. The Yorkshire coast and the Cleveland hills and dales;. THE ESK IN GLAISDALE. DRAWN BY ALFRED DAWSON. upper Eskdale lo 0 beck, of the Wintergill, through a deep cleft in the steepside of Egton High Moor, and from the bold moorlandnab that is thrust out between the gill and the dale head. There is tangled woodland, too, before wereach the heath of Glaisdale Moor, which is part ofthe lofty transverse ridge that separates the watershedsof the Esk and the Rye, and across which the moor-land tracks lead into Rosedale. It is in this greatridge that all the southern tributaries of the Esk havetheir


. The Yorkshire coast and the Cleveland hills and dales;. THE ESK IN GLAISDALE. DRAWN BY ALFRED DAWSON. upper Eskdale lo 0 beck, of the Wintergill, through a deep cleft in the steepside of Egton High Moor, and from the bold moorlandnab that is thrust out between the gill and the dale head. There is tangled woodland, too, before wereach the heath of Glaisdale Moor, which is part ofthe lofty transverse ridge that separates the watershedsof the Esk and the Rye, and across which the moor-land tracks lead into Rosedale. It is in this greatridge that all the southern tributaries of the Esk havetheir source. Return we now to Glaisdale End, in order thatwe may continue our wayfaring up Eskdale. Thesplendid woods of Arncliff are left behind, but stillthere is plenty of foliage in the dale, and there arepleasant farmsteads and cultivated fields; and, as wego forward along the road on the slope of the southernhill, the river is seen in a tortuous course below, wind-ing about with many a dimpling curve, accompaniedalways by the railway, and beyond is th


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidyorkshirecoa, bookyear1892