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

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Page 309:-
[moun]tains; and saw green cultivated vales over the tops of lofty rocks, and other mountains over these vales, in many ridges: whilst innumerable narrow glens were traced in all their windings, and seen uniting behind the hills with others that also sloped upwards from the lake.
The air on this summit was boisterous, intensely cold, and difficult to be inspired, though below, the day was warm and serene. It was dreadful to look down from nearly the brink of the point on which we stood, upon the lake of Bassenthwaite, and over a sharp and separated ridge of rocks, that from below appeared of tremendous height, but now seemed not to reach half way up Skiddaw; it was almost as if
... the precipitation might down stretch
Below the beam of light ...
Under the lee of an heaped up pile of slates, formed by the customary contribution of one from every visitor, we found an old man sheltered, whom we took to be a shepherd, but afterwards learned was a farmer, and as people in this neighbourhood say, a statesman, that is, had land of his own. He was a native, and still an inhabitant of an adjoining vale; but so laborious is the enterprize reckoned, that, though he had passed his life within view of the mountain, this was his first ascent. He descended with us for part of our way, then wound off towards his own valley, stalking amidst the wild scenery, his large figure wrapped in a dark cloak, and his steps occasionally assisted by a long iron-pronged pike, with which he had pointed out distant objects.- In the descent, it was interesting to observe each mountain below gradually resuming its dignity; the two lakes expanding into spacious surfaces; the many little vallies that sloped upwards from their margins, recovering their variegated tints of cultivation; the cattle again appearing in the meadows; and the woody promontories changing from smooth patches of shade
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