Page:A tour through the northern counties of England, and the borders of Scotland - Volume II.djvu/75

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

[ (>J ]

and some smaller dwellings, situated in the midst of a wild romantic valley, called the Vale of Irthing, which here contracts itself into a deep glen, the impetuous river flowing between stupendous banks of fantastic rock, beautifully wooded, and pursu- ing a course of whimsical irregularity. The spring which attrafts the company to this sequestered and desolate spot, is near the upper house. We found it to be strongly impregnated with sulphur, but, contrary to the general character of waters com- bined with the hepatic gas, extremely agreeable to the palate. Its effects in cutaneous disorders are powerfully good. At a small distance on the moor is a chalybegate spring; and another at four miles distant, highly charge ; md vitriol

��The agreeable inixtun

��:iol.

-

��lion of those constituent' , J

wood, water and dingle, reader Gil ;land Sn; ;i of great interest to the painter; attractive to the <reolo?"i st, as i being in many places utterly ba. present a beautiful and . stratification of tins par; . height is about lorry yards,, v. he- strata are thus disposed: m r ,v.lJ., common ferrugincoi: or vards; course freestone, thr<.e

��:;!

�">

� � �n ';

�he roil

�.,....;

�y, L'a

�-. !

�,

�� �