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After thus supplying all that one of the most able and painstaking antiquaries of our day has been able to state and opine relative to this series of unique relics, it may seem presumptuous in the writer of the present paper to add any remarks of his own. He ventures, nevertheless, to suggest that Mr. Roach Smith's latest observations are the best, and that we must look rather to a military than a manufacturing origin for these pieces, a large proportion of which seem to bear inscriptions more or less abbreviated-embracing the name of a legion, cohort or manipulus, and occasionally of some two of these. That lead was worked in the neighbouring hills in ancient times is certain; and this fact strongly favours the supposition of their manufacture, possibly by soldiers from different countries temporarily stationed or quartered here. Difficulties nevertheless still remain, and the question as to how it has resulted that these pieces are apparently found at the station of Verteræ only, to the exclusion of those upon either hand,-to say nothing of far more important and extensive Roman sites throughout this country, inclusive of many in which lead also abounded,-constitutes a mysterious point yet to be resolved.

THE LAKELAND OF LANCASHIRE.

No. II.-HAWKSHEAD PARISH.

By A. Craig Gibson, F.S.A., Hon. Curator.

[READ 10TH MAY, 1866.]

THE Parish of Hawkshead may be roughly described as forming a parallelogram, measuring about ten miles from north to south and six from east to west. For purposes of local government it is divided into four quarters or townships— namely, Hawkshead, with an area of 4492 acres; Claife, with 4579; Monk Coniston and Skelwith, 5937; and Satterthwaite, 7322 acres-the acreage of the whole parish being 22,330.

Its population in 1861 was 1800. Its annual death-rate I have not been able to ascertain with perfect accuracy.

It is bounded on the north by the parish of Grasmere; on the east by Windermere; south by the parish of Colton; and west by the central line of the vales of Coniston, Yewdale and Tilberthwaite, part of the extensive parish of Ulverston. Though deficient in the grander elements of beauty, so abundant on its immediate north and west, the parish of Hawkshead is by no means destitute of the beautiful. It possesses many varieties of fine, if not of grand scenery. Its bare brown moorlands contrast well with its fertile enclosures and

wooded parks-its craggy "knots" and "pikes" with its rounded moraine-hillocks and verdant "hows"-its reedy marshes with its rich meadow-lands-its sombre tarns with

its sparkling lakes-its hirsute coppices with its groves, groups and single trees of stately growth and effective though fortuitous arrangement-and its rude dry-built hovels of undressed native stone contrast forcibly with its handsome and, in some instances, splendid mansions. In short, though it has no lofty mountains, this secluded parish holds within its bounds natural beauties of the most charming and diversified character; and whatever may be said of the comparative tameness of its interior, the only disparaging criticism I have heard applied to it,-its marginal line runs through scenery whose loveliness is rarely equalled and nowhere surpassed.

Commencing at Elterwater, a small lake formed by the two branches of the river Brathay which drain the convergent vales of Great and Little Langdale, we find that sheet of water almost bi-sected by a low narrow promontory, which projecting morsel of marshy land forms the most northerly point of the parish I am attempting to describe, and also of the County Palatine of Lancaster. The shores of Elterwater fully bear out the poet Wordsworth's remark, that "tarns are "often surrounded by unsightly tracts of boggy ground;" a defect which in many instances might be remedied by drainage.

Leaving the reedy shores of Elterwater, the doubled stream soon acquires a very rocky channel, forms the rapids or falls known as Skelwith Force, and, after passing the romantic little village of Skelwith Bridge and the secluded hamlet called Skelwith Fold, laves the stony bases of the wooded knolls which so strongly characterize this subdivision of the parish.

The bold heights to the southward culminate in a hill called Ironkeld-a name which suggests the proximity of a chalybeate spring, now lost and forgotten, if it ever did exist. Of no great altitude, this eminence commands one of the finest prospects in the kingdom, including the principal hills

of Cumberland, Westmoreland, Lancashire and Yorkshire; while the sheets of water comprised in the view are Morecambe Bay, the Duddon Estuary, Coniston Lake, Windermere, numerous tarns and, as a local authority, with some little obscurity of simile, avers-" Esthwaite, stretching out its "peninsulas like a silver mirror."

The stream of demarcation pursues its lively course past the little church so beautifully situated on one of the wooded knolls I have referred to. It has been the fashion to decry this edifice as rather a blot upon or an anomaly in the scenery here. I take leave, however, to think that it is a pretty and certainly a pleasing feature in the fair landscape, quite in keeping with the native beauties surrounding it. And rich in native beauty this scene must of necessity be admitted to be. "Sweeter stream scenery," said one eloquent lover of the English lakes and their accessories-" Sweeter stream scenery, with richer fore and loftier back ground, is nowhere to be 16 seen within the four seas." We cannot wonder at the accomplished Charles Lloyd, the early and life-long friend of Wordsworth, Southey and Coleridge, and the elegant translator of Alfieri, taking up his rest at Old Brathay, the unpretending mansion near to the last and most picturesque of the bridges under which this boundary stream passes to join its sister river, the Rothay, from Rydal and Grasmere, and become the principal feeder of Windermere.

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Before leaving these fair streams I may mention a fact or two relating to the fish that frequent them. The charSalmo Alpinus-from its rarity and its beauty (in flavour it is not equal to a good lake trout) is the favourite, most celebrated and most sought-for fish of Windermere. In the spawning season it ascends the Brathay, a clean rocky bed being a desideratum with the char, while the trout, preferring sand, takes the Rothay. A very barbarous, wasteful and unsportsmanlike method of taking the char is practised surrep

titiously in the Brathay during spawning time. The process is called "clicking," and is carried out thus. To a short stiff stick a stout line is attached, having at its further extremity a plummet and a number of strong fish hooks set back to back all round. The fish, tired with their ascent of the rapid stream, flock for rest into the deep eddies or still places, locally called "pots." The armed line is dropped into these pots, the opportunity watched for, and the sudden withdrawal or click seldom fails to bring up a spawning char or two. This form of poaching gave rise, some years ago, to a legal question which was oddly decided. A respectably connected person was detected at it and brought before the Ambleside bench for illegal fishing. His advocate insisted that clicking was angling, an assumption that was so warmly protested against by the magistrates, one of whom, at least, is a zealous and, of course, an honourable fisher, and so stoutly supported by the other party that at length it was agreed to allow the decision of the case to rest upon this point, and to take the opinion of counsel as to whether the process described were angling or no. The learned counsel referred the magistrates to the definition of angling given in Johnson's Dictionary, namely, "fishing with a rod, line and "hook." The difference between hook and hooks being held to be immaterial, the identity of clicking with angling was established, and the culprit escaped.

The parish boundary-line has hitherto run due east; but at the confluence of the two rivers, close to the town of Ambleside, it turns to the south, following their western bank till they fall into the lake, and then, the same bank of Windermere. For more than a mile here the lake is bounded on its Lancashire side by the fine park surrounding the mansion of Brathay Hall, the seat of Mrs. Redmayne.

In the first quarter of the present century William Green, an artist of considerable talent and great industry, resided at

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