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

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Page 221:-
spectator with instant destruction; it is safer to shelter yourself close to its bottom, and trust to the mercy of that enormous mass, which nothing but an earthquake can stir. The gloomy uncomfortable day well suited the savage aspect of the place, and made it still more formidable; I stayed there, not without shuddering, a quarter of an hour, and thought my trouble richly paid; for the impression will last for life. At the alehouse where I dined in Malham, Vivares, the landscape painter, had lodged for a week or more; Smith and Bellers and also been there, and two prints of Gordale have been engraved by them.
Oct. 14. Leaving my comfortable inn, to which I had returned from Gordale, I set out for Skipton, sixteen miles. From several parts of the road, and in many places about Settle, I saw at once the three famous hills of this county, Ingleborough, Pennygant, and Pendle; the first is esteemed the highest, and their features are not to be described, but by the pencil [1].
[1] Without the pencil, nothing indeed is to be described with precision, and even then, that pencil ought to be in the very hand of the writer, ready to supply with outlines every thing that his pen cannot express by words. As far as language can describe Mr. Gray has, I think, pushed its powers: for rejecting, as I have before hinted, every general unmeaning and hyperbolical phrase, he has selected (both in his journal and on other similar occasions) the plainest, simplest, and most direct terms; yet notwithstanding his judicious care in the disposition of these, I must own I feel them defective. They present me, it is true, with a picture of the same species, but not with the identical picture; my imagination receives clear and distinct, but not true and exact images. It may be asked then, why am I entertained with well-written descriptions? I answer, because they amuse rather than entertain me; and because, after I have seen the places described, they serve to recall to my memory the original scene, almost as well as the truest drawing or picture. In the meanwhile my mind is flattered by thinking it has acquired some conception of the place, and rests contented in an innocent error, which nothing but ocular proof can detect, and which, when detected, does not diminish the pleasure I had before received, but augments it, by superadding the charms of comparison and versification; and herein I would place the real and only merit of verbal prose description. To speak of poetical, would lead me beyond the limits as well as the purpose of this note. I cannot, however, help adding that I have seen one piece of verbal description which completely satisfies me, because it is throughout assisted by masterly delineation. It is composed by the Rev. Mr. Gilpin, of Cheam, in Surrey; and contains, among other places, an account of the very scenes, which, in this tour, our author visited. This gentleman, possessing the conjoined talents of a writer and designer, has employed them in this manuscript to every purpose of picturesque beauty, in the description of which, a correct eye, a practised pencil, and an eloquent pen, could assist him. He has, consequently, produced a work unique in its kind at once. But I have said it is in manuscript, and, I am afraid, likely to continue so; for would his modesty permit him to print it, the great expense of plates would make its publication impracticable.
[This excellent note seems to contain the justest criticism on the nature and powers of verbal description, as applied to landscapes and prospects. And now the reader has gone through our author's specimens of it in the foregoing Guide, if it appear that he hath not availed himself of these precepts as much as he might have done, he may take a scrutiny into his errors, a critical lesson, in the next degree useful to instructions derived from such examples as Mr. Gray's; and thus reap improvement as well as amusement, from the efforts of a hasty and redundant pen.- Mr. Gilpin's tour has been since published.]
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gazetteer links
button -- Gordale Scar
button -- Ingleborough
button -- Malham
button -- "Pendle" -- Pendle HillPendle Hill
button -- "Pennygant" -- Pen-y-ghent

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