button to main menu  Clarke's Survey of the Lakes, 1787

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Page 143:-
  Mr Gray
As I am aware of the curiosity which most persons have to know any small particulars of the life of an eminent man, I shall here insert a genuine anecdote of Mr Gray. This gentleman, who was no less remarkable for his timidity than his poetry, went (by land) to Bowness: Here he was told, that the best point of view was on the opposite shore, a little above Nab-Gate, (see plate X.) Curiosity and a love for natural beauty, were strong incitements on the one hand; but the reflection that there was no convenient way of attaining his desire, unless by crossing the Lake in a boat, was a reason almost equally strong for staying where he was. Being told, however, that not only horses and carriages frequently were ferried over there, but that the common carriers from Kendale to Hawkshead used that conveyance, he ventured to set forward blindfolded. He was accordingly landed near Nab-Gate, had viewed the landscape, and taken out his mirror in order to view it in miniature, when he saw the boat returning for more passengers; then asking his guide if any persons had ever been lost in crossing the ferry? the guide told him, that about the year 1634, forty-seven passengers were lost, owing to their own imprudence, by oversetting the boat as they were returning from Hawkshead fair.
This at once determined Mr Gray not to embark a second time, and he accordingly began to look about for some road to take him to Bowness by land; lifting up his eyes, he saw impending precipices on every side, (except the Lake,) a sight as alarming to him as a second voyage; he was so agitated at the prosect, that he trembled for fear, and had just command enough of himself to say to his guide, "Get me to Bowness any way;" nor did he utter another word, or ever look up, till he arrived there. He then set off immediately for Kendale; but has, in his account of his tour, entirely suppressed every hint of this curious journey. He says, "I reached Ambleside October 8th, meaning to sleep there, but not liking my bed-chamber, which was dark and damp as a cellar, I resolved to go to Kendale, and did so." He betrays himself, however, when he afterwards says he travelled from Ambleside, full five miles, along the banks of Winandermere to Bowness, (which is not the direct road to Kendale, see plate X.) and adds, that the Lake is ten miles long, and that Bowness is about the middle.
  Windermere lake, size
  fish
  fishery

The Lake of Winandermere is the largest in England, and contains, below the Ferry, two thousand acres at low water, and 2574 above the Ferry, (including islands;) deduct for islands forty acres, and there then remain 4534 acres of water in the whole: The length down the middle ten miles and a half; from Ambleside along the road by Troutbeck Bridge and Bowness to Fell-Foot, is eleven miles and a half. This Lake having been reported by the fishermen and others to be in many places 70 and 80 fathoms deep, I determined to try it by experiment: I therefore got a line made up of hair, 90 fathoms long, to which I put an iron weight of eight pounds, hollow up the middle: I then sounded this and all the other Lakes, and found the depths as marked upon the plans where taken. It had also been reported, that these Lakes had gravelly bottoms of clear, white, and red pebbles, &c.; but I found no rocky or pebbly bottom; at two fathoms the weight generally sunk into the mud at the bottom, and the tube came up filled with very small sand like dust; by letting it stay one minute at the bottom, it would have sunk a foot into the mud, which might be easily distinguished by the line; indeed at four fathoms deep, near Fryer Cragg in Derwentwater, I found a rock, which was the only one I ever found; I tried them at many more places than are marked on the plans.
The fishery in this Lake is a freehold belonging to several men, which together pay a quit-rent of six pounds to the lord of the manor, but is not very valuable; for the pike, the most voracious of all fresh water fish is in plenty here the whole year, and destroys the other fish: Here are also trout, eels, perch, and charr; the trouts are scarce and bad, though some are pretty large; they are, however, ill fed, owing as I suppose, to not venturing to seek food for fear of their natural enemy the pike.
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