button to main menu   West's Guide to the Lakes, 1778/1821

button title page
button previous page button next page
button start of addendum
Page 265:-
[Ingle]borough, are grouse, the ring-ousle, and wheat-ear, the fox, mountain cat, wild-cat, pole-cat, weasle (sic), stoat, badger, and martin.
The perpendicular height of this mountain above the level of the sea, is 3987 feet, as taken by a neighbouring country-gentleman. The country people are all persuaded that Whernside, on the north side of the vale of Chapel-in-the-Dale, is higher than Ingleborough, from snow continuing longer on its top, and other circumstances. The elevation appears so nearly the same to the eye, that nothing but an exact admeasurement can determine this honour for these rival, soaring candidates. The top of Ingleborough is the first land, however, that sailors descry in their voyage from Dublin to Lancaster, though above thirty miles form the sea, which shows the great height of this mountain, though not an argument for its being higher then Whernside, which is not so well situated to be seen from the Irish Sea.
In our return we visited the long, deep, and dreadful chasm of Meir-Gill, on the west side of the sheep-fence wall, running north and south over the base of Ingleborough. It is about eighty yards long, but in most places so narrow that a person may stride over it, and is no where above two or three yards wide: in one place there is a curious natural bridge over it. The depth is very different in different places; in one place we found it an hundred feet, forty-eight of which were in the water. One part will admit a bold and active adventurer down almost to the water, by a gradual but slippery descent. Here the shadow of the superincumbent rocks, like that in Hurtlepot, forms a deceitful appearance in the water: the bottom seems not above two feet below the surface; but how fatal would be the attempt to wade this abyss, in quest of further discoveries, from this shadow of encouragement! The narrowness of this crevice at the top, has something dreadful and alarming in it: how fatal would one false step prove to the unwary shepherd amongst the snow, when the mouth is drifted up; or to a stranger bewildered in a fog, and looking forward with eager eyes for some habitation or frequented path! Harmless and heedless
button next page
gazetteer links
button -- Ingleborough
button -- "Meir Gill" -- Meregill Hole
button -- "Whernside" -- Whernside

button to main menu Lakes Guides menu.