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

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Page 173:-
To return to Whittaker: 'At Hornby, a fine opening to the right, consisting of the vallies formed by the Wenning and the Greta, discloses new scenes of beauties, again terminated by Ingleborough, now seen in nearer and more distinct majesty; after which, the principal opening, growing still more expanded, and suffering nothing, as yet, from its increased elevation, either in point of shade or fertility, approaches Kirkby Lonsdale. The soft and luxuriant beauties of this place - terminated by the Howgill Fells, a group of mountains of striking form, though inferior to Ingleborough - are scarcely to be surpassed: and he who would wish for a happier combination of river, meadow, and indigenous wood of the richest growth, than that which appears beneath the celebrated Terrace of this place,[1] might have cause to lament that his taste was too fastidious to admit of any gratification from landscape.
'As we advance northward, the vale gradually undergoes some diminution of its charms, though none of its fertility, till it is met by the Rothay from the east. It then assumes, more and more, the character of a high mountain glen, gradually ascending and contracting, while it grows dimutive in its features, as well as cold and barren in proportion, till, after a rapid turn towards the east, the glen and brook of Lune terminate on the verge of Ravenstonedale, in Westmorland.'
  Claughton
CLAUGHTON - 'the Town of Claugh' - possesses an ancient Manor House, built about the latter end of James, or the beginning of Charles I., a good specimen of the architecture of the age. It is of an oblong form, with two embattled towers, containing numerous transom lights.
[] The bank of Lune, leading from the Church-yard towards Underley.
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