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

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Page 266:-
sheep have often been suddenly swallowed up by this gaping wonder of nature. To say that no living creature ever came out of its mouth, would be a proposition too general; trouts of a protuberant size have been drawn out of it, where they had been long nourished in safety; their habitation being seldom disturbed by the insidious fisherman.
A little further to the east, we came to another curiosity of nature, called Barefoot-wives-hole: we had noticed it in our ascent up the side of Ingleborough. It is a large round pit, in the form of a funnel, the diameter at the top being about fifty or sixty yards, and its depth twenty-six. It is easily descended in most places, though on the south side there is a high rocky precipice, but is dry; the waters that are emptied into it being swallowed up among the rocks and loose stones at the bottom. In our way back we also saw Hardrawkin, and some other subterranean passages of less note, which had been formed by the waters in their descent from the mountain adjoining to Ingleborough, to the vale beneath. Indeed the whole limestone base of this monster of nature is perforated and excavated in all directions, like a honeycomb. [1]
From the Chapel-in-the-Dale we shaped our course towards the south-east corner of Whernside, along the road leading to the village of Dent. As we proceeded, the curate entertained us with an account of some singular properties observable in the black earth, which composes the soil in the higher parts of the vale, in various morassy places. It is a kind of igneum lutum, or rather a sort of putrified earth, which in the night resembles fire, when it is agitated by being trodden upon. The effect it produces in a dark evening are truly curious and amazing, Strangers are always surprised, and often frightened, to see their own and horses' legs be-
[1] Limestone has all the appearance of having been once in a soft state, and easily soluble in water. This principle will account for the scallops on the surface of limestone rocks, being made perhaps by the water draining off while the stone was soft; also for the chinks and crevices amongst them, made by their shrinking together when dried by the sun. The caves themselves proceed, most probably, from a great part of the rock being dissolved and washed down by the streams pervading the different strata.
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gazetteer links
button -- "Barefoot Wives Hole" -- Braithwaite Wife Hole
button -- "Hardrawkin" -- Hardrawkin Pot
button -- Ingleborough
button -- "Meir Gill" -- Meregill Hole
button -- Twisleton Dale (?)

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