JUiongskbtJak* 71 



on our left, well supported by Raven Crag and Goat Scar on 

 our right* Above Buzzard Crag there is a small sheet of 

 water called Grey Crag Tarn — it is said to be full of fish, 

 and is certainly full of weeds ; the only fisherman seen there 

 is a solitary grey heron from Dallam Tower. The climb to 

 the tarn is very steep, and a sight of it is hardly worth the 

 trouble of going up. 



The first house on the right is Sadgill* ; here we turn off 

 through the farmyard and follow a good road up the side of 

 the hill, which, after a few turns, leads us safely to the top 

 of Stile End Grassing, and then down into Kentmere, where 

 we find our conveyance at the Low Bridge Inn, from whence 

 the road homewards is as at page 62, or the way we came. 



FROM WINDERMERE TO KESWICK. 

 (21 miles.) 



As most of the public conveyances start from the railway, 

 we shall suppose this the point of 'departure. If the vehicle 

 be the Royal Mail, there will be a halt at the post-office to 

 take up the letter-bags ; and then, seated in a real old four- 

 horse coach, the journey is enlivened by a sharp ring of eight 

 pairs of horses shoes and an occasional solo on the horn, the 

 traveller rolls swiftly down the highway. This is at once 

 the Cheapside and Rotten Row of the neighbourhood, — 

 the principal track of those whom business or pleasure brings 

 to the terminus at Windermere. 



* It is a long and not very interesting walk down Longsleddale to Ken- 

 dal. Stockdale, half-a-mile below Sadgill, on the other side of the val- 

 ley is better worth visiting than any other part of the vale. There is a 

 pretty fall in it ; and the rocks will be found, by the geologist, to be 

 particularly interesting. We need not return to Sadgill, but can cross 

 Sleddale by the bridge leading to Till's Hole, just below a curious 

 mound or drift surmounted by larch. 



