Rides on Railways eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 349 pages of information about Rides on Railways.

Rides on Railways eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 349 pages of information about Rides on Railways.

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Ambleside, fourteen miles north-west of Kendal, is partly in Windermere, but chiefly in Grasmere parish.  This is one of the favourite resorts of travellers in quest of pleasure.  It has been compared to a delightful Swiss village, the town reposing in a beautiful valley, near the upper end of Windermere Lake; “no two houses being alike either in form or magnitude,” and the entire place laid out in a rambling irregular manner, adding to its peculiarity and beauty.  The pretty little chapel which ornaments the place was erected in 1812, on the site of an older structure.  The neighbourhood is studded with attractive villas; but the most interesting of the residences is that of the lamented Poet Wordsworth, at Rydal Mount.

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Rydal village is one mile and a quarter from Ambleside, and is planted within a narrow gorge, formed by the advance of Loughrigg Fell and Rydal Knab.  Rydal Hall, the seat of Lady le Fleming, stands in the midst of a finely-wooded park, in which are two beautiful waterfalls, shown on application at the lodge.  Rydal Mount, Wordsworth’s residence for many years, stands a little above the chapel erected by Lady le Fleming.  Mrs. Hemans describes it as “a lovely cottage-like building, almost hidden by a profusion of roses and ivy.”  “From a grassy mound in front, commanding a view always so rich, and sometimes so brightly solemn, that one can well imagine its influence traceable in many of the poet’s writings, you catch a gleam of Windermere over the grove tops.”  “A footpath,” Mr. Phillips says, “strikes off from the top of the Rydal Mount road, and, passing at a considerable height on the hill side under Nab Scar, commands charming views of the vale, and rejoins the high road at White Moss Quarry.  The commanding and varied prospect obtained from the summit of Nab Scar, richly repays the labour of the ascent.  From the summit, which is indicated by a pile of large stones, eight different sheets of water are seen, viz., Windermere, Rydal, Grasmere, and Coniston Lakes, and Loughrigg, Easdale, Elterwater, and Blelham Tarns.  The Solway Firth is also distinctly visible.”  Knab, a delightful residence formerly occupied by De Quincy, “the English Opium Eater,” and by Hartley Coleridge, eldest son of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, is situated close by.  In the walk from Ambleside to Rydal, should the tourist pursue his course along the banks of the Rothay, he will, having crossed the bridge, pass the house built and inhabited by the late Dr. Arnold, Master of Rugby School.

Grasmere Village is a short walk from Rydal, and only four miles from Ambleside.  Wordsworth lived here for eight years, at a small house at Town End; here he wrote many of his never-dying poems; to this spot be brought his newly-wedded wife in 1822; and in the burial ground of the parish church are interred his mortal remains.  Wordsworth quitted this sublunary scene, for a brighter and a better, on April 23, 1850.  Gray once visited Grasmere Water, and described its beauties in a rapturous spirit.  Mrs. Hemans, in one of her sonnets, says of it:—­

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Rides on Railways from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.