]]^attertial0, being rather out of the ordinary track of 

 travellers, is not so much frequented for a resting-place as 

 Keswick and Ambleside, but it is a charming spot to spend 

 a short time in, and we recommend the tourist, if he wishes 

 to see Ullswater and its surroundings in perfection, to take 

 up his abode at one or other of the two good hotels which 

 he will find there. By doing so he will also have the 

 opportunity of visiting Haweswater, which is one of the 

 loveHest of the lesser lakes, and not nearly so well known 

 as it deserves to be. 



The church, and the few houses round it, nestling under 

 the hills at the head of Ullswater, are known as Patt£tt(ale, 

 a name, as some say, derived from St. Patrick, who, if 

 accounts be true, once preached to the inhabitants of this 

 vale. However that may be, the church, which is quite 

 in keeping with the surrounding scenery and has been re- 

 built, is called after the Saint, and this circumstance perhaps 



o 



