button to main menu  Description of Sixty Studies, pp.104-105

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page 104:-
[encir]cled by mountains, of which, Bow Fell is the principal; and Langdale Pikes, though not the highest, composed of the best arranged lines; descend to Well End, the highest house on that side of the valley, and from thence to Mill Beck.
Should the traveller wish to ascend to the top of that Pike of Langdale which is called Stickle Pike, or to Stickle Tarn, he must commence his labours at Mill Beck. The Ambleside guide, or a person from Mill Beck, will, perhaps, take him by Dungeon Gill, and from the top of the Dungeon, to the top of the Pike or to the Tarn; but some parts of the road are so steep as to be painfully unpleasant to such as have not been much accustomed to scrambling. The Tarn is a pretty circular piece of water, having soft turf on three fourths of its margin; from the other fourth rises Pavey Ark, which is, perhaps, the grandest range of
page 105:-
rocks in Westmorland, and a good point to view them from, is the outlet of the lake; which, beautifully clear, will serve to dilute the traveller's Cogniac brandy, or old Jamaica rum, a most grateful potation after his laborious ascent, or to wash down the hard eggs and hung mutton presented by his hostess. Leaving the foot of the Tarn on the edge of the hill, a peat or turf road soon appears, on which descend to Mill Beck; the eye of the spectator, whether directed up or down the valley, is cheared all the way with views of fields, richly bedecked with wood, and encircled by high mountains. Dungeon Gill passes through a deep cleft of the mountains, the tops of which cleft so overhang its basis, as nearly to meet; there is, indeed, a large stone stretching from side to side, over which, some have had the temerity to cross this hideous gulph.
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