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Gentleman's Magazine 1747 p.385
Aldstone is the nearest town where one can get a safe
conductor to cross these almost impervious wastes, a country
extremely ill represented in all our maps yet published, not
to mention their exhibiting the towns on the wrong side of
the river [Nint]. About two in the afternoon we set
forward three in company, and two who join'd us afterwards,
out of the same curiosity. We pass'd the river Tine
near its confluence with Blackaburn, beyond which
this immense waste begins, and could plainly perceive the
alteration of air in riding a few miles. On the top of
Roderic heights is a pretty large lake, call'd
Green-castle-loch, which receives no visible feeder,
but emits a small stream northward to the said burn; nor is
there any vestige of a castle, from which it could be
presum'd to borrow the name. The Swallows, those
incontestable remains of Noah's deluge, begin here to
be very frequent. Some of these are 30 or 40 yards in
diameter, and near as much deep, perfectly circular, but
contain no water at any season, the ground having gradually
fallen in at the sinking of the waters; but where they have
happen'd amid rocks, the holes are left open to incredible
depths. This naturally accounts for those surprizing
phaenomena in the Pyrenean and Narbone
mountains, and our Elden-hole in Derbyshire,
whose depths have never been ascertained with the longest
lines.
On the descent of Roderic-fell there is plenty of
herbage, but few plants, save the scorpioides arvensis, and
tormentil.
At the bottom of this height Blackaburn is divided
into two branches, the eastermost tumbling over a precipice
of 40 perpendicular yards, which makes a most wild,
surprizing cascade.
From this rivulet we are to account the rise of
Cross-fell. We were now so much environ'd with large
and extended morasses, rocks and mountains, that they
exhibited a very frightful appearance, not the vestige of a
house, except some old shiels, where in former ages the
people had resorted like the Asiatic Tartars to graze their
cattle in summer, a practice now quite disus'd. There were a
few sheep, but no deer, that we could see, tho' there are
several on the heights; and notwithstanding the
extraordinary drought, the water follow'd our horses
footsteps for miles together, except where the ground was
perfectly rotten. At a place call'd Bulmans cleugh
there have been formerly lead-works, now left off. We had
now ascended gradually about 3 miles, thro' very broken
morassy wastes, when the mountain began to rise in three
very formidable ascents, very steep, in the manner of mount
Lebanon, pil'd one above another, with large and
extensive plains to each of them, and loose shivery stones
on ye brows, very troublesome to the horses which we now
were obliged sometimes to quit. This continu'd for near 2
miles more, when we got on the edge of the highest, which
forms a capacious plain of several hundred acres, if you
reckon from the East ascent; but of such a barren soil, that
there was not so much as a single leaf of grass, herb or
plant to be found in so large a plain, exclusive of a few of
those rings attributed to fairies, some of which are perfect
circles of the Gramen gluinis variis, in botany,
ascrib'd by Linnaeus in his description of the
Baltic isles to a particular quality of its affecting
the dirtiest soil, where no other grass can survive. This
immense plain has no verdure, therefore, but a venerably
grey aspect from the moss or down, and even this can hardly
draw a subsistence to support itself; so inconceivably
barren is this distinguish'd eminence. The West side towards
the Cumberland plains is more rocky and steep than
the way we ascended. Great part of six counties were to be
seen, and notwithstanding our height, there seemed to be 4
or 5 mountains that disputed preheminence, the rest all
look'd far below us. These were Skiddaw in the West
of Cumberland, Criffield in Scotland,
Pennygent and Ingleborough in
Yorkshire, and the highest Cheviot in
Northumberland. I computed the diameter of our
visible horizon to exceed 120 miles, 60 each way from the
center. The mountains in Cleveland by the east sea
were very fair, and the West sea sufficiently discoverable.
As to the perpendicular height of the mountain, I could not
so well judge, having no barometer, and the top suffers too
much by refraction to be ascertain'd on geometrical
principles.
Whether it takes its name Cross-fell from its
transverse situation to the common run of that ridge, or
from a papistical conjuring a cross to dislodge the aerial
daemons, which that religion has ascribed to this desolate
mountain, I take not upon me to determine.
P. S. Being the 13th of August, and a long
drought, and hot season, we were not able to find any least
relicks of snow, in places most likely for it; which is very
extraordinary.
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