|  | Thirlmere  
Reservoir 
 
 TABLE-TALK.
 
 DUNMAIL RAISE and the Valley of Wythburn are threatened next 
year with an invasion which has excited the indignation not  
only of the principal dwellers in one of the loveliest nooks 
in the very heart of the English lake district, but has  
awakened painful surprise and opposition all over the  
country, wherever the love of natural beauty, and the  
reverence for famous men whose footsteps have doubly  
hallowed it, are not yet quite extinct. A ruthless piece of  
vandalism is contemplated which it is to be hoped may yet be 
baffled by a firm and united resistance. Parliament is to be 
asked in the approaching session to empower the Manchester  
Corporation to turn the beautiful lake of Thirlmere into a  
reservoir for supplying with water, not Manchester alone -  
for that city, they own, has an ample supply for the next  
twenty years to come - but the various towns en  
route. Only dire and extreme necessity, and an absolute  
impossibility of obtaining water elsewhere, could justify  
this proposal. Neither of these conditions fortunately  
exists. "Not one tithe," as Mr. Somervell, the chief and  
indefatigable opponent of the scheme, has pointed out, "of  
the moorland available for the supply of water of  
Manchester, between the Lune and South Lancashire, has been  
utilised as yet." To carry out the scheme proposed a huge  
embankment would have to be reared to the height of at least 
70 feet, thus lengthening the lake from 2 1/2 to 4 1/2  
miles, and deepening it to the extent of 60 or 70 feet. This 
would have the effect of placing under water the whole  
valley, and the beauties of the spot would be buried in a  
deep dark reservoir. "It is the intention of the Waterworks  
Committee," naively remarks the Cumberland Times, "to 
substitute for the present tortuous up-and-down track a  
straight road cut on a level line around the slopes of  
Helvellyn. Below it the lake, enlarged to more than twice  
its present dimensions, will assume a grandeur of  
appearance in more striking accordance with its majestic  
surroundings. HOW THE VALLEY WILL LOOK IN THE DRY SUMMER 
SEASON, WHEN THE RESERVOIR IS HALF EMPTIED, HAS YET TO BE  
ASCERTAINED." Another ground of opposition to the scheme is  
its danger as well as it unsightliness. In the very possible 
and even probable event of
 
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