button to main menu  Otley's Guide 1823 (8th edn 1849)

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Page 203:-
a number of cavities all over the mountain, resembling inverted cones; the most remarkable is 'Barefoot Wives' Hole,' a large funnel-shaped pit, 50 yards in diameter, and about 26 yards deep. It is always dry, the water which may flow into it being swallowed amongst the loose stones at the bottom. These pits are said to be similar to those found on the Mounts Etna and Vesuvius. Ingleborough, or 'The Station of Fire,' has doubtless been, in the time of the Romans, a place of defence, and a beacon of 'smoke by day and fire by night' to communicate the intelligence of any irruption or insurrection to the surrounding castelli and encampments.
Soft twilight hues are blending o'er thee now,
Hill of my native vale; 'mid cloudless skies
Thy giant cliffs in peaceful grandeur rise,
And the light mists are wreathed round thy brow;
Erewhile the thunder cloud's abiding place
Where closed the elements in fearful strife -
Yet of its ravages the tempest rife
With desolation, there has left no trace
Distinguishable 'neath the purple vest
Of Ev'ning, now thy form enveloping.
Like thine, the Wanderer's eve with peace be blest,
The troubles o'er Life's dark day chequering:
And Hope to cheer him, still in mercy given,
Then gently guide him to her native heaven.[1]
P.
  Ingleton
  Ingleton church

In the Parochial Chapel of INGLETON,- a village situate on the confines of the West-Riding of Yorkshire, and on a lofty bank of the Greeta, one of the
[] For this and the preceding Sonnet on Ravenwray, we are indebted to a Reverend Vicar - a school-fellow, class-fellow, and, through life, a dear friend of ours - who lived beloved - close by the scenery he so well portrays - and died alike lamented by all, high and low, rich and poor. He was the only man we have known who had, what is vulgarly called, 'the good word' of every body. To him we are also beholden for the description of the Norman Font in Ingleton Church, as well as for being instrumental in the bringing out of a drawing of it by a Yorkshire artist, Mr. Binns, of Halifax - as accurate as his portraits: we can give it no higher panegyric.
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gazetteer links
button -- (beacon, Ingleborough)
button -- "Barefoot Wives' Hole" -- Braithwaite Wife Hole
button -- Ingleborough
button -- Ingleton

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