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Page 284:-

ARTICLE VIII.

Furness Fells
Further Account of Furness Fells;
  eminences
  objects
  trees

OR, OBSERVATIONS ON PLACING OBJECTS ON THE EMINENCES, AND PLANTING TREES IN THE VALLIES SEEN IN THIS TOUR.
BEING THE NOTE INTENDED FOR P.43.
FURNESS FELLS, and the adjacent parts here alluded to, are so peculiarly distinguished with picturesque beauty, that they deserve a more minute description. This country consists of a succession of mountains and vallies formed and intermixed in all the possible variety of rural nature. Much of the vallies, and the bases of most of the hills, are covered with young wood, which, at certain periods, is cut down and charred for the use of the neighbouring furnaces. On this account, the copses, which consist of various kinds of trees, constantly, in the summer, exhibited every pleasing colour of youthful vegetation. The main shoots also spring up so straight, and the collateral ones at such small angles with them, that they give an uncommon idea of vegetating vigour; and when they are seen rooted in the different clefts of rocks, fancy will conceive them not unlike the stream of some fluid bursting forcibly from its prison. Amongst these copses are found several neat villages, houses, and spaces of cultivated land, which, with a number of brooks and rivers tumbling and tinkling among them, constitute a scene of sylvan beauty exceedingly lively and singular. But what still enhances the whole, is the goodness of the highways, of which, in fine weather, it is not extravagant to say, in general, that they
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