OF THE WATERS. 27 



and are monuments of the tremendous power of that Being who 

 formed them, pointing out to us obedience, and an humble 

 dependence upon him. 



Below the water-fall, oppofite to Tecket, the brook enters a 

 fubterraneous cavity under a great rock. It keeps its fecret 

 courfe for a mile and a half, and then rifes in perpendicular 

 bubbles, in a field near Nunwick Mill, after fupplying which 

 with its ftrong and clear flream, it falls into North Tyne. After 

 heavy rains, and great fnows, the greateft part of it is carried off 

 in a ftrong and rapid current paft Tecket, between two hanging 

 banks of wood, where, by various falls from broken rocks, it 

 forms a moft romantic and beautiful fcene. 



E a CHAP. 



