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cf trees. That to the right pours down frota 

 one cleft of the rock to the other, for a con- 

 fiderable fpace, admirably overhung with the 

 fpreading branches of the adjoining thick wood, 

 which rifes in fweeps around it, gloomy with the 

 brownneis of the fhade, and contrafling the 

 tranfparent brightnefs of the water. 



The other cafcade likewife falls down an irre- 

 gular bed of rock, but not in fuch ftrong breaks 

 as the former ; it is feen in the bofom of a fine 

 wood, which fringes a rifing hill, upon the top 

 of which is a ,building. I attempted a flighc 

 fketch of thefe fails. See plate V *. 



Winding from this inimitable fcenc down to 

 tlie river's fide, and following it, you come to a 

 rcmant'c fpot under a range of impending rocks, 

 with flirubby wood, growing out of their clefts, 

 and a few goats browzing on their very edges— 

 You look back on the preceding fcenes, which 

 in general appear like a fine hollow of furround- 

 ing Vvoods. Fijljer\ Hall, a beautiful little hill, 

 the building crowned with a tuft of trees. 



Purfuing this road a little further (though 

 without the bounds of the ornamented grounds) 

 you rife with the hill, and have a view of the 

 river broken into three fheets of water, divided 

 by fcattered woods, and the banks ornamented 

 by a ftraggling village ; between the hills a 

 diftant profpect is ^t^n. 



Returning, we took the walk that leads by 

 Fijherh Hall and winds up the hill to the left : 

 The firft point you come to is a bench overhung 

 with trees, from which, at your feet, you look 

 down upon a beautiful cafcade, gufhing out of 

 a rock under a thicket of trees ; exquifite. And 

 to the right, at a little diitance, another, but 

 3 different : 



