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|  | Page 37:- the rank of captain: He made himself very acceptable to the 
Usurper, by taking prisoner Sir Timothy Featherstonhaugh at 
the battle of Worcester. The same Brown had a brother named 
Richard, whose son James likewise served under Cromwell. 
Richard, however, being loyal, that he might prevent any 
others of his sons from entering the service of the 
parliament, sold How-Town, and purchased a customary 
tenement at Knott, in the manor of Water-Millock. He 
lived to a very great age; dying, as appears by the 
parish-register, at the age of an hundred and four. Abraham 
his son likewise lived to the age of ninety-nine years and 
ten months; and in such surprising health and vigour, that 
at the age of eighty-six he mowed in one day an acre of 
land. His age and activity attracted the notice of the Duke 
of Norfolk so far, that he promised to enfranchise his 
estate, provided he lived to the age of an hundred; but this 
his death prevented by two months.
 
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| Swarth Beck cataracts
 
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|  | Next sail towards the Westmorland side of the Lake, to the 
foot of Swarth-beck. If this brook chance to be full of 
water, the vast number of grand cascades will here regale 
the eye of the beholder: these fall in innumerable 
gradations, over hollow craggy rocks, till the brook 
precipitates itself into the Lake. The noise of these falls 
is very considerable, and may be heard at the distance of 
two miles, and is reverberated from rock to rock in a 
thousand different tones. These sounds are the 
barometer of the neighbourhood. Traditions handed won 
from father to son have formed a set of rules, by which the 
farmer is enabled to predict with tolerable certainty the 
weather of the day from the sound these cascades emit the 
preceding evening. It might perhaps puzzle even a philosopher to assign a 
reason why the different state of the atmosphere should thus 
affect the sound: the peasants think not of the cause, but 
are seldom mistaken in the event: this I know for certain, 
that in a squally south wind, which blows in gusts from the 
mountains, the noise and bellowing of these cataracts emit a 
variety of notes, which I cannot better explain than by 
comparing them to an AEolian Harp.
 Also look at the black, barren, and almost perpendicular 
mountain called Swarth-Fell: here your boatman will shew you 
the rock down which the late Edward Hassel, Esq; led his 
horse, that he might be in at the death of a fox; so steep 
and dangerous is the descent, that no one since that time 
durst ever attempt it, nor would any one give credit to it, 
were there not at this day many living witnesses of the 
desperate enterprize.
 
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| fish, Ullswater char
 skelly
 
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|  | By this time the fishermen will be ready with their boats 
and nets, if ordered, to attend the travellers in their 
return; I shall therefore say a few words concerning the 
fishing, and the species of fish here found. The fisheries of Ulswater belong to many different persons, 
and pay to the lord of the adjoining soil a very high 
quit-rent. Mr Hodgkinson has by much the largest share, 
viz. from Stibray to Hole-Beck in Gowbarrow. The fish 
found in this Lake are trout, perch, eels, char, 
skellies; and a fish peculiar to this and buttermere, 
(where there are very few,) called Grey Trout. These 
grey trouts in form resemble the other trouts, but are much 
larger, weighing thirty or forty pounds: one was killed a 
few years ago which weighed fifty-six; but the ordinary 
weight is from seven to twenty pounds each. They are found 
chiefly in the deep water, below House-Holm island: they 
are, however, sometimes taken in all parts of the Lake, 
though but seldom, except in October, which is their 
spawning time. During that month the King of 
Patterdale usually sets a net across the foot of 
Coldrill-Beck, where most of them go up to spawn: a few 
indeed attempt getting up at Glenridding-Beck, but not one 
has ever been known to enter any other of the streams. Some 
of the trouts, however, escape the net, but are generally 
taken by the neighbouring farmers, who strike them at 
night-time with spears by the light of a torch. These 
unlawful practices the Gentlemen of the neighbourhood have 
not been able to prevent: It is indeed impossible they 
should, for
 
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|  |      the 
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|  | gazetteer links 
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|   | -- "How Town" -- Howtown | 
 
 
|   | -- "Knott" -- Knotts Farm | 
 
 
|   | -- "Swarthbeck" -- Swarth Beck | 
 
 
|   | -- "Swarth Fell" -- Swarth Fell | 
 
 
|   | -- "Ulswater" -- (Ullswater (CL13inc)2) | 
 
 
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