button to main menu   West's Guide to the Lakes, 1778/1821

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Page 86:-
'I left Keswick,' says he, 'and took the Ambleside road, in a gloomy morning, and about two miles (or rather about a mile) from the town, mounted an eminence called Castle-rig, and, the sun breaking out, discovered the most enchanting view I have yet seen, of the whole valley behind me; the two lakes, the river, the mountains in all their glory; so that I had almost a mind to have gone back again.' This is certainly a most ravishing morning view, of the bird's eye kind. For here we have, seen in all their beauty, a circuit of twenty miles; two Lakes, Derwent and Bassenthwaite, and the river serpentizing between them; the town of Keswick and the church of Crosthwaite in the central points; an extensive fertile plain, and all the stupendous mountains that surround this delicious spot.
The druid-temple, delineated in Pennant's tour, lies about half a mile to the right, but will be more conveniently seen from the Penrith road. Descend to

Keswick
KESWICK [1].
This small neat town is at present renowned for nothing so much as the lake it stands near, and which is sometimes called, from the town,
[1] (Derventione Raven. Chor.)
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gazetteer links
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button -- Keswick
button -- station, Castlerigg

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