f H4 ] 



water-fall unfeen, will .induce you to land 

 again ; walking on to a little ruinous 

 bridge, you look upon a romantic hol- 

 low of rocks and woods, with a ftream 

 pouring down the clefts in many {heets^ 

 and feen among the trees in the moft 

 pidturefque manner; a romantic fcene of 

 rock, and wood and water thirty feet high. 

 Rowing from hence, under Barrow 

 Crag, the iliore is rocky, and various : 

 Faffing fome low ground, and landing on 

 a riling one, the view is exquifite. The 

 water breaks in the mod beautiful man- 

 lier imaginable, into bays and flieetSj 

 ftretching away from the eye mod glori- 

 oufly, between the Stable Hills , Lord's 

 IJlandy and Vicars IJlajid : BrampJJjolm 

 cuts in the middle j and St, Albaiis IJle 

 prefents his broad fide to your full view. 

 At the other end of the lake, the riling 

 hills, part of cultivated, waving inclofures, 

 and part of hanging woods, all fcattered 

 with white houfes, and the whole crown- 

 ed with the lofty mountains, are beauti- 

 fully pidturefque, and contrail Unely with 

 the view of the fouth end of the lake> 

 around which the rocks and mountains are 



tre- 



