 
the workl of hearers in and about that old Crosthwaite Church would not 
be much benefited. 

The manner of electing churchwardens and sidesmen in this church is of 
old-time origin. ^^ The assembly of electors commanded to gather themselves 
together at Crosthwaite Church on the afternoon of Ascension-day, is to be 
composed of the Vicar of Crosthwaite, the eighteen sworn men (sidesmen), 
the churchwardens, the representatives of the house of Derwentwater, the 
sealer and receiver of the Queen's Majesty's portion at the mines, the bailiffs 
of Keswick, Wythburn, Borrowdale, Thornthwaite, Brundholm, and the 
Forester of Derwent Fells ; and these are to choose and elect the eighteen men 
for the year to come, and also the churchwardens. The oath to be administered 
on the Sunday following, between the morning prayers and the Litany, is as 
quaint as the rest, but too long to be given here. There is also a free or national 
school near the church — abutting, indeed, on to the churchyard wall — with 
certain local privileges helpful to the young of the place, and which the 



'^ There was more to do in those early times than simply to provide for the right "ul 
distribution of the parish funds, or to look after the scholars and their master ; for the 
north countrymen, slow to move in everything, were the last to accept the new dispensation. 
Clergy and lait3^ almost to a man, supported Aske's rebellion — the Pilgrimage of Grace ; 
and Sir Ralph Sadler wrote in 1509 to Lord Burgliley that, " the hearts of all the com- 
monalty of the North country were altogether bUnded A\dth tli' olde popishe doctrme." These 
liomanistic proclivities got the poor Eighteen into temporary trouble ; and the authorities 
appoiated for the better ordering of the religious observances of the county, did their best 
to drive them into the way of simplicity and the Reformation, and to destroy the lingering- 
love of papistry and papistical splendours still existing. No great harm came to any of 
them, and no lives were lost. Fuller, speaking of Cumberland martyrs, says, in his dry 
sarcastic way, " This country afibrdeth none in the Raign of Queen Mary. First, the 
People thereof were mezell'd in Ignorance and Superstition. Secondly, such as favoured the 
Reformation were connived at by Owin Oglethorpe, the coiu'teous Bishop of Carlisle, who 
crowned Queen Elizabeth. However, Cumberland had one Native, who going up to 
London, first found a husband, and then met Avith martyrdome therein : viz., Elizabeth 
Foster," born at Graystock, burnt with six others in one fire at Smithfield, January 27, 
155(i. 

63 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

eigliteeii sworn men manage to the good or evil of the institution and 
scholars, as the worse or better element among them prevails. Sometimes 
there are disagreements between the Eighteen and the master ; one objecting 
to the over-severity and the other indignant at the over-leniency ; one fuming 
that his son does not learn fast enough and another fretting because his 
daughter is going to be such a fine scholar she will make but a feckless woman. 
Self-government has its disadvantages. 

The ancient and original village of the vale is Crosthwaite ; that little 
hamlet below the Vicarage-hill to the right, where there is a fine old house 
called Monk's Hall, now a farm, and a tree with a tradition at its roots. This 
was the parish hamlet when the Christian religion was represented by noble 
architecture and social inequality ; when the monk dwelt in a celled palace, 
and the serf herded with the pigs and the goats. It is now nothing but the 
decrepit old name-giver, palsied, withered, and worn out. 

But withered and decrepit as it may be, it still lives in the glories which 
neither time nor circumstance can change : it still looks up to Skiddaw's 
calm, grand front, still sees the burning sunrise flushing it a glowing 
crimson as the day steals on and over the mountain tops and then flows 
down to the valley beneath ; still sees it paling gradually from red and purple 
to grey and green, like a fire burning itself out to ashes, as the sun sinl.s 
down behind the Bassenthwaite lake and the sea beyond ; still sees it white 
and silent as a frozen statue in the winter — green as a young flower leaf in the 
spring — belted with gold in the summer, but the gold broken into by purple 
shadows and greyer markings — and in the autumn time burnished with all the 
richest colours nature can give — purple and red and gold and bronze — 
till it is one large garden of beauty and fragrance. And so the times 
wear on, and man and all his fashions change from year to year, and from 
day to day ; but palsied, withered, and decrepit old Crosthwaite village 
lives in the presence of the Eternal — the Eternally Young and the Eternally 
Beautiful ! 



64 




BORBOWU;fLE rv 

B'BOM 
BELOW THE BOWT^BIi 



THE KESWICK WALKS 



CHAPTER V 



Yes the Vale of Keswick is the opened rose itself, and all the other lakes and 
mountains are the leaves and buds. Noble sprays, some of them, full of rich 
tones and dehcious sweetness, but none equal to the perfected flower. And 
Borrowdale is the heart of the rose ; the inner golden recess where the bees 
seek their food and the butterflies their enjoyment; the point where so many 
lines converge and where we rest before taking wider flights beyond ; for, 
indeed, the most noticeable thing in the whole vale is that cluster of dark blue 
mountains up at the head of the lake, if it be not the solitary Northern mass 
of Skiddaw set up like a kind of mountain Jove above the rest. 

65 K 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

Borrowdale^ is generally only ranked as one of the "walks about 
Keswick." Tliougli the heart and nucleus of the mountain system, it is 
regarded mainly as the way to Langdale by the Stake, or to Wastwater by 
Sty Head, or to Buttermere by Honister ; not often as a place of sojourn or of 
intimate knowledge. And yet it has within itself beauty that would reward 
long months of loving roaming. For instance, the walk from Grrange, ending 
at Stockley Bridge at the foot of Sty Head Pass, is without an equal; especially 
if you choose an evening full of rich sunset tones, and know the worth of 
the loveliness about you. 

* Tlie manor of Borrowdale was once part of tlie Castleiigg manor, belonging to the 
Derwentwater estate, but probably given by one of the family to the chiu'ch ; for, in some 
accoimts, it is said that, " the monks of Furness held, of the honoui- of Cockermoixth, in 
pure and perpetual ahns, Borrowdale, which, by the dissolution of the said monasterie, fell 
into King Henry's hands, and was, at the tune this survey of the Derwent Fells manor was 
taken (1578), still hi the possession of the Queen. The abbot and convent of Fountains 
late held the other Borrowdale of the said honoiu-, in pure and pei-petual alms, wliich came 
to the said Idng by the dissolution of the abbey ; and, by the said Kmg Hemy, gi-anted to 
Ptichard Grame and his heirs." Another account gives the manor to WilHam Wliitmore 
and Jonas Verdon, by grant of James I., and they, by a " deed dated the 28th of November, 
1614, sold and conveyed to Sir Wilfred Lawson and tliii'ty others therem named, all the 
said manor of Borrowdale, except all those wad-holes and wad, commonly called black 
cawke, mthui the commons of SeatoUar, or elsewhere, witliin the commons and wastes of 
the manor of Borrowdale aforesaid, of the yearly rent or value of fifteen sliillings and 
fourpence, since which time it has been held distmct from other roj'-alties of the manor." 

Great fun used to be made of the Borrowdale people when intercoiu-se was rarer and 
local distinctions greater than now, (Clarke, writing m 1789, says that twenty years ago a 
cart was unkno^ai in Borrowdale,) and many of the old Gotham traditions were fastened on 
them as on the Troutbeck men. True or not, it is believed to this day in Keswick that the 
cuckoo wall, which was to build in the gowk or cuckoo, and so ensrure eternal spring, was 
actually begun at Borrowdale ; and " Borrowdale gowk " is a term not infrequently applied 
to the heavy Borrowdale men. There are other stories, as that of the red deer Avliich 
was certamly a -nitch, because it escaped the hunters ; and that of the mule Avliich was 
certainly a peacock (a beast heard of just then for the first tune), for what else could it be ? 
and other rough old tales, expressive of the superior enlightenment of the to^vns and their 
consequent contempt of the dales. The " tongue," too, is of the broadest, and even a born 
Cumbrian has difficulty in understanding the i-eal, ]-ipe, racy, Borrowdale vernacular, which 

ee 



THE KESWICK WALKS. 

Grange,^ though not in itself beautiful as a human dwelling-place, is yet 
pretty to look at with its long soft line of double bridge leaping over the river. 
And the river flowing beneath, against that banked waste of stones, is as 
lovely as its name. Skiddaw and the lake behind look their best from here ; 
Maiden Mawr facing us, leading off into the bolder mass of Gait Crag,'' 
is at its noblest ; Castle Crag, wooded from base to summit, and standing like 
a fortress* to guard the pass, is picturesque as ever; and the greater mountains 
at the head look dim and full of mystery, as belongs to their grandest aspect. 
A little farther inward and you come to the choicest part of the valley, wild 
with crag and fell, yet rich with trees and flowers and flower-full meadows, 
and lightened by the life and music of the bright Derwent, flowing on like 
a noble song. You are near the bend of the road just facing Castle Crag 
(the place chosen for the large view), one of the loveliest of the walk, and 
singularly like a bit of Norwegian road. The wooded hill standing out from 

calls a heron " Joan na ma crank," and a gleacl or kite " Jackey Slope." The attachment 
of the dales people to their native place is at all times marked. In the parish register of the 
chapel is a notice that a youth who had quitted the valley, and had died in one of the 
to^vns on the east coast, requested that liis body should be brought home and interred at the 
foot of the pillar where he used to sit as a schoolboy ; and many more of the like could be 
found by any one mterested in the search. To go back to the old cuckoo scandal. In Cum- 
berland and Westmoreland an AprU fool is an " April gowk;" and the local proverb for the 
first of April is, " Hunt the gowk another mile." There are also May goslings, or 
" geslings," for the first of May ; but for that day only. If you try to make a May goshng 
on any other, your answer mil, or ought to be — 

" May day is come and gone. 

Thou art the gosling, and I'se none." 

^ Grange was the store place of the monks, their granary or harvest-room, where they 
kept their graiu and salt and tithes seciu-e against aU depredations ; bemg guarded by the 
lake to the north, and by the then almost hnpassable mou.ntains behind. The momitam 
passes, be it remembered, are quite things of modern iuvention. 

^ Goat Crag — often improperly spelt Gate Crag. 

'' Castle Crag was a Roman station, commanding the pass behind and the vaUey in 
front ; but I believe that no Roman remains have jet been found on it. Some of the guide- 
books say they have, and that they are to be seen in Crosthwaite's Museum — a fallacy. 

67, K 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 



the rest is Castle Crag, black with shadow and burnt with sunshine — a sun- 
shine that catches each pointed rock and craggy face upon the edges, and 
makes them aflame with ruddy gold, while it deepens the shadows into 
unfathomable blackness. Over Gait Crag and Maiden Mawr is poured a thin 
golden haze — that thin soft haze which, more than any other atmospheric effect, 
transforms the mountains from their real being, and cheats the eye from its 
truth. At the base of Castle Crag runs the Derwent, winding away from fields 
red with ripe grass down to the quiet lake beyond ; and side by side with the 
river runs the road, grey to its blue, motionless to its flow, but repeating colour 
and line as an echo repeats the spoken word. The opposite crags are bright 
and clearly defined in their " coats of many colours," the bramble is coming 
into flower, and a lovely festooning of ivy of the small-leaved kind runs in and 
out among the stones of a beck- side wall ; while the air is perfumed with 
young meadow-sweet — "queen of the meadows" — just coming into flower, 
every now and then interrupted by wafts of honeysuckle clinging round the trees. 
Back, a little way, to where the shingle of the slate quarry is tumbled 
in road-side masses beautifully blue against the warmer grey of the rocks 

above, and up the side path to the great 
Bowder Stone, which has been likened^ to 
all things on earth to which it has no 
manner of resemblance. Then, on again, 
to almost the same spot as that of the large 
view, but looking up the vale instead of 
across it, to the station whence the view 
at the head of the chapter is taken. 




■m-<^ 



* " Upon a semicirque of turf-clad gromicl 
A mass of rock, resembling, as it lay 
Pdght at the foot of that moist precipice, 
A stranded ship, with keel npturn'd, that rests 
Careless of \\inds and waves." — Wordsworth. 
This is the nni\'ersal quotation ; but never meant by Wordsworth for the Bowder Stone. 
; 68 



THE KESWICK WALKS. 

It is impossible to worthily describe the craggy rocks clothed in fern 
and heather ; the grey blue of the slate quarries ; the woods and fields 
and fells in all their sweet and subtle shades of green and grey and gold ; 
and, to crown all, the glorious sunset filling everything with intensity as 
well as delicacy of colour. Man is only a part of nature : how, then, 
should he fitly translate the infinite ? The western crags and hills are 
apparently solid black, but a black which, when looked into, is rich with 
purple and green and the finer tones of orange ; on the north the contrast 
of the bright green bracken touched here and there to red and gold, 
and the blue slate darkened to indigo or lightened to cold grey, show 
clear and crisp against the dim uncertainty, the slow, shy, rich revealing, of 
the southern side. The broad grey bed of pebbles fringed with larch 
is warmed to purple, and the quiet pools among the waste are like 
sheets of beryl ; while Glaramara stands bathed in delicious radiance, as 
if the shadow of a rainbow was passing over it. Every tenderness and 
variety of tone and colour is there : from the richest orange to the deepest 
purple, and all possibilities of red and green and blue between ; but all 
toned down now into an amethystine violet, like a mass of molybdena, 
or ''peacock ore" a little veiled, or the feathers on a dove's throat. 
The cup-like hollow which looks so like a tarn-bed, but is not, is 
softened to a mere tender marking — a shadow darker, but more bloom - 
like than the rest ; the great Bull Crags glow and burn as if the very 
heart of them was on fire within ; and the river hurries through the valley 
like a thread of gold — a little gentle streamlet, too meek for wrath 
and too weak for work. At least, so it seems now, shrunk to a narrow 
line against the wide belt of pebbles : wait till the floods break loose, 
and then see what that tender little stream can do. 

A few steps farther, and you see the way of the Three Passes : not 
the paths themselves, but the openings of the dales; where the Stake 
Pass goes up by Stonethwaite and Langstreth, under Bull Crags and 
Eagle Crag; where the Sty Head Pass winds up over Aaron End, beyond 

69 



THE LAKE COUNTEY. 

Seathwaite ; and where tlie Buttermere Pass goes over by Honister Crag. 
There is also another, less known and less cared for — a stony way between 
High and Low Scawdale which leads into Newlands, and whence the 
sunset effects are supremely grand. Follow this way to-night, and when 
you are at the top of the pass, turn back and note them. 

Kosthwaite and the valley, narrowed now to a mere line, lie cool in 
the evening shadows — cooler and deeper for contrast with what is above. 
For the Borrowdale Fells, just over against the little village, are one 
broad band of reddened gold ; and beyond, but looking far too close to 
have all Thirlmere in the dip between, is the Helvellyn range, a burning 
purple in the chrysolite-coloured sky — the very intensity of passion in the 
wonderful beauty of an eternal calm. While you look the shadows 
lengthen and the band of red gold contracts, an exquisite greenness 
mounting or rather flowing up into it, a green through which the gold 
faintly strikes like the changing hue of an opal ; Helvellyn gets more 
sombre in colour, but clearer in outline — each form distinct against the 
liquid heavens — less passionate and more sullen as the minutes pass. Every 
gradation of hue is before you, from the cold green and grey of the 
shadowed fell, which yet, when you look into it, is full of lingering 
touches of warmth, through the blue and violet and red of Helvellyn, up 
to the gold of the sky. And here, the intense orange in the line next 
to the mountain fades from orange to yellow, and from yellow to primrose, 
and then through a pale cream tint to almost white; till, looking higher, 
you see the pure blue, and the rose-red clouds turning gently westward to 
catch the last of the sunshine. And then the shadow finally conquers the 
golden band of the fell top. Helvellyn burns itself out and gets dark 
and slaty; and the glory fades from the sky, to be caught back and 
flung down in reflected light from the higher crimsoned clouds. And then 
the white moon rises behind amethystine Grlaramara ; and the daylight 
flows into the moonlight, in the commingling of indistinguishable beauty. 

And, in the moonlight, walk up to the head of the dale, and see the 

70 



THE KESWICK WALKS. 

glistening masses of refuse by the "wad" mines ^ under Gliyll o'Combe ^ 
on Base Brown; and tlie black group of the famous yew-trees, the " fraternal 
four ; " and, farther on, the white streak of Sty Head Ghyll — Taylor's Ghyll 
it is generally called — muttering to itself long before seen; and the sharp 
road up Aaron End. And now you are in the very home of the gnomes 
and the genii, and may hear their voices sighing in the hills, and the 
hurrying of their feet across the water as they float like vapoury mists 
from out their caverns, and swarm about the mountain-tops and down 
the rocky fells. If no dear ones are waiting on your prudence you may 
walk away into the gloom of Wastwater over Sty Head Pass by moonlight. 
It would be worth doing on a reliable summer's night ; something to 
remember for ever, and to set as a seal against the loving glories of the 
evening. But, alas ! prudence never had much to do with the moonlight 
yet ; so, if you are wise, you will turn your faces homeward, and lament ; 
and the owls and the corncrake will lament with you. 

This is Borrowdale in the dry summer weather. See it when the 

® These are tlie famous blacklead mines, so long lield to be the only ones in the world, 
where fortunes have been made — and some lost — and wliich have been the origin and 
begimiing of the prosperity of Kesmck. The mines are very variable, a " sop " of large 
value being sometimes stumbled against, and sometimes nothiug found for months. But 
so many substitutes have been discovered of late years, not to speak of the gTeat Russian 
display in the Exhibition of 1862, that the value of the Borrowdale wad is a little 
diminished ; or, if not its value, yet the dependence of the pubHc on the jield. 

'' Gniercoom, as it is spelt, is a singular instance of the degradation of sense by sound, 
and the manner in which the true meaniug of a word gets lost by phonography. GUlercoom 
Hollow is the name of the depression on the top of Base Brown, whence issues the fall, 
" Sour-Mnk Ghyll." Now a ghyll is not a waterfall rightfully — a ghyU is only a chasm or 
deep cut between two rocks or through a hill, down wliich is naturally the place of a water- 
fall. Above the ghyll, or pathway, of Sour-Milk Force is the Combe, or crest of the hill, 
over which the water of the force comes down. The ghyll, therefore, is the ghyll of the 
combe, and the hoUoAv is still called Gillercoom (Ghyll o' Combe) Hollow — the hollow 
between the ghyll and the combe. Sour-Milk Force in the Ghj-ll of the Combe, became 
Sour-Milli Ghyll only ; and Ghyll of Combe Hollow became Ghyll o' Combe, so intelligently 
spelt in the guide-books as Gillercoom. 

71 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

rain has fallen for twelve hours, ^ after the rishig of the " Borrowdale sop," ^ 
and you will find the whole conditions changed. Lodore, which had 
scarcely a cupfull of water trickling through its stones, is now a turbulent 
and turbid Force in the place of a limpid stream rippling musically from 
stone to stone. The river into which it subsides— a mere silver line before — 
is now a boiling whirlpool, white or brown as it holds itself together in its 
sullen flood or breaks passionately into spray and foam upon the rocks. 
The fall comes down, parting into three fierce streams before they join 
again in one ; with just one or tAvo black rocks putting out their heads 
above the waters ; but all the rest are covered, and their places marked only 
by the fiercer rush and the louder roar. The lake-side meadows are standing 
swamps ; and the river by Grrange is no longer a waste of stones, but a 
waste of waters breaking up into thundering waves — not the mere dashing 
of petulant spray against the rocks. It is the same higher up. There are 
no stones now in the river-bed by Castle Crag ; the larches stand waist-deep 
in the water ; the road is flooded up to the horses' girths, and the waters 
dash into the carriage and pour through it. The mountains are loud with 
water-courses ; and not a trace of that gorgeous colouring of twenty-four hours 
ago is to be seen. All yesterday Skiddaw was hidden under a straight-ruled 
smoke-coloured coverlet, which came nearly down to Applethwaite ; to-day it is 
washed clean out of the picture as the storm traverses the vale. So with 
G-laramara and the mountains at the head of Borrowdale. You see nothing 



^ Tlie accounts of floods, and disasters and ii-reparable losses following on tlie summer 
rains, are far too numerous to be quoted here. Any of the older guide-books and county 
histories give them, but it is a thing of which south country people have no idea, and of 
wliich a simple and unexaggerated statement would look like romance to those uninitiated. 

^ The " Borrowdale sop " is a small, smgle cloud, at first no bigger than a man's hand, 
but gradually gathering size and siibstance, which rises at Pierce Ghyll Head (a ghyll and 
force by the Sty Head Pass, on Lingmoor side), and floats away rotmd by Sty Head Tarn 
and Sprinkling Tarn. Should it take the direction of Langdale, and fall over into the vale 
of Langdale, it will rain Avithin twelve or twenty-four hoiu-s, even though the sky be 
cloudless, and the glass high ; l»ut it marks the continuance of fine weather, if it floats over 
into the vale of St. John 



THE KESWICK WALKS. 

but a driving hoary mist, or a fiercer wrath of rain pitiless as hail ; nothing 
but trees bent in the wind, and waters foaming from the hill sides, and the 
rain pouring down a level torrent, and the paths of the mountain ghylls 
filled with raging mountain streams. This is what twelve hours' rain among 
the mountains has In-ouafht. 




" Round the lake " is perhaps the most beautiful of the home walks 
about Keswick, more especially if able to gather up into one knot all the 
scattered points of interest lying by the way — the ascent of " Castlet," already 
spoken of ; the two cascades, Barrow and Lodore ; the Bowder Stone and 
Borrowdale, for those who have not been there before. Of Castlet and these 
last two no more need now be said, though, indeed, their loveliness is as fresh 
to-day as it was yesterday and will be to-morrow ; fresher than the words to 
paint it. But there is Walla Crag beyond Castlet, of which volumes might 
be filled, and never end by doing it justice. For what mere verbal description 
can photograph its purple scaurs and blackened rifts, its clefts and boulders. 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

and that pleasant tossing of green about its base ? Walla Crag has the 
place of the declared Beauty of the Derwentwater range. Then, it is more 
interesting than any other from its associations; for there is still that 
steep and dangerous way called the Lady's Kake, up which poor Lady 
Derwentwater escaped with her jewels, to do her loving woman's utmost 
for the release of her lord ; and perhaps it is the human interest associated 
with it that has given it such a special holding in the hearts of the 
KesAvick people. In old times, too, a large white stone in among the boulders 
used to be pointed out as the Lady's Pocket-handkerchief; and it was firmly 
believed in a certain nursery then filled with rosy-cheeked creduHty, that the 
Lady had dropped her handkerchief in her flight, and that it still hung among 
the crags, where no one could get at it. It was a sad blcAv struck at faith 
when it became known that the handkerchief was a stone to which a certain 
Crosthwaite and one Atkinson were said to climb every year, and paint with a 
material paint-brush and white lead. The last story may be as apocryphal as 
the first. That Great Wood of Walla Crag, as it is called, is full of dehcious 
walks ; some leading up among the crags, and some keeping to the low ground 
among the ferns and wild flowers and shy birds and shyer wood beasts ; and 
one, the sweetest of all, going by a field through the pleasant coppice of 
Keswick Springs into the road at Brow Top ; very lovely, and lonely enough 
for lovers. 

But now you are bound for BarroAv Falls and " round the lake." Still 
under Walla Crag, you pass by where a mountain streamlet, set with ferns and 
flowers, dashes through the cool wood ; and then the bare brow of Falcon 
Crag — keen and wild as its name — cuts against the blue sky sharply. The 
lake shines in the yellow sun, and the ripple just whispers to the pebbles if 
no wind is astir to-day, and the vale rests in calm radiance, — a blue lake 
under a blue sky, and golden fields shined on by a golden sun. And then you 
come to the gates of the Barrow grounds, ^° and by the well-kept gardens to 
Barrow Falls, just behind the house. What a possession for a dining-room 
"^ Barrow means a liill or tumiiliis. 
74 



THE KESWICK WALKS. 

window ! — an out-look right into the heart of a waterfall, not a hundred yards 
away ! 

The falls make a double leap, one hundred and twenty-four feet in all ; 
with a resting-place in between, something like a flight of steps with a landing 
in the middle. The upper fall throws itself off into foam and spray, like a 
shower of snowflakes ; the lower twines its Avater into strings, and keeps its 
forces close. The space is too much cleared of trees, perhaps ; and, though 
not so artificial as the Rydal Falls, yet there are signs of the spirit, if not 
traces of the blast, which once made the leap grander than what time and nature 
had ordained. But even improyers cannot entirely spoil a waterfall. There are 
still the golden sands and the rocks, the clear pools and the green depths 
within the shade, the old tree-stems covered with moss and the moss bearing 
ferns and polypodys, the wild flowers in the sunshine, and the wild birds in 
the bushes. And though the Barrow Falls look too much like what they are 
— a private cascade in a gentleman's private grounds — yet they are very 
beautiful in substance, and would be more beautiful if left wholly to the 
gracious care of nature. 

Lodore, of apparently unknown height, for some call it three hundred 
and sixty,^^ some one hundred and fifty,^-- and some one hundred ^^ feet only, 
has a grander impress. Broken and fierce — less thickly wooded than 
Stockghyll and of a longer range of fall — the rift deeper and wider and the 
boulders larger — here is a turbulent scene enough ; but disappointing ; save 
to those who see it not only immediately after heavy rain but even during 
the shower. For the supply from Watendlath Tarn runs down perceptibly 
in half an hour, and then there are only big old rocks and small spaces of 
fall, and olive-brown pools clear and very shallow, and lipping rills, in place 
of the rush and the hurry and the wild outpouring, and the funnels of 
foam driven underneath the pools in long whitened streaks, and the mad 
outcry and hurtling of the waters. It is not often in perfection during the 

" Otley's Guide. '^ Handbook of Keswick. " Black's Guide. 

75 L 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

summer, excepting in the July rains, such as those spoken of; and again, 
as with so many points in this country, only residents and natives know 
its beauty by heart. The dark crags — Gowder Crag on the left, and 
Shepherd's Crag on the right — are fringed with trees to the top ; and here 
and there an oak sapling or a young mountain ash has taken root among 
the very boulders themselves, some of which, covered with moss, look like 
great green velvet balls, and some, left bare, shine in the sun with prismatic 
colours. The blackened, sides of the rift are wet with spray, and there are 
dark corners under cavernous ledges, and shallow places barely covering the 
pebbles. Sometimes huge stones overarch each other, and the water dashes 
through and over as if spinning from a wheel ; sometimes a thundering leap 
comes madly down ; and sometimes a rock ctands stolidly in the way, and 
forces the dashing stream ajoart ; and then the tumult subsides, and only a 
clear small stream runs among the stones through the meadows to the lake. 

Now on, towards Grange, past the place where Gowder Crag fell into 
the road two years before poor Gray's visit, to his mortal terror lest it should 
fall again as he was passing, to where the Borrowdale gorge shuts in its vale 
against the world ; and then across the double bridges of Grange, where 
the old monks used to store their harvests ; and so by steep climbs and 
sharp descents on to the high mountain road of Catbells. 

The lake lies far below, and boats are gliding over its still waters, making- 
long tracks of light and disturbing the sharply-drawn reflections as they pass. 
Swineside is unfolding its summer mantle of golden gorse, and the Newlands 
Mountains, with their quiet vales and glens, entice to further wanderings ; 
down in the swamps where snipes and herons are to be found, by Ullock 
Moss, the yellow iris is blooming with lavish grace, the wild columbine 
bears its doves upon its breast, and orchids and rare ferns are to be found 
by careful seekers ; but purple foxgloves, musical with great brown bees 
within their bells, and hedges rich with honeysuckles and wild roses, offer 
themselves to all. Then through a delicious bit of road, dark with wood, 
and fragrant as no other road in the world — turning aside to the old landing 

76 



THE KESWICK WALKS. 

place of Nichol Ending by the lake, and coming back with a heart full of 
pleasant memories, and some not quite so pleasant; — as of that diseased, 
deformed, half-idiot lad, poor wretch ! who used to be always there ham- 
mering at his boat, and who had but tAvo loves in the world, of which his 
boat was one, and the Portinscale cockatoo the other ; — then through the 
pretty \illage of Portinscale,^^ where the white cockatoo still flies among the 
trees, and speaks to the passers by; over Derwent Bridge, which, high as 
it is, the floods have often washed over, and where those mysterious and 
fatal " cradles " were always causing the death of drunken men and unwary 
children ; and so home : with the evening rays reddening the mountain tops and 
turning into diamonds all the window panes on Brow Top and Chesuut Hill. 

This is one of the Keswick walks, beautiful in all seasons and at all 
times — ten miles only in length — but a microcosm of loveliness : being to 
the vales what an epigram is to literature, or a sonnet to poetry — the compass 
small, but the sense and feelinsf entire. 




WATENDLATH BRIDQ-E 



To Watendlath and round by Rosthwaite is also within the powers of 
the ordinarily strong. You pass under Walla Crag again, striking up to 
Ashness Bridge where Barrow Beck flows noisily and artists stop to make 
a sketch of Skiddaw and the two lakes in the valley below ; though, to be 
sure, Skiddaw is a little hidden on the Latrigg side by Falcon Crag, under 
which you sit. Then through the Barrow woods, taking care to diverge to 

" '^ riirtings-gliyll," say some. 

77 



THE LAKE COUNTEY. 

those two magnificent chasms in Thrang Crag, where you stand — your only 
support the small, frail, ash-tree leaning outwards — looking at the view across 
eternity. After which you go on again through more wood, till you come 
into the narrow vale of Watendlath. 

The first aspect of the valley is very wild, but the second tells you that 
the mountains do not exceed in actual height, and that the main elements 
of grandeur are the narrowness of the pass and the tumultuous forms of 
the rocks. There is room only for the narrow, stony way of the river, which 
jumps from rock to rock in a straight line, hemmed in by a rude wall on 
the one side and by the living crag on the other ; for the narrow, stony way 
of the cart-road ; and for a slender slip of meadow at the side, golden with 
buttercups and peopled with kine ; the masses of rock overhanging helj)ing 
to make it all look narrower still. Before you reach the hamlet, you turn 
aside to see a curious and lovely little cascade, where the rocks are curiously 
hollowed and waterworn, and which is a small miniature of the future full 
length of Lodore. For this Watendlath beck, issuing from the Watendlath 
Tarn (into which originally falls a little stream from Blea Tarn on the Thirlmere 
fells), makes the Lodore fall in its ending. 

The tarn and the hamlet belonging are noticeable chiefly for their 
seclusion ; not for wildness, nor for grandeur, but for seclusion — life in a 
recess with no outside relations — a bit of primitive isolation, the next step 
from which would be to savagery. The valley is very high, but the moun- 
tains are higher still, and there is no way back to the world again save by 
the hill tops to Borrowdale, or over that spongy flat of mountain table-land 
to Thirlmere : so you must sit for a short time in the porch of a farm cottage 
where every one sits, and, if you can, sketch that old woman in her scanty 
purple dress, with her blue-checked apron over her head, painfully gathering 
sticks. Some among you may think that more comfort and less picturesque- 
ness would perhaps advance that poor old flickering life a little ; but others, 
if artists of a certain school, hold to the blue-checked apron and the scanty 
purple dress, stained by the weather to such a delicious tone. Now go over 



THE KESWrCK WALKS. 

the quaint little bridge to the tara, and look at the green rushes extending 
almost half way across, with their red edging of water-lily leaves ; and then 
up High Ladder Brow, and over the fell top, — most probably in the rain — 
to where the beautiful Borrowdale valley ^^ opens below you. The hills are 
smoking, and clouds are hanging round them in all directions ; Scawfell's 
head is covered and Glaramara is veiled ; but what of that ? — the young 
green ling and the fruitless tufts of bleaberry hang laden with jewels, as 
the sun dashes aside the nearer mists like a loving face smiling through 
tears and sorrow. Be grateful for the smile, and glad of the sunlight which 
gives such splendour to the rain-drops as you come over the fell, wet and 
tired, and so throusfh the wood to Kosthwaite. 




THE DEUID OIPOLT 



The Druid Circle is another Keswick possession worth seeing. Not for 
any particular beauty in those forty-eight old cobble-stones set up on end, 
and looking like so many enchanted creatures sitting in mute perpetual 
council, and which the saying is that no one can count twice alike ; nor yet 



'* TMs is the manner in wliich old Avriters spoke of the yiew of Borrowdale from High 
Ladder Brow. " Dark caverns yawn at its entrance, terrific as the Avildness of a maniac, 
and disclose a narrow strait, runnuig up between mountains of granite, that are shook into 
almost every possible form of horror, and resemble the accumulations of an earthquake, 
splintered, shivered, piled, amassed." In reality it is simply beautiful, and no more 
maniacal than Windsor Park. 

79 



THE LAKE COUNTllY. 

for any particular loveliness in the way thereto ; but because of the asso- 
ciations and traditions attached, the thoughts to be evoked, and the magnificent 
panorama to be studied. You can get there by either the Ambleside or 
Penrith road : if the first, up Brow Top, past Castlerigg, and through the 
pretty Castle Lonning ; if the second, by Brigham and the old Penrith road, 
till you come to the waste, where these dumb stone creatures sit in the 
sunshine, waiting for the hour of their deliverance and the return of their 
gods, all bound in Eagnarok together. 

What a crowd of feeling rushes on us, as we stand on the sacred place 
where our savage ancestors so often offered up their sacrifices, and poured 
out their Custom of blood and agony to propitiate the God whom we know 
now to be the God of Love! What a long and varied chapter of nobler 
education since those dark times to the present turning of the cleaner historic 
page ! No better than the Zulu Kaffir or the tatooed Maori, the Druid priest 
and his flock of trembling worshippers re|)resented only the darkness and 
the stumbling of ignorance, only the debasement of fear and the cruelty of 
superstition. And now, the light that has broken through the darkness ! — 
the knowledge that has guided the heart of fear, and the feet of stumbling ! 

This Druid's temple was well chosen for its purpose. Commanding the 
finest mountain view to be had lower than from a mountain top — itself the 
centre of an amphitheatre closing it in on all sides — the lake hidden, and 
every sign of opening or way of escape concealed — we can fancy what it must 
have been, when rendered even more awful by reverence of place, and when 
thick woods still further shut out the light of liberty and the chance of 
deliverance. The inner circle, supposed to be the priest's place, i*^ looks 
directly towards the Vale of St. John and the broken outline of Nathdale 
Fells. Helvellyn, fierce and dark, stands as the great barrier against 

16 "Wriglit repudiates the theory that these Druids' cu'cles were temples, or places of 
sacrifice and worship, inclining to the belief that they were bmial-places instead, thougli 
puzzled -^^dth cemeteries of such magnitude as Stonehenge, and of such intricacy as 
Avehury. 

80 



THE KESWICK WALKS. 

Eastern hope and life ; and we understand now the meaning of its terrible 
lines, and what is the spirit in-dwelling, and how it has become the repre- 
sentative of cruelty in the mountain system. Is there such a thing as 
brute matter ? Cannot even the hills and the woods be filled with the 
abiding spirit of life, good or ill according to its generation ? Beyond 
Helvellyn, over Wanthwaite Fells, is Mell Fell, looking like a huge 
tumulus, suggestive of death to the men of old time. The ravines and 
precipices of Blencathra show all their wildness, and SkiddaAv and Latrigg 
scarcely soften the fiercer front of their neighbour ; the Newlands Mountains 
rise sharply against the sky ; and Walla Crag shuts out the Borrowdale 
range with its dark and clean-cut prison walls. Mountains all round, and 
never a glimpse of the quiet lake, nor the wide plains beyond ! — nothing but 
a living cell of rocks and hills, with no escape and no reprieve ! 

Think what this place of the Druid Circle has seen. Picture the long 
procession gathering from the mountain caves and rude forest homes, as 
the white-robed priests and the holy maidens, oak-crowned and with torque 
and band of gold, marched slowly through the vale, leading the white bulls 
for sacrifice and bearing the golden sickle and the unspotted cloth, while 
chanting their temple songs and striking their barbaric music. Old warriors, 
scarred with the mark of many a fight and bowed with years and the 
labours of their savage life ; armed men in the prime of their manhood, 
their long hair floating on their shoulders, and their garments, of the 
skins of beasts, hanging loosely round them ; fair-haired women bearing 
their children in their arms ; youths and maidens ; all swarming in from 
their fastnesses to attend the high festival held in honour of the gods 
they worship]3ed and did not know. And what festivals ! — the shrieks of 
the slain, their organ chaunt ; and the blood of the victims, their incense 
swinging from the altar ; and muttered invocations to dread names, their 
Litany of Love ; and blind terror, and bewildered guiding, and the heart 
bowed for fear, and the hand clenched for death, their High Mass and 
Church Service ; and the earth a charnel-house for the sustenance of heaven, 

81 M 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

and man the sport of the gods and their victim, for all their creed of hope ! 
Oh, those dumb, eternal mountains ! what tragedies of crime and terror 
have been enacted year by year before them ! Yet there they stand, 
unchanging witnesses of good or ill, patient in their power and of supreme 
and infinite compassion ; the same now and always, whatever storms of 
life beat up about their feet. 

The same and yet how different ! There are mountains which mean only 
summer days' excursions, and children gathering bilberries, and lovers wander- 
ing through the bracken, and skylarks singing overhead ; and there are others 
which the fury of the elements never wholly quits, but which have ever in 
the heart of them an elemental spirit of wrath and a terrifying Presence ; 
and there are others, like High Street, where the aspect is one of command 
and authoritative rule ; and others, like Helvellyn, penetrated with the 
crying souls of victims and the masterful spirits of torture. And then, 
again, there are places like this of the Druid Circle, where every expression 
is of loneliness and terror, and the solemnity of priestly rites, and the help- 
lessness of man in the grasp of superstition. 

Whether it is that the Druids chose what they saw befitted them, or 
whether they have left their spirits in their temple yet to this day, who 
can say? — but sure it is that their "Circle" near Keswick makes quite a 
different imj)ression on the soul to anything else in the district ; and that 
some such thoughts as these, more or less distinct, flow as naturally through 
the mind while standing there, as the thought of children in a daisy-field, 
or of young lovers in the spring time. And for this reason, the best time 
and manner in which to see the stones is on a dark, lurid, lowering summer 
day, when the clouds are full of thunder and the mountains full of wrath, 
when all the forces of nature look fierce and aggressive, and the whole earth 
teems with secret life and the souls of the slain struggling to come forth. 
Or else on a wild winter's twilight, when the wind is thronged with demons, 
and in every blast you hear their voices, and in every flying cloud behold 
their forms. And you understand the meaning of these stones as well then 



THE KESWICK AVALKS. 

as in the heavier aspect : the only difference being in the heaving struggle 
to get loose, and in the riot of escape. 

No such thoughts could come from that lovely walk by Skiddaw Terrace, 
through Millbeck and Applethwaite, (said by the etymologically crazy to mean 
Ea-pul-thwaite — water- water-place,) and home by the pleasant fields of 
Ormathwaite, the " cleared place of snakes." This is one of the favourite 
Keswick walks ; and no wonder. First there is the Bassenthwaite road, 
worth going on if only for the sake of passing by such places as " Crookeldy 
Bridge," and "Dancing Gate;" and then there is the turn sharp to the 
right, and the steep way just under Carsleddam — so close under, that you 
look into the very heart of Skiddaw, and see the form of its bones and the 
colour of its blood. Millbeck is the first of the hamlets on Skiddaw Terrace, 
and the bridge there has long been a favourite with artists ; while farther 
on, Applethwaite and its ghyll — called locally Wordsworth's G-hyll, because 
the great poet was once pleased to express his approbation of the same — 
might stay the wandering feet and arrest the roving eyes for many long- 
days together : such mountain climbs and wooded rambles and sketches 
of picturesque, unhealthy old houses, and such a view as cannot be matched 
from any mountain side in the world. But the view is the same as that had 
during the ascent of Skiddaw; so the description of it will come in more 
properly there. 

The gully and the river divide the village of Applethwaite in two ; and 
by the water-side in that cleft you may see a bank of nettle-leaved bell- 
flowers — " Canterbury bells," growing as richly as if cultivated in a private 
garden ; and count the lovely icicles in winter and the pretty cascades in 
summer, and rejoice in the very home of beauty and picturesque wildness. 
The village of Applethwaite, with its gardens and its lanes, its fruit-bearing 
trees and stretches of gorse-clad mountain, its mill and the rift with the 
rivulet within, is a gem of its kind — the real hamlet of the hills. 

The way home (more rightfully the ways home) is as beautiful as the 
rest. Either down the lane, and through the Ormathwaite fields and wood, 

S3 M 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

and by the Lairthwaitc fields where the bearers and mourners in the funerals 
from under Skiddaw "raise the psalm," ^'^ and so to Keswick by the Vicarage 
Limepots ; or by Gale which lies under Lonscale, and through the Latrigg 
Avoods, and by Goosegreen and the Greta. Very precious whichever way is 
taken. And all this time, remember, you have the lake and its islands and 
the Borrowdale mountains before you ; and the grey town, with its pink church, 
spreading out to the foot of Brow Top and backed by Walla Crag; and the 
vale with its green fields and its white terraces below you ; and the great green 
head of Skiddaw toAvering above you. Can you ask anything more beautiful ? 
No section of a book can give even a list of all the walks about 
Keswick. They would take a volume to their own share, and then leave half 
untold ; but we can mention a few of them in the catalogue and guide-book 
style. There is the way from Keswick to the Portinscale road through 
HowTah's, with a noble view of Skiddaw like a consolidated thunder-cloud 
sent from the north, and where you can track the course of the Greta, and 
see the Borrowdale mountains, but not the lake : and that pretty church lonning 
with the mysterious "dub" attached, called Priest-cuddy-Hole,^^ of strangely 
dark and mystic meaning : and there are the fields about Portinscale, bringing 
one to all sorts of pleasant places full of sweet surprises : and Gutherscale 
and Skelghyll are worth seeing : and the by-Avays about and through New- 
lands. Swineside is a fair young hill to be compassed and surmounted ; 
the Faw Park woods are the SAveetest eA'er groAAm betAveen the sun and the 
generous earth ; and out by BraitliAvaite and ThorntliAvaite you come to 
episodes of beauty Avliich fill your heart, and make you press the hand 
Avithin your own with a tenderer grasp. Ah ! go Avliich way you Avill, in 
and about that beloved Vale of DerwentAvater you must perforce go into 
the very heart and home of beauty ! 



" This striking custom is still kept up. At a given spot in the road, before neariug the 
church, the clerk, who heads the funeral procession, gives out tlie Old Hundredth, and the 
niournfvd Avail may be heard far and wide through the valley. 

'^ A cuddA' is a donkev, as Mxdl as the familiar abbreviation of Cuthbcrt. 



84 




liilbSJiJJMTHWAlTi!; WATJiii 



BLENCATHRA, SKIDDAW, AND BASSENTHWAITE 



CHAPTER VI 

The Skicldaw^ group comprises Blencathra, Souter Fell, Carrock Fell with 
its strange Sunken Kirks, the Caldbeck Fells, and Skiddaw proper with 
its various members ; for every peak and larger crag in this country has a local 
name, sometimes known only to the shepherds, but sometimes, as with the 
various peaks and crags of Skiddaw and Blencathra, made historical. 



1 By some made to mean the Great HiU; by others, the Horseshoe HiU, "from its 
fancied likeness to a horseshoe (yscyd) ;" and by others, Scoed How, from sheath or 
>,,.,.een— the screening or protecting hill. Robinson, rector of Ousby, hazards the etymo- 
logical conjectm-e, " Slddday, or Sky-day, so called fi-om the height of it." 

85 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

Blencatlira, though apparently independent, is, in reality, only a portion 
of the Skiddaw group ; as may be seen by the model ; where the Skiddaw 
range stands apart in a mountain crown or circle, Blencatlira, and the others 
merely belonging to the whole. The way to it lies by the Greta, along the 
Penrith road, leaving the gardens of Low Bryery, so neat and Dutch-like, to 
the left, and thence, by many a pleasant turn, to Threlkeld,^ where some old 
traditions still live and the links between the present and the past can yet be 
counted. It was here that Sir Launcelot de Threlkeld had his third house ; 
for he was wont to say that he had three — Yanwath (near Penrith), for profit 
and warmth and comfortable winter quarters ; Crosby, which gave him a park 
well filled with deer, and days of knightly sport and revelry ; and Threlkeld 
Hall, which gave him tenants^ for war-time. Three tolerably desirable posses- 
sions for a landowner of the olden time barely able to read his mass-book ! 
But Sir Launcelot was a noble gentleman; and, if riches may be measured 
according to desert, had neither men nor money beyond his merit. It was 
he who married the widow of the ruthless Clifford, and who proved such a good 
stepfather to the young heir — the shepherd-lord of Wordsworth's " Song at 
the Feast of Brougham Castle." And in days when murder was part of 
every gentleman's fitting education, and the slaughter of the innocents for the 
better seizure of their estates by no means a reprehensible act, the tender 
guardianship which he, a stepfather, bestowed on a lad by whose death he 
would have benefited, stamps him as a Christian far removed from his time, 
and as a knight who had won his spurs on a better than the battle field. 

There is a steep way up Blencatlira which those may go who covet 
superfluous fatigue ; but the more rational path is farther on, by the little 
hamlet of Scales. Yet, though more rational, by no means ignominiously 
secure, for it is only a narrow ledge running over the shoulder like a great 
muscle starting out, and is not always a pleasant track to walk in, especially 
when the wind blows with such force that you may be blown fairly over by a 



Thrall-keld (serf or slave spring) ? or Thor's Hill Keld! 

86 



BLENCATHRA, SKIDDAW, AXl) BASSENTHWATTE. 

stray blast waiting like a tliief round the corner of a rock. Still it can be 
done without real peril ; but it is not always pleasant, and might be a little 
unsafe to the very timid. If it is a windy day, the oak and the ash will be 
white, the fern feathers driven and laid, and the great dock leaves doubled 
up, as you turn into the hill-side path, which, followed to its end, would land 
you in the small town of Hesket New Market, out by High Pike and Carrock 
Fell ; in which case you would pass by Souter Fell, and, if you wished, by 
Bowscale Tarn, both famous in local traditions, the one for its spectres and 
the other for its undying fish.'' But if you want to go to the top, you must 
keep straight up the shoulder for Scales Tarn and Razor Edge : with such way 
of descent as you may choose. 




' > 






EiiZOB EDGi! 



That small and noisy stream to the right, coming out of Scales Tarn, 
is one source of the Greta : but only the Glenderamakin as yet, not the 



^ " Both the undjaiig fish that swim 
In Bowscale Tarn did wait on hun ; 
The pair were servants of his eye 
In their immortahty ; 
They moved abont in open siglit, 
To and fro for his dehght." 

Tliese, too, lilie the old stone dolls in Crosthwaite Cliurch, used to be called " Adam and 
Eve." We never knew of any one wlio had seen them, but they are none the less there. 

87 



THE LAKE COUNTEY. 

Cxveta until it meets the St. John's Vale heck, the ancient Bure. It 
makes a wide circuit before it comes clown into the valley, going all the 
way to Souter Fell and Mungrisedale before finally subsiding into the Greta. 
Following then the direction, if not exactly the course of the stream, you 
soon come upon the thing you want to see — Scales Tarn, under the shadow of 
Tarn Crag, one of the bolder processes of Linthwaite Pike, itself the boldest 
of the whole mass, saving the Edges. Here, the saying is, the sun never 
shines and the stars are visible at noonday. Of your own experience the 
little lake will probably be covered with shining spangles, not of direct 
sunlight though, and no stars will be visible — not even in the blackest part 
under that jagged height, so precipitous and overhanging that the very sheep 
learn caution and make no tracks across. 

It is very lovely to watch the ripple of a tarn ; a wonderful lesson 
in wave curvature, if small in scale yet as true as the Avildest ocean 
storm could give. Ever changing in line and yet so uniform in law, 
the artist and the hydrographer might learn some valuable truths from 
half a day's study of one of these small mountain sheets of water. Now 
the broad, smooth, silky curves flow steadily across ; now a fine network 
spreads over these, and again another network, smaller and finer still, 
breaks up the rest into a thousand fragments ; then the tarn bursts out 
into tiny silver spangles like a girl's causeless laughter ; and then comes 
a grey sweep across the water, as if it shivered in the wind ; and then 
again all subsides, and the long silky flow sets in again, with quiet 
shadows and play of green and grey in the transparent shallows. It is 
like a large diamond set in emerald ; for the light of the water is radiance 
simply, not colour, and the grass, with the sun striking through, is as bright 
as an emerald. We can never get beyond crystals and metals as the image of 
the supreme excellence of water and earth. 

Now up from the tarn, by a sharp pull, to the Threlkeld side of the 
mountain, where are some notable transformations. From below the 
various parts of Blencathra look like the shoulders of Skiddaw, but bonier 



BLENCATHRA, SKIDDAW, AND BASSENTIIAVAITE. 

and scraggier ; part of the same upheaval, but the wilder and more troubled 
part, as is always the case with one side of a mountain. Seen from 
above, these shoulders turn to Edges topping deep and precipitous ravines ; 
the ridges, like Striding and Swirrel Edge on Helvellyn, only sharper and 
more dangerous, leading up like the crests of a wave to the grassy mountain 
top, as smooth and soft as the Sussex Downs. Gold and black are those 
ravines, sweeping down in enormous mountain bays ; and the top is sharp 
too, and broken, and not good for weak nerves to venture too near the 
edge ; but the pictures seen from these high mountain bays are wonderfully 
grand, and worth a little daring and danger. The whole Helvellyn line is 
there, from Wanthwaite Fells to Helvellyn Top, with Fairfield and St. 
Sunday's Crag accompanying ; and there is the enchanted vale of St. John, 
and Nathdale Fells set like a backbone between the two valleys, and the 
valleys themselves, calm and rich, and still. Great How and Thirlmere are 
beyond, with Steel Fell barring the way, and the Dunmail Raise gap just 
visible ; and, far in the distance, are the Coniston Fells, and a shining strip 
of sea beyond. A mass of blue heads are the mountains about Ambleside 
and Troutbeck and Hawes Water ; and then come the two cones known 
as the Mell Fells, and the great spine of all, Crossfell, like a dim line 
of cloud backing up the horizon. 

They say that the castles of the Penrith plains may be seen though 
a pocket telescope clearly. If you have none, you cannot go maundering 
about the Danes, or the Border deeds of the Mosstroopers ; or how Anne, 
Countess of Pembroke, Montgomery, and Dorset, set all her smaller world 
at nought ; of the magnificent Toryism of the old Lord Lonsdale ; or any 
other platitudes of the same nature, sure to be uttered by those more his- 
torical than the rest. But you can make out instead Carlisle as a vapoury 
marking on the earth's map in between the dip formed by Atkinson's Man 
and Carrock Fell ; and the lonely living of Caldbeck.* The green shoulders 

'' Ciildbeclv is one of tlie bleak outlj-ing stations of the lake country — lonely and 

89 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

of Skifldaw and its forest — where is never a tree, but only moor-birds and 
ling- and a geological peculiarity to be noticed in its place and a certain 
sliooting-box of enviable circumstance — rise up in endless succession ; and then 
comes a glimpse of the sea between Lonscale and Grisedale Pike, with a 
fierce bit of Blencathra itself — " stern Blencathra's skyey height" — all radiant 
green, and bleached stones like the bones of the creature laid bare ; and 
the sunlight falling on it heavily, chased by large cloud shadows, and chilled 
by the raving wind. 

If you are strong, you may go down by Carrock and Bowscale Tarn, 
ending in Caldbeck and its fells and moors. Or you may take Skiddaw on 
your way home ; or you may descend by Knot Crag upon Threlkeld, which 
would hoAvever be too much of a retrogression ; or you may find out the 

desolate, but with a past, a liistoiy, capacities of wealth, and beautiful nooks. Ranulph 
Eugain, the chief forester of Ingiewood, granted a licence to the Piior of Carhsle to build 
an hospital there to secui'e travellers from thieves and storm, on theu' way through the 
wild Caldbeck fells to more civilized j)ai-ts. When this was done, the church was founded, 
and dedicated to Saint Mungo, who had already given his name and benediction to a 
famous well which still exists near the churchyard. Gospatric, the son of Orme, gave the 
patronage of the rectory to the Prior of Carlisle, from Avhom it passed to the bishoj) when 
times and rulers and church services were changed. The district is divided into Caldbeck- 
Uptown, or Uppertown, and Caldbeck- Underfell. The Cald (keld) ? beck rises in Braefell 
from half a dozen heads, coming down from Park End, past the Faidds and Whelpay 
(a wolf's name hi disguise), by Pategill, or Paddergill, Piattan Row, and Hudscales, to one 
of the loveliest places under heaven, called the Meeting of the Waters ; and here it falls 
into the Caldew that has come out of Skiddaw Forrest round by Mosedale (where it has 
received the Bowscale Tarn stream) and Hesket New Market, to finally lose itself in the 
Eden, or Water of the Hills, just below Carhsle. Caldbeck has riches, too. The old 
sajdng, " Caldbeck and Caldbeck Fells are u'orth all England else," is not without some 
foundation ; for there are mines at S\\'ineside, and even " gowd scope has been foimd there." 
As for beauty, the Howk, or Fairy Khk and Fairy Kettle, the Meetuig of the Waters 
already spoken of, and, A^itllin a walk, Iveghyll or Ivesgill IMill, and Sebergham, may stand 
as fair even after KesAvick and the lakes. But it is a desolate old place, for all that ; 
and, towards Carhsle and Wigton, the very essence and extreme of bleakness and poverty, 
save for those -who like and xinderstand the wildest form of moorland life, and can take 
interest hi nature without a single adventitious grace to her sliare. 

90 



BLENCATHRA, SKIDDAW, AND BASSENTIIWAITIl 

birthplace of the Gleiideraterra, and follow its course in the cleft between 
Skiddaw and Blencathra ; or you may come down the green steep that leads 
directly upon Waste Cote, and through the Brundholm Woods by Greta ^ 
side, where you have one of the best, though not most characteristic, views 
of the lake and vale. 

These woods, set up on a height, with the river down in the vale below, 
and the lake and the mountains as the distant view beyond, are infinitely 
lovely. Had they been farther south they would have been peopled with 
nightingales ; as it is, every bird that lives and sings in the north seems 
to find its home here. The river, too, is a real woodside river — broken, rich, 
varied— parts full of happiness and love, like that glorious bit beneath the 
trees, where, when vou have crossed the little Avoodsn bridge, you must needs 




MILLKAOB — BRTTNDHOLM: WOODS 



* Called Greta,, say some, from the word to greet, or cry ; for, indeed, it is a ver}^ 
soimding river, wailing or singing, according to one's mood. Bnt a clever friend suggests as 
its etymology instead — Great-Ea, or the great water ; and older etymologists give it as the 
Greot-Ea, the rocky water. It is formed by the St. John's beck, formerly the Bure, wliich 
issues from Thirhiiere, and the Glenderamakin, which, falling out of Scales Tarn, whids 
away roimd Souter Fell till it joms the St. John's beck, not far from Tlu-elkeld. In old 
accounts, Keswick is said to be situated near the Bure, and, in some guide-books, this river 
is said to " issue from the coves of Wythbiu'n ; " but the name is, in fact, lost now, and no 
one loiows anything of the Bure : neither of that from the coves of Wythburn, nor of that, 
still more apocryphal, from the top of Castlerigg : both of which may be found by the 
curious in old books of the county. 



91 



N 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

sit down on the bank among the flowers, and dream of the one you love ; 
and others full of soitoav ; and others— like the Mill Kace— eloquent of human 
industry and the ceaseless round and noble glory of toil. Factory life seems 
to be robbed of half its squalor when the surroundings are such as these. But 
now indeed the Greta loses its character of the wood-side river, and becomes 
the serviceable river to the town ; and for all its length hereafter, from Brierley 
to Calvert Bridge, and thence to the Keswick Bridge, it has something set it 
to do ; perhaps nobler in the end, than showing the law of river flow, or teach- 
ing the perspective of reflection, or even emblemizing the phases of human 
life, and the changes of human feeling. 

And so you will have accomplished Blencathra : beautiful in itself, with 
grand prospects from its heights, and by no means difficult to surmount, yet, 
strangely enough, not one of the "fashionable" mountains among tourists. 
But, having accomplished it, perhaps it has scarcely been with thorough 
satisfaction. For, though there may have been sunshine and cloud in 
abundance, which should, apparently, have made effect enough, 3'et the shine 
may have been of that poor and hard kind sometimes seen in the mountain 
districts — a flaring not an enriching light, taking out all the more delicate 
shades of colour and hardening all the softer touches, reducing the tender 
gleams to one monotone of lifeless yellow, and leaving only a level glare 
in the place of those thousand subtle changes which make the true beauty of 
a mountain day. And though the wild clouds may have been for ever sweeping 
over the sky, and burying broad tracts of the hillside under their depths of 
shade, yet the shadow has been perhaps as hard and soulless as the rest. 
There have been no gentle pencillings of tender grey through which the light 
might flow shyly down ; no prismatic aureoles crowning the shining crags ; 
the clouds have come sweeping along, as if they strode mailed and armed 
through the sky, and dashed aside the heavy glare with a hand as harsh and 
unloving as itself. For moods of nature are as various as the tempers of 
men ; and this harshness of sunshine is not an infrequent experience on 
summer days in a strong east wind, 

92 



BLENCATHRA, SKIDD AW, AND BASSENTPI WATTE. 




" its fine black head, and the bleak air a top of it, with a prospect of 
mountains all about and about, making you giddy; and then Scotland afar 
off, and the border countries so famous in song and ballad ! It was a day 
that will stand out like a mountain, I am sure, in my life ! " That Avas 
Charles Lamb's impression of Skiddaw top : not going into guide-book par- 
ticulars as to what he saw thence. Perhaps because he neither knew nor 
cared for the formal baptism of small blue points scarce seen in the dim 
horizon. 

Skiddaw*^ is a mountain peculiar to itself in all things; of special place 
and special formation, of a different view to anything else in the whole district, 
and of quite a different character of ascent. For, instead of the gradual 
revealing of most other mountain ascents — the new lake that peeps out here — 
as you go a few feet higher the hidden tarn that lies below you there— the 
ranges you first look up to and then look down on— and the new knowledge 
of position and relation that you attain — here you have nothing but the one 
same view of Derwentwater all throughout, until you get to the top and look 



^ " Skiddaw, Lanvediii, and Casticand, 

Are tlie liighest mountains in all England." 

This was Camden's proverb ; Clarke's is : — • 

" Kidstow Pike, Catstycam, Helvelljai, and Sldddaw man. 
Are the highest hills ever clomb by Englishmen." 

Its real height is said by the Ordnance surveyors to be three thousand and twenty-four feet 
above the level of the sea. 

93 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

over the plains to the sea, and over the sea to the border land of our old 
enemy beyond. 

It is an ascent of which very little can be said by way of description. 
For, when we have spoken of Derwentwater and its islands in the sunshine, — 
of how the mountains stand all round it, a liquid purple if in shadow, 
or flecked with gold if the sun shines fitfully through the clouds, or brave 
in one broad gleaming sheen if the heavens are free and the light of the day 
unchecked — of how the lower hills get gradually lost and are at last reduced 
to the level of the plains — and how the fields and woods and gardens become 
more and more map-like as we go higher, the houses less distinct, and the 
lake nothing but a tarn with a few dark spots on it, — when we say that new 
ranges of hills come gradually up behind the others, a very sea of mountain 
tops, but with less individuality than many other ranges seen from nearer 
heights, we say all that the first part of the ascent reveals to us. All, 
that is, leaving the beauty untold. But, from the beginning of the way 
up by Latrigg and Gale lying under Jenkin Hill which is the shoulder 
ascended, and whence the Skiddaw Terrace view sjooken of before is seen — 
the view of the ascent — from the beginning to the end of that chapter by 
the King of Saxony's Well, a world of beauty if not a world of startling 
surprises lies before you. And without difficulty in the going ; which is a 
recommendation with many ; which indeed is the chief cause why Skiddaw 
is so popular, for the most timid horsewoman can ride to the top, without 
a really hard pinch anywhere. It is just a smooth rising front of moorland, 
with a lovely home-view lying below — a great, green amphitheatre beyond, 
Skiddaw forest — and then the stony, bleak, wild top, the distant prospect, and 
the glorious outburst. 

There lies the Solway, yellow in the northern distance, with the blue 
mass of CrifFel '^ beyond ; there can be sometimes seen the Isle of Man, 



■^ " When Skiddaw wears a cap, 
Criffel wots full well of that." 

94 



BLENCATHKA, SKIDDAW, AND BASSENTHWAITE. 

and by the specially favoured, so specially that they are almost apocryphal, 
the coast of Ireland ; the town and castle of Cockermouth — not Whitehaven, 
because of Scilly Bank, but the line of sea-coast about St. Bees ; the 
Newlands Mountains and those of Buttermere ; the Ennerdale range ; Scaw- 
fell, and part of the Screes in the dip of Black Sail ; Black Combe, just 
appearing in an opening between Great Gable and Kirkfell ; the Coniston 
range, and the sea and plains beyond. Some do speak of Lancaster 
Castle, and some of Ingieborough in Yorkshire, and some of Snowdon — 
" Snowdon and Criffel nodding to each other " (?). You may think yourself 
fortunate to make out the whereabouts of Penrith against Crossfell, and of 
Carlisle from the Point of Ullock, whence also you will see Bassenthwaite 
Lake, which has been hidden before by the intervening heights. Helvellyn and 
Blencathra stand close up to you, and between them you see Place Fell and 
High-street, belonging to Ullswater. But the air is too bleak to bear a very 
long survey ; indeed you are obliged in self-defence to shelter yourself 
behind the maen, or Man, on the top, whence you see the northern side, 
and where the grey granite, found at only one other place in Cumberland, 
crops out from among the Skiddaw slate in the hollow below. The descent 
is as long and tedious as the ascent was gradual, and tedious too, for 
the real mountain climber ; relieved, perhaps, by stumbling on a sand- 
piper's nest in the path, and by the loveliness of a fine ravine near the 
bottom, where the fern is like forest trees of fairy size, and the rocks are of 
all colours in the summer sun. As you walk home the yellow Hght is lying, 
brighter than gold, on the yellow fields towards the lake, and Walla Crag 
is black and purple and crimson behind the golden surface poured like a 
liquid wash over its whole breadth. 

There is a way down the "breast" of Skiddaw, coming on to Millbeck, 
which is practicable if steep, and shorter than the ordinary round ; and 
another way down by Bassenthwaite,*^ or Broadwater as it was anciently 



^ Bass, local name for percli — Bassentliwaite, the i^lace of perch. 

95 



I'HE LAKE COUNTRY. 

called, wliich tourists often take ; but Bassentliwaite is generally left for an 
independent tour. Indeed, poor Bassentliwaite gets scarcely its due. Like 
a pretty girl by the side of a professed beauty, few people see the sweetness 
wliich would have charmed many but for the blinding power of contrast. 
And, as there is a fashion in all things, not one tourist in a hundred 
knows anything of the real beauty of Bassentliwaite. Yet, even Blea Soughs, 
and all the other swamps about, are beautiful in their way, and used in 
olden times to give pleasant skating in the frosty winter weather, and grand 
days and nights to snipe and wild-duck shooters. Bassentliwaite Lake is a 
famous place for wild fowl, and keeps " open " in frosty weather longer 
than any other. It is an early recollection, that a couple of wild swans 
once flew over Bassentliwaite ; and a flock of wild geese stands out to this 
day as a childish memory of much wonder and not a little awe. 

Skiddaw looks grand when you are beneath him — his big limbs and 
comely proportions and the roundness of much flesh showing to stately 
advantage ; and even little Dod sticks its cap of fern and heather knowingly 
awry, and looks out upon the world as if it were a creature with a will of its 
own, and an independent social position. As for Longside it is a mountain 
in itself; and a tourist's day might be far less profitably employed than in 
exploring Longside and the Skiddaw points adjacent. Very few people know any- 
thing of the view from Bassentliwaite Hawse, looking towards Isell and Embletou, 
with the lovely Derwent flowing through, and the valleys spread out in all 
their sweet pastoral richness like great gardens ; and still fewer know anything 
of that wild bit of desolation, Uldale Moor, or of Little Tarn and Overwater, 
or of Brae Fell, beneath which you may pass, if you are so minded, on your 
way to Caldbeck, or bear more to the left if you dread the rougher road. 
These are out-lying members not adopted yet into the lake family, but by no 
means to be despised by the true lover of nature, the artist, or the naturalist. 

The Keswick Mountains look well from the Skiddaw or north side of 
Bassentliwaite ; so do its own special fells— Barf and Wytliop and Wliinlatter ; 
but you cannot see the famous bays — Bowness, Braidness, and Scarness ; 

96 



BLENCATHEA, SKIDDAW, AND BASSENTHWAITE. 

you must wait for these until you are on the other side — until you have passed 
through the toll-gate where the skeleton of a horse, framed in the house-side, 
indicates a veterinary surgeon hereabouts ; and by Armathwaite the seat of all 
the Vanes ; and over Ouse Bridge which crosses the Derwent — flowing down 
now as a fully developed river to Cockermouth and the sea. 

Stop at Castle How where was once a Roman encampment ; but you will 
not find anything better now than enchanter's nightshade and wild geranium. 
You will see only the way of that pitiless railroad ; the places of the five little 
islands covered at half-flood ; and the scored mass of rock under which you 
stand, in a fairy kind of bay. But you ought to know the uncatalogued secrets 
of the lake-side : where the yellow flag — the iris ijseud-acorus — is to be found, 
and where the rarer ferns and bog mosses ; and when you are under the 
Wythop Fells, where the woods are full of fox-gloves towering like great purple 
thyrsi among the trees, you ought to be thoroughly at home, and to know your 
paths and where to set your feet. At Beck Wythop you see the three fine 
bays opposite, Wythop Brows rising nobly behind you, and the Point of Ullock 
showing grandly as a back-ground with the Long Side of Skiddaw across the 
lake ; and when you are under Barf, you see the Apostle Crag. The solemn, 
shrouded figure comes out with bowed head and reverent mien, as if actually 
detaching itself from the rock — a vision seen for not a dozen yards ; and then 
the magic ceases, and the Apostle goes back to stone. Then by Thornthwaite 
and its pleasant mountain woods, and through Portinscale, home ; watching 
a whole battery of rolling clouds pouring across Walla Crag — the mountain a 
burning orange and the sky almost pure gold, Wanthwaite Fells radiant in the 
sunshine, and Helvellyn clear and glorious like a mass of many-coloured ore. 




LONG-SIDE — PBOM CASTLE HOW 



97 




TJLISWATEE — FROM SHARROW BAT 

ULLS WATER 



CHAPTER VII 

The heroic way from Keswick to Ullswater ^ is straight over Helvellyu ; but 
for those who do not care to go by the Miner's Path to Glenridding, there 
is the unheroic road of Wanthwaite Fells, which yet they will find quite 
sufficiently rough for even boastful mountain travellers ; surely the longest 



' Has Ullswater anything to do with L'ulf, the Wolf; Lyulpli, as we call it? A Lyulf 
was the first Baron of Greystoke ; did he give his name to the sheet of water beliind the 
mountains? All the Whelpdales and Whelpays of this country may be referred to the 
wolf theory, and perhaps Ullswater is WoK's Water, among the rest ; unless it is, as Robinson 
says, a pleonasm, the prefix meaning water— el, hel, ul, hul, wel, elv, elf, aU the same 
thing— and therefore literally water-water. 

98 



ULLSWATKR. 

and dreariest line of fell road in the kingdom ! Fine views of the Vale of 
St. John and of Threlkeld, of Skiddaw, Blencathra, and the bright Greta, 
are to be had at the outset ; while, as you proceed, the broad expanse of 
Hutton Moor, with Crossfell blue in the distance, has a charm of its own — 
that charm of wide range and free breathing belonging specially to the moors. 
Yet it cannot be called beautiful, as painters use the word, save in its 
generous expanse and the tender flow of the bounding lines. Turning to the 
right, and happily leaving that ugly cone of Mell Fell out of sight, the 
open wild is suddenly changed for the mountains and the narrow pass again ; 
and the road drops down the sharp hills of Matterdale " on to the hamlet of 
Dockwray, and from Dockwray down the steep descent of Gowbarrow Park ; ' 
through woods where old thorns are literally smothered by honeysuckle, and 
the rose-trees are crimsoned with bloom, and the air sweet with orchis, till 
the blue water shines clear through the trees, and you are by the lake side. 

Ullswater is a long, narrow, irregular lake, in shape not unlike a 
smaller pattern of Lucerne as has been so often said ; though, of course, 
immeasurably inferior both in size and circumstance. It is divided into 
three unequal reaches, which give it the form of a Z if you change the 
angles into curves ; of which Skelley Neb and Hallin Fell close in the 
lower, and Birk Fell foot, where it runs out into the water, and Styebarrow 
Crag, head the middle part where the pretty little island of House Holm 
stands half-way between, so that you might almost draw a line through for 



* Mathair or Mothaix — pronounced maer and nicer, and coming do^^ai into mere and moor 
^means the mother and source or reservoir of water. This is Dyer's derivation of Mathair. 
Another makes Matterdale, Mater-dale ; and Patterdale, Pater-dale ; and Miss Martineau 
relegates such christening to the aves and paters said by the tremblmg monks on their 
way across Wantliwaite Fells. Matterdale had its little chapter of heroism in 1630, when 
the tenants there defended a suit which went to deprive them of common rights, and in 
the defence spent half their estates. One man is said to have walked to London in three 
days, in wooden clogs, on business in this suit. The sacramental wine used to be kept in 
this chapel in a wooden keg : perhaps is so still. 

^ The place or country of the wild swine ; once swarming ^vith foxes. 

99 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. • 

the division. Even the highest reach, trending away to the Patterdale hills, 
has a fourth small independency, very pretty and minute, hut never counted 
as a separate division. This winding shape and the intercepting of the 
mountain feet, make it impossible to ever see the lake as a whole ; but the 
partial view, as you come down between the flowering bushes, is very grand. 
Birk Fell rises out of the water sheer and sharp before you — a mass of 
intense gold and purple ; High Street is behind in cooler grey, showing clearly 
now why the Eomans chose it as their main road to Penrith, for the long level 
of its top and the tremendous command it gave of all around and below ; 
the Kirkstone hills, backing up Brother's Water,^ or Broad "Water as it is 
sometimes called, are at the head of the lake, grim enough when you are near 
them, but softened now into dim mysteries of loveliness ; Helvellyn and its 
main buttress, Catstycam,^ are behind that wooded crag of Styebarrow ; ^ and, 
as you advance, Dolly Waggon Pike puts up its pert peak, and challenges 
notice as much by its form as by its name. 

Turn now to the left to see L'ulf 's or Lyulph's tower and Ara Force ; 
but if you are of the " true sort," you will care nothing for the first — a mere 
modern make-believe, with glazed windows among the ivy and cucumber 
frames at the tops of the towers — (the views from it, however, are fine, and 
it has a pair or two of antlers worth seeing, which somewhat redeem its 
inanity) — and when you have seen enough of it, take boldly to the fell and 



* Called Brother's water, they say, from the ckcumstance, t-\^ice liapj)eiimg, of two 
brothers behig drowned in it together. 

* Cat-stie-cam, the hill-way of the wild cats, — modernised, corrupted, and vulgarised 
into Catchedecam, which has no meaning whatever. 

^ TMs is not the Pig Hill, but the Stie-barrow, — way-liill, the road over a barrow or 
height. In old times, when the road round the lake was yet a thuig of the future, pack- 
horses used to carry all the goods of the country by a way behmd the Styebarrow, wliich thus, 
it may be supposed, got its name. Speaking of Styebarrow — sometimes spelt Styboar, and 
wMoh he calls Starbery Crag — Brand says that the view is, "nobly aweful;" •' the women 
remarkably beautiful;" with "intelligent looks ;" " clothed in majesty and pohteness united 
with simplicity of manners." 

100 



ULLSWATER. 

clamber up among the crags and bracken to the spot whence our page-view 
is taken. The wood, with its birch falhng in fountains of gi-een, its hght- 
limbed beeches, and oaks no longer young and golden but green and adult, 
its hornbeams, its planes, and its twisted thorns, makes a beautiful line as 
it follows the course of the stream ; indeed, all the lines, whether of cloud 
or wood or mountain, flow into and fulfil each other in the most marvellous 
manner — marvellous because, with their constant repetition, there is never 
monotony, nor does their harmony at any time flatten into sameness. The 
slope of fell opposite, its belt of pasture-land dotted with cows and sheep 
and its head of larch kept by the grey wall from wandering down into the 
field, looks quiet and home-like ; while away into the distance the mighty 
hills, stern, sublime, and silent, seem to take the soul away from human 
living altogether and to place it in close keeping with the great things of 
eternity. The teaching of the lake country is everywhere solemn and earnest, 
but perhaps nowhere is there so much solemnity, at once grave and tender, 
as about UUswater. There is greater stillness here, and less stir and throng 
of visitors perceptible, than with either of the other large lakes ; the hills 
press round with closer grasp ; the dales are more lonesome, and there are 
fewer rich estates ; the mountain forms are more impressive, partly because 
the vale is narrower ; and there is still left here the sentiment of old world 
life, of simpler times, of society less complex and humanity more child-like 
than now, such as used to be the characteristic of the whole north country, 
but which fashion and the universal railroad have swept away from Winder- 
mere, and are on the eve of sweeping away from Keswick. But here, at 
UUswater, man may stand face to face with nature as yet undisturbed and 
unchilled. All this crowds through the mind while looking at the lake lying 
below Gowbarrow, and counting up the mountains, naming them one by one. 
And when you are there, a few deer will probably come about you and stand 
at gaze, much as they might have done when the Norman baron hunted 
them with sound of horn and twang of bow, and a villein's life was held of 
less importance than theirs. 

101 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

The great mass of fell to the left, stretching into the middle of the lake, 
is Birk Fell ; a part of the larger side of Place Fell which appears ahove 
it. The mountain behind the foot of Place Fell and across the head of the 
lake, is St. Sunday's Crag ; at least, the higher part is St. Sunday, the lower 
is Birks, and the lowest, over the foot of Place Fell, Bleas ; the one meaning 
Birches and the other Blue Things. Over Bleas again, in the centre, is the 
line of Deepdale Park ; and over that, in the extreme distance, Eed Screes, 
the Kirkstone Pass mountains, with Scandale Head to the right. Then, still 
travelling with the sun. Dove Crags and Hart Crag, a little peep of Eydal 
Head ahove Birks, and FairfiekU to St. Sunday's right. At the water head, 
under Birks, is Hall Bank, while Styeharrow hounds the greater part of the 
western bank of the lake. At the top of Styeharrow is Glenridding Dod. Above 
that, to the right of Fairfield, is Dolly Waggon Pike ; then the long round 
line of Bleaberry Fell, with Striding Edge behind ; and then Herring Pike, 
rather more forward, in shadow ahove the sunny side of Glencoin.^ 

Coming down from the fell, you go through a meadow fragrant with 
orchids, the sweet-scented and the butterfly, and gilded with yellow cocks' 
combs, bronze-tipped — passing a curiously shaped mass of stone in the river 
bed, browned with moss and looking like an enormous mushroom, where the 
Ara dashes down in winter from Great Dod grandly — and up to a beautiful 
initiatory leap, not included in an ordinary visit to the Falls, and thus not 
made a show-place productive of sixpences to the guide at the sham tower. 
But very wild and lovely, nevertheless, and the more so, for its comparative 
loneliness. Then, back to the little Avooden bridge, over an inky rift where 
the water dashes below with a deep and sullen roar, and down to the side of 
the stream, to look up at the rift from below, and to get dizzy as you look. The 
rocks are cloven in great square blocks, amethyst and brown and iron-red. 



'' Faar-feld? — sheep-pasture. 

^ Sometimes spelt Glencune, Glen-ma-coiii, or coyne ; Glen in a corner, hidden away 
and secret. 

102 



ULLlSWATEli. 

green and orange and purple ; in places covered with ferns and beaded 
sprays and swinging fibres trailing over ; here, a holly tree hanging down 
head foremost over the stream, clings to the ground above, like a live thing 
clutching for support — there a growth of moss, dank and dripping, is thrown 
like a velvet robe over the nakedness of the stones. The eaves and caves 
of coloured stones, like various marbles, are reflected in the quiet pools, clear 
and olive brown, where the golden sands drift to the sides in fine sifted heaps, 
and wastes of coloured pebbles, large and smooth, lie for margins. The wild 
wood all around is carpeted with moss close pressed, and wood-sorrel leaves 
as close as moss, and more freshly green ; old trees make pleasant seats in 
their great roots, and some up-torn by a long past storm, lie across the stream. 
But the scars of that old strife of elements are covered up now by the 
generous giving of the spring time and the love of the rich summer ; ferns 
and foxgloves plume the mossy trunks where never leaf or bud of their own 
will grow again, and hurt is once more, as so often, transformed by grace to 
beauty ; — as so often ! 

On again, through a woodland tract of surpassing sweetness, to where the 
noise of the water comes louder on the ear; and then you stand upon the 
spidery lines thrown across the head of the fall. The little bridge quivers 
under you, as the waters thunder in a leap of eighty feet, and the spray 
flies oif into the space below like a fine prismatic veil. Birk Fell is seen 
through the trees at the left, the blue lake lipping its base ; and snatches of 
richest loveliness are to be had on either side, as you follow the winding path 
which leads below the fall, whence you can look up and see the full form of its 
grandeur. A tree has wedged itself into the chasm, spoiling the symmetry 
while adding to the wildness ; but the whole course is full of beauty of a 
noble kind, shading off into exquisite grace and sweetness and the gentleness 
of power suspended, when, after making this one wild bound, the water 
comes quietly down in soft and tender flow, in sweeping lines and smooth 
resting-places, where scarce any motion is perceptible. Grand or gracious 
throughout its length, mournfully tender in its legend, the Ara and its 

103 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

Force may well attract your footsteps often, and enchain your hearts with 
love.9 It is a place where the young would loye their hope the best, where 
the mature would cling most proudly to their choice, and the aged dream 
back over the past and the lost, with tenderest memories ; it is a place for all 
time and for all ages, for all moods and for all minds. 




ABOVE THE I'ORCK 



^ " In a castle which occupied the site of Lyulph's Tower, there dwelt in days long 
passed away, a fair damoselle, the wooed of many suitors. Su- Eglamore, the knight of her 
choice, was in duty bound to prove his knightly worth by seeking and accompUsliing deeds 
of liigh emprize in distant lands. He sailed to other shores, and month after month 
disappeared without bringing tidings of either his welfare or return. The neglected 
Emma fell into a bewildered state of mind, her sleep became infected mth liis image, and 
sometimes in dreams sher threaded her Avay to the holly bower on Airey stream, where she 
last pai-ted from her errant lover. One evening, when she had betaken herself thither, 
her faculties wrapped in sleep. Sir Eglamore unexpectedly approached the castle, and 
perceived her, to his great astonishment ; upon advancing, she awoke, and fell with the 
suddenness of the shock, into the stream, from which she was rescued by the Imight only 
in time to hear her dying expression of behef in his constancy. Straightway he built 
himself a cell in the glen, and spent the remainder of his days as an anchorite." 

104 



ULLSWxVTER. 

Then again to the right, and by the lake side to Patterdale ^" — St. Patrick's 
dale,^^ in the days before vocal hieroglyi^hics came into vogue : surely never 
the dale of Pater Nosters for monkish fears ! — a road something like the famous 
coach-road of Windermere, but not so soft or cultivated ; wilder and richer, 
with more boldness and variety of form, more grandeur, and owing nothing as 
yet to art. No coquettish houses stand in studied shyness along its banks ; 
no trim gardens, with cultivated growths of ferns and wild flowers, give 
pictures of artificial simplicity ; but all is left very much as it might have 
been in the elder times (we cannot dissociate ourselves from those elder times 
here !) when aurochs and Avolves and wild boars and the Baron's stags ran 
wild over the fell tops and fought with the eagles for food : much as in the 
still older days when the Eoman legions marched over High Street with blare 
of music and flash of steel and the imperial eagle glancing in the sun, while 
the Britons hid, trembling and yet admiring, in the dales below. For all 
about Ullswater, on both sides, are multitudes of glens that run up behind 
the mountains, and thread them like garden paths about their feet ; which 
mountain veins are the principal feature of this lake : more marked here, 

!«' Beside Mounsey, the " King of Patterdale," the little chapelry has a notability to 
hoast of m the person of Mr. Mattison, the curate, who for sixty years officiated at that 
small " chapel with the yew tree," at the foot of St. Sunday's Crag. His ordinary mcome 
was generally twelve x^ounds a year, and never over eighteen ; he married, and had four 
children, all of whom he christened and married, educating his son to be a scholar, and 
sending him to college. He buried his mother, married and buried liis father, christened 
his v,'i£e, published his own banns, and died worth one thousand pounds. But he had no 
biographer like Wordsworth, and no one ever appended the Wonderful to his name. 
Patterdale is a chapelry in the j^arish of Barton. All the land in the district once belonged 
to Ivo de TaUlebois ; all save Yanwath out b}^ Penrith, which was the de Threlkelds' held 
imder the Grej^stokes. But it ^^'ent, in the seventeenth century, to the Lowthers, as did the 
rest. And from the Lowthers it has got parcelled out into different holders : Ivo de 
Taillebois, rude, strong, and illiterate, but great and generous, being represented by quite 
another manner of lord in the Patterdale world. 

" Surely Patrick's-dale ; see the GalenJariuin Inquisitionum post mortem, when in 
the thirty-first of Henry III., Patricksdale is found to belong to " Will'us de Lancastre." 
Also called so ui the Bishop of Carlisle's Ptegister at Rose Castle, so early as l.lRl. 

105 P 



THE LAKE COUNTKT. 

and at Hawes Water in a minor degree, than anywhere else. You come 
now to one of these glens ; first passing by fields full of ripe brown grass 
ready for the scythe, starred with white ox-eye and splashed with gold and 
purple — the purple mountains matching the meadow crane's-bill, but deeper 
and darker in tone, and the golden sunshine struck back from the yellow 
shine of the buttercups ; — past scores of cows standing knee-deep in the 
lake, and some under the shade of the rose-trees and honeysuckles ; up 
through fragrant woods, and on by that steep path to Linkin Dale Head, 
whence issues the Glencoin beck, dividing Cumberland from Westmoreland. 

The day was fitful when we went up the glen, but full of effects to 
be noted as studies of sun and shadow. As we turned back to get a view 
of the lake, the sun flashed out and flung a double rainbow over by 
Place Fell, and a bright metallic light caught point after point, making 
the dim grey masses as if of emerald, gold-flecked, throwing a golden 
shine on the naked crags and forming golden islands on the distant hills, 
falling with a greener radiance on the water, but barring the fields with 
streaks of purest gold. A tree became a golden fountain in this bright 
metallic sunshine, and the thin smoke from the house below was coloured 
to a rainbow-edged aureole. At the next outburst the light, no longer 
yellow, was white like exaggerated moonlight, pale and bleaching but 
intense ; making the near fells of hoary silver against the deep violet 
mountains behind, and taking out the colour from everything it touched — 
the whitest and most bleaching light possible to fall from the yellow sun. 
And then all faded as a mist drove through the valley, washing out gold 
and silver and emerald and rainbow tints into one uniform grey ; the wood- 
pigeons which had been calling softly to each other in the woods ceased 
suddenly; and when we turned to the steep fell the clouds were again 
gathering thick and heavy before us. 

Over shoulder after shoulder our narrow mountain path led us, not 
too tenderly. Once, where the way had been broken down by a torrent, 
we were obliged to cling to the face of the rock as we scrambled over 

106 



ULLSWATER. 

the slippery bit carefully ; and always we were obliged to take heed to 
our steps, and not carry our eyes too high. And now the rain came 
blindingly, and the wind blew spitefully, as we stood and looked at the 
barren sweeps about, beautiful in form and full of noble lines, but bearing 
neither tree for shelter nor food for life — only holding the "back door" 
to the famous Greenside mines, which pierce the mountain through to 
the other side. On, higher, tramping blindly into clouds and through 
peat bogs,^till we finally fell upon the actual entrance of the mines, coming 
upon it suddenly, not knowing where we were, or what we had to find. 
The artificial desolation about — the stones and rubbish cast away — the 
broken rocks — the water-wheels not at work — the fragments of old iron 
and riven planks, useless and worn out — the utter silence and solitude of 
this place of man's life and labour (it was Saturday evening, and the 
workers had gone home), where, at the present moment, his labour was 
represented only by its destruction, and his life was a sign of the past — 
all made the natural desolation yet more striking. No sign of animate 
existence was anywhere, save one solitary sheep walking in a bewildered 
manner along the stony causeway, and the smoke curling up from a mine 
chimney, as from a volcano, in the mountain beyond. 

And yet many scores of men^" are employed in these rich lead mines, 
and neither care nor science spared to make both labour easy and life 
secure. Tramways are laid for the wheeling of the waste, which is thrown 
down in a huge dead mass beyond a desolate crag ; the stream is banked 
and built up scientifically, so as to give most power with least expendi- 
ture ; a rivulet is made for a rude mountain torrent which rages in the 
times of the autumn rains and the spring snow meltings, and an archway 
is built expressly for it, so that it may not tear down that zig-zag moun- 

'^ The discontented " conservatives " of a htindred years ago used to say that, " Patter- 
dale men were rich before these mines were opened, but since then they had become poor, 
for having taken to di'uiking, consequent on earnuig more money, and then by losuig 
health and estates." 

107 p 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

tain road — one of the most tremendous possible for laden horses ; and 
strangely beautiful in all this wildness is a very field of the oak and parsley 
ferns and shining-leaved, alpine lady's mantle, set in the stones under a 
crag as grim as the seal against the gates of death. Nothing is more 
striking than rare growths found in the midst of desolation. We cannot 
divorce the idea of care and protection and fitting circumstance from what 
we prize ; and even a mountain fern, to which we attach an arbitrary value, 
seems out of place in a mountain wilderness, and as if it needed more 
tender handling than only the liberty of nature and the leave to grow. 

The lightning-shaped path leads to what looks from above like a flat 
glass pavement let into the earth ; a refinement on the ancient habits of 
gnomes and kobolds ; but which are merely miners' houses with shining 
slate roofs made into flat glass pavements by the glamour of light 
and perspective. The rain and mist had now cleared, and we saw 
the Miner's Path leading to Helvellyn top (and over to Keswick also) ; 
we saw the steep sides and sharp edges set round the crown of Helvellyn ; 
we saw the vale of Ulenridding, rich and beautiful before us, backed by 
hill and crag tossed up in waves against each other — St. Sunday's Crag 
most masterful of all — and feathered by woods seeming to fall softly to the 
very edge of the lake ; we saw the Kirkstone mountains, where it was 
still wild and cloudy and dim and full of sorrow ; and then we plunged 
down the steep descent, having to the right the Glenridding beck, coming 
from Ked Tarn and Keppel Cove Tarn in the heart of Helvellyn, rushing 
down beside us. All in mountain loveliness of place and circumstance 
is this stream ; with fern and flowering bush and feathery ash and sharp 
escapes and quiet harbours, as beseems a mountain stream ; but so soiled 
by miner's work that we could trace its white line far into the lake, and 
the whole bay is whitened where it enters, as if meal or lime were poured 
into it. The Greenside mines, however, are worth the cost of a soiled 
streamlet and the destruction of a few yards of lake beauty. Then we went 
by a pleasant bit of copsewood down into the highway again ; passing 

1U8 



ULLSWATER. 

St. Patrick's Well— a fountain under a peaked niche, almost like a foreign 
saint- shrine— and going under Styeharrow Crag, where the King of Patter- 
dale, Mounsey of Patterdale Hall, made his famous stand against the 
Scots, 13 and drove them back from Ullswater. He headed a mere handful 
of dalesmen against a stout armful of moss troopers ; but he won the day, 
and bore the title of king for ever after. 

Up at the head of Patterdale, where the valley lengthens out towards 
Brother's Water, are Deepdale and High Hartsop ; perhaps the two most 
beautiful of the many beautiful dales about Ullswater. But different in 
character; Deepdale, a barren sweep where the snow gathers thick in winter 
and the wind rushes down in summer, and High Hartsop wooded, sheltered, 
and rich, like a gentleman's private park rather than an uninhabited, and, 
save one small enclosure, uncultivated wilderness. A mountaineer could 
take both dales in one walk, for they lie side by side, divided only by the 
mountain wall of Deepdale Park — a rough but not insurmountable barrier. 
As independent walks they are within the compass of any south country- 
woman who can go bej^ond her own garden. Let us first speak of High 
Hartsop. 

The road leads by the Goldrill ^* and the bridge, where the river bends 
into a broad pool over a growth of brown weed, like the repetition under 
water of the trees above ; the ashen grey stems of the beeches are reflected 
in purer black and white in the stream, which is yellow in the sunshine 
and purple in the shade ; Place Fell, red and purple and copper coloured. 



'^ Are Glencoiii and Glenridding verbal testimonies to tlieir encounters ? Glen is not 
an ordinary term in Cumberland or Westmoreland topography ; ^vas it taken there in 
memory of the Scots whose word it is ? 

'* The highest source of the Goldrill is said to be either at Jack Brig, where the three 
parishes of Barton, Kendal, and Windermere join; or on Kirkstone Fell. At Goldrill 
Bridge a vein of yellow ore crosses the rock in the bed of the river, — hence the name. 
Six streams enter Ullswater on the west of the lake from the glens ; two only of importance 
on the east — tlie Goldrill, and Sandywyke Beck from Martindale, opposite Gowbarrow. 

]09 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

rises beliincl the trees and meadows like a huge side of metalhc slag; 
the dull colour and harsh forms of the knotted figwort break through the 
lighter and more tender growths by the bridge and the wall ; and most 
probably you will see a yellowhammer flying across, carrying a golden line 
through the green of the trees and against the metallic brilliancy of the 
mountain : a dominant chord of colour, subordinating all the rest. As you 
go forward St. Sunday's Crag is to your right, and in front are Hartsop 
Dod, steep and conical, and Codale Moor showing its front seamed with that 
jagged pathway. You pass the wooded range of Deepdale Park, and that quaint 
little Bridge of Arches ^^ where a third segment has been built seemingly 
only to buttress up a garden plot ; and you come to the strange blighted 
tree which the lightning has shivered into planks as it stands ; still following 
the Goldrill — worthy of its name — and making out the form of the Lion 
Crag over against the fall which comes from Angle Tarn ; keejoing to the 
right-hand of Brother's Water, under the wooded hill, and by the water- 
lilies and marsh trefoil. 

The road now leads by Hartsop Hall with its church windows and 
old trees, once a place of importance, but at present only picturesque ; and 
then into High Hartsop, the dale itself, the loveliest and the richest in 
the country. Dove Crags, which back this glen, are softened into a tender 
mass of bloomy lilac which may be miles away, and may be gentle slopes 
no more difficult to conquer than Primrose Hill : but as you go on, the 
subordinate forms come out from behind this tender veiling, and show 
a thousand different heights, angles unapproachable, crags unscalable, sharp 
points, and rugged clusters, all the tumbled ruins of the wildest bit of 
crag in the vale. You are in an amphitheatre. On one side is a curious 
hollow, like a giant's arm-chair, where the king and his guests would sit 
when they watched the tournament below; and in the centre is a ruined 
castle — far more like a ruined castle than the Castle Rocks of St. John. 

'■^ Deepclale-Beck Bridge, liglitfuUy. 
110 



ULLSWATER. 

It is a very rare and a very singular mountain nook altogether ; richly 
wooded and wildly broken, and sleeping as stilly in the shadoAV of the 
great hills about as if it was in truth the enchanted place it seems. Hart 
Crag is behind Dove Crags, and Fairfield is in the distance to the right; 
and, if you have a stout heart, you may follow the course of that jocund 
stream which comes bounding down among the trees and rocks like a 
wild white horse leaping to the plains, and so clamber up, the best way 
you can, either over the tops and on to Fairfield, or back and down to 
Deepdale on the other side. Either way you will have your reward ; if 
beauty, and pride in a daring feat well accomplished, can reward you. Let 
us hope it can ; even better than riches, if not so well as love. 



^'4 




DEBPDALB HEAD 



Deepdale has none of this richness. It has not a tree at its head, 
save a little rosebush hanging over the stream, and here and there an old 
twisted thorn, bowed and bent by the wind with which it has battled so 
many years ; and the crags are not broken up into such picturesque masses, 
nor flung abroad with the careless grace of High Hartsop, but slope steeply, 
with the old wave-like sweep — like Scandale enlarged, or the trough of a 
tremendous billow struck to stone. As you stand in the centre a cloud rises 
slowly before you, strangely counterfeiting the forms below as it gathers 
itself up off the heights and folds itself together, then drifts away into open 
space. The wind is roaring down the gorge, and you know now why the 
thorns are bent and twisted with that crip|)led look of pain which these 

111 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

wind-dwarfed trees always have, and why the rocks are so Avan and bleached, 
worn into such fretted faces, and so heavy and time-troubled. The wind 
that sweeps across the vale with such fury on an ordinary summer's day 
is a sign of what it must be in winter time, when the elements have a harder 
grip on the throat of nature, and press the earth with a heavier foot. Water- 
courses wander down in all directions, like silver veins in the purple rocks ; 
but sometimes a broad green stripe, with yellow spots about the edges and 
crimson threads among the yellow, tells of a hidden stream dissi23ating itself 
silently under the roots of rushes and spearAvort and tufts of pale yellow 
moss — over which be careful of your tread, for you may get mid-leg into 
water before you are aware. Parsley fern and bracken, j)lentiful if not strong, 
give the only softening growth to the wildness of Deepdale ; for the gold 
and green and grey and red of the lichen on the bleached rocks can be 
scarcely said to soften, though they may beautify ; and ever as you go 
deeper in — till you stand against the very back plates of the gorge — the 
sense of its wildness and desolation increases with you — the sense of your 
own loneliness — and how your present place is severed from all the uses of 
the world outside. More desolate and lonely still, if a solitary lamb cries 
piteously on the crag, its mother lost and silent — if the wind raves with 
frantic wrath — and if a bank of dark clouds is gathered against a back- 
ground of fiery red, with a thunderstorm already breaking in the distance. 

A beautiful way back is to be had by scrambling over part of St. Sunday's 
Crag, behind Eagle Crag (there is always an Eagle Crag to all mountain 
masses), across the rifts where the mountain torrents have worn deep wrinkles 
into the softer mountain face, which the wind has planted with quickens and 
thorns and rosebushes and fern down the sides, and out on to the wide 
heights, above all human cares and free from human fears. And here on these 
wide heights we once saw a thing of no special importance, but which 
gave a '^ local colouring " of richest tint to the scene. A troop of horses, with 
arched tails and flying manes, came thundering past us, making the earth 
literally shake as they Avent, and scaring the sheep and lambs into frightened 

112 



ULLS WATER. 

groups, too frightened even to cry. It was really a grand sight, these reinless 
horses careering over the mountain tops, leaping the chasms and spurning the 
hillocks, plunging knee-deep through a black peat bog, which they tore and 
splashed into thick cascades, all finally dashing round and behind a crag, 
where we heard their hoofs striking the hard rock as they thundered down its 
face. Soon after, a handsome boy, flushed and panting, his hands and rough 
jacket pockets filled with wild flowers, his manners shy and modest however 
awkward, came running across the ridge. He was hunting the horses off" the 
fell to get them home ; and though it was nothing but a troop of farm-horses 
driven down to work by a farm servant, still it was a very interesting sight ; 
the more so, perhaps, because of the beautiful face of the boy, one of the 
noblest of the noble north-country type. 

Now wander on over the fell till you come to the head of Bleas, where 
you will break upon the lake and its islands and the sweet vales of Grisedale 
and Glenridding, with the miner's smoke and the miner's slag and the bare 
tops of Helvellyn and Catstycam, and Dolly Waggon Pike beyond. A scramble 
down the crags, a swamp or two to cross with light steps, and you are in the 
beaten track again ; and one more stanza of the poem is complete. 

Two things ought to be seen in the lake country : sheep-washing and 
sheep -shearing — the last by no means so pretty as the first, neither so 
animated nor so picturesque, but still to be seen by all who have the oppor- 
tunity. The day before it begins the sheep and lambs are bleating with 
more than usual passion, for the dogs are bringing them in off the fells, 
separating them into lots, and dividing the little ones from their mothers, to 
the really pathetic distress of both. Then the lambs are left to the care of 
heaven, and the sheep are pent up in a shed together ; whence they are dragged 
out by boys as they are wanted, and flung on their backs into the lap of a 
clipper seated on a long kind of settle — " sheep forms " they are called — who 
tranquilly tucks the little pointed head under his arm, and clips away at the 
under part of the wool, taking care to keep the fleece unbroken ; the art being 

113 Q 



TPIE LAKE COUNTRY. 

to hold the middle way, and neither to graze the skin by going too close, nor 
to loosen the fleece by cutting above the welted fibres. All four feet are noAv 
tied together, and the beast is hauled round as a solid kind of rug, when its 
back is sheared in the same way, the fleece hanging down like a bit of carpet 
or small crib blanket. When the whole is off, its legs are untied, and it is 
lugged — that is the only word to express it — panting and terrified to the place 
where the man stands Avitli the ruddle pot and branding-iron ; where it receives 
its distinctive smear and letter of assignment, and is then dismissed to its 
huddled group of companions clustering together at the remotest spot in the 
yard available. 

This is merely a bald catalogue of the scene ; the real portraiture would 
be very diff"erent. For in this must be included the farm buildings over- 
shadowed with trees, and the low-roofed farmhouse covered with ivy and 
bordered with English cottage flowers ; the sheep dogs lying in the sun, with 
a lazy manner of indifference as having nothing to do, it being holiday time 
for them and a transfer of responsibility — some about the feet of the men, and 
some stretched, wide awake in fact however fast asleep in seeming, as out- 
posts by the gates and along the walls, to keep the sheep in closed ranks ; the 
one special strong man— generally a dare-devil looking fellow who might be a 
smuggler or a poacher but who is only an extra powerful shepherd — whose 
particular duty seems to be to supply the jokes and rough horseplay, and to 
carry the shorn sheep to the ruddle pot : for they are difficult to manage now 
when they have no wool, and must be held by sheer strength ; the one or two 
handsome Scandinavian faces, straight and fair, sure to be among the number; 
the lithe figures of the boys learning of the men, and handled gently even by 
the roughest ; the pretty young house girls, looking so quiet and gentle, 
dressed in their Sunday best and carrying great jugs of beer — the strongest 
that can be brewed — laughing and yet shy, as they penetrate into the mass of 
men and animals in the yard ; the cows milking by the byre doors ; the purple 
hills and the calm lake ; the home fells whitened with the shorn sheep let 
loose scattered over them like daisies, but very unhappy yet, not recognized 

114 



ULLSWATER. 

by their lambs and utterly humiliated and ashamed ; the harmonious 
combinations into which all things group themselves, animate and inanimate ; 
and the hot summer sun shining over all : these are the incidents which make 
sheep- shearing a striking thing to see. But perhaps, for reasons not needed 
to be particularised, more pleasing if you stand to leeward, and out of earshot 
of what is said. For the first fortnight in July you may take your choice of 
the farms all over the country, small or large according to your liking ; wanting 
no other guidance than the incessant bleating you will hear from daybreak to 
sunset, with the loud barking of the sheep dogs and the rough voices of the 
men directing. 

A fine steep walk up Place Fell shows you Codale Moor in all its rudeness, 
Hartsop Dod like the roof of a house rather than an honest mountain. Red 
Screes and the Kirkstone Pass, and the deep shadowed hollow where the way 
comes down from Scandale by that white line of water : a weird-looking place 
even in the kindly sunlight, like an ogre sleeping in his arbour after dinner, 
but all the same an ogre when he wakes. And none the less weird for the 
strange faculty the mountains have of changing themselves and their posi- 
tions. If you lose sight of them for a hundred yards they are something- 
else when you turn back ; independent members have come out, and guiding 
landmarks are hidden ; an angle of forty-five degrees has become a perpen- 
dicular descent, if it has not sloped away into a mere gentle swell ; what looked 
an accidental shadow turns out to be a rift between two heads some miles 
across ; and no Protean tricks of old times were ever fuller of misleading 
disguises than the aspects of the hills according to the change of one's own 
position. 

From this station on Place Fell are to be seen many points of interest 
and some old acquaintances : the pass to Hayes Water by Nether Hartsop to 
the left of Hartsop Dod ; the zigzag way up Codale Moor — the very essence 
of bleakness and roughness ; and the lonely Kirkstone Pass beyond Brothers' 
Water ; the beautiful little hiding-place of High Hartsop under Dove Crags ; 

115 Q 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

and Deepdale running up beneath Fairfield ; Grisedale and Glenridding, and 
where Glencoin hes behind the wood ; the Goldrill, banding Brother's Water 
and Ullswater together, and turning up in all manner of unexpected places 
and fugitive glimpses : all paved and underlined by the bright green fields, 
among which can be made out a certain stately garden, looking from here like 
a bald geometrical map, or like the pieces of a card puzzle scattered abroad. 
Helvellyn's square top now appears, and Catstycam, and the miner's smoke by 
Herring Pike — perhaps blown down by the wind into the gorge — and the sweep 
of the mountains coming down into the dales ; which, as you ascend higher 
so as to take in only the leading lines, are more and more like the typical bird's 
wing. And now the path leads right away over the shoulder of Place Fell, 
and the lake and the farther mountains are lost altogether, but the bird's wing 
and the wave form remain in every higher hollow and mountain side ; and still 
everything is clear and yet tender with excess of softened light. As you go, 
the rugged sheep yet unshorn, with heavy brown fleeces trailing to the ground, 
some with half their wool rubbed off which makes them still more ragged, 
but the newly sheared white and milky, look at you wildly, and then bound 
away like goats ; and sometimes a skilfully ruddled lamb, catching the sunlight 
slantingly, glows all a-fire like one of Linnell's Sussex sheep. And now you 
are on the top of Place Fell, on broken ground, spongy and treacherous, with 
a world to choose from, and only your own will and powers of endurance to set 
the limits. So you wander on at random, falling upon all manner of wild bits, 
till brought up suddenly by the deep chasm of Boredale Head. 

At your feet lies a wide, green sweep, tenantless, houseless, lifeless, so 
far as you can see, with the lake flowing past in a blue line at the outlet, and 
the Penrith plains beyond, shining in the sun with map-like clearness. High 
Street, now a green-grey wall patched with purple and white, is above the 
Martin dale range ^^ where the wild red deer are still to be found ; and across 

"^ Tlie martiii is tlie clean mart, and tlie foumart is tlie foul mart or weasel ; and Martin- 
dale is the dale of the martin, which once ranged on these hiUs ■\^•itll red deer and wolves. 
" We have no great numbers on the south side of the Trent, but yet in the countj' of Westmore- 

116 



ULLSWATEE. 

the lake, as you go on, the well-known head of Skiddaw comes up out of the 
blue, and soon the longer side of Blencathra ; while every stone and glittering 
spar and purpled edge of turned peat-moss nearer home, is translated into 
living jewels by the lavish sun. And wandering, wandering over the moor, and 
to the head of all the great sweeping dales flowing like green troughs into the 
lake, you at last find or make a way for yourselves down the roughest clamber 
that even cragsmen can call a path. And so by the lake side track at the base 
of Place Fell to the meadows and your home. 

By the foot of the lake the road leads you to quite another manner of 
country. Landing at How Town with Fusedale at its back, the Hawse 
running like a hog's back between the two valleys of Fusedale and Bannerdale, 
and keeping along the lake-side way — rounding Sharrow Bay (the view at 
the head of the chapter), you come into a lovely land. For after passing 
through a narrow lane thick with flowers and where the woody cranesbill grows 
in rank profusion, you come to Pooley Bridge,^^ which is to Ullswater what 



land ill Martindale tliere are many." Tliis was Maiiwood's experience. Martiiidale used to 
pay three pounds out of its township for the priest's wages, and the last cm-ate of the parish, 
or of these parts at all, called " sii-," was the Reverend Richard Birket (apud 1689). The 
old designation of the clergy before the R,eforination, was always " sir ; " knight being added 
as the military or civil distmction. Nicolson, Bishop of Carlisle, at the beginning of the 
eighteenth century says, " Since I can remember, there was not a reader m any chapel who 
was not called ' sir.' " 

'■^ Pooley Bridge, like Ullswater and Patterdale and Helvelljai, is in Barton parish. 
Barton was a strange uncouth place by all accounts. It was one of its customs, not 
peculiar to itself though, that the master should give his scholars a prize to fight cocks 
for, the scholars too subscribing their cock-pennies, and the match coming off at Shrovetide 
or Easter. In some schools the salary partlj^ depended on this custom, for of course the 
cocks to be fought did not come up to the value of all the " cock-pennies " subscribed. 
The vUlage is now quite an obscure little place, but the churchyard has one oddity in a 
certain epitaph worth transcribing : — 

" Under this stone ! reader, interr'd doth lye 
Beauty and virtue's true epitomy; 

117 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

Newby Bridge is to Windermere — tlie archway by which, the waters march from 
beautiful obscurity to stately service. Here the Eamont — the Water from the 
Hills — is spanned by a fair stone bridge, " where was once a fair stone cross 
with steps or seats all round it," and on the top the Dacre arms : which cross 
was repaired May 2, 1679, by Thomas, Earl of Suffolk, as inscribed on the 
weathercock. This is not surely the same bridge which was built in 1425, the 
New Bridge then, in which the Bishop of Durham took such interest that he 
" granted an indulgence of forty days to all persons truly repenting of their 
sins, and confessing, who should contribute any of their goods given them by 
God to the building of a bridge over the river Amot, in the parish of Penrith?" 
From Pooley Bridge the view up the lake is marvellously grand, but nearer at 
hand there is beauty and interest too. Dunmallet, once a Roman station, and 
now a strange artificial looking hill — " a remarkable hill, but itself rather a 
disgusting object," as some one calls it — stands up like a tumulus of trees ; 
the Dalemain woods, where the squirrels and the robins and the thrushes 
and the linnets live in perpetual joy and gladness together, stretch far into the 
distance ; while not quite six miles away lies Penrith, full of interest to the 
antiquary, both in itself and in its neighbourhood. 

For here on the banks of the Eamont, and about two miles from Edenhall, 
are the giant's caves, Isis Parlis, where it is reported one Isir, a terrible giant, 
once hid, dragging men thither, like Cacus, to devour them at his better 
leisure : though another version makes this Isis Parlis the keep of the 
castle where Tarquin lived, whom Sir Lancelot du Lac came down to slay 
and destroy. The giant's grave is in the churchyard : two stone pillars twelve 

At lier appearance tlie Noon Sun 

Blusli'd and shrunli in cause quite undone. 

"In lier concenter'd did all graces dwell; 
God plucked my rose that lie might take a smell. 
I'll say no more, but weeping wish I may 
Soon with thy dear chaste ashes come to lay. 
Sic Efflevit Maritus." Clarke's Survey. 

118 



ULLSWATEE. 

feet liigii, placed there in memory of Ewain Csesarius, kuigiit, a famous warrior 
temp. Athelstane — some call him king in the time of Ida — anyhow a magni- 
ficent man, fifteen feet high (as the distance between the pillars proves), who 
killed wild boars like sucking pigs ; in memory whereof older writers speak 
of four boars sculptured between the pillars. Not far from them is the 
Giant's Thumb, another big stone, to mark the spot where Ewain's thumb 
was buried, and which was an old rose-cross very rudely done ; as, indeed, 
is all that remains of the workmanship altogether. 

Then there is the Countess's Pillar, where Lady Anne Clifford joarted in 
such bitter grief from her good and pious mother, erecting this stone cross 
as a memento, with this inscription : " This pillar was erected in the year 1656 
by Anne Countess Dowager of Pembroke, for a memorial of her last parting 
with her pious mother, Margaret, Countess Dowager of Cumberland, on the 
2nd of April, 1616 ; in memory whereof she hath left an annuity of 41. to 
be distributed to the poor of the parish of Brougham every 2nd day of April 
for ever, upon the stone table placed hard by. Laus Deo ! " 

And there is the Harts Horn tree, or rather there was, where " mutual 
the victory, mutual the defeat " 

" Hercules killed Hart o' Grease, and Hart o' Grease killed Hercules." 
And of which the story ran, that when Edward Baliol, King of Scotland, 
came over to Westmoreland to stay with Robert de Cliff'ord in the year 1333 
or 1334, visiting his castles of Appleby, Brougham, and Pendragon in 
succession, they ran a stag by a single dog out of Whinfell Park to Pted 
Kirk in Scotland, and back again to the same place. The stag leaped the 
park palings, but fell down and died : the dog tried the leap after him but 
failed, and fell and died the other side. So they nailed the stag's horns to 
an old oak hard by, where they remained for three centuries after — the 
bark growing over the horns, and, so to speak, engrafting them ; but in 
1648 some Vandals in the army broke off many of the branches, and ten 
years afterwards some Goths took down the remainder at night. Here, too, 
are the ruins of Penrith Castle, where the Duke of Gloucester once lived so 

IIQ 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

magnificently, but Avliicli belonged to the Nevills, who lived as magnificently 
as the king himself ; if all things were equal to the ' ' six oxen eaten at 
breakfast at Kichard Nevill's house in London." The date of the castle is 
unknown. It seems older, say they who understand such things, than 
Edward V., but no castle was in existence in the times of John or Henry III. ; 
no mention of it is made when Edward III. seized Penrith in 1300, and none 
made in the Scotch incursions. It was held for a few weeks by Lambert in 
1648, and then dismantled by order of Parliament. 

And there is Mayborough, supposed to be Druidical ; and King Arthur's 
Eound Table which some say was a jousting place ; and Long Meg and her 
Daughters in Aldingham parish (Keld-ling-ham, "habitation near the Hanging 
Stones"), which they say was a judicial court of the Druids, where they prayed 
to the All-healing Power, and burned their criminals in wicker-work baskets. 
And then there is Brougham Castle, ^^ which has so often passed to the younger 
branch, and which was added to (not built) by Roger de Clifford, who left his 
seal and signature in an inscription, " This made Roger," over the inner 
gateway, together with his own arms and those of his wife, Maud Beauchamp, 
the Earl of Warvdck's daughter, sculptured elsewhere. A pond called Maud's 
Pool is in the grounds to this day. And then there are the castles : Grreystoke 
Castle where the proud Howards have succeeded to the De Meschines and 
Lyulfs of olden date ; Lowther Castle, or Louder, the castle of the Dark 
Waters ; and Edenhall where the Luck is kept as religiously as if fairies did 
really give it to the butler, singing as they went 

" If this glass should break or fall, 
Farewell the luck of Eden Hall." 

And, in truth, once when it rolled to the ground, shaking but not 

'^ "At Burghara is an old castel that the commune people tlier sayetli doth synke. 
About this Burgham plowghmen fynd iii the feldes many square stones, tokens of old 
buildinges. The castel is set in a stronge place by reasons of ry^^ers enclosing the cuntery 
thereabowt." — Leland's Itinerary. Brougham was the Roman Brocaviimi. 

120 



ULLSWATEE. 

shivering, misfortunes came upon the family of Musgrave thickly. And 
there is Dacre Castle, or more rightly D'Acre, now a mere ruined farm, but 
once the seat of men as famous in their days as the best in the land ; and 
Brougham Hall, where our youngest, sprightliest, and cleverest statesman 
and philosopher lives, but which is modern, Avith no tradition at its back. 
And then there is the Beacon Tower and Crossfell farther off. These are 
only a few of the things to be seen in and about the Red Hill (Penrith is 
archaically Pen Rhudd, or the Red Hill) ; but, not coming quite naturally 
in a book on the Lakes (though they form part of the instruction of a guide 
book proper), they must be left on one side. But Penrith would repay long 
and sound study, where there was any love or understanding of antiquity. 




FROM a: EKCCiii-r 



,-^nmk 




v=3-^-sazstt^ 



!rMALL TV A IKK 
UNDER HIGH STHEiSF 



HAWES WATER AND HIGH STREET 



CHAPTER Till 



Those who love the mountains can understand the pleasure of slinging on 
bag and knapsack and setting off on foot for the discovery of Hawes Water. 
For all these expeditions are in a manner discoveries, if undertaken Avithout a 
guide, and steering by map and compass only. The way from Ullswater to 
Hawes W^ater and back— across Swart Fell, over Moor Dovock, and by the 
side of the lake (Hawes Water) to Mardale Green, returning by High 
Street, Hayes Water, and Angle Tarn— is a comprehensive and instructive 
walk; containing, as it does, so many of the characteristics of the country 
—the wild moor, the open plain, the lake, the hidden tarn, the mountain 
top, the craggy climb, the hill-side stream, and the rugged pass. 



12-i 



HAWES WATER AND HIGH STKKET. 

The first thing to do is to take boat clown the lake to Sharrow Ba}'. 
Let us suppose it one of the hot, still, passionate July days, when the water 
is smooth as glass and full of light and colour — but chiefly an intense sea- 
green in the depths, changing to a clear olive brown, gold-hearted, in the 
shallower bays ; when the mountains have gone miles away in the tremulous 
summer mist which widens the distances and lowers the heights so strangely 
in this country ; and when the reflections in the water are as clear and still 
as the objects they mirror : nowhere so clear as in the bays and under the 
lee of the islands.^ Islands indeed they are not ; rather grey rocks crowned 
with a few trees, which two steps would cross and a flight of swallows cover. 
There are several things of interest to be seen as you row down the lake. 
First, there is that strange fissure called the Devil's Chimney, directly under- 
neath which you may row, and look up the rent which Professor Tyndall 
would climb, chimney-fashion, without much trouble ; and perhaps you may 
see an otter come tumbling into the water ; for they have a favourite resting- 
place there, on a kind of shelf, where they lie till they are disturbed by 
strange visitors. Then there is Scale How Pike, a sharp pyramidal point, 
with Scale Force foaming below, a mountain glen leading up into Boredale 
at its feet, the long High Street line at its back, and the Hawse splitting 
up the valley into two parts. And then there is the Kail-pot Crag at the 
foot of Hallin Fell ; a pretty place much frequented by picnic parties — its 
lovely bay, as clear as if a crystal film was spread over the bright stones, 
its wood-topped crags, its ferns, and luxury of wild flowers, making it an 
ideal place for that pleasant admixture of flirting and good cheer. The " Kail- 
pot " is in the crag; a round hole which the water always washes, and where 
you could boil a good-sized leg of mutton if the lake was a Geyser, and 
you had your kitchen fire ready burning. 

' There are four of these small insurrections of rock on Ullswater : Cherry Holm at 
the head, where was never a cherry-tree within the memory of man ; Wall Holm by the 
Purse, where no one ever saw a wall; Ling Holm close in shore ; and House Holm (house- 
less), with its little offset under its lee. 

123 E, 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

And so you row leisurely on ; past rude and liomely How Town, and 
its hawse — the hog's hack standing isolated like Troutheck Tongue or Nath- 
dale Fell in St. John's (a common mountain form in the independent 
Talleys) ; and perhaps a heron flies hea^dly over the lake at the next reach, 
while, for contrast, the steamboat walks quickly up with its noisy steps, 
making three large waves, no more, which break into white foam on the 
shore everywhere, and shatter the reflections like a broken mirror. And 
when you see the boat you will naturally think of the time, not so very 
many years ago, when there was no wheel-road along Ullswater at all ; when 
all goods were carried either on pack-horses behind Stybarrow (Styboar, it 
was called then), or by carriage-boats up the lake ; and when Patterdale was 
as much out of the world as the wildest nook now in Styria or the Caucasus. 
And, if you are not singularly logical and close, you will somehow mingle 
up into one confused picture as, in a way, representatives of the past and 
present, the red deer still to be found wild at the head of Bannerdale and 
on Kidsty Pike, and which you hope to see, and that smart hotel, with its 
sumptuous tare and its lordly charges, which you have just left ; which 
musings will bring you to Sharrow Bay, where you repeat again your 
lesson of the mountain names at the head of the lake, and again confess 
that, whatever their names, no description of yours can fitly set forth the 
grandeur of their outlines, the variety of their details, the glory of their 
colouring, or the magical effect of the hot July noonday mist upon them. 

At the foot, by Pooley Bridge, is a very different view. Here, all is 
soft and fertile ; with cornfields and broad pasture lands, fair towns, rich 
castles, and stately rivers bearing golden treasures to all as they pass — the 
life of the plains and of lordly owners, where past service^ and present 
honour, the founder's fame and the descendant's wealth, meet in full measure 
round keep and castle — where Penrith carries back the light of history to 
the old Ronnn times and the Druidical before them, to the days of the Norman 

^ " The great Earl of Warwick clisclainecl not to be Marshall Steward and Captain 
of 1' lionor of Penrith and villages adjoining." — Sandfoed. 

124 



HA^YES WATER AND HIGH STREET. 

conquest and the Scottish marauder,^ the last historical flicker being lighted 
at the Cavaliers' expiring flame. 

Now follow the track over Swart Fell, watching still the richness of 
the Penrith plains, and seeing how spectre-haunted Souter Fell, beautiful 
Blencathra, Skiddaw, and unlovely Mell Fell come out by turns from behind 
the UUswater screen ; seeing how^the noble Dalemain Woods make a resting- 
place for the eye in the middle distance ; and how the little wooded cone of 
Dunmallet gains a beauty not quite its own, when its formal green head 
rests against the blue line of Crossfell as its background :— Crossfell, where 
the Helm Wind* blows, and which was once Fiend's Fell, where all the 

^ The parish register has not infrequent entries of " incursate of pirites, borderers, 
theifs and murtherors ;" and great complamts generally of corn and beasts destroyed by the 
Scots ; to \yliomL poor Penrith was a market town of tempting supply — all the more tempt- 
ing, as its wares could be had without repayment. 

* In Richardson's History of Cumberland, the followmg is the account given of the 
Helm Wind: — "Its appearance, according to my remarks, have been that of a wliite cloud 
restmg on the summits of the liills, extenduig even from Brough to Bampton ; it wears 
a bold, broad fi-ont, hke a vast float of ice, standing on edge. On its first appearance, there 
issues from it a prodigious noise, which, in grandeur and awfulness, exceeds the roaring of 
the ocean. Sometimes there is a Helm-bar, which consists of a wMte cloud arranged oi^posite 
to the helm, and holdhig a station various in its distances, being sometimes not more than 
half a mile from the momitaki ; at others, three or four miles. Its breadth also varies 
from a quarter of a mile to a mile at least, tliis cloud prevents the wind blowmg farther 
westward. The sky is generally visible between the helm and the bur, and frequently loose 
bodies of vapour, or small specks of clouds, are separated from the helm and the bar, and 
flying across in contrary directions, both east and west, are seen to sweep along the sky 
with amazing velocity. From the bar-cloud the wind blows eastward ; but underneath 
it is a dead cahn, or gusts of wind from all quarters ; and the violence of the wind is 
generally greatest when the helm is highest above the mountains. The cold air rushes 
down the hill with amazmg strength ; it mostly comes in gusts, though it sometimes blows 
with unabated fury for twenty-foui- houi's, and contuiues blowing at intervals for three, four, 
five, and even six weeks. I have at different tunes walked into the cloud, and found the 
wind increase in violence, till I reached the mist floating on the side of the hiU , when once 
entered into that mist, I experienced a dead calm. If the lielm is stationed above the 
mountain, and does not rest upon it, it blows with considerable violence unmediately mider 
the helm. Shepherds have frequently observed, that the wind rushes down on each side, 

]-2i3 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

unloosed demons used to hold their open-air meetings, till pious St. Augustine 
reclaimed it to the uses of good angels b}^ building a cross and an altar on 
the top, administering the Holy Eucharist and baptizing it afresh by the name 
of Crossfell. A heap of stones there is still called by the country people 
The Altar on Crossfell. 

If it is a true lake-country summer's day, you will find that life has 
enough to do to hold its own against the sun. The birds are silent in the 
woods, and the woods themselves, no longer broken up into the separate 
tints and distinctive forms of spring, are in massed and solemn monotony 
of form and shade ; the mists quiver over the ground, and rise uj) in a 
thin grey film, through which the sun breaks with a stifling heat more 
difficult to bear than the sharper and clearer shine ; but you know that 
in all this dimness of heat and oppressiveness of silence, nature is 
perfecting her summer flowers and saturating with rich savours her autumn 
fruits, turning into golden lances the waving fields of oats and corn, and 
the stiffer ranks of the bearded barley, and ripening into food the poorer 
fields of grass, left standing for such days as this. 

And now you are on Moor Dovock ; a wide tract where nothing grows but 
ling and bracken and peat-bog mosses ; but where, at every ten yards, you put 
up all manner of unusual creatures whose strange cries only increase the lone- 
liness of the place. Strange, that is, unless you are a sportsman ; which the 
writer of these pages is not. The plaintive scream of the plovers, the harsh 
voices of the moor fowl, the skylarks soaring in their song over head, the 
startled whirr of the partridges, and the thousand uncatalogued sounds pro- 
ceeding from things hidden, only serve to make the solitude more entire, 
because so eloquent of the absence of man. And when you go down into the 
hollows whence the distant view is shut out, with the grey film between yon 
and the sky, and the voices of these wild creatures like the voices of ghosts, 

so that at a distance from the hase of the mountam, it blows from different quarters. The 
hehn does not always observe a regular form ; neither is there always a helm-bar, for that 
plienomenon onlj- appears ^^'heu the wind at a little distance blows from the west." 

126 



HAWES WATER AX]:> HIGH STREET. 

heard but riot seen, about you, it is as if you were standing alone on the edge 
of the world, with all life behind you, and only space and the unknown spirit 
world beyond. That wide misty moor — reach after reach the same, till the 
way becomes almost awful in its monotony — its distant landmarks, ever in 
the same relative positions, seeming to mock the idea of progress — is to you, 
almost fainting under the heat and the stagnation of the air, like an enchanted 
plain, where you are doomed to wander for ever. But at last — what does 
not come " at last ! " — the first forms of the Hawes Water hills begin to show 
themselves on the right ; then you come to a solitary cottage keeping guard 
over a little space of cultivated ground; and then to the head of Helotn 
Dale, with the old- wave form, and the end of all things in the closed trough- 
like sweep. 

At the edge of the moor are the few lonely dwellings, customary 
with waste places literally taken from the moor-fowl, and made to grow 
potatoes and oats for men and bairns ; dAvellings and people as little 
part of the social life of the country, as the backwoodsman in his hut is 
part of the body politic of New York. The people living on the skirts of 
these wide moors are as peculiar in their way as the dalesfolk; often 
educated to a scholarly exercise of intellect, while living in a loneliness that 
is almost eremitical, and in a simplicity and poverty that take you back 
many generations, and still more cycles of national civilization. At one 
such lonely place — a house standing in the midst of desolation — a homestead 
literally snatched from the wild — we, the artist and author of this book, went 
in to ask for bread and milk ; it being well into the evening when we came off 
the moor, and Hawes Water was still a haven undiscovered before us. And 
though what we saw and heard there was neither poetical nor dramatic — in 
fact, not specially interesting to the reader at all^yet it is worth relating 
as a kind of typical or general representation of the class of person and 
manner of life belonging to these places. 

The house was a poor-looking, but well-built stone cottage, surrounded 
by a wall that of itself at once inspired the feeling of loneliness ; for 

127 



THE LAKE COUNTEY. 

it enclosed no gardened space of fruit and flowers, only a neglected barren 
strip of ground that in the winter would be ankle-deep with mud, and 
in summer was a dusty cart-track thickly groAvn with weeds and dis- 
figured by all manner of accumulated unsightliness ; an utterly unlovely 
and ungraceful enclosure, meaning defence of a kind only, no more. Indeed 
the general aspect of the place was not so much one of poverty or stint as of 
bleakness and unloveliness : life with the element of artificial or made beauty 
entirely absent. Of natural beauty even, there was none of the softer or 
more ornamented kind ; only such as could be got out of a wide tract of 
moorland, with the distant line of hills beyond, and the ever-changing aspects 
of the sky. There was no bustle of a farmhouse about ; no kine lowing, 
no horses tramping, no bleating of sheep or barking of dogs, and at first 
not a human being anywhere ; but presently, in a field a little way off, we saw 
a family group haymaking ; ^ and when they saw us standing by the house- 
door, they left off work and came to know what we wanted. 

They were noticeable people, these two " house parents." The man — a 
mere working farmer tilling his small piece of ground for family consumption 
mainly, coming in to greet us, hot and weary with his work — was refined and 
thoughtful ; a man evidently well considered in his degree ; as his wife said 
with no little pride, though with feigned displeasure, " chosen to be a juryman 
oftener than was fair, because they knew him, and knew what a fine scholar he 
was." She was a ruder person, bright-eyed and bonny, but of a less gracious 
nature ; not at the first so frankly hospitable as he — he offering his best with 
a manly courtesy, and an open-handed generosity essentially noble — but she, 
woman-like, hanging back doubtingly, troubled at the prospect of short- 
coming in the haytime, and reckoning up mouths and loaves with true feminine 
carefulness. 



* Tlie hay and corn harvests lie very late in these colder uplands. Hajanaking at 
the " back end " of Jnly, or even well into Angiist, is no such uncommon matter ; and 
corn has been seen so late as the week before Christmas, before the reapers came to the 
rcaj)ing. 

128 



IIAWES WATER AND HIGH STREET. 

"I dunno' ken aboot bread, ye see," she said, hesitatingly; "white bread, 
ye see, 's bad to get at haymakin', and we'se mony to gie' tu." 

After a short time, however, she was as kind and generous as her 
husband : but her kindness was from personal magnetism, and the quick 
sympathies of her woman's heart ; his from the dignity of his own nature, 
and the service he felt bound, by his manhood, to render to all men 
alike. They gave us freely of their best ; wheaten bread, butter, and a huge 
jug of milk ; and the man took down a large cheese from the " rannel balk " 
(the beam running across the kitchen) piled up with cheeses for their own 
use only, and told us "to spare nothing, we were kindly welcome." The 
place was well furnished in its way — the old settle by the chimney neuk, the 
press and clock of black oak, the high-backed chairs, and wealth of "delf," 
giving it a true old-fashioned air and manner of comfort, as understood by 
these remote farmers. And they were proud of their place, boasting that the 
Dun Bull (the little inn at Mardale Green) " hadn't a room the like of theirs, 
and that they could accommodate more folk than them if they had a mind." 

But though they were so kind and genial we saw that their hearts 
were heavy, and in a short time they told us their sorrow — unfortunately 
too general in these parts — the loss by consumption, or more accurately, 
scrofula, of their eldest two girls; "as fine lassies as you ever set eyes 
on," said the mother, weeping, " and as guid anes ! " The other girls 
whom we saw, were apparently ideals of country health and strength, ros}^, 
well-fashioned, as wild and unkempt as colts and as shy, and yet they were 
not safe ; and we saw that at any moment the same disease might show itself 
in them as had already struck down their sisters : this disease of scrofula, in 
its two forms of consumption and brain affection, being the curse of the whole 
country. We shall ever remember that lonely dwelling on the moor, with its 
quiet, thoughtful, and religious man, its bonny wife, brave and active, troubled 
like Martha with many cares, yet with a true human heart beneath them all, 
its great, bright, rosy girls stealing "behind backs" in the milk-house, too 
rough and shy to "face t' folk," or "quality," Avith gratitude and respect. 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

For indeed it is a matter of gratitude, if rightly taken, to see human nature 
in its fairer and better forms. 

Yet they were not uncommon specimens of the more lonely northern 
folk. In many a secluded home where the outside world never enters, and 
the whirring wheels of this great material civilization of ours are heard hut 
faint and far off, where the physical life is of the meagrest and the social of 
the deadest, you may fall upon thoughtful men, well educated to an almost 
scholarly point, and with a refinement of moral feeling that passes from 
honesty to real nobleness. Shy perhaps — perhaps, too, not a little dry and 
hard in manner at the outset — keen with an almost savage acuteness — and 
by no means disposed to loose-lipped confidences, or to unproved trust — with 
much of the Scottish caution, and hereditary reminiscences of the times when 
strangers were enemies still clinging to them, — and yet men who could hold 
their own against the best and brightest in the land. Ah ! they are a fine 
set of men and women, these northerners — Grod bless them ! 

In another desolate place, two little children of four and six years of 
age were sitting hand in hand on the fell-side, watching a couple of hundred 
sheep huddled up at the farm-gate for to-morrow's clipping. Not another 
human being was to be seen anywhere ; and when we asked them if they 
were minding the sheep, the elder answered: "Ay! us and 't lisle dog," 
quite in a fraternal and family manner, as if "us and 't lisle dog" were all 
on an equal footing together, and accustomed to joint duties. They made 
a pretty picture as they sat in the evening light, alone on the wild fell-side, 
with the frightened flock of sheep before them, and the golden rays of the . 
sun slanting through the mottled sky above ; and they, too, told of the 
entire loneliness, and security of the place. 

And now you are at Hawes Water ; a long narrow lake turning round 
at the head like Ullswater, and like Thirlmere almost cut in two by an 
intersecting promontory. The mountains to the right are set edgewise 
to the lake, with small dales running up between ; but to the left there is 
only one huge sweep — wooded at the foot, craggy at the head — standing 

130 



ITAWES WATEE, AND HIGH STREET. 




HAWES WATER 



broadside like Place Fell on Ullswater. This broadside sweep is respectively 
Naddle Forest and Wallow Crag ; where, in the last, lies " Jamie LoAvther's " 
wicked ghost, and which now, in the quiet evening stillness, looks stern 
enough for any awful tale to hang about it ; while the edgewise ridges 
are really only spurs of High Street buttressing up the long range, as the 
Ullswater spurs buttress up Helvellyn. 

It is a grand walk all along the edge of Hawes Water, under the eaves 
of the mountain ridges, with that great Wallow Crag on your flank, and 
Harter Fell and the other rough Mardale mountains before you. And none 
the less delightful for the unwonted simplicity and primitive lives of the 
people. Very little of distrust here ! If you ask your way, they will, 
perhaps, lead you right through the house to save you a few steps ; and 
certainly no new fashion of wealth or luxury or even beauty has yet found 
its seed-bed at Hawes Water. Here is still the ugly, poor-looking gentleman's 
house, which one sees so rarely now among the pointed roofs and grey 
stone cottages in the lake district — a cream-tinted, stuccoed square box, 
adorned by no trellis-work with tea-roses or grape-like westeria, passion 
flower or purple clematis, flame-coloured pyrus or saffron canariensis, 
growing up, but standing there in its naked ugliness, a mere windowed 

131 s 2 



THE LAKE COUNTIIY. 

barrack stuck down on a coarse and fiowerless lawn, with nothing more 
beautiful in front or rear than a plot of blue iris or a clump of white rocket. 
And here, too, is still the tumble-down cottage and the rickety farmhouse, 
with the byre and the stable and the pigsty all in architectural community 
together ; with the " middenstead " at the house door, and the children 
playing with fever and ague by its side. Measands Becks is one of these 
old hamlets : a miserable collection of dirty huts made beautiful by the 
trees and shrubs and wild-flowers groAving about, and which might so easily be 
made clean by the aid of noisy Fordendale Beck — a pretty mountain stream 
dashing through, pleasantly continuing that broad white fall on the crags 
above, and whence, they say, the best view of Hawes Water is to be had. 
But every vieAv is lovely, for all that the lake is not one of the most frequented, 
and, consequently, not of established reputation ; yet, seen in the calm of 
evening, with every mountain form repeated with tenfold force of line and 
colour in the black lake, and all these forms so grand and severe, it is 
something well worth travelling far to see, and looking back upon with love 
when left for ever. 

But in truth, it is all very primitive and rough ; and it is easy to 
understand how fine gentlemen and ladies who travel with "comforts," 
would shrink from the only place of entertainment at Hawes Water as 
they would shrink from an Indian's wigwam ; and for some of the same 
reasons. Then, it is not very practicable for grandees in their carriages; for 
the high road is a mere walled-in path, where two carts, if they met, would 
have to make compliments to each other, and one must back into the 
nearest gate — there would be no passing with all four wheels left sound. 
The church is picturesque enough, with its gilt weathercock now so seldom 
seen, but it is by no means a rustic cathedral ; the royal hotel — and the 
only one — is a wretched wayside public-house, where you can get eggs 
and bacon and nothing else — except the company of a tipsy parson lying in 
bed with his gin-bottle by his side ; and the King of Mardale — the great 
man of the place, the largest landed proprietor of the home blood, and in 

132 



HAWES WATER AND HIGH STREET. 

his time the best wrestler and best sheep-shearer of the dale — is a yeoman, 
whose family certainly came in with the Conqueror,^ keeping both name and 
estates through all the long generations since ; but he is still, according to the 
Guide Book, nothing better than a yeoman for all that, though he has some 
of the oldest blood of England in his veins, and is the virtual King of the 
Dale. So that, on the whole, the social and political life of Hawes Water is 
not of the most fashionable or brilliant description. 

High Street must now be conquered. Your way lies up Mardale 
Green, having Branstree to your left, Harter Fell in front, and your right 
path leading under Pyat Rock, a vicious-looking crag serving as a landmark. 
Between Branstree and Harter Fell is the rough Gatescarth Pass into Long 
Sleddale ; and between Harter Fell and Small Water is the entrance to the 
magnificent pass of Nan Bield, leading to Kentmere, which you must go 
out of your way to see, for the pleasure of standing a little nervously under 
its overhanging crags, and feeling as if about to be crushed between its 
facing rocks. Then cross the crags again, looking back on the long flat of 
Mardale Green so often overflowed in the winter time, with that one solitary 
house at the end (the Dun Bull, its royal hotel, near to the church), and 



^ The Holms, the family iii question, were originally Swedes of Stocldiohn, but 
came into England A^ith the Conqueror; to be rewarded for their adhesion with certain lands 
and estates in Northamptonshire, where they Kved in such peace as the times afibrded, 
until the days of King John ; when troubles came upon them, and the head of the house 
had to fly for Ms life. He came dovm to Mardale, then well nigh maccessible, and con- 
cealed Iximself in a cave at the foot of PJggindale Crag, called Hugh's Cave to this hoiu* ; 
not half a mile from Chapel Hill where the present Holm lives, as his forbears have hved 
before him. It has its name of Chapel Hill from the fact of Udolphus, one of tlie familj^, 
founding an oratory near his dwelling-house. The fugitive, when the time of trouble was 
ovei-past, bought the present Hohn estate in Mardale, and here the Holm family has been 
from that tune to this, never wanting a son to take the estate and perpetuate the name. 
Many attemps have been made to buy out the old yeoman, but he and his have been 
steadily true to themselves and their generations, and no amount of modern money has yet 
been able to purchase those well-worn and honourable title-deeds. 

13.S 



THE LAKE COUNTRY, 

its framework of savage hill ; catching the precious breeze as it creeps down 
the gorge so languidly it does not ruffle the starry spikes of the yellow bog 
asphodel, or the face of that deep blue Small Water lying under the shadow 
of High Street. The tarn is pleasant in this clinging summer heat ; 
cool, quiet, and fresh ; a perfectly round and symmetrical dimple in the 
old mountain cheek, which the dews and the clouds come down to fill, and 
which the Greeks would have consecrated by some sweet legend into a 
favourite place of pilgrimage for the young Boeotians in the vale. A shoulder 
of High Street, represented by a rough mass of broken rock over which you 
must make your way, separates Small Water from Blea Water, another tiny 
mountain lake which you are bound to risk your neck to see before you 
begin the real ascent of the day. As you stand on the gentle slope by Blea 
Water, you will begin to make out your work, which, it is to be hoped, you 
will be gallantly sure is quite of a mild and tranquil character — a mere 
nothing for steady heads and strong feet. Kidsty Pike, staring at you in 
the sunlight with its broad red face, is impassable certainly, save to 
gnome flies prepared to walk up a shingly perpendicular ; but the level line 
of High Street is no more difficult than a meadow path — when you are 
once on it ; and though there are a few questionable crags, shaped like a 
lion's head, to the left, between which and the shingly perpendicular opposite 
you must make your choice, yet believe them easy (if you must go up 
them) until better knoAvn. Wherefore toil on merrily as others have, till 
you near the questionable crags and stand face to face with the day's event. 

If you are like some others known to us, to this hour it will be a 
dream, as well as a marvel, how you ever got over those crags. Sharp 
cuttings, higher than your head, have to be surmounted, with such aids as 
small foot-holds worn into the rock, or toe-points jutting out, or a stout 
tuft of bracken or ling may afford ; narrow sheep tracks, with the rock 
perpendicular above and the crags steep and pointed below, have to be 
warily trodden, and the loose stones and slanting slides carefully passed, 
where one false step would be fatal to life possibly, and to limb certainly ; 

134 



HAWES WATER AND HIGH STREET. 




a set of steps a yard high, and sometimes overgrown with sHjjpery grass, 
(like a giant staircase with all the corners worn off, the stairs broken, and 

no balustrades), leading right up the 
face, has to be taken — or none other ; 
gaps, through which nothing larger 
j^\\ than a lean lamb could force itself, 
are sometimes the only way of pass- 
ing from a lower round to the higher, 
unless you can drag yourself up the 
cleft by mere force of arms and 
shoulders, or the weaker be dragged 
up by the stronger, standing on the 
narrow ledge above ; and when 
dragged up, there is often not room 
enough for four feet and two bodies 
between the rock and destruction. The sharp angles will graze you, the 
gorse will tear your ancles and the junipers will prick your hands ; and 
ever the climb gets steeper and the way more rugged — ever the need of 
going on without halting, or daring to look above or below, or to question 
probabilities of success, or to think of what you have done or have still to 
do, more absolute, if you would keep your nerves in working order at all ; 
till, with a supreme effort, scrambling up a narrow ledge where one slip 
of hand or foot would be simple death, you get over the last barrier, and 
stand on the broad turfed down,'^ which is the top of High Steeet. But for 
nights after those crags will come back like monsters haunting your dreams, 

' So broad and spacious and level is this mountain top, that it made not only the best 
road the Romans could have had in the district, but for centuries after was used as a 
general meeting-place for the shepherds of Patterdale and Martmdale, Mardale, Kentmere, 
and Troutbeck, who assembled there every tenth of July as much for fuii as business, 
and witli as keen eyes to cakes and ale as to professional purposes. It is a grand stretch of 
table land, but not one of the best in point of views ; though very noble prospects are to be 
had ; as indeed wherever you can go here half a hundred feet above the level. 

135 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

and it may prove to be a very close question, whether, as with one of us after 
that day's climb, you are not going crag-crazy. 

High Street is like no other mountain in the country. On the top it 
is more like a common than a mountain, with scarcely a slope to break its 
level, until it dips down towards Troutbeck on the one side, before mounting 
Froswick, and climbs up Lade Pot^ on the other, before finally descending to 
the Penrith plains. Standing just above the Tongue which sj)lits Troutbeck 
in two, and not far from the Scots' Rake,^ you see Windermere and its islands 
• — only part of the lake, cut into by Wansfell Pike ; you see Wetherlam and 
the Old Man, Black Combe, and the sea beyond, and maybe Ingleborough, and 
Lancaster church and castle, and Underbarrow Scar at Kendal. To the left is 
the valley of Kentmere, where Bernard Gilpin^° was born, and whither the pass 
of Nan Bield leads from Hawes Water ; and also to the left, Froswick, 111 Bell 
with its two peaks like horns, and Yoke, — the last showing only its mighty 
Rainsborrow Crag, sharply broken and needle-like on the Kentmere ^^ side where 
the reservoir, which is the modern substitute for the old natural tarn, lies 

® Lad means way, and Pot a circular hole or scoop. 

^ Wliere tradition says a party of Scots came down upon Troutbeck one bright day in 
1715, but were driven back. It was not often that such mcursions happened. " Border 
contests were carried on at a distance from our lake land," says Southey; " where the 
inhabitants being left in peace seemed to have enjoyed it." AVherefore we have no ballad 
poetry among us, though one old bard, Llywarc Han, is mentioned in history as a " Prince 
of Cumbria." He lived to be a hmidred and fifty years old, and had twenty-four sons, 
" wearing the golden chain — leaders of battles," all slain before his death. He was exiled, 
and died at Bala, at a place still called the Cot of Llywarc the Aged. 

'" Bernard Gilphi was born at Kentmere, 1517, the great, good man, the apostle of peace 
that he was ! PJchard Gilx^in, before him, was also a mighty man of the place. He was 
" iufeoffed, in the reign of John, by the Baron of Kendal, in the Lordslup of Kentmere 
Hall, for Ms smgular deserts in peace and war." It was he " who slew the Wild Bore that, 
raf'ino' in the Mountains adjoyning (as sometimes that of Ermianthus) much indamaged 
the country people; whence it is that the Gilpins hi their coat-armes give the Bore." So 
says Fuller. A vahant man this Richard ; but Bernard stands, perhaps, the highest in the 
hierarchy of the just. 

" It seems scarcely fair to pass over the Kentmere VaUey so Ughtly. One of the 
■widest and most important that we have — and one of the most unportant of our rivers 

136 



HAWES WATER AND HIGH STEEET. 

below, but smooth enough towards Troutbeck. Langclale Pikes are in the 
distance; Eed Screes and Codale Moor apparently within a stone's throw; but 
if the sun is in the west, St. Sunday's Crag and Helvellyn will be nothing but 
dim uncertain outlines in a radiant haze — dark purple masses lost behind 
a tremulous sea of golden light. Neither, as you go, will you perhaps 
make out much of Skiddaw or Blencathra, of Crossfell or the more distant 
plains. The first will be only great blue limits, the last, reaches of mottled 
green shading off into cooler grey ; but on the eastern side, where the sun 
falls, you can almost count the stones on the hills opposite, if the light is 

giving its name to both vale and to^Yn. — it seems to demand a longer notice, wliicli, 
however, cannot be accorded. Yet the course of the Ken is full of interest. Ptising at the 
back of High Street, passing by Frosmck and 111 Bell, and through the old Kentmere Tarn, 
receiving soon after the stream from Skeggles Water, and those from the two little tarns in 
Potter's Fell — then the Sprint from Long Sleddale, and the Mint from what was once 
Fawcett Forest — then watering the feet of Kendal, turning its mills, and refreshing its 
parks and gardens — then rnshuig onward, taldng up the Underbarrow and Beetham becks, 
and passmg through Leven's park, where the cHpped yew-trees are, till it wanders finally 
into the sea, where it forms its dangerous sands, (" Kent and Keir have parted many a good 
man and his meer " — i. e., mare) — what a history might be written of it, from its first shy 
bubbhng forth among the moss and ferns of the mountain tops, to its last mde, rapid flow 
into the illimitable sea ! So innocent and full of childish play in the beghming, so mighty 
and full of dangerous wrath in its ending ! " Certes, this riuer Ken is a pretie deepe riuer, 
yet not safe to be aduentured upon with boats and bahngers, by reason of rolhng stones and 
other huge substances that oft annoie and trouble the middest of the channell there," says 
an old ^vl*iter ; to wliich Camden, reported by Fuller, adds Ms word, respecting the two 
waterfalls wliich presage the coming weather : — " I learn of Master Camden that in the 
river Cann, in this County, there be two CatadupcB or Waterfalls; whereof the Northern, 
sounding clear and loud, foretokeneth Fan- Weather ; the Southern, on the same terms, 
presageth Rain. Now I wish that the former of these may be vocaU in Haytime and Harvest, 
the latter after great Drought, that so both of them may make welcome musick to the 
inhabitants." These catadupse are, one waterfall m Leven's park and one in the Beetha, 
below Beetham. " When the Levens fall sounds more loud and clear they look for fair 
weather; when " that below Beetham " doth the same, they expect rain. The philosophj' 
of which is no more than this, that the south-west winds, blowing from the sea, bring the 
vapours along with them, and generally produce rain ; consequently, blowing from the nortli 
or north-east, thej' have the contrary effect." — Buexet. 

137 T 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

bright and the air still. Miss Martineau's report of the weather general to the 
top of High Street is, " It donks and it dozzles, and whiles it's a hit siftering, 
but it don't often make no girt pell;" but even this mild kind of turmoil was 
not our experience when we went up. 

And now follow the Eoman Road as long as you dare, treading on the 
very line where the Latin legions trod so many centuries ago, and seeing the 
very objects which they saw. And yet how different in spiritual percep- 
tion ! For you love what they coveted, you admire what they abhorred, 
to you the hills have in them the glory of nature and delight in her love, to 
them they were but good military roads for the passage of their armies, or 
natural citadels of the foe to be carefully watched and powerfully beset. One 
cannot get away from the Romans on High Street. Their ghosts march with 
us in the evening light, and the summer winds blow the echo of their tread in 
faint gusts across the air ; we see them in their serried ranks, their bright 
armour flashing back the sunlight, and their music drowning the roar of the 
wild beasts and the shrill cries of the barbarians below ; we hear their strong 
Italian voices singing snatches of Latin song — some of the younger and 
patrician trolling out Greek ditties, perhaps those which old Anacreon had 
sung under the shadow of the Athenian vineyards — and some of the ruder 
nations breaking in with rougher force of voice than what the Roman 
gentleman, singing his Grreek ode softly, cared to hear ; we see them in their 
insolent confidence as Masters of the World, condescending to the conquest of 
this remote island of wolves and savages, where the summer sun was scarce 
brighter than their native moon, and where the snows lay sleeping on the hills 
far into the morning of May. They throng the level height on these still July 
evenings — they tramp again through their own road, which neither time nor 
the elements have yet destroyed, strongest and most masculine of all the 
nations of the world — they fill the air, and they people the earth ; and it is 
only by an effort that we can banish those ghostly legions from us, and come 
back to the actual life and being of our tamer nineteenth century. Ossian 
wrote no fancies. If any one wishes to see ghosts, and to feel and hear them, 

138 



HAWES WATER AND HIGH STliEET. 

let him go up High Street in the evening, and march with the shadowy 
cohort ever passing from Alonas to Petreana by that long green strip which 
was their famous hill-top road. 

When you leave the ghosts you fall upon Hayes Water in the hollow below 
you ; Grey Crag overshadowing it, and Hartsop Dod putting up its sharp sides 
beyond ; and then perhaps you stumble against what is even more impressive 
than the lonely mountain tarn — the fleece of a sheep lying almost undis- 
turbed, and as the creature must have died. Quite in the same attitude and 
position, though the wool will be spread as if it had been pulled at, while 
underneath you will see the gaunt skeleton of the ribs as under an artificial 
coverlet, the skull and leg bones being scattered a little way off. Of all the 
lonely and desolate impressions of these mountain walks, this finding of dead 
sheep is by far the most so. It tells such a tale of helplessness and suffering 
and the wild fight for food, on these dumb heights, with perhaps accidents of 
winter storms, of hurt, or of mere weakness and decay, that the heart is made 
more pitiful than if it was not the lot of sheep to die before their time, and as 
if it was not the appointed law that the rooks and ravens should be fed. 

Then you come to Angle Tarn, in its high shallow basin on the lower 
heights of Place Fell. The first view of it is more beautiful than the second. 
Seen from the east side it is symmetrical and harmonious ; from the west, it 
is like an oddly-shaped trefoil, with a dotting of island spots across the upper 
leaves. A step to the left brings you in sight of Brothers' Water, not looking 
so desolate from here as on the Scandale evening ; perhaps because you have 
now learnt its softer aspects better, and have come to connect it with the life 
and civilization of Patterdale ; but looking only lovely and picturesque, and of 
tenderest peace and quietude. The west side, where the Scandale mountains 
fling their shadows, is a deep black lightening to purple, and there is a wild 
rising of buttresses and spurs round it, all springing from the same platform, 
and running up to greater or less majesty of development. The steep sides 
of Plartsop Dod are fine from here ; so are those rosy clouds coming up over 
High Street, which you are now fuciiig, having turned l;>ack from the direct 

139 T 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 



road down Place Fell, for the purpose of descending by Hayes Water and 
Nether Hartsop.^- 




HAYES WATER 



The solitude here is as perfect as if you were alone in creation. Not a 
sight, not a sound, not even a wild bird or a wild flower — nothing but the 
close turf, and the peat bogs, and the sharp sides or rough crags or tossing 
heads of the mountains, with the level sun striking all the eastern side with a 
hard and shadowless light. Too hard a light ; for by it everything is brought 
out in the same proportion, and as much importance is given to a heap of 
stones as to a mountain shoulder ; a crag is as large as a mountain, and the 
mountain as near as the crag ; nothing is left unrevealed, and the sun thrusts 
its flaming torch with almost cruel vigour wherever the light can rest. To the 



'^ There are many other ways for those so miiided. There is one by Troutbeck to the 
old haunts of Ambleside ; another by Codale Moor to Kirkstone ; or down the face of 
Codale itself, by the rongh-looking path that serpentines along its Imotty shoixlders into the 
road by Brothers' Water ; or you may go down by Bannerdale, where you \^dll have a 
chance of seeing the red deer ; or by Lade Pot to Swart Fell ; but if you have your resting- 
place at Patterdale, and wish to see Nether Hartsop, choose the pass by Playes Water — 
which is not rccommendable, however, on the score of smooth walldng or ease of going. 

140 



HAWES WATEK AND HIGH STREET. 

west everything is wrapped away in golden doubt, and there is nothing but dim 
purple shapes thickly veiled in gold and crimson. On an eminence to the 
right you see both Angle Tarn and Hayes Water^^ again; one on the right hand, 
the other on the left — the one all in light, the other in inky darkness— the 
one barely topped by the fell-side rim, the other set deep at the very base of 
the hills. 

It looks a mere five minutes' run down to Hayes Water, and perhaps 
a twenty minutes' pull to High Street, which you have left some hours 
ago ; and mountaineers as you may be by birth and habit, even you may 
be easily deceived by the flattering brightness of the atmosphere. You will 
find out your mistake by the time you have toiled down to the margin of the 
tarn, through bogs, and water-courses, and plum-coloured peat-mosses, and rare, 
but welcome patches of fern, and dry peninsulas of rock ; Grey Crag, as you 
go, slowly clothing itself with gold and crimson as the sun sinks lower and 
lower. Behind Helvellyn — far behind, so that the light is not interrupted — 
comes up a bank of cold grey clouds, not yet sunlit ; and against them, as a 
background, hangs a flock of small curl-clouds of the deepest crimson for your 
last evening splendours, as you cross the stream at its issue from the tarn — 
crossing by a curious paved stile, stile and bridge and wall in one. Then 
you descend by a rough path, following the lovely stream flowing on your 
right, fern-fringed and fairy haunted — resting in pools, or leaping out in 
foam, or creeping slyly under the shadow of its ash-trees and flowering- 
bushes, — a stream full of poems and fairies and nymphs and children's 
fancies, wild, beautiful, and untouched. 

A sheep maze — (they are everywhere by the fell-side brooks, wherever there 



^^ The four tarns seen to-day are very characteristic of the three forms most generally 
taken. Small Water and Blea Water are the usual filhngs in of mountain cups — hollows 
made in the hills as you would make a thumb-mark in a piece of dough; Hayes Water is 
the lake naturally collecting at the feet of sharp precipices — the reservoir into which are 
drained the springs and becks ; and Angle Tarn is the water lying in a shallow basin on the 
] all- tops. 

141 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

is a deeper pool than usual liaiidy for the sheep washing) — is at the end of the 
pass ; and you will not he sorry to see even this remote sign of human living ; 
for hy the time you come down into Nether Hartsop, hy Atkinson's Cove, the 
bank of cold grey clouds will have burned itself from dun crimson into ash 
colour again ; the mountain tops, from having been like sultanas gold and 
gem-bedecked, will be now like pale nuns wrapped in scapular and veil ; and 
you will be at the end of your powers, if you have spent, as we once did, 
more than twelve hours in the transit between Mardale and Ullswater. (The 
"king" said he would do it in less than two, and he gave us three.) Now 
you pass the blasted tree, looking black and ghostly, and you hear the fall of 
the stream from Angle Tarn, and even see its white track against the rocks 
before leaping into the valley beneath ; but all is getting very dim and 
uncertain, for the faint wash of warm tint in the west has faded finally away, 
and the sky is all silver and blue and quiet grey — grey like the evening moths 
flitting across the path ; the moon and the stars have come out with the soft 
light of a summer's night ; and the earth has folded herself to her rest. And 
now you are at home ; and if you have done what has been written of in 
this chapter, you will have done what many could not have accomplished in the 
same manner, and by the same ways — the heavy climb, the length of road, and 
the unresting pace of two days' severe work. 




\ IG i 1 R N( 




HELVELLYN AND FAIRFIELD 



CHAPTER IX 



The lonely, gleaming miner's town on Glenridding side looks very cold and 
hard, as you pass it on your way up to Helvellyn, Colder, too, and harder, 
for the pale sunlight which, if the day is fitful, flashes at intervals through 
the clouds, bleaching the rocks and works and massed heaps of refuse to 
a sickly greenish white, and making the slated roofs again as if of shining 
glass. But uncomfortable as the morning looks, it may be one of those 
days which have hope, and a noonday crisis, possible in the heart of them ; 
and when, if the weather does really, as they call it, " take up," you will have 
far more beautiful eff'ects, and a richer reward of loveliness, than in days 
which have had no sorrow to begin with. In which may perhaps be found 

143 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 



an analogy to human life ; as indeed may be found in all the conditions 
and variations of nature whatsoever. 

Passing through this small miner's town, and up by the steeply winding 
road — keeping by the side of Red Tarn Beck, not yet polluted with the 
miner's ore, but flowing down the brant brow of the hill, clear and pure as 
a mountain stream should be — the way leads by long and slow degrees right 
into the wild Helvellyn heart. But many a furlong of lonely mountain 
road must be trodden before Catstycam, which has been the landmark so long 
in front, is fairly reached, or before the hollow where lies Keppel Cove Tarn 
between this " Wild Cat's Hill " and Helvellyn proper, is plainly marked. 
At last however you reach the tarn, lying under a bleak shoulder which you 
have to climb ; and here you would do well to sit for a while on the rough 
hill-side, catching the water trickling from a little nameless brook, and 
making out the form of what lies before you. 

Clouds are drifting over the whole top of Helvellyn : and you will have to 
walk into them unless the sun can break a way through, as it has already 
broken through and utterly routed and destroyed others of the morning's 
making ; but, for the present, be thankful for them — thankful for the grand 
effect they make, sweeping in broken feathers across the nearer heights while 
heaped up in denser masses beyond, so that the jagged lines of Swirrel 
Edge ^ come out against the background with startling clearness and 




isolation. And Swirrel Edge is a fine thing to see, especially when it stands 
out so utterly alone as now, with only the clouds between it and infinity, or 



' Swirl-Edge. 
144 



HELVELLYN AND FAIRFIELD. 

perhaps the topmost height of Helvellyn, like some giant keep, peering for 
a moment dimly through. 

The Tarn lies just below. Shallow, reddened at the sides, and with a 
certain drawn and drained look about it, (which is not mere fancy, for it is 
really the reservoir of the mines,) it is not one of the most beautiful of the 
mountain tarns, and yet its situation is of surpassing grandeur, lying as it does 
in the shadow of Catstycam's sharp precipices, and under the noble tumult of 
Swirrel Edge, with its third boundaiy, that " huge nameless rock," where the 
path winds up to-day. But though its enclosing lines are so magnificent, Keppel 
Cove Tarn is, it must be confessed, (comparatively) uninteresting in itself. 

Notwithstanding all the greater dislocation here than usual, note still 
the ever-recurring bird's sweep of wing in the dale, where the little brook 
runs like a blue pencil mark, edging the longer feathers ; and the wave form 
of the mountains, — the sharper peaks to one side, where the wave has fallen 
most steeply down, and been beaten against, and broken into ; and the 
smoother slope to the other — the slope of simple flow and upheaval. Go 
where we will, these same forms recur without exception, if with manifold 
and most lovely variations. A burst of sunlight now comes through the 
dark screen of the headland, tearing the clouds to fragments which the 
wind blows roughly away ; and, as they drive across towards the sea, the top, 
where that small black point of the stone maen stands, and the second Edge — 




Striding, alone and beyond Swirrel — are seen in photographic crispness of 
outline. In photographic crispness and clearness, too, is the green and 
purple and rich red brown in the mountain depths, and the lustre of the 

145 u 



THE LAKE COUNTKY. 

thinner yellow lights below. The Penrith plains are all in sunshine; and 
Ullswater and the lower mountain tops are bathed with the same golden glory ; 
and the brightness of the plains makes those solemn purple shadows, and the 
angry clouds yet hovering about, more striking for the contrast. 

But now turn up the shoulder : plodding over its broken steeps with 
hearts full of mountain joy — and there is no joy like that — till you come 
upon an instalment of your day's inheritance — the Keswick mountains, with 
Bassenthwaite lake as the outlet, the Solway beyond the level line of the 
Cockermouth plains, Criffel in delicate shading against the horizon, with a 
dimmer Scottish range yet, the Newlands sentinels, and the dark heads of 
the Borrowdale group, darker and more severe than all the rest. In a few 
more steps, come up the divided spurs of the flat-topped Thirlmere range — 
that great spongy bog of tableland leading off to Borrowdale : but Keswick 
lake " is hidden. 

Ah, what a world lies below ! But grand as it is on the earth, it is mated 
by the grandeur of the sky. For the cloud scenery is of such surpassing noble- 
ness while it lasts and before it is drawn up into one volume of intensest blue, 
that no kind or manner of discord mars the day's power and loveliness. Of all 
forms and of all colours are these gracious summer clouds — ranging from roseate 
flecks to dazzling white masses and torn black remnants, like the last fragments 
of a widow's weeds thrust aside for her maturer bridal ; from solid substances, 
firm and marble-like, to light baby curls set like pleasant smiles about the 
graver faces : words and pictures, in all their changes, unspeakably precious to 
soul and sense. And when, finally, they all gather themselves away, and 
leave the sky a vault of undimmed blue, and leave the earth a gorgeous 
picture of human industry and dwelling — when field and plain and mountain 
and lake and tarn and river are fashioned into the beauty of the primaeval 



'^ Six lakes are seen from the top of Helvellyn, not counting the smaller waters : 
Ullswater and Windermere, Esthwaite, Coniston, Bassenthwaite and Tliirlmere ; but Rydal 
and Grasmere and Derwentwater, which it would be natural to expect to see, are all Iiidden 
by intervening spurs or ranges. 

146 



HELVELLYN AND FAIRFIELD. 

earth by the purity of the air and the governing strength of the sun and 
the fragrant sweetness of the summer, and when the very gates of heaven 
seem opening for our entering where the southern sun stands at gaze in his 
golden majesty, — is it wonder if there are tears more glad than many smiles, 
and a thrill of love more prayerful than many a litany chanted in the church 
service ? In the very passion of delight that pours like wine through the 
veins, is a solemn outfall — in the very deliciousness of joy an intensity that 
is almost pain. It is all so solemn and so grand, so noble and so loving, 
surely we cannot be less than what we live in ! 

Let any one haunted by small cares, by fears worse than cares, and by 
passions worse than either, go up on a mountain height, on such a summer's 
day as this, and there confront his soul with the living soul of nature. Will 
the stately solitude not calm him ? can the nobleness of beauty not raise 
him to noble likeness ? is there no divine voice for him in the absolute still- 
ness ? no loving hand guiding through the pathless wilds ? no tenderness 
for man in the lavishness of nature ? have the clouds no lesson of strength 
in their softness ? the sun no cheering in its glory ? has the earth no hymn 
in all its living murmur ? the air no shaping in its clearness ? the wind no 
healing in its power ? Can he stand in the midst of that great majesty the 
sole small thing, and shall his spirit, which should be the noblest thing of 
all, let itself be crippled by self and fear, till it lies crawling on the earth 
when its place is lifting to the heavens ? Oh ! better than written sermon 
or spoken exhortation is one hour on the lonely mountain tops, when the 
world seems so far off and God and his angels so near ! Into the Temple 
of Nature flows the light of the Shekinah, pure and strong and holy, and 
they are wisest who pass into it oftenest, and rest within its glory longest. 
There was never a church more consecrated to all good ends than the stone 
waste on Helvellyn top, where you sit beneath the sun and watch the bright 
world lying in radiant peace below, and the quiet and sacred heavens above. 

And now you can make out the faces of old friends, and call to them 
through the space. Harrop Tarn, on the Thirlmere Fells opposite, is 

147 u 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

touched to silver by the generous light ; and little Blea Tarn — a doll's lake 
it looks from here — lying higher and more north than Harrop Tarn, 
shines like a pool of quicksilver in the purple distance. Dunmail Raise 
looks a pleasant hour's walk from end to end, and not more than a few 
minutes from where you stand, if you care to run briskly down the green 
slope before you. Just over the doll's lake you see the heads of some of 
the Ennerdale and Buttermere mountains — Steeple, Pillar, Haycock, and 
Yewbarrow, all in a little group together ; then the Borrowdale family, 
headed by Scawfell Pike ; farther on a bit of one of the Langdale Pikes 
(Harrison Stickle), and a dim boll, which you know from its position to 
be Black Combe. Over to the south lies Coniston, and the sea beyond ; 
Coniston water looking higher than the rest — a mere delusion of distance — 
and the sea quite clear and bright ; and, still farther to the south, part of 
Windermere, seeming from your present height tame and flat, and, now that 
its prettiness is invisible, of no importance in the mountain map. Esthwaite 
lies between these last two ; the three lakes all together in the same sweep. 
To the east you see Ullswater, with its noble fells brought down to baby-house 
toys, and Angle Tarn, like a small spangle stuck on a many-coloured ground ; 
but Kidsty Pike breaking the level line of High Street ; High Street itself, 
and 111 Bell, hold their OAvn, even from Helvellyn. And then you see some- 
thing in the far off horizon, over beyond Windermere, which the one of you 
with the best eyes declares to be Lancaster Castle. It may be so. 
Faith is not always a bad showman. To the north, Skiddaw is not the 
soft-natured patriarch of the Keswick side, but showing a noble front of 
purple rifts and scarred seamings — quite a pronounced and energetic mass 
of mountain life ; and Blencathra — the Carrock Fells in the dip, where 
Caldbeck lies beyond — is picturesque as ever, the shadows deep and pure, 
and the crested edges broken down into cascades of screes and froth of 
crag, very noticeable and very fine. 

And now you come to the grandest sight of all — the one great vision 
of power — the Edges in their eternal majesty of wrath, like an angry 

148 



HELVELLYN AND FAIRFIELD. 

word of God spoken through the storm. There they stretch in a grand 
wide sweep ahove Red Tarn, the broken hne of Striding Edge Kke a mere 
knotted cord, and Swirrel Edge not much broader, or with a firmer foot- 
hold. The sharp sides and jags and crags are all green and brown and 
grey, as you stand on the top and look down into this fierce mountain 
bay with the still mountain lake in its heart lying nearly eight hundred feet 
below : a scene never to be forgotten — unequalled in our England both for 
form and colour, both for savageness and majesty. There is no real 
danger on Swirrel Edge, terrifying as it looks ; so you may pick your steps 
down among its stones set like chevaux-de-frise all along the ridge, and 
enjoy the feeling of standing on a tight-rope slung between the earth 
and the sky. The two Tarns — Red Tarn and Keppel Cove Tarn — lie to 
the right and left ; so closely set under the Edge that you could drop a 
ball from either hand into both. Striding Edge runs on the other side in 
mute companionship, furious and more difficult than Swirrel, and with real 
danger on its sharp, steep, narrow ways ; ^ but yet a portion of the same 
body — torn asunder, each from each, by some great convulsion or giant 
irresistible power — twin Edges, with just so much diff'erence in spirit and 
temper as marks the individuality. 

Down, too, by Swirrel Edge, among its rocks and sheltered places 
can be found some rare plants. The rose root {rhodiola rosea), with its 
curious fleshy leaves, and the scent of roses about its root, as the form of 
the opened rose is in its crowning spathe, is there ; as are also the 
kidney-leaved sorrel {oxyria reniformis), the clustered alpine saxifrage — why 
not the "snowy" saxifrage? — {saxifraga nivalis), and the moss campion 
(silene acaidis) ; treasures all of them, worth a little extra difficulty or even 

^ TMs was the Edge wlierefrom Charles Gough, whom the guide-books will persist in 
calling an " unfortunate young lover of nature," was lost more than half a century ago. 
The memory of his untimely fate has been embalmed with special and peculiar honour in 
the poems of Scott and Wordsworth ; and is known to all behevers in the superior nature 
and better morality of dogs,— the fidelity of his dog bemg very pathetic, and indeed the 
supreme point of interest in the story. 

149 



THE LAKE COUNTllY. 

danger to obtain. At least it will be well for you if you think so, 
scrambling and stumbling about the rocks perhaps with more courage than 
grace, though you have no traveller's business there, and must scramble ujj 
again, whether full-handed or empty, when the time comes to turn your- 
self homeward. 

But it is such a fine, rich sensation, that of wandering about these 
perilous places — so grand in their sublime loveliness, so magnificent in 
their dangerous beauty — that almost any amount of foolhardiness may be 
excused. It is worth whole years of tamer living in the plains — worth a 
generation time of living in the cities. It is like playing with a tiger of 
which we believe ourselves the master, but which at any time may turn 
against us and crush our bones in the play that has flashed out into 
wrath. And so these mountain precipices, so easily mastered and overpassed 
in a sunny, even-tempered day, may become dangerous as wild beasts in 
the wind and the mist and the storm, which may burst out in less than 
half an hour under a fitful and Unreliable sky. Yet how one loves thes.e 
wild beasts ! — how one delights to lay one's hands on their manes, and to 
tread their tawny necks beneath one's feet, and to venture into their 
deepest dens, even when the thunder of their roar is beginning, and their 
anger and their fierceness is aroused ! Beautiful mountains ! dear tigers 
but half tamed ! it is better living with you than with the loveliest of the 
home-side creatures ! 

Coming up at last from the Edge — you need not say with what botanical 
results, for very likely you have found nothing, searchers are so many and 
pilferers so unconscientious — you first come to the famous spring called 
Brownrigg's well, and then, three hundred yards off, to the summit where 
the stone maen is, and where you sit behind the shelter that it makes, and 
dream away your resting-time in pleasant and sleepy fancies. Then go 
forward, to where you look down on the top of Fairfield; noting there the 
same kind and manner of ridges as belong to Helvellyn, of which indeed 
it is o-eologically only a buttress and component part; less grand in mass, 

150 



HELYELLYN AND FAIRFIELD. 

of course, but of the same broken structure — the same cresting of the wave 
falling over into rocky foam — the same flood of movement struck to stability 
for ever. The prospect on all sides is of a very sea of mountains : wave 
after wave rising up into the sky : with a boundary line of level shine. And 
all in such marvellous harmony — the lines flowing into each other, and 
going together for such good ends of beauty and agreement ! Some are 
battlements, and others are spurs and buttresses, and some are gentle slopes, 
and some are walls; but the typical form is the wave — the sweep and the 
crest, the flow and the break. Swell after swell has beaten up on this 
ancient strand : some higher, others lower, some now in cool shadow purple 
and blue, and others in the hot summer sunshine ; and all flowing out from 
the Borrowdale centre — all but Helvellyn and Skiddaw, both of which are 
interpolations in the archaic mass. It is a mighty spectacle ; and something 
to be seen by all men. 

And now turn homeward, for the coming shadows are beginning to lengthen, 
and Grisedale is not a contemptible valley. So you go to the top of the big 
hill at the foot of which lies Grisedale Tarn, where the wild swine of old 
time used to come to drink. But before this you must notice one most 
eloquent change in the social conditions of the mountain : the wire fence put 
up round the limits of a certain lordly property. Where the old Normans 
built their rude stone walls, rough, ready, unscientific, but durable, the modern 
man of money and education draws a light wire line, as effective for its time, 
but not quite so durable perhaps, as the stone wall symbolic of the heavy, 
mailed hand that won roughly and griped hardly. Now we have position 
instead of valour; and a long purss for title in place of the gilded spurs and 
the uncaptured banner : and a light wire fence carried round the precipices 
of Helvellyn, as round a gentleman's private park. A strange combination of 
scientific improvement, and an invincible nature presumed to be conquered ! 

You come down among the plum-coloured patches of turned bog-earth 
colouring the big shoulder, and see the mountain path, on the other side of 
the tarn, leading to Grasmere through the dip of Fairfield and Seat Sandal ; 

151 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

and you note how the face of the mountain is drawn and puckered as if 
with wrinkles, and how all the hills seem to go up as you come down — 
twenty feet to your one. And then you lower yourself into the head of 
the dale, and walk through the evening splendours to your home. Looking 
behind as you go to see the amethystine light lying so soft, and yet so 
intense, on every rock and grassy tuft and patch of shingle — looking to see 
the sunset films all red and yellow and purple and orange in the sky — the 
green gorge before you all the greener for the coloured background shedding 
such a light beyond. Place Fell stands up square and wide; Birk Fell is 
conical and sharp ; and the hill sides, as you descend lower and face them, 
are angular and perpendicular. And the way seems to lengthen as you go ; 
for the reaches that were shut out by spurs which looked nothing when you 
were higher up, but which now become large chasms, or heavy feet thrust 
forward and taking much time to round, seem to be interminable ; but, 
weary as you are, you will surely still recur to the mighty things you have 
seen halfway up to heaven, and still vividly rejoice in the beauty lying 
round you. 



^^^-^^m4 "^^^^Cr^^ 


r««s^fe 


?^^^^^' 


r^"^^ 


SAIBFIELD KIDGES— FBOM HELVBLLTN TOP 



Our day on Fairfield was a different experience to this of the typical 
mountain perfection. We will give it as we proved it; for though it was 
not a very instructive ascent, according to the teaching of the guide-books, 
still, it was great in its way, and of grand, if exceptional, teaching. It 
should be said, however, that the views from the top of Fairfield on 
a clear day, are very fine ; one special point taking in a circuit of eight 
lakes and tarns, with a noble range of mountain tops— among which Hel- 
vellyn is the proudest and most majestic, and little Helm Crag, crested 



152 



HELVELLYN AND E AIRFIELD. 

with its strange stone feathers, the most picturesque. But for us it was 
grand as a bit of cloud scenery chiefly; though oftentimes in between the 
rents came golden bursts of sunlight, and landscapes of such loveliness as 
one would willingly have suffered a martyrdom to see. But we will speak 
of the clouds only. 

It was rash to attempt the mountain at all to-day ; for the sky was 
heavy with dark rain-beds, thick and heaped, of that colour which makes the 
green of field and wood, and the crimson roses and burning bright geraniums 
in the garden, all the brighter by force of contrast against so sullen a back- 
ground. A kind of sky which never by any chance breaks into blue for that 
morning at least ; but which, however, may continue simply lowering without 
falling into actual storm. We gave ourselves the benefit of the chance, and 
attacked the ascent of Fairfield as a thing likely to result in both profit and 
pleasure. 

As the day wore on the clouds came lower — so low that it seemed as 
if we should have touched them with our hands had we been standing 
half a yard higher; clouds with dark pencilled edges, and unfathomable 
caverns in them, where lighter mist wreaths stood at the portals and in 
the black jaws and throats : and before we were halfway up they had 
come to meet us in very truth, with the gates of their waters flung abroad. 
Down came the pouring rain in a torrent which might have been the 
"tailing" of the deluge; and for the time all other forms and forces of 
nature were lost, and there was nothing in the whole of creation but a universal 
sky, leaden-coloured, and a general downfall of the waters. But still we 
persevered in the ascent ; in our hearts not unwilling to be on a mountain 
top in a thorough mountain storm. 

And we were rewarded, richly ; for we saw such things that day as we 
had never seen before, and perhaps may never see again. We saw the cloud 
world in its almost every aspect, from grandeur that was absolutely terrifying 
to loveliness that was very enchantment. Sometimes a big cloud rose 
slowly up against the edge of a mountain, and then turned over as if 

153 X 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

peeping down into the world below, increasing and increasing in bulk and 
weight till at last it rolled heavily down the sides, as if overpowered by its 
own density; sometimes we skirted the edge of a precipice, from which 
boiled up large volumes of vapour, literally as if the earth sent up steam 
or smoke from its seething heart ; and sometimes we saw the vapours 
creeping down into the fathomless abyss — creeping — creeping — till they 
seemed to fill the whole space, and were then forced to rise up again — the rising 
seemingly as interminable as the fall had been. There was one precipice 
by the edge of which we stood watching these boiling vapours till our 
senses almost reeled, and we had to remember that there is no such thing 
as a physical Hell anywhere ; and that if there is even, it is not on the 
top of Fairfield, But it was awfully like the ideal Mouth of the Pit ! 

Sometimes we were cheated into the belief that all this would soon 
end, and that the sun would come out, as he seemed to promise by the 
clouds getting thinner with a light striking through, most hopeful and 
suggestive ; and then we congratulated each other on our perseverance and 
courage, and promised ourselves magnificent views from the top, quite equal 
to those to be had from Helvellyn after a threatening morning. And while 
we wagged our heads complacently, and spoke false hopes to each other, 
suddenly we were entirely enveloped, and everything gone from us, save the 
stone on which Ave stood, or the one square foot of ground immediately 
beneath us. And there was no earth any^vhere, no solid foot-hold, no foun- 
dation, nothing but this one small stable point, and all the rest an infinity 
of mist — an eternity of space. Nothing beyond, behind, above, or around, 
but a white and ghostly world of cloud, elusive, impenetrable, and formless. 

Then this ghostly world would break up into separate forms, and the 
heavier masses would heave themselves away into the upper world, while light 
fragments would be left scudding close to the ground, like lambs or little 
mountain elves — fairy wreaths which a child would have chased to catch, as 
they swept and curled and careered before us. They came over our feet, and 
Wc3 trod on them but did not hurt them ; and they ran before us, but we 

154 



HELVELLYX AND FAIEFTELD. 

caught them up again, as they rested round the head of some okl dumb 
stone or played round the moss-bed of some patient hillock ; sometimes, 
when we got up to them, they made themselves into thin air and ran away 
altogether, and sometimes they gathered substance, and rolled themselves 
into winged cherubs that took flight up to the graver family above : nothing 
in the world could have been more bewitching or fairy-like than those 
fragments of baby clouds scampering like sentient things about the crags 
and mountain tops. 

Then a cold, thin, grey mist — not so dense as what had been- — would 
steal on ; a mist in which all forms were exaggerated and all conditions 
obscured ; which made a sheep look like an elephant, and then dissolve away 
like a phantom ; which made a mountain wall of some five feet an insur- 
mountable barrier, like a castle keep ; which made indifferently sized boulders 
mighty crags, and accidental hillocks towering heights. This light, cold, 
exaggerative mist gave the strangest effects of all, and was the most pure 
bit of glamour of the whole day ; for it came and went with its silent feet, 
and it deepened or lightened as it crept before the wind, now revealing and 
now concealing, now enlarging and now withdrawing, till the mind became 
as unsteady as the eyes, and lost the true perception of everything about. 
Then there would be a sudden clearing : the denser vapours would gather 
into solid masses and quit the earth altogether, and the mists would disperse 
like a film withdrawn, and leave the valley free to the sight. And then 
we would see lakes and tarns lying to the right and the left, some, by the 
fantastic perspective of the vapours still hanging about, seeming to lie in 
the sky ; and some, by the chance angles of reflection, seeming to bear huge 
waterlilies or strange shapes of tower and castle within them ; all utterly 
unearthly and weird, however beautiful, when the white curtains shrouding 
them were withdrawn and we looked through the opening. We saw then 
how old tales of enchanted lakes and drowned castles and mythic fairylands 
concealed from near observers, had grown, in times long past, when simple 
men and women only perceived, and neither understood nor criticised. The 

155 X 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

sun and the moon and the mist and the rain, the wind and the rending 
frost — these were the sources of those lovely fairy-tales of old ; yet, lovely 
as they are, how much less beautiful than the sources whence they sprang. 

And now the clouds were quitting us altogether, to establish themselves 
finally, after multitudes of changes, in their rightful home. But what a 
wonder-world of magic was wrought during those changes ! How they 
mirrored in their forms the features of the earth below ! There were caverns 
and peaks, and deep dark gorges, and swelling bolls : all softer transcripts 
of the lower world ; marvels to which the marvel of icebergs is as nothing. 
And other and nobler forms yet : prophets, angels, sweet praying saints, and 
dancing peris, winged birds, and bounding beasts — whatever the earth holds 
incorporate within her, given back in this translation of the clouds ; given back 
in all the loveliest colours, as well as in each perfectness of form ; now soft 
and warmly tinted like monthly roses shed abroad ; and now a heap of snow ; 
and now the black grey of funnel smoke ; and now, again, a thin and luminous 
mist, not strong enough to be called cloud. And with all these changes, one 
dark bank rested ever against the western sky, as motionless as if anchored ; 
not changing and not moving, while this petulant foreground shifted its place 
continually. 

And now they lifted themselves up a few feet higher ; and we saw how 
soft and velvet-like was the light lying on the emerald green and golden 
mole-skin brown of Loughrigg Fell, and how one side of the Windermere 
valley was all in sun and like topaz and malachite, and the other all in shade, 
and like the darker veins of lazule. And here stole in a ray of shame-faced 
sunlight, touching some of the night-robed clouds and turning them to 
brides confident of the bridegroom ; making the whiter clouds blush bright 
rose-colour, and making the black a bloomy purple ; dissolving some to mere 
vapour, and flinging out others into sable masses, desperately distinct : yet, 
finally getting strength, and conquering the cloud-world at large, and taking 
the earth back to his own life and his own love. 

When we came off the mountain it was under the unclouded blue and 

156 



HELA^ELLYN AND FAIEEIELD. 

in the slanting rays of a yellow sun. The birds were singing with a 
deliriousness of song, and the old hills were alive everywhere with the voices 
of the brooks leaping into life ; the grass was gemmed with a thousand shining 
sun-born jewels, and the trees hung laden with diamonds on every spray ; 
and everything in heaven and earth looked more beautiful for the heavy 
rain that had fallen throughout the day, and had washed the atmosphere to 
silken lustrousness and the purity of crystal. 




THE TWO EDGEi3 




LANGDALE AND THE STAKE 



CHAPTEK X 



From Ullswater to BorrowcTale by Grisedale Tarn, Grasmere, Great Lang- 
dale, and the Stake, is a delicious day's walk of only twenty-six miles in 
all ; unless is added the loop of Colwitli Force, Little Langdale, and Blea 
Tarn, which gives another half dozen or so. Those who are not heroes or 
heroines will split the transit ignominiously into divisions, though to many 
the whole way would be a mere summer day's journey — a moderate " con- 
stitutional " between breakfast and dinner, pleasantly flavouring the Kos- 
thwaite ham and eggs. This, however, is a matter of individual liking and 
power, not affecting the rest. 



158 



LANGDALE AND THE STAKE. 

Grisedale Beck never looks so bright and living as on the morning 
when you are going to leave it — it may be for ever. Place Fell is never 
more majestic ; the Kirkstone momitains never fuller of gloom and mystery ; 
and the lake is sure to be at its loveliest, whatever its mood, when you 
turn away from them all, and go up into the wooded glen, with something 
that is at least sadness if not so bitter as grief. For is it not a heart- 
wrench to leave these pleasant mountain places ? Truly is it the parting 
of friends ! — quiet friends, where our affections root themselves and grow 
as if those grand old hills were human beings — brothers or lovers — to love 
us in return ! 

The mountains fronting you as you ascend the Grisedale pass are 
nobly grand — the long line to the right, leading to Swirrel Edge, especially 
full of temptation — needing an effort of common sense not to go along its 
purple ridge and once more risk your neck on the Edges ; for it is some- 
times an effort of common sense not to peril life unnecessarily, as all 
mountain lovers know. A flock of newly shorn sheep marks out in white 
the windings of a hill-side track below ; the living line, scattered and broken, 
but ever continuous, repeating the rougher line above, as does the stream 
lower down, and the broad grey path beside it. And when colour is 
added to this delicacy of repeated form — when the ascending line of 
the ridge, and the curved sweep of the side, and the harmonious flow 
of the path and the stream, are mated with violet shadoAvs and golden 
sunlight — the one softening every discord, and the other giving full power 
to every harmony — it may well be understood that the walk up Grisedale 
Pass is a thing to be remembered and loved for a lifetime. 

In time you come to Grisedale Tarn, lying under its three mountains 
— Fairfield, Seat Sandal, and Helvellyn : its situation, its speciality, 
though, for individual distinction, it is the largest of all the tarns ; and 
when you have passed Grisedale Tarn you turn to the left, between Fair- 
field and Seat Sandal, and set your face towards your old friend Grasm.ere 
again. Seat Sandal, to your right, is of a singular blue-green ; Fairfield, 

]59 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

to your left, is a rich burnt umber splashed with lake and purple ; and 
your way down Tongue Hill — the slack between the two — is moderately 
steep and sometimes immoderately boggy, with the usual winding way and 
winding stream side by side.^ At one point the stream breaks out into a 
fall, now a mere suggestion lipping over the brown rocks, but in the rain 
times forming a wild cascade. A merry little stonechat talks and 
curtsies to you as you pass; a sandpiper runs scared out of its unpro- 
tected nest ; and then a sudden rush of wings startles you with its 
strange sound, and a dense flock of rooks — probably the Eydal rooks — 
come sweeping over Seat Sandal homewards like a crowd of children 
trooping out of school. For it is perhaps scarcely a day when even rooks 
care to be far abroad ; glaring and sultry where you stand, but misty 
towards the sea, where the tide-clouds are blowing up : a vain day — a day 
of temper and show, with lovely yellow lights across the hills and blue 
spaces in the sky, like a woman's hair and eyes, but a threatening of pos- 
sible anger in those sullen clouds above Loughrigg, like the swollen 
eyebrows and darkened forehead of temper. Under any aspect, however, 
the view of Grasmere hence is lovely. 

Then across the vale and up by Red Bank to the west side of 
Grasmere, where it looks the sweetest for home and the grandest for back- 
ground ; where no man, who has not yet seen the nobler districts, would 
ask a better boon of fortune than leave to lay down his staff and pitch his 
tent for life, like any other bewitched nomad tethered by the magic 
of beauty. A bit of Helvellyn is seen between Fairfield and Seat Sandal ; 
Steel Fell is behind Helm Crag ; the still recess of Easedale, and the dip 
where Codale lies behind its enclosing rim, are to be made out ; the great 
mass of Silver How, dark and beautiful, is to the left as you look down 
on the valley and the lake : and when you have seen your fill of all these. 



1 " From a small space of gromid here tlie rain-water slieds iiito Windermere, 
Ullswater, and Derwent, entering the sea hy the river Leven into Morecambe Bay ; by the 
Eden into the Solway Frith ; and by the Derwent into the Irish Sea." — Otley's Guide. 



IGO 



LANGDALE AND THE STAKE. 

turn up to the fell, walking among sundew and starry asphodel, yellow 
saxifrage and the pretty pink bells of the bog asphodel, till you come 
upon Elterwater at the entrance ^ of Great or "Girt" Langdale. 

The mountains on this side are singularly craggy; broken, rough, 
untamed masses of rock ; great unscaleable monsters, beneath which the dark 
valley of Langdale^ winds away into the very jaws of the hills — the most 
picturesque of any valley yet seen, the most Alpine-looking and pleasantly 

* Across the dale would lead the traveller past the head of Elterwater to Colwith 
Bridge and Colmth Force, one of the finest in the country ; and then, either to Oxenfells, 
Tilberthwaite, and Coniston, or, to the right, round by Little Langdale and its Tarn 
and Blea Water to Dungeon Ghyll. Those, however, whose cliief object is Dungeon 
Ghyll and the Stake Pass must go straight up the greater dale. 

^ Sir Leoline and Christabel lived at Langdale Hall, where Sir- Leoline " rose and 
found his lady dead," and ordained the slow tolling of the Langdale beU at dawn, 
as said by Coleridge : — 

" Hence the custom and law began, 



That still at dawn the sacristan, 
Who duly pulls the heavy bell, 
Five and forty beads must teU, 
Between each stroke — a warning knell : 
Which not a soul can choose but hear 
From Bratha Head to Wyndermere. 
Saith Bracy the bard — So let it knell ! 
And let the drowsy sacristan 
Still count as slowly as he can ! 
There is no lack of such, I ween. 
As will fill up the space between. 
In Langdale Pike and Witch's Lair, 
And Dimgeon Ghyll so foully rent. 
With ropes of rock and bells of air, 
Three sinful sextons' souls are pent, 
Who all give back, one after t'other, 
The death note to their Uving brother, 
And oft too, by the knell off'ended, 
Just as their one ! two ! three ! is ended ; 
The de^'il mocks the doleful tale, 
With a merry peal from Borro^\'dalo.'' 

161 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 



primitive. Not more primitive than Hawes Water and Mardale, but more 
beautiful and loveable — a sweeter mountain retreat — where the weary would 
find a refuge and not only a hiding-place, but where the young and the 
high mettled would pine to death, reduced to despair by the imprisonment of 
the hills. 

Behind Lingmoor come up the sharp peaks of Wetherlam and of Wrynose 
(pronounced Raynuz), where the Three Shire Stones are, chiefly noticeable for 
the bright violet shadows lying on them, and for their roughness of outline ; 
the square head of Tilberthwaite, with its heathery crags and tracts of juniper, 
blocks up a large space in front ; and, to the right, one of the Pikes stands 
grimly against the sky. Beautiful things that look like artificial cascades are 
to be caught in the distance, all of a shining fall of grey like water struck to 
stone : they are the Thrang Crag slate quarries (where the slates are " thrang" 
or " thronged " enough), noted for their ^^,^^ i::^^ 

picture slates, which are very curious ; for 
sometimes a whole landscape is figured on 
a slab, with trees and lakes and mountains 
and rivers, just like their own larger natural 
selves. If you go into the excavation you 
may knock your head against the propped- 
up roof, and see where the last block has 
been cut ; and stumble on the loose shingle, 
and cut your hands, and bruise your feet, 
without being much the wiser for the ordeal ; 
and then you can come out again, and look 
at the falling oaks and larches, clinging to 
the ground by only a root or two where they have been undermined, and 
admire the porphyritic colour of the stones, and take in the whole beauty of 
desolateness, in the solitude and the wreck of slates heaped up about. 

Though late in the summer, say in August, hay-making will probably be 
still on hand ; and the small industry of the few fields makes the loneliness of 




THKANG CRAG QUARRY MOtlTH 



1 62 



LANGDALE AND THE STAKE. 

the vale more apparent. Yet here are our fellow-men, with whom the same 
human tragedies are enacting as on the largest theatre of social life ; though we 
cannot help wondering, as so often before, what manner of being it is that they 
fulfil, and what is their importance in the history of their age,* and whether 
they care for their dales and hills and flowers, which so many grand ladies 
and gentlemen come whisking down by steam to see ; and what they think of 
all the fine folk moving about them like Baker Street visitors about the cattle- 
pens ; how the thorough-bred cockney, inane and self-satisfied, strikes them ; 
and how the languid young parson, not quite certain as to the permissibility of 
his manhood at all ; and how the stout-limbed collegians, enthusiastic, 
pedestrian and mathematical ; and the brides and bridegrooms, not looking at 
the scenery critically, but simply drinking in the impression of its loveli- 
ness, as flowers drink in the sunlight, and growing in their own love from 
the draught — what do they think of them all ? — how do those foreign lives 
affect the homebred ? One can understand the grandeurs going to Windermere, 
and Grasmere, and Keswick, or any other of the more notorious show places ; 
but in these wild and primitive dales one feels an unusual sympathy with 
Wordsworth's horror at the idea of lake desecration and cockney travel brought 
northward by railroads, and more minded to defend these Alpine homes from 
eyes that do not really love their beauty than glad to welcome new fashions 
or even a " rasher " spread of gold or a nearer contact with refinements. 



^ Tliis primitive little valley, looking like a strijo of Switzerland or one of the German 
Alp dales, has some importance though, m the liistory of its time, and an economic value to 
the country at large. For here, buried among trees and in a place of beauty fitter for 
temple or for palace, for parsonage or for love-cottage, than for its present uses — are the 
Government powder- works : the most unUkely of all things to be found in an Alpme valley, 
where apparently nothing more practical than waterfalls and crags are to be met with. 
All this side of the country is famous for its charcoal. Richly wooded, and for the most 
part with quick-growing timber, rather a large business is kept up in bobbins, cask- 
hoops and staves, bark for tanning, fence-wood, charcoal, and more rarely, flooring- 
planks and mast-wood, which form the staple of commerce in and about Langdale and 
the Tilberthwaite side of the Coniston range. 

163 Y 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

Cai'Yjing such thoughts as part of the impress of the place, not less 
true because of meeting with a noisy carriage load or two of Eegent Street 
bonnets and " fast " hats intermingled, you continue your appointed way 
along the high road — which in fact is a mere ferny lane bounded on either 
side by close walls and crags — through the meadow and over the beck, Mill 
Beck, one of the sources of the Brathay : and then by the narrow stony way 
to the foot of a great white tumbling cascade, called Mill Beck Force, coming 
out from Stickle Tarn, with the Pikes over-topping. The highest^ to the 
right is Harrison Stickle, that to the left Pike o' Stickle, and the long sweep 
to the right of Harrison Stickle is Pavey Ark, in the cup or lip of which 
lies Stickle Tarn, whence comes that foaming reach — the Mill Beck Force. 
Just over the tarn is White Crag, where the bodies of poor William and 
Sarah Glreen were found forty years ago, lost in a snowstorm on their way 
from Langdale^ to Easedale, their own home. Their story has been preserved, 
not only on account of its sad tragedy, but also because of the sweet womanly 
thoughtfulness and courage of their little daughter, of nine, left in charge 
of the younger six at home, and who provided and cared for them with wonder- 
ful sagacity during the many days when they were blocked up by the snow, 
and left parentless and almost foodless in their Easedale cottage. 

Mill Beck Force foams grandly down among the crags and broken ledges, 
its sides beset with purple heather just brightening into colour and now turned 
by the sun to crimson, with bracken bronzed and reddened, with fleshy um- 
belliferae — some of the younger leaves freed, pluming the veined spathe, 
and others seeming as if they would burst clean open with the force of 
the concealed life not yet come out into the sunlight. It is a pleasant 
exercise to climb up the crags so far as you can without becoming actually 

' This explanation refers rather to the view heading the chapter, which, taken fi-om 
the back of Blea Tarn, inchides also the glorious pouit of Gimmer Crag, the point lying 
farthest to the left, but not seen by the traveller standing near to Mill Beck Force. 

* There is a way from Grasmere by Easedale and Codale Tarns, over to Sticlde Tarn, 
and down by the Mill Ghyll crags into Great Langdale Head. 

J 64 



LANGDALE AND THE STAKE. 



^5^\ 



crag fast ; but it is well to remember that they are not over easy, and that 
in parts they are absolutely dangerous ; yet, as you mount higher, the cascade 
becomes grander, the rocks wilder, and the way more difficult, but the reward 
more royal, so that you must set danger against delight, and balance both 
by the order of your muscles and the steadiness of your brain. 

This open face of foam and tumult is 
to the right : to the left is Dungeon Ghyll,^ 
a dark chasm, cold and black, where the 
waters pour down through a curious fissure 
above, and where the stream for all its 
length hereafter in the open air has a secret 
look somehow, like the half-confidences of a 
conspirator. As you follow this deep-voiced, 
self-contained water to the Ghyllhead, you 
feel that its heart will be a mystery like few 
yet penetrated ; and so you find it, when 
you get into the damp, clammy chamber, 
wiiere the sun never shines and the free airs 
never enter, but where only the waters leap 
for ever and for ever, falling from the bright 
upper world of the fell top into midnight 
and dungeon gloom, never afterwards to 
lose the stamp set upon them there. A 
wonderfully impressive chasm ! — indeed it 
is a piece torn out of the very body of 




ETJHCEON GllYIL 



'' " It was a si)ot which you may see, 
If ever you to Langclale go ; 
Into a chasm a mighty block 
Hath fallen, and made a bridge of rock; 
The gulf is deep below ; 
And in a basin black and small, 

Receives a lofty waterfall." — The Idle ShepJiercl Buys. / 
165 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

the hill ; where the roof is two huge stones that have got wedged together, 
making a narrow pathway for the adventurous to walk over if they please. 
Down below are steps and ladders and helping stones to enable you to 
enter into the farther chamber, where you may stand and watch the restless 
waters ever hurrying down, and listen to their unceasing roar, till your brain 
teems with weird fancies, and you feel yourself to be in one of the torture 
chambers of the earth. Then come out into the sunshine again, and see 
how the rocks look covered with green and purple and swinging honeysuckle, 
and how the banks show under their carpeting of yellow stars — much the 
same in effect whether spearwort or buttercup or hawkweed or potentilla — 
see how full of life and song and poetry they all appear, after the gloom and 
mystery of the Dungeon chamber ! 

The Pikes — the two Stickles — are two or three miles from Mickleden, 
the head of the dale, and that head is the wildest and finest part of it. 
Hitherto Lingmoor has bounded the way on the left ; now you must bear up to 
the right between the Pike o' Bliscow — a grand old craggy head — and the 
Pikes, and then between them and a great fore-thrown buttress of Bowfell 
(itself only an outwork of Scawfell) which stands like a tongue at the 
head. Bowfell proper rises beyond and behind its henchman ; and Crinkle 
Crags are to the left. You walk on among the grim rocks — not coloured and 
porphyritic as at Ara Force, but grey and time-worn — and through tracks of 
yellow moss, with the red lines of the sun-dew beading the gold ; and over the 
stone river-bed, which will have no water to-day if the season is dry, but will 
be a waste of dry stone ; seeing where one road goes over by Wall End to 
Blea Tarn and its larches, and where another goes up by Rosset Ghyll to 
Angle Tarn and Scawfell, and how that grand old Gimmer Crag, so absolutely 
lifeless — not even lichen-covered — looks almost white in the pale sunlight, and 
finer than even the Pikes. As it rises in one unbroken up -springing line from 
the dale to its height of over two thousand feet, it is, perhaps, the most 
beautiful thing in the whole country, whether seen alone or in combination 
with the Pikes from Blea Tarn, or yet farther off, from Tilberthwaite or from 

166 



LANGDALE AND THE STAKE. 

Windermere ; wherever seen, still the one fine and culminating poiilt of the 
whole; but, strangely enough, not even named in some of the guide-hooks, 
and not so notorious as the Pikes in any. 

A long flat waste of marshy ground filled with watercourses and stone 
beds, and a whole congeries of green mammae or giant graves like the last 
dashes of foam on the strand — leads up to the foot of the pass. This is 
Mickleden, and the great blind alley corresponding on the left, is Oxendale. 
It is the old end of all creation, so often come to at the dale heads, — the old 
hemming in by the walls of an oblong kind of cup with lips and sides 
seemingly impassable. These passes are strangely suggestive ; at a distance 
they look impossible, perpendicular ascents not to be conquered ; close 
at hand they are nothing, a mere half-hour's pleasant mounting, and then 
down again into the free country on the other side ; when really on them they 
are interminable, with tops cut off like the Irishman's end of thread, and not 
to be attained by any means known to a miserable walking humanity. Yet, 
though you know all this by frequent experience, you will be sure to let 
yourself be cheated once again, and not for the last time ; and when you 
come to the foot of your mountain ladder, and see how it rounds away into a 
mere garden mound above your head, you will argue quite blithely that the 
Stake Pass is a nothing after all, and what can people mean by their 
exaggerations — you will be over before you know that you have begun. 

While standing there, looking at the eternal crest of the eternal wave, 
like the grand sweep and " sshe " on the shingle, noting where it tore down 
in the days when all was fluid and what a tremendous force once poured 
through the dale, perhaps one of the sudden mountain storms so common 
here will come over the pass, white, ghostly, and pitiless — an in-pouring of 
winter through the summer warmth — blotting out every trace of the way 
before you, while all the wild hills lying backward will become solemn and 
listening, like neutrals waiting for the result of the fight. The clouds pour 
over the edges of the hills, like waterfalls of mist ; the grey rocks turn to 
white before them, and the Pikes become of a dead ash-colour ; the monu- 

167 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

mental cumuli of the morning are torn and trailing wrecks in the sky, and a 
world of future turmoil, angry and full of blackest fears, gathers up from 
Scawfell. But the valley behind is all in sunlight yet, with no sign of the 
wrath to come deadening its yellow shine. When you turn to the pass again, 
there is the ghostly hurrying of silent feet, and the cloudy army rushing over 
the hills in wrath to sweep through the valley in tears, the wind and the rain 
and the sheeted mist and the chilling breath, desolation, and the way washed 
out : perhaps bewilderment and peril, if the storm should continue or deepen. 
But hope for the best, and, if you dare, walk into it cheerily ; enjoying 
the sensation of struggling up a steep mountain pass, with the rain beating 
into your face and drenching your clothes, which the wind will soon shake 
with such good-will that it will shake the rain-drops out of them, and 
which the summer sun will then warm and dry. For, in a few minutes 
perhaps, the sky may burst into blue and sunshine ; the skirts of the mist 
will gather themselves up, though one black rain-edge may still linger on 
the top of Bow Fell, and over the Pike o' Bliscow will hang the last shreds 
of a thin, diffused vapour, like a veil or a garment spread abroad. And the 
effect of this thin mist gathered up into denseness in one part, and at the 
other spread out into light grey layers, filmy and diaphanous, is very lovely. 
Windermere and the plains beyond are enframed in the dip made by the 
Pikes and Lingmoor, like a picture exquisitely coloured, seen from a window. 
The bounding line is positive cobalt, intensely and purely blue ; the middle 
distance is of yellow, shading through grey to green and purple ; and the 
nearer tints are of velvet softness, or of radiant brightness. You will have 
the opportunity of watching all this for a long time and often ; for your way 
is not the mere half hour's stout footing that it seemed to be at the base, 
but a long, tough, and rough hour's climb, with frequent rests, as of neces- 
sity, in between. At last, however, you lose it all when you are on the 
top of the pass, in a waste of stones with a black pool and a brawling stream 
beside you : rugged forms closing you in all round, and a wide cup — a broad, 
shallow basin— before you, which you have to cross. 

168 



LANGDALE AND THE STAKE. 

No smooth slopes here ; no mammal likenesses, rich and fertile in 
their suggestiveness ; if waves, then waves when the wrath of the sea was 
spoken in foam and broken in angry spray upon the land ; when the 
fury of passion stamped itself on the rocks, and was incorporated for ever 
in the tumbled froth of stone scattered abroad. Yet how one longs to go 
to the tops of all these big mountains reared up round the rim of the 
waste-cup ! How one yearns to follow the feet of Bowfell, where it crawls 
away up to Scawfell ; and to tread the long broad shoulder of Gable Moor 
to Angle Tarn ; and to learn the features of Glaramara's hoary head 
looking out from the rift yonder ! What delight it would be to climb 
those crags to the right, beyond which would be found Stickle Tarn 
and the backs of the Pikes, and Codale Tarn, and the Easedale range; or 
even to get down into Borrowdale by the fell tops, where that fine sweep 
ends (or seems to end) in Eagle Crag ! But tarns and mountain-tops must 
be left for another day. You must carry yourself and your knapsack 
over the rim of your great unfinished waste-plot of the world, and down 
by Langstreth (Longstreet) into Borrowdale ; which you will find quite rude 
and fatiguing enough before you come to Rosthwaite this evening. 

Skiddaw and Blencathra now show themselves behind and beyond the 
Borrowdale Fells. The fells get finer and the crags more broken ; the road 
momently more steeply rugged as it dashes down the broad shoulder — so 
sharjily that you constantly lose sight of it altogether, and have no perception 
of the next turn when this acute angle is ended. Langstreth, the valley 
below, is wilder than even Langdale, grander and more powerful ; and that 
Force, unbaptized by any guide-book but which is called in the country 
Gatescarth Ghyll, falling over the broad face of rock by your right, has a 
bolder look than many better known and more celebrated. Indeed, it is 
all wilder and larger and more energetic here than what you have seen 
before, and more beautiful. 

At last— and not until after a long descent — you come down into the 
narrow path, and the stony one, lying between Glaramara and the Borrowdale 

169 Z 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

Fells ; a long hour's rude journey leading you under that magnificent 
monster, Eagle Crag, standing sentinel between the gorges of Greenup 
and Langstreth, and under Bull Crags opposite. Then by a wide, dry 
torrent bed, where the stones are brought down by the winter rains and 
storms from the mountain tops ; and by terrible roads of stone, worse than 
sea-shore shingle ; and under great heaps of stones ; and by hill-side cataracts 
of stones ; till the primitive old hamlet of Stonethwaite is reached — Stone- 
thwaite rightly called, indeed ! — for surely here are all the waste stone-heaps 
of creation ! To add to the desolateness of the lonely dwellers in this hamlet, 
they do not see the sun for three months in the year. "On" or "about" 
the twenty-fourth of February, the first ray shivers down upon a house- 
top, from the cleft between Bull Crags and Hanging Haystack. And Stone- 
thwaite then has nine months of very doubtful shine to make up for its 
three months of darkness. 

Yet even this miserable place has its amenities. About its rocks and 
crags are gracious little crumpled sprays of oak fern — and the startled- 
looking beech fern putting back its ears like a kid, or that kid-like plant, 
the cyclamen — and rarer plants still, among its secret sacred haunts, to be 
found by diligent searchers fond of exploring rough mountain sides, and 
to whom a rare fern is as precious as a jewel, and a new wild flower as dear 
as a new friend. There must be this love, though, to make Stonethwaite 
anything but a desert or a prison ; as there must be love to help man through 
every rough pass in life. 





THE TARNS 



CHAPTER XI 



BoRRowDALE is good liead-quarters for the tarns ; and a tarn hunt is by no 

means unexciting sport; for though all of the more important are named 

in the guide-books and figured on the maps, still there are a few neither 

spoken of nor marked, the finding of which is a true discovery to the 

ordinary traveller, leading him into the heart of many a secret of nature, 

and showing the form of many of her workings. We get to the back of 

the mountains, so to speak, on such expeditions as these; and when not 

to the back, then to the inner depths, where we can follow the track of the 

forces by which these great things have been done, tracing where the fire 

has fused and the water wasted ; and seeing how the mighty shaping hand 

has fashioned the mountain world to perfect nobleness, and where it has 

left rough, unfinished bits, like waste-plots in the great garden : rough 

bits, where only ferns and moss and heather are flung by the summer's 

charity, and where useless water gathers into useless hollows, idle for the 

171 z 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

world's work, if glorious for the world's beauty. Yet not wholly useless ; 
for they all send out small subscriptions to the general fund, and at least 
help to swell, if they do not originate, the wealth of rivers and the bounty 
of the sea ; in which manner they are working members, if unnoted, in the 
great republic of natural forces. Not that every mountain stream springs 
from a tarn, but almost every tarn ^ sends out a stream. Then, tarn-hunting 
teaches the relative position of places almost as exactly as do the mountain- 
tops, leading by "backs," and "shoulders," and "slacks," and "feet," 
and over the lower heights straight to half a dozen seemingly irreconcilable 
districts, each one of which is a day's journey from the other by the beaten 
track. Thus, Easedale and Sty Head in one day must needs include some 
glorious cross-country experiences, as you will find if you set out from 
Rosthwaite as your centre, to see how many tarns may be found betAveen 
the morning and the night. 

Go first to lonely Stonethwaite, on which if the sun is shining as 
you pass it may be counted a notable thing in the Stonethwaite calendar ; 
not following the stony road to the Stake Pass, but leaving Langstreth 
and Eagle Crag to the right, and taking the left-hand gorge of Greenup 
instead. Climb straight up the gorge, past the rocky pool where the 
two streams join, past Garnett's Force — a beautiful cascade, not generally 
known, its only present sponsors the shepherds — then up Greenup Edge 
towards High Raise, keeping Line End Crag to the right, till you come 
upon a vast bowl-shaped amphitheatre, something like that of the Stake, 
but not so large. This you cross in the direction of Grasmere, climbing 
the opposite rim where a line of stone piles marks the Avay for the 
belated shepherds and the snow-bound, and where an outcrop of grey stones 
through the yellow boggy grass is in striking contrast of colour. A 
fine up -rising of mountain tops is to be seen from here : Whinlatter and 
Grisedale Pike over Maiden Mawr ; Robinson in a dip over Eagle Crag ; 

' Blind Tarn by Coniston Old Man is an exception, being Avithout any issuing stream. 

172 



THE TARNS. 

Dale Head oyer Bull Crag; the sheer precipice of Honister over Serjeant 
Crag ; and the little point of Cam beyond Glaramara. But Glaramara itself 
has probably faded away into a cloud, which also impenetrably conceals 
Bowfell. A little farther on, and all this is lost, and you look down on 
Wythburn Head to Wythburn and Thirlmere (but merely to a corner of this 
last lying far below, between Cat Crags and Steel Fell), and on Buddy Ghyll 
Brow in Wythburn Head to the left of Cat Crags, with Green Comb above. 

The mists may probably be thick here, veiling the tops of the highest 
mountains — Helvellyn, Seat Sandal, and Fairfield — and draping their feet too, 
so that they may be of any imaginable height and circumstance ; but not 
hiding the great slip of screes a hundred feet high, on Buddy Ghyll Brow (all 
green ground now), which burst out with some rush of water one day, laying 
bare a strip of mountain bark which will never have power to grow again. 
Across Deep Slack, a disturbed hollow, with wave-like mounds and rocks 
and stones and all manner of ground irregularities, you look on something 
round and light ; like a diamond in the heart of an uncut emerald cup 
about which still clings some of the green-grey matrix ; that green-grey 
matrix is the oatcome of stone against the mountain side, and the diamond is 
Codale Tarn. So immediately overhanging it is the crag whereon you stand 
that it seems as if you could drop into the water beneath, as you could drop a 
ball into Bed Tarn and Keppel Cove Tarn from Swirrel Edge. It is a singular 
effect that of standing on a summit, with a sheet of water immediately 
below : and of dangerous fascination. For who does not know the impulse, 
more or less strong according to temperament, to fling oneself off the top, and 
learn the mysteries of that dark blue world below ? The Germans were not 
far wrong when they embodied this impulse in the legend of fair-haired Nixes 
luring men to their destruction by the insatiable longing of the unknown 
love ! 

As you rise the last few yards, under the unseen horizon — unseen, because 
of the formless mist hanging round it — you catch a dim streak of water 
lying as it might be in the sky, but which you know to be Windermere ; 

173 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

another to the right, rather less dim, which is Elterwater ; Rydal-mere is in a 
hollow to the left ; and hetween Kydal-mere and Codale Tarn is Easedale Tarn, 
lying lower than the rest, under those steep, rough, fence-ways, called Carr's 
Crags — pleasant scrambling places for the sure-footed and adventurous, but 
terrifying to neophytes not yet familiar with mountain circumstance. Very 
wild and very lonely are these two tarns ; Codale the wilder of the two, because 
more rock-bound and of higher altitude than Easedale, but neither sparing 
much for softness or tenderness, neither borrowing of the Sybarite roses or 
eiderdown for the rugged Doric bonework beneath ; true mountain tarns, both 
of them, born in the wilds where but little of pleasure and less of gain leads 
human footsteps — their only companions the free creatures of the air and the 
gracious throngings of the sky. Ah ! if all men could be taught the 
deliciousness of a lonely mountain tarn, and a rough mountain scramble, 
where they would cut their feet, and graze their knees, and tear their hands, 
and get wet-footed in the bogs, and wet-backed in the mists, and meet with 
nothing more exciting than a flock of frightened mountain sheep or a noisy 
swoop of plovers screaming overhead ! If they could but be all inoculated 
with the love of such joys as these, how much better it would be for the present 
world and for the future generations ! 

Now to the right — your landmark Harrison Stickle, which, as well as 
his Combe, soon comes in sight ; and so to the point whence you can look 
down on Stickle Tarn, and over it and Great Langdale and Blea Tarn to 
Wetherlam, and such distance beyond as the day may allow. Esthwaite 
Water has now come within view, to the right of the dim line of Winder- 
mere; but Blea Tarn is too close under the rocks overhanging to be seen. 
Stickle Tarn, however, is enough for any picture by itself, shadowed as it 
is by those fierce Langdale crests, with mountains stretching away to the 
right, and to the left Windermere, Esthwaite, and Elterwater, like lakes seen 
in a dream. White Crags are in front of the Stickle, and the tarn lies between 
in a sort of shelf or cup, under Pavey Ark. It is used as a reservoir for the 
service of the Langdale G-overnment powder-works, and is none the less 

174 



THE TARNS. 

beautiful for its usefulness ; its outlet is that fine Mill Beck Force which is 
seen when passing through Great Langdale on the way to Dungeon Ghyll and 
the Stake. A little peep of Bowfell to the left of the Stickle is to be had, and 
to the right the line of the peak rises up into an independent jag called 
Harrison's Combe, a kind of cock's-comb-shaped crest of crags for the 
mountain's top — what old country wives would call a " top-knot." 

The Stickle is a grand tarn, lying in the manner of a hanging water- 
garden in a shallow basin seemingly specially hollowed out for it : as unlike 
both Codale and Easedale Tarns as these are unlike each other, but quite 
as wild and lonely, and as far removed from the human world as either. 
And, perhaps, this is the real meaning of these tarns — this utter isolation, 
and, in general, severance from all the uses of human life ; like something 
given us which we must retain but over which we have no control — a 
savage child dropped at our doors, of whom we can make neither playmate 
nor servant. 

And now straight away to the right of the Combe for Angle Tarn under 
Bowfell at the head of Kosset Grhyll; best reached by crossing the great 
Stake Pass Amphitheatre, and over the beck that falls down Gatescarth Ghyll, 
and then up the shoulder of Gable Moor, with Scawfell sullen in the lowering 
sky before you, and Bowfell blacker and more sullen still. But perhaps 
old Glaramara has caught a ray of the passing sunlight, and seems to smile, 
as sunny mountains do, with such a welcome of friendliness ! — the only lover, 
open-faced, in a company of veiled strangers. 

It is a " dree " way up the Gable shoulder at all times, but specially so in 
the dull monotone of certain atmospheric conditions ; yet even in such dust- 
coloured times there are breaks of rich effects and gorgeous colourings, and 
always magnificent outlines and grand circumstance of rock and fell : such 
as that deep, indented, purple wall of Allan Crags which you fall upon in 
your way up Gable, and that smaller and further intervention of turf-clad 
mountain bone called the Tongue, dividing little Ghyll Head. To the left 
- of which stands Rosset Pike, where lies a black Avell-head of a tarn ; very 

175 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 



deep, for it is black almost to the brink, with grey- white stones and green 
turf chasing for the jet all around, and a dark mass of fell like that at the 
back of Small Water behind it. This is Angle Tarn under Bowfell. And 




here the dull monotony of your day may be broken ; for down a nameless 
rift in the dark fells comes an outpouring of clouds, every now and then 
covering the black face upturned to them, and then quietly stealing down 
that steep bit of loose screework, by courtesy named a pony road, which goes 
over the side of Bowfell down Mickleden into Great Langdale — in other words, 
the famous Kosset Ghyll Pass. These sudden outpourings of clouds scatter 
the monotonous sullenness of the day grandly; they make the dark beauty 
of Angle Tarn more gravely, mournfully, tender than it would have been, 
softening to sorrow what else was fierceness and desolation, and bringing the 
grace of tears over the hardness of despair. 

From Angle Tarn mount immediately towards Esk Hawse (pronounced 
Ash Kawse by the dalesmen), taking your farewell of Langdale Pikes : the 
three very plain now, and beautiful Gimmer Crag, the Crag of the Ewe Lamb, 
showing well and grandly defined. Directly before you is the same kind of 
crest or comb as that of Harrison's Combe, crowning the brant brow sloping- 
over from Angle Tarn to Langstreth ; and a few steps farther bring you to 
a spot where, looking over Tongue Ghyll into Langstreth, you see an inky 
pool, a rocky edge, a foaming rush, — and the beck a mile down immediately 

176 



THE TARNS, 

after. Such a magnificent hurling from the heights as it is ! — such a grand 
and headlong outfall ! But the head should he steady which looks over 
into the rift, and the feet sure that stand on the edge, and courage should 
not weaken itself by rashness, and daring should be specially careful of folly. 
This, indeed, may stand as stereotyped advice for all mountain explorers 
venturing into unknown places, and beset by many temptations to over 
boldness. For it is a temptation of surpassing force, the noble view to be 
had from that giddy crest — it is a temptation, the rare fern known to be 
growing down that steep face of rift ; so steep that even the mountain sheep 
do not cross it^the flower to be found among those perilous rocks, and 
planted as a trophy in the quiet garden at home — the wild bird's nest among 
those almost insurmountable crags ; what allurements to danger, all of these, 
to the young and ardent, and those who believe in the worth of a muscular 
manhood, and in the analogous beauty, for the matter of that, of a powerful 
womanhood ! If lives are sometimes left at the feet of these great mountain 
sirens, we can scarcely wonder at the fascination which leads men to such 
sacrifice. 

Now on to Esk Hawse, where one of the finest views of the country 
is to be had — a view that takes in, as one section, the Scotch mountains lying 
beyond Borrowdale and the vale of Keswick, Skiddaw, and the Solway ; 
as the other, Eskdale and its white line of river running through the 
green narrow valley, the sands and the sea and desolate Black Combe ; and 
for the third, the Langdale and Brathay valleys on to Windermere and 
Ingleborough. A grand view in truth ! grand in the sunshine and the shade, 
in the morning and the evening alike. Here, too, is the famous Fludder's 
Brow where the guides and shepherds meet for business, as they do on 
High Street, and used to do at the Justice Stone by Thirlmere ; but your 
path will keep you nearer to Scawfell than to Fludder's Brow to-day : first 
passing by that great ravine which looks as if ploughed by some world- 
wasting cataract, lying almost on the mountain top. A deep, winding, and 
most noticeable ravine is this : thirty, forty, fifty feet down — it may be a 

177 A A 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

hundred or a thousand or many thousands for all the accuracy of measure- 
ment to he had by the bewildered eye : with fierce-coloured iron-red sides, 
and a little beck at the bottom, which finds its way down High House side 
to Stockley Beck and Borrowdale ; a ravine nameless so far as we could 
find, but grander than half those baptized. This passed, keep away under 
Great End ; if it be a misty day, walking in and out of the clouds as you 
walk in and out of passages and fields and woods, till you come to Sparkling 
Tarn, sometimes called Sprinkling Tarn, set, not in a cup but in a mere 
hollow, on the top of High House. 




Angle Tarn needed the cloud blackness, which suited well with its depth 
under the high fell shadow ; but Sparkling Tarn — lying in its shallow basin 
on the very brow of High House, looking up into the face of the sky, and 
catching the faintest glint of sunshine that falls — seems born only for the 
light of heaven to mirror itself within — only for the smiles and the joy of 
the sunshine : a bright-faced, bright-eyed little Naiad resting on the bosom 
of the old green hill, and playing with the sunbeams as they get entangled 
in her hair. The rim of the tarn is singularly shallow ; it seems 
scarcely high enough to prevent the water from overflowing High House 
sides, and sti'eaming down at every angle, instead of keeping its appointed 
channel as feeder in principal to Sty Head Tarn ; but if shallow it is broad, 
with a great promontory of turf and rock — almost an island — plunging into 
its very heart, and giving food and shelter to the mountain sheep. It is 
very beautiful and remarkable, lying there on the mountain top with only 
so narrow a ledge of rock to keep it within bounds and prevent it shedding 



THE TARNS. 

itself all abroad. The proper course of the issuing stream is down a little 
rocky bed to Sty Head Tarn, of which it is the principal feeder, as was said ; 
but not much of a feeder to the Sty Head fishes, for they — no, the anglers — 
complain that these suffer considerably in food and flesh by the impoverish- 
ment of the Sparkling waters, of which the Sparkling fishes have had the 
first and fullest benefit. A strange fact, but quite intelligible ; and almost 
patent in the general aspect of seemliness in this well-conditioned tarn — 
fishpond, or Naiad's home, as one chooses to be practical or imaginative. 

Scarcely a hundred yards from this lovely little water-world you come 
upon another tarn — your real discovery of the day ; a tarn known only to 
the shepherds, and not even to the guides, still less to guide-book makers. 
It is a sort of toy-lake, difierent to anything seen before ; oval, surrounded 
by small, slaty, basaltic-looking crags, part with a little gTass growing in 
among them, and part a mere piling up of small stones, as if they were 
miniature crags built by children : a very fairies' lake on which you will 
come with as much pleasure as if you had fallen upon a royal child among 
the shepherds, or a white enchanted fawn among the sheep. It is called 
by the few who know of it. High House Tarn ; and, like Sparkling Tarn, 
sends down its little toy tributary into Sty Head Tarn. As the mists steal or 
scud over it, it is the most lovely and most unreal vision of a lake that can bo 
imagined — quite a haunted lake ; the undrugged cup of an innocent Circe, 




HIGH HOTTSE TARN 



A A 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

the home of a mountain Calypso where is no Ulysses. Beyond it lie three 
other tarnlets — mere watery heads on the grass — anonymous, yet worth 
looking at, and of no mean account in the day's "hag;" but dwarfed in 
interest hy the superior beauty of the fairy lake. They ought to be seen 
first to have real justice done to them. However, there they are, and, 
first or last, are very pretty watery beads, if not so fair as the brighter 
gem of High House. 

After this you can go by a short, steep, and it must be owned not 
wholly safe, cut down to Sty Head Tarn lying black under the green walls, 
cloud-topped, of Great Gable, which like Helvellyn and Seat Sandal in the 
morning, may be of any height under the disguise of the evening mist. But 
Sty Head Tarn, when you reach it, has a worldly look, lying as it does in 
the midst of the pass ; and wild as it seems to the traveller going over from 
Kosthwaite to Wastwater, it is but a tame home-pond to the " hunter " who 
has made his own way across the wildest hills we have, and who, like a moun- 
tain Columbus, has found for himself water-worlds uncatalogued before. Now 
descend the pass towards Borrowdale, leaving the immense great end of Ling- 
mell on your left — the two Gables, Great and Green, in front, from between 
which flows a stream into Sty Head Tarn. On the other side of Gable Head 
Ghyll — the two sources but a few yards apart — flows another beck into 
Ennerdale, to supply Whitehaven with fresh water. You cross Sty Head 
Beck, the outlet of Sty Head Tarn and one of the " forbears " of the Derwent ; ^ 

' Tlie genealogy of tlie Dervvent, so far as we could arrive at it — but these local 
variations were very cliificult to verify — may serve as a si^ecimen of how these mountain 
streams are made, and by how many upland Httles comes the mickle of the great river 
watering the plains and bringing riches to towns and cities. Stocldey Beck comes from 
above High House, out of the ravine by Esk Hawse under Great End : this is, we 
believe, the real or highest source of the Derwent. From Sparklmg Tarn and High 
House Tarn a stream falls into Sty Head Tarn ; another also from between the Gables — 
Great and Green : the outlet of Sty Head Tarn is Sty Head Beck (in wliich is the Force 
called Taylor's Ghyll, bemg at the foot of the Ghyll, but not ia it), which falls into Stocldey 
Beck, a little below Stockley Brig. Down Langstreth comes a stream from Angle Tarn 
under Bo\A'fell ; and from the Stake Pass falls another, Gatescai-th Ghyll. into it ; and 

180 



THE TARNS. 

and then down to Stockley Brig, your old place of desolate delight. Now 
through lonely, humid Seathwaite,^ and by the mines and the yew-trees and 
Keppel Crag and Jenny Bank's Crag beyond, and by Sour Milk Ghyll 
opposite, and through the fields by the beck (the fields where used to be the 
mad "man-keen" bull'* that went raging mad if it heard the voice or step 
of a man) ; and so, over Seathwaite Brig and Strands Brig to Rosthwaite : 
the circle of your tarns complete. 

The rooks will be going home in the twilight, the owls hooting, and 
the bracken throwing out its powerful scent, the yellow moon is looking at you 
just over Glaramara, peeping into the Tarn of Leaves on Glaramara, and 

these two, united, join a thii'cl force, Greenup Edge, at Stonetliwaite. Greenup Edge, tlie 
Stake, Langstreth, BoiTOwdale, High House, Sty Head Pass, Honister, and between 
the Scawdales, and many an untracked beck besides, all send do^Yn their sux)phes to form 
the river Derwent, wliich is carried through the Derwent lake on to Bassenthwaite, and 
thence to the sea — a broad, full, gracious river, but born of a mere mountam rivulet 
which a cliild could leap across. 

^ Humid indeed : the average annual rainfall, taking ten years as the basis, is over 
one ]iundred and twenty-six inches for Seathwaite ; for the rest of England it is twenty- 
nine inches. 

^ Bulls cannot long be kept sane in these narrow valleys ; the constantly repeated 
echoes of then- o^^Ti bello'ndngs make them mad. There are always some local " bogies " of 
this Idnd — always a mad bull somewhere in the lake district ; and awful brutes they are to 
look at, and something more than awful to meet. This mad bull of Seathwaite had a no 
mean Ust of killed and damaged, more or less true, tacked to its reputation ; and, indeed, 
even a brave man might o^WL to something hke tremor at the sight of its fierce head thrust 
above a low stone wall, its eyes hterally flaslimg mth fiery red rage, foam hanging about 
its hps and nostrils, its whole attitude, as it pawed and stamped and tore up the gromid, 
one of ungovernable fury, and its voice a low, harsh grunt, like a bellow dwarfed and 
roughened and strangled by passion. The wall looked perilously low, and the padlocked 
gate seemed dangerously old and crazy, when we passed the field where our " man-keen " 
friend was snorting and gnmtiug and stamping, as he glowered after us viciously, and 
with a wicked expression of disappointment in Ms blood-red eyes ; and though we had met 
and passed tranquilly enough many a bull and many a wild-looking herd of Hue on the 
hills in our rambles, we did not pass the place of the Seathwaite bull with pulses quite so 
calm or steps quite so even as heretofore ; nor did the dalespeople themselves : aU were 
more or less terrified at the mad man-hater. 

181 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

into Dock Tarn on tlie Rosthwaite Fells, and then dipping again behind the 
hills, as you wander up the road— it is to he hoped not too tired, after your 
twelve hours' stiff mountain work, to tell of the beauties of the ten tarns and 
the four lakes which you have seen to-day and made friends of for life. 




STY HEAD TARN 




JRUMMOCK AND BUTTEBMBRE 
FROM LOWFELL 



BUTTERMERE, CRUMMOCK, AND LOWES WATERS 



CHAPTER XII 



These three lakes are always taken together; with sufficient geographical 
reason, connected as they are by a river-chain ^ of which they are only 
the larger and more ojDen loops, and lying in a bajided row between two 
spokes of the mountain wheel, one of which divides them from Newlands 
and the other from lonely Ennerdale. But though so closely united, they 



1 Two mountain streams fall into and form Buttermere lake, and, by consequence, 
Crmnmock : the one rising in Honister Crag, called Gatescarth Beck (Gatescartli or, 
perhaps, more properly Gaitscai-th — the way over the scaur or steep hill ; or the Goats' hill), 
because it nms down through Gatescartli dale ; the other rising m the Haystacks, called 
Black Beck, meeting with a thii'd, rising m Fleetworth, and then called Wanscale. Loaf 

183 



THE LAKE COUNTEY. 

are very different in character, passing from the tame and pastoral prettiness 
of Lowes Water through the mature grandeur of Crummock up to the stern 
severity of the head of Buttermere ; striking a chord of beauty, unhke and 
yet harmonious, not to be bettered in the country. 

There are three ways from Keswick to these lakes ; one over Whinlatter 
and by the old Cockermouth road to the Vale of Lorton, and so to Scale Hill 
and Lowes Water ; another by Newlands and Buttermere Hawse ; and the 
third and grandest, by Borrowdale and Honister Crag. There are, also, the 
two fine passes of Black Sail and Scarf Gap, leading from Wastwater to 
Buttermere ; and a way by Floutern Tarn and Scale Force from Ennerdale 
to Crummock, or over Blake Fell to Lowes Water beyond. But these 
are mere mountain " trods." The first three mentioned are good broad 
carriage-roads, severe in their structure certainly, and demanding extra 
strength of horse-flesh and more stoutness of skid than usual to ordinary 
highways — but carriage-roads all the same ; though not a little frightful to 
those unaccustomed to them, and absolutely perilous if south-country horses 
are used, or, indeed, any but those trained in the mountain ways — then they 
are safe enough, provided the driver is sober and the tackling sound. We 
will speak first of the way by Whinlatter. 

By Southey's Thorn — an ugly, crippled, old thorn-tree in a field on 
the Cockermouth road; by the Thornthwaite woods and orchards looking 

Beck, coming out from little Loaf Tarn, Hassness Beck, and Borilden Beck, and one or two 
more runlets of no importance, also help as feeders to the lake. The great stream of Sour 
Milk Force, coming out of Bleaberry Tarn, falls into the Dubs, not the lake ; and the Dubs 
(or Pools in ordinary English) is the stream connectuig Buttermere and Crummock lakes. 
Ptuddy Beck — quite a little fellow — Rannerdale Beck from between Whitelees and Grasmoor, 
Citmerdale (Cinderdale) Beck, and Wandham out of the Newlands mountams, which is 
first Wandham, then Millbeck after it has passed the bridge, and then Driggera lower down — 
Mossdale Beck out of Floutern Tarn, High Nook Beck, and Scale Beck, the stream mto 
wliich Scale Force subsides, all help to form Cnmimock; falling either into the Dubs 
flowing from Buttermere, or into Park Beck flowing from Lowes Water into Crummock, 
or into the lake itself. The stream falhng out of Crummock is the Cocker, on which 
Cockermouth is built, and whei'e it loses itself in the Derwent. 

184 



BUTTERMERE, CRUMMOCK, AND LOWES WATERS. 

full of beauty and the loveliness of home ; ^ past Mad Beck by Braithwaite, 
which so extraordinarily overflows its bounds at certain times — hence its 
name, by no means a libel on its nature ; over Braithwaite Bridge with the 
asplenium trichomanes, the maidenhair spleenwort, feathering its stones ; and 
up by the back of the Newlands mountains — Causey Pike, Ghyll Mickle, 
Grimmer Pike, and the rest, finer as you go on ; and then you are fairly 
upon the slaty, steep ascent of Whinlatter at the back of Thornthwaite, 
Barf Fells above, with the Wythop woods beyond. The vales of Keswick 
and of Bassenthwaite wind below ; not the lakes, only the valleys ; Der- 
wentwater, to the right, being hidden by the Newlands mountains, and 
Bassenthwaite, to the left, obstructed by Lord's Seat and its own particular 
fells. But the scene is one of exquisite softness ; and though you know 
that those bright gold-coloured tracts out by Bassenthwaite cover the poorest 
heart of soil, and that those fair green level spaces are swamps, fruitful 
chiefly to the water-fowl, yet you let yourselves be charmed with false faith 
and fair appearances, and believe in the richness which has only show for 
its dowry, and no reality for its substance. 

Yes, the view from Whinlatter is very great, if even a little delusive 
in the matter of commercial value. Skiddaw has a noble frontage, and is 
mild and many-fleshed, as best beseems him ; while stern Helvellyn, far 
away, is softened by distance as faults are softened by absence, till its 
huge severity of bulk and form has become the force of grandeur only, like 
a turbulent manhood mellowed into a wise old age. The wooded lanes, and 
homestead fields, and quiet houses scattered about the vales, all blend together 
in one sweet emphasis of peace and love ; and the silver band of the winding 



^ Tliorntliwaite and Braithwaite, but especially the former, are famous for their orchards, 
which are held to be the best iii the district ; aud theu- spring-time loveluiess, when out in 
full blossom, is one of the really beautiful sights of the place. Part of the clergyman's 
income at Thornthwaite arises from the orchard which is the only bit of glebe he has ; and 
the value of the fruit of which averages about twelve pounds yearly. But the lake country 
generally makes a very indifferent orchard ground, not for berries which are plentiful and 
line, but for all the pomaceous group. 

185 B B 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

river runs from each to each with that wonderful expression of Hfe and speech 
which a river always infuses into a landscape. It is one of those views 
which impresses itself on the memory, clamped as it is with so much 
grandeur in the background, and such softness in the low-lying depths ; 
and when seen in the autumn time with the Wythop woods all tawny 
orange and russet brown, and Skiddaw purpled and bronzed and crimsoned 
with heath and ling and the dying bracken, it is as much a marvel of 
colouring as of nobleness of form. 

Then along the slaty Whinlatter Pass, with the great masses of fell 
rising boldly up on either side — bare-flanked Grrisedale Pike to the left, 
showing liis twenty-six hundred feet and eighty of height in a fine uprearing 
head — Lord's Seat (seventeen hundred and twenty-eight feet high,) — and 
Wythop and Whinlatter and Barf fells, broken not so much into the naked- 
ness of crags as into green and scattered steeps — the sweep between covered 
with coarse brent grass, a rush which is plaited for basket-work of a kind. 
It is a desolate way from the top of the pass to King End, when the 
broad plains of Cockermouth, fertile and tield-full, burst on the sight, 
bounded by the sea with its band of light, and broken into on the left 
by the Lorton hills, overlapping at the foot, and studded with white houses 
set high up on the sides ; higher than elsewhere, as it seems from here, 
or whiter, which comes to the same thing perhaps. 

You leave the fair plains of Cockermouth veiled tenderly in haze, and 
the shining sea line, and the Scottish mountains very dim, too, in the 
mist beyond the sea, and the road leading down to where the sweet Lorton 
valley opens out into the plains as a way of escape for beleaguered moun- 







IHH YALE Oi LOliXON 



BUTTERMEKE, CEUMMOCK, AND LOWES WATERS. 

taineers — keeping the higher terrace ; whence you have a dehcious view of 
the whole vale and the Whinfield fells to back it, and where you can 
make out the one solitary yew-tree, that famous "pride of Lorton vale,"'' 
as a dark spot beside a white farm-house. You pass hedges flush with 
summer flowers, rich-coloured cows, whitened sheep with orange-red housings 
daubed on them, children in big bonnet-hoods and frocks tucked up, weeding 
in the fields, and calves at the gates being fed as delicately as babes ; and 
then you turn from all this tenderness of the vale life, and get back to the 
wilder hills again; rounding the end of the "spoke," out by Whiteside and 
Scalehill. 

These rugged, steep ascents ! — they dwarf the earlier fells to nothing ! 
— each new cone seeming more terrible than the last as you wind round 
the forward spurs down into the Crummock valley, past Kirkfell and 
Harrat Crag, and Swineside and its maen, and over pretty Hope Beck 
falling into the Cocker at a little distance off, with Dod and Whiteside 
and high Grasmoor and lower Ladhouse and the naked head of Whitelees 
Pike, all to the left; where also is "Dick Nieve," a mountain "fist""* of 
goodly dimensions. And then you come down to Scale Hill, where fierce 
Mellbreak is before you, surpassing, if not overtopping, them all. The bright 



^ " There is a yew tree, pride of Lorton vale, 
Which to this day stands single, in the midst 
Of its own darkness, as it stood of yore. 
Not loath to fnrnish weapons for the bands 
Of Umfraville or Percy, ere they march'd 
To Scotland's heath, or those that cross'd the sea 
And drew then- soundmg bows at Azincour, 
Perhaps at earlier Crec}^ or Poictiers. 
Of vast circumference, and gloom profound. 
This solitary tree, a living thing. 
Produced too slowly ever to decay ; 
Of form and aspect too magiaificent 
To be destroy'd." 
* Nieve means a fist. 

187 B B 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

blue dragon-flies are flitting about, and the day is hot with the true summer 
heat, gladdening and enlivening, but not flowing over into that sullen con- 
gestion whereby storms and tempests are engendered ; a bright, innocent, 
cheery summer heat, the fittest day in which to see so bright and innocent 
a lake as Lowes Water.^ 

Then by Gillerthwaite and down the steep hill to the banks of the 
lake ; through High Gap Yett, and over Crabtree Beck, and under the 
brows of Low Fell, till you come to the tame and uninteresting country 
at the foot — a land of level ugliness, with neither the richness of the valleys 
nor the beauty of the hills to give it value. But at the head the old grandeur 
remains ; and when the sun and cloud throw their magic of light and shade 
across the broken steeps of Blake Fell, and over the uprising of which 
Honister is the wildest member, the timid banks of Lowes Water have 
a charm about them sufiiciently satisfying to soul and sense. Add the 
accessories — the orchids in the fields below Low Fell, the birds singing 
and the bees humming over the cow-wheat and the stonecrops, the smell 
of the firs and of the peeled oak bark, the lake rippling its tune against 
the pebbles on the shore, the stream of golden glory falling from the evening 
sun which makes the cows a fiery red, and the grey walls a purpled red, 
and the great stony cones round the two. inland lakes heather-coloured, and 
Eannerdale Knot like an immense piece of porphyry stuck cornerwise into 
the water, and fills all the mountain distances with mystery and love, and 
bespreads the sky with clouds carrying the last colours of the day : which 

^ Lowes Water lias one peculiarity, quite exceptional to itself. Its discliaroing river 
(Park Beck), instead of running on towards tlie sea, as with all the other lakes, flows 
backward, as it were, into Crumniock, so that instead of being a continuation of the 
preceding two lakes, it is an independency — a separate water-world of its own — holdmg no 
ties or duties in common with its neighbours. And though both Crmnmock and Buttennere 
hikes are full of cliar, none is found in Lowes Water ; apparent hkeness of food and 
harbourage, and even actual connexion of water, provmg no law to these dainty and 
capricious creatures : as in the distuiction which they and the trout make between the 
Brathay and the Rothay. 

18S 



BUTTERMERE, CRUMMOCK, AND LOWES WATERS. 

illuminations would beautify the tamest paragraph in the great natural 
page. 

"Round the lake" of Lowes Water is one of the favourite walks of 
the neighbourhood ; not often taken, truly, because so few people ever care 
to stay at any of these lakes. Within a day's excursion of Keswick, they 
are simply visited, not studied — looked at, not learnt ; for, in a country 
where there are professed grandest bits few take to heart the simpler views, 
which however in a less picturesque neighbourhood would be widely 
sought after. This walk round Lowes Water is very choice ; though marred 
in its integrity of beauty by the swamj)y ugliness of the country at the 
immediate foot. There is first the quaint little church belonging to 
the parish ; ^ and then there is the pretty cascade falling from Carling 
Knot, with its froth and its foam and its unruly mountain life ; and 
there are the woods and the crags, and the incessant shifting of the 
mountain picture, and Crabtree Beck, and the sweet lake-side road, and 
the pleasant inn at the end of it. Only a seven miles walk or so ; and 
yet how many of the thousands visiting our country yearly, ever dream of 
taking this walk into their experiences ? 

But if Lowes Water is tame, Crummock''' is grand. The mountain 
system is different here to elsewhere ; the spoke is splintered across, as if 



^ Lowes Water was the manor of Raiidolplms or Ranulplius de Lindsay. In Ricliard 
the Fii'st's time, " William Lindsay sued out a writ of right against Henry Clarke, of 
Appleby, the Countess of Albemarle, and Nicholas Estoteville, for Loweswater and other 
lands." The parish registers of Lowes Water contain some curious particulars respecting 
the characters and incidents of certain deceased ; things of only local interest, but full of 
quaint revelations, at least to those to whom the lives of men and women, utterly uiilciiown 
and unimportant in the world at large, can convey any object of human sympathy. 

7 Crummock means a cow with a crumpled horn. Does not Tam o' Shanter speak of 
" Loupin' and flingin' ower a crummock?" Many of the names about here — Buttermere, 
Crummock, Sour Milk Ghyll, and even Lowes Water, if one chose to force a meaning — 
seem to allude to the dairy-farm capacities of this valley; and it is, in truth, rich and 
pastoral, as if the very home and haunt and appomted place of cows. 

189 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

against the grain, and the forms are all sharper and more conical, more split 
and bare than usual, with a savage, vixenish, unaccommodating look quite 
special to themselves. Whiteless Pike, Mellbreak, Red Pike and his companions 
High Stile and High Crag, old Honister and the army at his back, Gras- 
moor,^ Ladhouse scarred and naked, and Whiteside black as death, all make 
a noble array when seen from the various stations in Lanthwaite woods, or 
from the tops of any of the mountains round about. Rannerdale Knot, too, is 
a thing to study. It is one of the isolated hills, like Helm Crag and Castle 
Crag, a petulant hill, standing by itself on its own feet in an aggressive 
and self-assertive manner not to be overlooked, and seen from Lanthwaite 
Woods, with Buttermere Moss, Fleetwith, Great Gable and Green Gable, 
the Wastwater Kirkfell, and, farther still, Rosthwaite Cam, as its supporters 
and backers, it is by no means a despicable gateway by which to enter into the 
richer depths of mountain beauty. 

Then to Crummock belongs one of the finest water-falls, Scale Force, the 
Staubbach of the lakes, over a hundred and fifty feet in height, and falling m 
a sheer perpendicular down a clean-cut rift, after the manner of Dungeon 
Ghyll but not so gloomy or deep set. It is a channelled fall, which seems as 
if it would get deeper with the years ; and the waters come down in what 
at first sight . looks all one stream, but which soon resolves itself into a 
thousand gracious forms — a thousand little falls strung together, catching the 
points of the jutting rocks and flinging themselves off in arching sprays 
— little hidden leaps, continuous and yet broken, dashing down like a 
cascade of plumy feathers. The rocks of the rift, close to the heart of the 



^ In 1760, on the ninth clay of September, there was a tremendous storm in this 
neighboiirhoocl, clurmg which a waterspout burst on Grasmoor — written Grasmire then — 
follo^ving the course of the httle Lissa, wliich runs from it into the Cocker, tearmg up the 
ground and doing irreparable damage. " It laid devastate ten acres with stones no human 
art can ever restore." Brackenthwaite, the hamlet by Scale Hill, had a narrow escape, and 
the " Usle Lissa" was thrown into the Cocker with siich force and violence of its waters, 
that the Cocker itself overflowed, and became one vast and stagnant inundation. 

190 



BUTTERMERE, CRUMMOCK, AND LOWES WATERS. 



^ 



«?:- 



L'.v' 






m 



v.. 



■'fi 'li 



fall, are bare and lifeless ; but at the entrance tliey 
are bespread with moss and flowers, while whole reaches 
are covered with the film fern, the Itymeiiophyllwm 
Wilsoni, which no one can get at, and only the clear- 
sighted can distinguish from moss. The water here 
is not olive-brown as usual, but absolutely colourless — 
pure, limpid, unstained world, which splashes merrily 
at your feet and flies daintily, all refined to spray, 
into your face as you scramble up the wet rocks and 
front the whispering Naiad shrouded behind her long 
'**♦' white veil. It is pleasant among these slippery rocks, 
*{ S where, if you do plunge knee-deep in the pools, you 
Jfj. come to no vital harm, and can shake yourself from 
the wet out on that spongy bit of waste-land, stone- 
strewed, leading from the Force to the lake. Mishaps, 
if not too serious, only add to enjoyment ; and he is 
but a bastard mountaineer who cannot take a ducking 
with unruffled equanimity, or to whom a bog or a 
shower is not as much a matter of indifference as the 
colour of a gate-post or the fashion of its handle. And, 
by the way, the gate fastenings are to be noticed here ; 
the quaintest, most ingenious, and most varied of any 
to be seen. 

There are other things worth seeing by Scale Force. 
There is Ling Crag at the foot of Mellbreak, a small 
kind of Dod or independency coming out into the lake, 
which the wise will climb for the sake of what they 
can see from the top ; and there is the green flat head 
of Herd House, which divides Crummock from Enner- 
dule, from one special point on which issues the water 
of the Force, as a kind of boundary between Herd House 

191 



r, 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

and Ked Pike, to fall down that tremendous chasm under Blea Crag, and 
then to mark, with a silver line, the way of separation between Red Pike 
and Mellbreak — Ling Crag rather, if that pert little Dod must be specially 
mentioned. And there is the way over to Ennerdale already spoken of; and 
pleasant wanderings all about Floutern Tarn ; and along its river side, that 
pretty Mossdale Beck, at least as far as you can go — which is not very far ; 
and fine prospects to be had from every point ; and such mountain ascents — 
if the side be properly chosen — as even a member of the Alpine club might 
pronounce " stiff." Crummock is a grand bit of mountain jewellery, and 
none the less so because of the comparative ignorance of the travelling world 
about it. 

Then there is Buttermere,'-^ a smaller lake, and lying farther still among 
the mountains, with scenery yet wilder and forms yet grander, and with 
its own special force. Sour Milk Grhyll, coming out of Blebba^° or Bleaberry 
or Burtness Tarn, lying in a hollow between Red Pike and High Stile ; 
where is also a place called Burtness Cove, faid to be an old crater, and 
where the Buttermere eagles formerly built their nests. And there is White 
Cove Ghyll as well ; a mountain force of no mean value, but suffering from 
the neighbourhood of greater values in Sour Milk Ghyll and Scale Force. 
And there are mountains. Red Pike and High Stile and High Crag, all in 



^ Buttermere was said to allow its priest " wliittle-gate " and twenty shillings yearly ; 
by other accounts, " clog-shoes, harden-sark, whittle-gate, and guse-gate"- — that is, a pair- of 
shoes clogged or ii'on-shod (capital things for this country), a coarse shirt once a year, free 
living at each parishioner's house for a certain number of days, and the right to pasture a 
goose or geese on the common. Not too luxurious appointments for even a successor of the 
Apostles, bomid to forswear the lusts of the flesh and the pride of hfe! The person who 
held Newlands chapel in the time of George II. was a tailor, a dogger, and butter-pat 
maker, and the Mungrisdale priest had (U. Os. 9d. a year. Such cures were often held by 
unordained persons — hedge parsons with a vengeance ! 

'" Blebba is a corruption of Bleaberry, or is it the archaic word ? Blabber is the 
name of the Norwegian frmt. Have we preserved the sound unconsciously ? The fells 
about here are famous iov their bilberries, and it is quite one of the recognized industries 
of the autumn to gather them for selling and preserving. 

192 



BUTTERMEUE, CRUMMOCK, AND LOWES WATERS. 

a stretch of cones together ; the Haystacks ^^ — those twiu brothers backing 
up old Honister ; the pass of Scarf Gap leadmg from Gratescarth to Ennerdale 
between the Haystacks and High Crag — Wanscale beneath, meeting that of 
Black Sail coming from Wastdale between Kirkfell and the Pillar up through 
Mosedale, and down to Gillerthwaite by Ennerdale on the other side ; and 
there is Fleetwith, to the east of Honister, and Scarf to its west ; Kobinson 
over Hassness ; and Buttermere Moss, both High and Low ; and there is that 
magnificent recess, like a deep blue clam-shell and as finely serrated, beneath 
the pale green line of the Three-legged Brandreth,^- and known geographically 
as Grey Knot and Green Crags ; but very like a clam-shell, whatever its 
name. And above all these is Honister, sullen and sharp and stern : a grim 
old mountain tyrant, so individual that he can be recognized from the 
smallest perceptible corner or the loosest sketch. 




HONISTEB — EVEN IK G 



Belts of blue lobelia are round Buttermere Lake, and great purple spikes 
of loosestrife are in the meadows, and the air is full of the scent of the 
meadow-sweet, and the hedges are yellowed with the yellow vetch, and the 
fields and lanes are gold-spotted with the hawkweed tribe ; and down by 
that sweetly singing Mill Beck grow blue forget-me-nots and still bluer 
birdlime, and all manner of wild-flowers and pleasant herbs ; and butterflies 
and dragon-flies, and softer moths and gaudy beetles, and many a lovely 
wild bird, pausing in its flight, swarm about the flowers in and round the 

" Not the Hanging Haystacks of Borrowdale. 

'^ A brandreth is the three-legged stand on which is placed the griddle or flat iron 
girdle whereon cakes, &c. are baked. 

193 C C 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

beck, mating their sweet music with the happy murmur of the waters, and 
fashioning out the old idyl of peace and love and the tender harmonies 
of nature, for ever and for ever repeated but never tiring. And then 
there is the chapel, which used to be the smallest in the lake district. It 
is very small now, but not quite so minute as in olden days ; and a great 
deal more decent in architecture and arrangement. 

And there is the story of pretty Mary of Buttermere to think of, while 
waiting at the inn, or rambling by the lake side. An old story now, but 
always finding an echo in human sympathy, because never beyond the 
pale of social possibility. Poor pretty Mary ! it was a bad day when her 
foolish but innocent admirer published her charms to the world, and made 
her the sad gazing- stock of all the idle and curious and dissolute down for 
a month's holidays to the lakes : still worse when a low-born gambler and 
forger came to the little inn, and passed himself off as one of our Aristoi — 
brother to Lord HOpetown, a colonel in his own right, and something too 
magnificent in station and manhood to be mated with anything but beauty 
as transcendent as her own. Mary caught at the bait : it was a glittering 
one ; but she found out her mistake, poor simpleton, when her husband was 
arrested and carried off to Carlisle, where he was hung in his own name 
as one James Hatfield, thief and forger. Mary was wiser next time. She 
contented herself with a man of her own class in her second venture ; and, 
as the stout, sonsy, and by no means over-refined wife of Dick Harrison of 
Caldbeck, retained very little of the beauty which had procured her so much 
disaster. She transmitted it though ; for her daughters were the loveliest 
young women of the district ; but happily preserved from their mother's fate, 
and given over to the care — questionable in one instance — of " men of the 
people," who, if they did use them a little roughly, did it by virtue of 
equality, which was better than deception and crime and being hanged at a 
jail door as the upshot. 

Another way to these lakes from Keswick, and a very general one, is 
bv Newlands and Buttermere Hawse ; a way which many think sufiiciently 

194 



BUTTERMEEE, CRUMMOCK, AND LOWES WATERS. 

terrifying when they first see that sharp zigzag line built up against the side 
of the mountain and seeming to hang in the air, down which they have to 
drive with such safety as the steadiness of their driver and the sure-footed- 
ness of their horses allow. The pretty vale of Newlands, with its peeps across 
the wood out to the grand world of Keswick, and its humble admiration of 
Skiddaw, has many pleasant incidents. It has the beck, where the Newlands 
bull once chased a notable of the district, and forced him into the water where 
he stood shivering ; but even then not over-safe from the broad forehead and 
the vicious horns longing to be at the game of pitch and toss with a shuddering 
magnate as the ball ; and it has the little village of Stair, where Ludlow once 
lived, and where society is simplified to almost its primitive elements ; and 
it has Rawling End, a "brawny mountain of goodly proportions ; " and that 
tremendous cleft or slit by Knot Rigg; and Groldscope, with all her riches 
hidden in her brown bosom, and those curious old excavations called Penholes ; 
and it has Grieedale Pike, which is one of the more difficult mountains ; and 
Hindscarth and Causey Pike, both of them fine headlands for distant views ; 
and it has Robinson, — and he is a grand old mountain too, but not one to 
take liberties with in misty weather, or when the night is setting in. There 
have been sad adventures on Robinson, and aching hearts kept sore for long 
because of the dangerous ravines and the cleanly cut precipices belonging to 
him, and veiled from the searching eye by night or cloud. There is also 
a fine Force in Robinson, where the broken crags are curiously uptorn, and 
where there is a "punchbowl" of glorious dimensions down below, and the 
figure of a huge bear, so they say, to be seen climbing up the steepest part 
of the rock and dividing the water as it falls ; and there is the slack which 
leads from Scawdale ; and the giant's foot of Whitelees Pike ; and the cavern 
and the rift and the stream and the dale, the desolation of all things after 
you have passed by Keskadale,^^ and the long spell of utter loneliness and 
wildness. 

'^ A coiTiiption of Gatescarthdale. 

195 C C 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

It is a very beautiful journey, and used to be one on which the older 
lake country writers expended a vast amount of fine writing. " The lower 
parts are pastured with a motley herd ; the middle tract is assumed by the 
flocks ; the upper regions (to man inaccessible) are abandoned to the birds 
of Jove. Here untamed nature holds her reign in solemn silence, amidst 
the gloom and grandeur of dreary solitude — and here the following excla- 
mation of young Edwin may be properly recalled to the reader's remembrance, 
— ' Hail, awful scenes,' " &c. This was old West's manner of depicting the 
impressions made by Newlands Hawse ; but the truth — plain and collapsed 
— dwarfs his birds of Jove into barn-door fowl, or sparrows on the house-top. 

By Honister the way is the finest of all ; a larger nobleness, a wilder 
going, a feeling of being in the heart and veins, and receiving the very 
life of the hills, accompanying one from the first step up by Seatollar, to the 
last by Gatescarth and Buttermere. A grand pass in truth ! — something to 
be seen with reverence as well as love, and to be remembered in the distant 
days and nights when time and inexorable circumstance have separated 
you from this land of loveliness and grandeur and driven you down into the 
pallid life of the city again. 

A rough and rugged road leads up between the stream — the Seatollar 
beck — and the mountain ; the stream becoming wilder, and the mountain 
sterner, and the road a harder problem for wheeled things to solve, 
and the whole scene a grander gathering of natural forces, and a nobler 
revelation. With its human uses too ; which is more than can be said 
of every mountain pass ; for down that scarred and lined and tear-streamed 
face are the most famous slate quarries in the lake district, and whence 
was hewn the slate "that took the prize" in the exhibition of '51. The first 
you come to are on the right-hand side, in Yew Crag, where was hewn that 
prize slab, but the second and more important are on the left, in Honister. 

This slate quarrying is awful to look at, both in the giddy height 
at which the men work, and in the terrible journies which they make 

196 



BUTTEEMERE, CEUMMOCK, AND LOWES WATERS. 



when bringing down the slate m their " sleds." It is simply appalling to 
see that small moving speck on the high crag, passing noiselessly along 
a narrow grey line that looks like a mere thread, and to know that it is a 
man with the chances of his life dangling in his hand. As we look the 
speck moves ; he first crosses the straight gallery leading out from the dark 

cavern where he emerged, and then he sets 
^ himself against the perpendicular descent, and 
^ comes down the face of the crag, carrying- 
something behind him — at first slowly, and, 
as it were, cautiously ; then with a swifter 
step, but still evidently holding back ; but at 
the last with a wild haste that seems as if 
he must be overtaken, and crushed to pieces 
by the heavy sled grinding behind him. The 
long swift steps seem almost to fly ; the 
noise of the crashing slate comes nearer; 
now we see the man's eager face ; and now 




SL_BD HOADb — HONISliH QUABSIES 



we hear his panting breath ; and now he draws up by the road- side — every 
muscle strained, every nerve alive, and every pulse throbbing with frightful 
force. It is a terrible trade — and the men employed in it look wan and 
worn, as if they were all consumptive or had heart disease. The average 
daily task is seven or eight of these journies, carrying 
about a quarter of a ton of slate each time ; the down- 
ward run occupying only a few minutes, the return 
climb — by another path not quite so perpendicular, 
where they crawl with their empty sleds on their backs, 
like some strange sort of beetle or fly — half an hour, 
done in former times, and the quarrymen still talk of Samuel Trimmer, who 
once made fifteen journies in one day, for the reward of a small per-centage on 
the hurdle and a bottle of rum ; and of Joseph Clark, a Stonethwaite man, 
who brought down forty-two and a half loads, or ten thousand eight hundred 

197 




CTA-ERTMAN S SLED 



Grreat things used to be 



THE LAKE COUNTKY. 

and eighty pounds of slate, in seventeen journies ; travelling seventeen miles — 
eight and a half up the face of the crag, and the same number down, at 
this murderous pace. These are almost legendary days, though, in the Honister 
world ; days which belonged to the style and manner, if not to the date, of Guy 
of Warwick, and our old friend Hugh Hird of Troutbeck. Twelve journies 
a day rank now as a feat scarcely to be compassed ; for no man of modern 
slate-quarrying powers can do anything near to these giants of the elder time. 

The quarrymen have small sleeping huts among the crags, and remain 
during the week at their work, going home only from the Saturday night 
to the Monday morning; which leaves scarcely too much time for the 
building up of a man's domestic life ; but they are not a bad race, though 
rough and uncouth, as are all men whose business leads them to much 
separation from women and exclusive companionship with each other. 
About the base of the crag are broad tracts of alpine ladies' mantle 
{alchemilla alpina), while forked spleenwort {asplenium septentrionale) , 
and many a rare plant besides, are to be found among the screes and 
shelving sides ; in places not always easily accessible, certainly ; but courage 
and patience do a great deal towards filling the pockets of a j)lant collector. 

The Pass is solemn to oppressiveness. Up the steep ascent, with the 
high broken hills pressed in on either side, and the rough road cleaving 
the air in the old lightning shape, as usual — up to the grim top, where you 
stand in the very centre of gloom, before and behind and all around you 
only gloom, and no radiant shine of joy to break in between — and then 
down — down where the sun seems scarcely ever to shine, and where the 
clouds throw deepest shadows, and the serpents' winding way seems going, 
not to freedom and the tranquil life of the valley, but to everlasting 
death; down to where Gatescarthdale lies silent in the depths below, the 
river, the Gatescarth beck, the only living sound to break the stillness, 
till you come upon the lake throbbing like an imprisoned heart against 
its bonds ; — follow the road of the Honister Pass with the honest intention 
to receive its own special spirit, and then confess that it is the most sublime 

198 



BUTTERMERE, CRUMMOCK, AND LOWES WATERS. 

of all that you have seen yet, whatever larger adjective lies before you in 
the future. Kirkstone was most desolate ; Sty Head will perhaps prove most 
terrif}'ing and tumultuously wild ; but Honister is the sternest, the severest, 
and most majestic ; the Pass where the iron ribs of nature are clothed 
with sparest flesh, where the frown lies heaviest on the eyelids, and the 
hand is clenched with the firmest grasp, where the old Egyptian Statues of 
the Plain might be set up as fitting doorkeepers and guardians — art like 
to nature in the stillness and solemn grandeur of their mien. 

Most noble, too, is Honister won — Honister from the crest not only 
from the foot. You go up the road by Seatollar Beck, and on to the 
common through the gate — the sun gleaming through the oaks and across 
the bracken and making the fells to sparkle like bright steel : behind, as you 
rise, is seen Black Crag (against and beyond which lies Dock Tarn), an 
outline of Helvellyn, High Saddle and Green Comb above Greenup, Glara- 
mara and where lies the Tarn of Leaves, Eosthwaite Cam, Low White- 
stones, and Serjeant Man, and a host of other points and stony tongues 
belonging to the Borrowdale mountain world. To the right is Yew Crag, 
looking from here as if utterly unserviceable to all uses whatsoever, and not 
in any way the home and habitation of some scores of human beings, with 
such strong links to civilization and the great world beyond, as that prize slab 
implies. And when you have looked your fill, you go up without further stop 
to Honister Head. A wild place this for shepherding ! — where many a man 
has been lost in the snow and the winter's storm, in the darkness of the 
night, and in the rain and mist; a wild place in truth! — counting its victims 
by the score, to count them still in the future as in the past. Stag's 
horn moss and alpine ladies' mantle, wild thyme, the precious eyebright and 
yellow tormentil lift their lovely little heads by many a crossing streamlet 
among the rocks and grass ; a slate causeway ; the remains of some slate 
shed or shelter — a wall with piercings for doors or windows, some six 
feet thick ; another survey back over the Hawse into Borrowdale, seeming 
like a pleasant easy descent all the way from where you have climbed ; a 

199 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

sight of Black Sail Pass at Eniierdale Head, with the Pillar to the right 
of it ; a look against Honister side and its quarries, and down the crag 
to the pass below — road and stream like mere lines from the height above ; 
the long slate road seeming on the very edge of the crag, sloping steej)ly 
down under its several archways ; then higher still, and another look down 
the precipice into the pass ; higher still, again, till you catch the tops of 
Robinson and Dale Head over Yew Crag ; and the quarries on the top 
of Honister are reached. 

And then, a little beyond the quarries comes the view : Lowes Water 
and Buttermere and Crummock all lying down at your feet ; Buttermere 
directly within the fork of the pass ; Crummock rounding Rannerdale 
Knot, and backed up by Mellbreak ; and Lowes Water, still further, 
between Mellbreak and Low Fell. To the right of Rannerdale Knot is 
Moss, and above it, in the distance, Ladhouse ; and over that, again, the 
black clouded height of Grasmoor ; while away and beyond lie the plains 
and the sea and the dim line of Scottish hills. 

Now retrace your steps toward the quarries, noticing their sheer sides, 
and the slates cropping up edgewise in the turf on the crag top ; then 
cross back by a grassy, disused road, and see what a direct vein of slate 
runs right through Honister and into Yew Crag on the other side. 
It is the hard roofing slate, in contradistinction to the soft clay slate 
of Grange and Gatescarth, and is noticeably distinct. You are now on 
" Moses' Trod " going up towards Brandreth, where the sheep are 
"rank" on the fell sides (Gatescarth farm below being the largest sheep 
farm in the country), and where the Three-Legged has all his feet in the 
air; and, as you go, you see the Pillar at the head of Ennerdale, and 
Black Sail Pass, and the Hay Stacks (Loaf Tarn on the top, and Scarf 
Gap in between) and the triplet of cones. High Crag, High Stile, and 
Red Pike ; and when you are a little higher you see down into the heart 
of lonely Ennerdale, all along the wild dale — wilder than any excepting 
Westdale — past the lake, and to the distant country, seaward, beyond. 

200 




^^•■^>jrTt.Y 



WASTWATER AND SCAWFELL 



CHAPTER XIII 



At Stockley Brig beyond Seathwaite (Borrowdale Head) the world of human 
going seems to have come to an end. Perhaps the goats or the more 
lissome of the mountain sheep might find a way out over the living barriers 
closing them in on all sides, but surely no ordinary man, in "boots of 
the period," could scale those crags or surmount those steeps ! The shep- 
herds give a different answer. They will tell you that what looks so 
utterly impossible to you is mere ordinary habit to them, and that they 
can " shepherd " all about both crags and mountain side as well as you 
can walk up Primrose Hill, or down the slope of Hampstead Heath. One 
spot, however, even they abandon : the red-scarred gash by Taylor Ghyll, 

201 D D 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

wliicli, so far as the world has yet gone, has been found inaccessible ; so 
sharp and shingly, so loose in footing, and so severe in climb is it. But 
though the. general look of the hills and crags is simply impossible, there is 
an outlet in the steep ascent between High House Crag and Taylor Ghyll — 
that forked path known as Aaron End, up which you go for Sty Head 
Pass ; which, indeed, is the beginning of the Pass, and whence you can 
bend your steps either to Great Gable or to Scawfell, or to any other of 
the high mountain tops clustered about the nave of the wheel. 

If Honister is stern. Sty Head is violent ; if Kirkstone is desolate, Sty 
Head is terrifying — in certain aspects, when the clouds hang low over Wast- 
water, literally terrifying, as if the road was going down into the home of the 
Eternal Death. The disruption, the dislocation, the violence of the way, is 
beyond all that has been seen yet. It is nature in one of her wildest moods, 
her fiercest and most turbulent. If the Egyptian statue, silent and oppressive, 
might be taken to represent the spirit of Honister, the strong man in his 
wrath would be likest to Sty Head Pass. Even in the beginning, up by 
Aaron End, the key-note of the rest is struck. The castellated heights of 
High House Crag ; the red scars of Taylor Ghyll with the white foam flung 
restlessly up through the heart of it ; the purple breadth of the backward 
lying hills, with the utter loneliness of the valley winding away between 
Scawdale and Glaramara ; all have a majesty, and some of these incidents 
a fierceness, which prepare for what has to come. 

And when you have passed the little wooden bridge which a chance 
tourist put up over Sty Head Beck, in pity for belated travellers or those 
overtaken by storm and flood, and have come face to face with Lingmell, with 
that one sharp rift in his side— to Green Gable, torn asunder from Great 
Gable by the deep ghyll Avhich looks like a gash into its very heart — and 
have seen where Sty Head Tarn lies lonely in its shallow cup under the 
noble crag of Great End, and in the shadow of dark Lingmell — and where 
the path goes up to Scawfell by Sprinkling Tarn — all the forms now about 
you wild and broken and tumultuous exceedingly, and the sense of fierce- 

202 



WASTWATER AND SCAWFELL. 

ness and uprising and the strife of elements and the battling together of 
natural forces, the greatest impression made on you — you have come into the 
meaning of your way ; but not into its full spirit. That is for the descent ; 
when you see your path, as a sharp and sudden line, falling down like a 
straw flung by the winds ; a path literally built up of stones against the moun- 
tain side, but which the winter winds and torrents will sweep down like a 
child's fortress on the sea-sand, levelling all that solid -looking embankment, 
and showing the naked rock and pathless crag again, as the sea wave will 
level the child's busy day's delight ; when the characteristic features of Wast- 
water come out — Yewbarrow broad and black ; the gorge of Mosedale dark 
and purple ; Great Gable with his grey crown and his steep sides all red 
and orange-striped, both he and Lingmell looking jewelled^ in the sun ; 
when you see how Kirkfell stands like an impenetrable barrier against 
you, and how the crags are fiercer and the mountains more aggressive 
here than elsewhere : you have entered within the gates of one of 
Nature's grandest temples, and have caught the echo of some of her noblest 
harmonies. 

It is all so wild here ! The sharp lean sides of the hills ; the stream 
foaming down in the bottom, and the steep path above ; the crags all hoary 
and naked, save on the ledges where the summer has cast a few spare tufts 
of moss and grass, as if in defiance of the sternness which forbids all other 
forms of love and grace ; the darkness of the Wastdale valley, with, perhaps, 
a pale sun-gleam stealing over Kirkfell, or across that glorious stalactite- 
looking crown on Great Gable; the magnificent markings of Piers Ghyll 
all furrowed with deep and angry rivings ; the broken line of crag and hill- 
top — no longer the wave line with the quiet flow, but throvm up in broken 
foam, beaten and lashed and tortured ; all make our mighty Sty Head Pass 
a fitting way from the grandeur of Borrowdale to the gloom and death of 
Wastwater. For do we not so often pass from strength through passion 

' As, iiideed, tliey are ; garnets studding the slate to be found on both. 

203 D D 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 



into death ? from the violence and writhing of the tortured spirit into the 
desolateness of the broken heart, and the still grave lying beyond ? 

Half-way down the pass, on looking back, the road seems to end. 
You are standing by a huge jutting crag, which you have just rounded, and 

your way is suddenly cut off. You 
see nothing but the huge jutting 
crag overhanging its base, and the 
steep side of the ravine where no 
pathway can possibly go. You have 
come by a way of glamour, spirit 
made, withdrawn so soon as passed 
over. This is an effect several times 
repeated ; so that you have an infi- 
nite succession of endings behind 
you ; all trace of your past way lost, 
and no continuation apparently pos- 
sible. Looking downward it is the 
same. Here the way is so steep 
that often the lines lie side by side, 
the connecting loop entirely lost. In bad weather, when the mists boil 
up from the valley, and the clouds pour down from the hills, and the 
foothold is lost, and you see only the crag and the sharp descent 
and the surging mist and the eternal Nothing, when the wind shouts 
behind you and drives you on, and the rain and hail envelope you, and 
you are pelted and hunted and savagely hounded by the furies yelling at your 
heels, their curses in your ears, their blows on your back or struck open- 
handed into your face, it is like going into Hell. But not with the facilis 
descensus. Surely the old mythologists would have named it so ; and he 
who had been brave enough to first face the dangers of the way, would have 
been celebrated as another Orpheus victorious over another guardian of the 
dread gates ! 

204 




WASTWATER AND SCAWFELL. 

As you descend this awful pass, a wonderful effect of form and colour 
is shown in Great Gable and its crags. Hollowed in the centre, and buttressed 
with grey pillars on each side — a whole cascade of immense boulders pouring 
from that sweeping curve to show what wind and rain have done, and the 
jewelled brightness of its sides shining many coloured and glorious if the 
sun lights on them — it is the most picturesque of the Wastdale moun- 
tains, though not the most sought after. But the centre, as it is, of the 
Borrowdale system — the nave of the nave — the key- stone of her arch and 
point of the pivot — with Wastdale, Ennerdale, and Borrowdale branching out 
from its feet, it deserves all manner of recognition, and will repay all manner 
of research. It is one of the finest mountains to ascend ; giving some of 
the grandest views and most glorious effects ; not to speak of the natural 
basin in a rock on the summit, always full of the purest water, and the garnets 
to be found imbedded in the slate. 

Wastdale Head has more than mountain road or even mountain top 
for the traveller ; it has a ravine and a waterfall, both of which would be as 
famous as Scale Force or Dungeon Ghyll, if the way was more accommo- 
dating. Piers Ghyll, that long and deep ravine under Great End, where the 
huge rocks wall you in on both sides and the tremendous steeps of Scawfell 
look at you in front, while Great Gable bars the way against the world behind, 
is one of the noblest rifts in the whole lake country ; and Greta Force, close 
by, is as fine a waterfall as the other is a chasm. But the way thereto is 
rough and wet and stony, with steep bits to overcome, and rugged bits to 
master, and rivers to cross, and bogs to wade through, so that only the really 
strong-hearted tourist would add either rift or fall into his day's sum of 
exploration. They are close together, however, and both can be seen when 
one is reached. You see Piers Ghyll from the pass road ; but merely see 
it : you know it only by entering into its heart and learning its secrets from 
its own telling. Greta Force is not visible ; it has to be sought for, where 
its double stream falls into the ghyll, with a larger body of water than what 
belongs to either Ara Force or Scale Force ; but then so few of the ordinary 

205 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

tourists care to clamber up into the heart of a fierce and desolate mountain 
for the sake of a ravine and a fall, that both Piers Ghyll and Greta Force 
get passed by unvisited, and almost unmentioned in the guide books. Still, 
there they are, for the noble delight of those who care for noble beauty. 

And now you see the old shining line of sun and sea out by Gosforth — 
that bounding line, whatever the height on which you stand ; but not the 
lake, at least not yet : it is lying shyly away under the Screes, and you must 
go down a good part of the way before its dark, still face catches yours. 
But now you do see it ; and now you are by a wide river bed of stone and 
water — a waste, as so many mountain streams are ; and now you are fairly 
at the head of Wastdale, and the Pass is conquered. And when you have 
got down, and are standing by the wall, you look back, into a bit of veritable 
enchantment. The buttressed, broken, stalactite segment of Great Gable has 
gone back into one uniform and flowing curve, over which perhaps a bright 
cloud is hovering with a repeat of line as accurate as a mirror would have 
given : the terrible pass has closed in at the top, and has become merely a 
steep pathway over a mountain shoulder, with not a trace left of the 
ruggedness hidden behind the crags — of the fury and terror and violence by 
which you have come. Wastdale, which looked so green and calm from 
the height, is now a desolate wild ; and the Screes, and Yewbarrow square 
and trenchant, and Kirkfell all scored and skinned, and the dark Mosedale 
Pass, and the few scattered houses that can scarce be called a hamlet even, 
they are so few, all come out in their true colours — the colours of gloom 
and savageness unmitigated. 

Wastwater is always desolate, whatever the weather. It has no trees, 
no cultivated lands, and, indeed, none to 
cultivate, save a mere handful at the upper ^^^ j. '"/*^-^ 
end about the feet of the Ennerdale and ;-^^5«s 
Borrowdale mountains. All its wealth is 
gathered round its small quaint church — 
the smallest and quaintest of the country, now that Buttermere has been 

206 




WASTWATER AND SCAWFELL. 

dowered with one newer and larger ; ^ but down the sides of its mountains is 
nothing fit for the uses of man or the good of life — nothing but desolate grandeur 
and the awful stillness of nature waiting, rockbound, for deliverance. Even 
in the sunshine Wastwater is desolate ; perhaps more so indeed, then, than 
in the gloom. For you cannot help contrasting the loneliness of the place, 
its deathly silence, and cut off and cornered kind of life, with the brightness 
lifting up the heart of the world elsewhere ; the sunshine seeming to you, 
standing in the shadow of these gloomy mountains, like music from the 
outside filling the death chamber, or the voice of other's laughter when 
your own is broken with weeping. One thing is very noticeable in this lake 
country of ours — the distinct spirit and feeling with which each separate place 
seems to be imbued; so that one place is the representative of gloom, and 
another of passion, a third of desolation, a fourth of loving homeliness, a 
fifth of rustic peace, and a sixth of dreadful fear ; each place seeming to have 
certain qualities with which the spiritual and material impressions accord. 

There are several ways out, though, from this lonely place. There is 
the Sty Head Pass by which you have come ; and Black Sail to either 
Ennerdale or Buttermere ; and the way by Strands, at the foot of the lake, 
to Gosforth and the sea ; and another way to Gosforth, leaving Strands to 
the left ; and a way up to Scawfell by Lingmell ; and one between Scawfell 
and the Screes, over by Burnmoor Tarn to Eskdale ; and another to Irton 
and Eskdale — the infant Irt, where the Komans got their pearls,^ rising in 

^ The Wastclale church has eight pews, three small cottage windows, and is further 
lighted by a skyhght immediately over the pulpit. 

^ Pearls. — " These are found commonly by the rivers Irt, where Mussels (as also 
Oysters and other Shell Jish) gaping for the Detv, are in a manner impregnated therewith ; 
so that some conceive that as Dew is a liquid Pearl, so a Pearl is Dew consolidated in these 
fishes. Here poor people, getting them at low water, sell to jewellers for Pence what they 
sell again for Pounds." But the pearls are " far short of the Indian in Orientness. But 
whether not as usefull in Physick is not as yet decided." About the year 1695 some 
gentlemen got a patent for pearl fishing in the Irt ; and Mr. Patrickson, of How, obtained 
as many as were afterwards sold for 800Z., though the pearl mussels never seem to have been 
very plentiful. 

207 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

Scawfell between Lingmell and Great End — S(3 that no one is obliged to 
remain at Wastwater for want of means of escape, though none of those 
means, save by the high road and the lake side, are specially easy. But a 
grander way than that of Sty Head from Borrowdale to WastM^ater is straight 
over the top of Scawfell Pikes ; and this was one of our own experiences. A 
way to be taken only in the summer, not in the desolate snow-time represented 
in the view below, — a view given to contrast with the crisp clearness of 
summer, and because Borrowdale under snow is a thing to be seen, and when 
seen to be remembered for a life. 




UP THE GORGE — BORROWDALE HEAD IN SNOW 



It was past one in a June day when we left Seathwaite ; not going up by 
Aaron End as when following the road of the pass, but keeping straight 
up the gorge, as if for Sprinkling Tarn and Esk Hawse ; and soon coming 
to a bit of real climbing, over a green shoulder, steep and not pleasant to 
look back from, for it was very narrow and sharply curved, so that, when 
we looked back, all our past way was gone, and we had the impression of 

208 



WASTWATER AND SCAWFELL. 

standing in mid air with no material support before or behind us — which 
was not agreeable ; with a steep declivity below, where a false step would 
have been a broken limb at the least. Then we went over another shoulder, 
broader and less steep, but boggy : Glaramara, Skiddaw, and Base Brown 
behind us, and before us Great End, looking no nearer and no smaller for 
our hour's walk, and standing like an upright wall in the sultry summer 
haze. Still another shoulder ; this time flanked with rocks on both sides, 
like walls of rock to uphold it ; a way like the old giant's staircase we know 
of — the perpendicular of rock and the step-top of grass, but sometimes of 
rock too, where the giant's footsteps had worn away the grass. 

And now we seemed to be almost at the top of the pass, with, apparently, 
only a handful of crags to climb. As we rose. Great Gable loomed up over the 
other side of Sty Head with a cloud on his summit, as usual ; the line of 
Skiddaw and Blencathra was plain behind us ; Derwentwater beneath, but far 
away ; and, nearer, the whole length of Borrowdale. But a few steps onward 
took Borrowdale away from us, and brought us to the edge of a deep chasm, 
which seemed to divide us from the Sty Head Pass, and directly over which 
was the place of our bright-faced jewel-like Sparkling Tarn. We found an easy 
way across the chasm, but we had to go back again and still to the left of Great 
End, by the little piles of stones set to mark the way ; climbing up and up, 
with all manner of mountain-tops rising ever behind and beyond each other 
in a very sea of solid waves ; till two cones appeared far below us — the 
Langdale Pikes, piercing into the sunshine bright and glowing. In a few 
moments more, and we looked down into Langdale, and over Bowfell down 
into Eskdale — and far away over fell and valley into the indistinguishable mist. 

Then we turned to the right, and a long shoulder was before us. To 
the left was the sea of mountains ; to the right. Great Gable, becoming 
gradually lost in the shadow of the End. 
In front of this long shoulder was Scawfell. 
This was what we had to reach, when we 




had rounded the foreset boll in question. But when we came to the top, we 

209 E E 



THE LAKE COUNTKY. 





found that while we were toiling on, Great End had slipped away, leaving us to 
climb an empty sleeve, in which he was only laughing at us; and there 
he was as far off as ever, with Scawfell Pike 
in the distance — yet in the distance. To 
the left again — another steep climb ; and to 
the right, below us, a pit, bottomless for aught that we could see ; but a 
little farther on, a green platform rose in the midst, with Sty Head Tarn 
shining like a star upon it, and the great black mountains steeply walling 
it round. Yet all below us ; great as they were, we looked over their tops. 

Then a quarter of a mile of scrambling over a sea of rocks — rough as 
any sea-shore scrambling ; only there was no sea-weed to make them 
slippery, nor growth of any kind till they Avere crossed ; and then 

Scawfell rose up, and looked bigger and 
more formidable than ever. As we pro- 
ceeded he grew, and our work seemed only 
beginning : all the climbing we have had mere child's play to what was to 

come. This was his next aspect, still 
bigger, yet seeming no nearer for his en- 
largement ; and again he became bigger and 
bigger yet again, till we rose above every- 
thing else, and saw only himself before us, 
more gigantic than ever. We had to get 
down this steep embankment, over the shale 
and rocks, to the foot of the Pike itself; 
but before we went forward we looked down 
over the tops of the other mountains and 
S-1 saw a lake of gold lying in the grey formless 
mist beyond them — the lonely lake of Ennerdale. Then up the corner, 
through the steep loose screes ; digging places for our feet, and afraid at every 
step of disturbing the stones and bringing down a torrent of slates and 
boulders upon us (it was like going up the corner of a crumbling house 

210 




WASTWATER AND SCAWFELL. 

for steepness and insecurity), glad to rest continually, yet almost afraid to 
stop, lest we should be sent sliding to the bottom by the very sharpness 
of the angle at which we stood. We could not see how far we had come ; 
and we could see nothing of what remained above us — nothing but loose 
stones, and sometimes a footing of grass under a bigger mass of rock. 
And now we were close upon the summit. Behind us, no trace of the 
way passed over, only a stony and almost perpendicular side, which looked 
from here impossible ; and a third sea of stones — a mound of rocks washed 
bare, and bleached by the wind and the storm. We saw one golden 
patch of delicate moss on them, and lichens as brilliant and gorgeous 
as if they had been garden-beds of flowers, or clusters of precious stones ; 
and then we passed to the pole, set up like a flag-staff above all England — 
the highest point in England ; standing three thousand two hundred and 
thirty feet above the level of the sea. Wastwater lay dark and broken 
below, and two little tarns beyond it ; a sparkle was on Kirkfell, and 
Mosedale and Blacksail looked full of purple ripeness ; the sun had 
caught a portion of Crummock lake till it glowed like a cup of red wine 
spilled on the earth ; we looked over Sty Head Tarn, and a little jewel 
shimmering above, and we saw Borrow^dale and Derwentwater, and the 
Scottish mountains beyond the Skidclaw range ; we saw the Penrith plains, 
Windermere and Langdale Pikes, and we looked into Eskdale, and down the 
vale of the Duddon, and saw where their rivers ran hurriedly from the 
mountains to the sea ; and then we saw the sun shining down the sea, 
and Black Combe as the foremost sentinel of the land, and a wild range 
of mountain tops everywhere beneath us. Amongst them all, most conspicuous 
from where we stood, was Lingmell, like a huge lion creeping at our feet 
and guarding us in our lonely majesty. 

And now it was getting very dim and dusky : the sun was sinking, 
and the wind was cold and noisy; so we went to our new apartments, 
once held by the ordnance surveyors, but now roofless and doorless ; and, 
selecting the one which had a chimney — on the principle of Dickens' Fleet 

211 E E 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

prisoner, who preferred to sleep under the table because he had been used to a 
four-poster, and the legs were good make-belieyes — we made our beds of the 
flattest stones we could find, and agreed to wait patiently for the morning. 
The passing sunshine still settled warmly among the stones on the waste 
top, and on the one little patch of golden moss which stood out delicately 
from the blue-grey of the nearer crags ; passing imperceptibly through bluer 
tones into the hazy distance and warmer sky, where the sun was sinking, 
leaving long bars of red and gold, and a tender, mellow glory everywhere, 
like the calm of a prayer for all England. So, before it should get quite 
dark, we went out on the causeway for a last look at the flagstaff. 
There it stood alone against the clear sky, the light of the setting sun 
behind it, and the young moon, clear as crystal, rising in the sunlight 
below. The silent stars came out one by one, as we lay in our turret 
chamber, and the white clouds like angels floated noiselessly over us. The 
only sound was that of the winds, which shouted like thunder, as at last 
they sang us to sleep in the continuing twilight. 

When we awoke the wind was raving and the stars Avere gone ; 
Derwentwater and all the distances were lost, and there was a dead mist 
everywhere; but by-and-by the mist changed to feathery clouds rapidly 
driven across the sky ; the light in the horizon gradually increased, and 
a faint tinge of brown came into it, changing to a sea-shell colour — to 
faint red — to reddish yellow — and then to a broad band of pure gold, into 
which the great sun came leaping, as if the whole heavens had shouted 
when he rose. Up from the chasm between Scawfell and the Pike — that 
terrible Mickledore — swept huge white masses ; while over Skiddaw, on the 
opposite side, the long line of clouds, behind which the sun had set, 
stretched itself out in broad bars, growing more distinct, and seemingly 
nearer, at each moment. The mountains toward Windermere lay in mist, 
with mist between us and them, and a band of mist behind them ; and behind 
that mist rose up strange black monsters, coming close in their blackness 
though countless miles away. Sometimes a herd of buffaloes leaped over 

212 



WASTWATER AND SCAWFELL. 

one another; sometimes one gigantic beast came tumbling over the white 
rock of mist, which then opened and swallowed him up alive; some- 
times an eagle, presently dissolving into vapour, flew for one minute 
through the sky and then was gone ; higher in the arch were great 
feathers, wind-born, and long white arms thrust across, and caverns many- 
chambered, and columns and rocks and light pencilled curls, and all the 
whole phantasy of the world of vapour, which the sun touched now 
to gold, and now to orange — to pale pure rose — to burning crimson — and 
then to deep and passionate purple, like the very heart of love outpoured 
on the heavens. And then, finally, he drew them all up into himself, 
and the earth was left free to him, and the heavens were interpenetrated 
with his life, and there was no sorrow and no dimness and no distrust 
or shadow of fear anywhere. It was a sunrise like a bridal — the renewal 
of the earth's daily life — nature, like humanity, putting on fresh youth and 
hope by love. 

Now we had to descend. We had done the great feat, and seen the 
great sight — slept on the top of Scawfell, and seen the sunrise in the 
morning — and now it was time to think of the world below and the 
future of the day. So we turned away from off the top, and went 
down by Lingmell toward Wastwater ; down steeply but without real 
difficulty, to boggy grass and water. Very pleasant the first gush of it in 
the grass, and the feeling of the soft turf after those hard bare stones, 
and the bleat of a startled sheep after the night's stillness. After a time 
we reached the real source of the lake and the Irt below, seeing where 
the infant stream rises in a great shoulder of Lingmell. Then we 
went on, keeping to the left and close under the crags of Scawfell ; 
passing the terrible gap of Mickledore, bridged over now by a white cloud, 
come no one knows whence, or why, or how; and then down by the beck 
and over a long stretch of wet grass, winding up and over another 
shoulder, and by loose screes and broken rocks, to get entangled in a 
labyrinth of walls and watercourses and sheep-tracks and delusive paths, 

213 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

till the hour of deliverance came at last to us, as to us all, and we 
found ourselves at Wastdale Head in the early morning, before the world 
of man was yet well astir, having accomplished our purpose without let 
or hindrance, or evil resulting. 

Not by Black Sail to Ennerdale or Buttermere to-day, but by the lake-side 
and Strands to Gosforth, and round by Calder Abbey, Egremont, Ennerdale, 
to St. Bees and the sea ; a way which gives to perfection the mountains up at 
Wastdale Head, Scawfell, and Scawfell Pike, and that magnificent buttress 
called the Screes, the only thing of its kind in the district. The promise 
of the morning was not to be fulfilled by the maturer day; for the mist 
was slowly rising up through the purple chasm of Scawfell, and filling all 
Mosedale like the very presence of despair : very quietly — very stealthily — 
coming down the pass, and over the lake, which it turned from purple 
to grey as it crept on like a spirit ; first blotting out Great Gable, then 
Kirkfell, then Lingmell, then veiling Scawfell and the Screes, and then 
hanging soft and rolling immediately above our heads ; but soon floating away 
again, and leaving everything brighter for its presence. As we went on 
everything became grander. Scawfell Pike showed his great bulk, and that 
fine crest of his, all serrated and fierce — a very tiger of a mountain ; 
indeed, all the mountains here are of the tiger nature ; even at the foot, not 
going off tamely, but subsiding in throes and bounds and angry claws thrust 
forward savagely; like tigers passing into cats. Middlefell and Buckbarrow, 
Kirkfell in his radiant coat. Great Gable well bearing out his name, for he 
was just like a house side from here, with a pointed roof and great gable 
end, Lingmell with the perpendicular ghyll, and all the other mountains, 
glowed or gloomed with wonderful intensity, as sun or shadow fell. Indeed, 
the colours to-day were of that intense character so much delighted in 
by artists, and the lines were of that marvellous clearness which seems to 
multiply and enhance every circumstance. The hazel leaves were burning red 
and gold, and blue-bells and gorse and the changing leaves of the bracken — 

214 



WASTWATER AND SCAWFELL. 



bronzed and green elfin ling and purple heather — and the little tormentil 
like drops of gold upon the grass, all made up a compound of colour that 
was as lustrous as so much enamelled work. The Screes were purple, with 
patches of golden-brown moss set in rims of golden-green scattered through ; 
and the lake, that deep still lake which no frost, however severe, can ice over, 
was blue and green and grey and purple and silver and gold by turns, with 
great slabs of turquoise and malachite beneath ; the Sty Head mountains, 
looking glacier-scored, were shining in the sun ; Mosedale was dark, and 
bloomy, and tender ; and the shadows were everyivhere sharply defined, and 
the lights were everywhere radiantly brilliant. Still watching Scawf ell's great 
shell-shaped head, across a miniature forest of gorse and bracken which grew 
between us and the lake-side — over the bridge, and by the river running away 
with its burden of song — seeing how the sea-wind had dwarfed the few trees 
about into stunted cripples bowed and twisted, we finally got opposite the Screes. 




Wonderfully soft and velvet-like was the late summer verdure on them — 
great brown velvets, and green satins, and gold-coloured silks, set among the 
grey stones with a contrast that heightened both ; and wonderfully glacier-like 
the form. You can almost see where the primaeval waters once rushed down 
that steep side, which looks like a wave broken down at the top — the channels 
in them (like lava-veins flowing among the velvet green,) all leaf-shaped, like 
those fan-shaped coralline forms seen in the sea-sand — and large stones, and 
red marks as if the earth had been skinned to the blood-veins beneath, and 
the great skeleton ribs shown one by one. The Screes stand sheer against 

215 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

the lake, almost as straight as if ruled with a line. The other side is 
gracious with little bays and promontories, but the Screes rise straight and 
sharp, and suffer no tender play whatever at their feet. Looking back, when 
opposite this huge buttress, there is no longer any outlet for the world at 
the head. Great Gable and Buckbarrow, gone now to softest dove colour, 
close up the dale, while at the foot the Screes mellow down to rocks, the 
rocks broken into by chasms : Hawl Ghyll,* or Hawley Gap, the most 
remarkable : to finally pass off into the fells and the plains and the sea. 

And now the way goes gradually back into civilization, and the well-known 
refinements of art and cultivation. Close to a bold crag on the right is a quiet 
shaded bit of road running between stone walls, with garden and shrubbery on 
either side ; the evidence of home and human care, and the place of rest and 
peace, very beautiful to look upon after the mldness gone through. We 
cannot make a home on the wilds, or pitch our tent on the hill-tops. We 
have grandeur there, and communion with nature, and the filling of soul 
and sense, but the care and the thought which make up social life — the 
tenderness and the beauty which are our real home — belong to the low-lying 
lands exclusively. We felt that very strongly to-day, when passing from the 
cold majesty of Scawfell, and the dark gloom of Wastwater, into the peace 
and cultivation of the lower country. Near a field filled with sunny sheep, we 
turned again to look at what we had left. The Wastdale mountains looked 
quiet and almost tame, and even our tiger Scawfell lay with his forepaws 
stretched out, and his nose between them, asleep ; the Screes looked low and 
grey, flowing into the Irton Fells, with the grey line of the Muncaster Fells 
behind, topped and ended by Black Combe. Then we came on Strands 
and its pretty river ; and then on the level line of the blue sea, with the clouds 
heaped up in white cumuli over Wastdale, but lying in filmy streaks across 
the sea, over each world repeating the line and the form below. 

^ The felspar of tlie rock lias decomposed here, and wasted mto sharp needle-hke 
points — true aiguilles, though minute — with very beautiful fashioning and results. A fine 
vein of spicular iron ore, as well as one of haematite, runs here. 

216 






S^^.-Sf 




CALDER ABBEY, EGREMONT, AND ENNERDALE 



CHAPTEK XIV 

Feom strands the way goes through Gosforth-the '' reddest of villages-" 
where an old stone pillar^ in the churchyard is covered with unintelligible 
carving, to the confusion of the wise and the bewilderment of the foolish 
and where from the hill beyond, is a magnificent view of the sea, with 
tlie^IsW Man lying clear and distinct on its bosom; behind, to the right, 

' In Gosforth cimrchyard is a cross-whether Danish or Br^i^^i^^^^^^^^^^ 
fourteen feet Ingh; the lower part is placed on a pedestal of three steps- thl tl " 
forated with four holes; the sides are enriched .vith various .uHlo hes ^Tn/ ' '"'" 
ana ..th .en and animals in has-relief-one of a .an on wt^: ^tlT^ 
.hnnn was there once, but it has been taken away, as also a horizontal statue tet^Z 
them, M.th a sword sculptured on it.-Vide Gentleman's Ma,a.iuc, Oct., 17Q0 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

tlie Wastwatei- mountains blue and dark ; to tlio left, the purple Muncaster 
Fells ; and in front a rich and varied road, where the hedges, bright with 
flowers and loud with song-birds, are crowned with great golden fields of 
corn waving above the green fences ; a sweet country road, which leads to 
Calder Bridge, where is something to be seen before going farther to the 
abbey, which, however, is the real lion of the district. 

For at Calder Bridge are both Ponsonby Hall, with its beautiful grounds 
and pleasant cascade, and the picturesque little modern church, with that 
pleasant walk through the churchyard and by the river side ; also the prettiest 
inn parlour in the world, with the river dashing underneath the bridge, and 
the sweetest sentiment of old world rusticity and simplicity to be found 
anywhere ; the very perfection of an inn parlour of the old-fashioned style. 
And then there is the mile-long walk underneath the trees, and between 
the red sandstone walls, which the wind and weather have mellowed to the 
most delicious tone, and which the black-veined spleenwort, our old friend 
asplenium trickomanes, covers. And then there is the broad and shady 
avenue of old elms and oaks and sycamores, leading uj) to the house and 
the abbey; the preface, introducing you by a stately chord to the statelier 
melody beyond. And all these are things worth seeing and noting, before 
entering into the mystery of beauty and the past in the ruins of the abbey. ^ 



^ Calder Abbey was a Cistercian monastery, fonnded in 1134 by Ptannlpb de Mescbines, 
tbe second Eaii of Cbester. and Ciimbeiiand, and completed by Tbomas de Mnlton, wbo 
added to tbe number of monks, and increased their possessions. It was a land of offset or 
dependency on Fxirness, the great institution of tbe conntry, and was but a small community 
at tbe best, but rich in aristocratic relations. At tbe Dissolution the whole of the revenues 
accruing amounted but to G4Z. 3s. 9cZ., according to Speed. Henry VIII. gave the Abbey 
and its lands to Thomas Leigh, LL.D., and bis heirs, to hold in capite, and Dr. Leigh's 
grandson. Sir Ferdinand Leigh, sold the abbey to Su^ Pdchard Fletcher, who gave it as a 
marriage portion to his daughter when she married John Patrickson. From the Patricksons 
it passed to Mr. John Tiffin, of Cockermouth, and then to Mr. John Senhouse ; it is now in 
the possession of Captain Irwin. The Senhouses — Avbom Ave do not meet mth again, their 
historj^ and houses l.vmg out of our track — are a very notable family in the north-Avest of 
Cumberland ; and among tbe ancient forbears Avas a " limb " called Dick Senhouse, a 

218 



CALDER ABBEY, EGREMUNT, AND ENNEHUALE. 

It tells the reader little to say that these ruins consist of the square 
tower of the church, supported by pointed arches upheld by four clustered 
columns ; that the width of the choir appears to have been only twenty- 
five feet ; that traces of a fascia are yet to be made out (or were, but a 
short time since), above the remaining arches; and that the various relics 
dug up from time to time represent such and such knights and noble 
patrons. The most learned catalogue of architectural details would not advance 
any one much to know, unless was added that which makes up the true 
portrait of the place, because giving its real spirit — the rich old monkish 
look of beauty and fertility, assumed to be self-denying because still and 
quiet ; the low-lying meadows, with the kine standing knee-deep in the 
luxuriant grass ; the clear trout-stream running among the old oaks and 
elms of the grove, where Brother Ignatius used to hook out fine fat fish for 
the prior's supper, with Brother Hilary standing by breaking the tenth 
commandment as he thought of his own lentils and coarse oaten pottage ; 
the evidence of centuries of cultivation lying on every square rood of ground, 
a cultivation of time so different to the ripest of the merely modern ; the 
green smooth sward which has taken generations of diligent scythemen 
to bring to its present state of velvet perfectness ; the rooks flocking home 
in the declining sun ; the sentiment of repose, and the spirit of old time 
still about it ; all this is to be added to make up anything like a picture 
of Calder Abbey — pure and noble in its ruin, as it was pure and noble in 
its prime. So different to Wastwater left in the morning ! — the one the 
historic past, the other the natural present ; the one dealing only with the 
world of human uses, the other with the grandeur of material forms : and 
both so beautiful in their way. 

terrible gambler with terrible luck. " You must be either tlie Dev^ or Dick Senliouse 
for tipping the dice so pat ! " said one man, plajong with him unawares ; and " I will do it 
in spite of the Devil and Dick Senhouse ! " Avas a common phrase, expressive of other 
points of Master Dick's character not quite in accordance mth received notions of ordinary 
niorahty. 

219 F F 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

Tlie ivy and the pretty little ivy-leaved toad-flax (antirrhinum linaria) 
hang in clusters and festoons about the dark red arches and moulded capitals ; 
and the winds have carried winged seeds into the very cells and cloisters 
where the pious monks said their early orisons, and walked, repeating the 
hymns and collects of the day, so that now all sorts of trees and shrubs 
and flowers are springing up round the old stones, and the free things 
of earth are rooting themselves where the ordered thoughts of heaven went 
before ; honeysuckles and great ash-trees overshadow arch and aisle and 
pillar ; and side by side with the rich old ruin stands a modern house, 
square, stuccoed, and glaring ; yet not without value in one's thoughts and 
meditations among the remains of Calder Abbey, 

Those who care to see everything may go to the Camp, as it is called, 
where they may make out (if they can) the limits of the ancient encamp- 
ment which is said to have been on the side of Ponsonby Fell ; but it is 
not very distinct in its markings, nor have any relics ever been found 
there, so that its ancient service is perhaps a little doubtful, and certainly 
its present aspect is by no means inviting. Still, it is there, and the 
insatiable traveller may bind it into his sheaf of sights if he will. From 
Calder to Ennerdale he may then choose either of two ways : the one 
leading up and over Cold Fell, and under Blake Ley, where lies the little 
tarn that sends out one branch of the Calder — though the higher and main 
issues are from the top of Iron Crag and under Revelin — and where he 
may see the bleak fell road and the wild fell side to perfection ; and the 
other taking him by a good and rational carriage-road through Egremont, 
both meeting at last at Ennerdale Bridge,^ a little below the foot of the 
lake.* The fell road is the most " accidented." The wide sea view, and 



3 Ennerdale Bridge is tlie scene of Wordsworth's poem, " The Brothers." 
'' The peculiarity of Ennerdale Lake is that it lies at the outlet of the valley, not at its 
head among the mountains, as is usually the case mth lakes. Instead of hiding away at 
the feet of the higher hills, Ennerdale has run off as far out into the plain and towards the 
sea as it could, leading the dale, little Liza, and the greater hills, to themselves. 

220 



C ALDER ABBEY, EGREMONT, AND ENNEllDALE. 

the yellow fling of gorse among the purple heather and the cold crag, 
have many beautiful points and incidents ; and for walkers not irritated by 
a multitude of gates to open and bad places to pass, it is the most inter- 
esting ; but let carriage folks go by Egremont ^ — four miles farther. They 
will be repaid; for the village, like every place in this district, has its 
antiquities and historical associations, its legends and its traditions, as well 
as no little natural beauty. The ruins of the old castle^ stand on the 
western height, with the wide fertile plains below, now marred in their 

^ Egremont was a borough at tlie time wlien Parliamentary representatives were 
remunerated, but wlien that practice was discontinued the inhabitants petitioned to be freed 
from an expensive XDrivilege, and to have their borough disfr'anchised, wliich was accordingly- 
done. They had various privileges secured to them by charters granted by the successors 
of William de Meschines, but they were burdened also with all the old feudal servile duties, 
wliich made men of less account than beasts. By the chai-ter granted by Richard Lucy, in 
the reign of Xing Jolin, and which is still extant, " the burgesses were obhged to find armed 
men for the defence of the castle forty days, at thefr own charge ; they were bound to aids 
for the redemption of the lord and his hefr fr~om captivity ; for the laiighthood of one of liis 
sons ; and the marriage of one of his daughters. They were to find him twelve men for Ms 
military array ; to hold watch and ward ; and were restrained fr-om entering the forest of 
Eunerdale vith bow and arrow. Every burgess that kept a plough was compelled to till the 
lord's gTound one day hi the year, and liliewise to find a man to mow and reap in autiunn. 
If a woman belonging to the borough was seduced, the fine to be paid to the lord by the 
male offender was three shillings ; but if a burgess seduced the daughter of a rustic, who 
was not a bru-gess, he was excused the penalty, unless it could be proved that he had 
promised her marriage. The wife of a burgess guilty of using contumelious langTiage to a 
neighbour (in other words, a scold) forfeited foiu-pence." The parish church is a very old 
buikUng, built by William de Meschines in honour of St. Mary, and granted by liim to the 
cell of St. Bees. The to^vn has about fifteen hundred inhabitants, and the land yields 
large quantities of ii-on ore, wliich is sent to Whitehaven unsmelted, and thence shipped to 
South Wales. That pretty river runnmg by is the Ehen or Enna, wluch falls out of 
Ennerdale Lake into the sea, almost side by side with the Calder. 

^ It was built about the beginning of the twelfth centiuy by William de Mesclmies, 
brother to the mighty Ranulph, who gave him the barony of Copeland, which included all 
the country between the sea and the rivers Duddon and Derwent ; but in process of time, by 
marriage and other maimers of transfer, the property got divided, and the castle of 
Egremont passed into the hands of the de Lucys. General Wyndham is the present 
owner. 

221 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

beauty by the tall chimneys and mining villages scattered among the fruit- 
trees and corn-fields ; but still, as ever, enframed by the dark Ennerdale 
mountains and the long line of deep blue sea, with the changing clouds 
flung in fleecy masses on the mountain tops, or resting in burning ingots 
over the water world below. About the old ruins hangs the historical 
legend of the Two Brothers,^ known far too well to quote ; and the 
romance of the Boy of Egremont, the son, say some, of the Lady Alice 



^ Tliis anecdote of Denton's x^oints to the same story, differently related. " Tlie 
Baron of Egremont being taken prisoner beyond tlie seas by tlie Infidels, could not be 
redeemed without a great ransom ; and being for England, entered his brother or kinsman 
for his surety, promising, with all possible speed, to send him money to set Mm free ; but, 
upon his return to Egremont, he changed his mmd, and most unnaturally and unthaukfully 
suffered his brother to lie in prison, in great distress and extremitj', until his haii" was grown 
to an unusual length, like to a woman's haii'. The Pagans being out of hopes of the 
ransom, in great rage most cruelly hanged up tlieii* pledge, bindhig the long hair of liis 
head to a beam in the prison ; and tied his liands so belund him, that he could not reach 
the top where the knot was fastened, to loose himself. During his imprisonment, the 
Paynim's daughter became enamoured of him, and sought all good means for his 
deUverance, but could not enlarge him ; she, understanding of this last cruelty, entered his 
prison, and taldng her knife to cut the liak, bemg hastened, she cut the sldn of his head, so 
that mth the weight of his body he rent away the rest, and fell down to the earth half dead ; 
but she presently took him up, causmg surgeons to attend him secretly, till he recovered his 
former health, beauty, and strength ; and so entreated her father for him, that he set him at 
Liberty. Then, desii'ous to revenge his brother's ingratitude, he got leave to depart to his 
country, and took home with hun the Hatterell (scalp lock) of his hair, rent off as aforesaid, 
and a bugle-horn, which he commonly used to carry about him. When he was in England, 
where he shortly arrived, coming toward Egremont Castle, about noontide of the day, when 
his brother was at dinner, he blew his bugle-horn, wlaicli, says the tradition, the Baron 
presently acknowledged, and thereby conjectured his brother's return; then sending his 
friends and servants to learn his brother's mind to hun, and how he had escaped, they 
brought back the report of aU the miserable torment which he had endured ; which so 
astonished the Baron (half dead before -with the shamefiil remembrance of his disloyalty and 
breach of promise), that he abandoned aU company, and would not look on his brother till 
his just i^a-ath was pacified by diligent entreaty of the fiiends. And to be sure of liis 
brother's future Idndness, he gave the Lorrlshij) of Milium to him and his heirs for ever. 
Whereupon the first Lords of Milium gave for then- arms the Horn and the Hatterell." 

222 



CALDER ABBEY, EGREMONT, AND ENNERDALE. 

de Romili of Keswick, but about whose personality '^ there is some doubt, 
antiquarians never agreeing. Still the story remains the same, and the 
connection of the de Romilis with Egremont, "the Mount of Sorrow," is 
undoubted. For the rest, Wordsworth's readers and lovers know all that 
can be said. 

Two miles and a half from Egremont, but nearer to Calder Bridge, 
is the village of Beckermet, Avhere another tragical tradition is attached 
to a place called Wotobank, but which reads as if the story had been made 
to account for the name. There was once a certain Lord of Beckermet, 



® We mil give the account as we find it. " The Lady Ahce had two sons, the younger 
of whom, from the place of his birth, Avas called " the Boy of Egremond," and who, 
outlivong an elder brother, became the last hope of his family. She had also three daughters, 
Cecil}'-, Amabil, and Avice, who, on the death of then- sur\dvhag brother, fell heirs to this 
extensive heritage, which, after their mother's decease, was accordingly parted among them. 
Her son, who was named "William, is said to have been drowned on liis return from hunting 
or hawldng as he crossed the river Wharf, near Barden Tower in Craven. The accuracy 
of this account, though admitted to be true so far as the death hj drowning of a scion of 
Romili's house, is, however, doubted by that popular antiquarian writer. Doctor Whitaker, 
who states that the drowned son of the Lady AUce or Aaliza was a party and witness to the 
charter of translation to Bolton, in 1154, of the canons of the priory of Embsay, founded 
in 1121 by William le Meschin and Cecilia his ^'^ife. Besides, as the boy of Egremond was 
alive in 1160, and a partaker in the rebellion of the Pictish Celts of Scotland, of which the 
object was to set liini on the throne as the rightful heir, the lucid archaeologist is of opinion 
that the story refers to one of the sons (both of whom died young) of Cecilia le ]\Ieschin, 
grandmother of Lady Alice. Be this as it may, the generally received version of the tale 
affirais that the young lord's grejdiound, being tied to his girdle by a leash, hung back as 
its master sprang across the deep chasm, through which the waters pour with resistless 
force, and, thus checked in his leap, the unfoi-tunate Romili fell into the seething torrent, at 
a place called " The Strid," where he was drowmed. When the report of her bereavement 
reached his mother, borne by the attendant who beheld his untimely fate — and who, wishing 
to break the pitiful tidings as softly as possible, inquired in language whose phraseology in 
the present day is almost unintelligible, "What is good for a bootless bene ?— meaning 
thereby, "What remains when prayer is useless?" — tradition avers, that apprehending 
from the retiirn of the falconer alone, with despair pictm-ed on his countenance, that some 
great calamity had befallen her son, her answer was couched in that memorable archaism, 
" Bootless bayl brings endless sorrow." 

22.3 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

who one day went out hunting wolves, accompanied hy his lady and a lordly 
retinue. The "ardour of the chase" separated him from his wife, who 
was soon missing from the cavalcade, but after a search was found lying 
dead on the side of a hill, with a wolf devouring her. In the agony of 
his sorrow the husband cried out, "Woe to this bank!" and succeeding 
ages crystallized the cry, which at this day is the name of a pretty modern 
house built on the site of the poor lady's untimely deathbed. There is also 
another story attached to Beckermet, of a gayer character. About four miles 
south of Bout in Eskdale, lies a lonely tarn Avith a rocky islet in the 
middle, called Devoke Water ; and three-quarters of a mile from Devoke 
Water are some remains, generally called Barnscar, or the Cit}^ of Barnscar, 
which folks say are the remains of a Danish city, though no historical 
record confirms that idea. However, it Avas a city of some kind, for 
silver coins have been found there ; and when Hutchinson wrote his 
history, the character of the buildings seems to have been more easily 
traced than now ; for he speaks of Avails and a main street, with several 
cross streets, and an ancient road from Ulpha to Bavenglass as quite well 
made out ; but noAV there are merely small piles of stones set up on a 
very desolate bit of fell, and you may belieA^e them to have been a city of 
human inhabitants if you like. The popular belief further is, that the 
Danes peopled this Barnscar in something of the old Sabine manner, 
making a raid on Beckermet and Drigg,^ Avith forcible union consequent ; so 
that when any sudden friendship or love-making springs up between tAvo 
young people in this part of the Avorld, they are said to "go together like 
the lads of Drigg and the lasses of Beckermet." 

From Egremont down to Ennerdale the road passes over the fell, rich 
in gorse and bramble and great bunches of ^^elloAv ragAvort, with splashes 
of bronzed and blood-red bracken and purple tufts of vetch for compen- 
sating colours, till it comes doAvn to Ennerdale Bridge, and thence on 



CALDER ABBF.Y, EGREilONT, AXD ENXERDALE. 




ENl;TBBn4.LE WATER ■ 



to the foot of tlie lake. The square top of Herdhouse stands well forward 
as you round the common road or go down the steep hill which leads to 
the boathouse ; whence the Ennerdale valley is at its best. At the head 
of the dale stands the Pillar,^° the steepest and craggiest of all the mountains, 
till one thousand eight hundred and twenty-six deemed the English Jnngfrau, 
our maiden mountain inaccessible, but now owning to nearly a dozen con- 
querors ; each traveller who has actually reached the top writing his name on a 
slip of paper which he places in a bottle left in the crevice of a rock for the 
purpose. So at least goes the story, which we could not verify by personal 
observation. It is a magnificent-looking mountain ; the crowning rock, a 
great grey striated column which fires all one's ambition to surmount. By 
it is the Steeple, followed l)y the Haycocks, with a sharp little bit peeping 
up like a child's pert voice among the grave elders ; and then comes the 



" You see 3-011 precipice ; it wears the shape 
Of a vast building, made of many crags ; 
And in the midst is one particular rock, 
That rises like a column from the vale. 
Whence b_v our shepherds it is called the Pillar." 

WoRDSWOliTH. 



225 



G a 



THE LAKE COUNTKY. 

fine broad sweep of Kevelin, ftillin^- into tliat of Crag Fell — Iron Crag 
behind, and the Angler's Crag below. On the left are Black Sail and Bed 
Pike and the distant point of Grasmoor ; Latterbarrow, a little green 
knoll, thrusting its feet into the water, is followed by Windsor Crag — a small 
bit of screes — and Bowness Knot, fellow comrade and of like nature to 
itself; next are the long slopes of Bannerfell, leading over to Floutern 
Tarn on Blake Fell ; and, quite at the back, looking towards the sea, 
one of the last of the wavelets thrown up in this mountain tide, the Knock 
o' Murton Hill, a smooth round protuberance bulging out on the plain like 
a great green wen. 

All the Ennerdale mountains are of the same nature ; a kind of craggy 
moorland, capital for sportsmen ; but, save in the sheltered nooks at the foot, 
Avliere are patches of forward land and good crops enough, no cultivation 
anywhere. The place is wilder even than Wastdale ; more lonely and austere 
if less sublime ; at the head wonderfully noble, with a majesty of mountain 
unusual. But it is not lovely, taking that word to mean an admixture of 
softness with the grandeur: not even when "on the lake," which is such 
a soft and lovely experience every^vhere else. An extraordinary collection of 
small stones in this lake is called "the island." How they ever came 
there, or why they should be there at all, surpasses the intellects of the 
best guessers ; as also why a fine rift in the rock on Crag Fell should 
be called Robin Hood's Chair. Scores of names and initials are carved, 
modo Anglice, on the walls of this rift ; some of them dating so far back 
as the year one thousand seven hundred. Jenny Crag Well, under Kevelin, 
is another of the notabilities of Ennerdale. It is a spring of perfectly pure 
Avater, cool in summer and unfrozen in winter ; of the same temperature 
the year round ; never failing whatever the drought, and never muddied 
whatever the rainfall ; one of the many such to be found in the lake country. 

Kevelin itself is an important mountain, all things considered. The 
whole land hereabouts being more or less impregnated with iron ore, even 
Kevelin has had its secret chambers rifled with the rest, and has been forced 

226 



CALDEli ABBEY, EGREMONT, AND ENNERDALE. 

to give up its treasures. Lately, they have begun to work for iron ore on 
Bowness Knot — the yield in Kevelin failing, or the directors quarrelling 
among themselves, or some other of the many casualties of mining property 
having befallen both works and yield, so that it has returned to its earlier 
and humbler function — that of feeding bees. Every summer and autumn 
hundreds of hives are brought up to Ennerdale and set on Revelin, for the 
bees to get strength and sustenance before winter time. Carts come in the 
early morning laden with beehives, and "a vast o' good honey gets shakt 
oot ont' road." A certain wall on the mountain is called Bee Wall End; 
and the honey gathered fi-om the heather hereabouts is their Hymettan 
honey to the north-country people. 

The head of the dale flows up into the old closed barren sweep, with the 
Liza running through ; the pretty, clear, bright little Liza starting with a 
laugh from her birthplace on Great Gable, and laughing to the end, where she 
loses herself in the Big Water. But though presenting many of the ordinary 
features of the dale, it has some special and noble characteristics of its own ; 
and the Avalk over Blacksail to Wastwater by Gillerthwaite, and between 
Kirkfell and the Pillar, and Kirkfell and Yewbarrow, into Mosedale valley, is 
one of the finest in the country- — one of the wildest as well, and to the 
inexperienced, of no contemptible danger. Scarf Gap to Buttermere is not 
so bad ; but the mountain path over by Floutern Tarn and Blake Fell to 
Lowes Water, is a thing not to be attempted by the ignorant or unwary : 
such a wild, lost bit of travel as it is ! — when the eager mountain storms 
come on, like great white wolves raging over the heights and hollows, a 
perilous way even to the guides themselves, and to the stranger too often fatal. 
More stories are told of travellers lost about the Ennerdale paths and passes 
than in any other part of the country, the distances between point and point 
not being long — which is a temptation ; and the ways apparently easy — which 
is another temptation ; but under any obliteration, or disguisement by storni;, 
proving utterly unreliable and destructive. 

Ennerdale is the least knoAvn, and, at the present time,, the least likely to 

227 G G 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

be visited of all the lakes. Indeed, it can have only its own special sifting of 
visitors, for the carriage-road to the foot goes no farther than the Boat-House ; 
at least what follows is very indifferent and leads nowhere ; and the Boat-House 
itself, the only place of accommodation, cannot house many visitors at a time, 
and has no attractions for fine folks at all. The other approaches to the lake 
are either severe pony roads, as the Black Sail and Scarf Gap passes, impossible 
to all save good walkers and hardy riders ; or mere mountain paths, like the 
Bannerdale Fell way over to Flouteru, or by Iron Crag and Tong Fell down to 
Scalderskew and Calder. So that until Ennerdale has the benefit of carriage 
ways along its banks, it will remain comparatively a terra incognita to the 
tourist world, save those who can brave a rough pass, and those who care only 
to gape away an hour at the foot while their horses are baiting at the inn. 
And this is what butterfly people generally do ; driving over from Lowes Water 
through Lamplugh ^^ to Ennerdale Bridge, or from Wastwater by Egremout, 
or the fell road higher up ; to be for ever after quite contented with the belief 
that they have seen Ennerdale, and have " done " the lake effectively. 

Those who want variety in scenery would do well to pass from Enner- 
dale to St. Bees. A more thorough diversity could scarcely be found, from 
the lonely mountain lake imprisoned -within its iron barriers, through flowery 
country lanes, and by dirty and ugly mining villages, down to the mighty 
sea — the term and bound of all things. The character and spirit of the 
way change strangely as you go on. When you leave Ennerdale you pass 
first through the dear old country roads, narrow, tortuous, bordered with 
hedges full of flowers — in this early autumn time silvered with great bind- 
weed, azured with liairl)ells passing into tbe deeper purple of the tufted 
vetch, and gilded with hawkweed, bright yellow vetchling, and heavy ragwort 
— country roads diversified by stretches of copse wood and the sudden windings 



'* Lampliigli, said to mean the wet dale, being a corruption of Glan-fillougli or Glan- 
plougii. The nuuior and estates were held by the Lamplughs, a race of valorous gentlemen, 
all of A^hom -\^('re knighted on the field. 



22S 



CALDER ABBEY, EGREMONT, AND ENNERDALE. 

of the Ekeii — by pretty bridges such as that of Wath Bridge, with the fine 
span of arch so customary to this country — by picturesque cottages, and 
healthy, honest faces ; but gradually losing all these features as the way leads 
you into the mining district. And then you come to a new order of things ; 
to a village like Cleator, formal and ugly, with evil faces and squalid looks 
haunting every door and window ; with ragged children ; girls and women 
unkempt, flaring, and untidy ; men lounging and vicious, sometimes brutal- 
looking for a change ; in a word, with the outward signs, so fatal and so 
easily recognized, of a trade that excludes healthy physical influences, and 
where bodily waste is supplied by sensual excess. They all look sodden and 
hard-worked, and in the whole of the two villages you will pass through you 
will not perhaps see one well-looking woman — meaning by that, modest and 
cleanly — nor one really cared-for child. The very colour of the earth, too, is 
altered from that of the lake-land proper. The rich browns and pure greys 
of the mountains have given place to a coarse, hard red, which ruddles every- 
thing to the same ochreous tint alike. The roads are red and the houses are 
red, the carts and the horses and the slouching canvas-clothed men and the 
bare-footed children — they are all daubed and saturated with red. About 
the Big Bigg works, where the landslip took place on the high road one day, 
the redness is singularly offensive ; but by-and-by the mining district yields 
to the clean, close-shorn uplands of the sea-side ; and when you mount the 
last hill, leading to St. Bees, you are in another world. 

You cannot see the sea-line yet, because of the intervening headland, 
but if you are fortunate you may see instead wliEit will serve for many minutes 
of pleasant wonder. The sky in a long straight line of deep blue, flecked 
with warm-grey clouds standing as it seems far above it, at times so perfectly 
represents the sea, that it is long before one can be convinced it is only 
cloud and sky, and not the sea beneath. The heavens overhead are upheaped 
Avitli clouds, while on the horizon this band of intensest cobalt lies, like the 
ocean, perfectly still and unruffled, with the clouds standing above it. The 
illusion lasts till a deep cut in the Head lets in a vieAV of the real sea, with 

229 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

the Scotch mountains and the Isle of Man; and then the Fata Morgana 
vanishes, and when the sun sinks below a broad blood-red band that fades off 
to divinest grey, through purple and violet and yellow and green and blue, 
to the great white clouds above, you have one of Nature's most beautiful 
phantasmagoria replaced by one of her noblest realities. 








lb-Li; OF MAN — PROM ST. BEES 




ST. BEES AND THE SEA COAST 



CHAPTER XV 



St. Bees^ is the favourite watering-place of the lake district; and it is 
easy to understand that it should be preferred to Allonby or Parton, or any 
other station on the coast, because of the greater amount of beauty and poetry 



' St. Bees is said to take its name from Bega or Beza, according to some, Begotli 
(beg — og, little, young) — a sweet Irish saint who was shipwrecked on the coast, and who, in 
gratitude for the holy love that heard her prayer, founded, about the year 650, a small 
monastery, where afterwards a chiu'ch was built in memory of her — the Lord of Egremont 
giving her all the land wdiere the snow should fall on St. John's Eve : and it fell in a broad, 
bold band, as of course it would. The " aforesaid rehgious house ha-vong been destroyed by 
the Danes, was restored by William le Meschines (the Lord of Egremont), son of P^anulph, 
and brother of Ranulph le Meschines, first Earl of Cumberland after the Conquest, and 
made a cell of a prior and six Benedictine monks to the Abbey of St. Mary at York." 
William further " granted to God and St. Mary of York and St. Bega, and to the monks 
serving God there, all the woods withm their boimdaries, and everything ^nthin the same, 
except hart and hind, boar and hawk ; and all liberties which he himself had in Coupland, 
'■ 231 



THE LAKE COtJNTRY. 

associated with it. Its foundations laid in legend and romance, but Avitli a 
positive history to lift it out of cloud-land into the world of fact ; rich in both 
land and sea treasures, in the floAvers of the field" and in those of the wave ; with 
sunsets unequalled on any sea-line in England ; with a wide belt of sound sand, 
and a bed of rock full of anemones and star-fish, jelly-fish, and all manner of 
odd sea creatures ; with pretty country walks, and a glorious sea-beach ; what 
is wanting for its reputation ? and what to its power of fascination ? So near 
to Ennerdale, too, as it is, it seems as if a ray of mountain loveliness has 
flashed across it ; as if the sweet influences of the hills and lakes have flowed 
down even to the great sea, and that the breezes which bring back health and 
strength and the freshness of the free skies, go out from the land laden with 
beauty and delight. It is strange how much the sentiment of the mountains 
lingers round St. Bees, and how we find it to be the true and real outlet of the 
lake system ; the last expression, if not the culminating point. 

Very sweet are the close flowery lanes about, and gloriously noble the 
wide reach of downs, with the sea shining l)elow, and the great burning sun 



as well on land as on tlie water, both salt and. fresli." At the Dissolution, Archbishop Grindal 
(who introduced the tamarisk into England) — Fullei-'s " pious Grmdal," and other men's 
" perfidious prelate" — founded a free grammar school in the place of the Benedictine cell, 
where the youths of Cumberland and Westmoreland might learn the Humanities at small 
charges and to large profits : his spur thereto being that he was a nati^'e of Hensmgham, a 
small village close at hand. This Avas in 1587, by a charter got from Queen Elizabetli ; 
and in later days a college Avas established, under the patronage of Lord Lonsdale, for the 
education of our northern priests and curates of small incomes and unimportant cures. At 
the Dissolution, EdAA'ard VI. granted the manor of St. Bees to Sir Thomas Chaloner, front 
whom it passed to the W3"berghs ; and from them, by foreclosed mortgage, to Lord Lonsdale 
about the year 1003. Of the old church only the toAver is Saxon ; the rest is florid 
Gothic. It is built of the red sandstone of the neighbourhood ; and at the east end are some 
fine carvings. The nave is used as the parisli church, the cross aisle (used to be) the place 
of burial ; and there is a wooden efligy of Anthony, the last of tlie Lords Lucie or Lucy, 
of Egremont, whicli is very ugly and very curious. 

^ " Who climbs on hands and knees. 

For some rare plant, yon headband of St. Bees." 
The great clift" called Bees Head, or Bamliead, says Goxigh, abounds with sea-fowl. 

232 



ST. bp:es and the sea coast. 

in the cloudless heaven ahove. All so silent, too ! — as silent as on the 
mountain tops; the only breaks to the stillness there being the cry of a 
sheep, or the music of the falling waters within the ghylls, while here it is 
the song of the skylark, or the lowing of the cattle pastured on the downs — 
those wide shadowless downs seething in the summer sun. And all the 
more impressive is this stillness, because of the life and movement we know 
of, but do not recognise below. We know that the waves are breaking with 
sounding murmurs against the rocks and on the shore, though now the whole 
glittering expanse has neither sound nor movement ; that the ships, tying 
seemingly as idly as "painted ships upon a painted ocean," are full of human 
life and industry, freighted with passions as well as with cargoes, loud with 
hope and fear and love and sorrow, as well as with flapping sails and twanging 
cordage ; we know that the villages and towns shining white and still in the 
scene, are plenished with varied life ; and that the hum of men and the 
whirling wheels of commerce are echoing in the lower lands, while we stand, 
silent and alone, beyond them all ; we know all this, and therefore the stillness 
of those great sea-downs falls on the heart with a powerful fulness of emotion, 
deeper and stronger than any speech or sound could give. 

There is a choice of pleasant ways about St. Bees. One carries you 
by the breezy downs, where the elastic grass is beaded with white mush- 
room balls, and starred with flowers — sea-pinks and thrift and lavender 
and rest-harrow and countless others — Avhence you look over to the sea dotted 
with ships, some standing close in shore, their white sails looking like 
large wings, and others gliding noiselessly away over the edge of creation, 
bound one knows not for what distant port ; through heath and pleasant 
pasturage, down to the head of that strange red rift gemmed with agates and 
pretty pebbles, called Fleswick Bay. Here the St. Bees and Whitehaven 
people make pic-nic parties, finding every requisite for that agreeable pastime ; 
for a little stream of fresh water, good for many uses, meanders through the 
glen ; and flat blocks of red freestone serve for tables, and round smooth 
stones for seats ; and a grim but none the less convenient cave, once doubtless 

233 H H 



THE LAKE COUXTKY, 

given up to unhallowed kegs of brandy and casks of whiskey overproof and 
innocent of excise duties, but which now young couples are fond of exploring, 
offers facilities for one essential element in a happy pic-nic to get itself enacted. 
So that on the whole Fleswick Bay is the most popular place for miles round ; 
and in truth worth a long hour's visit, without a merry pic-nic party or a pair 
of bright eyes as incentives. 

The way off the cliffs is down a true gipsy lane, where you have to do 
a little scrambling : not ■ more than is good for you, but still, at one point, 
rather a pinch for the stately and many-fleshed ; the red walls of rock on 
either side are covered with a small fine green bordering of moss, and flowers 
grow on the ledges — chamomile with its hair-like leaves, samphire, and thrift. 
The cows, pasturing on the uplands, come down the red glen to drink at 
the sweet streamlet of fresh water, and to stand knee-deep in the warm, 
smooth sea ; and you have to drive them boisterously before you when 
you go back, if you return by the way of the downs, for the rift is too 
narrow for you and those four-footed beasts, in comfortable intermingling 
together. The stones are water- worn and ribbed and channelled, and you can 
S3e where the waves have washed up in their remorseless strength for centuries 
past, and how the once sharp ril)S of the earth are worn away under that 
incessant sweep ; and you can learn, if you will, something of the law of 
wave force, which is the same, v/ith a difference, as what you have learnt 
in the lake wave ; with a difference : for the sea wave is a long, steady, 
and incessant sweep, regular and rhythmic, and the lake wave is irregular 
and interrupted — partial in its flow and of uncertain boundary — so that lake 
rocks, though they get worn and channelled too, do not show such persistent 
action as either river stones or sea-side rocks. 

From Fleswick you may go back either by the road or the downs, or, 
at low tide, by the rocks and the sea-shore ; or you may go farther on 
the Whitehaven side, to the lighthouse, and see what fine arrangements 
they have there for the guidance into safety of the ships wandering in 
foo- or darkness about the pathless dangers of the St. Bees headland, and 

234 



ST. BEES AND THE SKA COAST. 

how the very perfection of cleanhness is attained in that tall, chimney- 
looking building — a cleanliness almost approaching to genius, it is so full 
of watchfulness and thought.'' The road and the downs are both delightful 
ways, but by the sea-shore is the best of the three; for there you not 
only pass under magnificent cliffs, where the sea birds are sitting in the sun 
or wheeling round in heavy flight screaming to their young within their 
nests, where you have the sensation of being at the roots of. creation, and 
under the shadow of the remorseless grandeur of Nature ; but you also come 
upon a bed of rocks, where you may lose yourself for as many hours as 
the tide will give you free- warren and the right of search. And how many 
soever these hours may be, you will not have seen half the wonders of that 
marvellous world. 

Limpets and periwinkles, and small gray cirrhipeds and great yellow 
whelks and deep blue mussels — some of them of singular smallness — with 
their long beards like slender rootlets beaded with fragments of stone and 
seaweed, cling all about ; some fastened to the lifeless rock with a look of 
ancient holding as if they had sat there since before the flood, and some 
entangled in among the ulva — that fine green weed hanging down from the 
rocks like hair newly smoothed and combed, as if those great round stones 
were the heads of enchanted mermen, and that smooth growth of weed 
their comely locks. And there are broad bands of purple sea- weed like 
great ribbons floating about ; and little coralline tufts of the daintiest growth 
and loveliest tint — red and pink and white, and some as if dyed in the royal 
purple, and some as if newly taken from a vat of liquid amber. And there 
are sea grapes, which, however, are nothing but cuttle-fish eggs ; and sea 
barberries, which are the eggs of the purpura whelk ; and mermaid's purses, 
which, if not empty, hold a very ugly creature as their treasure ; and masses 
of bladder wrack, which you pop with a sounding noise and great squirt 

'^ Camden did not e\'cu mention Wliiteliaven in his accomits of tlie nortliern counties ; 
and in 15G6, Gougli says there were but six houses and only one pickard of eight or nine 
tons belonging. 

235 H H 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

of sea water; and balls of lioney-combed froth like desiccated sponges or 
consolidated foam, which are the worn-out egg clusters of the whelk; and 
other wonderful things to be picked up and studied by those caring to 
know what lies about them. 

And then there are the live things : little brown crabs scuttling away all 
on one side, and queer little shrimps diving about in great perplexity of soul ; 
and, sticking underneath the rocks, so that you must go down on your hands 
and knees to find them, are some wet, shining, deep-coloured masses. Of all 
colours are those wet shining masses, and of all patterns : some like big 
carbuncles of dark blood-red ; and others of emerald-green ; and some of dull 
olive-green, like the oriental peridot ; some like chrysolites, with a kind of 
brown struck through the yellow shine ; and some pale rose colour, like 
delicate pink topazes : mere fleshy masses now, without life or motion or 
change ; but take them tenderly from their rocks — tenderly, and yet autho- 
ritatively — slipping underneath some thin and harmless instrument, like a 
small paper-knife, or even, if you have a steady hand and are careful not to 
injure the base of your prize, the blade of a pocket-knife itself — feed them 
■with some of that fine green hair-weed, and some of that purple growth as 
well, and give them plenty of sunlight and fresh sea-water — and then see 
what your monochromatic bits of sea-flesh become. That brown lump throws 
out a million yellowed anthers, each threaded with a bright blue bead at 
the base, while round the inner circle is another edging of bright blue, 
contracting or enlarging, paling or deepening, at the creature's will. That 
little pale rose topaz puts on an outer robe all pearl strung — rows of small 
spots, like seed pearls, banding it round ; and the large, solid, blood-red gout 
puffs itself out till it looks a congeries of bladders of a transparent white shot 
with pink. The yellow nodule shows a deep violet lining ; and they all 
expand like flowers, and turn to the sun for joy and increase. They are 
indeed living flowers ; flowers that move their petals and anthers at will, and 
that open and close themselves from formless buds to full-blown blossoms also 
at will ; flowers that have all manner of lovely markings about their edges, 

236 ■ 



ST. BEES AND THE SEA COAST. 

and coloured hearts and changing petals ; flowers that are never two hours 
the same, hut that put on their crowns and royal mantles in the sun with 
more than the peacock's pride, and then sit in the ashes with dust-coloured 
Cinderella, sullen and disarrayed ; flowers that change like things in a fairy 
tale gifted with powers of transformation. Our rock hed here is rich in 
these sea anemones; "crass" and "mess" growing to enormous sizes and 
in large quantities. 

Then there are star-fishes, queer leathery heings with orange painted 
hacks, and a dull and lifeless look altogether till they are thrown into a 
pool of sea-water or cast upon their hacks, when they show the wealth 
of heauty with which Nature has dowered them in rich excess. Myriads 
of small, fine, pellucid threads unfold themselves from the inside of the 
rays, moving ahout in a strange kind of order as if making patterns or 
geometric figures— now all clustered together in a pearly cloud, and now 
fringing the edges with the daintiest beads, like small moonstones or colour- 
less opals. The silent, ceaseless wandering of these fragile threads, which are 
the creature's feet with which it walks over sand and rocks and treads 
the surface of the wave with the certainty, if not the force, of a giant, 
has a very fairy-like appearance. Yet no one seems to care much for these 
five-rayed, orange-backed, star-fish, though they are wonderfully interesting 
beasts, if you have patience enough to watch how they accommodate them- 
selves to circumstances, and how they fit their thick bodies into all manner 
of inequalities, and how they change themselves from mere dead-alive leathery 
bits of inanimation into the most exquisitely jewelled surfaces, instinct with 
life and feeling and movement. Ah, truly, not the meanest thing of Nature 
but has its secret world of loveliness and wonder, if we only look for it. 

Then, on the sands, you will see lying flat plates of dirty-looking 
jelly, torn and ragged at the edges, covered with sand, and altogether of 
a disreputable appearance. Take one up carefully — not touching him with 
your naked hand — and fling him into a shallow pool left by the receding 
tide among the rocks. In a few moments your dirty plate of jelly will 

237 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

expand into the most lovely disc — strij^ed and barred with brilliant colours, 
shooting out long threads that wave and play in the water as the creature 
slowly sways itself to and fro. It is a jelly-fish — a Medusa — a sea-nettle — 
one of the acephalte — that you have captured, and hundreds of them are 
probably lying on the beach, mere battered and bruised masses, but needing 
only to be taken back to their own sea world to become again things of 
loveliness and grace unequalled. 

These, and many more than these, you will find among those green 
and black-haired rocks by the blufi" headland ; there where the escarp- 
ment, split into great parallel blocks of the richest red, wears such a 
different aspect to the sea-beach pavement smoothed and rounded into 
gigantic pebbles ; yet both are of the same formation ; only the one shows 
the varied action of the wind and rain and frost, and the other the uniform 
sweep and swell of wave, for ever and for ever repeated. 

When the tide has run down the sands are ribbed and channelled in 
the old form, like the markings on the Screes at Wastwater ; and you see 
again the leaf, both the coralline growth and the fan shape, which the 
downward pour of water on a yielding surface always gives. And farther 
on, you most likely fall against a thick length of iron cable, now bent 
and twisted like a doll's wire, telling its sad tale of wreck and disaster, 
and noble lives entombed and lost to humanity for ever. Nothing gives a 
more vivid idea of the tremendous force of the waves than a cast-up iron 
cable, not one strand of which you can bend, now all twisted and unravelled 
as if it had been made of thread. 

The sea beach and the rocks and the cliffs, with their pleasant downs 
above — the cliff of Baruth and Tall Tomlyn, as the Head is affectionately 
called — are of course the chief features of interest about St. Bees ; but 
there are others for the stranger beside. There is Grindal's college * with 



■* " Edmund CTiindull, born at St. Bees, bred Scholar, Fellow, and Master of Pembroke 
Hiill, ill Cambridge, and Proctoui- of the Universit}' ; " in Mary's reign lie fled beyond seas; 

238 



ST. BEES AND THE SEA COAST. 

its antiquities ; and the giant's burying-place ^ — if you can find it ; and the 
villages round about ; and the lanes and fields full of wild flowers ; and 
the strange Scalegill pond, the birth of which did so much damage, or 
rather was coincident with so much damage — for, on the first of March, 
one thousand seven hundi'ed and ninety-two, the ground in a meadow 
belonging to Lord Lonsdale suddenly sank several feet, and immediately 
after the water rushed out, falling through the fracture as into a funnel, 
drowning the Scalegill colliery, and making the Scalegill pond in question. 
And there is Whitehaven, for those who care to see a town given up to 
coals and fish ; and then there is the sea-coast, and the stations leading 
gradually on to Coniston and Furness. 

Lonely and desolate are those small grey stations on the sea-shore ; 
without history and without trade ; spare in population and poor in 
circumstance ; devoid of all that makes a western civilized home more 
beautiful than a savage wigwam ; but ever with the dark blue mountain 
boundary behind, and the wide and fathomless sea, with its teeming life 
and its gorgeous sunsets, its power and its unrest, in front. Nethertown 
and Braystones and Sellafield — close to which, however, the Calder escapes 
into the wider world of waters, so that dusty, stony, desolate little Sellafield 

has that interest if none other — Seascales and Drigg, whence the lasses of 

_ 
by Elizabeth lie was made Bisliop of London, Arclibisliop of York and Canterbniy ; a man 
of learning and piety, jnodesty and single life : lie offended Leicester when he would not let 
him have Lambeth House, and forbade the Earl's phj^sician from marrying another man's 
wife, so he was undermuied with the queen, and had lost his archbishopric but for the 
queen's relentmg. He died July 6th, 1683. " Worldty wealth he cared not for, desirmg 
only to malie hoth ends meet ; and as for that httle that lapipcd over, he gave it to pious uses in 
both Universities, and the foundmg of a fair Free-school at St. Bees, the place of his nati'sit}'." 
^ In the library of the Dean and Chapter of CarHsle is an account of the finding a 
giant at St. Bees, in the year 1601, just before Christmas time: it is in MacheU's MSS., 
and tells how that " he the said Gyant was four yards and a half long, and was in complete 
armour ; that his teeth were six inches long, and that he was Iniried four yards deep in the 
ground, AA'hich is now a cornfield. His armour, sword, and battle-axe are at Mr. Sand's, 
of Redington (RoUington), and at Mr. Wjdier's, at St. Bees." 

239 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

Beckermet got their lads — what are they all but the poorest and most pitiful 
sea-side hamlets to be seen anywhere ? There is not a paragraph of history 
to be written on them all. 

Eavenglass ^ is better. Not that the little town is much, but some 
of the traditions are interesting. The three rivers, the Irt, the Mite, and 
the Esk, fall into the sea near together, forming an estuary called Esk 
Meals,''' which, at low tide, is a wide bed of sand, and at high tide a 
grand and foaming river ; and there are fine oysters to be had here, which 
to some would prove the greatest attraction of all. The three rivers, fol- 
lowed to their sources, would lead you into very noble company. The 
Irt would take you up to Wastwater, Scawfell, and Lingmell, and, 
if you chose to add the track of the Bleng which falls into it just abovfe 
Santon Bridge, you would get into the wilds of Ponsonby Fells, Seatallan, 
and the Haycock, where you might lose yourself between Ennerdale and 



^ Anciently part of the barony of Egi'emont, till the manor was granted by Richard 
Lucy to the Pennmgtons, ancestors of the present Lord Muncaster. Richard Lncy, 
however, obtained for Ravengias the privileges of a fair and a market from King John, 
and the fau* is still held by the Earl of Egremont or his representative on the eve, the day, 
and the morrow of St. James. " On the first day the Earl or his proxy attends, 
accompanied by the serjeant of the borough of Egremont, -with the insignia caUed the Bow 
of Egi'emont, by the foresters, with their bows and arrows, and by all the tenants, of the 
forest of Copeland, who hold their estates by the special service of attenduig the Earl or 
his representative during Ravenglass fair. On the tliiixl day, at noon, the Earl's officers 
and tenants of the forest depart after proclamation, and Lord Muncaster and his tenants 
take formal repossession of the place, when the day is concluded by horseracing and various 
rustic diversions. The children of Ravenglass manor go about from house to house 
singing for the bounty they were wont to have in old King Edward's days." They get a 
pie or twoj)ence at each house. Denton says that R,avenglass was anciently a place of 
ferns, and that the name is a corruption of the Irish Rainigh Fernsald. 

■^ " Eskmeals is a plain, low, dry ground, at the foot of the Esk, between the moimtams 
and the sea, which sort of grounds, lying under mountams and promontories uito, or at the 
sea, are commonly caUed Meeles or Meiles, as it were the entrance or mouth fi'om the sea 
into a river or such hke place, as the MeUd or (query of?) Esk. Kirksanton MeU, Cartmeil, 
Mealholme, the Mule of Galloway, and Millom itself, and many other such hke." 

240 



ST. BEES AND THE SEA COAST. 

Wastwater, and be days and even weeks before you found yourself and 
civilization again. The Mite would carry you up into wild and desolate 
Mitredale under the Muncaster Fells, and face to face with Scawfell, and 
finally to the back of the Screes, just esca23ing Burnmoor Tarn Avhere one 
of the tributaries of the Esk has its head-quarters. As for that same 
sweet winding Esk, to follow it would take you to Devoke water, and into 
green Eskdale, to Stanley Ghyll and Birker Force, to Harter Fell and 
Hard Knot and Bow Fell, and finally to Scawfell, close under the 
shadow of the Pike, where it has its highest spring and earliest cradle. 
The dale itself would carry you over by Hard Knot and Wrynose and 
Fell Foot, with a diversion to Blea Tarn, down into Little Langdale and 
Colwith Force ; where, however, you have no business at this moment, if you 
want to go by the way of the sea-coast, under the lee of Black Combe to 
Broughton ; a way worth seeing, if only for the sake of the purple background 
of hills always standing between you and the sky — Scawfell topped far above 
the rest, and the Screes drawing the noblest line against the grey clouds. 
Very beautiful, too, is it to see the valleys opening up towards the hills, Mitre- 
dale and Eskdale, with Birker and Harter Fells behind, and Muncaster 
Fells below; and grander still the way becomes as you go on towards 
Black Combe from Bootle.^ The golden oats and purple heather make a 
lovely contrast between fell and field ; and the hedges look like golden 
lines, all yellowed in the early autumn by the great square ragwort growing 
here in wonderful profusion ; and then you get to the foot of Black 
Combe 9 — that grand culmination of the mountain system on the southern 



** Boot hill — Beacon hill, so some of the efymologists say : others Bothal, from 
cromlechs, or Bethel, the House of God. In some old records it is Bodele. It is the 
smallest market to^vn in England, and has a market cross. 

^ Some superstitions, and a few odd customs, still exist ahout Black Comhe. It is said 
there that the bees sing, and the labouring ox kneels in adoration at twelve o'clock at night on 
Christmas Eve ; and that what quarter soever a bull Hes facing, on Allhalloween, thence 
will blow the prevailing winter wind; and Hob Thross, " a body all ower rough," like the 
Brownie of old time and Milton's lubber fiend, has still, we believe, private quarters some- 

241 I I 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

side, the buttress, the advanced guard, the foremost sentinel of all. Black 
Combe, indeed, has the widest range of any — fourteen counties being to 
be seen from it, and as far as Talk-on-the-Hill, in Staffordshire, a hundred 
miles off. It is no rare thing to see Ireland too — before the sun rises, 
not after. Of the same geological formation as Skiddaw,^*^ it is still more 
marked in its condition, isolated as it is from the green slate at its back, 
and the red sandstone in front; and, with its fine black head,^^ deserves 
Avell its name, and regal sovereignty of the south. But if its head is 
black, the fells belonging are bronzed with seeding gorse — brown where the 
gorse and the still green bracken flow into each other, and reddened gold 
where the fern-leaves have begun to change. The changing bracken, and the 



where iii the lowly dwelhngs about Black Combe ; or had, before the raihoad came to sweep 
him away into the limbo of the unproYed and the impractical. Newly married people do 
not Iniy corn for then- first sowing about Black Combe ; they go tlu-ough the coimtry side, 
begging a handful here and a handful there, till their friends and neighbours have filled 
their sack, and given them their future crop : else sorrow a loaf of bread would they rear, 
were they to give money for their gxam. They are called corulaiters when on this 
interesting mission : laiting meaning seekmg or looking for. On Christmas morning the local 
dish hereabouts is hack pudding, made of sheep's heart, suet, and dried fruits. Servants 
are hired only at Martmmas and Whitsuntide ; money is lent only at Candlemas ; and the 
dead are always waked. 

'" It is of Skiddaw slate ; the only outcome of that special geological formation on 
this side. At the simimit is a cavity, as of an extinct crater, out of a corner whereof a 
rivulet flows into Whicham, with vitrifications as at Bowscale. The same Idnd of crater is 
on Coniston Old Man, and Helvellyn, but on each of these is a lake at the mouth of the 
cavity. 

" Black Combe is Literally Black Head. It is in the lordsliip of Millom, and where is 
still a " castle," then " Millom Castle," which is now partly a farmhouse and partly a ridn. 
The lordsliip belonged to William de Meschines, and was given by hmi, in the reign of 
Henry I., to a de Boyvihe, who exercised "jura regaUa" there, including the pleasant 
privilege of erecting a gaUows, A^ith the right to hang men thereon. From the de BojwiUes, 
who were related to the Lords of Egremont, it passed to the Huddlestons, and then 
in 1714 to the Earl of Lonsdale for twenty thousand pounds. It was disparked only as 
lately as 1802. During the Parliamentary wars, the Rev. Nathaniel Ward, vicar of 
Staindrop, who had entere 1 the royal army, was slam at Millom Castle. 

242 



ST. BEES AND THE SEA COAST. 

purple heather, and the undertone of grey crag, make, in the early autumn 
days, a glorious arrangement of hill-side colouring, more ripely gorgeous 
than the spring, and more varied than the summer. Indeed, the early autumn 
time is the grandest of all for scenic effects in the lake district ; the time 
when the atmosphere lends the greatest charm, and when vegetation is at its 
loveliest — emphatically the fittest time for this sea-side route, and for watching 
the hills and hollows and lights and shadows of the grand old solitary sentinel 
glooming in the sun, itself the fitting witness, in its massiveness and 
mystery, of the ancient spirits ^" still hovering round its base. 

From Bootle you come to the mouth of the Duddon, seeing where the 
railroad bridge is flung across the wide Duddon sands, ^^ like a mere thread 
suspended between earth and sky — seeing, too, where the old monks, in their 
rich valley of Furness, gave motive and action, and a rule whereby the lay 
world was forced to live, lording it over the lake country with somewhat a 
heavy hand if a beneficent, and caring as much, we must confess, for their own 



'^ Many Druiclical circles exist in this district, to be best seen by the Ordnance maps. 
At Annaside twelve stones in a circle, which were once, it is natural to suppose, a temple 
like that at Keswick; near Gutterby are thirty stones in a cu'cle called Kii-kstones, and two 
hundred yards off is a cairn. The Standing Stones are three miles larther south ; these are 
eight big blocks, which once formed part of a cii'cle twenty-five yards in diameter ; in 
Millom grounds are the imperfect remains of a circle ; about a mile east of Black Combe is 
the Sunken Kirk ; and a mile off, another circle, smaller. All these are assumed to be 
Druidical remains ; and probably the reasons which led the monks to Furness previously 
caused the bards and priests of Druidism to estabhsh their temples and celebrate their rites 
in the same district. 

'■^ The Lancashh-e side of the estuary is called Dimnerholme-sand-side. The Cumber- 
land side is Barrick RaUes. The Duddon has a speciality in its cocldes, which are reputed 
the best and finest of any in the north country ; though both the Lancaster and Leven 
sands produce very largely iii size and quantity, yet the " fi-esli Dutton cocldes," as they are 
called, bear the palm ov^er both, and help to the support of many a poor family by the sea- 
side. The calculation a few years ago was of 8,553,600 cockles in a month, allowing ninety 
to the quart. Sandford (about 1675) speaks of the Duddon as " a brave river, where the 
famousest Cockles of all England is gathered in the sands, scraped out mth hooks lilve 
sickles, and brave salmons and flookcs, the bravest in England, hung up and dried like 
bacon." 

J?i? 112 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 



pleasant temporalities as for the spiritual graces of their vassals. But for 
the present you must leave Furness Abbey on one side, until you have 
learnt what Donnerdale and Eskdale, Wrynose, Little Langdale, and 
Coniston have to show you. 




BLACK COM33E 




IK M BIPKb BRIDGE 



CHAPTER XVI 



Broughton^ is the " chief town" of the Dudclon ; the metropoHs and capital, 



* Brougliton belonged to tlie cle Brouglitoiis, — the grant confirmed to EdA\'ard de 
Broughtou by Wm. de Lancastre III. to be held b}^ knightly service and a rent — amount 
unknown. When Lambert Simnel landed at the Pile of Foudrey in 1487, the Duchess of 
Burgundy, sister to the deposed king and so-caUed aunt to the adventurer, prevailed on Six- 
Thomas Brougliton to join the invaders landing there probably through some such agree- 
ment '\\'ith the fair plotter. After the defeat at Stoke, near Coven tiy. Sir Thomas escaped, 
and found an asylum with some of his tenantry at Withersack, in AVestmoreland, '\^•here 
he died without issue in 14!)5. And so the grand old family, Avhich liad Uvcd unstinted from 
the Saxon times, through the Norman Conquest and the troubles of the York and Lancaster 
disturbances, fell for an adventurer. 

245 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

whence post-horses can he taken seven miles up the road, as far as Newfield ; 
or a couple of miles farther to Birks Brig ; or, indeed, over the pass entirely, 
if not particular in the matter of carriage-springs, and if a sharp climb one 
way, or a steep pitch the other, can be faced without wincing. The road 
cannot be called a normal carriage-road, let it be remembered ; still, it is 
practicable ; but whether riding or driving or walking, your way up the 
Duddon is to start from Broughton, fronting the hills, and leaving the sands 
and the plains and the sea behind you. 

The river first fallen upon is only the Lickle,^ a side branch of the 
greater stream, coming from the heathery bee-haunted Furness Fells, but not 
the real thing yet for a few paces. There is no mistaking the Duddon 
when you do see it ; for you feel it at once to be a pathway ^ up into a 
world of beauty and strength unusual and supreme, and that the waters 
foaming under the wooded heights that bank it up on the left, while 
tender copses and bright fields lead down to it on the right, are sure to 
carry you to a birthplace equal to their out-fall. Very rich is the way for 
the first long part— sweet and flowery and pastoral ; reminding one some- 
what of the broken picturesqueness of Great Langdale, but not so primitive ; 
with Broughton Tower rearing itself up through its screen of trees, and 
Duddon Grove displaying its luxury in the midst of simplicity like an 
exotic plant blowing among our English wild-flowers ; with pretty homes 
and hamlets, and pleasant signs of work and industry by the road-side, but 
getting wilder and less rich, if more noble, as you proceed. Till, Avhen you 



^ Often erroneously set down as the Little in maps and charts. 

^ " Now it has assumed something of the port and strength of a river; the water, too, 
which like Cotton's favourite Dove, was ' black at its som-ce, because it sx^rings from the 
mosses,' has, like it, become ' so clarified by the addition of several clear springs, bigger than 
itself, which gush out of the limestone rocks, that in a few miles you will find it one of the 
pui-est crystaUine springs you have seen.' Wordsworth says, ' the water is perfectly 
pellucid, through which in many places is seen, to a great depth, its bed of rock or blue 
gravel, which gives to the water itself an exquisitely cerulean colour.' " — Thorne's Rambles 
Inj Rivers. 

246 



UP THE DUDDON. 

are at Ulpha (which you must call Oopha, if you want to be understood), 
you have come into quite untrimmed life again, and have got your first grip 
on the mountains. For you stand some feet higher above the sea at Ulpha 
Kirk, ("to the pilgrim's eye as welcome as a star,")* than you did at 
Broughton in the morning. 

The scenery hereabouts is wonderfully grand, and from a certain point 
in the road you get one of the finest views of your day. Cove and Blakerigg 
and Walna Scar and Seathwaite Fell, all purple and gold, rise up before 
you; while dusky Wrynose and steep-sided Hard Knot break through the 
clouds in the extreme distance, and the sea lies like a sheet of silver at 
your feet. A marvellously beautiful view, turn where you will ; to the 
richness of the open valley and the sea ; to the white track of river ; to the 
sterner distance before you, or the desolateness of the hill-side, too bleak 
for cultivation and too poor for human life. And tempting even to steady- 
headed travellers are the many by-roads leading to all manner of hidden 
beauty. At one place a grey, roughly-marked road leads over Wallabarrow 
to Eskdale. (There was a good wheel track before you came to Ulpha, but 
this steep, fell- side cat's climb has fascinations far superior to the plain, 
broad, rolling way.) By another cat's climb you would be taken right into 
the heart of the Furness Fells, and over to Coniston by the help of the 
sky and the sun as your compass only ; but if you are bound for the track 
"up the Duddon," you will have to rein in your curiosity with a strong 
hand, and away by the beaten track to Newfield, which is Seathwaite, and 
the home of Wordsworth's Wonderful Walker ; wiio, by the way — pity 
that it should be so ! pity that any idol whatever should have its clay feet 
smashed ! — was not so wonderful after all, but simply a shrewd and thrifty 
" statesman-priest," who knew how to turn an honest penny with the best 



The Kii'k of Uljiha to the pilgrim's eye 

Is welcome as a star that doth present 

Its shilling forehead through the peaceful rent 

Of a black cloud diffused through half the sky." — Sonnet xxxi. 

247 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

of them, and who, by this thrift and divided genius for turning honest 
pennies, managed to leave a handsome mass of savings out of an apparently 
beggarly income. His cottage parsonage still exists, of the humblest archi- 
tecture but beautified by flowers and climbing roses ; and the cloth lining 
of his pew, woven by his own hand, is a local lion of the place ; his tombstone 
is in the quiet churchyard, where, under the shadow of the yew-tree and 
near to an old-fashioned sun-dial, the world is told by the record on a 
plain blue slab that Robert Walker died the 25th day of June, 1802, in 
the ninety-third year of his age and the sixty-seventh of his curacy at 
Seathwaite ; and that Anne, his wife, also died this same year of grace 1802, 
on the 28tli day of January, in the ninety-third year of her age. A right 
worthy and venerable couple, but in no wise superior to many others of the 
ancient parson class in the mountain district, save in the ability to make 
money by a variety of sources, even including that of unlicensed beer- 
selling. 

At Seathwaite comes down the Seathwaite brook, bringing with it the 
freshness and cheerfulness of its birthplace on breezy Dow Crag for one 
portion, and from Seathwaite Tarn on Seathwaite Fells for the other. This 
is the brook spoken of by Wordsworth as desecrated by the erection of a 
mill for spinning yarn upon its banks, but which he would not have much 
cause to lament now — at least, for the unpicturesqueness of use and neatness ; 
for the old mill is a tangled ruin ; and the poet's ghost may rest appeased. 
Poor Wordsworth ! how he fretted and fidgeted his soul at the inevitable 
march of events, and the throwing open to the world at large the hidden 
mountain beauties he wanted so earnestly to keep to himself and the 
shepherds ! 

Going up this supplementary valley, or gorge, of the Seathwaite beck, 
passing under Under Crag as if to ascend Walna Scar, you come upon 
wild and beautiful nooks — hidden recesses, where it seems to you that no 
one has ever been before ; lovely hiding-places, which you and the mountain 
spirits alone know of, and Avhich tbe sins and follies of humanity have 

248 



UP THE DUDDON. 

never polluted. So it seems to you, going up that wild gorge of the little 
beck. And so does it seem to you also when sitting under the lee of that 
tall rock called emphatically The Pen, or The Hill, according to the speech 
of our forefathers, the Painted Ones ; with Wallabarrow on your left, and 
the foaming river below. This is the place where the pensive stranger 
wandered out for a noonday stroll while dinner was preparing at the little 
inn. Coming back sooner than was expected, and asked, " Where he had 
been?" he answered innocently, "As far as it was finished;" not under- 
standing the beauty, which to him was simple chaos. 

And here a divergence must be made. Go off the road and scramble down 
to the bed of the Duddon, and see how wildly and how grandly the rocks 
have been riven and tossed about by frost and wind and the pitiless pene- 
tration of rain. Deep and fierce lies the river below, marking its way by 
a thousand white cascades, leaping all obstacles with a bound, and flinging 
up its cap of spray and foam with a wild hurrah and a furious hurling 
onwards ; and high and broken towers Wallabarrow Crag above you ; and 
dark and full of fear the mountains at the head, which you have to learn 
and conquer before the day is out. And when you have wandered about 
the rocks for as long as you may and dare, you must come back to the road 
again ; if, indeed, you be not minded to follow the Duddon step by step, 
and never quit its side till you have come to its birthplace ; which you may 
do if you have stout sinews, and the summer day is long, and you are not 
finical in the matter of your pavement. But, perhaps, you had better come 
back to the road and Nettleslack Bridge, unless you wish to be bogged and 
belated. 

To the right a sharp clear way is traced over Walna Scar — that great 
broken crag with Seathwaite Tarn in the dip and Wetherlam behind. This 
leads to Coniston ; is, indeed, the recognized way of communication between 
the Duddon and Coniston ; and a noble way it is ! By the Walna Scar 
quarries, and near to Blind Tarn under Dow Crag — a streamless lakelet set 
in the moss like a thing lost, with never an outlet beyond; by Black Fell, 

249 K K 



THE LAKE COUNTEY. 

and across Asligill and Torver Becks, till you come down under Yewdale Crag 
to Coniston, just where the railroad ends, on the west side of the lake ; — if 
you want one of the best fell-side walks that can he named, take this some 
day when you have perfectly learnt the Duddon in its main artery, and so 
have leisure to study the ramifications. But not to-day. 

Then on again, having now lost the river within the rocks until you 
pass Wallaharrow, when there it is again, beautiful as ever, under the crags, 
the birds singing in the trees, and the cows pasturing in the fields — a perfect 
picture of peace and sweetness, till you come to a greenish-grey lane which 
leads you down to some stepping-stones. Not the famous stones ; only a 
few " water- teeth " for the shepherds, where, however, you may stand and 
see the grandeur of the rift — a sheer chasm where the water rushes in un- 
checked force, the fell all in gold and purpled tones, while isolated crags come 
out in cool grey, and the background of wild mountains of a deep bloomy 
purple. A very noticeable bit this of the Duddon ; perhaps the loveliest and 
most noticeable of all, with the stormy river rushing so fiercely forward to 
bury itself, like many a life too eager and too passionate, within the depths 
of the rock, and behind the gates of death and bondage. Only, with no 
eternity of death for the river, as so often for the life ; for the rock gates 
open again beyond, and the Duddon strides through them into the light 
of life and the joy of the sun once more, for many a long and lovely mile 
before its last issue into the waste of waters by Duddon Sands. 

A long dale, and a wild one, this which you are now traversing, unin- 
habited save at rare intervals, when you fall upon a few poor fell-side dwellings ; 
at least not fall upon them, for oftentimes they are off the line of such " high 
road " as it is, and well-nigh inaccessible at certain seasons and in certain 
weathers ; but great is the courage of the dalesmen, and wonderful their 
power of isolation, sustaining, as they so often do, a life of almost unbroken 
solitude, with minds not uncultivated, and manners not rude if less than 
soft. They form a race apart, and are the most interesting of the mountain 
folk. But wild and lonely as this dale is, how full of incident ! Here you 

250 



UP THE DUDDON. 

come to Goldrill Crag^ and Wordsworth's Fairy Chasm, where the roots of the 
rock are of a pure blue below the water, though only of a warm dove-colour 
in the sunlight ; where the water is no longer a river but a broken cascade ; 
and where the wild fells, backed by the wilder mountains — Harter Fell and 
Birker Fell on the one side, the Old Man and Wetherlam and Walna Scar 
on the other, Wrynose and Grey Friars in front — seem the very term of all 
human life. 

Then on again to Birks Bridge, a stone bridge flung across a black 
rift where the stones are hollowed into deep " pots," all the angles rounded, 
and all asperities softened — honeycombed through and through — one reck 
specially worn aAvay into an arch through which the river leaps merrily. 
The water has a strange sound. The surging in and out these holes gives 
a weird kind of anger to its flow, both by sound and look ; and the life and 
tumult here make the next reach — a stony, marshy, flat, stagnant rather 
than running — still more dead and dull. But the fell-side and the river 
meadows are covered with sweet-gale, and the loveliest bog plants are to be 
found here in their season ; beautifying the desolation and peopling the 
solitude. Else it is all a mere waste, doing nothing, bearing nothing, giving 
nothing towards the great commonwealth of human life ; its only use the 
scanty pasturage to be had off the fells for a few sheep and shabby "beasts," 
— the wildest, loneliest, most lifeless place yet seen. But by-and-by you 
come to some stepping-stones — Wordsworth's stepping-stones — whicb, of 
course, you go down to see and stand on, and sentimentalise about ; 

^ Green speaks of Ms escape from wliat miglit have been ratlier an embarrassing 
experience. Not long after lie and a fiiend had been sitting on a certain stone that rises 
out of the river under Goldrill crag, an immense fragment came do^^ai from above, and fell 
on the exact spot where they had been. It was in the night tune when it fell, and the 
shepherds were, natiu'ally, much alarmed, but did not discover tiU morning what the noise 
had meant. These shps and fractures are by no means uncommon in the lake cotmtry, 
where the frost splits the rocks mth such a clean and unseen fracture, that you have a ton's 
weight hanging loose above your head, held together by perhaps the last rootlets of a bunch 
of ling, without your knowing that it is anything but the sohd side of a rock, as firm as the 
earth itself. 

251 K K 2 



THE LAKE COUNTllY. 




" A zone 
Chosen for ornament — stone matclied "with stone 
In studied symmetry,^ with interspace 
For the clear waters to pursue their race 
Without restraint." 

and then you pass Black Hall ; and then you come to Cockley Bridge 
— Cocklety Brig, as the dalesmen call it — where the Eskdale Pass to the left 
joins your present road — Wrynose Pass before you. Mickledore Chasm is 
seen over where Burnmoor Tarn lies ; Scawfell and Scawfell Pike ranging 
to the left. If a storm is coming on, walking over the mountains with a slow 
and solemn tread, the fields below you, and the woods and crags, will all look 
doubly bright and full of colour in the grey of the coming shower ; the subtle 
darkness of background having the power to bring out to the utmost all the 
brighter tones in the landscape beyond. The wonderful vividness of colour 
against the blotted, misty, grey-clad hills, is one of the special atmospheric 
effects of the mountain district. It may be seen to a faint degree on the 
plains, but never as here. 

You have come twelve miles from Broughton when you stand on 
Cockley Beck Brig, and have eight more at the least before you land at 
Langdale. It is a long day's journey, adding the side excursions to the 
river, and wandering afield for any new beauty that may attract you. 



® " As harmonious in colour as symmetrical in form — of a delicate wliite, with the 
slightest admixture of blue." — Thorne's Rambles by Hirers. 



252 



UP THE DUDDON. 

And now you have your real mountain pass before you ; the steep shingly 
road; the sweep of the bird's wing, broken here, though, out of its true 
line, and heaped up with adventitious bones ; the wet and watery river side ; 
the jutting crags, the crossing stream, and the true mountain desolateness 
of all. The interminable dale that it looks, viewed which way you will ! 
backward to the sea, with the road and the river winding together, in 
harmony and completeness, if not in repetition ; or forward, to the barren 
fells and the crags above, and the grey chain of mountains below and 
against the sky ! But in due time you reach the top of the pass, where 
the Three Shire Stones ^ mark the point of junction of the three counties. 
And near the stones, among the oozy moss and bog, is the highest source 
of the Duddon ; a little pool of water welling silently up among the 
stones and moss, to become hereafter one of the most celebrated of the 
Lancashire rivers.^ And without being sentimental and absurd, it is impos- 

■^ Tlie " Three Sliire Stones" are something like a rude three-sided altar, mth the 
name of each coimty — Lancasliire, Westmoreland, and Cmnberland — carved on smoothed 
slabs let into each side, and facing according to the compass. A white pillar, with 
" W. F., 181G," on one side, and a bold " Lancashire" on the other, asserts the position of 
that county -^Aitli even more distinctness than the others. Young men not burdened with 
flesh, and possessing long hmbs, nisij stand in two counties, and touch the third at the same 
time, which is still held to be a noteworthy geographical feat. 

^ The venerable Harrison, chaplain to Lord Cohham, in a description of the Lancashne 
rivers, " nearly three hundred years ago," says: " Having passed the Leuen, or Corny- 
sandes, or Winander fall (for aU is one), I come to the Lew, wliich riseth at Lewicke 
chappell, and falleth into the sea beside Plumpton. The Ra\\d;her, descending out of Lowe 
Furnesse, hath two heads, whereof one cometh fi-o' Pennyton, the other by Uhnerstone 
Abbey, and joyning both in one chaneU, they hasten mto the sea, wliither all waters direct 
theyr voyage. Then come we to another rill south-west of Aldmgham, descending to 
Glaiston Castell, and Uliewyse the fourth that ryseth neare Lyndell, and runiung by Dawltu 
Castell and Furnesse Abbey, not farre from the Barow heade, it falleth into the sea ouer 
agamst Wauey and Wauey chappell, except myne aduertisements misleade me. The 
Dodon coiheth fro' the Shii-e stonehill bottome, and gohig by Black hil, Southwake, S. John's, 
Uffay parke, and Broughton, it falleth into the salt water betweene Kji-by and Mallum 
Castell, and thus we are now come imto the Ravenglasse point," where our authority quits 
the rivers of Lancashire. 

2.53 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

sible to see the insignificant, scarce definable source of a noble river without 
experiencing something more than mere delight in a fine prospect, or pleasure 
at a curious discovery. The analogy between it and our human life is so 
strong that we cannot choose but recognize it, with happy meditations or 
gloomy, according to the teaching of our lives, and the lessons learnt from 
experience. Bleak and dark and desert is this fell top — this cradle of that 
sunny reach below ; as if it is the crest of the last wave, where the only 
Beyond will be destruction. But as you go on, following now the rough 
marking of what was the old Kendal and Whitehaven road in the days 
when carts and railroads were not, and the universal pack-horse did the 
commercial carrying of all 'cross country traffic, you come upon Little Langdale 
Valley, lying in its beauty below you. In a short time you see Little Langdale 
Tarn, where the pass goes over by the Stake, the Pikes topping and ending 
that section of your view. For the rest there is a wild upheaval of mountains, 
and when you turn to the left, across Lingmoor, for high-lying Blea Tarn 
and Fell Foot, you are wandering in a corner of old chaos — a forgotten corner, 
never reduced to symmetry and order. 

Blea Tarn has one or two specialities. It is the scene of Wordsworth's 
Solitary — that one lonely house still there to make it yet more lonely — and 
the hill-sides round it are clothed with larch- wood ; almost the only instance 
in the country of wood growing about a real mountain tarn ; it lies in a 
more regularly formed basin, as if it had been made in a more compact 
and finished manner than its congeners, and the Pikes " that from some 
other dale peer into this," but more especially Gimmer Crag, look their 
best from here ; all of which give boggy, black, and desolate Blea Tarn a 
specific value, even beyond what belongs by right to a tarn ; the solitude 
and the distant heights that rise up over the immediate mountain wall, 
the crags and the free life, the wild prison that it is, and the yet more 
wild escape. There is a stronger, and, for its very strength, a tenderer and 
more chastened beauty, in the mountain shapes and lines in these most 
desolate places, than there is in even the richest luxuriance of cultivation. 

254 



UP THE DUDDON. 

Is it that they are the types of Christ-like resignation and Promethean patient 
fortitude, more beautiful than all the undulations of happiness and success ? 
and that when we see these lean, gaunt, lonely hills clustered round their 
dark and lonely tarns, with a grip of love all the stronger because unshared, 
we see a positive picture of man's soul, and the emblem of silent endurance, 
and the love that sometimes binds the strong and the unlovely together ? 

If you care to go down by Fell Foot and Wall End, you will come 
out nearly opposite to Dungeon Grhyll ; but if you want to see Little Langdale, 
and one or two lonely spots connected, come back again to the old road, 
simply knitting Blea Tarn in with the day's chain, making it a loop but 
not an ending. For this walk into Little Langdale and on to Colwith 
Force is something worth seeing. Every step of the way is lovely. The 
leafy lanes through belts of copsewood, with the valley below and the heavy 
mountains behind and on each side, are beautiful both in themselves and 
in what they show. Rich as the richest parts of the Midland counties, and 
grand as only mountain scenery can be, these wooded lanes are things to 
remember for ever, especially if seen in the autumn time, when the yellow 
leaves are scattered in showers of gold on the ground, and the sunlight, 
slanting across the trees, brings out all hues and tones possible to nature, 
from cobalt in the shadows to gold on the surface, and from gold, through 
orange, to blood-red crimson in the heart. 

The place of the powder-mills alone is a poem in itself, and the bridge 
across the Langdale Beck (the Brathay in its embryonic state,) lets you into 
such a scene of river loveliness as you will never forget all your life long. 
The river has made itself a pathway there, under the overhanging trees and 
down the steep fall of stones, which, in its one small bit of isolation, is 
unparalleled for beauty. Even the Greta in Brund Holme, even the Derwent 
in Borrowdale, or Grrisedale Beck, or the bright-eyed Gloldrill, or the Duddon 
itself, cannot surpass these few yards of river beauty at the back of the 
powder-mills as seen from Langdale Brig. 

Then through the primitive Alpine lanes, of which you have seen 

255 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

something before ; between woods and over hills, and diving down into 
valleys again, with the Brathay valley before you, and Loughrigg, and the 
back of Ked Bank Grasmere between it and Fairfield — with all the sweet 
incidents of a true country walk, till you come to Colwith Force fretting 
out its life under the crags and about the tree roots, while the great rocks look 
serenely down into the very heart of its turmoil, and the branches whisper 
to each other gently, and shake their leaves, light as the fall of baby 
fingers, on its troubled breast. The spray flies off as the fall leaps down 
from stone to stone, and the sun glints on it cheerily, and the huge 
mountains at the back, Wetherlam and the Old Man, send down their clouds 
and mists to swell the flow, which, in rainy times, is really grand. It is 
a leap in the river running between Little Langdale Tarn and Elterwater ; 
an heroic leap, plunging down its rocky rift with the fury of a wild Arab 
rushing to the plain. 

On the height above the Force, crossing Colwith Bridge, is a fine 
panorama of mountains. Wetherlam, big as an elephant and grim and 
w^olfish in appearance, is to the extreme left, and next it comes the oddly- 
shaped crest of Wrynose ; Bowfell between it and Lingmoor ; the highest 
point to the right is one of the Pikes, and Pavey Ark follows, while it 
lowers, the line : High Raise — Serjeant Man just peeping up above — Silver 
How, and the dip of Dunmail Eaise, are all in a cluster together; and then 
come Seat Sandal, Grisedale Pass, and Fairfield above. The rest are 
probably in the clouds, but the lower foreground crags are sure to come out 
fine and bold, and a bit of Elterwater shines in the sun to give animation 
to the landscape. 

And now the road becomes at every yard more beautiful. You are no 
longer among the mountains, but among the fells — the Tilberthwaite Fells 
— notoriously the most picturesque of all. Not an attempt at neatness ; not 
a sign of the intelligent landscape gardener anywhere ; a good road, newly 
made, and an old and indifferent one abandoned, the only marks of man's 
life at all ; not a house, not a garden, not a field, only the wildness of the 

256 



Ur THE DUDDON. 

fell-side, with the steep hill and the steep valley, and the blue crags feathered 
with ling and bracken and sullen juniper, with the crimsoned leaflets of the 
bilberry and the purple pods of the gorse ; little copses of elms and hazel 
by the wayside, the leaves all turned to fiery jewels in the autumn sun, with 
here and there a solitary thorn-tree, or an ash set high up among the rocks, 
or belted in with a chain of larch across the middle ; wild -flowers of all 
kinds, from the dainty scarlet pimpernel to the coarse-leaved prickly ox- 
tongue ; Wetherlam and the Old Man and Grrey Friars ever in the landscape, 
and glimpses of Black Combe and the sea to be had at intervals ; wildness, 
with nothing desolate about it, but only beauty and solitude ; this is the 
character of the way between Little Langdale and Coniston. It is like a 
mountain park or garden, run wild ; in its wildness bearing fruits and 
flowers, perhaps of little value, but still bearing both fruits and flowers, left 
to the grace of nature unchecked, not to barrenness and the disgrace of 
nature destroyed. Over by Oxenfell and Yewdale runs this beautiful fell-side 
road ; one of the richest, the most varied, and the most picturesque ; well 
worthy to be known and loved by all who care for the noblest kind of hill- 
side scenery, not necessarily including the hill-top. 

If you have wanted to include Eskdale^ in this walk "up the Duddon," 

^ Sj^ealdiig of Eskdale cliapelry, Hiitcliinson says, " Wakes and Doles are customary, 

and weddings, cliristenings, and funerals are always attended by the neighbours, sometimes 

to one hundred. The popular diversions are himting and cock-fighting." Winning the 

kail — in Scotland the brose, in West Cumberland Riding for the Ilibbon — is mentioned in 

a curious local poem by one Edward Chicken, parish clerk of St. John, Newcastle-on-Tpie ; 

and though not belonguag strictly to the present note, jet it may be included as an 

appendix : — 

" Four rustic Fellows went the while 

To kiss the Bride at the Church Stile : 

Then vig'rous mount their fetter'd Steeds^ 

To scourge them going, head and tail, 

To win what country call ' the kail.' " 
In the Westmoreland dialect we are told, the ceremony being over, " Awe raid haame 
fearful wele, and the youngans raaid for th' Pdbband, me Cuson Betty banged awth Lads, 
au gat it for sure." 

257 L L 



THE LAKE COU^'TKY. 

you must have either stxarted from Raveiiglass, or have turned l)ack on Hard 
Knot, or else have diverged midway over by Wallaharrow Crag, as you vs^ere 
told. If you have gone from Eavenglass you Avill have had a fine day's excur- 
sion. In the first place there is Muncaster Castle,^'' at the foot of the Muncaster 
Fells, dividing you from Mitredale ; and to those who care for grandeurs 
and the like, the castle will be a treat. Then there is Devoke Water, with 
the city of Barnscar (Bardskew and Barnsea), tempting the antiquarian with 
its strange old remains and suggestive fancies ; and then there is beer to 
be had at the " King of Prussia." And beer in a mountain ramble does 
not count for little. Indeed, the "King of Prussia" is an institution of 
such im]iortance that it is marked on the maps as a station equal in 
interest with Stanley Ghyll or Birker Force. Stanley Grhyll, by the way, 
is a stupid modernism. Dalegarth Force is the old name of the waterfall, 
and until the Stanleys of Ponsonby bought the property ; but if our fells 
and falls are to change their names according to the baptism of the lords 
of the manor for the time being, we shall have rather a confused geography 
for future generations to commit to memory. 

The name, however, cannot spoil the thing. Stanley Ghyll or Dalegarth 
Force, Avhat matters it ? here is one of the choice places of the earth. It 
is not the finest waterfall by any means (it is only sixty feet in fall), but 
it is the finest glen, and the view from the moss-house at the top is superb. 
A deep, dark, cool recess, where wild-flowers and ferns and bilberries grow 



''' ISIuiicaster has its Luck as well as Edeiihall, but the one has no pretension to tlie 
snpernaturalism of the other. The Musgraves got their Luck from the fames ; it was 
Llemy VI. who gave Sir John de Pennuigton his — a curiously ^^TOught glass cup in remem- 
hrance of the zeal ^^ith Avhich he had served him, and the fidelity ^^itll ^^ilich he had 
followed the Idngly fortmies, even when they were at theii' worst, and the head that wore a 
crown wanted a shelter, which who but Su- John siipplied ? The Fool of Muncaster, 
Thomas Skelton, was a man of note m his day, and his portrait is still to be seen in the 
castle. The boys of the district have preserved his memory in a certain game, wliich they 
call " Mad Tom of Mulcaster." The right name is ]\Iulcastra3 or Moelcastre, according to 
L)entou's MS., or Mealcastre, from the Meal on which it stood. 

2.')8 



UP THE DUDDON. 

in more than ordinary luxuriance ; a great steep rift, one side of which is 
bare crag, but the other covered Avith Avood through which the sun slants 
with brightest radiance ; a river as clear as a tremulous sheet of crystal flowing 
over its bed of rock and small fine golden sands ; and then the waving of the 
plumy birch and the greater greenness of the damp moss, step by step 
greener and more damp, till you come up to the fall ; the leap — the many 
leaps — the mad uproar, and the foaming waters, with those three frail bridges 
leading you across and across, till you have learnt every feature and have 
taken to heart every line — that is Dalegarth Force, such as you see it when 
you have got the key from the farmhouse — and have fee'd the keeper. It 
is something after the pattern of Ara, but smaller in volume and not so 
sheer in fall ; and of even grander accessories. Or perhaps they look grander 
here in thia narrow valley, where one has so lately left the long flat of 
sands and sea-side wastes, than they would if seen in the powerful nobleness 
of the larger mountain district. 

Eskdale can boast a very fair share of natural riches ; one of which is 
the green dale itself, with its glittering river winding like a silver snake 
through its midst ; while Dalegarth is a thing to remember for ever, to 
long for, and to love — as one loves a noble poem or a beautiful and suggestive 
story. Passing on from this cool recess, you follow next the road that takes 
you to Birker Force, a finely placed waterfall, coming, in its small beginning, 
from Low Birker Tarn out on Birker Fell. Wilder and less rich than 
Dalegarth, with more mountain strength and less woodland loveliness about 
it, broad and bounding, and with a fine volume of water, not high, yet 
inspiring, like a full-toned mountain song — Birker Force is as unlike to 
Dalegarth as the Highland chieftain is unlike the Lowland lord. Both are 
noble and both full of manhood ; but the one has added richness, not 
efieminacy, and the other has kept to his simplicity, which yet is not 
barrenness. They are well contrasted in tone and spirit ; and if mere 
words of description fail to give their picture, at least they can give thei]- 
meaning. For every place has its special meaning, and its secret sympathy 

259 L L 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

with liuman mood and circumstance ; and it needs no fanciful imagination, 
no aptness at idealisms, to read a page in liuman character, or to fashion out 
the conduct of a life in the aspect of a waterfall or the features of a 
mountain side. 

Then on by the road — a good highway as mountain paths go ; through 
patches of common land, where wayside bogs show rare mosses, and the 
rough places have the bristly ox-tongue as their treasure, where the ground 
is blue with harebells and the air alive with birds ; on, over the brow and 
under the crag, past the rock and the river, and in the shadow of the hill, 
till you come to where a long line of blue glitters in the autumn sunshine, 
and the sweet and tranquil waters of Coniston welcome you like a loving 
face upturned to yours. 




I'JiOM DUDDOM BBIDGB 




THE OLD MAN — FKf 



BBANTAOfM iD 



CONISTON AND HAWKSHEAD 



CHAPTER XVII 

It i« a strange fact that Conist«n,. which n,ay be tak.n a. the fiv«t of the 
lake series hj the visitors approaching fron. the south, anc, wl"cl. has dnee 
conrmunication by way, if not by ™l>icle, wUh all the rest, rs stm he U^ 
known and the least loved. Yet the scene., here is as beaut* as elsewh^e 
excepting, perhaps, the choicest parts about Keswick an ^^^J^ 
stand out as unique and inimitable. For there must always be he B 
with everything, and Nature, like man, has the purpl^_for_^^^oMre. 

'"^^^^^^^^^^^^■^^^^^'^^^^ °\!r !:ir :, t " tr::ri::::ss 

of places, Comston , ^^ ^^_^_^^^j .^ ._^ ^^^^ ,,.^y „.,th 

nf'""'c: Xr: « sC^'L.,. of its „»„. deft. an. eaves. a.l 
;rSe mSco. «oo<1 for oM-tnne f..Uves . ;----: XZ" 1- 
"-8b nuleea for t.at ^^iJZ:^^^^ "^ =^''--* "^^ '"^ ^^'=»' 

:m:-: ^r^t:": .ve„i ,.«. ...., ... .as .. K.„.sto„. 

26 I 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

cradles, if notliiug Letter tlian shabby linings, torn and jagged, for others. 
Yet Coniston Lake, that long and narrow- sheet of water stretching its six 
miles of blue between the fells, deserves a more generous appreciation than 
what it has met with, and a more popular acceptance. And now that it 
has a railroad probing its very heart, it is likely that lovers will come round 
it, as thickly as round Windermere and Derwentwater. 

Take the circuit round the lake, beginning at the Waterhead on the 
west side, and going southwards towards Furness, past the islands and by 
Brantwood on the east, as one example of the sweetness and the richness 
of the place. There is first that grand Old Man, at the feet of which you 
reverently walk, overshadowed by his huge crags as you pass through the 
ancient village of Church Coniston — one of those quaint villages with the 
flavour of old times about them, and the generous beautifying of nature 
around, so characteristic of our lake country. The old deer-j)ark, where 
once the lord held his high days of sport and revelry, and which has still 
the inheritance of richer foliage and nobler growths than belong elsewhere, 
is one of those flavourings : so is that ivied and venerable house, Coniston 
Hall,^ where the Flemings used to live, and which was the residence for a 



^ It is six miles lonu;', and from three-quarters to a mile in breadth, and contains the 
best char of all the lakes, as Ullswater has the worst and poorest. Even Corry bears 
testimony to tlus fact, when he says, " Our learned Clarencieux (Camden) was miposed 
upon when he was informed that the char was a fish peculiar to Winder Meer, since in 
Coningston Meer, mthin five (?) miles, a char much fairer and more serviceable is caught." 
Also the best black-faced mutton feeds on the Coniston Fells, which are the richest in mines, 
have the best slate, and are of most geological importance, of the whole lake district. 

^ The manor of Coniston passed, by the marriage of Elizabeth, daughter and heu'ess of 
Adam de Urs\\'ick, m the reign of Henry III., to Richard le Flemuig, and Coniston Hall 
became the family seat for seven generations. About the tenth year of Henry IV., Thomas 
le Fleming married Isabella, one of the four daughters and co-heiresses of Sir John 
de Lancastre, and acquired the manor of Rydal ; and for seven generations more Rydal and 
Coniston yied with each other «hich should hold the family seat, and whether it should be 
in Westmoreland or Lancashire. Eydal conquered. JMichael le Fleming, the founder of 
iiic family, liad mucli land and property about this neighbourhood, Imt he -was fond of 

262 



CONISTOX AND HAWKSIIEAD. 

time of the Countess of Pembroke — " Sidney's sister, Pembroke's mother," 
but which is now only a farmhouse famous for its sheep-chpjDing. Both of 
these places have a world of suggestive thought lying about them; of quite 
another character to what is awakened by the primitive hamlet of Torver 
farther on ; where was never a name of note, nor a family with spurs at 
their heels, nor " cote armoure " on their shields, but only sons of the soil — 
brave thralls and faithful serfs — whose descendants are, some of them, living 
on the same lands to this day, as brave, and happily somewhat better educated 
than their forbears. Here, at Torver, was once an old chapel, lately removed 
for one more suited to the ideas of the present day ; but which had a special 
interest in that it was consecrated by Archbishop Cranmer, and said to be 
the first place of Protestant worship consecrated in England. It is doubtless 
right that these relics should pass away, and yet one cannot refrain from a 
feeling of sorrow and untimely loss when they have gone. It is the sacrifice 
of sentiment to convenience ; and the sentiment seems to be the stronger 
fact of the two. The Black Beck of Torver is a beautiful episode in the 
day's ramble, and the Black Beck Falls, flowing down from the mountain's 
side and joining the Torver Beck which comes from Gait's Water lying 
under Dove or Dow or Dhu Crags, are worthy of all renown. But indeed 
these mountain cascades are so exquisite everywhere, that we might build 
shrines and say our orisons of praise impartially and equally by all. 

Then on, under the hoary fells, where gorse and bracken clothe the old 
bleached bones with grace and glory ; past Beacon Tarn, which, unless you 
have chosen the higher road from Oxenhouse, you must go out of your way 
to see, though it is not specially picturesque, being merely a well-sized pond 
lying tranquilly on the dark brown moors of Beacon Hill, and sending out 



excliangiiig his rights and estates. Thus, he gave " Eos, with its fishponds and members 
and appiu-tenances " for Berdesey and its fishponds ; " and he gave away Ursmck and its 
appiu'tenances, save the church. Muchlands was origmallj^ " Michael's Land," as Mucli 
Ursmck is only the corruption of Michael's Urswick : it is called Mychel-land ui the 
Denhy records — as the manor of Akhngham is called the manor of Muchland. 

263 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

a small thread of living water, known to the world as Beacon Beck, which 
joins the Crake at Bouthray Bridge ; then hy Water Yeat, and Arklid, and 
Low Nibthwaite, first turning to note the whole length of the lake shining 
like a bright blue ribbon from the copper sheds to the noble park at the 
head. You are not among the mountains at the foot of the lake ; only 
in the fell country, with the purple heights clustered against the sky in the 
distance, and nothing but whitened rocks or dark stretches of mossy uplands 
around you, bronzed or reddened as the growth upon them is dying fern 
or seeding gorse or the elfin bells of heath or heather. There, away to the 
south, lie the plains and the cities and the waste of sands and the eternal 
sea ; there the loud whirr of the factory and the rattle of the steam engine, 
the hoarse murmur of life concentrated, and the fierce struggle for existence 
and pre-eminence for ever going on ; and here, up to the north, is the love- 
liness of fell and flood, the noble peace of the mountain top, the grandeur 
of the mountain torrent, the sufficing space, and the breadth and power of 
true manhood : all emblemised in the glorious majesty of the Old Man, 
standing up against the west like a royal lord, with his court of lower nobles 
surrounding. Such a noble mass as he is, clothed now in this autumn time 
in purple and gold, with a crown of crimson if it is in the evening and the 
cloud wreaths are light and vapoury, but clothed ever with power and beauty, 
no matter what the season or the weather. 

And now you turn up the east side of the lake, seeing where the floating 
island (for Coniston could once boast of this phenomenon as well as Derwent- 
water and Esthwaite) got stranded among the reeds at Nibthwaite during a 
high wind and heavy flood, and has never been able to get off again ; passing 
by Gridiron or Peil or Montague Island as you choose, and then by Fir, or 
Knott's Island — sometimes island, sometimes promontory, according to the 
rain-gauge — where the wild balsam grows among the raspberries and black- 
berries, and where, on the road-side bank across the way, a very cloud of 
white convolvuluses hold up their "moonlight-coloured cups," and the grass 
of Parnassus shows its gold-green veins under its waxen skin. Then on 

264 



CONISTOI^ AND HAWKSHEAD. 

again, past pretty copses and over pleasant becks — one, the Black Beck, though 
not the "Black Beck of Torver " opposite — with a wide wealth of flowers by 
the wayside, and ever the noble mountain king to the left ; past Brantwood, 
which Wordsworth's seat, where the great poet sat pronouncing this the 
best view of the lake and the Old Man, has made classical ; past Tent Lodge, 
made classical, too, by the tragedy of poor Elizabeth Smith, who, in her last 
illness, used to be brought down to the lake-side here, and laid on her couch 
under a tent, whence the name of the house succeeding ; up steep hills and 
down sharp pitches, through copses and by fields,^ and past the hazel-tree 
where the toothwort grows under the stone at its root ; and so to the quaint 
and ancient village again — Church Coniston, at the foot of the Old Man. 
And here, it may be well to say, that there are two Conistons, though not 
two villages : Church Coniston on the west side of the lake, reaching from 
Yewdale, or Yellow, or Udale, or UUdale Beck to Torver, and backwards to 
Fell Foot — once a chapelry in Ulverston parish, but made parochial in 1586; 
and Monk Coniston on the east side, and at the head of the lake^ a chapelry 
in Hawkshead parish. 

There are very few traditions about Church Coniston, but such as they 
are, they may be had for the asking. For instance, there is that brawling, 
rocky Church Beck, where a young miner was — not drowned, but dashed to 
pieces before he had time to drovrn- — one dark night when out a-courting ; 
and there is Priest's Stile, so called it is said because an old priest died 
suddenly while crossing it, or, according to another " saga," which got iLs 
name from the frequency of the priest's visits to Coniston Hall, when the 
right of Whittlegait was part of his stipend, and the larder at the hall the 
most inviting ; for Priest's Stile leads to the Old Hall. Then there is 
Jenkin Syke, where poor Jenkin's dead body, enclosed in its coffin, slipped 
from the " sled " into the ditch, all unbeknown to the bearers until the}- 
came to Torver, when they turned back for their burden and found it in 
the "syke" or ditch just out of Coniston. This was in the days when 
Coniston had no burying-place of its own, but was obliged to send all its 

265 M M 



TriE LAKE COUNTRY. 

deceased to Ulverston for interment and Christian "happing up." And 
beside these far-away traditions, interesting only for the ghmpse they afford 
of the rougher ancient times, there is a certain classical savour remaining, 
for the Black Bull was the "Howf" where De Quincey established himself 
when he came to Coniston, and is therefore a fitting place of literary pilgrimage 
in the eyes of some. Though, after all, this is not much on which to found 
a Coniston Parnassus. 

Of walks about, and to, and from, Coniston, there are plenty ; and numerous 
excursions to be made into some of the finest and most striking scenery of 
the lake district. Tilberthwaite and the Langdales, Windermere, and even 
Derwentwater for the moderately strong who can take kindly to a mountain 
walk of over twenty miles, Furness Abbey and the Duddon ; these are just 
a few of the most noteworthy among a crowd of the desirable. Then there 
is the road to Broughton, by the west side of the lake and over by the foot 
of the Duddon fells ; but the better way is from Coniston to Seathwaite, over 
Walna Scar, and so down the Duddon — by the way you know. You do 
not know the Walna Scar road yet ; you have not yet mounted that " brant 
bit " rising so sharply out of the village — mounting by what is a good road 
enough in the beginning, but which soon goes off into rudeness as you creep 
higher up on the flank of the Old Man, and the farms and fields of the 
home-land sink lower. On the Avay — and when the way is merely a dry 
torrent bed, and well for you if dry — turn aside to the right, and steer 
your course among bogs and stones and over watercourses and through 
stretches of reedy grass, to Gait's Water, the progenitor of the turbulent 
Torver Beck, which, by-the-by, gets lost in the ground soon after its issue 
from the tarn ; and as you walk over the natural archway of moss and stones, 
you hear it bubbling and running beneath your feet down in the earth. The 
wildest of all the tarns is this of Gait's Water, hidden away under the bleak 
rocks of Dow Crags, like the very wreckage of creation and the spoils 
of a world foregone. Hemmed in on one side by a wall of precipice — 
black Avhere the shadow, of a dead ashen colour where the sun, lies on those 

2G6 



CONISTON AND IIAWKSHEAD. 

jagged columns and shivering screes — surrounded on another by a tumbled 
mass of dark grey stones, at the roots of which foxes make their homes, 
as the ravens used on the crest of the precipice — lying far away from all 
signs of man, with no outlet into the wider world beyond, no prospect of 
distant lands, no opening to softer scenes — it is the most weird-looking and 
imprisoned of all the tarns ; as if a ghoul or an Afrit was chained and fettered 
beneath its pitchy waters. In fact, it is a miniature Wastwater, as fierce 
and savage in degree if not in extent ; and if seen on a gloomy day, with 
the winter wind raving through the sky, or the sullen summer thunders 
muttering overhead, it is a place where it would not be matter of surprise 
if weak nerves lost their balance, and unsteady Avits were overset. Close at 
hand, too, to add to the weirdness and facility of terrifying imaginations, is 
what is locally known as the Giant's Cave ; a large deserted slate quarry, 
about which are some tremendous traditions of how it goes right through the 
very entrails of the Old Man, falling into the copper mines on its way, and 
coming out on the other side — a terrible place, filled with bogies and 
kobolds and gnomes and all manner of evil influences, and utterly impos- 
sible to be explored through all its extent with safety to life or limb ; so say 
the gobemouches of the district. 

Now ascend (if you can) the rocky ridge that divides you from Low 
Water — the highest of the Coniston tarns. Levers Water lying just below 
it — where the hairy (?) trout used to live ; a big monster very nearly as 
apocryphal as the Adam and Eve of Bowscale ; and see the ripple and the 
shadovi^ chase each other like smiles and sighs over its steel-grey face, and 
then scramble back to the main road again, where the view, even though 
familiar, will seem to you of divine sweetness by contrast with the savageness 
you have just left. 

There is Coniston lake from Waterhead to Nibthwaite and on by the 
shining Crake to the glittering sea beyond ; and there is Windermere with 
its islands like a nest full of young birds, and the pleasant line of the Leven 
running down to meet the Crake at the root of that rich tongue of land thrust 

267 M M 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

out between Morecambe Bay and tbe estuary of the Dudclon, one of the 
"papillae" of which is Furness Abbey; and there is Black Combe like a 
darkened Pharos built up against the sea ; and, if the air is clear, you may 
see the hills of the Isle of Man, St. Bees Head, and the Scotch mountains 
- — faintly : but at all times, save those of persistent gloom, you may 
see Bowfell and Great End out by Borrowdale, and Scawfell Pikes and 
Scawfell proper, and the Pillar and the other Ennerdale mountains ; and 
ever the sweet valleys lying peacefully at the giant feet bestriding them, and 
ever the glittering expanse of sea, with the long thin lines of dusky grey 
where the steamers are passing up and down. 

Then down the steep path to Seathwaite ; diverging on your way to 
Blind Tarn, that voiceless pool which no clear stream issuing therefrom 
reveals or expresses ; unique in this "blindness" and isolation; very different 
to its neighbour which sends out a mountain river every step of which is a 
cascade, and the voices of whose waters are noisy exceedingly, and of wonderful 
variety of modulation. Thence to the ruins on Black Fell, which arcli£eologists 
pronounce definitively to have been what Dan Birkett says they were, "the 
ruins of a city of t' ould ancient Britons," though they cannot date them 
quite accurately ; but which certain shrewd shepherds, without reverence, say 
are merely the remains of an abandoned "peat-scale," a building used for 
storing peats before carting them away for use in the farms and cottages, thus 
bringing into actual life Sir Walter's famous satire and rebuke. Then back 
to the road again — and stop to admire that little oasis of fields and farms, 
the first meeting of human habitation which befals 3"0u, and perhaps for that 
reason striking you as so specially sweet and homelike. And now on to New- 
field, by the rugged path and the leaping stream and the flowers and the ferns 
and the purple heather, and so to Broughton — if your will carries you there ; 
or by Wrynose and the Three Shire Stones, to Langdale — at your jjleasure. 

But the day of days at Coniston is the day spent on the Old Man, that 
big old patriarch of two thousand six hundred and fifty feet, with his "wife " 

26b 



CONISTON AND HAWKSHEAD. 

and "son" in liis arms, and Wetlierlam, his friend, by his side. You go 
up through Church Coniston, and by the old Wahia Scar road, past the 
blue slate quarry — where the birds' nests, built on the ledges, show 
desertedness and long disuse, even more eloquently than the tufts of ling 
and closeness of white heath bedstraw; and when a steep pull has set 3'ou 
well on to the fell, note — for they are worth noting with much love — 
the tossing, tumbling Boon Beck falls in the ghyll yonder — the Boon Beck 
being the joint production of Low Water and Levers Water, aided by a third 
anonymous stream forking that of Low Water. Then to the coppermines, 
with the yellow veins glittering like gold in the shining quartz, and where 
you may go through the whole process and mystery of mining, even to a 
descent inprofundum, and the pleasant chance of knocking your head against 
the roof and grazing your shoulders and elbows against the walls of the mine 
passages. In old times these mines were wrought on somewhat the same 
principles as those by which Hannibal cut his way through the Alps : the 
rocks were heated with fire, to the utmost heat attainable, then suddenly 
cooled with water, which caused them to split and crack sufficiently to admit 
the old workmen's rude wedges ; some of which, scarcely fit for a modern 
Christian's " darrack," have been found jammed into the rock. They use gun- 
powder and the ordinary process of blasting now ; generally without evil results, 
but sometimes to the destruction of the workman ; as Avitness that fatal cut called 
" Simon Nick," still to be seen in the face of a precipice not far off, where 
one luckless Simon once made his ill-omened nick for blasting, but got caught 
in a premature explosion and so was blown to eternity unawares. Refuse 
heaps are about the mouth of the mines, troughs and water-pools, broken 
beams and rusted iron, and all the litter and lumber belonging ; but they 
are not so desolate-looking as the Greenside mines at Ullswater, and have 
a more heartsome and inhabited appearance generally. And in truth they 
are inhabited ; and not only with human beings ; for they are also 
swarming with rats, which get sustained by some mysterious process of 
assimilation unexplained, seeing that they have nothing but quartz and 

269 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

copper to eat ; if they do not take to clay for a diversion. Higher up, and 
seemingly unconnected with the lower works, is a huge waterwheel, turning 
round as if for the benefit of the crows and ravens only ; hut in reality it 
hoists the kibbles in the mines below to a certain level, and does its business 
none the less effectually because remotely. 

Then, leaving the mines, a rough and steep road leading zigzag up 
the hill takes you to some more works at Paddy End, and on to Ivernal 
Crag; this last, a huge mass of solid rock with a face of broken precipice 
turned, threatening and impassable, against you. There is always a raven's 
nest on Kernal Crag. Let the shepherds kill one or even both the parent 
birds, with a nestful of younglings to look after — by which bereavement 
it is expected they will all perish and the world be rid of that generation, 
at least — so surely do other ravens appear and take the orphans under 
their charge. It is said to be impossible to exterminate the ravens on 
Kernal Crag — only one nest and one brood yearly, but a constant succession 
of foster-parents, and the orphans fed by strange maternal charity — let the 
shepherds shoot *' till their arms drop off." 

Then up and up, the way now becoming very steep, to the edge of 
Levers Water, the largest of all the tarns and one of the most beautiful, 
both in shape and position ; nearly round and measuring a mile in circum- 
ference, with copper-mines near, to the uses of which it is turned. It 
lies between the Old Man and Wetherlam, and is not far from Low Water, 
the highest of the Old Man's lakelets, and placed immediately under the 
highest point — Buckbarrow Crags surrounding and overtopping it. It is 
as famous for foxes as Gaits Water ; the fallen rocks affording the same kind 
of harbourage. And here it may be mentioned, what perhaps every one 
would not see for themselves even by looking at a map, that all the Waters 
on the Old Man lie to the west, and the Tarns to the north : though no 
one now knows why that distinction of terms was made. Now go along 
the bad road that you will find to the west of Levers Water ; see Oukrigg 
precipice ; toil up the side of a watercourse ; see Ghyll cove ; mount Brimfell, 

2:0 



CONISTON AND HAWKSHEAD. 

which you will find as stiff a bit of work as you can desire ; and then on to the 
narrow ledge of rock and fell which leads you to the top — " the varra topmost 
towerin' height," of the Old Man — the Alt Maen, as some people say it is 
righteously, and according to etymology — the Griant of Coniston Lake. 

And now see your view. It sweeps round, as the outline, from Lancaster 
to the Scottish hills, seen over Skiddaw but faintly, and from Crossfell to 
Ingleborough ; some indeed adding to the list Snowdon and Slieve Donard 
in L'eland. But these are the exceptionally clear-sighted who have made the 
ascent on exceptionally clear days, so are not to be taken as averages of 
what ordinary travellers may expect. Black Combe is there dark against the 
brightness, and Devoke Water filled yet with the fine fat trout, the fore- 
fathers of v/hich the merry monks of Furness brought from Italy, to help the 
lentils and dry bread of abstinence days ; Scawfell and Wastwater you see ; 
the Borrowdale hills in a confused, inextricable mass ; Skiddaw, Blencathra, 
and all the huge Helvellyn range, including Fairfield and Seat Sandal, Steel 
Fell, and the other lower heights ; Langdale Pikes and Stickle Tarn ; the 
Kirkstone Hills and High Street; 111 Bell; Windermere in fragments; and 
the sea beyond the valley. All these the eye takes in with loving admiration, 
while, lying seemingly close under you, are Seathwaite Tarn and the valley 
of the Duddon, Coniston Lake, and the houses and fields belonging, with the 
sparkling threads of running rivers, and the foam of the hill-side falls. And 
then, right against you, highest and grandest of all from where you stand, 
is the sober face of your companion, Wetherlam, and the mysteries of the 
Tarns and Waters not a stone's throw from you. 

Come down by the slate quarries again ; for almost all the mountain, 
where it is not copper, is of a fine blue roofing slate, of varying quality and 
of varying uses — for "London," "Country," "Tom," and "Peg," do not 
represent the same geological conditions or the same commercial value. Then 
see the Pudding Stone, that great travelled boulder of the like nature as the 
Borrowdale Bowder Stone ; see High and Low Crawberry, with Crawberry 
Hawse between, the Old Man's " Sons," those queer protuberant gemini, 

271 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

standing like massive heads crusted over with turf and stone ; see all that 
lies hefore and behind and around you, and then fall into the road again, 
thankful for the emotions learnt on the heart of Coniston Old Man. 

Another beautiful walk is to he had from Coniston to the Ferry 
(Windermere), passing by High Cross, Esthwaite Water, and Sawrey ; 
adding the ascent of Iron Keld off the old Ambleside-road, going by Tarn 
Hawse, and coming down by Borwick Lodge. From Iron Keld is to be had 
one of the finest views of the whole lake district, at the least expendi- 
ture of force and from the most unusual level. For you see the other 
mountain ranges, not from a commanding height and thus flattened and 
foreshortened, but breast-high and face to face, so that you can understand 
all their magnificence and rejoice in their relative positions and distinctive 
features of structure undiminished by any tricks of perspective. This view 
from Iron Keld is very little known ; it does not come into the programme 
of the ordinary lake tourist, and only a few of the more adventurous ever 
dream of exploring out-of-the-way places ; so that, save the immediate neigh- 
bours who ferret out all things strange or lovely in their locality, the marvels 
to be seen from Iron Keld are as though they were not.*' 

When you have seen as much as you have time for, come down into the 
wild fell-road again, noticing the gorgeous autumn colouring of the way, till 
you come to Hawkshead Hall, called Hawks Hall in old deeds, that low- 

* This is tlie roll-call of what you can see from the top of Iron Keld. Black Combe, 
the Old Man, Wetherlam, Wiynose, Crinlde Crags, Scawfell, Bowfell, Skiddaw, Helvellyn, 
Seat Sandal, Fairfield, Nab Scar, Rydal Park, Arnold Crag, Scandale, Kiikstone Pass, 
Red Screes, 111 Bell and Frosmck, the Kentmere Hills, Farleton Knot, Ingleborough, 
Wyresdale Fells, Morecambe Bay, the Furness Fells, Greenodd, Ulverston, and the Duddon 
again. This is the outline. In the inner circle — the middle distance — Coniston Lake, 
The Tarns on Borwick Moor, Yewdale and Oxenfell, Little Langdale, the Pikes and 
Fellfoot, Great Langdale, Elterwater, and Loughrigg Tarn and Fell, Ambleside, Winder- 
mere, Blellam Tarn, Bowness, Latterbarrow, Lindal Fell and Heald Brow, Hawkshead, 
and Esthwaite Water. 

272 



CONISTON AJND HAVVKESHEAD. 

browed ecclesiastical-looking old place, where the monks from Furness used 
to come at stated times to hold their manorial Court of Rights, looking after 
the temporalities while administering spiritual life and consolation and the 
righteous ordinances of the Church. It is a pleasantly placed old house, with 
noble trees about it, and the brawling Hawkshead beck running through the 
grounds ; and it stands well for a sketch, which can be made without difficulty, 
leaning against the stone wall fencing off the house and its appurtenances 
from the highway. Like all these old places where the church met the parish, 
and pocketed the proceeds, it is turned now to very low mundane uses, being 
merely a barn and " shippon," or barn and beast-place, instead of the lordly 
dwelling, and the holy, of old time- 
Then on to Hawkshead,^ where again the evidences of the past ^ meet you 
in the face, and where the spirit of the departed is mightier than that of the 
present. It is a desolate-looking town enough, bleak and uncomfortal)le, as if 
it wanted counterpanes and blankets on winter nights ; the want of ' ' snug- 
ness " being the want most evident of all. The church is of the same class 
as Crosthwaite, but dedicated to St. Michael instead of to St. Kentigern, with 
one tablet against the wall worth noticing, and one tombstone in the church- 
yard, that of Elizabeth Smith's. Hawkshead has a grammar-school of some 

^ Hawkshead lias four to-\viisliips — Hawkshead, ]\Ionk Coiiiston ^^ith Skeh\ith, Claife 
induduig Sawrey, and Satterthwaite mchiding Grizedale. It Avas a perpetual curacy only, 
though called a vicarage, and was ecclesiastically under Ulverston ; hut Ulverston was 
ecclesiastically under Dalton. In or about 1200 a dispute arose as to wliicli of the two 
belonged a chapel at Hawkshead, when it was sho"\Aai by old testimony that Ulverston had 
been dependent on UrsT^dck, and Urs\Adck on Dalton. UrsA\ick, like every other valley iir 
the days of the origm of names, gave a denomination to a family. Yet UrsA\dck its the 
Wick of Urse, which seems a misnomer somehow. 

^ In the time of Elizabeth certain " blomaries " or iron smithies were suppressed at the 
common request of the tenants of Hawkshead and Coulton, that the tops and croppings of 
the woods might be preserved for the nourishment of the cattle. Christ. Sandys, gent., and 
Wm. SaAvrey leased these smitlues, and paid the Queen twenty pounds annually for the 
w^ood. At the suppression the tenants charged themselves with this rent, called bloomsmithy 
or wood-rent, assessed on and by the customary tenants. These bloomaries first belonged to 
Furness, then to the Crown, and nave since been bought by private individuals. 

•273 N N 



THE LAKE COUNTRY, 

note, founded in 1588, by Archbishop Sandys, whose family came into Furness 
before the time of Henry VI., and where the two Wordsworths were educated. 
The okl prelate, the friend of Cranmer, Jewel, and Hooker the "judicious," 
is represented by the family at Graythwaite High, where are also other 
relics 7 of the past beside genealogical traditions. Hawkshead is not a very 
stirring place by history or by fact. The only register of consequence in the 
parish books, beside the record of its numerous charities, is of a tremendous 
storm in the summer of 1686, an account of which is given at full length, 
as in the note below." It is perhaps better for a parish to be so destitute of 
disturbance ; but only in the sense in which it is better to be an oyster than a 
man ; thus avoiding anguish, but also foregoing nobleness and the sphere of 
noble action. It has Esthwaite for its lake ; full of pike, as well as of such 
other fish as that ogre of the waters will suffer to exist in its vicinity, with its 
floating island, bearing alders and willows, careering about the little offset at 
the head called Priest's Pot ; though why so called no one knows, if many 
guess. It was here that Wordsworth laid the scene of his famous skating 



^ A Saxon cornmill, with a small channel and a cii'cular recess like a basin, was fonnd 
in Field Head Moss, near Graytliwaite High, at ploughshare depth. Graythwaite High is 
the seat of the Sandys, who came into Fnrness before the reign of Henry VI. : Graythwaite 
Low, of the Sawreys of the time of Henry VIII. There is a yew-tree at Graythwaite 
Head, which is sixty-fonr inches iti girth at the height of six feet above ground. 

^ " Be it remembered that upon the tenth day of June, at nighte, in the yeare of oiu'Lord 
God one thousand six hundred eighty and six, there was such a. fearfiill thimder mth fyre 
and rayne, which occasioned such a terrible flood, as the lilve of it was never seene in these 
parts of no man liveninge, for it did throwe down some houses and mills, and tooke away 
severall briggs, the water also did run through houses, and did much liurte to houses, 
Ijesides the water washed down trees and tmiber, and the rills carried them, -s^ith stones and 

f)ther things, a greate waye ofl^, where they layd on ground : yea, further, the water did 

so fiercely run down the hye ways, made such deejpe holes and ditches in them, that at 

severall places neither horses nor foote coulde passe, and the brookes and did so 

breake out of their places that they brought exceedhige greatt sand beds into men's grounde 
at many places, which did greater hurte than ever like was kno"\ATLe. I pray God of his 
great mercy grant tliat none wliich is now liveninge never see the like again." 

274 



CONISTON AND HAWKESHEAD. 

picture ; here that Matthew was dreaming on the old grey stone, and " growing 
double " as he dreamed ; and here, too, is the yew-tree, on the seat near which 
were left the lines beginning : — 

"■ Nay, traveller ! rest. This lonely yew-tree stands 
Far from all human dwelling." 

Esthwaite is not a large lake, though not one of the smallest, being 
sixth in degree from the smallest — standing indeed eleventh in the scale, 
of which Windermere is the largest and Brothers Water the least. The 
stream therefrom is the Cunsey Beck, which flows into Windermere, 
having first made Out Dubs Tarn and Eel House Pool, above the first 
of which is Ees Bridge, whence a glorious view is to be had, with the 
special grace of Helvellyn standing as a distant background, and filling 
in the bounding lines with a mightier sweep than any other hill repeats. 

From Esthwaite water — which you leave before you have seen the last 
ripple at the foot~you go through the Sawreys, High and Low, where 
you may see where " Cooks' braw bog house " once held all the Saw- 
reyans during a Scottish raid ; and a braw bog house it must have been 
to have sheltered all the people on that dreadful day. And from the 
Sawreys you wind down the hill where the old blasted tree used once 
to stand, and on to the feriy and the Fashion of the lakes again. 

Another way takes you to Ambleside by the Brathay and Skelwith, passing 
under Loughrigg Fell by the road we know of; unless Blellam Tarn is 
preferred instead, and the walk over the Wrays, both High and Low. And 
another famous Coniston walk is into Yewdale and on to Tilberthwaite — 
that most picturesque of all the fell foot valleys, lying between Oxenfell and 
Wetherlam ; or by Oxenfell into Tilberthwaite. But the first is perhaps 
the most beautiful, because you keep under the steep wall of Coniston Crags. 
If you go into Yewdale you must look out for the old yew-tree, the 
patriarch of the Yewdale family, which, people do say, dates somewhere near 
the deluge, and which is a living fable as it is, with no exaggeration to help 

275 N N 2 



THE LAKE COUNTEY. 

its fabulousness. But there are plenty of yew-trees in the dale generally ; 
and at High Yewdale (a farm of that name) is a small wood of them quaintly 
clipped and carved into all manner of monstrous shapes ; the taste for which 
came in with our Dutch William. Then you can go to Esthwaite over the 
Grrizedale fells if you like ; or stop short at Grizedale if you like that better, 
though you will not come to much when you get there ; still, it is a wild walk, 
and you see how the remoter dalesmen live, and what manner of minds and 
thoughts spring up in these far-away regions. In short, you can go every- 
where to or from Coniston ; but for all that, it is not one of the more 
frequented of the lakes : though, like many other things little flattered, it 
is among the more deserving of praise. And now turn down to the south, 
and set your face to the Abbey, of which this lovely lake was formerly the 
fief, and see where the Lords of Furness — and of Coniston — used to live and 
have their being". 




OONISTON WATER 




FUKNESS ABBEY AND THE SANDS 



CHAPTER XVIII 



Beautiful as Furness ^ is now at this present time, with its noble ruin glowing 
among the autumn trees and across the rich meadows of its native glen, 
its main interest lies in the past. The system of which it is the representative 



' Frudernesse or Futliernesse — Fudernesia in Stephen's charter, 1126 — the farthest pomt 
or promontory, according to some ; according to others, Fruder's point or promontory ; 
but Fruder's identity left undetermined. Originally the name was Bekangsghyll, the Glen 
of the Deadly Nightshade, from Lethel Bekan, the solanum lethale. So says one John Stell, 
a monk and poetical historian of the time of Henry VI., in his famous lines : — 
" Haec vallis olim sibi nomen ab herba 
Eckan, qua wuit, dulcis nunc, tunc sed acerba ; 
Inde domus nomen, Bekansgill, claruit ante." 

277 



THE LAKE COUNTEY. 

was one of so much importance in our English life, it was at one time so 
wholly the law and the gospel, the guide of man's soul and the guardian of 
his body, that we cannot regard these ruins only as beautiful red sandstone 
architecture, but must go back to the days when they formed one of the thrones 
and castles of the rule set up throughout England for all men to obey. 

Furness Abbey was a wide domain. The Lordship " included all that land 
between the Duddon and the Leven, and the sea and Windermere. It followed 
the water-line, beginning at the mouth of the Duddon and tracking the 
stream up to its source on Wrynose (then called the Wrinrose Hills), going 
down the opposite side with the infant Brathay, taking in Elterwater, following 
the Brathay to Windermere, and thence along the west side of the lake 
by the Leven to the sea again, where it swept in the Leven sands, the Isle 
of Foulney, the Pile of Fouldrey,^ and the Isle of Walney."* On which 
last was built Peil Castle,^ (the ruins to be seen yet near the landing pier,) 
by an abbot of Furness in the time of Edward III. 



^ The Duke of Biiccleugli is the present Lord of the Liberty of Furness, and Ulverston 
manor is part of the same Liberty, which went to Furness by the grant of Stephen. At 
the Dissolution the Crown seized what the Cro^^ai had given, or at least confirmed ; but 
Charles II. gave the lordship to John, Duke of Albemarle, as a reward for his services, 
and from hun it passed by various descents and purchases to the Duke of Buccleugh and 
his heu's. Various privileges are attached to the Liberty, amongst them that of executing 
all writs, processes, and precepts of her Majesty within the Umits. 

^ Where Lambert Snnnel landed in 1487. 

* The boundaries of Furness and the barony of Kendal are mentioned in the coucher's 
books of the Abbey. " Ab Eltrewatra ad Tillesbure, et mde ad Conigston et inde ad caput 
de Thiu'stin Watra (Coniston Water), et per ripam ipsius Aque, usque Crek, et inde ad 
Levenam." Later in another deed : " Ab Eltrewatra per vallem de TUdeburghthwaite, inde 
per Ywedale bee ad Conigton, sic in Thui'stin Water, &c." — Whitaker's History of 
Richinondshire. 

^ Peil was reported to Elizabeth in 1588 as the only good haven for great slups between 
Milford Haven and Scotland. The famous " Papist Dr. Allen was born hard by the pyle : " 
and at the tune of the Armada it was named as one of the places for the likely landing of 
the Spaniards : one reason thereof beuig its fine harboui-age ; the other, and in those days 
the most conclusive, that the deputy heutenant was a Cathohc. 

278 



rURNESS ABBEY AND THE SANDS. 

The Abbot's power was equal to his domain, and recognized no other 

man's sovereignty or independence. He was the one absolute autocrat of 

his territory, and exacted the same oath of allegiance as was paid to the 

king. In all matters, civil, ecclesiastical, and military, he was supreme, 

ordering the supplies of men and the raising of armies for the border service 

or his own uses ^ as he liked ; subject to the king only in so much that 

he was bound to furnish him with arms and men, when a general levy was 

commanded. He had the ' patronage of all the churches, save one, in his 

Lordship, and the appointment of the coroner, the chief constable, and all 

the officers connected with the Courts Baron; "he and all his men were free 

from all county amerciaments and suits of counties and wapentake ; " he 

had a free market, a fair, and a criminal court at Dalton ; in fact, he had 

all manner of rights everywhere, " with sac and soc, tol and team, infangene- 

theof,^ and everjiihing within Furness, except the lands of Michael le 

Fleming," as Stephen's charter expressed it. He issued summonses and 

attachments by his own bailiffs ; he had the return of all the writs, and 

his territories were closed against the sheriff and his officers under any 

pretext whatsoever. His lands and his tenants were exempt from all 

" talliage, toll, passage, pontage, and vectigal ; " and the man who presumed 

^ " The military establishment of Ftu'iiess likeT^'ise clei)eiicled on the Abbot. Every 
mesne lord and free homager, as -n^ell as the customary tenants, took an oath of fealty to the 
Abbot, to be true to him against all men, excepting the king. Every mesne lord obeyed 
the summons of the Abbot, or his steward, in raising his quota of armed men, and every 
tenant of a whole tenement fui-nished a man and a horse of war for guarding the coast, for 
the border service, or any expedition against the common enemy of the king and kingdom. 
The habiliments of war were a steel coat, or coat of maU, a falce or falcliion, a jack, the 
bow, the byll, the crossboAV, and spear. The Furness legion consisted of foiu' divisions — 
one of bo-sATiien horsed and harnessed ; byhnen horsed and harnessed ; bowTaeu -oithout 
horse and harness ; byhnen without horse and havness."— Antiquities of Furness. 

'' Saccum, the power of imposmg fines ; soccum, the power of administeriiig justice ; 
toUum, the right of levjdng tolls ; team or theam, a royalty granted for trjdng bondsmen 
and \illeins, -nith sovereign power over the -sallein, tenants, their wives, children, and goods 
(abolished 12 Car. II.) ; infangthefe, the power of judging theft. 

279 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

to disturb or molest m.}^ lord abbot or any of his tenants was to pay a 
fine of ten pounds to tlie king. In addition to which he was the owner 
and occupant of almost half the low country, and he and his order had 
prolations, privileges, and immunities of every kind. One of which was, that 
as the sands of Morecambe Bay were dangerous (sixteen men having been 
drowned therein at one time, and six at another), the Abbot of Furness prayed 
Edward II. that he might have a frank-pledge and coroner of his own, " for 
everywhere it would be the salvation of one soul at least ; " which was 
granted. Another was, that he was absolved from the obligation of appearing 
at the wapentake of Staincliffe and Friendless in York, it being a long way 
off — forty miles, with two dangerous arms of the sea to cross ; wherefore 
my lord abbot was allowed to appear there by proxy, and in the person of 
an attorney only. In fact, he Avas the greatest man in the whole north 
country ; and that wild and savage Lordship of Furness was as absolute an 
autocracy as Russia or China at the present day ; happily, perhaps, for 
the district, which had greater chance of good rule and civilizing influences 
under the monks of Furness than if it had been under the ruder hand of 
some lawless old baron or God-denying knight, intent only on rapine and 
revel. The ecclesiastical rule of the middle ages might be hard and heavy 
and unloving, but it was not so actively oppressive, nor so thoroughly evil 
as many another. 

Originally the monastery of Furness was of the Savignian order of 
St. Benedict, and was established at Tulketh in Amoundernesse, a branch of 
the Kibble near Preston. But two years after, namely, in 1127, it was 
taken by its founder and patron, Stephen,^ then Earl of Morton and 

^ " 111 tlie name of tlie Blessed Trinity, and in lionour of St. Mary of Furness, I, 
Stephen, Earl of Bologne and ]\Ioretoii, consulting God, and providing for the safety of my 
own soul, the soul of my -^^-ife, the Countess Matilda, the soul of 1113^ lord and uncle 
HenrV' King ^^ England and Duke of Normandy, and for the souls of all the faithful, 
liviiio" as well as dead, in the year of our Lord 1127 of the Roman iiidiction, the 5tli 
and 18th of the Epact. Consideruig every day the uncertamty of hie, that the roses 'and 
flowers of kiii<^s, emperors, and dulses, and the crowns and palms of the great wither and 

280 



rURNESS ABBEY AND THE SANDS. 

Boulogne, to Furness, where it reigned as we have seen in absolute supre- 
macy until the Dissolution in 1537. In the meantime it changed its order 
and its colour. In 1148, under the Pontificate of Eugenius, the whole 
Savignian order passed oyer into the Cistercian,^ or Bernardine, in honour 
of St. Bernard of Citeaux (hence the name), who remodelled the Benedictine 
rules. And after a severe struggle with the conservative element of the 
house, Bajocis, the fifth Abbot of Furness, and his prior and his almoner 
and all the rest of the body, made themselves Cistercians like the rest, and 
were no longer the Grrey monks but the White. For instead of the grey 
dress which had formerly marked them, cassock, cowl, and scapulary were 

decay, and tliat all things, with an uninterrupted course, tend to dissolution and death, I 
therefore retiuii, give and grant to God and St. Mary of Furness, all Furness and Walney 
(Wagnea), "with the privilege of hunting; with Dalton and all my lordship in Furness 
(infra Frudernisiam) , with the men and everjd;huig belonging, that is in woods and in open 
ground, in land and in water; and Ulverston (Olvestonam), and E,oger Braithwaite, with 
all that belongs to hmi ; my fisheries at Lancaster and Little Guoring (Guorenem Parvam), 
vnth all the lands thereof, with sac and sec, tol and team, iiifangtheof, and everything 
within Furness, except the lands of Michael le Fleming : with this view and upon this 
condition. That in Furness an order of regular monks be, b};- di-v-iue permission, estabhshed ; 
which gift and offering T, by supreme authority, appoint to be for ever observed ; and that it 
may remaui firm and inviolate for ever, I subscribe this charter with nry hand, and confirm 
it mth the sign of the Holy Ghost. 

" Henry, King of England and Duke of Normandy. 
Thurstan, Archbishop of York. 

" AUDTN, ] -D- 1 

' ]■ Bishops. 

BOCKO, I 

" PiOBERT, Keeper of the Seal. 
PiOBERT, Earl of Gloster." 
^ The spread of the Cistercian order was very rapid. Begmning with its titular saint 
and twelve monks who filiated from Citeaux, it soon rose to such repute that St. Bernard 
hunself founded one hundred and sixty monasteries, and in fifty years fi-om its first 
establishment it had eight hundred abbeys. Li England and AVales were eighty-five Houses 
of Cistercians, two only in Lancaster, namely, Furness and Whalley ; but nine in all as 
dependencies or filiations from Furness, the House of most importance in England, after, 
perhaps, Fountahis in Yorkshire. AU the Cistercian Houses were dedicated to the Vu'gin 
Mary. 

281 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

now white, with, in full choir, a girdle of black wool with a mozet or hood 
coming down in front as far as the girdle, where it was rounded off, and 
falling to the mid leg behind. When they went abroad they wore a cowl 
and full black hood ; but each house had its distinctive marks and signs ; 
the description above is only general to the order. Furness once disputed 
Avith its brother abbey of Waverley in Sussex. It was on a question of 
precedence, wherein the pride of both holy fathers was roused almost to 
bloodshed point, and the Christian virtues got sadly put out of court 
in favour of the ecclesiastical. It was a long quarrel and a hard one, but 
it was settled at last by the good offices of the calm-headed ; when it was 
arranged that the Abbot of Furness should have precedence through all the 
houses of eleemosyna in England, and that the Abbot of Waverley should 
be foremost in the Chapter of Abbots, with superiority over the whole order ; 
which was not supremacy, be it remembered. This was about the hardest 
lesson that the proud House of Furness ever had to learn, till the end of 
all monkish things, when the abbot was fain to accept as his pension for 
life the rectory of Dalton, valued at thirty-three jjounds six shillings and 
eightpence per annum. Rather an awkward translation for the head of a 
sovereign and independent establishment, worth, according to Dugdale, 
805L 16s. 5d. per annum, or 9461. Ss., 10^/., according to others; and 
766L 7s. lOd., by Speed's calculation ; exclusive of the woods, meadows, 
pastures, and fisheries retained in the hands of the monastery, and the 
mines, salt-works, and mills belonging, which would bring up the revenue 
to something more than princely. 

Some of the painted glass formerly belonging to the Abbey, is in Bowness 
churchyard ; the Virgin Mary, St. John, the Crucifixion, a group of monks 
and their abbot, some angels, St. George and the dragon, St. Catharine and 
her wheel, the arms of France and England, and the arms of various patrons 
and benefactors of the Abbey — Lancaster, Urswick, Le Fleming, Millom, &c. 
are yet to be seen. The glass belonged to the large east window — a magnificent 
and noble inlet of God's light ; and on the outside, under an arched festoon, 

2?2 



rUllNESS ABBEY AND THE SANDS. 

are still the crowned heads of Stephen and Maud, his queen, which have 
evidently been finely executed. But the red sandstone of which the church 
and abbey were built is not good for finer sculpture. In the south wall, and 
at the west end of the church, are four seats with Gothic ornaments ; and in 
the middle space, where the first strong-handed old Barons of Kendal were 
interred, lies the figure of a man in armour, cross-legged. As West's account 
is the best that has been given yet, and as the ruins are very much in the same 
condition as when he wrote of them, it is better to give part of his description 
as it stands, than to run the risk of obscuring what else is so plain and distinct. 
" The chapter-house is the only building belonging to the Abbey which 
is marked with any elegance of Gothic sculpture ; it has been a noble room 
of sixty feet by forty-five. The vaulted roof, formed of twelve ribbed arches, 
was supported by six pillars in two rows, at fourteen feet distance from each 
other. Now, supposing each of the pillars to be eighteen inches in diameter, the 
room would be divided into three alleys or passages, each fourteen feet wide. On 
entrance, the middle one only could be seen, lighted by a pair of tall pointed 
windows at the upper end of the room ; the company in the side passage would 
be concealed by the pillars, and the vaulted roof, that groined from these 
pillars, would have a truly Gothic disproportional appearance of sixty feet by 
fourteen. The northern side alley was lighted by a pair of similar side-lights, 
and a pair at the upper end ; the southern side alley was lighted by four small 
pointed side windows, besides a pair at the higher end, at present entire, and 
which illustrate what is here said. Thus, whilst the upper end of the room 
had a profusion of light, the lower end would be in the shade. The noble roof 
of this singular edifice did but lately fall in : the entrance or porch is still 
standing, a fine circular arch, beautified with a deep cornice, and a portico 
on each side. The only entire roof of any apartment now remaining is that 
of a building without the enclosure wall, which is supposed to have been 
a private chapel to the Guest Hall. It is a single ribbed arch that groins 
from the wall. The tower has been supported by four magnificent arches, of 
which only one remains entire. They rested upon four tall pillars, whereof 

2«3 2 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

three are finely clustered, but the fourth is of a plain, unmeaning construction. 
The west end of the church seems to have been an additional part, intended 
for a belfry, to ease the main tower ; but that is as plain as the rest : had the 
monks even intended it, the stone would not admit of such work as has been 
executed at Fountains and Kievaulx Abbies. The east end of the church 
contained five altars, besides the high altar, as appears by the chapels ; and 
probably there was a private altar in the sacristy. In magnitude, this Abbey 
was the second in England, belonging to the Cistercian monks, and next in 
opulence after Fountains Abbey, in Yorkshire. The church and cloisters were 
encompassed with a wall, which commenced at the east side of the great 
northern door, and formed the strait enclosure ; and a space of ground, to the 
amount of sixty-five acres, was surrounded with a stone- wall, which enclosed 
the mills, kilns, ovens, and fish-ponds belonging to the Abbey, the ruins of 
which are still visible. This last was the great enclosure, now called the 
Deer Park, in which such terraces might be formed as would equal, if not 
surpass, any in England." 

And now in these glorious grounds, where formerly the mighty Abbot 
and his monks w^alked and prayed and framed the laws of their generation, 
is a grand hotel for summer tourists, full of all modern luxury and modern 
self-assertion : the greatest contrast to that great thing of the past that could 
have been possibly made : greater even than a row of modern barracks, or a 
union, or a police-station would have been. The Furness Abbey Hotel is 
an essay in itself on the change of society included in the title. 

The seal of the House was the Virgin and child in a circle, she with a 
crown, the nimbus, and a globe, he with only the nimbus ; on either side 
were two escutcheons of the House of Lancaster, supported by bundles of 
nightshade, and charged with the three lions of England. At the base each 
shield was supported by two monks in full habit ; in the foreground were two 
plants of nightshade, and over each monk's head a sprig of the same. The 
wyvern in the lower compartment was the device of Thomas Earl of Lancaster, 
and the legend was " Sigillum. Commvne. Domvs. Beate. Marie, de. Furnesio." 

284 



FURNESS ABBEY AND THE SANDS. 

Until the time of Pope Sixtus IV. the rules of the order as to fasting and 
devotional exercises were very severe ; hut the good Pontiff, taking into account 
the frailties of human nature, granted them the privilege of meat thrice a 
week, for which a special room, distinct from the usual Eefectory, was fitted up 
in every monastery. They were great benefactors in their way, and did their 
best for the land and the people committed to their charge — no doubt with 
an eye always to the advantage of the House and the permanence of their 
influence ; but still, under this restriction, they did their best. They built 
chapels and threw out new Houses, as bees throw off new swarms ; they 
enclosed waste places, and favoured piety and learning ; if they laid their 
grip heavily on purse or scrip, it was with less cruel clenching of the fingers 
than the mailed hand would have had ; and on the whole the rule of that 
great Cistercian autocracy was no hindrance to the progress or prosperity of 
the subjects living under its sway.'° 




Though Furness was the seat of ecclesiastical supremacy in the pro- 
montory, consequently of greatest importance to men and history, there were 
many other places of interest round about. There was, rather there is, the 
beautiful Conishead Priory, the paradise of Furness, founded by WilKam 



'" 111 tlie reign of Edward I. tlie Abbot of Furness, to whom belonged tlie bailiwick of 
Coulton, enclosed by royal Licence Abbott Stott, Oxen and Hill Parks, aU in the said parish. 
By indenture dated the 28th of January, 1 Henry VIII., each tenant was allotted his pro- 
portion of common by a jiuy composed of the monks of Furness and the tenantry of Coulton. 
The lands feU to the Duchy on the dissolution of the monasteries, and were held of Queen 
Elizabeth by customary land, and bloomsmithy or wood-rents. 

285 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

Tailbois the first baron of Kendal; for though the name still remains, 
it is only as belonging to a gentleman's mansion built on the old site. And 
there is Dalton, which used to be a Koman station ^^ as well as the capital 
of the district in the time of the Abbey and before the rise of Ulverston, and 
Avhich West thinks must have been the mother church, if antiquity and 
seniority go for anything. Dalton, too, was the place where George Eomney 
the painter was born one fifteenth of December (1734) ; at least at Bankside 
or Cocken, nigh at hand and in the parish. Certain old customs are still 
kept up here : such as the cherry fair — the child's fair, held on the Sunday 
before Lammas ; the habit of hiring reapers on Sundays in harvest time ; 
and the strange fashion at funerals of not only giving bread and cheese at 
the house, but, when the corpse is buried, of the clerk proclaiming at the 
grave- side that the company must assemble at some public-house appointed, 
where they sit in groups of four — to each four one quart of ale allowed, 
half to be paid by the conductor of the funeral, and half by the company. 
In the meantime the waiter goes round with cakes, and gives one to each 
guest, which he must carry home with him, not eat. And then the Dalton 
Crag is worth looking at, being of the finest limestone in the district. 

And there is Kirkby Irelath, with its relics ^^ and its church — the " kirk by 
the western place of assembly," temp. Henry IV., and dedicated to St. Cuth- 
bert ; and its house — Kirkby Hall, or Cross House, or Kirkby Cross, as you 
like to call it, before which once stood a cross that Edwin Sandys, Archbishop 
of York, demolished in his Protestant zeal ; nearly as zealous in his 
Protestantism as Barnaby Potter, the Eight Eeverend of Carlisle, of whom it 

" West says the Roman road proceeds from the Thorn on Conishead Bank west 
through Street Gate (an important and decisive name), to the place where it joins the new 
turnpike road from Ulverston, and formuig an obtuse angle to the south-west, points directly 
by Lindal to Dalton ; at the Cross it turns up Scalegate, and slanting over the rocks by 
St. Helen's, crosses Goldmire, and circling a httle takes its direction by Roan Head to 
Duddon Sands. The station must have been at Dalton, abandoned before the Itinerary 
was "ivi'itten. 

'^ Four celts, three rude and one polished, were found at Haume, near Kirkby Irelath, 

286 



FURNESS ABBEY AND THE SANDS. 

was said "that the organs would blow him out of church." *^ This Kirkhy 
Hall was the home of the Kirkby family ^* for ten generations ; the imme- 
diate neighbourhood is famous for the dark blue slate worked in almost 
inexhaustible quantities out of the fells surrounding. And there is Irelath 
hard by, where the best iron mines are ; and Whitrigg, called the " Peru 
of Furness ; " and Whicham, with its lake or pond famous for Will-o'-the- 
Wisps, where it is always calm when Barfield is troubled, so that the two 
parishes at the foot of Black Combe have never the same kind of weather ; and 
Whicham Hall, where Scot's Croft is supposed to have been the site of an 
old battle with the border enemy. For once, Furness Fells, the " Apennines 
of Lancashire," as West calls them, were the boundary lines between Scotland 
and England, and the incursions into the low country Avere many and mighty ; 
specially one in 1138, of gigantic ' violence and rapine. And there are the 
ruins of Gleaston Castle built in such haste, which belonged to the Duke 
of Suffolk, poor Lady Jane Grey's father ; and Gutterby Bay, where the 
sunken rock, called Black Segs, causes the loss of many brave lives by ship- 
wrecks, and where old roads, visible below water-mark, show that the sea has 
gained here, and how much, within the record of man's hand. 

And there is Swart Moor, where, in 1486, " the German Baron, bold Martin 
Swart," mustered the forces of Lambert Simnel, poor knave ; and where on 
the last day of September, 1643, Colonel Rigby, with seven or eight companies 
of foot, all "firemen," save about twenty with pikes — assembled for prayers, 
coming in from Ulverston, after which exercise they went on to Lindal Moor 

" Sandys was imprisoned for taldng part mth Lady Jane Grey, and kej)t for some time 
in the Nmi's BoAver with Bradford the Martyr. He escaped, however, happily for himseK, 
and went to Zurich and Peter Martyr, where he remained until Queen Elizabeth's 
accession, when he returned to safety and esteem, to be ultimately made Archbishop of 
York. 

^'' Saxon families, so late as iii the time of Henry VIII., lived in villages and places 
of theu' own names, as appears from the court rolls — the Braithwaites at Brathay, the 
Sawreys at Sawrey, &c. At Nibthwaite all were Piedheads, at Finsthwaite all Taylors, 
at Coltham all Satterthwaites, &c., still a north-country peculiarity. 

287 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

for more mundane matters. A few years ago, some labourers, making a new 
road over the moor, came upon large numbers of horse- shoes of very small 
size ; but whether they had belonged to Colonel Rigby's forces, or to Lambert 
Simnel's, the antiquarians could not decide. Swart Moor is famous, too, for 
its connection with George Fox. In 1652, he went there in his character 
of itinerant preacher,^^ preaching Quaker doctrines to Judge Fell and his 
family; converting the women, but not at first the judge, whom afterwards 
however he reclaimed ; converting the wife indeed— daughter of John Askew 
— to such good purpose, that he married her in 1669, eleven years after the 
judge's death. He lived at Swart Moor Hall, now a farmhouse merely, 
where his bed-room and study may still be seen ; and he built a Quaker 
meeting-house on the moor, the first in England, with Ex Bono G. F. 1688, 
to be spelt out at this day over the door. 

And there is Kirkby Thore, with its Whelp Dale, and Whelp Castle, 
where the Machels once lived ; a grand family in their day, and going quite 
back into the haze of tradition. Their seal is a problem in itself, " an Indian 
dog, ex grseco et tigride nato, and with a forked tail," on which hung a whole 
world of romance. They were great patrons of the church, for we find that 
Henry II. confirmed the grant of land at Crackenthorpe, (the village of the 
crakes, rooks, or crows,) to the priory of Carlisle, which had been given 
by Halth le Malchael, and Eva his wife ; and L'Ulf, or Liulf of Kirkby 
Thore gave some lands there to the Abbey of Holme Cultram, also in the time 
of Henry II. Ulf le Malchael, "Wolf, that mischievous whelp," was a noted 
man in his day, though now only a name— a mere breath and no more. And 
then there is Cartmel,^^ still a place of some note if not so much as in olden 
times, when it was of such large monkish value that the priory was a kind of 

'^ " The Quakers, whose errant lives as errant preachers made them the first travellers 
to solicit goods," have always been well considered in the north, and are notorious for their 
commercial respectability and worldly success. 

16 a -jij^g high antiquity of this district, with a to-\ATi in it called Sudgetluit, is identified 
b_y a grant of Egfrida, a king of the Northumbrians (670 — 6^5), who gave the whole of it, 
with all the Britons in it, to St. Cuthbert." 



FUENESS ABBEY AND THE SANDS. 

rival to Furness. It stood on the little Ay stream, which rises iu the small pool 
called the Ayside Tarn, in Stavely, three miles north of Cartmel.i^ Below 
the latter it goes by the name of Lower Cark Tarn, and Cark Beck, and falls 
into the Leven by Holkar Hall. Cartmel Priory was founded in 1188 by 
William Mareschal, Earl of Pembroke, for the regular canons of St. Augustin, 
and dedicated to St. Mary. The founder said in his instrument : " This house 
I have founded for the increase of our holy religion, giving and granting to it 
every kind of liberty that heart can conceive, or the mouth utter, and whoso- 
ever shall in any way infringe upon these immunities, or injure the said priory, 
may he receive the curse of Glod, of the Blessed Virgin Mary, and of all the 
other saints, as well as my particular malediction." 

The priorj^ had various privileges ; as was the case with all religious 
Houses ; among them that of the exclusive appointment of guides over the 
sands, as the priory of Birkenhead had the privilege of appointing boatmen 
for the ferry across the Mersey. There were two of these guides, and the 
prior had synodal and Peter's pence allowed for them, afterwards commuted 
to a yearly stipend. It had also a spring good for scorbutic affections— 
the Holy Well in the limestone rock of Humphrey Head, where are the 
Fairy Church and Chapel, and where the knight once destroyed a ferocious 
wolf; the same knight as lies in Cartmel church, supposed to be Sir John 
Harringion, who went to Scotland with King Edward I. and was there 
knighted. He and his lady lie now in a fine open-wrought arch, with 
grotesque figures — monks chanting and others — on the surbase. Here is 
also the tomb of the prior William de Walton, with "Hie facit Frater 
Wilelmus de Walton, prior de Kartmel," on it. There is also a free 
grammar-school at Cartmel, under the superintendence of the church- 
wardens and sidesmen of the parish, where sixpence quarterage used to 
be paid for "grammarians" in 1635, and fourpence for "petties" (little 

'^ Kert — camp, and mcU — hill, some etymologists say ; but these deiivations are dma- 
gerous things to phiy with. 

289 ■ P P 



THE LAKE COUNTRY. 

ones). In 1664 the master's salary was twenty pounds a year; in 1674 
tlie quarterage for grammarians was eiglitjoence, but no charge was made 
for petties ; in 1711 the quarterage was one shilhng and sixpence for Latin, 
and one shiUing for Enghsh. People of means gave cockpence at Shrove- 
tide, on the plea of a prize for cockfighting. Any one may be taught 
here, but only twenty non-parishioners at a time. Dr. Law — Edmund 
Law, D.D., the Bishop of Carlisle — was educated at Cartmel free school, 
his father being only the curate of one of the small chapelries in the 
parish, which office he held for forty-nine years. When Lonsdale Hundred 
had a part to play, while Thurland Castle was besieged, Eoger Kirby and 
Alexander Rigby of the Burgh, assisted by all the malignant gentry of 
Westmoreland and Cumberland, set on foot " to raise all the forces of 
Cartmel and Furness part of Lancaster, to surprise Lancaster and Hornby 
Castle, and to assault on all sides, and to raise on siege, and then to 
proceed further into Lancashire (as upon credible information, I believe), 
to joyn with Latham House and all the ill-affected in our country to our 
generall devastation. And for this end they drew together part of the 
Cumberland forces into Fourness, and with them the strength of that place 
to about the number of 1000, intending the next day to march into Cart- 
mel." But they never did. The colonel intercepted and defeated them 
instead. And besides these ancient things there is the Holly or Holy 
Well — much frequented in summer-time and very lovely ; and an inter- 
mittent spring at Pet Farm, something like the famous Giggleswick well 
in Yorkshire, and which old John Gough accounts for as produced by " a 
natural compound syphon formed in the recesses of the hills." 

And then there is the comparatively modern town of the present 
capital of the peninsula, Ulverston ; which was once pronounced Owston, 
and which is a derivation somehow from ulf, or wolf; where, in old times, 
WiJliam de Lancastre — he whose body lies buried in the quire of Furness 
Abbey — gave the mills to Lawrence de Cornwall, who, in his turn, gave 
them to Edmund Neville and his heirs, confirming also the manor of 

290 



PURNESS ABBEY AND THE SANDS. 

Bi'oughton or Brogiiton to Edward de Broghton, The Neville family^" came 
into Furness in consequence of this grant, establishing themselves at Neville 
Hall ; but lands and mills and estates were all forfeited by the rebellion of 
Sir John de Neville against his lawful sovereign. He joined his kinsman, 
Charles Neville, Earl of Westmoreland, and Thomas Percy, Earl of 
Northumberland, in the Mary Stuart attempt of 1569, and lost his goods 
and gear in consequence. Ulverston rose to favour and importance during 
the plague year of 1681, when Dalton was decimated, as was Bigger in 
the Isle of Walney. From the parish registers it appears that " there died 
in Dalton three hundred and threescore, and in Walney one hundred and 
twenty." It lasted up to the next Easter, and was so severe that the people 
left their homes and took to tents in the fields ; the market being thus 
suspended for some months, Ulverston came into its place. The tradition 
went that it was brought into the town in a parcel of ribbon. So at least 
reports old West. In the eighth year of his reign Edward I. granted to 
Ulverston a charter for a weekly market and annual fair ; but Dalton swallowed 
up all the good of this and of everything, till the see-saw of history adjusted 
itself. 

And so come dreams and echoes of the old times as we wander by the 
sea- shore in the autumn evening, listening to the murmur of the receding 
Avaves, and looking back into the darkening depths of the mountain land 
behind us. It was the early spring morning when w^e stood on the wooded 
heights of Elleray ; the mists v/ere rising from the earth, and the new town 
of Windermere, and the young life of the year, lay burnished and bright in 
gold below us. It is the late chill autumn now, when we are on the level 
sands looking over the gloomy waste towards mutilated Furness, with the 
wreck of the past, and ruins and relics the only world before us. The 

"* It is almost impossible to know how to spell tliese old. names. Should they be spelt 
as was iisual at the time whereof ^ve are writing, or as they are spelt at the present day? 
The nanre in qnostion may he Nevil, Ne^•ill. i>r Neville, as the reader likes, 

291 V V 2 



THE LAKE COUNTKY. 

sun is sinking, and a broad blood-red band dyes the sea with crimson; but 
a bank of sullen purple clouds is slowly gathering up and gaining on the 
last glory of the dying day; the wind is rising in the distant ocean caves, 
the sands are bleak and bare, the sea-birds are wheeling over head 
uttering their mournful cries, the wild night is coming on, and the tide 
is running out, like the tide of life ebbing into eternity and death. 



"-^^Vr?^-i=^!^"^^*^!^i**^' 



APPENDICES 



I. Provincialisms of the Lake District 

II. Botany or the Lake District 

III. Geology op the Lake District 

IV. Table of Mountains, Lakes, and Waterfalls 
V. Eainfall 



>, 






> '■r ^rV-TP^C: ^. 



SCAWFELL MAN 



APPENDICES 



APPENDIX I 
PEOYINCIALISIS OF THE LAKE DISTRICT 



§ 1— GLOSSARY 



A or At, yes; "Hoot ay mon!" PshaAV ! yes, 
man; also always, ever. 

Aandorn, Oendorn, or Orndinner, anything 
taken between dinner and tea; an afternoon 
luncheon or country " kettledrum ; " also the 
afternoon. 

Aback o' Behint, behind; in the rear; and "the 
other end of nowhere." 

Abraide, to feel nausea after food; " to have the 
acid," in fact. 

Acker, "to curl, as the curl of water from the 
wind, hence Ackerspire, the term for the 
shooting of barley when in steep for malt." 
Westmoreland and Cumberland Dialects. 

Addle or Ettle, to earn by work; as Addlings 
or Ettlings, are earnings or wages received for 
work; but a horse that falls and rolls from side 
to side "addles his shoon." 

Ae, a or one. 

Afit, on foot; and A-eoat, afoot; as "a design is 
afoot." 

Agnailes, or Nangnailes, or Hangnails, the 
small strip of flesh, sometimes also called a 
Backfriend, which grows by the side of the 
nail and tears off down into the which, or quick 
of the flesh. 

Ahint, behind; "Gang ahint ! " — the word of 
command to the colley, or shepherd's dog, to fall 
into the rear of the sheep and bring up the 
straying members. 



AiBLiNS, perhaps; maybe. " Aiblins I wool, and 

aiblins I woonot: " Maybe I will, and maybe I 

will not. 
Ail, to be ill; "She's varra ailing," she is very 

unwell. 
AiRT, AiRTH, a point in the compass, or the 

horizon. 

" Of a' the airts the wind can Waw, 
I dearly like the west." 

Aither, either and each. 
Ajee, awry; crooked. 

" The best laid schemes o' mice and men, 
Gang aft ajee." 

Alaan, Alane, alone. 

Alang, along. 

Alegar, or Allekar, vinegar. 

Allar, or Eller, the alder tree, (Alnus glutinosa.) 

All Hallowmas, All Saints' Day; when (on All 
Hallow Een rather,) the girls try charms : such 
as melting lead, or breaking the white of an 
egg into a tumbler of water, tying up their 
garters, peeling apples before the glass, burning 
nuts, and other like efficacious manner of pro- 
phesy for the matrimonial future. 

Amackilt, in some fashion, 

Amang, among. 

Ambry, a pantry or cupboard. 



295 



APPENDIX I. 



Ameast, almost. 

An, if; An', and; En', and. 

Anan, directly; immediately. 

And aw, and all. 

Ane, own. 

Anenst, over against. 

Anters, in case that; also adventures and needless 
scruples. " He's fashed wi' anters," he is 
troubled with fancies and doubts. 

Anudder, another. 

Anunder, beneath. 

April Gowk, April fool. 

Ard, or AiRD, high, when used for a place; 
Ard-land means a hard and hungry soil; a 
corruption, doubtless, of arid, but the original 
sense of Ard is high, and ard-land is bad land 
because it is high; Arden, the fallow quarter. 

Arr, the scar of a wound; Pock arrs, pock- 
marks. 

Arrant, errand. 

Arval, a funeral; Arval-bread, funeral bread 
given to the followers in the open air, and 
expected to be carried home with them, not 
eaten on the spot. 

Ass-BuiRD, the ash-box; Ass-midden, the ash- 
heap in the yard ; and Ass trug, a coal-scuttle. 

Ass, to ask ; AsT, asked. 

Assart, cleared; reclaimed. Assart lands are 
forest lands reclaimed. 

Attercoppe, or Addercop, a spider and a spider's 
. web; also a cross-grained person, as is Attermite. 

Aughts, or Outs, a large quantity; not to be 
confounded with Orts, leavings. " I'll not eat 
j'our orts." I'll not cat your leavings. 

AuLD, or Aavd, old ; T' Auld Ane, the devil. 

AuRSELS, ourselves. 

Auter, altar; but generally called Hee-autre, in 
unconscious remembrance of the High- Altar of 
olden times. 

Aver, a cart-horse, or any common hack-horse. 

Awe, an elf; a fool. 

AwND, the awn or beard of barley, &c., ofien 
pronounced Augs. 

Ax, to ask. 

At, always; yes ; with an interrogative accent, 
meaning surprise. 

Ayont, beyond. " That's ayont my gumption ; " 
that's beyond my understanding. 

AzzARD, " a little sneaking or insignihcant fclloAv." 
— IK. a IK I C. Dialects. 



Baad, an improper woman; as is also Bandylan. 

Babby-Clouts, baby clothes. 

Back-bword, the dough or paste-board on Avhich 

bread or paste is rolled, chiefly used for oat-cake. 
Back-end, the latter part of the month or year: 

the autumn generally. 
Backside, the yard or back part of the house; but 

capable of many equivocal doubles entendres. 
Badger, a pedlar; originally a person who pur- 
chased grain at one market, and took it on 

horseback to sell at another. 
Badly, ill ; " I'se nobbut badly." I am ill — 

nothing but ill, literally. 
Baggin, food. 
Bailies, bailiffs. 
Bain, near; Bainer way, a nearer way; "The 

bainer the titter," the nearer the sooner. 
Bang, to beat; to surpass; a loud noise; a thump; 

"he cam in wi' a bang," he came in with a 

noise, and in haste; and he "banged Ban- 

nager," he went beyond Bannager; Bensil is 

also to bang or beat. 
Bannocks, oatmeal cakes made thick, hot, and 

buttered — not the same things as "oat-cake." 
Bargii, a short, sharp hill; also a horseway up a 

hill. 
Barn, or Bairn, child; but constantly used in 

conversation between people on friendly terms, 

whatever the age. 
Barnekin, the outer part of the castle where the 

stables, byres, and barns were placed. 
Barring-out, still kept up in rough country 

schools, but declining like other old customs. 
Bask, a sharp, acid flavour, as unripe fruit is bask. 
Baslard, a dagger; bitt obsolete now. 
Bass, perch; Bassenthwaite is the place of the 

hassen, or perch. Also used for dried sedges 

and rushes; a rush-bottomed chair being a 

" bass- bottomed " chair, (a corruption of bast ?) 
Baste, a blow; and Batered, beaten. 
BatI'en, a large truss of straw; called also AVaps. 
Batter, dirt. 
Battling-stone, the stone, and Battling-wood, 

the piece of wood, used in washing and beating 

clothes by the river side. 
Bawk, or Balk, a cross-beam; but Bawks is a 

hay-loft. 
Baavme, to dress oneself smart. 
Bawn, ready; Bawned, prepared to go; ready 

di'cssed. 



29G 



PROVINCIALISMS OF THE LAKE DISTRICT. 



Bat, to bend. 

Baze, to alarm. 

Beak Mouths, pit holes, or the passages into coal 

mines. 
Bease, or Beese, beasts ; and Beastings, or 

Beastlxngs, the first milk of a cow newly calved. 

Beastings pudding is a kind of rich batter 

puddmg made of that milk; not recommcnd- 

able. 
Bebb, to drink ; and Belying, drinking greedily, 

or gulping down liquid. 
Beck, a small river or brook. 
Beeld and Bigg, to build. 
Beelin, bellowing ; and Belder or Blether, to 

bellow ; cry lustily. 
Beirsii, Brash, Bratti<e, or Bevisit, "to run 

headlong, a violent push, a sudden motion." — 

W. and C. Dialects. 
Belive, presently. 
Belper, to cheat. 
Beltain, Beltein, Beltan, the first of May, when 

fires used to be lighted on the hills, with many 

quaint ceremonies, in which the quicken or 

mountain-ash tree had a large share. 
Bemooked, dirtied; defiled; literally, beviucked. 
Bense, a cow's stall in the byre. 
Bent-Grass (agrostis vulgaris), a long coarsp 

grass that grows on poor land, and is used for 

baskets, &c. 
Berrt, gooseberry ; " a fine berry year" means a 

fine crop of gooseberries, not of berries in general. 
Berrt, to thrash corn; and Berrier, a corn- 
thrasher. 
Bettermer, better; " he's in summut o' a better- 

mer way just now," he is rather better at this 

moment. 
Betwattled, confused; qut of one's senses. 
Beytb, a sharper ; also a bite. 
Bidden-Wedding, a wedcjing where the guests 

are bidden, but expected to make a collection 

for the newly maiTied couple £),t the end of the 

feast. 
Biddy, pediculus humanus. 
Bide, to wait, to bear; " I canna bic}e, or ^bide, on 

him," I cannot bear him, I dislike him. 
Big, a species of barley of a poor kind. 
Biggin, a building, but not used for large houses; 

also a wooden bowl, or what is elsewhere called 

piggin. 
Billy, brother. 



BiNK, a stone seat or table. 

BiRLER, or BuRLER, the M. C. at a "hidden-wed- 
ding," who looks after the liquor and gets up 
the subscriptions. 

Birr, or Burre, whirr; a stone flung with force 
" comes with a birre," because it makes a whir- 
ring noise in the air, and a spinning wheel 
" birres " as it goes round. 

BisPEL, mischievous and naughty ; " lisle bispel 
moonkey," little mischievous monkey! 

BizEN, a bye-word; "to be a shame and a bizen," 
to be a disgrace, and the common talk of the 
place. Bizen is literally bye-said, a bye-saying. 

Black-berries, black currants, not bramble 
berries. 

Blaeberry, or Bleaberry, bilberry or -whortle- 
berry. 

Blained, half dry, spoken mostly of linen hung 
out to dry; also bleached, whitened. 

Blake, yellow; "as blake as a marygold," as 
yellow as a marygold; also bleak; cold; naked. 

Blakeling, the yellow bunting. 

Blate, bashful. 

Bleb, or Blob, a heavy gout of soap suds or 
thickened liquid of any kind; a blish, or blister. 

Bleets, the blight. 

Blemmle, to mix up fluid and solid, as flour and 
water. 

Blinder Bridles, bridles with blinkers. 

Blish, a small blister. 

Bobber, Bop.berous, in high spirits ; also boast- 
ful, bragging. 

Boggart, and Bogie, and Bogle, ghosts, and 
spectres, and evil spirits made visible. 

Boggle, to be afraid; also to hesitate. 

Bolder, a loud noise ; " the bolder of a cannon," 
the report of a cannon. 

BoNGAiT, to fasten. 

Bqnny, pretty; " a bonny wee wife," the ultimate 
perfection of womanhood to every young man's 
fancy. 

Boon Days, free service days, when tenants are 
obliged to give work and labour gratis to their 
lords ; a common clause in customary tenures, by 
which so much land in Cumberland is held. 

Born, suffered; but Borned or Bornt or Brunt 
is burnt. 

BoRTERT or Boutrey, the elder-tree. 

Bottom-Wind, that strange upheaval which some- 
times takes place on Derwentwaterin a perfectly 
297 Q Q 



APPENDIX I. 



calm and windless day, when the Avaters are 
violently agitated from beneath, and flung in 
high waves from west to east. 

BouKS, the divisions or boundaries of a field. 

BouET, to offer ; to pretend. 

Bout, time ; condition ; " She's a bad bout on't," 
she has a bad time of it; used in this sense for 
illness. " Ay ! it'll sarve its turn this bout ! " it 
will serve its turn for this time or purpose. 

BowDER, BooLDEE, BowLDER Stones, large 
round cobbles, as witness the Bowder Stone of 
Borrowdale. 

Bower or Boor, an inner room. 

Bow-HouGiiED, having crooked thighs. 

" She's 'bow-houglied, she's hein shinned, 
Ae luBping leg a hand-breed sliorter." 

Braad-Scar, a broad stone. 

Brad, spread out, hot, inflamed. 

Brae, rather an open stretch of upland than a bank. 

Braids, resembles ; is like to. 

Brake, to beat violently. 

Brandreth, an iron tripod fixed over the fire, on 

which is placed the pot or kettle or girdle. 

" Three legged Brandreth " is a secondary hill 

near Buttermere. 
Brank, to bridle; to hold up the head Ihce a horse 

sharply reined. 
Brant or Brent, steep; Brantwood, stcepwood. 
Brass, money. " He's a gay lock o' brass," he has 

plenty of money. 
Brast and Brassen and Brussen, and Beossen, 

burst; generalljr applied to over-eating. "Nay, 

what I'se eat till I'se fairly brossen," I have 

eaten till I am nearly burstiug. 
Brat, an apron or pinafore. 
Brattle, a push, a stroke, to thunder, to huny. 
Brauchin, a horse collar. 
Brawly and Brav^elt, well ; in good health. 
Brawn, a boar. 
Braxy or Bracksie, hard mutton hams which 

take the skin off your mouth, and are very nearly 

uneatable altogether. 
Brayed, beaten; " to bray in a mortar," to pound 

or beat up. 
Break-ditch, a straying cow that will wander 

from her pastures. 
Beee, a bustle. 

Breed Beyder, a bread-basket. 
Breeder, brother. 



Beide-ale, wedding- ale; so called from the bride 

selling the ale at the poorer marriages. 
Bride-cake, the thin currant (girdle) cake, which, 
after they had left the church, and generally at 
an inn, the bridegroom used to break over the 
head of the bride (covered with a clean napkin), 
and for the broken pieces of which the brides- 
maids and men used to scramble as for 
charms. 
Bride-wain, an old custom now almost out of 
date, where the friends of a newly-married couple 
assemble for a treat of cold pies, furmenty, and 
ale, ending in a collection for the benefit of the 
entertainers. " At the close of the day, the 
bride and bridegroom are placed in two chairs, 
in the open air, or in a large bam, the bride with 
a pewter dish on her knee, half covered with a 
napkin; into this dish the company put their 
offerings, Avhich occasionally amount to a con- 
siderable sum." " Wain," or " bride-wain," 
means the bride's wain or waggon, which, like 
the Prench corbeille, is assumed to be filled AA'ith 
bridal articles of value, taken from her father's 
to her new home, and decorated with ribbons, 
flowers, &c. But the name and the custom are 
both passing away. 

The following is from the Cumberland 
Packet: — "George Hayter, who married 
Ann the daughter of Joseph and Dinah 
Collin, of Crossley Mill, purposes having 
a Bride- Wain at his house at Crossley near 
Maryport, on Thursday, May 7 th next, 
(1789), where he Avill be happy to see his 
Priends and Wellwishers, for whose amuse- 
ment there will be a Saddle, two Bridles, 
a pair of Gauds d'amour, gloves — which 
whoever Avins is sure to be mai-ried within 
the Twelvemonths, a Girdle (Ceinture de 
Venus) possessing qualities not to be de- 
scribed, and many other Articles, Sports, 
and Pastimes too numerous to mention, but 
which can never prove tedious in the exhi- 
bition." 
Brig, a bridge. 

Brock, a badger; a cabbage; a small fragment. 
Brong, brought. 
Broaa', " saucy, pert, handsome, clever." — W. and 

C. Dialects. 
Brow^n-cock, the cock-chafer. 
Bruil, to broil ; and Bruilliment, a broil. 



298 



PEOVINCIALISMS OF THE LAKE DISTRICT. 



Bookstall, a forest service; attending at a certain 

station to watch the red deer in hunting, and 

assisting to turn tliem out on the fell tops; a 

net to catch deer. 

BuDE, the participle of bide; having borne with 

patience. 
BuLL-STANG, a dragon fly. 
Bumble Bee, the humble bee. 
BuMMELLs, or Bomble-kites, blackberries. 
BuMMiN, humming. Ale is bumming when made 
into hot posset and singing by the fire on the hob. 
BuMMLE, and Bummelt, and Bummler's Luck, 
means to bungle and bungled, and the bungler's 
or blunderer's luck. 
BcTN, or Bdnnel, a dry hemp stalk; a hex, or the 

dry hollow stalk of the hemlock. 
Burley-Briggs, or Baeley-Break, a game. 
Bden, a brook. 

Butch, to kill for meat; "he hutches for Joe 
Ritson; " he kills Joe Ritson's " beasts " fur him. 
Butter-shag, a slice of bread-and-butter. 
Butter-sops, Avheaten bread or oat- cake fried 

in butter and sugar. An excellent sweetmeat. 
Bword-claith, table-cloth. 

BwoEDEE-cowppERS, horsc-dealcrs from the bor- 
ders; generally sad rogues. "I'se fra t' border, 
lad ! " Hoot, ay, mon, like eneugli ; t' coarsest 
part o' t' claith 's alius nighest t' selvedge ! " 
I'm from the border, lad! Pshaw, yes, man, 
very naturally; the coarsest part of the cloth is 
always next the selvage ! 
Byre, cow-house. 
Cabbish, cabbage; a "tailor's cabbish" is what 

the tailor filches or cabbages. 
Cade Lamb, pet lamb. 
Cafe, chaff; not to be confounded with Caulf or 

CoAF, a calf 
Caleever, or Callevie, to prance about ; to make 
a riot; to be in any way wild and unrestrained; 
furiously frisky. 
Callar, cold ; fresh ; cool. 
Cam and Coom, comb; and the crest of a hill. 
Cammed, crooked, or ill-tempered. 
Cample, to reply saucily; to argue and dispute. 
Cankert, rusted; also ill-tempered. 
Canny, a clever and capable, or fine and handsome, 
woman; a good manager and a clever house- 
keeper; also a smart and capable man. "A 
canny body" of either sex is expressive of a 
wide range of practical virtues and administra- 



tive qualities, best translated, perhaps, by the 
American word "faculty;" but a canny hinny 
is a sly, and not a loveable person. 
Cap, to surpass in any way. "That caps a';" 
that goes beyond all I have heard; that out- 
herods Herod, and " bangs Bannager." 
Carel, Carlisle. 

Caeras, by elision and conti'action, Car, or Cart- 
house. 
Cart-loose, cart-rut. 
Cat, sometimes nape or cap, as ' Cat o' the neck,' 

— the cap or cape of the neck. 
Catwitted, silly and self-sufficient. 
Caud, or Cauld, cold. 
Caul, a swelling; a bail. 

Cawkers, or Clogs, the iron tips and heels on 

the country wooden-soled shoes. Spring clogs 

are the same things made with a sole separate 

from the heel, and tapering to a fine edge, 

thus giving a kind of spring-board sole to the shoe. 

Cawl, to abuse ; browbeat ; frighten. " He 

cawll'd me reet nasty; " he abused me very 

shamefully. 

Chaft, the jaw; a corruption oi chaps. 

Char, our " golden Alpine trout," found in some, 

not all, the lakes. 
Chats, spray-wood. 

Cheg, to chew a hard substance, as you clieg at a 

bit of wood, and you cheg braxy, or hrachsie. 

Chimley, Chimley lug, and Chimley Ncik, 

the chimney corner; the place on the settle 

nearest the fire. 

Chitty, the usual term for a cat. " Chitty-Puss- 

Lane " is a small back street in Keswick. 
Chop in, to put in. 
Chow, to mumble and gi-umble and mutter like 

an old woman or peevish child. 
Claaikin, scratching. 

Claggy, clammy and sticky; clay mud is claggy ; 
and half-baked bread is claggy, as well as sad; 
and treacle is claggy ; but a damp and sticky 
hand is puggy. 
Clam, to hunger; and to climb; Claver, or 
Clevver, is also to climb ; but Clavers is idle 
talking. 
Clap-bread, thin cakes of oats or barley, baked 
on the griddle. They are made on the clap- 
board. 
Claets, Claety, Claeting, mud, muddy, and 
dirtying with mud. 
299 Q Q 2 



APPENDIX I, 



Clashes, tale-bearers and gossips. 

Clay daubin, an old custom, dying out, when the 
friends of a newly-married couple met together 
and built them a clay house; ending the day 
with a feast or merry-making, as of course. 

Cleck, or Click, to snatch. " He clicked it oot 
o' my hand; " he snatched it out of my hand. 

Cleckings, a shuttlecock. 

Cleed, to clothe; as Cled is clad or clothed. 

Cleek, to hook. 

Cleggek, to cling; and Clegg is a horse-fly. 

Cleps, a wooden tool for weeding corn. 

Clecgh, or Cloxjgh, a ravine or ghyll ; the stem 
of a tree where it divides into branches. 

Clifty, apt ; active; generous. 

Clink, a blow. 

Clints, a kind of limestone or porphyritic stone. 

Clipt and Heeled, properly drest, like Busked 
and Banned. 

Clipt Dinment, a newly shorn Avedder sheep ; 
a mean, sorry-looking fellow. 

Glish-ma-Sauntek and Clish-ma-Claver, the 
one is a proser, and the other a gossip; and 
Clish-ma- Clash is silly gossip in the concrete. 

Clod, to thiow. 

Clott, to toss about. 

Clout, a cloth ; a piece of cloth ; to patch ; to give 
a blow. " I'll gie thee a clout on t' head on thee, 
lad, if thou fashes me ony mair," I'll punch 
your head, boy, if you tease me any more. 

Clowen, to bustle about. 

Clowk, or Clow, to scratch, but rather to claw; 
as two women might " clowk at ane anither." 

Clufe, a blow, {pro cuff) ; and Clufet, beaten or 
cufted. 

Cluuts, feet ; and Cld ves, hoofs. 

CoATTS, petticoats. 

Cobby, headstrong and hearty: "A cobby lad," 
an obstinate, though he may be also a fine- 
natured, lad, but one who must have his head. 

CocKEK, a cock-breeder or tighter; Cockin, cock- 
fighting; Cockle, to crow like a cock. Cock- 
fighting, like pancake casting, used to be the 
popular amusement on Shrove Tuesday. 

" VVliaar llier war tae lie Cook- feiglitm', for it war Pankeak 
Tuesday, 
We met some lads an lasses gangin' to kest their Pari- 
keaks." 

CocKLER, a gatherer of cockles ; Cocklin, gather- 
ing cockles. 



CocKWEBS, cobwebs. 

Coggers, woollen leggings. 

CoLLOP Monday, the first Monday before Lent, 
when they have coUops, or rashers of bacon and 
eggs for dinner, as they have pancakes for the 
next day. Shrove Tuesday. 

Conn, and Scuo, a squirrel. 

CoNNY, pjretty; Connoly, prettily; cannily. 

Convoy, a railway break, chiefly used on the 
Whitehaven coal-pit tramways. 

Coo, or Coe, to call. 

Coon, dust. ♦ 

Coon-thanks, to requite a favour: "The deil 
coon him thanks;" the devil reward him. 

CoppY, a small wooden stool; a coppice. 

Corby, a raven. 

CoRNAGE, " a tenure which obliges the landholder 
to give notice of an invasion by blowing a horn," 
W. and C. Dialects. Or was it not the serAace of 
finding and rendering certain horned beasts at 
certain times of need or stipulation ? 

Corn Laiters, corn seekers. Newly married people 
begging for seed corn for their first crop ; a custom 
yet in use about Black Combe and Broughton. 

Corp, a corpse. 

Cottered, cluttered; entangled; matted. 

Couper fair, a market held at Kirkby Stephen the 
day before the great Brough-hill fair, when 
" belter for belter," means a proposal to ex- 
change or barter horse for horse — halter for 
halter. 

CouPR^usE, to raise by leverage. 

Couren, crouching, cowering. 

Cow-clat, to spread manure on the fields. 

CowEY, a hornless cow. 

CowD Lavord, oatmeal pudding made with suet ; 
not recommendable. 

Cowl, to scrape up dirt. 

Cowp, to exchange; and to upset. "He cowped 
me o'er;" he upset me, or knocked me down; 
and " we cowped nags," wc exchanged horses. 

Crack, to boast ; to chat, as "He's a fine crack 
wid him," he is a good talker, an agreeable 
talker. " I'sc du'it in a crack," I'll do it in a 
moment. 

Cracket, a cricket; also a lower kind of coppy, 
or stool. 

Crasible, to crawl and creep, as young children, 
on hands and knees. 

Cr^vmmkl, to do a thing elumsily. 



300 



PROVINCIALISMS OF THE I.AKE DISTRICT. 



Crankle, weak. 

Cranky, checked; a dress is cranky when it is 
checked, and the Rob Roy tartan is cranky. 

Crap, crept; Crappen, crept in. 

Cropt, a small field. 

Croupe, to stoop ; to crouch. 

Crouse, or Crowish, spirited; pert, upstart. 

Crow-Coal, an inferior kind of coal. 

Crowdt, thick oatmeal porridge made with lard. 
A horrible mess. 

Cruin, Croon, or Crune, to murmur; to hum a 
tune; also to bellow. "The bull's crooning," 
the bull is bellowing. The church bells at 
Brough bear upon this word. They were given 
by one Brunskill, who liyed on Stanemore, and 
who, one clay hearing his bull crune, or bellow, 
from a great distance, said: — "Hear ye how loud 
that bull crunes ? If all the kye could crune 
together would they not be heard from Brough 
to Stanemore ? " Whereupon he sold his stock, 
and bought the church bells with the money, 
and in this way his bulls and cows " crune " 
to this Tcry hour, and are heard' fi'om Brough 
to Stanemore. 

Cuddy, Cuthbert, and jackass as well. 

Cummerlan', Cumberland ; generally " canny 
Cmnmerlan'." 

CuRCHY, to curt?ey. 

CtiRLEY-POW, a ringletted, curly head. 

Cursenjmas, Corsmas, Christmas ; Cursinin, 
christening. 

CuRSTY, Christopher. 

CusH, an exclamation: " Cush, lass ! " my word ! 
look here ! Also the call for the cows. " Cush ! 
cush ! cush ! " cried at the gate will bring the 
kye up like dogs. 

CusHY-cow Lady, the ladybird. 

CuTTEN, cut down. 

Cutter, to whisper; speak low. 

Cutty, short; a Cutty pipe, a short black clay 
pipe at one time to be seen in every auld wife's 
mouth. 

CwoLLY, or CwoALEY, a coUey or sheep dog. 

CwoATS, clothes. 

Daddle, the hand; to trifle. 
Dadge, to saunter about; "to loaf." 
Daet, and Daft-like, idiotic ; half-Avise. 
Daggy, drizzly {W. and C. Dialects); also half 

cooked, and therefore sodden, meat. 
Daive, or Dill, to soothe. 



Dander, to hobble. 

Dannet, an improper woman, 

Darrak, a day's work. 

Darter, active; energetic; bustling. 

Dawkin, a simpleton; a soft, feckless, Dolittle. 

" I'd rather have a wife a dule than a dawkin ; " 

I'd rather have a wife a devil than a fool. 
Dazed, confused, or dizzy, as with overmuch light. 

Old people are often dazed. 
Dazeg, a daisy. 
Deail, Dole, or Drail, a share or allotment in 

enclosed land; an intake. 
Deetin, or Deeghtan, winnowing corn. 
Deftly, cleverly. To do a thing deftly, is to do 

it quickly and quietly and easily. 
Deg, to sprinkle with water; to ooze slowly. 
Dess, a row or heap ; to dess is to sort or pile up. 
Deyl'd, spiritless; careworn. 
Dezzed, injured by cold. Chickens get dtzzed 

when they are starved with the cold. 
DiBBLER, a pewter plate. 

Didder, to tremble; to shiver; to dodder, in fact. 
Diddle, to hum a tune. 
DiGHT, or Dest, to clean; to dress; to put in order. 

You diyht yom'self Avhen you dress cleanly ; and 

you dight a room when you arrange it. 
Dinnle, to thrill; to tingle from cold. 
DissNiNS, the eighth part of a mile in horse-racing. 
DiTT, to stop up. 
Div, to do, and Divvent, do not. " Ye divvent 

ken me." You do not know me. 
DoBBY, a bogie, and a fool. 
Doff, to put off. You doff one gown, and you 

don another. 
Doggenel, an eagle. 
Don, to dress; put on. 
Donnet, the de\'il. 
Dope, a simpleton. 
Dorted, stupefied. 
DouBLER, the general bowl in which was served 

the posset ale, before the time of tea and 

individual spoons. 
Douse, or Douce, a fresh, canny, well-conditioned 

person. "A douce woman," one who is gentle and 

prudent and well-behaved; also good-looking. 
Dow, good; "naught a' ofow," nothing that is 

good. " We maun do as we dow," we must do 

as we can; also a dove. 
Dow^LY, melancholy as applied to persons; lone- 
some and grewsome as applied to places. 



301 



APPENDIX I. 



Down House, the kitchen. 

DowNO-CANNOT ; "the bird that can sing and 
won't sing," is an exemphfication of " downo- 
cannot," (don't know, cannot.) 

DozAND, spiritless; impotent. 

DozzEL, a hard knob or lump : " A' lumps and 
dozzels like Nanny Haikin's butter," is a pro- 
verb to express anything lumpy, as lumpy 
porridge, and a lumpy feather-bed. 

Draff, brewer's grains and pig's food. 

Dree, long and tedious. " A dree road," a long 
and weary way. 

Dreeap, to speak slowly; to drip one's words in 
short. 

Drip, snow; "white as drip." 

Druivy, overcast; muddy. 

Due, a small pool or hole of stagnant water. 

Dcbblek, a large plate whether of wood or 
earthenware. 

Duds, clothes, but of poor quality. " Them bits 
o' duds," those few old rags. 

DuLE, the devil; and dulish, devilish. 

Dumb Wife, a fortune teller, but only by conse- 
quence of her dumbness. 

DuNCH, to nudge roughly. 

DuNG-owRE, knocked down. 

DuRDEM, uproar; row; hubbub. 

DuRTMENT, dirtment; anything useless and uncon- 
sidered. 

Dust, money. 

D WALLOWED, withered; a flower dwallows, so docs 
a sick and fading child. 

Dykes, detached parts of the vein of a coal mine, 

Ea, in ; and. 

Earles-penny, or Arles-penny, bargain money; 
money advanced to servants when they are 
hired, to make sure. 

Eavelong, oblong. 

Eaver, or Eever, a point or quarter in the 
heavens; " the rainy eever," the rainy quarter. 

Eem, leisure. 

EiTH, easy. 

Elcone, each one. 

Elcy, Alice. 

Elden, old rubbish of all kinds, specially old wood 
tit only to be burned. 

Eld-Eather, a grandfather; but El-mother, is a 
stei^mother; an "old" or "ill" mother. 

Elson, a shoemaker's awl. 

Esii, or Ax, to ask ; and Esiit, or Axx, asked. 



Esiies, ash trees; and Esses, like asses, ashes. 

" Skeer the esse," sift the ashes from the embers. 
Ettle, to prepare; also to earn, 
Fadder-Fwok, father's family. 
Faddlb, to fidget over things. "A feckless fad- 

dling body," an incapable, fidgeting, messing 

person. 
Eadge, to loiter and lounge as if tired ; Fadgy, 

corpulent. 
Faffle, to saunter and to fumble about. 
Fagged, tired. 
Fain, glad; desirous. 
Fair-tro-Days, dayhght. 
Fancy, a ribbon; a prize for the best dancer at 

the " Murrey Neets." 
Fan, found ; felt. 
Fansome, kind ; caressing. 
Farish-on, nearly tipsy. 

Farlies, outlandish wonders; things from afiir. 
Farr, to ache. 
Farrantly, orderly; decently; respectable. Auld 

FARRANTLY, old-fasliioncd, but in a decent and 

respectable sense. 
Fash, to trouble; to tease. "I canna be fashed 

just noo, sae hoo ways wi' ye ! " "I cannot be 

troubled just now, so be off with you! " 
Fashen, fashion; auld-fashined, or auld-fas- 

sioned, wise beyond your natural years or 

opportunities. 
Fashery, annoyances; also tediously nice ways; 

and FASSious is tedious and tiresome — " bother- 
ing," in modern slang. 
Fassen's-even, fastings eve, or Shrovetide. 
Faul, a farmyard. 
Fawd, a bundle of straw. 
Fearful, very, " A fearful gran' seeght," a very 

fine sight. 
Feater, a good dancer, or footer. 
Featlet, four ]Dounds of butter. 
Feckless, feeble; incapable; daAvdling. 
Feeag, to encumber; to load. 
Feeal, to hide. " He that feeals can find." 
Fell, the lower spurs of the mountain ridges ; also 

the lower elevations, if rocky, all through the 

country. As a verb, to knock down. 
Fend, to work hard; "he fends hard for a 

living;" also used as a form of greeting; "hoo 

fend ye ? " how do you do ? how do you 

thrive ? 
Fendy, thrifty, and well managing. 



302 



PROVINCIALISMS OF THE LAKE DISTEICT. 



Fest, to ]et out; also to bind, as an apprentice. 
Fettle, to put in order whatever is amiss, wliether 

broken, or untidy, or unprepared; also, substan- 
tively, a cord to fasten a pannier. To be " out 

of fettle," is to be out of condition — out of 

health — but not seriously so. 
Few't-weel, promised fair. 
FiDGE, to fidget; to sprawl. Fietlb and Feck 

are also to fidget. 
Fig-sue, ale boiled with figs and fine " white " 

(wheaten) bread, and eaten on Good Friday. 
Filth, a bad man or woman ; generally a slut. 
Fine, to cease or end. 
FissEL, to rustle hghtly. 

Fizzle, to nestle; to get close up to; caressingly. 
Flacker, to quiver; to flutter; as Flackered, it 

is rejoiced. 
Flaitch, to flatter; to persuade. 
Flate, or Flait, frightened. 
Flann, shallow. 
Flead, stood. 
Fleck, a flitch. 
Fleebtsky, (fly by the sky, fly by night), a flighty 

inconsiderate person. 
Fleek, or Flock, a flounder. 
Fleer, the floor; also to jeer and make game of; 

as is Flyer, or Flyke. 
Flig-me-gaihey, a flaunting, "fast," untidy 

girl. 
Flipe, the rim of a hat. 
Flou, or Flew, or Flue, bleak; windy; shallow; 

also used to express a certain blue unwholesome 

pallor, as from cold or weakness, 
Flyre, to jeer. 
Flyte, to scold. 
Foe, fall; Foeth', fall thee; Foin-awt, fallen out, 

or quarrelled. 
FoiN, falling. 

Foosen, generosity; Foosenable, generous. 
Force, a waterfall. 
Forret, or Forrat, forward; also impudent; pert. 

" To be weel foiTat with ane's wark," and a 

" forrat lisle lass," have different moral meanings. 
Format, to bespeak. 
FossPLE, the impression of a horse's hoof on soft 

gi-ound. 
Fou, full; also tipsy. "We're no fou," we are 

not tipsy. 
Foudersome, bulky; cumbersome. 
Foumart, a pole-cat ; the foul marten. 



FouT, fond; foolish; substantively, a spoiled child; 

a pet. 
Frahdle, to talk foolishly. 
Frase, fray; and Fratch, quarrel. 
Fremmed, strange. 
Frid or Frith, unused pasture land. 
Fridge or Fruin, to brush or rub against another 

in passing. 
Frittish, cold. 
Frosk, a frog. 
Frow, a worthless woman. 
FuDGEL, a clumsy, stupid little child. 
FuE, or Few, to attempt. ' ' I canna f ue to do it," 

I cannot make the attempt, I cannot dare to 

do it. 
FuRED, went. 
FusoME, or Fewsome, handsome; neat; notable; 

tidy. 
Gaapen, or GowPEN, the hands ; also what can be 

held by the two hands placed together. 
Gaily, very well. " I'se gaily, thank ye," I'm all 

right, quite well. 
Gait, goat; also a path; a way; a single sheaf of 

corn ; two buckets of water. To gait corn is to 

set up sheaves of corn in wet weather to dry. 
Galloway, a horse under fifteen hands high; a 

hackney. 
Gallus or Gallows, much; very; exceedingly. 
Gammashers, spatterdashers ; gaiters. 
Gammerstang, " a tall, awkward person of a bad 

gait, a hoyden or awkward girl." — W. and C. 

Dialects. 
Gang, to go. 
Ganging- a-Rocking, going a visiting, and taking 

a rock and spindle for the combination of pleasure 

and business. 
Gangril, a toad. 
Gant, to ya^^^l. 
Gantree, a barrel stand. 
Gar, to make, to compel. " I'll gar thee greet," 

I'll make you cry. 
Garrick, or Garrack, an awkward lout. 
Garth, a garden, or piece of enclosed cultivated 

land. 
Gate, a road, or path, or way, as is Geatt ; " gang 

the gate," go your way, be off. 
Gattle-headed, forgetful; addleheaded. 
Gavelock, an iron bar used as a lever. 
Gawmin, silly ; stupid ; a moral gawky. 
Gayshen, smockfaced and silly. 



303 



APPENDIX I. 


Gear, money; possessions; the tackling of a cart 


or lean" (W. mid C. Dialects); but Graitiied 


or plough. 


is dressed. 


Ged-wand, a goad for oxen. 


Grank, to moan. 


Geslings, goslings; the yellow blossoms of the 


Gratii, to repair; assured. 


sallow or willow, Avhich fall into tlae river and 


Greeav or Grove, to cut peat; to dig. 


become goslings. 


Greet, to weep; to cry. 


GiF and Gin, if. 


Grepen, clasped (gripen or griped?) 


Gill, or Giitll, a deep ravine with a force or 


Gretmin, a thin covering of snow. 


stream at tlie bottom. 


Greype, or Grape, a pitchfork for manure. 


GiLLiVER, a gillyflower. 


Grise, young pigs ; used to be anciently wild swine. 


A Gird of laughter, a fit of laughter. 


Grousome, or Grewsome, fearful; frightful; grim ; 


GiRN, to grin. 


awful. 


Girt, or Gurt, great. 


Grump, and Grumpy, cross; displeased. 


Glad, smooth. 


Gryke, a cranny; a chink; a fissure. 


Gleaan, squinting. 


Gud Hawns, good hands — stanch drinkers. 


Glead, or Glede, a kite. 


GuDMAN, the husband, called also generally "f 


Glender, to stare; and Glint, a glimpse, a 


maister." 


glance, as is also Gliff; but ^Z?^ means a more 


Guff, a fool, 


transient and momentary glance tlian glint. 


GuLDER, to speak harsh and loud. 


Glime, to look askance; to squint — substantively 


Gulley, a big clasp-knife, a joctelegs or jachey 


tlie glaire or slime that comes from the nostrils 


legs. 


of cows and hoi'ses. 


GuBDLE, Girdle, Griddle, the iron laid over, 


Glish, or Glisk, to shine or glitter. 


or on, the brandreth, and on which cakes are 


Gloar, or Glowre, to stare Avith passion or 


baked. 


malevolence; to leer. " E'en Satan glower'd an 


GuRSiN, grazing, pasturage. 


fidged fu' fain." 


Hacked, a term used when a player has won all 


Glop, a fool ; and Gloppen, to astonish; to stare; 


the stakes ; chopped or chapped. 


to frighten; to disgust. 


Hacker, to stammer; "to hacker and stammer" 


Glouping, silent or stupid. 


is to prevaricate. 


Glumped, gloomed. 


Hackled, cross and ill-tempered. 


Glunch, to look cross and angry. 


Hack Pudding, a pudding made of suet and 


Glutiien, to gather for rain. 


sheep's heart, sugar and dried fi'uits, and eaten 


Gob, the mouth. 


on Christmas morning. 


Goddartlt, cautiously. 


Hack-Slater, a nasty fellow; a sloven. 


GoDiL, God's will ; and Godlins, God willing. 


Hadleys, hardly. 


GoEERAM, a clown; and Gobslotch, a greedy 


Hag, to hack or cut; to haggle; to dispute. 


clown. 


Haike, an exclamation. 


A good few, a good many. 


Haistert, hoisted about. 


GoPE, to talk vulgarly and loud. 


Hallan, the passage or space between the outer 


Gosh and Gomm, exclamations of the same cha^^ 


and inner door of a cottage; also the partition 


racter as Cush. 


between the passage and the room. Birkett 


Gove, to gape and stare like a fool. 


derives the word from the German, helden, to 


GowD i' GowpENS, gold in handfuls. 


conceal ; it is more likely to be the diminutive of 


Gowk, the cuckoo ; a fool ; the core of an ap]3le 5 


hall; a kalian is to a cottage what a lobby or 


the yolk of an egg; the inner part of anything. 


hall is to a large house. — W. and C. Dialects. 


GowL, to weep; to cry sulkily; as Gowlan is cry- 


Hallan-shaker, a beggar who stands in the 


ing and sobbing in a " howling " kind of way. 


hallan to excite charity. 


Graidely, honestly. 


Halts, " a pair of strong wicker hampers which 


Graiped, groped. 


were joined by a pack saddle, and hung across 


Graitit, " the condition of the body, as being fat 


a horse's back; they were put to various uses in 


3C 


4 



PROVINCIALISMS OF THE LAKE DISTRICT. 



husbandry, which offices are now performed by 
carts." — W. and C. Dialects. 

Ham-samm, anyhow; confusedly. 

Hantle, a handful, or good quantity. " She's a 
hantle o' brass," she has a good handful of 
money. 

Hap, to cover, and Happin, a coverlid ; Hap up, 
cover up. 

Happen, or Mappen, perhaps it may be; literally 
the corruption of "it may happen." 

Haeden-glotii, sacking; Harden Sark, one of 
the stipulated modes of paying certain small 
countr}^ priests in former times ; a shirt of very 
coarse texture. 

Haek't, guessed. 

Harns, brains. " Ding out your barns," knock 
out your brains. 

Hask, rough ; parched ; stiff. 

Haspin, an idle fellow doing nothing but lounging 
about. 

Haster, surfeit; something that hastes you to your 
end. 

Haugh, like Sough, low flat marshy ground. 

Hause, Hawse or Hose, the neck ; the throat ; 
the lower spur or ridge of the mountain line ; 
with a way leading over, as Buttermere Hawse, 
Bassenthwaite Hawse, &c. 

Haver, oats; to talk nonsense. 

Havet-scavey, helter-skelter. 

Haw, hungry. 

Haavflin, a halflmg — a half witted person next 
thing to a fool. 

Hawkey, a white-faced cow. 

Hay-bay, noise ; confusion ; Hay-maiden, the 
ground ivy {glechoma hederacea). 

Heald, or Weald, to lean on one side. 

Heams, a wooden collar for horses. 

Heck, " the division from the side of the fire in 
the form of a passage in old houses; also an en- 
closure of open work of slender bars of wood, 
as a rack to hold hay for horses. A Heck- 
Board is the board at the tail of a cart; Heck 
Door, the inner door, not closely panelled, but 
only partly so, and the rest latticed; Hale- 
heck, the half or lower part of a door." — 
W. and C. Dialects. 

Heckle, to dress tow or flax ; to get impotently 
angry. 

Heead-wark, headache. 

Heffle, to hesitate ; to prevaricate. 



Helle, to pour in a rapid manner. 

Helm Wind, the peculiar -wind coming with the 

cloud called the Helm, which rests on the top of 

Crossfell. 
Herd, a cattle keeper ; Herdwick, a farm famous 

for its herds or beasts and sheep. Two or three 

farms in Cumberland have this name, hence the 

designation of Herdwick sheep. 
Heriot, a fine paid to the lord when a landholder 

dies, generally a horse or cow, but sometimes, 

when the lord is " keen," the best thing the 

unfortunate landholder has left behind him. 
Herrt, or Harry, to rob and distress ; to rob by 

violence as in the border times, when William 

of Deloraine harried the lands of Richard 

Musgrave. 
Hesp, to latch. " Hesp or hasp the door," latch the 

door; only to be used for the old fashioned latches. 
Hether-faced, rough faced. 
Hedck, a crook or sickle; and Heuck-fingered 

is thievish. 
Heugh, a ravine. 
Hight, to promise; to vow. 
Hind, a farm servant. 

Hinny, honey; one of the prettiest terms of endear- 
ment of the country. 
HiRPLE, to limp. " He hosts and he hirples the 

weary night lang." 
HiTTEN, eaten. 
HoAST, the curd for cheese before it is taken from 

the Avhey. 
Hob thross, " a bodie a' owre rough " that lies by 

the fireside at nights; the Brownie. 
HocKER, to clamber a little unsteadily. 
Hogs, sheep from six months old until they are 

shorn. 
Holm, rich meadow lands, as Abbey Holm, &c.; 

lake islands, as the holms on Windermere and 

Ullswater, and Ramps Holm on Derwentwater. 
Holt, a peaked hill, wooded. 
Host, to cough. 

Hot, a square basket, used for manure. 
HoTCH, to shake. " An' botched an' blew wi' 

might an' main." 
Hove, swelled; to lift or heave. 
How, empty; "the how neet," the empt^ lonely 

night. 
HowDER, to walk heavily. 
Howdon-can-Panter, an ungraceful rider, 
HowDY-wiFE, a midwife. 



305 



R R 



APPENDIX I. 



HowK, to dig out with a spade or pick. 
HuBBLESHOo and Hubble-te-Siiives, a mob and 

confusion. 
Huddle, to embrace; to hug; Huddlin, cuddling. 
HuNSXJP, to scold; to "fratcb." 
PluRSLE, to shrug the shoulders. 
'HwoAziN, resin. 
Ilk, or Ilka, each ; the same. 
Ime (a contraction of rime), also Izle, hoar- 
, frost. 
Imp, an addition to a beehive; a length of hair in 

a fishing-line. 
Ingle, fire or flame; Inglewood, fire-wood; 

Ingle-nuik, the fire-corner, or seat nearest the 

fire. An ingle of sticks is a common phrase. 
Jacket slope, a kite. 

Jannak, fit; proper; good; fair and honourable; 
, smart or fine. — Halliwell's Archaic Dic- 
tionary. 
Jannocks, loaves of oatmeal — oat-bread, not 

cake. 
Jarble, to bemire; to daggle. 
Jaws o' Yell, great quantities of ale. 
JiDDY-ctJM-JiDT, a see-saw. 
JiMMER, a hinge. 

Jimp, slender; a "jimp waist," a small round, 
• trim waist. 
JiKKAN, and Careering, "junketing and keeping 

it up." — TF. and C. Diahcts. 
Joan-na-ma-crank, a heron. 
Jobbt and Jwosep, Joseph. 
Joisted, pastured. 
JowRiNG, or JowLiNG, pushing and shaking 

against anything. 
Jyke, to creak. 

Kaaikin, looking about stupidly. 
Kaik, or Kelk, a kick. 
Kale (Kail), broth. 
Keane, to scamper away. 
Keave, to plunge and struggle and writhe 

clumsily. 
Keckst, whooping cough. 
Keek, to peep and piy. 
Keel, to cease. 

Keep and Creek (keeper and crook), hook and 
- eye. 
Keld, a well or spring; also those dark smooth 

places which come upon the lakes, without 

wind, or shadow of cloud. 
Kelp, a young crow; also a pot-hanger or crook. 



Kemps, coarse fibres or hairs in wool. 

Kench, a twist; a sprain. 

Kenguid, an exemplar; also the mark distinctive 
of any one. 

Kenspeckle, noticeable for any peculiadty of 
dress or appearance. 

Kerley-merley, kickshaws and follies; what we 
might now perhaps call brie a Irac, if speaking 
fashionably. 

Kessen, to cast on; as to " kest a loop," to cast on 
the first or additional loops in knitting. 

Kett, rubbisii. 

Kevvel, to walk awkwardly. 

Kex, the hemlock; the withered stalk of the 
hemlock. 

Keysand, Kysant, Kisty, dainty in food; 
squeamish. 

Kezzlup-skin, rennet; the stomach of a calf used 
for curdling milk into " come milk " (curds and 
Avhey). 

Kink, a small sore — specially a small chapped sore 
on the lips or hands ; Kink-host, the chin- 
cough. 

Kirk-garth, the churchyard. 

Kirn, churn; Kirn-supper, harvest- supper, so 
called because a quantity of cream, slightly 
churned, was originally the only dish which 
constituted it. — W. and C. Dialects. 

KiKOCK, a raise, a heap of stones. 

KiST, a chest. 

Kite, the abdomen. 

Kits, pails. 

Kittle, to tickle, also quick; Kittly-slip-douns, 
barley-meal porridge. 

Kizzard, wizzened; shrivelled; parched; dry. 

Knack, or Knapp, to mince in speaking; to speak 
affectedly. 

Knap, the top of a hill. 

Kniee, or Kneave, or Neaf, the fist. 

Knop, a large tub; also the top of a gooseberry. 
You have to knop gooseberries, "berries," before 
using them; in the south you top and tail them. 

Kype, heed; care; attention. 

Laayin-days ! an exclamation, meaning "la!" 

Lairly, or Lairy, idle; base. 

Lait, to seek; and Laitit, found; Lating, an 
invitation or a seeking out. 

Lake, or Laik, to play; Laker, a person play- 
ing, or in high good humour; Lakeing, a 
plaything. 



506 



PROVINCIALISMS OF THE LAKE DISTIilCT. 



Lall, Lile, and Lislk, little. 

Lallops, a trollop. 

Lam, to beat. 

Lane, or Lean, to hide a fault ; to connive at. 

Lang Length, the whole length ; Langsome, long, 

tedious. 
Lant, loo; Lanter, aplayeratloo; Lanted, loo'd. 
Lash-comb, the large " back hair " comb, with 

wide teeth. 
Lauke, to whip; to weed corn ; Laukin, weeding. 
Lave, the rest; " ahint the lave," behind the 

others. 
Leathek-te-patch, a certain step in a jig. 
Leck, hard " blue clay," the substratum so often 

found in the north. 
Leddek and Leather, to beat. 
Leea, Leagh, Leigh, a scythe; and Leeath, or 

Leathe, a bam. 
Leeftail, a quick sale. 
Leet, or Ltte, to meet with ; to chance ; to alight ; 

to expect; and to depend on. 
Let-to-gate, went home. 
Lick, to beat. 
Lids, manner ; fashion, 
LiG, to lay; also a lie; Ligging, lying. 
Lilt, to sing, or "turn a tune;" also to walk 

jauntily. 
Limber, supple. 

Link, to take hold of arms; to w^alk quickly. 
LiPE, a piece cut off anything. 
Likple, Liverpool. 
LiRT, to toss. 

Lish, active; as a "lish dancer." 
Lithe, to listen; to attend. 
Lock, or Loke, a small quantity. " A lisle lock 

o' brass," a small quantity of money. 
LoFP, to offer. " I'd like t' loff on 't," I would 

like to have the offer of it. 
Lonnin, Loaning, a lane. 
LooME, lame. 
Low, to blaze up; to flame. Lowes, small knolls 

rising in the plains. Is this the meaning of 

tame and pretty Lowes Water, where are no 

mountains but only gentle, well-tempered little 

hills ? 
LoWN, or LouND, a calm. 
Lowp, or Lope, leap ; Lope e' dyke, a cow that 

leaps the hedges and wanders abroad. 
Lowse, to loosen; Lo"vvs'd, loosened. 
Lugs, the ears. 



LuRRT, to pull. 

Lush, the noise of anything falling into water. 

Lythet, thick. 

Maander, to wander; and Maap, to maunder; 

Maapment, rigmarole. 
Mack, or Mek, make; sort. " Them mack," that 

kind or sort of person or thing. 
Maddled and Maffling, confused like an old 

person; Maflin, a simpleton. 
Madlin, a bad memory. 
Maiden, a clothes-horse. 
Maislikin, foolish. 
Mae, Mary. 
Man-keen, fierce after men, said of animals 

whom the presence of a man makes mad with 

rage. 
Manneeley, in a proper manner. 
Man-sworn, perjured. 
Mant, to stutter. 
Mappen, maybe. 
Marrow and Marras, the match; the like to; 

the equal. 
MAwaiiN, a bunch of rags used for cleaning out 

ovens and other such places; a slattern. 
Mawm, peaceable; quiet. 
Maythem, a " may gosling." 
Mazle, daft; stupid; Mazelins, sillj^ confused 

people. 
Meakin, water milfoil (^Myriophyllum). 
Mean, to bemoan. 
Mell, to meddle; also a mallet. 

" I, Jchn Bell, 

Leave this mell. 

For to fell 
Tlieiii that gi'es a' to their bairns, 
And keeps nought for theirsel'." 

" Epitaph on himself by an old country mason, 
who, during his life, had given away all his 
property to his ungrateful children. The 
jockey who is last in a race, is called the 
mell." — W. and C. Dialects. 
Mell-door, the space between the heck and out- 
ward door; the entry or passage; that is, the 
middle or intermediate door. The mell-door 
and heck were always at the back of the 
house. 
Mense, manners; decency. Tailor's mense, the. 
bit of meat which a country tailor always leaves 
when working out at houses, lest he be charged 
with eating up everything; Mensful, is nian- 
S07 R R 2 



APPENDIX I. 



nerly and decent; and Menseless, is mannerless, 
mean, or wanting mense. 

Ment, mixed or mingled. 

Mere, a lake or pool; Meer, a mare. 

Merth, greatness; extent. 

Mess, truly; indeed; an untranslateable exclama- 
tion. 

Methy, difficulty of breathing. 

MiCKLE and Muckle, much. " Many a little 
makes a mickle." 

MiDDiN, a dunghill ; also Middin-stead. 

Miff, a mow or rick; and Miffmaff, nonsense. 

Mirk, dark. 

MiRLiN, pining. 

Mismajsneked, ill-mannered. 

MiSNARE, to inconvenience or mislay. 

MiSTETCH, evil teaching. " A mistetcht horse " 
is a horse with one or more special vices. 

MoAM, mellow. 

MoDTWARP, and Modldiewarp, a mole. 

MoiDER, to di&tract; to bewilder; to work hard. 

MoMMOCKS, little bits, fragments. 

Mood, roared; but used chiefly for a cow's " moo," 
or bellow. 

MooDLE, to fold up, but not neatl}^ 

MooRMASTER, the superintendent (not the captain) 
of the mines. 

MuL, the dust of peats; Mull, to break into small 
pieces. 

Mullock, dirt; refuse. 

MuRELL, to muse or think with great attention. 

MuRRY, merry; and Murry-nbet, merry night; a 
dance or other entertainment held at a public- 
house, where all the guests pay their share, and 
where drinking — the cardinal sin of the north 
— and its companion immorality are rampant. 
Happily now on the decline. 

Nantle, to fondle. 

Nash, brittle. 

Nattle, to rattle lightly; to nattle at a door or 
window is to shake or tap it lightly. 

Neb and Ness, a point; a beak; the nose; and, 
allusively, the mouth. 

Necked, when the ears of corn are laid by the 
wind they are necked ; and things notched are 
necked too. 

Night-Courtship, or Sittin' oop, a custom some- 
thing like the bundling of Wales, when two 
lovers " sit up " together through the night in 
the dark, generally lying in bed, both dressed ; 



it need scarcely be said with Avhat fatal conse- 
quences. But this, too, is a custom fast dying- 
out from all but very rough and remote 
places. 

Nobbut, only. 

Noddy, a game at cards. 

NoLT, black cattle; but also horned cattle gene- 
rally. 

NooLED, curbed; broken-spirited. 

NousKAiTH, a wishing or longing mixed with 
envy. 

NouTEGELD, Or Neatgeld, a tax paid in " beasts" 
in olden times. 

NuiKKEL, or NuiKKELT, yielding milk; Top- 
NuiKKEL, full of milk, said of a cow in the 
early days after calving. "Nuikkeli^ probably 
a corruption of new calved." — W. and C. 
Dialects. 

Nyfle, to pilfer. 

Oast, curd for cheese. 

Oddments, odds and ends. 

Oddwhite, an oath. " God wite," God knows. 

Off-at-side, mad. 

Ondergang, to undergo. 

OoN EGG, a soft egg without a shell. 

Open'd-their-gills, " said of those who gape 
wide and drink much." 

Oss, to offer; to attempt anything; Ossing, 
offering. 

OuT-Roup, a public auction. 

OwND, fated; or "overlooked." 

Pace-Eggs, Easter eggs, boiled hard and dyed all 
colours — red, purple, yellow, and black — much 
prized by children. 

Pack, a measure of coals equal to about three 
Winchester bushels. 

Paddock, frog ; Paddock-rud, or Paddock-eide, 
frog spawn. 

P.4JFi'ELDiN, baggage. 

Pan, to fit; to agree. 

Pang'd, quite full, as with food. 

Parlish, dangerous; a corruption of perilous. 

Parrack, a paddock near a house. 

Parsen, personal charms. 

Pate, a badger; also the head, as elsewhere. 

Paut, to walk with a heavy, clumsy step. 

Pawpe, to step forward in a leisurely measured 
manner. 

Pean, to strike or beat. 

Pech, to pant. 



308 



PKOVmCIALISMS OF THE LAKE DISTRICT. 



Pee, to squint; to peer; to look with one eye; 
Peed, blind of one eye. 

Pefe, to cough. 

Peg, to beat with sharp knuckles. 

Peldee, to encumber; and Pelter, a large mass 
or quantity. 

Pell, a storm of wind or rain; a turmoil and 
tumult. 

Pelset, obstinate; froward. 

Peis^ntstones, stone discs, made like quoits; a 
Pennystone cast, the distance they can be 
thrown. 

Pet-lip, a hanging, sulky-looking lip. 

Pettlb, to trifle. "He pettles.and fidges," he 
fidgets about doing little nothings. 

Petl, to beat. 

Pez-steae: when a girl loses her loA'cr, she is 
rubbed with peastraw by the young men of the 
village; and the same thing is done to a youth, 
by the girls, if he is jilted by his sweet-heart. 

Pick, pitch; Pick-daek, pitch dark; Picks, dia- 
monds in cards. 

PiCK-THE-EWOAL, Said of marcs which foal pre- 
maturely. 

PiGGiNS, small wooden pails, made like half barrels, 

, with one long stave left for a handle. They are 
used for milk and potatoes, and " a' macks o' 
things." 

Pig-hull, a hog sty. 

PiEXED, dried up; pinned. 

Plack, a piece of money. 

Pleenin, complaining; "badly." "I'se nobbut 
pleenin'," I'm ill. 

Ploat, to pluck the feathers from a fowl or bird. 

PoDDiSH, porridge. 

Poke, a sack or bag ; and Pokey, saucy; inquisi- 
tive ; pushing. 

Popple, to bubble up. 

Pops-and-Paiks, a game at cards. 

PossET-CDP, the pewter flagon in which the old- 
fashioned ale posset used to be seiwed. 

Pow, to pull; also the head; Pow^der, is bustle; 
haste. 

Primely, like brawly, very well; capitally. 

Primp, to be a prude ; to act priggishly. 

Prod, thrust. 

Pubble, plump. 

PuDDER, confusion. 

PuGGY, damp or moist; as " a puggy hand," a 
warm, damp, sticky hand. 



Pyfle, to pick delicately. 

Pyonnet, magpie. 

Quality-mak, quahty folk, gentlefolk. 

Racken, to think; also to reckon or count. 

Rack-hurry, the tramroad down to a hurry — that 
is, a staith or coal-wharf. 

Rackle, rude, boisterous ; Rackle-deed, dis- 
orderly conduct. 

Raddle, to weave; to banter; to riddle. 

Ragabrash, ragamuffins ; low people. 

Raid, an incursion over the Border, when the Scots 
harried the poor Borderers and lifted their gear. 

Raise, a cairn; a tumulus; a heap of stones ; a 
robbery. 

Ram, having a foul strong smell; Rammish, 
violent; also as the adjective of ram; Ram-stam, 
thoughtless. 

RajVNel-balk, or Ranxel-tree, the beam across 
the chimney, bearing the chain with crooks and 
hangers for the pots and kettles, and specially 
the Ratten-crook, or longest crook, reaching 
from the runnel balk to the fire. 

Rannigal, a wild " outward " unmanageable per- 
son ; Reeul has the same meaning. 

Ranty and Randy, wild to dissoluteness; also, 
more innocently, only frisky. 

Rappis, a rapscallion ; Rascot, a rascal — both 
corruptions. 

Ratch, a straight line; to pull asunder; to stretch; 
as is also Rax. 

Rattens, rats. Rattex-eow is the name of a 
hill near Caldbeck. 

Rave, rove; tore. 

Rear, to raise; to rally; Reer'd, raised on end. 

Redd up, to put to rights; to tidy oneself or a 
room. 

Reek, smoke. 

Ride, to ride out on horseback on a raid or foray ; 
a border term. " Ride Rowlie, the hough's i' the 
pot! " — Go out, Rowley, the last bit of beef (re- 
presented by the shin, or hough, the worst part) 
is in the pot, so go out and get more. 

Riding the Staxg. " On New Year's Day the 
populace carry stangs and baskets; whoever 
will not join them is mounted on the stang, and 
carried shoulder height to the next publi chouse 
and fined sixpence." — Gentlemen's Magazine, 
1791. Also, certain classes of misdoers were 
mounted on the stang, but if too reputable in 
station for such a display of popular feeling, a 



309 



APPENDIX I. 



substitute was found, who repeated, to make sure 
of no mistake, — 

" It isn't for my foat at I ride stang, 
But for W. B. who his wife does bang." 

The class of offenders generally made to " ride 
the stang" were .unfaithful husbands and such as 
beat their wives, and those who worked on Sun- 
days anl holidays. 

Eip, news. 

Rock, a distaff. 

Koop, or Roup, hoarseness ; a public sale. 

Roughness, abundance. 

RouK, a great number. 

RouNDGE, a great noise; a violent push. 

RowoRGiN, an organ — one that makes a large 
noise. 

Row UP, to devour. 

RoTSTERAN, roystcriug; RoYSTEHiNG, scrcamiug 
loudly. 

RuGGS, woollen counterpanes. 

RuMBUH, the short run before leaping. 

RussLiN, wrestling. 

Sacicless, weak and simple. 

Sairt, poor and innocent. 

Sank, a great quantity. " A sank o' havver," a 
great quantity of oats. 

Sark, a shirt or chemise ; a " cutty sark," a short 
shirt or shift. 

Sarra, to serve. " Will that sarra your turn ? " 
will that do for you ? 

Sattle, or Settle, the long oaken bench with a 
back to it, placed along the chimney side. 

Saurin, vinegar — the soweriny. 

Saww, " a violent yet sluggish kind of ache or 
pain, such as follows a blow upon the head, or is 
felt in the iingers when brought to the fire in a 
severe frost." — W. and C. Dialects. 

Scale, to waste ; also to spread. You scale your 
property when you waste it, and you scale 
manure when you spread it abroad on the 
field. 

Scar, a bare, steep, jagged rock. 

ScAUMY,' a thick, misty, flaky look in the sky, as if 
covered with cloud scaum, or scum. 

ScoMTHER, to scorch severely. 

Sconce, a screen drawn from the heck to the fire, 
giving the family an inner room or place of en- 
sconce; also a tin candlestick with a reflector. 



Scons, barleymeal cakes, eaten hot with butter. 

ScoTTY Kye, Scotch cows — the small black High- 
land breed. 

ScowDER, and a §CROW on, an untidy bustle; 
also a row; a confusion. 

ScRAFFLE, to struggle, and to quarrel. The pigs 
scrape for food, and the bairns scrape at 
their games. 

ScRAT, a scratch; said also of a busy, careful, 
and economical little housewife, who scrats or 
scrapes up every penny she can make. " She's 
a lisle scrat," meaning nothing disrespectful, but 
only expressive of her exceeding industry and 
carefulness. 

Scrawlen, sprawling. 

Screes, loose, shingly precipices — the Screes at 
Wastwater the type of the rest. 

ScRUDGE, scrowdge; and Skreenged, squeezed. 

ScDFTER, to bustle; to huny; to scuffle after. 

ScuGG, hid in a corner, like a squirrel. 

SCDMFISHED, SuffoCatcd. 

Sea-nag, a ship. 

Seck, such. 

Seek as a Peet, sick as a magpie; extremely 

sick. 
Seevy Cap, a cap made of " sieves " or rushes. 
Seggy, hard and horny skin. 
Seugh, or Sough, a wet ditch; also a morass. 
Seypers, those who drink to the last drop. 
Shag, a slice of bread. 
Shakin, the ague. 
Shally-wally, and Shittle-cum-shaw, both 

exclamations of contempt. 
Shawl, to walk ill, with bent and bowed legs. 
Shear, to reap ; also to shear sheep. 
Shed, to excel. 

" Here lies John Richmond, honest man ; 
Shed tliat who can." 

Gravestone in Cockerham Churchyard 
( W. and C. Dialects). 

Shem, shame; a Shem and a Bizin, a shame and 

a public scandal or byeword. 
Shilla, a stony beach ; also used for " shale." 
Shirl, and Skirl, and Slird, to slide or skate; 

Skirl is also to scream. 
Shive, to cut in slices. "Harry-lad shive," a 

whole round of bread. 
Shwort-cakes, Scotch bread; short-cakes. 



PEOVmCIALISMS OF THE LAKE DISTEICT. 



Side, to tidy ; to put things away. 

SiEVETTHWAiTE, the placc of rushes. 

SiKE, or Syke, a small stream or rill that runs 

diy in summer. 
Sin, since; Sin stne, since that time. 
SiND, to rinse. 
Sine, to strain. 
SiNEWAYS, many ways. 

Skaif, distant, wild, fearful, scattered abroad. 
Skeer, or Scowee, gravel, or small pebbles; also 

the place where cockles are gathered. 
Skelled, " anything twisted or warped out of a 

flat or straight form into that of a curve, shell) 

or shell." — W. and C. Dialects. 
Skelp, to " pelt along," to walk very fast, also to 

yelp. 
Skeen, to squint. 
Skensmadam, or Who may say ; " a mock dish 

set up on the table for show." — W. and C. 

Dialects. 
Skewin up, tossing up ; Skew't and teav't, 

tossed about and fagged. 
Skilvings, " a wooden frame to fix on the top of 

a cart, in order to widen and extend its size." 

— W. and C. Dialects. 
Skimmels, forms; scats. 
Slaistee, to beat violently. 
Slack, a valley or small shallow dell. A slack 

is also the depression in a mountain range. 
Slake, to wipe gently; " the slut's slake," is 

when a room is only half cleaned, merely slaked 

over, not thoroughly dusted. 
Slammakin, untidy; sprawling; careless. " A slam- 
makin lass," a big, sprawling, untidy trollop. 
Slape, slippery; said, too, of a man not over 

honest or truthful. 
Slat, to spill; and Slatteey', wet and dirty and 

untidy, and Slatchin is untidy too. 
Sleti-iering, lounging; "loafing;" also slippery. 
Slinge, to slink away. 
Slive, to dress carelessly and slovenly. 
Slokken, to quench thirst. 
Slon, sly. 
Slosh, Sloshy, (slush, slushy,') muddy; wet; 

dirty. 
Smiddy, a blacksmith's smithy. 
Smoor, to smother; to suiFocate. 
Smuly, demure; looking graciously and smugly. 
Snaae, greedy. 
Snafflen, a sauntering, do-little way. 



Snag, to cut off ; to notch. 

Snape, to gird at others; to snap at them. 

Snaps, sm;dl round gingerbread cakes. 

Snaebel, a hard knot bad to undo; and Snock 
snarrels is both entangled and cross. 

Sneck, the latch of a door or gate. 

Sniet'rin; snivelling, as is Snotteeing. 

Sniggs, young eels. 

Snirp, to pine; to wither. 

Snirrels, the nostrils. 

Snizy, cold. 

Snodd, smooth; demure. 

SoAV and Clip, to salve and shear sheep. 

Sonn, to think and ponder. 

Sonsy, a well-favoured, stout, good-humoured 
person. 

SooND, to swoon; to faint. 

Sops, lumps of blacklead. 

Soss, to fall with a thud, as would any weighty 
soft body; SossiNG, drinking in a heavy, sodden 
manner. " To lie sossing in bed," is to lie lazily, 
stufiy and hot in bed. 

SoTTER, to boil slowly. 

Sour-milk, butter-milk. 

Spain, to wean. 

Spang, to shoot with pain; to leap out; to jump. 
" My side spangs sae," my side shoots with 
pain. 

Spat, a sharp quick slap. 

Spelk, a splinter or thatching pin. 

Spottle, schedule. 

Squoaveran callan, a light, merry boy. 

Staat, an estate; the Statesmen are the estate- 
men, men holding a little landed property of 
their own — a race unfortunately fast diminish- 
ing to make room for large landed proprietors 
and monopolists. 

Staffle, Stavel, or Stoap, to walk like a 
drunken person; to wander about as if lost. 

Stag, a young horse. 

Stang, a long bar or wooden pole, very strong. 

Stank, to sigh ; to moan ; to gasp for breath ; also 
a dam or weir. 

Starken, to tighten. 

Stavlan, lounging. 

Stee, or Stie, a ladder or stile ; a way of ascent as 
Sty is ascent. "Ye shall see heaven opened, 
and the angels of God stiynge up and coming 
down upon the Son of Man." — Wiclif^s 
Bible. 



311 



APPENDIX I. 



Steek, or Stuik, to shut ; to close. 

" Kittle t' coal and mak t' ingle shine ; 
Sleek t' dere, and keep out t' swine," 

Steg, a gander. 

Steven, "to set the steven," to agree upon the 

time and jilace of meeting for an appointment. 
Stevvin, to be in a fuss and fluiTj. 
Stint, a limited allowance. 
Stitches, narrow ridges of cultivated land; the 

" stitch of potato " is not the furrow. 
Stodge, any thick satisfying food, as porridge, 

peas-pudding, &c. ; Stodgy is the adjective 

of stodge, and is used also for a fat, clumsy girl. 
Stomp i', a heavy Avalker, one who stomps or stamps 

about; a pianoforte player with a heavy touch 

stomps. 
Stoeken, to cool; to Stiffen like cooling tallow. 
Stoun, or Stound, a sudden transient pain, like 

spang. 
Stoue, dust; and, metaphorically, a dispute or 

noisy meeting. 
Stove, a young shoot of wood. 
Stowter, to struggle ; to walk clumsily. 
Strammer, large; great. " A strammer lie " is a 

bouncer. 
Strones, tenants bound to assist the lord in 

hunting the red deer. 
Steoo, " to strain a liquid through cloth, or to 

press it through a narrow passage, as through 

the teeth;" also to draw anything tlirough the 

teeth, as asparagus, &c., instead of biting it. 
Sdkken, wet; literally " soaking." 
Sdmp, a dirty puddle or pond; but Sumple is a 

blockhead. 
SuNKETS, suppers. 
Swaith, like Wraith, the fetch or ghost of a 

dying person. 
SwAYMUS, shy, bashful. 
SwEELS OF Laughter, bursts of laughter ; a 

candle svfeels when placed in a draught. 
Sweet Butter, or Rdm Butter, butter and sugar 

mixed up ■^^■ith rum, and used at childbirths ; 

generally a piece of this is put into the baby's 

mouth as its first taste of earthly food. 
Savelt, overcome; faint; to swoon; to die away; 

" grass Avhen cut in hot weather is said to swelt. 

In a hot, dry season it is said that every green 

thing swelts for want of rain." — W. and C. 

Dialects. 



Swipe, to drink off hastily; and Sype, to drain. 
Swietle, to fidget about; also to be nimble and 

active. 
SwoRT, a syringe. 
SwuRLT, whirled. 
Syke, or SiKE, a ditch. 
Syzle, to saunter. 
Taakin, in a temper. " She's in a fine taakin," 

she's very angry, very much put out. 
Taas, Avood split thin to make into baskets. 
Taave, or Teave, to Avade through mire; but 

Taavin is kicking. 
Taggelt, a bad character, male or female. 
Tahmy, untAvisted; stringy. 
Tammy, glutinous; sticky. 
Tangle, sea-Aveed. 
Tappy-lappy, in a hurry, " Avith the coat laps 

flj'ing behind through speed." 
Tarn, a small lake or lakelet on the hill tops. 
Tarn'd, ill-natured. 
Taa'e, moving the feet about quickly— fidgeting 

Avith them; also Avorking np plaster Avith a 

spade. 
Taystrageet, ?.e.,tie strayed; a loose idle person, 

strayed from the tie or tether like a coav or 

horse. 
Tea Draa (to draAv), a place of refuge; a home. 
Teanale, a basket. 
Tearan, tearing. A "tearan felloAv" is a rough, 

hot-headed, riotous person. 
Tedder-styak, the tether stake to Avhich cattle 

are tied or tethered. 
Teeht, a lock of wool, flax, &c. 
Teem, or Toom, to pour out of one vessel into 

another. 
Tem, to kindle, to light. 
Terrible, often used as xerj. " 'Tavhs a terrible 

great sheep; " " aye, 'tAvas a maist serious grand 

sheep indeed ! " 
Teylleyer, a tailor. 
Teyney, tiny. 
Teyte, tide, or time, used for "as soon as." " I'd as 

teyte hev a glass o' rum as a pint o' yell." 
Thack, thatch; Thecked, thatched; Thecker, 

thatch er. 
Thibel, or Thivel, the wooden stick Avitli which 

porridge is stirred. 
Thick as Wamps, intimate friends. 
Thrang, thronged; busy. 
Thraav, to Avrithc; to twist. 



312 



PROVINCrALlS^irS OF THE LAKE DISTRICT. 



Threap, Thrup, to assert, generally a lie. " ,Slie 
threaped 'till my face," she said positively that 
falsehood to my face. 
Threshwood, threshold. 
Thrimmelt, pulled out. 

Thkopple, the windpipe ; and Thropplep, throt- 
tled. 
Throssel, or Throstle, a thrush. 
Through Stone, or Thurff Stone, a flat tomb- 
stone; also the large binding stones which go 
through the whole thickness of the unmortared 
walls. 
TiiwAiTE, a cleared piece of land. 
Tift, a small draught of liquor; a short fit of 
doing anything; also condition as to health of 
the body; as a verb it means fetching of the 
breath quickly, as after running. 
Tig, to strike gently; also to drag after another. 
A child tigs at its mother, and too often tews her 
in doing so ; and people that bore one with their 
constant company, tig after arte. 
Tinkler, a tinker. 

Titter, sooner; earlier. " The bainer the road the 
titter you'll come," the nearer the way the sooner 
you will come. 
Titty, sister. 
Tocher, a dowry. 

Toit, to topple over, as is also Tottle. 
Tome, a hair line for fishing. 
Too JUNG, an aching and dizziness of the eyes; 

also to empty out. 
Top, or Topper, superior; first-rate. 
Traave, or Treeave, to stride along lifting the 

feet high. 
Traily, in a slovenly, reckless manner. 
Tram, a line, or succession of things, as cattle, 

carts, &c. 
Trig, tight; compact; also _/m/Z with food. In this 
sense trig is a stage lower than brussen ; you are 
first trig and then brussen. 
Trippet, " a small piece of wood obtusely pointed, 
something like a shoe, hollow at one end, and 
having a tail a little elevated at the other, which 
is struck with the buckstick in a game called 
'trippet and coit,' played by the rustics." — W. 
and C. Dialects. 
T'rod, the road. "IMoses' trod" not far from "Aaron 

End," is a steep path going up by Great Gable. 
Trollybags, tripe. 
Trouncin, a beating. 



TrjE, or Tew, to work hard; to be worn otxt and 

fatigued " A tewing darrak " is a laborious, 

fatiguing, wearying day's work. 
TuixHWARK, the toothache. 
Tumble-car, " a cart drawn by a single horse, 

Ijrobably so named from the axle being made 

fast on the wheels, and turning round with 

them." — W. and C. Dialects. 
TwiLT, a quilt. 
Twister, a year-old slieep. 
Tup, a ram. 
Tyer, moreover. 
Tyke, a coarse, rough, ignorant fell )W; also a 

rough terrier dog. 
Unco, exceeding; extremely. 
Unhomed, awkward; untidy. 
Unname, or Unknaam, unknown. 
Unkat, awkward; uncouth; uncultivated; but 

Unket is strange news. 
Urciion, an " urchin " — a hedgehog. 
Varsal, universal. " In t' whole varsal world," in 

the whole universal world. 
Waat, or Wait, to under.«tand. 
Wabble, to shake, as boiling water; in fact, to 

wobble. 
Wad, black-lead; plumbago. 

Wa, dang it! why, hang it! a veiy frequent ex- 
pression. 
Waff, a whifF; a slight blast of smell; also a short 

snappish bark. 
Waffler, a wavering, undecided person. 
Waintly, very well. 
Waistomea, woe is to me, woe's me. 
Wait, or Wared, .spent on goods or wares. 
Wait, to knoAV. 
Wale, choice. 
Wamp, Avasp. 
Wandly, gently. 
Wankle, feeble. 
Wankly', very Avell. 

Wanters, the unmarried Avho want partners. 
Wap^d, Avrapt. 

Wars, or Batten, a large truss of straAv. 
War-day, the Avorsc or Avorkday; every day in 

the week but Sunday. 
Warison, the stomach. 
Wark, to ache. 
! Weahze, weeze, or aa'Aze, a plot of wool, or soft 
' cushion, put on the head to protect it from a 

load. 
313 S S 



APPENDIX I. 



Weathkrgall, " the lower part of the riiinbow, 
when the rest of the arch is not seen."— W. and 
C. Dialects. 
Webster, or Wobster, a weaver. 
Wed, the heap of clothes placed in the middle of 

the game of Scotch and English. 
Wee, small. " A wee bittock," a small bit. 
Weeaky, moist; juicy. 
Weght, or Wecht, a sheep-skin vessel, like a 

sieve without holes. 
Welly, well-nigh. 

Welsh, or Wallow, "tasteless; insipid. Broth 
and water and pottage without salt are wallow 
or welsh. A person whose face has a raw, pale, 
and unhealthy {flew) look, whom a keen frosty 
morning pinches, and to whom it giA'es an 
a])pearance of misery and poverty, has a welsh 
and wallow face. A welsh day is the same as a 
sleety day when it is neither thaw nor frost ; but 
a wallow day is when a cold, stormy, and hollow 
wind prevails." — W. and C. Dialects. 
Welt, to lean on one side; to upset. 
Wey, yes; certainly. 
Weyte, blame. 
Whaker, to quiver; to shake; Whakered, 

quivered and shook. 
Whane, to stroke down; to soothe. 
Whang, to jump clumsily; a blow or bang; also 
a thick clumsy piece of anything eatable. " A 
whang " of meat, and a " Harry-lad-slive " of 
bread, would satisfy any one not a ghoul or an ogre 
Whakter, to flatter. 
Whantlb, to fondle. 
Whelker, also Yarker, a thump or blow; and a 

thumper generally. 
Whemmle, to turn upside down. 
Whewtle, a slight whistle. 
AVhey-faced, white faced; like whey milk. 
Wheyte, quite. 
Wheywig, buttermilk whey, with an infusion of 

herbs — generally mint or sage. 
Whick, c[uick, in the old sense; alive; also the 

raw or live flesh. 
W hicks, couch-grass. 
WiiicKFLAW, a whitlow. 
Whiddeu, to tremble. 
Whiew, to fly quickly; to use great speed. 
Whingb, to whine; to weep; and also to shrink back. 
Whinnering, neighing. CWhinnying.) 
Whins, gorse or furze. 



WniPPiNG-THE-CAT, the custom of workmen going 
out to get work from house to house. 

Whisht, hush. 

WiiissENDAY, Whit Sunday. 

White, to requite; also to cut wood with a knife. 

Whittle-gait, the privilege of the small priests 
of old time, when dining at the houses of their 
parishioners in rotation— that is the privilege of 
using their knife or " whittle," — was part of 
their salary. A mode of payment adopted, too, 
for the schoolmasters of the ])arish schools, but 
abolished now everywhere excepting at Wast- 
dale, where it is still in force, or was, at least, 
until very lately. 

Whye, a heifer; Whye-caulf, a cow calf 

WiiYLLYMER, or RosLEY CHESHIRE, the poor hard 
skim-milk cheese of the country. 

WiDDERSFUL, cndeavouriug. 

Wig to Wa', " he's banged aboot frae wig to 
wa'; " he is knocked about from pillar to post. 

WiGGEN, the mountain ash, or rowan. 

Willy-wands, willow rods. 

WiSKET, or WiiiSKET, a basket. 

WissEN, to know. 

Won, to dwell; to inhabit. 

Wonted, or Wennied, milk kept till it is sour. 

Wood, or Wud, mad. 

WoRCHET, an orchard. 

Wot, to know. 

" W)ien Skiddaw wears a cap, 
Criffel wots full well of that." 

WoTS, oats. 

Wramp, a sprain. 

Wraul, to fret; to find fault; to grumble. 

Wreeden, peevish; ill-tempered. 

Yammert, bawled. 

Yance, once; Yans, ones. 

Yat and Yett, gate. 

Yaud, or Yawd, a jade, or sorry horse. " The 
grey yauds " are Druid stones at King Hany, 
in the parish of Cumwhitton ; called grey yauds, 
it is supposed, because of the colour of the 
stones in such striking contrast to the black 
peat soil. 

Yedder, a straight hazel stick used in binding 
down or plashing fences. 

Yek, an oak. 

Yell, whole; also ale. 

YiLP, to chirp. 

Youngermer, younger persons. 



314 



riiOVINClALISMS OF THE LAKE UISTKICT. 



§ 2.— GENEEAL TERMS. 



Band, the suiuiuit of a secjndary licight ; as 
Taylor's Ghyll Baud, aad Kandcrson Band, 

Borrowdale. 
Barrow, a hill; as Latterbarro\Y, Mitredale, and 

StyebaiTow and Gowbarrow by Ullswatcr. 
Beck, a brook. 
Cam, or Comb, the crast of a hill, the analogue of 

which is the comb of a cjck; as Rosthwaite 

Cam and Catsty Cam. 
CooM, a hollow, or valley, in the side of a hill. 
Cove, a recess rather than a valley; as lied Cove 

and Keppel Cove, Helvellyn; Atkinson Cove, 

Hartsop. 
Dal, a dale; as Lindal. 
Den, or Dene, a glen; as Mickleden, " the great 

glen," Langdale. 
DoD: 1. the smaller process, half detached, of a 

larger hill, as Skiddaw Dod, Hartsop Dod ; 

2. A hill with a blunt summit, as the Great 

Dod. 
DoRE, an opening or fissm-e between rocks; as 

Lodore, Mickledore. 
Dux, a second-class hill; as Dunmallet. 
Ea, water; as Eamont, Easdale. 
Eells, the lower sjDurs of the mountains; bare, 

rocky, elevated land. 
EoRCE, a waterfall; as Stock Ghyll Eorce, Scale 

Force. 
Gate, a way; or Gait, goat; as Gatescartli, a 

hill with a way over it ; or Gaitscarth, the 

goat hill. 
Garth, an enclosure. 
Ghyll, a ravine, generally with a "force;" as 

Dungeon Ghyll. 
Grange, a farmstead; as the Grange, Borro\vdale. 
Hag, an enclosure; as Strandshag, Keswick. 
Haavse, a narrow passage, or a narrow ridge ; as 

Buttermere Hawse. 
Holm, an island, or the rich low land lying near 

to water; as the holms on Windermere; Abbey 

Holm, and Holm Cultram. 
How, a small hill; as Butterlip How. 
HuL, a hill. 



Ings, low meadows; as Broad Ing, Askham. 

Keld, a well or spring; as Threlkeld. 

Knock, a hill; as Knock o' Murton. 

Knot, a rugged, rocky, knotty hill; as Farleton 

Knot, Hard Knot. 
Max, or Maen, the pile of stones built up on the 

summit of all the higher mountains. 
Mere, a lake; as Grasmerc, Windermere. 
Nab, the " neb," or nose, or prominent projection 

of a hill; as Nab Scar. 
Ness, a promontory, also the neb, or nose; as 

Bowness, Furness. 
Pen, a hill; as Penrith, the Red hill. 
Pike, peak; as Hemng Pike, Scawfell Pike. 
Pot, circular holes, whether formed in the hills b}' 
the action of the weather, or in the stones of a 
river by that of water; as Lade Pot, and the 
Pots by Birks Bridge. 
Rake, the sunken, practicable way on an otherwise 
impracticable hill; as the Lady's Rake on Walla 
Crng, and the Scot's Rake in Troutbeck. 
Raise, a tumulus formed of up-heaped stones; as 

Dunmail Raise. 
Reach, the divisions of a lake made by the for- 
ward thrust of the mountains. 
RiGG, a ridge; as Loughrigg and Riggcndale. 
Scar, or Scaur, a bare rock. 
Screes, precipices covered with loose, shivering 
stones. The large stones at the base of the 
screes are all called Borrans. The Screes, Wast- 
water, and Red Screes, Kirkstone. 
ScROGGS, stunted trees or bushes. 
Slack, a hollow or depression in the outline of the 
hills; as the Slack between Seat Sandal and 
Fairfield, the Scandale Slack, and others. 
Syke, a ditch, or rivulet. 
Tarn, a small mountain lake. 
Thwaite, cleared ground ; as Thornthwaite, 

Bassenthwaite, &c., a most common postfix. 
Wath, a ford. 
Wray, a landmark. 

Wyke, a bay, or creek; as Peel Wykc, Winder- 
mere, and Peel Wyke, Bassenthwaite. 



315 



S S 2 



APPENDIX 1. 



;5.— NAMES OF PLACES. 



AsciiAM, and Askrigg, and Asiixess, the village, 

the ridge, and the promontory, or projection of 

water. 
AiiKLESiDE, or Hamelside, said to be from ea, 

water, and mel, brow or hill; water from the 

sides of the brows or hills. 
Avplethwaite, if not the village of apples, then 

Ea pul thwaite, the village of water (redoubled). 
Bassentiiwaite, the place of bass, bassen, or 

perch. 
Blea Tarn, the blue tarn. 
BoRROWDALE, or BoARDALE, Barrowdalc, or wild 

boar dale. 
BowFELL, the bowed or arched fell. 
BowNESS, the bowed or arched promontory, ness, 

or "neb." 
Brathat, water from the brae. 
Brotherilkeld, Broad-dur-ail-keld,a.hroa,diyvatev 

from the keld or spring. 
Bdttermere, Bode-toT-mere, the lake of a village 

by the hill, or is it the butter lake, famous for 

cows and dairy ? 
Calder, Avooded water. 
Carl Lofts, the high dwelling. 
The Carrs, the Scars or Scaurs. 
Carrock Fell, the rocky fell. 
Catstycam, or Caxciiedecaji, the wild cat's 

ladder hill. 
Causey Pike, causeway Pike. 
Cockley Beck, a winding or rugged stream. 
CoNiSTON, a town at the head of the lake. Tov, 

town; C(,n, at the head of; is, the lake. 
Crinkle Crags, with a crooked or crinkled out- 
line. 
Derwent, the windy lake, Bwr-givynt ; or the 

clear lake, Dwr-gwyn. Both names arc cha- 
racteristic. 
DoNNERDALE, the Duddon dale; and Duddon is 

the Dod-den, the lesser or loAver valley. 
Dow Crags, dove or black crags. 
Easedale, Eas-dale, or Is-dule, the water dale. 
Eairfield, the sheep hill, from Fuar-feld, Danish. 
Floutern, fiom the Islandic F/oi, the place of a 

marsh. 
Gatescarxii. See ante. Gate. 
Glencoin the corner glen. 



! Glenderaterka, a glen conducting water from 
i the hill. Glen-dwr, watev; turret, the hill or 
I emmcnce. 
Grasmere, or Grasmoor, or Gersmere, or Gris- 

MERE, the lake of green grass, or of the wild 

boar, Grise. 
I Greta, the great ea, or water. 
! Grisedale, the dale of the wild swine. 
\ Hammer Scar, the rocky scar. 
Harrison Stickle, Hamson's peak or pike. 

Steel Pike was the old name of this point. 
Hartsop, the deer's hill. 
Helvellyn, the hill that walls in the lake. Hel, 

hill; gwal, wall; It/n, lake. 
Hindscartii, the hind's or shepherd's scarth or hill. 
Keskadale, a corruption of Gatescarthdale. 
Keswick, Kesh-wick, the village of the Keshes or 

water hemlock. 
Kirkstone, from the fashion of the stones at the 

top. 
Lade Pot, the way (lad) over the pot or depression. 
Lamplugh, the loam (/am) ploughed, or Glan- 

FLOUGH, dale wet. 
Langdale, or Langden, long valley. 
Langstreth, long street or way, as it is. 
Legberthwaite, an inclosed barley field; leigh, 

meadow; bera, barley; thwaite, an inclosure. 
LiNGMELL, the ling, or heather hill or mell. 
LoDORE, or LowDORE, said by some to be the same 

as LowTiiER (Lodwr), the black-water, but by 

others to be the low opening or gullJ^ 
Ltulph's Tower, L'Ulf's, or the wolf's tower, 

from Liulf, the first baron of Grej'stoke. 
Long-sleddalb, the long smooth valley. 
Matterdale, either Mater dale, the mother 

dale, or Mathair dale, the dale of waters. 
Mell Fell, the smooth conical hill (moel). 
MiCKLEDORE, the great rift or opening; and 

MiCKLEDEN, the great dale or valley. 
Nanbield, the toiTcnt shelter; Nant, water or 

stream, or torrent; and bield, shelter. . 
Ormatiiwaite, the cleared place of snakes. 
Patterdale, Patrick dale. 
Penrith, the red hill; Pen, hill; rliydd, red. 
Pike o' Stickle, the pike of the peak; the point 

of the point. 
;)1G 



PUOVINCIALISMS OF THE LAKE DISTIUCT. 



PoETixsCALK, ;5or<, alaudiriy-itlace; iny.ix meadow; 
scale, a basin. 

Pull Wyke, a bai/ in the pool or lake. 

IvHYDAL, either a contraction of Rothaydale, or 
Rhydle, a passage place. 

Sale Fell, Black Sail, Top Sail, Sayle Bot- 
tom, all coming from the same woi'd, sagal or 
sahl, bar. 

Sandwyke, a sandy inlet or bay. 

Satuka Crag, SettaeaPakk, Saterry Water- 
crook, Satterthwaite ; from saetter, the Ice- 
landic summer chalets for the herdsmen. 

ScANDALE, shuns, a fort or rampart. 

Scarf Gap, scoef, smooth, the smooth gap. 

ScAWFELL, either the fissure fell, or the topmost, 
the most conspicuous fell. 

Seathwaite, seath, a well or pond, thwaite, an 
inclosure. 

Skelatith, scale v:atli, a ford in a hollow. 

Skiddaav, the horse-shoe hill (yseyd), or the pro- 
tecting hill (scced). 



Stake Pass, stoeyer, a stair or road over a 

hill. 
Striding, or Straciian Edge, the name expresses 

the kind of walking needed. 
Sty Head, stie, ladder, or way. 
SwiRREL, or Swirl Edge. 
TiiRELKELD, Thor's hill kcld, ov the llirall or serfs 

held or spring. 
Tilberthavaite, Till, bera (or barley), thwaite. 
Walla Crag and Wallabarroav, gwal beory, a 

natural rampart, or smooth grassy ground. 
Wansfell, wang, a.i\eld;wangsfell, an exposed hill. 
Watendlath, waden, ford; lethe, or latlie, a 

northern " hundred." 
Whinlatter, gwynt-hlaw-tor, windy brow hill; or 

is it simply the hill of whins or gorse ? 
Windermere, ywyn-dwr-mere, bright water lake; 

or the winding lake? 
Wrynose, the nose of the rhin, hill. 
Yoke, a hill in a chain of hills. 
Ullsavater, L'Ulfs water. 



This list has been taken out of Black's and WordsAvorth's Guides, and is giA'en for what it is 
Avorth; Avhich is not much. No attempt AA'as made in the glossary to give roots or derivations. To do 
this well needs a thorough and sound philological education; and CA'cn then there are traps and pitfalls 
into Avhich the Avariest fall. But I might have given a few very striking coincidences of sound, had I 
not thought it better to refrain from even conjecture; else, fremmed strange, and fremd the same thing 
in German; arles-penny, bargain money, and arrhes, French; gang, to go, and ^aw^ew, Dutch; gavelock, 
an iron bar, and gaveloc, Saxon; hause, the neck, and hals, German; helle, to pour, and hella, Icelandic; 
hot, a basket, and hotte, French; with many others, of Avhich these are only samples, were tempting- 
opportunities for a little commonplace etymology; Avhich, hoAvever, all tolerably Avell-educated people 
can sup])ly to themselves. 




,^^«<^^; ^ 



surTaRMi; he. 



31 : 



APPENDIX II. 
THE BOTANY OF THE LAKE DISTIUCT. 



§ 1.— THE FLOWERS. 



RANUNCULACEiK. 

Thalicteum Alpinum, Alpine Meadow - Rue. 

Between Great End and Scawfell; Helvellyn; 

Fairfield. 
T. Elavum: Yellow Meadow-Rue. Windermere; 

margin of the Greta, Howraj (Keswick). 
T. Minus: Lesser Meadow-Rue. Common.* 
T. Majus: Greater Meadow-Rue. Lodore; Uer- 

wentwater shores ; the Screes; UUswater; Enner- 

dale; Thirlmere; Pooley Bridge. 
AxEMoxE Nemorosa : Wood Anemone, or Wind- 

Elower. Everywhere in woods. 
Ranunculus A quatilis: Water Crowfoot. Com- 
mon; but specially luxuriant on St. Bees 

moor. 
R. AuRicoMus: Wood Crowfoot, or Goldilocks. 

Common. 
R. Fi CARTA: Lesser Celandine; R. Bulbosus, 

Bulbous Buttercu]) ; R. Repens: Creeping 

Buttercup; R. Acris, Meadow Crowfoot. All 

common. 
R. Hederaceus: Ivy-leaved Crowfoot. Lamplugh 

Hall; but common elseAvhere. 
R. Lingua: Greater Spearwort. Wastdale and 

Ennerdale. 
R. Flammula, Lesser Spearwort. Common. 
R. HiRSUTUS: Pale Hairy Buttercup. Drigg. 
Teoluus EuROPiEus: Mountain Globe-Elower, or 

Lucken-gowans. The lake sides generally, but 

specially fine at Windermere. 
Caltha Palustris : Common Marsh-Marygold. 

Common. This and the Globe-flower are two 

of the handsomest flowers of the spring 

time. 



Helleborus ViRiDis: Green Hellebore. Uuddon 
woods; Plumbland; Braithwaite. Rare. 

H. FcETiDUS: Stinking Hellebore. Between Bow- 
ness and Kendal. Rare. 

Aquilegia Vulgaris : Common Columbine. 
Common. 

NvMPHiEACE^. 

Ntmph^aAlba: White Water Lily. Common. 

NuPHAR Lutea: Common Yellow Water Lily 
Common. 

Papaverace^. 

Papaver Rhceas: Common Red Poppy. Common. 

IMeconopsis Cambrica: Yellow Welsh Poppy. 
Very rich about Windermere and Ambleside, 
where it is much cultivated; Ullock Moss (Kes- 
wick); Long Sleddale; Coniston. 

Glaucium Luteum : Yellow Horned - Poppy. 
Fimby; Coulderton; Bootle. 

Chelidonium Majus : Common Celandine. Com- 
mon. 

FcMARIACEiE. 

FuMARiA Officinalis: Common Fumitor}'. Com- 
mon. 

CoRYDALis Claviculata : Climbing Corydalis. 
Not uncommon. 

C. Solida: Solid-rooted Coiydalis. Newlands. 
Rai-e. 

CRUCIFER.Ti. 

SuBULARiA Aquatica: Water Awlwort. Enner- 
dale Lake. Rare. 

Thlaspi Alpestre: Alpine Penny-Cress. On 
the road from Kendal to Ambleside. A lime- 
stone variety, therefore rare in this district. 



T. Mujus and f. Minus are made synonymous by Cliiids. 
318 



THE BOTANY OF THE LAKE DISTRICT. 



Teesualia Nudicaulis: Niiked-stnlked Teesdalia. 

Raven Crag (St. John's); Thief Ghyll in Dean. 

Capsella Bl'RSA-Pastoris: Common Shepherd's- 

Piirse. Common. 
Lepidium Smithii: Hairy Pepperwort. Low- 
dor e. 
L. Campestre: Field Pepperwort. Common. 
L. Draba: Whitlow Pepperwort. Whitbarrow. 
Cochlearia Officinalis: Common Scnrvy-Grass. 
Kirkstone; Helvellj^n; Long Sleddale; Fleswick 
Bay. Var. Alpina of Babington is found on 
Helvellyn and Place Fell. Another variety, as 
yet unbaptized, is found on Sty Head, according ', 
to Otley. 1 

C. Anglica: English Scurvy-Grass. Workington 

Shore. 
Cakile Maritima: Purple Sea-Rocket. Seaton 

Shore. 

Crambe Maritima: Sea-Kale. Coulderton Shore. 

Seneiuera Coroxopus, or Coronopcs Ruellii: 

Common Wart-cress or Swine's-cress. Beast 

Banks (Kendal); Seaton. 

Cardamine Amara: Large flowered Bitter-cress. 

Rare. 
C. HiRSUTA: Hairy Bitter-cress. Common. 
C. Pratensis: Cuckoo-flower. Common. Some- 
times double, but rarely so. 
Camelina Sativa: Common Gold-of-Pleasure. 
Workington Mill in 1848. (Harriet Martineau.) 
ArabisHirsuta: Hairy Rock-cress. Whitbarrow; 

Shoulthwaite Moss. 
A. Petr.^a: Alpine Rock-cress. The Screes. 
Rare. 

A. Stricta: Bristol Rock-cress. Lamplugh Hall. 
Rare. 

Cheirantiius Cheiri : Wallflower. Scaleby 

Castle. Rare. 
TuRRiTis Glabra: Long-podded Tower-Mustard. 

Stainburn. 
Brassica Monensis : Isle-of-Man Cabbage, or 

Wallflower Cabbage. Fhmby; St. Bees. 

B. Campestris: Common Wild Navew. Common. 

Sisymbrium Officinale: Common Hedge-mus- 
tard; Erysimum Alli ARIA: Garlic Treacle Mus- 
tard ; SiNAPis Arvensis : Wild Mustard or 
Cherlock. All common. 

Resedace^. 

Reseda Ltiteola : Dyer's Rocket, Yellow Weed, 

or Weld. Flimby; p:aglesfield; Workington. 



ClSTINE^. 

Heliantiiemum Canum: Hoary Dwarf Rock-rose. 
Witherslack ; Humphrey Plead (Cartmel) ; 

Scout Scar. 

ViOLACEiE. 

Viola Canina: Dog Violet; V. Tricolor: Hearts- 
ease or Pansy. Both common ; the last singularly 
fine and richly coloured. 

V. HiRTA : Hairy Violet. Barrowfield (Kendal). 

V. Palustris: Marsh Violet. Cunswick Tarn and 
Spittal (Kendal). 

V". Lutea: Yellow Mountain Violet. The Kes- 
wick hills, specially Skiddaw; Brigliam. 

DrOSERACEtE. 

Drosera Rotundifolia: Hound-leaved Sundew. 

In all bogs everywhere. 
D. LoNGiFOLiA : Long-leaved Sundew. Borrow- 

dale, where it is common ; Foulshaw Moss ; 

Ullock Moss; Windermere, where it is rare. 
D. Anglica : Great Sundew. Foulshaw Moss; 

Helvellyn. 

POLYGALE^. 

PoLYGALA Vulgaris: Common Milkwort. Every- 
where, and in all colours, from the purest white 
to the deepest blue, and from the palest pink to 
the fullest rose ; a lovely growth carpeting the 
moors and fells. 

C ARY OP HYLLE^. 

Saponaria Officinalis: Common Soapwort. Not 
common, but found at Keswick. 

SiLENE Acaulis: Moss Campion. Black Rocks 
(Great End); Grisedale Tarn; Fairfield; Hel- 
vellyn; Borrowdale. Very rare. 

S. Inflata: Bladder Campion. Common. 

S. Maritima: Sea Campion. Between Keswick 
and Lodore, but rare; and at Eskmeals and 
Brackenthwaite. 

S. Nutans: Nottingham Catchfly. Dean; Moor- 
land Close. 

Lychnis Flos-cuculi : Ragged Robin; and L. 
DioicA : Campion. Common, and very fine 
about Ambleside. 

L. Alpina : Red Alpine Campion. Brackenthwaite 
Fells. 

Sagina Procumbens : Procumbent Pearlwort. 
Common; as are also Spergula Arvensis : 
Cirn Spurrey; Stellaria Media: Cbickweed; 



319 



APPENDIX IT. 



S. HoLOSTEA : Greater Stitchwort ; and S. 
Graminea: Lesser Stitchwort. 

Spergula Nodosa: Knotted Spurrey. Lilly Hall. 

Stellaria Nemorum : Wood Stitchwort. Winder- 
mere; Burdoswald; Moorsidc Hall; Laverock 
Lane (near Kendal). 

Arenaria Peploides: Sea-side Sandwort. Sea- 
ton; Flimby. 

A. Serptllifolia : Thyme-leaved Sandwort. 
Pardshaw Hall. 

A. Verna: Vernal Sandwort. About the lime- 
kilns, Kendal. Rare. 

A.Trinervis: Three-nerved Sandwort. Common. 

Cerastium ViscosuM: Viscid Mouse-ear Chick- 
weed. Common. 

C. Tetrandrum: Four-stamened Mouse-ear Chick- 
weed. Cockermoiith. 

C. Alpinum: Alpine Mouse-ear Chickweed. Hel- 
vellyn. 

LlNE^. 

LiNDM Catharticum: Cathartic Flax. Common. 
Radiola Millegrana : Thyme-leaved Flax-seed. 
Ehenside. 

Malvace^. 
MalvaStlvestris: Common Mallow. Common. 
M. MoscHATA: Musk Mallow. Common. 



TiLIACEiE. 

TiLiA EuKOP^A: Common Lime. 



Common. 



Hypericace^. 
Htpericd:,! Androscejium: Common Tutsan. 

Windermere; Coniston. 
H. Quadrangulum : Square-Stalked St. John's 

Wort. CHfton. 
H. Perforatum: Perforated St. John's Wort. 

Common; specially at Keswick and Ara Force. 
H. DuBiuM : Imperforate St. John's Wort. Below 

Kirkby Lonsdale Bridge. 
H. HuMiFUSUM : Trailing St. John's Wort. 

Everywhere, but specially fine about Lodore. 
H. MoNTANUM: Mountain St. John's Wort. Scout 

Scar (Kendal). 
H. Hirsutum: Hairy St. John's Wort. Camerton; 

Clifton. 
H. Polchrtjm: Small Upright St. John's Wort. 

Common. 
H. Elodes: Marsh St. John's Wort. On the 

road from Kendal to Ambleside; Birker Moor; 

Aitcha Moss; Ullock Moss. 



Parnassia Palustris: Common Grass of Par- 
nassus. Cunswick Tarn and Coniston, specially; 
but not infrequent in boggy places generally. 

ACERINEiE. 

Acer Campestre: Common Maple. Common. 
A. Pseudo-Platanus: Sycamore. Common. 

Geraxiace^. 

Geranium Saxguineum : Bloody Crane's-bill. 
Scout Scar; St. Bees; Whitbarrow. 

G. EoTUNDiFOLiuM: Round-lcaved Ciane's-bill. 
Common. 

G. Phj^um: Dusky Crane's-bill. Kirkby Lons- 
dale; BoiTowdale; Pepper Hag near Bumside. 

G. Pratense: Blue Meadow Crane's-bill. Not 
uncommon, but singularly fine about the banks 
of the Rothay, and at St. Bees. 

G. Stlvaticum : Wood Crane's-bill. Coniston, 
Water Head; the Kendal lanes; tlie lane under 
Swart Fell; St. John's Vale ; Windermere. 

G. Pyrenaicum: Mountain Crane's-bill. Yeorton 
Hall, and Keswick. Rare. 

G. Robertiakum: Herb Robert. Everywhere; 
a low-growing deep-coloured variety is on Place 
Fell, and a white variety is in a field near Jenkin 
Crag, Kendal, and in one locality at Coniston. 

G. LuciDUM : Shining Crane's-bill. Troutbeck; 
Lowdore; Windennere; Hawksheatl. 

G. MouLE: Dove's foot Crane's-bill. Common. 

G. PusiLLUJi: Small-flowered Crane's-bill. Etterby 
Scar; Windermere. 

G. CoLUMBiNUM: Long-stalked Crane's-bill. Cocker- 
mouth; Fellfoot; Newby Bridge; the canal banks 
at Kendal. 

Erodium Cicutarium : Hemlock Stork's-bill. 
Gosforth. 

E. Marttimum: Sea Stork's-bill. St. Bees. 

BALSAMINEiE. 

Impatiens Noli-me-tangere: Balsam Touch-me- 
not. Furness Fells; Coniston; Windermere; 
Ambleside; Scale Hill. 

OxALIDE^. 

OxALis AcETOSELLA : Couimon Wood Sorrel. 
Everywhere in woods and by rivulets and water- 
falls.' 



320 



THE BOTANY OF THE LAKE DISTRICT, 



Celastrixeje. 
EuoNTMUs EuKOP^us: Common Spindle-Tree. 
Near Kendal; Lodore Woods; Coniston. 

Ehamne^. 
Rhamnus Cathaeticus : Common Buckthorn. 

The Windermere islands and woods; Cunswick 

Wood. 
R. Erangula: Alder Buckthorn. Cunswick 

Wood; Windermere; Ullock Moss; Cockshot, 

and the Cass (Keswick). 

Legdminos^. 

Ulex EuROPiEUS: Gorse or Yellow Whin. Every- 
where, and one of the most beautiful character- 
istics of the country. 

U. Nanus: Dwarf Furze. Gosforth; Lamplugh; 
Pooley Bridge ; Buttermere; Wastdale. 

Genista TiNCTORiA: Dyer's Greenweed. Common. 

G. Anglica, Needle Greenweed. Drigg; Bootle. 

Cttisus ScoPARius: Common Broom. Common, 
but singularly beautiful about Windermere. 

Ononis Arvensis : Common Restharrow. The 
seaside generally; Coniston. 

Trifolium Ornithopodioibes: Bird's-foot Tre- 
foil. Workington Warren. 

T. Arvense: Hare's-foot Trefoil. Flimby. 

T. Repens: White Clover; T. Pratense: Purple 
Clover. Common. 

T. Strictum : Upright Round-headed Trefoil. 
St. Bees. 

T. Feagifercm : Strawberry-headed Trefoil. 
LoAV Levens, Milnthoipe. 

T. Procumbens: Hop Trefoil, Common; as is 
also T. FiLiFORME: Lesser Yellow Trefoil. 

Lotus Major: Greater Bird's-foot Trefoil; and 
L. CoRNicuLATUS: Common Bird's-foot Trefoil. 
Both common. 

Anthtllis VuLNERARiA: Lady's Fingcrs. Mary- 
port. 

ViciA Sativa, or Angustifolia (Childs) : 
Narrow-leaved Vetch. Common. 

V. Syltatica: Wood Vetch. Clifton Woods; 
Laverock Bridge. 

V. Cracca: Tufted Vetch. Common, and singu- 
larly lovely with its bright purple flowers 
threading the green hedge-rows. 
Ervum HiRSUTUM: Hairy Tare. Lowes Water. 
Lathyrus Sylvestris: Narrow-leaved Everlast- 
ing Pea. Parton. 



L. NissoLiA : Crimson Vctchling. Irton, in 

sand. 
L. Pratensis: Meadow Vetchling. Common; as 

is also Orobus Tuberosus, Tuberous Bitter 

Vetch. 
Ornithopus Perpusillus: Common Bird's-foot. 

Irton church; St. Bees Moor; Coniston Lake 

(east) side; Tentcrfell (Kendal). 
HiPPOCREPis CoMOSA: Tuftcd Horseshoe Vetch. 

Scout Scar; Grange; Windermere. 

Rosacea. 
Prunus Spinosa: Sloe or Blackthorn. Every- 
where. 
P. Padus: Bird Cherry. Windermere (specially 

fine), and elsewhere. 
P. Avium: Wild Cherry. Common. 
Spir^a Ulmaria: Meadow-Sweet. Common; 

abundant in Borrowdale and by Derwentwater. 
S. Salicifolta: Willow-leaved Spirasa. Pool 

Bridge near Hawkshcad; the Ferry, Windermere. 

A doubtful native. 
Geum Urbanum, Herb Benuet; and G. Rivale : 

AVater Avens. Common. 
G. Intermedium: Intermediate Geum. Rare. 
Potentilla Fruticosa : Shrubbj' Cinquefoil. In 

the Devil's Hedgegate ; the Screes. 
P. Verna: Spring Cinquefoil. Whitbarrow. 
P. Anserina: Silverweed. Common. 
ToRMENTiLLA Officinali.s : Common Tormentil. 

Common and abundant, 
Fragaria Vesca: Strawberry. Common, and 

very tine. 
F. Elatioe: Hautboy. Woodhall; Keswick. 
RuBus Idceus: Wild Raspberry. Common; fine 

in the Ashness Woods. 
R. Fruticosus: Blackberry. Everywhere. 
R. C^sius: Dewberry. Tallantire and Coniston. 
R. Saxatilis: Stone-Bramble. Gilsland; Cuns- 
wick Wood; Cockshot (Keswick). 
R. Cham^morus: Cloudberry. Styx Moss ; High 

Street; Goatscar; Long Sleddale. 
Agrimonta Eupatoria: Common Agrimony. 

Common. Var. odorata, Lorton. 
Alchemilla Vulgaris: Common Lady's-Mantle. 

Common. 
A. Alpina: Alpine Lady's-Mantle. Helvellyn 

crags ; Honister crags ; the Screes ; Black 

Sail; Long Sleddale; and mountain crags gene- 

rallv. 
321 T T 



APPENDIX ir. 



A. Arvensis: Field Ladj^'s-Mantlc, or Parsley 
Piert. Common. 

PoTERiuM Sanguisoeba: Salad Burnet. Scout 
Scar; Hardendale Nab (Shap); Cartmel Fells; 
Kendal Fells. Rare. 

Sanguisorba Officinalis: Common Burnet. Rare. 

Rosa Spinosissima: Burnet-leaved Rose. Win- 
dermere, rare ; Seascales, plentiful ; Kes- 
wick. 

R, Tomentosa, or Villosa: Downy-leaved Rose. 
Lamplugh; Gilsland; Windermere. Common. 

R. Cakina : Dog Rose. Everywhere ; but in 
greatest luxuriance about Ullswater and on the 
Undcr-Skiddaw road. 

R. Arvensis : Trailing, or White Dog Rose. 
Whillimoor; Coniston, &c. 

R. Rubella, or Hibernica: Red-fruited Dwarf 
Rose. Brackenthwaite. 

R. Involuta, or Sabini: Prickly Unexpandcd 
Rose. Derwentwater Bay. 

R. CiNNAMONiA: Cinnamon Rose. Ho^vl•ay (Kes- 
wick). 

R. Bractescens. Ambleside. Some of the Guides 
give this as a separate species, but Childs has it 
as a synonym with R. Canina. 

R. Gracilis. AVhinlatter. (Black's Guide.) 

Ptrus Communis : Wild Pear. Not common. 

P. Malus: Crab Apple. Common. 

P. ToRMiNALis: Wild Service-Tree. Not common. 

P. AucuPARiA: Mountain Ash. Common, and 
one of the most beautiful of all trees, whether 
white with flower in the spring, or scarlet with 
its clustered berries in the autumn. 

P. Aria: White-Beam Tree. Humphrey Head 
(Cartmel). 

Crat^gus Oxyacantha: Hawthorn. Common; 
but most beautiful about Ullswater. 

Onagrari^. 

Epilobium Alsinifolium : Chickweed-leaved Wil- 
low-herb. Buckbarrow-well; Long Sleddale. 

E. Angustifolium : Rose - Bay Willow - herb. 
High Barrow Bridge, near Shap. 

E. Tetragonum: Square-Stalked Willow-herb ; 
and E. Montanum : Broad Smooth-leaved Wil- 
low-herb. Common. 

E. Hirsutum: Great Hairy Willow-herb. The 
River Eden. 

Oenothera Biennis. Evening Primrose. Win- 
dermere. 



CiRCiEA Lutetiana: Common Enchanter's Night- 
shade. Common; but in special prof usion about 
UllsAvater and Keswick. 

C. Alpina: Alpine Enchanter's Nightshade. 
BaiTowside and Ashness Ghyll; Derwentwater; 
and between Ulverston and Hawkshead. 

Haloeagaceje. 

Mtriophtllum Spicatum, and M. Yerticil- 

LATUM: Whorled and Spiked Water-Milfoil. 

Conunon everywhere. 
HippuRis Vulgaris; Common Mare's-Tail. Dub 

Mill. Rare. 
Callitriche Veena : Vernal Water-Starwort. 

Whinlatter. 
C. Altumnalis, or Pedunculata: Autumnal 

Water-Starwort. Ennerdale. 

LvTHRARIiE. 

Lytiieum Salicaria: Spiked Purple-Loosestrife. 
Common; singularly beautiful in the meadows 
about P>ascdale Beck. 

L. Htssopifolium: Hj-ssop-leavcd Purple-Loose- 
strife. Said to grow near Derwentwater; but 
very rare, if not altogether doubtful. 

Peplis Portula: Common Water - Pm-slane. 
Harras Moor; Kinniside Longmoor ; Calder 
Ghyll s. Rare. 

CUCURBITACE^. 

Bryonia Dioica: White Bryony. Partial. 

PaEONYCHIE^, or ScLERANTHACEiE. 

Scleranthus Annua: Annual Knawel. Der- 
wentside, near Workington. 

CRASSULACEiE. 

RnoDiOLA Rosea: Rose-Root. Helvellyn; Fair- 
field; Goatscar; Long Sleddale; the Screes. 

Cotyledon Umbilicus: Wall Pennywort. Win- 
dermere; Ehenside; Gosforth. 

Semper vivuM Tectorum: Houseleek. Langdale. 

Sedum 7'elepiiium: Orpine, or Livelong; S. 
Anglicum: English Stone-crop; and S. Acre: 
Yellow Stone-crop, or Wall Pepper. All com- 
mon. 

S. Sexangulare: Tasteless Yellow Stone-crop. 
Hunday. 

S. ViLLOSUM: Hairy Stonecrop. Mosedale. 



322 



THE BOTANY OF THE LAKE DISTRICT. 



GKOSSULAKIACEiE. 

RiBES Gross ULARiA: Common Gooseberry and 
R. RuBRUM: Red Currant. Common. 

R. Nigrum: Black Currant. Derwentwater. Rare. 

R. Alpinum: Tasteless Mountain Currant. Conis- 
ton. Rare. 

Saxifrage^k. 

Chrysosplenium Oppositifoliubi : Common 
Golden Saxifrage. Common about all the road- 
side streamlets and wet places, where its close- 
growing leaves and dull gold-coloured flowers 
make a very lovely moss-like covering. 

C. Alternifolium : Alternate - leaved Golden 
Saxifrage. Portinscale; Benson Hall, Kendal; 
Windermere, but rare. 

Saxifraga Umbrosa: London Pride. Found 
once wild in the woods behind the Ferry Inn, 
Windermere, but certainly not a true native. 

S. Nivalis, Alpine Clustered Saxifrage. Helvellyn, 
by Red Tarn; Legberthwaite. Rare and pre- 
cious. 

S. Oppositifolia: Purple Mountain Saxifrage. 
Borrowdale; Striding Edge, Helvellyn; the 
Screes; Black Rocks, Great End. Rare and 
precious. 

S. Aizoides : Yellow Mountain Saxifrage. 
Common. 

S. Tridactylites: Rue-leaved Saxifrage. Moota 
and Whicham; old walls about Dacre; Swu-rel 
Edge, Helvellyn. Rare. 

S. Stellaris: Starry Saxifrage. Mountain tops, 
and sides of mountain streams. 

S. Hypxoides ' : Mossy Saxifrage. Kirkstone; 
AVindermere; Helvellyn; Fairfleld. 

S. Graxulata: White Meadow Saxifrage. Har- 
rington churchyard. Rare. 

Umbellifer^. 
It is impossible to give a perfect list of 
this order; I can only attempt to cata- 
logue those which are special, either for 
their rarity or their abundance. 
Eryngium Maritimum: Sea Holly. Common. 
Sanicula Europoea: Wood-Sanicle. Common, 
specially about Windermere and Elterwater, and 
noticeable because of its exceeding gracefulness 
and beauty. 



Hydrocotvle Vulgaris: Common Whiterot, or 
Marsh-Pennywort. Common in bogs. 

Coxiuji Maculatum: Common Hendock. Not 

common. 
Apium Graveolens: Smallage, or Wild Celery. 
Workington Marsh ; Kirkbride ; Brigsteer Moss, 
Kendal. Rare. 

BuNiUM Flexuosum: Common Pig orEarth-Nut. 
EA'erywhere. 

PiMPiNELLA Saxifraga: Common Burnet-Saxi- 
frage. Common. 

P. Magna: Greater Burnet-Saxifrage. Ballantire. 
Very rare. 

Angelica Sylvestris: Wild Angelica. Com- 
mon. 

SiUM Angustifolium : Narrow-leaved Water- 
Parsnip. Common. 

S. Latifolium : Broad-leaved Water-Parsnip. 
Stock Beck, Kendal. Rare. 

Helosciadium Nodiflorum : Procumbent Marsh- 
wort. St. Bees, Rare. 

H. Repens : Creeping Marsh wort, Nathdale; 
Brigsteer Scar, Kendal. 

H. Inundatum: Least Marshwort. Lowes Water; 
Brigsteer Moss, and other places near Ken- 
dal. 

FoENicuLUM Vulgare : Common Fennel. St. 
Bees. 

Meum Athamanticum: Spignel, Men, or Bald 
Money. Ennerdale; Keswick; Docker Garths, 
and other places near Kendal. Rare. 

Crithmum Maritimum: Sea Samphire. St. Bees. 

Heracleum Spoxdylium: Cow Parsnip, or Hog 
weed. Everywhere, 

Daucus Carota : Wild CaiTot. Ravenglass; 
Kendal Fell, where it is abundant; but not 
generally common. 

ToRiLis Nodosa: Knotted Hedge-Parsley. Bewal- 
deth. Very rare. 

ToRiLis Anthriscus : Upright Hedge-Parsley. 
Everywhere, and abundant, as are also Anthris- 
cus Sylvestris : Wild Beaked-Parsley; and 
A. Vulgaris: Common Beaked-Parsley. 

Ch^rophyllum Temulentum: Rough Chervil. 
Gillfoot and Whicham. Rare. 

Myrriiis Odorata: Sweet Cicely, or Sweet 
Bracken. Banks of the Ehen and about the 
Coni:-ton lakes and rivers. Not common. 



1 Cliilds makes S. Pulmala and 5. Plnrypetala (both of which are given in the bolanical hsts of the lake district as 
distinct species; iiynonyms with 5. Ilypmides. 

323 T T 2 



APPENDIX II. 



Peucedanum Ostruthium, or Imperatoria : 
Broad-leaved Hog's Fennel. Gilsland, and 
by Thiiimere Lake. Very rare. 

Araliace^. 
Adoxa Moschatellina: Common or Tuberous 
Moschatell, and Hedera Helix: Common Ivy. 
Everywhere. The latter specially noticeable in 
that small-leaved, close-growing kind, which 
botanists do not make into a variety, but which 
has quite a different appearance to the looser 
and fuller and largcr-leavcd. 

CoUNEiE. 

CoRNUs Sangdinea: Wild Cornel or Dogwood. 
Not common, but in great beauty about Winder- 
mere, where it has probably been planted. 

Caprifoliace^. 

Sambucus Nigra: Common Elder. Common. 

S. Ebulus: Dwarf Elder or Danewort. Bracken- 
thwaite ; Scalelands ; Brigham. Not com- 
mon. 

Viburnum Opulus: Guelder Hose or Water Elder. 
Keswick and Borrowdale. 

LoniceraPericlybienum: Common Honeysuckle, 
or Woodbine. Common; in great beauty in 
Gowbarrow Park and under Skiddaw. 

L. Caprieolium: Pale Perfoliate Honeysuckle. 
Has been found at Lorton Hall and 

L. Xylosteum : Upright Fly Honeysuckle at 
Workington Park ; but they are more than 
doubtful as natives. 

EuBIACEiE. 

Galium Cruciatum : Crosswoi't, Bedstraw, or 
Mugwort; G. Verum: Yellow Bedstraw ; G. 
MoLLUGO : Hedge Bedstraw. G. Saxatile : 
Heath Bedstraw% and G. Aparine : Goose- 
grass or Cleavers. All common. 

G. Palustre: Water Bedstiaw. Brackenthwaite 
and Lodore. 

G. BoREALE; Cross-leaved Bedstraw. Common, 

G. PusiLLUM: Least Mountain Bedstraw. Abun- 
dant on Kendal Fell. 

Sherardia Arvensis : Field Madder. Fields 
about Hawkshead. 

AsPERULA Odorata: Swcct Woodruff. Com- 
mon. 

A. Cynaxoiiica: Squinancy Wort. Whitbarrow. 



Valeriane^. 
Valeriana Officinalis: Great Wild Valerian. 

Common, and specially fine at Langdale Head. 
V. Dioica: Small Marsh Valerian. Wansfell 

and Loughrigg bogs; also in bogs at Bampton, 

Kendal, Shap, and elsewhere. 
Fedia Olitoria: Common Corn Salad or Lamb's 

Lettuce. Moresby Hall. 
F. Dentata: Toothed Com Salad. Frizington. 

DiPSACEiE. 

ScABiosA Succisa: Devil's Bit, or Premorse 
Scabious; S. Columbaria: Small Scabious; and 
Knautia Arvensis : Field Knautia or Field 
Scabious, are all common. 

COMPOSIT^E. 

Tragopogon Pratensis : Yellow Goat's-Beard, 
John-go-to-bed-at-noon. Common at St. Bees, 
but not general elsewhere. 

T. PoRRiFOLius: Salsafy. Workington. 

Helminthia Echioides : Bristly Ox-Tongue. 
Rare; to be found on Oxenfell. 

PiCRis HiERACioiDES: Hawkwced Picris; Apar- 
GiA AuTUMNALis : Autumnal Hawkbit ;Thrincia 
HiRTA: Hairy Thrincia; HvPOCHiERis Radi- 
CATA: Long-rooted Cat's-Ear; LatucaMuralis: 
Ivy-leaved Lettuce ; Sonchus Oleraceus: Com- 
mon Sow or Milk Thistle; S. Arvensis: Corn 
Sow or Milk Thistle; Crepis Virens: Smooth 
Hawksbeard; Hieraciubi Pilosella: Mouse- 
Ear HawkAveed; H. Sylvaticum: Wood Hawk- 
weed. All quite common everywhere. 

Apargia Hispida: Rough Hawkbit. Common. 

HiERACiuM Sabaudum : Shrubby Hawkweed. 
Ennerdale. 

H. Umbellatum : Narrow -leaved Hawkweed. 
Kirkland. 

Leontodon Taraxacum: Common Dandelion ; 
Lapsana Communis : Common Nipplewort ; 
Arctium Lappa: Common Burdock; Serra- 
TULA Tinctoria : Common Saw-Wort, are 
all common. 

Saussurea Alpina: Alpine Saussurea. Helvellyn. 
Rare, and very precious. 

Carduus Nutans: Musk Thistle. Near the toll- 
bar, Shap. 

C, AcANTHOiDES; Wcltcd Thistlc. Carlisle Castle. 

Cnicus Lanceolatus : Spear Plume-Thistle; 
C. Palustris : Marsh Plume-Thistle, are 
both common. 



324 



THE BOTANY OF THE LAKE DISTKICT. 



C. AcAULis : Dwarf riume- Thistle. Barrow. 

Rare. 
C. Heterophtllus: Melancholy Plume-Thistle. 

Armbotli ; Thirlmere; Shap ; Kendal; Long 

Sleddale. Eare. 
Onopordon Acanthi um: Scotch Thistle. Com- 
mon. 
Carlina Vulgaris : Common Carline Thistle. 

Ennerdale. This is the Charlemagne Thistle. 
Centaurea Nigra: Black Knapweed or Hard- 
head. Common. 
C. ScABiosA: Greater Knapweed. Eaglesfield. 
BiDENS CoRNUA: Nodding Bur- Mary gold. Braith- 

waite. Kare. 
B. Tripartita: Trifid Bur-Mary gold. Keswick; 

Bootle. 
EuPATORiUM Cannabinum : Common E[emp 

Agrimony. Common at Coniston, but not else- 

•where. 
TajSTACetum Vulgare: Common Tansy. Tal- 

lantire; EUercar. 
Gnaphalium Dioictjm: Mountain Cudweed; and 

G. Uliginosum : Marsh Cudweed, are both 

common. 
G. Stlvaticum: Highland Cudweed. Common. 
FiLAGO Germanica : Common Filago. Drigg ; 

Wansfell. Eare. 
F. Minima: Least Filago. Fieldshead In Eskdale. 
Petasites Vulgaris : Common Butter-bur. Win- 
dermere. 
TussiLAGo Farfara: Colt's-Foot. Common. 
Aster Trifolium: Sea Starwort. Eskholm; Hol- 

born Hill. Rare. 
Solid AGO Virgaurea: Golden Rod. Common. 
Senecio Vulgaris : Common Groundsel ; and 

S. Sylvaticus: Mountain Groundsel, are both 

common; so are S. Jacobcea: Common Ragwort; 

and S. Aquaticus: Marsh Ragwort. 
S. Tenuifolius: Hoary Ragwort. Little Brough- 

ton, and very rare. 
S. Saracenicus: Broad-leaved Ragwort. Moresby; 

Sebergham. 
Inula Helenium: Elecampane. Mosser. 
L CoNTZA: Ploughman's Spikenard. Whitbarrow 

Fells. 
PulicariaDtsenterica: Common Fleabane. Not 

common. 
Bellis Perennis: Daisy; and Chrysanthemum 

Leucanthemum: White Ox-Eye, everywhere, 

like mother and daughter. 



Pyrethrum Parthenium: Common Feverfew. 

Nether Hall (Maryport). 
P. Inodorum: Corn Feverfew; Matricaria Cha- 

MOMiLLA: Wild Chamomile. Common. 
Anthemis CoTULA: Stinking Chamomile. On 

the road to Seascales from Calder Bridge. 
A. Maritima: Sea Chamomile. Coulderton. 
Achillea Ptarmica : Sneezewort ; and A. 

Millefolium : Milfoil, are both common. 

Campanulacejs. 

Campanula Rotundifolia: Hairbell. Common 
towards the end of summer and the beginning 
of autumn; mixing in with the golden gorse, 
the purple heather, and the crimson leaves of 
the bramble, in wonderful blending of colour. 

C. Trachelium : Nettle-leaved Bell-flower. 
Common, and in great beauty about Watend- 
lath and Applethwaite (Keswick.) 

C. Glomerata: Clustered Bellflower. Harden- 
dale, near Shap ; but not uncommon elsewhere. 

C. Latifolia : Giant Bellflower. Isel ; Lamplugh ; 
Milnthorpe; Kendal; Coniston. Not common. 

Jasione Montana: Sheep's Scabious. Not un- 
common on the heathy fells, but partial. 

LOBELIACE^. 

Lobelia Dortmanna: Water Lobelia. On all 
the lakes. 

VACCINIEiE. 

Vaccinidm Myrtillus: Whortleberry, Bilberry, 

Whinberry. Very common in all the woods, 

and on almost all the mountains. 
V. Uliginosum: Bog Whortleberry, or Great 

Bilberry. Wardrow Moss; Moorside Parks. 
V. ViTis Idosa : Red Whortleberry, or Cowberiy. 

Skiddaw; Iron Crag; Swinside Fell. 
V. OxYCOCCUS: Marsh WhortlebeiTy, or Cranberry, 

Partial, but abundant. 
Arbutus Uva-Ursi: Red Bear-Berry. Bootle 

Fell; Brackenthwaite ; Grassmoor on Crummock. 

Erice^. 

Erica Tetralix : Cross-leaved Heath ; Erica 
Cinerea: Fine-leaved Heath; and Calluna 
Vulgaris: Ling, or Heather, abundant every- 
where, to the rich colouring of which half the 
autumnal beauty of the mountains is owing. 

Andromeda Polifolia : Marsh Andromeda. 
Moresby; Drumburgh. 



325 



APPENDIX II. 



MoNOTROrE^lS. 

Pi'HOLA RoTUNDiFOLiA : Round-leavcd Wiuter- 

Green. Walla Crag. 
P. Media: Intermediate Winter-Green. Stock- 

ghyll Force ; Kirklinton Moors. 
P. Minor: Lesser Winter-Green. Stockgliyll; said 

also to grow about Keswick. 
P. Secunda: Serrated Winter- Green, Helvellyu. 

All these growths are very rare, and some of 

them a little apocryphal. 
MoNOTROPA Hypopitys: Pinc Birds'-Nest or 

Fir-rape. Barrowfield, near Kendal. Rare. 

Ilicine^e. 
Ilex Aquifolium: Holly. Common. 

Oleace^e. 
LiGUSTRCM VulCtAre: Privet. Not uncommon. 
Fraxixus Excelsior: Ash. Common. 

GeNTIANEtE. 

Gentiana Amarella: Autumnal Gentian. Lime- 
kilns, Kendal Fell; Tallantire. 

G. Campestris: Field Gentian. Common. 

G. Pneumoxanthe: Marsh Gentian. Foulshow 
Moss, near Grange. Rare. 

Ekythr.ea Centaurium: Common Centaury. 
Common, " and a pure white variety at Lowes 
Water." (H. M.) 

Menyaxthes Trifoliata: Fringed Water-Lilj^, 
Buckbean or Marsh Trefoil. In peaty bogs on 
the fells; on Brothers-water, and White-Moss 
pond; one of the loveliest ilowers of the whole 
collection. 

Polemoxiace.e. 

PoLEMONiUM C.eruleum: Greek Valerian, or 
Blue Jacob's-Ladder. Graythwaite Woods, near 
Windermere. Rare. 

COXVOLVULACE^. 

CoxvoLVULUS Arvensis: Field Bindweed. Fitz- 

tollbar. Rare. 
C. Sepium: Great Bindweed. Common. 
C. Soldanella: Sea Bindweed. Sea-shore at 

Couldcrton and Harrington, 

BORAGINE^E. 

Pulmoxaria Officixalis: Common Lungwort. 

Common. 
Symphytum Officixale: Common Comfrey. Not 

uncommon. 
Axchusa Sempervirexs: Evergreen Alkanet. 

Kendal; Long Sleddale; Gosforth; Sandwith. 



LiTHosPERMUM OFFICINALE: Coinmoii Gromwell 
or Grey Millet. Mosser and WestAvard Parks. 
(H. M.) 

L. Arvensb: Corn Gromwell. Stanger. (H. M.) 

L. Maritimum: Sea-side Gromwell. Bootle and 
Workington. (H. M.) 

Myosotis Palustris: Forget-me-Not. Common. 

M. Arvensis : Field Scorpion- Grass, and M. Versi- 
color: Party-coloured Scorpion- Grass. Common. 

Lycopsis Arvensis: Small Bugloss. St. Bees. 

Cynoglossum Officinale: Common Hound's- 
Tongue. Fiimby; near Levens Church. Rare. 

SoLAXEiE. 

SoLAxuM Dulcamara: AVoody Nightshade, or 

Bittersweet. Common. 
Atropa Belladoxxa : Deadly Nightshade, Fur- 

ness Abbey ; Flookburgh ; and once about Egre- 

mont, but now only cultivated. 
Hyoscyamus Niger: Common Henbane. Cocker- 
mouth; Fiimby; Harrington; Levens Church. 

Rare. 

Orobaxciie^e. 
Lathr^a Squamaria : Toothwort. Wansf ell ; near 

Kendal, in three places; Coniston lake-side. 

Rare. 

SCROPIIULARIXEiE. 

Digitalis Purpurea: Purple Foxglove. Com- 
mon and very tine. In certain places, as in the 
Wythop Woods, Bassenthwaite, and in the Beck 
Leven Woods, Coniston, attaining to quite 
majestic stature, and an almost tropical luxuri- 
ance of growth and colour. Sometimes found 
with white flowers. 

AxTiRRHixuM Orontidm: Lesser Snapdragon. 
Common. 

LiXARiA Vulgaris: Yellow Toad-flax. Common. 

L. Cymbalaria: Ivj'-leaved Toad -flax, Mother of 
Thousands. Common on old buildings, as- 
Calder Abbey, Rose Castle, &c. 

L. Italica : Italian Toad-flax. Rare, but has been 
found near Coniston. 

ScROPHULARiA NoDOSA: Knotted Figwort; and 
S. Aquatica: Water Figwort, both common; 
as is Melampyrum Pratexse: Common Yellow 
Cow-wheat; which last is specially fine in the 
Linthwaite woods, Scale Hill. 

Pedicularis Palustris : Marsh Red-Rattle 
Common; very fine in the fields on the way to 
Eascdale Force. 



326 



THE BOTANY OF THE LAKE DISTRICT. 



P. Syltatica: Dwarf Red- Rattle. Everywhere. 

Rhinanthus Crista- galli: Cockscomb, Yellow 
Rattle. Common. 

E. Majus: Large Bushy Yellow Rattle. Chapel 
Bank, St. Helens. 

Bartsia Odontites: Red Bartsia. Common. 

Veronica Serptllifolia: Thyme-leaved Speed- 
well; V. Chamcedrys: Germander Speedwell, 
or Bird's Eye ; V. Officinalis : Common Speed- 
well; V. Beccabunga: BrookUme; V. Agres- 
Tis: Field Speedwell. All common. 

V. Anagallis. Water Speedwell. St. Bees and 
the Ellen. Rare. 

V. ScuTELEATA: Marsh Speedwell. Ullock Moss. 
Rare. 

V. Montana: Mountain Speedwell. Walla Crag. 
Rare. 

V. Hederifolia : Ivy-leaved Speedwell. Dis- 
tington; Workington. Rare. 

V. Spicata: Spiked Speedwell. The rocks at 
Humphrey Head, Cartmel. 

Verbascusi Thapsus: Great Mullein. Brigsteer 
Seal'. 

Labiate. 

Lycopus EuROPiEus: Common Gipsy- Wort. Burn- 
side Farm, Kendal; Ribton Hall; Drigg Moor. 

Mentha Rotundifolia : Round leaved Mint. 
Between Lodore and Borrowdale. Not 
common. 

M. HiRsrTA: Hairy Mint. Common. 

M. Piperita: Pepper-Mint; and M. Arvenis: 
Corn-Mint. Near Sykes in Nathdale, and on 
WhitbaiTow. 

M. Sativa: Marsh Whorled Mint. Windermere. 
Not common. 

Thymus Seepyllum: Wild Thyme. Common 
on all the dry uplands. 

Origanum Vulgaee : Common Marjoram. Cuns- 
wick Wood near Kendal. 

Calamintha Officinalis: Common Calamint. 
Kendal Castle and Calva Hall. 

C. AciNOS: Common Basil. Low Lingbank. Rare. 

C. Clinopodium: Common Wild-Basil. Winder- 
mere; Mockerkin; Papcastle. Rare. 

Ajuga Reptans: Common Bugle. Common; as 
is Teucrium Scorodonia, Wood Sage, or 
Wood-Germander. 

Ballota Nigra : Black Horehound. Work- 
ington. Rare. 



Leonurus Cardiaca : Common Motherwort. 

Workington Row. Rare. 
Galeobdolon Luteum: Yellow Weasel Snout, 

Archangel, or Yellow Dead-Nettie. Crosedale 

and Coniston. Not common. 
Galeopsis Tetrahit: Common Hemp-Nettle. 

Common. 
G. Versicolor : Large-flowered Hemp-Nettle. 

Sjjrint Bridge and Burnside Hall, Kendal. 
G. Ladanum: Red Hemp-Nettle. Hawkshead 

Fields. 
Lamium Purpureum : Purple Dead - Nettle. 

Common. 
Betonica Officinalis: Wood Betony. Common, 

as is unfortunately Stachys Sylvatica : Hedge 

Wound-AVort, or Stinking Roger, with its foul 

odour so terribly suggestive of carrion ; but 

S. Palustris, Marsh Wound- Wort, (common) 

is innocent and inodorous. 
Glechoma Hederacea: Ground Ivy, and 
Prunella Vulgaris: Self-Heal. Common. 
Scutellaria Galericolata: Greater Skull-cap. 

Not common. 
S. Minor: Lesser Skull-cap. Thornthwaite and 

Windermere. Rare. 

Verbenaceje. 
Verbena Officinalis: Common Vervain. Whit- 
barrow; Lindale, near Cartmel. 

LeNTIBULARIvE. 

PiNGUicuLA Vulgaris : Common Butterwort. 
Common in all the bogs. 

Utricularia Vulgaris: Common Bladderwort; 
and U. Minor, Lesser Bladderwort, on Fouls- 
haw Moss, Shoulthwaite Moss, and Eskmeals. 
Rare. 

U. Intermedia: Intermediate Bladderwort. Kes- 
wick. Rare. 

Primulace^. 

Primula Vulgaris : Primrose. Common ; in the 
spring-time colouring every bank and hedge 
with its pale sunshine, and to be found in shady 
and elevated places until quite late into the 
summer. 

P. Elatior: Ox-lip. Kendal and Caldbeck for 
greatest beauty; asalsoP. Veris: Cowslip. A 
red variety of this last is found at Egremont 
Castle. 



32/ 



APPENDIX II. 



P. Faeinosa : Bird's Eye Primrose. In bogs 
everywhere about Windermere and Troutbeck, 
but not generally common. A dark red variety 
is found near Ireby Low. (H. M.) 

Anagallis arvensis: Scarlet Pimpernel; Poor 
Man's Weather-glass. Common ; starring 
every field with its " prescient " bright scarlet 
spots. 

A. CERULEA: Blue Pimpernel. Ilensingham Toll- 
bar. Bare. 

A. Tenella: Bog Pimpernel. Common. 

Ltsimachia Nemortjm : Wood Loosestrife, Yellow 
Pimpernel. Common; perhaps in richest pro- 
fusion about Elterwater. 

L. Vulgaris : Great Yellow Loosestrife. Keswick ; 
Ennerdalc; Lorton. 

L. NuMMULARiA: Moucywort, Ilerb Twopence. 
Windermere. (H. M.) 

Glaux Maritima : Sea Milkwort. Eavenglass ; 
St. Bees. Bare. 

Samolus Valerandi : Brookweed. Coulderton 
shore. 

PLUMBAGINEiE. 

Statice Armeria: Thrift. Sca^vfell and sea- 
shores. 

S. LiMONiEM: Sea-Lavender. Common at St. 
Bees, and other sea-coasts. 

S. Spathulata: Spathulate Sea-Lavender. St. 
Bees Head. Bare. 

Plantagine^. 

Plantago Major: Greater Plaintain; and P. 

Lanceolata: Ribwort Plaintain. Common. 
P. Media: Hoary Plaintain. Arcledon; Egre- 

mont; Kendal; Whitbarrow. 
P. Maritima: Sea- side Plaintain. Flimby and 

Gillerthwaite. 
P. CoRONOPUs: Buck's-Horn Plaintain. Flimby; 

Eavenglass, &c. 
Litorella Lacustris: Shore- Weed. Common. 

Chenopode^. 

Chenopodium Bonus -Henricus: Good King 
Henry; C. Album: White Goosefoot. Common. 

Atriplex Patula: Spreading-fruited Orache. 
Workington, north shore. 

A. Laciniata: Frosted Sea Orache. St. Bees and 
HaiTington. 



Salsola Kali: Prickly Saltwort. Coulderton. 

Rare. 
Salicornia Herbacea: Jointed Glasswort. 

Eavenglass; Workington. Rare. 
S. Radicans: Rooting Glasswort. Workington, 

north shore. 

POLTGONEiE. 

OxTRiA Reniformis: Kidney-shaped Mountain 
Sorrel. Ashness Ghyll; Honister; Wastdale; 
Helvellyn ; Great End Crag ; Long Sleddale, near 
Buckbarrow well. Rare and highly-prized. 

Polygonum Bistorta: Common Bistort or 
Snake-weed — " Eastern giants," as the children 
call them. In special beauty about the Roth ay 
meadows, but not uncommon eveiywhcre, and 
cultivated as a pot-herb in the cottages. 

P. ViviPARUM: Viviparous Alpine Bistort. Hel- 
vellyn; Hardendale, near Shap. Bare. 

P. AvicuLARE: Common Knot-Grass; P. Con- 
volvulus : Climbing Persicaria ; P. Persi- 
CARiA : Spotted Persicaria ; and P. Htdropiper : 
Water Pepper. Common everywhere. 

P. Amphibium: Amphibious Persicaria. Dearham. 

EuMEX Obtusifolius: Broad-leaved Dock; R. 
AcETOSA: Common Sorrel; R. Acetosella: 
Sheep's Sorrel. Everywhere. 

Thtmele^. 
Daphne Laureola : Spurge Laurel ; and Daphne 
Mezereum; are given in Martineau's Guide as 
having been found in the Eayrigg, and Graj^- 
thwaite woods. 

Aristolochieje. 
Asarum Europium: Asarabacca. About Kes- 
wick. Very rare. 

EMPETREiE. 

Empetrum Nigrum : Black Crowberiy, Crakeberiy. 
Not uncommon on the higher fells. 

Euphorbiace^. 

Euphorbia Peplus: Petty Spurge ; E. Helios- 
copiA: Sun-Spurge. Common. 

E. ExiGUA: Dwarf Spurge. Bridgefoot. 

E. PoRTLANDicA: Portland Spurge. Braystones 
and Drigg shores. 

E. Paralias: Sea Spurge. Haverrigg and HaiTing- 
ton shores. 

Mercurialis Perennis: Dog's Mercury. Com- 
mon. 



328 



THE BOTANY OF THE LAKE DISTRICT 



Urtice.'e. 
Urtica DioiCA: Great Nettle. Common. 
U. Urens: Small Nettle. Distingtoii; Ullock. 
Parietaria Officinalis: Common Pellitory-of- 

the-wall. Torpenhow Chm-ch; Crookdale Hall. 

(H.M.) 
HtJMULUs LupULUS: Common Hop. Keswick; 

Egremont ; and elsewhere. 

Ulmace^e. 
Ulmus Campestris: Common Small-leaved Elm. 
One of our most beautiful trees. 

Amentace^e. 

SalixAlba: White Willow; S. Caprea: Goat's 
Willow, or Sallow. Common. 

S. Herbacea: Crack Willow. Scawfell Pikes; 
summit of Skiddaw and top of Helvellyn.' 

POPULUS Nigra. Blaek Poplar. Everywhere. 

Myrica Gale: Sweet Gale, or Dutch Myrtle. 
Common ; specially plentiful at Coniston, 
by Birks Bridge, Duddon, and Wastwater 
Eoot. 

Betuta Alba: White Birch — the lady of the 
woods. Common. Var. Pendulosa about Der- 
wentwater. (H.M.) 

Alnus Glutinosa: Common Alder; Fagus 
Sylvatica : Common Beech. Everywhere ; 
as are also Castanea Vesca: Sweet Chestnut; 
QuERCUs EoBUR, or Pedunculata: Common 
British Oak ; and Q. Sessilifolia: the Sessile 
Oak; CoRYLUs AvELLANA: Commou Hazel 
Nut; and Carpinus Betulus: Common Horn- 
beam. 

CONIFERyE. 

PiNus Stlvestris : Scotch Fir ; Juniperus 
Communis; Common Juniper; Abies Excelsa: 
Spruce Fir; and Abies Larix: Larch. All 
common. 

Taxus Baccata: Common Yew. Not large 
growing trees in general, save in the well-known 
" Fraternal Four " of Borrowdale, " the Pride 
of Lorton Vale," the Patterdale Church Yew, 
and others ; but in general they are stunted. 

HYDROCHARIDACEiE. 

Stratiotes Aloides: Water Soldier. Ennerdale 
Lake. Very rare. 



OnCHIDE.'E. 

Orchis Mascula: Early Purple Orchis, or Deaif 

Men's Fingers. Common; as is also Orchis 

Maculata: Spotted Orchis, with its strange 

variety of growth and colour. 
O. Ustdlata: Dwarf Dark-winged Orchiir, 

Wood Hall; Keswick. Rare. 
Habenaria Viridis: Green Butterfly Orchis. 

Murton Moss and Tenter Fell ; Kendal. 
H. Chlorantha, or H. Bifolia: Great Butterfly 

Orchis. Not uncommon, and in special beauty 

about the Ara river. 
Gi'MNADENiA CoNOPSEA: Fragrant Gymnadenia, 

or Sweet-Scented Orchis. Common, specially 

about Borrowdale. 
LisTERA OvATA: Common Tway-bladc. Common. 
L. Cord ATA: Heart-leaved Tway-blade. Castle- 

rigg Fell ; Mellbreak ; Helvellyn ; and one place 

only on Coniston Fell. 
L. Nidus- Avis : Common Bird's-nest. Flimlxy 

Wood; Wood Hall; and, rarely, near Winder- 
mere; Coniston; Cunswick AVood, Kendal. 
Ophrys Muscifera : Fly Orchis. Near Newby 

Bridge and Kendal. Rare. 
O. Apifera: Bee Orchis. Meadows round Cald- 

beck. Rare. 
Epipactis Palustris: Marsh Helleborine. Isel; 

Whitbarrow. 
E. Latifolia: Broad-leaved Helleborine. Dean 

Scales; Bridgefoot; and Whitbarrow. 
E. Ensifolia: Narrow-leaved White Helleborine. 

Whitbarrow. Rare. 
Cypripedium Calceolus: Common Lady 's-Siip- 

per. W hitbarrow. Rare. 

Iridackm. 
Iris Pseud-Acorus : Yellow Iris, Corn-flag. 
Common ; in great beauty in the Wy thop Woods, 
and by Bassenthwaite Lake. 

Amaryllidace^. 
Narcissus Pseudo-Narcissus: Common Daffo- 
dil, Lent Lily, Flocks. Common. 

DlOSOOREACE^. 

Tamus Communis: Black Bryonj-. Common; and 
beautiful in all stages, whether in its spring 
dress of shining leaves, heart shaped and deeply 



1 Wordsw^nh's Guide. 
329 



U U 



APPENDIX IT. 



green, or lightened by its waxen pale-green 
flowers, or gorgeous with its scarlet berries, 
starring the spaces between the dark purple and 
bright yellow of its autumnal leaves. 

TEILLIACEiE. 

Paris Quadrifolta : Tour-leaved Herb Paris, 
or True-Love-Knot. In shady woods ; but not 
common. 

LiLlACEiE. 

C'oNVALLARiA Majalis: Lily of the Valley. In 
the two islands of that name on Windermere, 
but perhaps it is better to say were, for frequent 
thefts have extirpated them almost entirely. 
Pulh\'j'ke Bay ; Rauncey Woods near Newby 
Bridge; and Cunswick Wood, Kendal. 

C. Multifloea: Solomon's Seal. Holker, near 
Cartmel; Castlehead Wood, Keswick; and 
Grange, near Borrowdale; Graythwaite Wood. 

C. PoLYGOXATUM: Angular Solomon's Seal. 
Barrowfield Wood, near Kendal. Very rare. 

Htacinthus non-sceiptus : Wild Hyacinth, Blue- 
bell. Common and everywhere. 

Allium Ursixum : Broad-leaved Garlic, Ramps 
or Ransoms. Common. 

A. SciKEENOPRASUM: Chives. Cartmel Fell. Rare. 

A. Oleeaceum: Streaked Field Garlic In one 
locality only near Windermere (Martineau, who 
gives it as Allium Carinatum). 

A. ViNEALE: Crow Garlic. Bearpot, near Wor- 
kington. 

JrXCACE.E. 

Jr^xcus Epfusus: Soft Rush. J. Coxglomera- 
Tus : Common Rush. J. Glaucus : Hard 
Rush. J. AcuTiFLORUS: Sharp-flowered Jointed 
Rush. All common. 

JcNCUs FiLiFORMis : Thread Rush. Crummock 
and Derwentwater lakes. 

J. IlLiGixosrs: Lesser Bog Jointed Rush. Wor- 
kington. Rare. 

J. Trifloris: Three-flowered Rush. Helvelljm. 
Rare. 

LiJzuLA Sylvatica : Gi'cat Wood-Rush, and 
L. Campestris: Field Wood-Rush. Common 
as is L. PiLOSA : Hairy Wood-Rush. In woods 
lictween the mountains and the sea. (H. M.) 



Nartiiecium Ossifragum: Lancashire Bog As- 
phodel. Common. A very beautiful little plant, 
sending up bronze-tipped golden spikes among 
the pale pink pimpernels and beaded sundews of 
the bogs. 

Alismace^. 
Alisma Plaxtago : Great Water-Plaintain . 

Keswick Cass. 
A. Raxuxculoides : Lesser Water-Plaintain. 

Eskmeals. 
Sagittaria Sagittifolia : Common Arrow-Head. 

Braystones Tarn. Rare. 

JuNCAGIXACEiE. 

Triglochix Palustre : Marsh Arrow-Grass. 

Common. 
T. Maritimum: Sea Arrow-Grass. Cloffocks. 

TvPHACEiE. 

Typiia Latifolia: Great Reed Mace, or Cat's 

Tail. Common. 
Spargaxium Ramosum : Branched Bur-reed. Por- 

tinscale; Nathdale. Rare. 
S. Simplex : Unbranched Upright Bur-reed . 

Harras Moor. Rare. 
S. Natans: Floating Bur-reed. Shoulthwaite 

Moss. Rare. 

Arace^. 
Arum Maculatuiw: Cuckoo-pint, Wake-Robin, 
Lords-and-Ladies. Common. 

PlSTIACE^. 

Lemxa MixoR: Lesser Duckweed. Everywhere. 

Naiadace^. 

PotamogetoxNataxs: Floating Pondweed. Com- 
mon. 

P. Perfoliatus: Perfoliate Pondweed. Bassen- 
thAvaite Lake. 

P. Dexsus: Opposite-leaved Pondweed. River 
Ellen. 

P. Heterophyllus: Various-leaved Pondweed. 
Common. 

P. Crispus: Curly Pondweed. River Derwent. 

P. Geamixeas: Grassy Pondweed. Harras Moor. 

Ruppia Maritima : Sea Ruppia. Cloffocks. 

ZosTERA Marixa: Broad-leaved Grass Wrack. 
Bootle Shore. "Brought up by the tide." 
(H. M.) 



3.3U 



THE BOTANY OF THE LAKE DISTRICT. 



Cyi'eeace^.' 

CarexDioica: Creeping Difecious Carex. Orgill. 

C. Pdlicaris: Flea Carex. Hunday. 

C. Aeenaeia: Sea Carex. Harrington Shore. 

C. VuLPiNA: Great Carex. Yeorton Hall. 

C. LiMOSA: Far. /rr/(/Ma ; ^ Mud Carex. Gilsland. 
Rare. 

C. Pallescens: Pale Carex. Sellafield. 

C. Flava: Yellow Carex. Hard Knot. 

C. Extensa: Long-bracted Carex. INIarron Side. 

C. Stricta or Vulgaris: Common Carex. Bull- 
gill Bridge. 

C. Rip ARIA: Great Common Carex. Stubbin Mire. 

C. Vesicaria : Short -beaked Bladder Carex. 
Braithwaite. 

C. Ampullacea: Slender-beaked Bladder Carex. 
Cockerside. 

C. FiLiFORMis: Slender-leaved Carex. Work- 
ington. 



Eriopiiorum Vaginatum: liaretail Cotton Grass. 

Common. 
E. Angustifolium: Narrow-leaved Cotton Grass. 

Cakler Ghylls and Edge Tarn ; Brigham 

Moss. 
SciRPUS Laccstris: Lake Club-rush, or Bull-rush. 

Lowes water. 
S. Maritimds: Salt Marsh Club-rush. Work- 
ington. 
S. Sylvaticus: Wood Club-rush. Banks of the 

Mar r on. 
S. C^SPiTOSUS: Scaly-Stalked Club-rush. Murton 

Moss. 
S. Pauciploeus: Chocolate-Headed Club-rush. 

INIurton M"oss. 
Eleochaeis palusteis: Creeping Spike Rush. 

Lowes Water. 
E. MuLTiCAULis : Many-salkcd Spike Rush. 

Ennerdale. 
E. AcicuLARis: Least Spike Rush. Egrcmont. 



-THE FEKNS 



POLYPODIETE. 

Poly'PODIUM Vulgare : Common Polypody. 
Everywhere. Vars. semilacerum and serratiim 
have been found near Windermere. 

P. Dry'opteris: The Oak Fern. Lodore; Bor- 
rowdale; Calder Bridge; Furness Fells; Wast- 
dale; Scale Force; Dalegarth; Stock Ghyll; 
Glenridding; Coniston. A slate fern; not rare. 

P. Phegopteris: The Beech Fern. Borrowdale; 
Ennerdale; Scawfell; Stock Ghyll; Grasmere; 
Coniston. Also a slate fern, and not rare. 

P. RoBERTiANUM : The Limestone Polypody. 
Scale Force ; Whitbarrow ; perhaps also by 
Lancey Falls (Thirlmere.) Rare, because of its 
following the limestone only, and that not freely. 

Allosorus crispl'S: Mountain Parslej', or Parsley 
Fem. On all the higher elevations; growing in 
great abundance round the slate rocks, and at 
the foot of the unmortared slate walls about the 
fells and mountains. 



ASPIDIE.E. 

PoLY'STiCHUM LoNCHiTis: Thc Alpine Shield or 

Holly Fern. Fairfield; Helvellyn; and reported 

to be found in Deepdale. Very rare. 
P. AcuLEATUM : the Common Prickly Shield 

Fern. Common by rivulets and in woods, 

as are also the varieties lobatuni and lon- 

chltidiuidis. 
P. Angulare: the Angular or Soft Prickly Shield 

Fern. Less common as a universal growth, but 

luxuriant about Ambleside. 
Lasxrea Thely-pteris : the Marsh Buckler Fern. 

Keswick; Glencoin; Blowy kc; Irton woods. (A 

peat bog fern.) 
L. Montana: the Mountain Buckler, or Heath 

Fern. Common. 
L. FiLix-MAS: the Male Fern. Common. Vurs. 

deorso-lobata, and paleacca, Ambleside ; var. 

incisa, Cockermouth; var. Pinderi, Elterwater; 

var. abhreviata, vaclxxOiing pinnila, Coniston. 



' This list is ent rely talsen fi-u)ii Jlartineau's Guide, corrected by Cliiids. 
^ .Made a synonym by Cliikl.s. 

.3.31 



U r 2 



APPENDIX II. 



L. Dilatata: Broad Prickly-toothed Buckler 
Fern. Elterwater; Langdale; Silverthwaite; Old 
Man; and the fells generally. Var. collina, 
Elterwater; Langdale; Ked House; Torver; var. 
dumetorum, throughout the rocky fells. 

L. Spinulosa : the Narrow Prickly-toothed 
Buckler Fern. Coniston ; Keswick ; Winder- 
mere ; and Ambleside. (A bog fern.) 

L. RiGiDA: the Eigid Buckler Fern. Arnside 
Knot; HuttonRoof Crags; Farlton Knot; Silver- 
dale. Bare. 

L. iEMULA : the Hay-scented, or Triangular Prickly- 
toothed Buckler Fern. St. Bees Head ; Coniston ; 
Windermere. Hare. 

ASPLENIE^. 

AriiYEiuM FiLix-FffiMiNA : the Lady Fern. Not 
uncommon. Vars. irifidum and latifolium. 
Keswick, rare ; growing there in only one 
locality ; various other forms abundant, specially 
about Coniston. Var. rhcelicum the mostcommon. 

AsPLENiDM Septentrionale: thc Forked Spleen- 
wort. Honister Crag; Scawfell; Patterdalc; 
BoiTowdale; Newlands; a ravine near Wast- 
water; Ambleside. (A slate fern. Rare.) 

A. ViRiDE: the Green Spleenwort. Patterdale; 
Kendal Fells; Ilutton Roof; Farlton; Arnside; 
Casterton Fell; Mazebeck Scar; Ambleside: 
Ashness Ghyll; Barrow Falls; Brandy Ghyll on 
Carrock; Borrowdale; Whitbarrow. (A lime- 
stone fern.) 

A. Germaniccm : the Alternate-leaved Spleen- 
wort. Helvellyn; Borrowdale. 

A. Ruta-muraria : the Rue-leaved Spleenwort, or 
Wall Rue. Common on old walls. 

A. Trichomanes : the Common Maidenhair 
SpleenAvort. Common, specially about Amble- 
side and Calder Bridge. Vars. ramosum and 
iiiclsum, Keswick and Borrowdale. Very 
rare. 

A. Marinum: the Sea Spleenwort. Sea cave near 
Silverdale; St. Bees Head; Head of Morecambe 
Bay ; Meathop, near Witherslack. (A sand 
fern, and very rare.) 

A. FoNTANUM: The Smooth Rock Spleenwort. 
Formerly at Wythburn, but now by the greed 
of collectors extinct. 

A. Adiats'tum-nigrum : The Black Maidenhair 
Spleenwort. Very common on old walls. (A 
limestone fern.) 



Ceteracit Officinarum: The Scale Fern. Not 
common, but in great luxuriance on Whit- 
barrow. A crenated variety found at Arnside 
Knot; Milnethorpe; Kendal; Ambleside; Gos- 
forth ; Keswick; Sandwith; St. Bees; Gow- 
barrow Park; Silverside. (A limestone fern, 
chiefly on old walls). 

ScoLOPENDRiCM VuLGARE: The Common Hart's 
Tongue. Only in the limestone districts, and 
there abundant. 

LOMARIE^. 

Ijlechnum Spicant: The Common Hard Fern. 
Common. 

Pteride^. 

Pteris aquilina: The Common Bracken. Every- 
where. 

CvSTOPTERIDEiE. 

Cystopteris fragilis: The Brittle Bladder Fern. 
Lamplugh; Holm Rock; Mickledore; Braith- 
waite Brows; Kendal. Var. dentata, Borrow- 
dale ; Egremont ; Kendal ; Silverdale. Var. 
interriipta, Windermere, and elsewhere. (A 
limestone fern). 

C. REGiA: The Alpine Bladder Fern. Blencathra, 
in 1820. Back of Old Man, Coniston (?). 

Peraneme^e. 

WooDSiA Ilvensis: The Blunt-leaved, or Oblong 
Woudsia. Westmoreland, " in three distant 
stations," F. Clowes. Cumberland, F. Clowes; 
but the localities concealed. 

HTMENOPHTLLEiE. 

Hymenophyllcm Tunbridgekse: TheTunbridge 
Film-fern. Hawl Ghyll (Wastwater); Euner- 
dale; Coniston. Very rare. 

II. WiLSONi, or LTnilaterale: Wilson's Film- 
fern. Not uncommon in damp mountain fissures 
everywhere; but in greatest luxuriance at Scale 
Force, where it lines the rocks. (A slate fern). 

OSMUNDACE^. 

OsMUNDA Regalis: The Osmund Royal or Flower- 
ing Fern. Windermere; Skelwith and Lough- 
rigg ; Colwith ; Seascales ; Gosforth; Coniston 
Crags; Ullock Moss (Keswick); Whitbarrow; 
Millam; Irton; Egremont; Scale Hill. 



332 



THE BOTANY OF THE LAKE DISTRICT. 



Ophioglossace^e, 

BoTRTCiiiUM LuNAEiA: The Common Moonwort. 
Not uncommon on the higher grounds. Bray- 
stones ; Muncaster Fells ; Keswick ; Castle 
Sowerby; Coniston Fells, &c. 

Ophioglosscm Vulgatdm: Common Adder's 
Tongue. Bare at Windermere, but common in 
several other districts. 

LrCOPODIACEiE. 

Lycopodium Selago: The Fir Club-Moss. Skid- 
daw ; Helvellyn ; the Ennerdale and other 

mountains. 
L. Annotinum: Interrupted Club-Moss. Bowfell; 

Langdale. Rare. 
L. Clavatum: Common Club-Moss, Stag's Horns, 

Foxes' Tails, Wolf's Tails. Common. (A famous 

dye.) 
L. Inundatum: Marsh Club-Moss. Wastwater, 

and by mountain tarns, but not common. 
L. Alpinun vel Complanatdm: Savin-leaved 

Club-Moss. Common on heathy fell-sides among 

the stones and rocks. 
Selaginella Spinosa: Prickly Mountain-Moss. 

Fairfield; Kirkstone; Loughrigg; Borrowdale; 

Scawfell; Coniston; Ennerdale, &c. 



Marsileace^. 

TsoETES Lacusteis : European Quilhvort, or 
Merlin's Grass. All the lakes. 

PiLULAEiA Globdlipbra: Pillwort, or Pepper- 
grass. Ennerdale lake only. 

Equisetace^. 

Equisetum Telmateia: The Great, or Great 
Water Horsetail. All the lakes. 

E. Pratense: The Shade Horsetail. By the 
Westmoreland lakes. 

E. Aevense : The Cornfield Horsetail. Gos- 
forth. 

E. Stlvaticum: The Wood Horsetail. Enner- 
dale, Watendlath. 

E. LiMostiM : The Water or Smooth Naked Horse- 
tail. Common. 

E. Palustre : the Marsh Horsetail. Common ; 
luxuriant on Coldfell. Var. polystachyon, 
rare. 

E. Hyemale: the Great Rough Horsetail. Old 
Field Wood, near Kendal; Sowgelt Bridge; and 
a few other places. Rare. 

E. Vaeiegatum: the Variegated Rough Horsetail. 
By the Irthing, at Gilsland. 



3— THE MOSSES 



Andre^ace^e. 
ANDRiEA Alpina: Alpine Andrasa; A. Alpestris: 
Rock Andrisea ; A. Rothii : Black Falcate 
Andrsea. Ill Bell and about Windermere. 

Bryac^. 
Weissi^. 

Gymnostomum Rcpestre: Rock Beardless-Moss. 
Helvellyn. 

G. MicROSTOMUM: Small-mouthed Beardless- Moss. 
Miller's ground near Windermere, and elsewhere. 

Weissia Verticillata : WhorledWeissia. Whit- 
barrow. 

Rhabdoweissia Denticulata: Toothed Streak- 
Moss. Furness Fells; Grasmere Fells; and else- 
where. 

DlCRANE^. 

Blindia Acuta: Acute-leaved Blindia. Winder- 
mere, &c. 



DiCRANUM PoLiTCARPDM : Mauy-fruitcd Fork- 
Moss. Red Screes. Rare. 

D. Squarrosum : Drooping-leaved Fork-Moss. 
Dunmail Raise. 

D. RuEESCENS: Reddish Fork-Moss. Calgarth 
Woods, and others. 

TEICHOSTOMEiE. 

DisTiCHiuM Capillacedm : Fine-leaved Dis- 
tichium. Ill Bell; Helvellyn; Scawfell; and other 
high mountains. 

DiDYMODON Cylindricus: Slcnder-fruitcd Didy- 
modon. Troutbeck Park ; Cook's House, &c. 

Teichostomdm Homomalltjm : Curve -leaved 
Trichostomum. Calgarth; Lodorc, &c. 

ToRTULA ToRTUOSA: Curly-lcavcd Screw-Moss ; 
T. Aloides : Aloe leaved Screw-Moss ; T. 
Ambigua: Taller Rigid Screw-Moss. Whit- 
harrow. 



533 



APPENDIX 11. 



Encalypte.e. 
Encalypta Ciliata: Fringed Extinguisher-Moss. 
The Helvellyn range. 

GRIMMIEiE. 

Grimmia Spiralis: Spiral -leaved Grimmia. The 
lower part of Eed Screes, Kirkstone. Not in 
fruit. 

G. ToRTA: Twisted-leaved Grimmia. Kirkstone 
hills. 

G. DoNNiANA: Bonn's Grimmia. " On rocks and 
Avails in high situations," (H. M.) "Not found 
in Britain," Hooker and Taylor's Muscologia 
Britannica, or rather, Wilson's Bryologia 
Britannica. 

RacomitriumAciculare: Dark Mountain Fringe- 
Moss; E. Fasciculare: Green Mountain Fringe- 
Moss; E.Lanuguinosum: Woolly Fringe-Moss ; 
E. Canescens: Hoary Fringe-Moss. All very 
common on rocks and walls. 

Ptychomitrie^. 
Ptychomitrium Polyphyllum : Many-leaved 
Fringe-Moss. Common. 

ORTHOTRICHEiE. 

Orthotrichum Stramineum : straw-coloured 

Bristle-Moss. Common. 
O. Eupestre, or Ecpincola: Rock Bristle-Moss. 

Hawes Water. 
O. Lyellii: Mr. Lyell's Bristle-Moss ; O. Cris- 

PDLDM : Dwarf-curled Bristle-Moss. Both 

common. 

Zygodonte^. 
Zygodon Mougeotii : Mougeot's Yoke-Moss. In 

crevices of rocks, without fruit. 
Z. ViRiDissiMus : Green-tufted Yoke-Moss. On 

ash-trees. 

BAUXBAMIEiE. 

DiPHYSciUM FoLiosuM : Leafy Bauxbamia. Ill 
Bell; Helvellyn. 

POLYTRICIIIE.E. 

PoGOXATUM Urnigerum: Urn-fruited Hair-Moss. 

Common. 
P. Alpinum. The higher mountains generally. 

Brye^. 
Bryum Acuminatum : Sharp-pointed Thread- 
Moss ; B. PoLYMORPHUM: Changeable Tliread- 
Moss; B. Elongatum: Long- fruited Tlircad- 
Moss; B. Crudum: Alpine Glaucous Thread- 



Moss. Not rare on the mountains; but not 
lowland mosses generally. 

B. Wahlbnbergii: Wahlenberg's Thread-Moss. 
In mountain rills. 

B. LuDwiGii: Ludwig's Thread-Moss. On wet 
rocks; Glaramara and the Borrowdale hills. 
Not in fruit. 

B. Alpinum : Alpine Purple Thread-Moss. Com- 
mon, not barren. 

B. Uliginosum: Bog Thread-Moss. In a branch 
of the Wythburn Beck, High Eaise. 

B.. Fallens : Pale-leaved Thread-Moss. Ill Bell. 

B. JuLACEUM: Slender-branched Thread-Moss. 
" Mountain rills, fruiting abundantly on Kirk- 
stone Pass, 111 Bell, and in Wythburn Beck." 
(H. M.) 

B. ZiERRii: Zierrian Thread-Moss. Eed Screes; 
Eydal Park, &c. 

Mnium Serratum: SeiTated Thyme Thread-Moss. 
Helvellyn. 

M. SuBGLOBOsuM: Eound-fruitcd Thyme Thread- 
Moss. Helvellyn. 

FUNARIE^. 

FuNARiA MtJHLENBERGii : Dr. Miihlcnberg's Cord- 
Moss. WhitbaiTow. 

Physcomitrium Ericetorum : Narrow - leaved 
Bladder-Moss. Windermere, &c. 

Bartramie^e. 
Bartramia Halleriana: Haller's Apple-Moss. 

On shaded rocks. 
B. Arcuta: Curve-stalked Apple-Moss. Lodore, 

in ft-uit. 

Splaciine^. 
CEdipodium Grippithianum: Griffith's Alpine 
Collar-Moss. The Helvellyn and other higher 
mountain ranges. This moss is not known out 
of England, Scotland and Wales. (Wilson's 
B. B.) 

L'iUCODONTE.E. 

Leucodon Sciuroides: SquiiTcl-tailed Leucodon. 
Rare in fruit, but found near St. Mai'y'sChiu'ch, 
Windermere. 

Ancectangia Compactuji: Compact Beardless- 
Moss. Eed Screes, &c. 

Antitriciiia Curtipendula: Pendulous Wing- 
Moss. Common. 

Anomodox ViTicuLosus: Tall Anomodon. Whit- 
barrow. 



334 



THE BOTANY OF THE LAKE DISTRICT. 



ISOTHECIE.'E. 

Pteragonium Gracile: Slender Wing-Moss. 

Not common in fruit. 
Climaciom Dendkoides : Marsh Tree-Moss. 

Derwentwater. 

Hypne^. 

Htpnum Euscifolium: Long-beaked Feather- 
Moss. Applethwaite Ghyll, Skiddaw. 

H. Palustke: Marsh Feather-Moss. Ambleside. 

H. Schreeeri : Schreber's Feather-Moss. In 
fruit at Windermere. 

H. Umbratum: Shady Rock Feather- Moss. Kes- 
wick. 

H. Brevirostre: Short-beaked Feather -Moss. 
Common. 



H. Flagellare: Thong-branehed Feather-Moss. 
Stock Ghyll, and other rocky streams. 

H. Squarrosum: Drooping-leaved Feather-Moss. 
Common . 

H. RuGOSUM: Wrinkle - leaved Feather -Moss. 
Whitbarrow. 

H. Crista-Castrensis : Ostrich-plume Feather- 
Moss. Not rare in the lake district, but said 
to be the most rare and the most beautiful of all 
the British mosses. 

H. Resupinatum: Upward-turned Feather-Moss. 
Common. 

H. Stlvaticum: Wood Feather-Moss. Common. 

H. Denticulatum: Sharp Flat-leaved Feather 
Moss. Va?\ Succulentum. Black Beck near 
Storrs, Windermere. 



The above list of Mosses is taken entirely from ]\Iiss Martineau's Guide, slightly corrected b}' reference 
to other works; but I do not hold myself responsible for any of the statements as to habitat made therein, 
which, it seems to me, are meagre and incorrect by their partiality. Miss Martineau only assumes to 
give the mosses of Windermere and its immediate neighbourhood, and I have not been able to find any 
other fuller local authority. 




GRiSS OF PAKNABSUS AND FRINGBD WATEE-Tjr.Y 



335 



APPENDIX III 
THE GEOLOGY OF THE LAKE DISTJIICT 

By Edward Hull, B.A, F.G.S. of the Geological Society of, .Great Britain. 



The mountainous region of Cumberland and West- 
moreland, like that of Wales and Scotland, is 
formed of some of the most ancient rock masses 
with which we are acquainted. That reverence 
for age which ethical writers, both of ancient and 
modern times, have alike inculcated, and which 
seems, in some degree, indigenous in the human 
mind, seems to have been foreshadowed in ancient 
geologic times ; for the newer formations of a 
special district like that we are treating of, seldom 
venture to raise their heads to a level with those of 
their ancestors, and, in general, we find the more 
ancient rocks towering in stately grandeur above 
their descendants. In the lake region, the heights 
of Scawfell, Skiddaw, and Helvellyn, formed of the 
more ancient Silurian rocks, overlook in every 
direction, the surrounding ridges, fells, and plains 
of the upper Silurian, Carboniferous, and Triassic 
formations. 

The general arrangement of the Silurian rocks 
of Cumberland and Westmoreland is extremely 
simple.* The oldest beds are found in the range of 
Skiddaw and Blencathra; and commencing at this 
point you constantly ascend into higher formations 



by traversing the country from north to south, till 
you reach Kendal, where the highest Silurian beds 
are found. The mountain chain is girt around by 
Carboniferous formations, except on the south-west 
side — from St. Bees Head to Morecambe Bay — 
where the hills are separated from the sea by a nar- 
row strip of Permian, or New Red Sandstone. 
Speaking of the contrast in the physical features 
which the central group of Silurian heights presents 
when compared with the circular zone of Carboni- 
ferous limestone hills by which it is surrounded, 
Professor Sedgwick says : — " On whatever side it 
is approached, we are struck with the tameness of 
the outline of every portion of the calcareous zone, 
when contrasted with the fine serrated peaks of the 
loftier and more central elevations. Prom some of 
the ridges in the range of Ci'oss Fell the eye takes 
in, at one view, the greatest part of the northern 
calcareous zone. Seen from that distance, all its 
minor inequalities disappear, and I have often 
fancied that it resembled a port' on of a great semi- 
circular redoubt, formed near the base of the older 
hills, and presenting a long, sweeping, irregular 
glacis towards the valley of the Eden.f These 



* To Mr. J. Oiley, of Keswick, we are primarily indebted for a knowledge of tlie sub-divisions into which the rocks of 
the Lake District are divisible. Mr. Otley's observations were systematized and extended by the researches of the Rev. 
Professor Sedgwick, of Cambridge, in 1822, and following years ; who, in a series of admirable memoirs in the Geological 
~Transactions and elsewhere, has fully detailed the structure' of the region, and co-ordinated the groups of strata with those 
of "Wales, where, by his own labours and those of Sir R. J. Murchison, the Cambrian and Silurian systems were first 
established. Several other observers have added to our knowledge of the geology of the lakes, amongst whom we may 
mention Professor Phi lips, of Oxford, Professor Harkness, of Cork, Mr. E. W. Binney, and Mr. Salter, late paleontologist to 
the GeologieaVSur-v^y. The geological map, constructed by Mr. J. Ruthven, of Kendal, with the assistance of Professor" 
Sedgwick, will be found very useful, and sufficient to guide the explorer until the maps of the Government Geological Survey 
are issued to the public. 

t Geological Transactions, Vol. iv., 2nd series. 

336 



THE GEOLOGY OF THE LAKE DISTRICT. 



limestone hills sink down under the Permian and 
Triassic beds which form the plain of the Eden, 
and in the direction of Whitehaven and Working- 
ton, under the coal-foi-mation. 

In default of a geological map, there is no better 
mode for bringing the physical structure of a dis- 



trict clearly before the mind's eye than a horizontal 
section; and I shall therefore beg the reader to study 
the subjoined representation of the outline of the 
ground and component formations, drawn from 
north to south across " the strike," or direction in 
which the rocks trend fi'om west to cast. 



Ideal Section across the centre of the Lake District, from North to South, shoavino 

THE general arrangement OF THE BeDS, AND OUTLINE OF THE SuRFACE.* 

(Af/er Serlgviclt and Harkncss.') 




1 . Granite of Skiddaw Forest. 
2 Felspar Trap. 

a. SkidJaw S'ate. 

b. Green Slate and Porphyry, &c. 

c. 1. Coniston Limestone. 



c 2. Calcareous Flagstone. 

d. Coniston Grits. 

e. Ireleth Slates. 

f. ICirkby Moor Flags and Tilestone. 



G. Old Red Coni^lomerale. 
11. Carbon.ferous Limestone. 
T. Trias, or Fei midn beds of the Vale 
of Eden, 



The section above shows the true succession of 
the natural groups, but unless we have the materials 
for referring these groups to their places in the 
geological scale, this knowledge would, of itself, be 
vague and unsatisfactory. Now, as the old forma- 
tions of the Cumberland hills are completely iso- 
lated from those of Wales and Scotland, which they 
appear at first sight to resemble, it is evident we 
must fall back upon the evidence of the organic 
remains they may contain in order to determine 
their true place in the series of rock systems. The 
u]ipermost groups at the southern side of the dis- 
trict were long since determined by Professor 
Sedgwick to have their representatives in the upper 
Silurian formations of Wales, as they were found 
sufficiently rich in shells, corals, and Crustacea to 
allow of this point being determined with accuracy, 
but it was not so with the tAvo lower groups — those 
of the " green slate and porphyry " (b), and the 
"Skiddaw slate" (a). In these beds— though 
attaining a thickness of about 15,000 feet — the only 



organized bodies discovered after diligent search 
were a few gi aptolites—ixmmals belonging to a V' 
simple form of zoophyte — from the Skiddaw slate 





GKAPTOLITES FROM TUB SKIDDA' 



Professor Harkness has lately added to our know- 
ledge of the fossils of the period by discovering 
additional species of graptolitcs and certain Crus- 
tacea, and from an inspection of these, Mr. Salter — 
our highest authority on this sitbject — has referred 
the Skiddaw slate series to that group of lower 
Silurian strata, known as the lower "Llandeilo 
flags." f These are very old, but by no means the 
oldest fossiliferous strata, for both in North Wales 



* In the above sections all minor irregularities arising from faults, dykes, and changes of dip are omitted, owing to the 
contraction of the scale. 

t Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society, vol. xix. In page 137, figures of the fossils from the Skiddaw slates are 
given, and described by Mr. Salter. 

337 X X 



APPENDIX III. 

and Scotland they are supported by several thou- I scale of the Skiddaw slate group, we can now 
sand feet of the more ancient Cambrian r(jcks.* arrange the remaining groups in their proper 
Having determined the position in the geological I geological places, as follows, in descending order:— 

Tjie Lakes. Wales. 

[I. Tilestones and Kirkby Moor) r,,-, , t t ji -n i 

Upper t,, /t- i i /-, n ? = Tilestones and Ludlow Beds, 

j Flags (Kendal Group) ) 

^'™'^^] 2. Leleth Slates = Wenlock Beds. 

^^^'^- [ 3. Coniston Grits = May Hill Sandstone. 

Lower i 4. Coniston Flags and Limestone = Llandcilo Flags, and Bala Limestone. 

Silurian •< .5. Green Slate and Porphyry ) ^ ^, i ., -n i 

„ ) r,i ■ m en ^ J .^ •' I _ jjower Llandeilo Beds. 

Beds. I 6. Skiddaw Slate ) 

I shall now proceed to give a short description of each of these groups from the bottom upAvards. 



SILURIAN SERIES 



The SJdddaiv Slate Group.— This group stretches 
from Dent Hill, near Cleator, to Caldbeck Fells, 
and from Cockermouth to Keswick. It seems 
to repose on the porphyritic rocks of Uldale, 
and is penetrated by granite in Skiddaw Forest, 
and at Carrock, Avhich appears to have highly 
altered the character of the beds, so as to give 
them a hard and crystalline structure. The group 
nsists of a series of fine black and grey slates, 
traversed by cleavage planes, and bands of flag- 
stone. The thickness of the group is probably 
not less than 7,000 feet, and it rises into the 
mountains of Skiddaw, Blencathra, and Grisedale 
Pike ; it also re-appears at some distance from the 
main mass in Black Comb. 

Green Slate and Porphyry Group. — The pre- 
cedinggaffioup is overlaid by a vast series of beds 
composed of felstone, trappean grits, and breccias, 
alternating with ehloritic roofing slate. In fact, 
we have here the products of submarine volcanic 
action repeated at frequent intervals during the 
ordinaiy deposition of the sediment of which the 
green slate is formed. The trappean rocks, whether 
in the fonn of sheets of lava, or hardened volcanic 
ashes, are regularly bedded Avith the sedimentaiy 
materials, and it is interesting to observe that in 
North Wales, similar irruptions of trap occurred 
on an enormous scale at this period. This group 
contains no fossils. It occupies the central portion 
of the lake region, stretching in a broad band 



from Avest to east, and rising into the lofty heights 
of Scawfell, BoAA-fell, Helvellyn, and the Langdale 
Pikes; the group dips generally toAvards the S.S.E. 
under the Coniston beds. At Wastdale and Esk- 
dale it is penetrated by granite. 

Coniston Limestone and Flags. — This remarkable 
group, about 1,500 feet in thickness, stretches in 
a narrow, slightly curved band from Millam, on 
the Avest side of Duddon sands, to Wasdale Pike. 
At the bottom is a band of argillaceous limestone, 
from 30 to 300 feet in thickness, passing upwards 
into calcareous shales and flagstone, the Avhole 
being plentifully charged Avith fossils (corals, 
molluscs, and trilobites). The limestone may be 
seen at the folloAA'ing— amongst other — places, 
commencing at Beck on the Avest, it ranges through 
Corn Park, and the village called Hill; then east 
of Duddon Bridge, Water Blain, Broughton Mill, 
Appletreethwaite, and Ashgill. It crosses Torver 
Fell, and ranges along Coniston Old Man ; from 
this it passes to the head of Windermere, and 
appears in quarries about 400 yards above Low 
Wood Inn. It passes near the village of Trout- 
beck. Between this and Wasdale Pike it appears 
at or near Line Foot, Kentmere Hall, Pike How, 
and on the east side of Long Sleddale, near Little 
London. I have been thus particular in tracing 
the range of this calcareous band, as it affords a 
very certain and definite geological horizon, and 
forms the boundary line between the older and 



The SkicWaw slates are therefore newer than the " Primordial zone" of the Lingula flags. 

338 



THE GEOLOGY OF THE LAlvE DISTRICT. 



the newer groups of the Silurian period, as well 
as the margin of a less elevated tract of hill 
scenery.* 

Coniston Grits. — A series of coarse, hard, light- 
coloured grits, of rather greater thickness than the 
preceding group. 

Treleth Slates. — A complex deposit of roofing 
slate, grits, and flagstone, of very great thickness, 
and in the lower division containing in some places 
a thin hand of impure concretionary limestone. 
This group occupies the greater part of both banks 



of Windermere, and stretches from Ulverston to 
Tebay Fells, and southward to Leven Sands. It 
is frequently penetrated by igneous dykes, which 
generally run in the direction of the strike. 

Kendal Group. — A series, well developed in the 
hills north of Kendal, and the valley of the Lune, 
north of Kirkby Lonsdale, consisting of grits and 
flagstone, passing upwai'ds into greenish and 
reddish flags, resembling the tile-stones at the to]) 
nf the Silurian rocks. This completes the Silurian 
series. 



OLD RED SANDSTONE 



The formations just described appear to have been 
deposited one over the other in a perfectly regular 
sequence, without any breaks or disturbance what- 
ever; but at the close of the Silurian peiiod, 
powerful elevatory movements set in, accompanied 
by the eruption of granitic rocks in various places, 
as in Skiddaw Forest. As the rocks were elevated 
from under the sea, they came in contact with the 
waves and currents, by which vast quantities of 
materials were broken up and carried away, while 
beds of shingle were in places accumulated upon 
the upturned edges of the Silurian rocks. These 
beds of shingle belong to the age of the Old Red Sand- 
stone and conglomerate. 

The masses of red conglomerate are found 



resting in a discordant, or unconformable, position 
on the slaty rocks in several places, as at the 
noi'thern extremity of Ulleswatcr, extending from 
the western bank to Mell Fell ; from Shap Abbey 
southward in along strip underlying the Carboni- 
ferous limestone as far as Langdale, in a similar 
position north of Kendal, and at Kirkby Lonsdale. 
The pebbles of which it is made up are generally 
roundish, and formed for the most part of the older 
rocks, amongst which we have no difficulty in 
recognizing fragments of Coniston limestone. The 
conglomerate rests indifterently on beds of all ages 
from the Lower to the L'pper Silurian, and is 
extremely irregular both in its structure and 
thickness. 



CARBONIFEROUS FORMATIONS 



The Old Ecd conglomerate supports in some places, 
and the Silurian rocks in others, the Carboniferous 
limestone, Avhich, as already stated, almost en- 
circles the Cumbrian cluster of mountains. The 
forms o£ its tabulated hills, its precipitous scars, 
and terraced slopes, is familiar to all who have 
visited Kendal, or Kirkby Lonsdale. The forma- 
tion consists of several thick beds, or group of 
beds, of limestone separated by bands of shale, 



with coal and flagstone, which are most numerous 
on the north side of the district. The " Great Scar 
limestone," 600 feet thick or more, forms the base 
of the series. The name, as Professor Sedgwick 
remarks, is applied with great propriety to this 
limestone, which in all parts of its range is marked 
by grey precipices and mural escarpments.f The 
following is a general summary of the limestone 
series : — 



* The followiiiR are the most common fds-ils from the Coniston Wmeslone :— Favosiles poJymorpha, Porites pyriformis, 
citeni/iora e chai oides, Tentaculites annulotus ; Ortlioceras, three smooth species, Leptwna depressa, orthis, several species, 
Atrypa affinis, Cytherina Icevigata, Calymene Blumenbachii, Asaphus tyrannus. This last and many of the other forms are 
floured in Murchison's Situria. 

t Geol. 7'raws. vol. iv. p. 70. The learned author dcscii! es, in Rreat detail, the vavions members of the carhiniferous 
series in ihe papers here refcntd to. 

3o9 X X 2 



APPENDIX III. 



Carbvniferous Limestone Series in Descending 
Order. 

Greatest thickness in Feet. 

1. Twelve-fathom limestone 80 

Gritstone, coal, and shale 80 

2. Four-fathom limestone 40 

Sandstone, fissile gritstone, and shale 350 

3. MosdaJe Moor, or Wold limestone 45 

Grit, shale, and coal 150 

4. Strong post limestone 45 

Sandstone, shale, and calcareons grit 150 

5. Second limestone, or black marble group 45 
Sandstone and shale 150 

fi. Great Scar limestone 600 

Total 1,735 



The beds of coal in this group are very thin and 
of inferior quality, the only one which has been 
much worked being that which lies below " the 
twelve-fathom limestone," and which was formerly 
mined under Great Colm, on the south side of the 
valley of Dent. A much more important product 
is the hasmatitc iron-ore of Ulverston and Cleator, 
which appears to hare been deposited in extensive 
hollows scooped in the limestone, probably by run- 
ning water, dissolving and carrying away the lime.* 
The limestone is often i-ich in fossil shells and corals 
of the ordinary genera and species, such as Producta 
latissima, Spirifer, Caryophyllia, Encrinites, &c. 

The limestone series is succeeded by that of the 
millstone grit and coal-measures of Whitehaven. 



PERMIAN AND TRASSIC GROUPS 



Rksting discordantly on various members of the 
older rocks, is a thick series of red beds composed 
of breccias, sandstones, and beds of marl wiih 
limestone bands. These are referable to the two 
formations above-named, but the sjjecial age of 
some of the mcndjcrs is at present a matter of 
controversy. These beds occupy the broad valley 
of the Eden, and the sea-coast from St. Bees 



Head southward to Morecambe Bay. They have 
yielded the richly-tinted stone of which the rains 
of Furness and Calder Abbey are built — ruins 
which, by the contrast of their coloui- to that 
of the foliage around, derive so much of their 
beauty and venerable aspect. Near Carlisle a 
small outlier of the Lower Lias has lately been 
discovered.! 



GLACIAL PHENOMENA 



That the highlands of the British Isles, at a 
])eriod immediately antecedent to the appearance 
of man, have been the centres of glacial dispersion 
varying in form and intensity from the present 
state of Greenland to that of the Alps, is now 
generally acknowledged, and the evidences are 
abundant and satisfactory. Confining our attention 
to the lake district, we find in its valleys, moun- 
tain slopes, and surrounding plains all those 
appearances which are produced in regions where 
glaciers now exist, though of course, owing to the 
small size of the mountain group, somewhat in 
miniature as compared with the Alps or Pyrenees. 
On approaching the district from the south, we 
find the whole country strewn with pebbles and 
boulders, often of large size, which we can identify 
with their parent masses amongst the hills. Thus 



we find blocks of Shap granite, porphyry, and 
mountain limestone many miles distant from their 
sources. These blocks are often polished and 
striated by attrition, such as is found to be the 
case with those which have l)een carried by icebergs 
or glaciers. These boulders are often imbedded 
in reddish clay, or " till," and gravel, which is 
stratified, and must have been deposited by the 
sea, as it contains marine shells in some places; 
so we are driven to the conclusion that the sea 
once overspread the lo-\\'lands, and was studded 
with icebergs which had their origin in glaciers 
amongst the highlands. 

The evidences of glacial action in the highlands 
themselves (I speak of the Cumberland hills) are 
unmistakeable. They were originally noticed by 
the late Dr. Buckland, dean, of Westminster. If 



* Sir R. Murcliison c nsiders the iron derived from tlio red beds of tlic Permian pciiod. Journ. Geol. Society, vol. xx. p. V:i. 
t By Mr. VV. Brockbiink, and Mr. Biiiney, F.K.S., who lias described it in tlie Journal cf the Geological Society. 

340 



THE GEOLOGY OF THE LAIvE DISTRICT. 



we observe with care the exposed surfaces of the 
rocks in the bottoms of the valleys, and for a cer- 
tain height up the sides, wc shall find that they arc 
rounded, often pohshed, and grooved or striated in 
]3arallel lines. These arc especially noticeable 
where the surface has been protected by turf 
which has been freshly removed. Examples may 
be seen at Ambleside, in a boss of slaty rock, -which 
rises from the valley close by the church, as showm 
in the figure below. There is nisi n remarkable 




ICB-WOBlSr 



nstance in a projecting mass of slate, on the north 
flank of Langdale, about GOO feet above the bed of 
the lake. Similar examples may be observed above 
Grasmere, Little Langdale, and, indeed, in nearly 
all the main valleys ; and it will be generally 
observed that the striations radiate in every direc- 
tion from the centre of the mountains. Thus in 
Borrowdale they point north ; in Wastdale, west ; 
in Gi'isdale, north-cast; at Ambleside and Winder- 
mere, south; and the striae often run across the 
hill-shoulders, as is the case south of Brathay. 

Another effect of glaciers is the production of 
perched blocks. Thus we find a block of trap 
resting on a boss of slate, or vice versa. Good 
examples of these may be observed on the ridge 
between Easdale and Langdale; and a very notice- 



able instance occurs at Stickle Tarn, where a b juldcr 
rests on a smooth surface of rock rising a little 
above the centre of the lake. 

Moraines, whether lateral or terminal, arc also 
of frequent occurrence in the main valleys, and, as 
in the case of Wastwater and Easdale Tarn, form 
embankments to lakes. The moraines generally 
assume the appearance of a group of hummocks 
or tumuli, on which boulders of every size lie 
scattered; the moraines are either thrown trans- 
versely across a valley, or ranged along its side. 
In the former case it can scarcely be doubted they 
have once formed lakes, which have suliscquently 
been drained by the rupture of the barrier at some 
weak point. Such a lake, I believe, once existed at 
the head of Langdale, and the lower end of the 
wild and lonely Grisedale. Moraines may be ob- 
served on the Stake pass at the head of BorroAvdale, 
at the head of Great Langdale and Enncrdalc, at 
Easedale Tam, Stickle T;irn, Blea Tarn, Kirkstonc 
Pass, and at the head of Little Langdale, of which 
a sketch is given below. 

It is hard to picture to our minds the smiling 
valleys of Cumberland and Westmoreland once 
filled by ice, and the heath-clad hills clothed with 
a mantle of perennial snow, yet science tells us 
that such was the case at one stage of the glacial 
period. At another the country was lower than it 
is now by 1,200 or 1,400 feet, and the sea washed 
the flanks of Scawfell, Helvellyn, and Skiddaw, 
isolating them from the rest of the world. But 
the island group still sent afloat messengers of ice, 
laden with fragments torn from its own sides to 
remind the outer world that it was not all sub- 
merged.* 



* The glacial phenomena of the district has been treated on by Mr. R. Chambers in Report of Brit. Association for 1851, 
and l>y the writer in Edinburgh New Phil. Journal,\o\. xi., and Mem. Lit. and Phil. Society of Manchester, vol. i., 3rd seiies. 




MORAINE AT THE HKAD 

341 



LITTLE LANGDALE 



APPENDIX IV 
TABLE OF MOUNTAINS, LAKES, AND WATEHFALLS 


Scawfell Pike 


§ I— THE 


MOUNTAINS 

Height ill feet 

Cumberland 3229-6 

„ 3172-0 


Scawfell 

Helvellyn 




Cumberland and Westmoreland 3114-6 

Cumberland 3057-9 


Skiddaw 

Bowfell 

Great Gable 




Westmoreland 2971-8 


Cumberland 29540 

„ 2932-3 


Pillar 

Crossfell 

Fairfield 

Blencathra 




„ 2927-8 


Westmoreland 2878-0 

Cumberland 2856-4 


Grasmoor 




„ 2805-2 


High Street 




Westmoreland . '*2700-0 


Red Pike 




Cumberland 2650-2 

Lancashire 2649-0 

Cumberland 2605-9 

Westmoreland 2490-2 

(^ ( 2424-1 


Coniston Old Man 

Grisedale Pike 




Ill Bell 




Harrison Stickle 




Pike o' Stickle 




) " I *2300-0 

Cumbei-latid 2173-0 


Carrock Fell 




High Pike 




„ 21C-y6 


Causey Pike 

Black Combe 




„ *2G30-0 


„ 1974-3 


Honister Crag 




„ *l700-0 


Wansfell 

Kirkstone Pass 




Westmoreland 1590-9 

1467-8 


Catbells 




Cumberland *1448-0 


Batr i ii<j 




„ *1 160-0 


Dent Hill 




„ 1130-7 


The Tongue (Troutheck) 

Penrith Beactm 

Scilly Bank (Whitehaven) ... 

* Not certain 


; the rest are 


Westmoreland 1191-8 

Cumberland 966-0 


„ ., 529-8 


verified by the Ordnance surveyors. 
242 



TABLE OF MOUNTAINS, LAKES, AND WATERFALLS. 



§ II— THE LAKES 



LAKES 



Windermere 

Ulleswater 

Coniston Water 

Bassenthwaite Water 

Derwent Water 

Crnmmock Water .... 

Wast Water 

Hawes Water 

Thirlniere 

Ennerdale Water 

Esthwaite Water 



Grasmere Lake 
Buttermere Lake . 

Lowes Water 

Rydal Water 

Elter Water 

Brothers Water . 



Length in 


Width in 


miles 


miles 


M. F. 


M. F. 


10 5 


1 


7 5 


51 


5 21 


4 


3 7 


7 


2 71 


1 H 


2 4 


4| 


3 01 


4 


2 31 


21 


2 5 


3 


2 31 


7i 


1 41 


3 


7i 


41 


1 21 


3 


1 Of 


3 


5| 


If 


41 


21 


41 


21 



Depth 
in feet 



240 

210 

160 

68 

72 

132 

270 



108 



80 



Beach marks— Height above sea level 



140 on Road near Harrowslack. 
) 532 on Road at Shan-ow Bay. 
\ 496 Sm-face of House Holm Island. 

187 on Road near Coplands Barn. 

237 on Road near Smithy Green. 

272 on Road near the Hotel. 

330 on Road opposite Buttermere Hawse. 

208 on Road near Countess Beck. 

698 on Road near Annas Cross. 

536 on Road near Deergarth Bay. 

371 on Road near Smithy Beck. 
( 225 Contour at side of road opposite Lake 
I Bank House. 

246 A on Island. 

398 on Road near Hassness. 

407 on Road near centre of Lake. 

185 on Road near Nab Cottage. 

200 Contour near the edge of Lake. 

539 on Road opposite centre of Lake. 



§ III— ALTITUDES OF LAKES 



L\KES 


Altitude in Feet 


Remarks 


Angle Tai-n 

Bassenthwaite Water 

Beacon Tarn 


1552-8 
225-5 
536-4 
612-1 
700-4 

1561-7 

1583-7 
1.38-2 
726-7 
413-9 
519-9 
8.32-4 
330-7 

1527-7 
146-5 
320-8 
2.38-3 
765-6 


Near Bow Fell. 


Blea Tarn (1) 

Blea Tarn (2) 

Blea Tarn (3) 

Blea Water 


11 mile N.W. of L. Langdale Tarn. 
Near the Boot, Eskdale. 
1 1 mile S.W. of Watendlath. 
Near S. end of Hawes Water. 


Bletham Tarn 

Blind Tarn 

Borran's Tarn 

Brothers Water 

Burnmoor Tarn 

Buttermere Lake 

Codale Tarn 

Coniston W^ater 


Near Blea Tarn, No. 2. 


Ci'ummock W^ater 




Denvent Water 

Devoke Water 





343 



APPENDIX IV. 

§ III — Altitudes op JjAuvs— continued. 



LAKES 



Dock Tarn 

Easedale Tarn 

Elter Water 

Ennerdale Water 

Esthwaite Water 

Goats Water 

Grasmere Lake .'. 

Greycrag Tarn 

Grisedale Tarn 

Hawes Water 

Hayes Water 

Kentmerc Reservoir .. 

Keppel Cove Tarn 

Levers Water 

Little Langdalc Tarn.. 

Lough rigg Tarn 

Low Water 

Loweswater 

Red Tarn (Helvellyn) 

Rydal Water 

Seathwaite Tarn 

Siney Tarn 

Slceggles Water 

Small Water 

Sprinkling Tarn 

Stickle Tarn 

Stychead Tarn 

Sunbiggin Tarn 

Thirlmere 

Ullcswater 

Wast Water 

Watendlath Tarn 

Windermere 



AltiluiJe in Feet 


1321-8 


gu- 


6 


ise 


7 


368 


9 


216 


8 


1645 


5 


207 


9 


1949 


4 


1767 


9 


694 


4 


1382 


7 


972 


9 


1824 


8 


1349 


7 


339 


6 


307 


6 


1786 


-4 


428 


9 



2356-2 

180-5 
1210-1 

724-0 
1016-6 
1483 
1959 
1540 
1430 

824 

533 

476 

204 



6 
7 
4 
3 
3 
2 
6 
4 
847-0 



133-7 



li mile S.E. of Gatcscarth Pass, 



( When levelled to, the surface of this reservoir 
\ was only 941-5 feet in altitude. 
Height when levelled to = 1801-6. 



This and Keppel Cove Tarn have sluices to sup- 
ply lead mines. The altitude given is the 
highest the water reaches ; present altitude, 
2347-8. 



Near Blea Taru, No. 2. 



There is a difference in level of about 0-2 ft. 
between the head and foot of this lake. 



These altitudes are given in feet and decimals above the mean level of the sea. 
The heights in every case show the highest level reached by the waters of the lake. 
In the case of a few lakes of smaller size, or where more than one bears the same name, a remark 
has been added to more exactly define their position. 



Tables II. and III., with the remarks concluding, have been supplied to me from the Ordnance 
Department through the courtesy of Colonel Sir Henry James; but did not reach me in time to be 
acknowledged in the Preface, or I should have there expressed my gratitude for information so valuable. 
It is right, however, to say that the column of lake depths in Table II. is obtained from local sources; 
and, therefore, not to be fully relied on. 

344 



TABLE OF MOUNTAINS, LAKES, AND WATEEFALLS. 



§ IV— THE WATERFALLS 

Name Place Height in feet 

Scale Force Crummock Water 160 

Barrow Cascade Derwent Water 124 

Lodore „ „ 100 . 

Colwith Force The Brathay above Elter Water 90 

Ara Force UUswater ' 80 

Dungeon Ghyll Langdale 80 

Stock Ghyll Ambleside 70 

Birker Force Eskdale 60 

Dalegai-th Force „ 60 

Sour Milk Ghyll Buttermere 60 

Upper Fall Rydal 50 

Skelwith Force The Brathay below Eltenvater 20 

The Howk Caldbeck 20 

The waterfalls are entirely incorrect ; the Guides not agreeing among themselves, and no information 
to be had yet from the Ordnance surveyors. There is a diiference of fifty feet in some of the falls, 
according to the various authorities, and the height of the beautiful Sour Milk Ghyll Force in Easedale 
is not mentioned by Black, Martineai', or Wordsworth. 




Y Y 



APPENDIX V 
TABLE or RAINFALL 

For the Year 1863, from Mr. Symons' " British Rainfalt-." 



Inches. 
Broiighfini Hall 36 50 



Allithwaite . 

Ilolker 

Cartmel 

Lowther Hall . 
Whitehaven . 

Ullswater 

Cockermouth . 
Kendal 



41-91 
43-20 
44-08 
45-76 
50-55 
50-45 
54-63 
54-92 



Inches. 

Kirkby Lonsdale 62-83 

63-70 
68-34 
81-69 
84-97 
86-34 
71-54 
83-90 



Bassenthwaite 

Wray Castle Uvindermere 

Lesketh How ( ^^^ 

The How Ambleside. 

Loughrigg / 

Keswick 

Coniston 



Seathwaite 173-84 



In the average of ten years Keswick had 55-01 inches, Coniston, 71-40 inches, Seathwaite, 126-98 
inches, London, 21-67 inches. Mr. Symons' abstract gives for all England 30-52 as the average fall in 
the ten years 1850-59, - 0-09 in 1861, + 3-12 in 1862, + 1-49 in 1863. Seathwaite and Coniston are 
not inclnded in these calculations; if they were, the figures would be 34" 13 +2-19 + 4-75 + 2-97. 






INDEX, 


/ 


A. 


Black Sail, 95, 184, 193, 200, 


Broughton, 241, 245, 252, 266, 




207, 211 


291 


Aaron End, 69, 71, 202, 208 


Black Segs, 287 


Brownrigg's Well, 150 


Aldingham, xxix, 37, 120 


Blake Fell, 184, 188, 226 


Brow Top, 47, 74, 84 


Allan Crags, 175 


Blake Ley, 220 


Brundholm Woods, 9 1 


Ambleside, xvi, 3, 6, 11, 18, 


Blakerigg, 247 


Buckbarrow, 214, 216 


24, 35, 36, 40, 80, 89, 140, 


Bleaberry Tarn, 184, 192 


Buckbarrow Crags, 270 


272, 275 


Bleas, 102, 113 


Bull Crags, 45, 69, 170, 173 


Angle Tam, 110, 122, 139, 141, 


Blea Tarn, 78, 148, 158, 164, 


Burnmoor Tarn, 207, 241, 252 


142, 148, 166, 169, 175, 180 


174, 241, 254 


Butterlip Meadows, 42 


Angler's Crag, 226 


Blea Water, 134, 141, 161 


Buttermere, 95, 183, 188, 2U0 


Apostle Crag, 97 


Blellam Tarn, 13, 22, 32, 272, 




Ara, 102, 166 


275 




Ashness Bridge, 77 


Blencathra, 46, 47, 51, 56, 81, 


C. 


Atkinson's Cove, 142 


85, 95, 99, 117, 125, 148, 169, 






209, 271 


Caldbeck, 85, 89, 90, 96, 148, 




Blind Tarn, 172, 249, 268 


194 




Bootle, xxxix, 241, 243 


Calder, xl, 214, 218 


B. 


Boredale, 116, 123 


Caldew, 90 




Borrowdale, xvi, 21, 52, 55, 58, 


Calgarth, 3, 5, 8 


Bannerdale, 117, 124 


65, 70, 76, 81, 169, 171, 178, 


Cark Beck, 289 


Barf, 51, 96, 97, 185, 186 


180, 184, 199, 201, 205, 208, 


Carlisle, xiv, xvi, xxx, 14, 43, 


Bamscar, 224, 258, 


209, 268 


55, 61, 63, 89, 90, 95 


Barrick Railes, 243 


Berwick Moor, 272 


Carrock, 85, 87, 148 


Barrow, 54, 74, 75, 77 


Bont, 224 


Carr's Crags, 42, 174 


Barton, 105, 109, 117 


Bowder Stone, 68 


Carsleddam, 51, 83 


Base Brown, 71, 209 


Bowfell, 3, 7, 9, 21, 22, 52, 166, 


Cartniell, xix, xxvi, xxix, xxx, 


Bassenthwaite, 47, 50, 51, 56, 


169, 175, 176, 209, 241, 256, 


2, 6, 34, 240, 288 


64, 83, 85, 95, 96, 146, 181, 


268, 272 


Castle Crag, 52, 56, 67, 68, 72 


185 


Bowness, xv, 5, 9, 96, 272, 282 


Castlehead, 51 


Beacon Hill, xxxix, 263 


Bowness Knot, 226 


Castle How, 97 


Beacon Stations, xxxix 


Bowscale Tarn, 87, 90, 242, 267 


Castlerigg, 47, 73 


Beacon Tarn, 263 


Braithwaite, 25, 84, 185 


Castle Rocks, 46, 110 


Beckermet, 37, 223, 224, 240 


Brandreth, 12, 193, 200 


Catbells, 47, 52, 55, 76 


Bee Holm, 14 


Branstree, 133 


Cat Crags, 173 


Bee Wall End, 227 


Brantwood, 262, 265 


Catstvcam, 93, 100, 113, 116, 


Belle Grange Woods, 13 


Brathay, 12, 21, 27, 32, 161, 164, 


144, 145 


Birker Force, 241, 258 


255, 275, 278, 287 


Causey Pike, 47, 51, 185, 195 


Birk Fell, 99, 100, 102, 103, 152 


Bridge of Arches, 110 


Chapel Hill, 133 


Birks Bridge, 246, 251 


Brotliers Water, 100, 109, 115, 


Cherry Holm, 123 


Black Combe, xxxix, 21, 95, 


116, 139 


Claife, 6, 273 


136, 148, 177, 211, 241, 268, 


Brotto's Ghyll, 46 


Clappersgate, 10 


271, 287 


Brougham, il9, 120 


Cleator, 229 


Black Hall, 252 


Brougham Castle, xxi, 119, 120 


Cocker, 184, 187, 190 




347 


Y Y 2 



INDEX. 



Cockermouth, xl, 48, 66, 95, 146, 

186 
Cockley Bridge, 252 
Codale, 42, 110, 115, 137, 140, 

160, 164, 169, 173 
Cold Fell, 220 
Colwith Force, 158, 161, 241, 

255, 256 
Conishead, xvii, xxvi, xxvii, 285 
Coniston, 3, 9, 21, 89, 95, 136, 

146, 148, 161, 163, 239, 242, 

249, 261 
Copeland, 221, 232, 239 
Coulton, xxix, 273, 285 
Crake, 264, 267 
Crawberry Ha^vse, 271 
Criffel, 51, 94, 95, 146 
Crinkle Crags, 3, 9, 21, 32, 166, 

272 
Crookeldy Bridge, 83 
Crossfell, 89, 95, 99, 121, 125, 

126, 271 
Crosthwaite, 14, 53, 55, 61, 67 
Crow Holm, 6, 14 
Crammock, 183, 200, 211 
Cunsey Beck, 15, 275 
Curwen's Isle, 14, 26 



Dale Head, 173, 200 
Dalegarth Force, 258, 259 
Dalemain, 118, 125 
Dalton, xvii, xxiii, xxviii, xxix, 

273, 279, 281, 286, 291 
Dancing Gate, 83 
Deepdale, 102, 109, 116 
Deep Slack, 173 
Derwent, xvi, 54, 67, 68, 96, 97, 

160, 180, 184, 221 
Derwentwater, xxxvi, 48, 56, 62, 

66, 74, 77, 93, 94, 209, 211 
Devil's Chimner, 123 
Devolve Water, 223, 241, 258, 

271 
Dick Nieve, 187 
Dock Tarn, 182, 199 
DoclvAvray, 99 
Dod, 51, 187 
Dolly Waggon Pike, 100, 102, 

113 
Dove Crags, 102, 110, 115 
Doves Nest, 10, 11 
Dow Crags, 248, 249, 263, 266 
Drigg, 224, 239 
Druid Circle, 79 
Duddon, xvii, xix, 2, 21, 211, 

221, 243, 245, 266, 271, 272, 

278, 286 



Dungeon Gliyll, 28, 161, 165, 175, 

255 
Dunmail Raise, xvi, 41, 43, 46, 

89, 148, 256 
Dunmallet, 118, 125 
Dunnerholme Sand-side, 243 



E. 

Eagle Crag, 46, 69, 112, 169 

Eamont, xxxv, 118 

Eascdale, 9, 42, 160, 164, 169, 

172, 174 
Eden, 90, 160 
Edenhall, 118, 120, 258 
Ees Bridge, 275 
Egremont, 214, 220, 232, 240, 

""242 
Ehen, 221, 229 
Elle ray Woods, 3, 291 
Eltcrwater, 12, 29, 161, 174,256, 

272, 278 
Ennerdale, 95, 148, 180, 184, 191, 
• 193, 200, 205, 207, 210, 220, 

232, 240, 268 
Eskdale, 177, 207, 209, 211, 224, 

240, 241, 247, 252, 257, 259 
Esk Hawse, 176, 177, 180, 208 
Esk meals, 240 
Esthwaite, 21, 146, 148, 174, 

272 
Ewe Lamb Crag, 176 



Fairfield, 40, 43, 89, 102, 111, 

116, 150, 159, 160, 173, 256, 

271, 272 
Fairy Kirk, 90, 289 
Falcon Crag, 74, 77 
Farleton Knot, xxxix, 272 
Feny Nab, 6, 14 
Fiends' Fell, 125 
Fleetwith, 190, 193 
Fleswick Bay, 233, 234 
Floating Island, 54 
Floutern Tarn, 184, 192, 226 
Fludder's Brow, 177 
Fordcndale Beck, 132 
Foulney Isle, 278 
Froswick, 136, 137, 272 
Furness, xvii, xix, xxix, xxxvi, 

12, 66, 218, 239, 243, 246, 

247, 253, 272, 277 
Furness Abbev, xxiii, xxvi, 253, 

266 
Fusedale, 117 

348 



G. 

Gable Moor, 169, 175 

Gait Crag, 52, 67 

Gait's Water, 263, 266, 280 

Gallows How, 35 

Garnett's Force, 172 

Gatescarth, 90, 133, 183, 193, 

196, 198 
Gatescarth GhvU, 169, 175, 180 
Ghyll Cove, 270 
Ghyll o'Combe, 71 
Gillerthwaite, 188, 193, 227 
Gimmcr Crag, 164, 166, 176, 

185, 254 

Glaramara, 9, 52, 70, 72, 169, 

173, 175, 181, 199, 202, 208 
Gleaston Castle, 253, 287 
Glencoin, 102, 206, 109, 116 
Glenderamaken, 87, 91 
Glendera terra, 91 
Glenridding, 98, 102, 107, 109, 

113, 116, 143 
Goldmire, xvii, 286 
Goldrill, 109, 110, 116, 255 
Goldrill Crag, 251 
Goldscope, 51, 195 
Goosegreen, 84 
Gosforth, 206, 214, 217 
Gowbarrow, 99, 101, 109 
Gowder Crag, 76 
Grange, 66, 67, 72, 76, 200 
Grasmere, 21, 39, 43, 69, 151, 

158, 163, 164, 172, 256 
Grasmoor, 184, 187, 190, 200, 226 
Great End, 9, 52, 178, 180, 202, 

205, 208, 209, 268 
Great Gable, 52, 95, 180, 190, 

202, 209, 214, 216, 227 
Great How, 46, 89 
Green Comb, 173, 199 
Green Crags, 46, 47, 193 
Green Gable, 180, 190, 202 
Greenside Mines, 107 
Greenup, 170, 172, 181, 199 
Greta, 47, 61, 84, 87, 99, 205 
Grey Crag, 141, 193 
Grey Friars, 251, 257 
Grey Knot, 193 
Greystoke, xxxviii, xxxix, 63, 

128 
Gridiron Island, 264 
Grisedale, 47, 113, 116, 151, 158, 

186, 195, 273, 276 

H. 

Hallin Fell, 99, 123 
Hanging Haystack, 170, 193 
Hanging Knot, 9 
Hardknot, xxxix, 241, 247, 258 



INDEX. 


w 


Harrat Crag, 187 


K. 


Longside, 96 


Harrison Combe, 174 




Lord's Seat, 185 


Harrison Stickle, 9, 148, 164, 


Kail-i-ot Crag, 123 


Lorton, 184, 186, 187 


174 


Kendal, xxi, xxiii, xxv, xxvii, 


Loughrigg, 20, 21,^ 28, 29, 32, 


Harrop Tarn, 45, 147, 148 


xxxii, 3, 14, 35, 39, 109, 254, 


38, 160, 256, 272 


Hart Crag, 102, 111 


278, 283, 285 


Loughrigg Fell, 9, 10, 25, 31, 


HarterFell, 131, 133, 241, 251 


Kentmere, 34, 133, 135, 136, 272 


156, 272, 275 


Hartsop, 109, 111, 115, 140, 142 


Kent River, 21, 137 


Lowes Water, 40, 184, 188, 189, 


Hassness, 184, 193 


Keppel Cove Tarn, 108, 144, 145, 


200, 227 


Hawes Water, 89, 106, 122 


149, 173 


Low Fell, 188, 200 


Hawkshead, xxvi, xxix, 265, 272 


Keppel Crag, 181 


Low Water, 267, 269, 270 


Haycock, 148, 225, 240 


Keskadale, 195 


Low Wray, 9, 13, 22, 32, 275 


Hayes Water, 115, 122, 139 


Keswick, xxxviii, 36, 40, 55, 57, 


Low Wood, 9, 13 


Haystacks, 183, 193, 200 


65, 96, 177, 184 


Lune, xix 


Heald Brow, 3, 6, 9, 13, 272 


Kidsty Pike, 93, 124, 134, 148 


Lyulph's Tower, 100, 104 


Helm Crao;, 38, 41, 152, 160 


King Arthur's Round Table, 




Helton Dale, 127 


120 




Helvellyn, 44, 49, 51, 80, 81, 82, 


Kkkby, xxiii, xxix, 14, 287 


M. 


89, 93, 95, 97, 100, 108, 113, 


Ktrkfell, 95, 187, 193, 203, 206, 




116, 117, 137, 141, 143, 159, 


214 227 


Mad Beck, 185 


160, 173, 185, 199, 242, 271, 


Ku-kstone, xvi, 20, 23, 24, 26, 


Maiden Mawr, 52, 56, 67, 172 


272, 275 


100, 102, 108, 109, 115, 271, 


Mardale, 122, 129 


Herd House, 191, 225 


272 


Martindale, 117, 135 


Herring Pike, 102, 116 


Knock o' Murton Hill, 226. 


Matterdale, 99, 116 


High Crag, 190, 192, 193, 200 


Knot Crag, 90 


Maud's Pool, 120 


High Cross, 272 


KnotRigg, 195 


Measand's Becks, 132 


High House Tarn, 178 




Mellbreak, 188 


High Ladder Brow, 79 




Mell Fell, 81, 89, 99, 125 


High Pike, 87 


L. 


Mickleden, 166, 167, 176 


High Raise, 172,256 




Mickledore, 212, 213, 252 


High Saddle, 199 


Lade Pot, 136, 140 


Middle Fell, 214 


High Stile, 51, 190, 192, 200 


Ladhouse, 187, 190, 200 


Millar Brow, 8 


High Street, 82, 95, 100, 116, 


Lady's Rake, 74 


Millbeck, 83, 95, 164,.184, 193 


122, 143, 177, 271 


Lancaster, xxii, xxviii, 95, 136, 


Miller Bridge 19 


High Wray, 13, 275 


148, 243, 271, 281, 284, 290 


Millom, 222, 240, 242, 243, 253 


Hindscarth, 195 


Lancey Falls, 45 


Miner's Path, 98, 108 


Honister, 70, 173, 181, 183, 184, 


Langdale, 14, 22, 29, 32, 137, 


Mite, XXX, 240, 241, 258 


188, 190, 193, 196 


158, 174, 176, 177, 209, 211, 


Moor Dovock, 122, 126 


Hovgvn, xxiii 


241, 252, 254, 255, 266, 268, 


Morecambe Bay, 2, 160, 267, 


HoAv Town, 117, 124 


271, 272 


272, 280 


Hutton Moor-, xvi, 99 


Langstreth, 69, 169, 176, 180 


Mosedale, 90, 193, 203, 206,211, 




Latrigg, 47, 77, 81, 84, 94 


214, 215, 227 




LatterbaiTow, 13, 226, 272 


Moses Trod, 200 


1. 


Leven, 160, 243, 267, 278, 289 


Muncaster, xxix, 216, 218, 241, 


Ill Bell, 136, 137, 148, 271, 


Levers Water, 269, 270 
Lickle, 246 


258 
Mungrisedale, 88, 192 


272 
Inglewood Forest, xxxvi, 90 
Iron Crag, 220, 226 
Iron Keld, 272 


Lindal, xvii, 253, 286 
Line End Crag, 172 
Lingmell, 32, 180, 202, 203, 207, 
208, 211, 213, 214 


N. 


Irt, 207, 213, 240 

Irton, 207, 216 

Isle of Man, xxii, 94, 217, 230 


Lingmoor, 9, 72, 162, 166, 168, 

254, 256 
Linkin Dale Head, 106 


ISTab Scar, 38, 39, 272 
Naddle Forest, 131 
NanBield, 133, 136 


268 


Linthwaite Pike, 88 


Nathdale Fell, 45, 80, 89 


J 


Linthwaite Woods, 190 


Netherby, xvi, xxxix 




Liza, 220, 227 


Newby Bridge, 5, 6, 118 


Jack Brig, 109 


Loaf Beck, 183, 187, 200 


Newfield, 246, 247, 268 


Jenny Bank's Crag, 181 


Lodorc, 52, 54, 56, 72 


Newlands, 47, 51, 58, 70, 76, 81, 


Jenny Crag Well, 226 


Long Meg and her Daughters, 


84, 95, 146, 184, 185, 192, 194 


Justice Stone, 45, 177 


120 


Nibthwaitc, 264, 267, 287 


349 







INDEX. 


0. 


Robinson, 51, 172, 193, 195,200 


Sour Milk Ghyll, 181, 189, 192 




Roman Roads, xvi, 138 


Souter Fell, 85, 87, 88, 125 


Ormatiiwaite, 83 


Roman Station, 25, 32 


Southey's Thorn, 184 


Oukrigo- Precipice, 270 


Rose Castle, xxxix, 105 


Sprinkling Tarn, 72, 178, 202, 


Out Dubs Tarn, 275 


Rosset Ghyll. 166, 176 


208 


Oxendale, 167 


Rosthwaite, 70, 77, 79, 158, 180, 


St. Bees, xxxviii, 95, 214, 221, 


Oxenfells, 161, 257, 272, 275 


181, 182 


228, 229, 231, 232, 233, 238, 




Rosthwaite Cam, 190, 199 


239, 268 




Rothay, 12, 19, 21, 25, 27, 32, 


St. Herbert's Island, 55, 58 


P. 


188, 253 


St. John's Vale, 46, 50, 80, 88, 




Ruddy Ghyll Brow, 173 


91, 99, 253 


Patterdale, 24, 99, 100, 105, 


Rydal, 10, 12, 36, 102, 160, 174, 


St. Sunday's Crag, 89, 102, 105, 


107, 109, 117, 124, 135, 139, 


262, 272 


108, 110, 112, 137 


140 




Stake Pass, 9, 21, 69, 158, 161, 


Pavey Ark, 9, 164, 174, 256 


S, 


167, 172, 175, 180, 181, 254 


Pendragou Castle, xviii, 119 




Stanley Ghyll, 241, 258 


Penholes, 195 


Salt Level Bay, 55, 59 


Steel Fell, 43, 44, 89, 160, 173, 


Penrith, xvi, xxxviii, xxxix, 


Sandal Top, xxxix 


271 


100, 118, 136, 146, 211 


Santon Bridge, 240 


Steeple, 148, 225 


Pet Farm, 290 


Sawrev, 6, 272, 275, 287 


Stickle Tarn, 43, 164, 169, 174, 


Petreana, 139 


Scale Force, 123, 184, 190, 191, 


271 


Piel Island, 264 


192 


Stockghyll, 12, 18, 75 


Piers GhjW, 203, 205, 206 


Scale Hill, 184, 187, 190 


Stockley Beck, 66, 178', 180, 201 


Pilve o' Bliscow, 9, 166, 168 


Scales Tarn, 87 


Stonethwaite, 69, 170, 172, 181, 


Pike o' Stickle, 9, 32, 164 


Scandale, 12, 22, 102, 115, 139, 


199 


Pikes, 3, 10, 21, 28, 32, 162, 


272 


Storr's, 15 


164, 166, 167, 168, 169, 254, 


Scarf Gap, 184, 193, 200, 227 


Strands, 207, 214, 216, 217 


256, 272 


Scawdale, 70, 181, 195, 202 


Strands Brig, 181 


Pile of Poudrey, xxv, 245, 278 


Scawfell, 9, 21, 28, 52, 95, 166, 


Street Gate, 286 


Pillar, 148, 193, 200, 225, 227, 


169, 175, 177, 201, 240, 241, 


Striding Edge, 102, 145, 149 


268 


252, 268, 271, 272 


Stvebarrow Crag, 99, 100, 102, 


Place Pell, 95, 102, 106, 109, 


Scot's Rake, 136 


"109 


115, 139, 152 


Screes, 95, 206, 207, 214, 215, 


Sty Head, 199, 202, 208, 209, 215 


Ponsonby Fell, 220, 240 


216, 241 


Sty Head Pass, 69, 72, 181, 202, 


Pooley Bridge, 117, 124 


Seamew's Crag, 13, 14 


203, 207, 209 


Portinscale, 50, 77, 84, 97 


Seascales, 239 


Sty Head Tarn, 72, 178, 179, 


Potter's Fell, 137 


Seatallan, 240 


180, 202, 210, 211 


Priest-cuddy-Hole, 84 


Seathwaite, 70, 181, 201, 208, 


Sun-biggin Tam, xxxix 


Priest's Pot, 274 


247, 266, 268, 271 


Sunken Kirk, 85, 243 


Priest's Stile, 265 


Seatoller, 66, 196, 199 


Swart Fell, 122, 125, 140 


Pudding Stone, 271 


Seat Sandal, 41, 43, 151, 159, 


Swart Moor, xxv, 287, 288 


PuUwyke Bay, 9, 13 


160, 173, 256, 271, 272 


Sweden Bridge, 22 


Pyat Kock, 133 


Sergeant Crag, 173 


Swindale, xxxiv 




Sergeant Man, 199, 256 


Swineside, 76, 84, 187 


' 


Shap, xxxiv, xxxv 


SwirrelEdge, 144, 145, 149, 159, 


R. 


Sharrow Bav, 119, 123, 124 
Silver How," 21, 32, 42, 160, 256 


173 


Eamps Holm, 54 


Skeggles Water, 137 




Kannerdale Knot, 188, 190, 200 


Skelghyll, 31, 84 


T. 


Ravengiass, 224, 240, 258 


Skelley Neb, 99 




Rawling End, 51, 195 


Skelwith, 12, 28, 29, 273, 275 


Talk-on-the-Hill, 242 


Razor Edge, 87 


Skiddaw, xxxix, 46, 47, 50, 56, 


Tall Tomlyn, 238 


Red Bank, 40, 160, 256 


58, 61, 64, 67, 77, 81, 83, 85, 


Tarn Haws, 272 


Red Pilve, 51, 190, 192, 200, 226 


93, 117, 125, 148, 151, 169, 


Tarn of Leaves, 181, 199 


Red Screes, 20, 24, 102, 115, 


177, 185, 186, 211, 212, 242, 


Taylor's Ghyll, 180, 201, 202 


137, 272 


271, 272 


Thirlmere, 44, 89, 146, 147, 173, 


Red Tarn, 108, 144, 149 


Sleddale, xxxiv, 133, 137 


177 


Revelin, 220, 226, 227 


Small Water, 133, 134, 141, 176 


Thornthwaite, 84, 97, 184, 185 


Riggindale Crag, 133 


Solway, 94, 146, 160, 177 , 


Thraiig Crag, 78, 162 


Robin Hood's Chair, 226 


Sour Milk Force, 184 


Three Shire Stones, 162, 253, 268 




350 



IXDEX, 



Threlkeld, xxxiii, 47, 50, 86, 90, 

99 
Threshwaite Mouth, 35 
Tilbertliwaite, 161, 166, 256, 

266, 275 
Torver, 238, 250, 263, 265 
Troutbeck, 8, 9, 31, 89, 124, 135, 

140, 198 

U. 

Ullock, 76, 95, 97 

Ullswater, 98, 99, 101, 105, 109, 

116, 122, 146, 148, 158, 160, 

262 
Ulpha, 224, 247 
Ulverston, xvii, xxii, xxiii, 

xxix, 2, 272, 273, 278, 281, 

286, 287, 290, 291 
UnderbaiTow Scar, 136 
Urswick, xxix, 273 



W. 

Wallabarrow, 247, 249, 258 
Walla Crag, 52, 56, 73, 77, 81, 
84, 97 



Wall End, 166, 255 

Wallow Crag, 131 

Walna Scar, 247, 251, 266, 269 

Walney, 9, 16, 278, 281, 291 

Wanscale, 183, 193 

Wansfell Pike, 9, 20, 24, 31, 136 

Wanthwaite Fells, 46, 81, 89. 97 

Wastdale, 193, 203, 205, 206, 

21'3, 214, 216, 226 
Wastwater, 52, 91, 180, 184, 

190, 201, 218, 219, 227, 238, 

241, 267, 271 
Watendlath, 75, 77, 78 
Watercrook, xvi 
Waterhead, 5, 262, 267 
Wath Bridge, 229 
Wetherlam, 3, 7, 9, 21, 136, 162, 

174, 249, 251, 256, 269, 272, 

275 
Wray, 9, 13, 32, 275 
Whelp Dale, 288 
Whicham, 242, 287 
Whinfell, xxxix, 119 
Whinfield Fells, 187 
Whinlatter, 51, 96, 172, 184, 

185, 186 
White Cove Ghvll, 192 



White Crags, 164, 174 
Whitehaven, xxi, 180, 221, 233, 

234, 235, 239, 254 
Whitelces, 184, 187, 190 
Whiteside, 187, 190 
Windemiere, XXXV, 1, 12, 14, 20, 

24, 39, 109, 136, 146, 148, 156, 

160, 173, 174, 177, 211, 212, 

267, 271, 272, 278 
Windermere Islands, 14 
Witch's Lair, 166 
Withersack, 245 
Wotobank, 223 
Wrjmose, 21, 162, 241, 247, 251, 

256, 268, 272, 278 
Wythburn, 45, 173 
Wythop, 96, 185, 186 



Yanwath, xxxii, 86, 105 
Yewban-ow, 148, 203, 206, 227 
Yew Crag, 196, 199 
Yewdale,250, 257, 265, 272,27 
Yoke, 136 



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