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Station commands an extensive and enchanting view of
Windermere, and Curwen Island is the grand leading feature
to which the eye is involuntarily led. The house which has
been built upon it, notwithstanding what some have said,
will, in many unaffected people, appear well calculated as
an ornament to the scene, and a suitable place of residence
for the enjoyment of the local beauties of the island, the
lake, and the surrounding scenery.
Comprehended under that angle of vision prescribed by the
laws of perspective, all the principal islands with the well
wooded Ferry House, are discovered in this view, and give an
extraordinary richness to it; the lands on the opposite
shores gracefully intersecting each other, and abundantly
decorated with woods, are in unison with the islands.
Cultivation is extended beyond the margin of the lake, high
into Troutbeck and Applethwaite; and
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the scene is closed at many miles distant from the eye by
grand mountains, the principal of which is Hillbell.
Near the banks of the lake, on the western shore, and to the
left of the Great Island, comfortably situated, stands
Calgarth, the seat of the Lord Bishop of Llandaff; and over
the other end of the island, Brayrigg, that of the Rev.
Fletcher Fleming; Old Calgarth lies between these houses.
Bowness with its church and the pleasantly dispersed houses
belonging to Mr. Taylor and Mr. Crump, appear beyond Crow
Holm and the Ferry House. - South of Bowness, on a beautiful
promontory, see Story, the property of Colonel Bolton, who
has recently added a magnificent house to that built by the
late Sir John Ledger, Bart. - should the grounds be
appropriately decorated, the mansion, with its appendages,
will be the most splendid on the banks of Windermere.
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