Online Encyclopedia

GRASMERE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 367 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GRASMERE  , a

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village and lake of Westmorland, in the heart of the
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English Lake
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District . The village (pop. of urban districtin 1901, 781) lies near the head of the lake, on the small
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river Rothay and the
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Keswick-
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Ambleside road, 122 M. from Keswick and 4 from Ambleside . The scenery is very beautiful; the valley about the lakes of Grasmere and Rydal
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Water is in
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great
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part wooded, while on its eastern flank there rises boldly the range of hills which includes Rydal Fell,
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Fairfield and Seat Sandal, and, farther north, Helvellyn . On the west side are Loughrigg Fell and
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Silver How . The village has become a favourite centre for tourists, but preserves its picturesque .and sequestered appearance . In a house still
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standing William Wordsworth lived from 1799 to 18o8, and it was subsequently occupied by Thomas de Quincey and by Hartley Coleridge . Wordsworth's tomb, and also that of Coleridge, are in the churchyard of the ancient church of St Oswald, which contains a memorial to Wordsworth with an inscription by John Keble . A festival called the Rushbearing takes place on the Saturday within the octave of St Oswald's day (August 5th), when a
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holiday is observed and the church decorated with rushes, heather and flowers . The festival is of early origin, and has been derived by some from the
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Roman Floralia, but appears also to have been made the occasion for carpeting the floors of churches, unpaved in early times, with rushes . Moreover, in a procession which forms part of the festivities at Grasmere, certain Biblical stories are symbolized, and in this a connexion with the ancient miracle plays may be found (see H . D . Rawnsley, A Rambler's Note-
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Book at the English Lakes,
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Glasgow, 1902) .

Grasmere is also noted for an athletic

meeting in August . The lake of Grasmere is just under 1 m. in length, and has an extreme breadth of 766 yds . A ridge divides the basin from north to south, and rises so high as to form an island about the
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middle . The greatest
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depth of the lake (75 ft.) lies to the east of this ridge .

End of Article: GRASMERE
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