|  | Gentleman's Magazine 1760 p.521 the valley, not only by producing a much greater quantity of 
water than the other, but principally by the vast quantity  
of rubbish which it brought along with it, the whole side of 
the mountain, down which it rushed with inconceivable  
rapidity, being covered with vast heaps of stones, beds of  
gravel, sand,and earth, which lying loose were easily  
carried away with so impetuous a torrent. Such a mixture,  
carried with the velocity which it must necessarily acquire  
down a slope of a mile in length, and so steep as to make an 
angle of 60 degrees with the horizon, could not but make  
terrible havock in the valley. The channel of the brook  
being rocky, and its bank rising to a considerable height on 
each side from the place of the water of the second spout's  
falling into Lizza, and mixing with that of the other 
down to the plain, it was so far kept within pretty good  
bounds; but it was no sooner freed from these restraints,  
than it made the most dreadful devastation. Of the first  
field it entered, it has swept away both the soil and the  
gravel quite to the rock; and the second, consisting of ten  
or twelve acres, is entirely burried under a sand-bank of  
such a thickness, as never to be removed. Instead of the old 
channel, which did not exceed five or six feet in breadth,  
and one in depth, a new one is now made at least 18 or 20  
yards in breadth, and one and half deep. Notwithstanding  
which, it overflowed its bank on each side, in such a  
prodigious stream, as to be able, at the distance of a  
quarter of a mile, to wash away a remarkably thick and  
strong wall; and what is more wonderful, on the other side,  
even where, on the smooth surface of the meadow, there  
seemed nothing to resist its progress, in some places, to  
tear up vast masses of earth, which can no where be found,  
so as to leave a pit of two yards and half in depth, and of  
800 or 1000 yards in area. Several other pits, it is  
thought, were made, and afterwards filled up again with  
stones and sand, otherwise it is difficult to imagine how  
the vast quantities of stone, which composed the walls near  
the brook, not one of which is remaining, should have  
disappeared.
 Such was the ruin it made in the meadows and arable ground,  
when at full liberty to spread itself. But it was no sooner, 
by the inclination of the ground, reduced within more scanty 
limits, than it began to rage with redoubled fury. Two  
meadows were entirely taken away, and a bed of sand left in  
their place, Its course being afterward through a wood, not  
a tree within its reach was left standing. Two stone  
bridges, well built and exceedingly strong, were carried  
away with the torrent, and not one remnant of the materials  
which composed them to be found: nay, what is more strange,  
a causeway of prodigious breadth, supported by a most  
enormous bank of earth, which is remembered these hundred  
years, has been swept from its foundation, and its place  
left floated by the stream. In short, nothing which fell in  
its way was able to resist it; but earth, trees, hedges,  
stones, walls, bridges, piers and mounds were swept away,  
till it reached the place where the brook discharges itself  
into the river Cocker. Here an end was put to its  
fury; for though the channel of the river was far from being 
capacious enough to receive the whole of the water, on  
account of the vast level plain on each side, its  
overflowings did no damage, as it could only deluge to be  
stagnant. Happily no houses were within its reach, though  
one very narrowly escaped, the ground being all carried away 
to a considerable depth within two yards of it, where the  
solid rock began, on which the house was founded; and a mill 
escaped, only by the channel's accidentally diverting its  
force from it to the opposite bank, which was all torn to  
pieces.
 I endeavoured, but in vain, to get data sufficient on 
which to build a calculation of the quantity of water which  
came down; for, as it happened at midnight, neither the time 
of its continuance could be ascertained, nor could it be  
determined whether it was constant and regular or variable.  
A clergyman in the neighbourhood was of opinion, that all  
the water of Crummack, an adjacent lake of two square 
miles surface, and very deep, could not have done half so  
much harm. It is certain, indeed, from one circumstance,  
that it must have been very great; as the water remained the 
next morning, in a widow's cottage, twelve feet  
perpendicular above the ordinary surface of the water, and  
at the distance of thirty yards from the brook; and as the  
ground was lower on the opposite bank to the distance of  
fifty yards, there must have been a stream of at least 4 or  
5 yards deep, and 80 or 90 in breadth; and this
 
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