BXlTltH MOUMTAUJi. 7* 
^ from Ingleton, is divided by an arch of limestone, pass- 
^ Under which is seen a large cascade falling from a 
of more than sixty-feet. The length of this Cave 
s about one hundred and eighty-feet, and the breadth 
*unety. ^ 
There are also in various parts of England many re- 
markable springs, of which some are impregnated either 
'Ih salt, as that of Droitwich, in Worcestershire ; or 
“Ulphur, as the famous well of Wigan, in Lancashire, or 
'uuninous matter, as that at Pitchford, in Shropshire, 
y^^rs have a petrifying quality ; as that near Luttemorth, 
y ~®'<^ostershire, and a dropping well in the West Riding of 
j^orkshire. And, finally, some ebb and flow, as that of the 
described above, and Laywell near Torbay, whose 
3ters rise and fall several times in an hour. To these we 
add that remarkable fountain near Richard’s Castle, m 
„ ^'^'^ordshire, commonly called Bone Well, which is 
^“erally full of small bones, like those of frogs or fishes, 
°“gh often cleared out. At a cliff near Wigan, in Lan- 
the famous burning well ; the water is cold, nei- 
iss^*^ '*■ smell j yet so strong a vapour of sulphur 
'"'‘th the stream, that upon applying a light to it, 
bu the water is covered with a flame, like that of 
spirits, which lasts several hovus, and emits such a 
that meat may be boiled over it. 
BRITISH MOUNTAINS. 
ijjju* ,®frtish Isles pre.sent many mountains of a bold and 
WijjcL ^tiaracter ; when contrasted, however, with those 
a..., , ttave been nlrf^nriv rlpsprihed. thev must he ronsi- 
already described, they must be consi- 
comparatively diminutive. 
b>:n kkvis. 
The 1 
tts these mountains is Ben Nevi.s, in Scctlaiid 
.atiou above the level of the sea being 4380 ieet. 

^curihtj elevates its rugged li'ont far above all the iivigh- 
« li * . A _. t _ 1 . . . V # -1 
• more than four-fifths of a mile. It termiustrs is 
'^^’Ulcr iis nig^L’U Jium iiu juuvc itii 
m°P'*hiins. It is of easy ascent ; and at the pe; pett- 
*Cight of 1 5C0 feet, the vale beneath presents a vci> 
