You are here
قراءة كتاب The Isle of Man
تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"
The Isle of Man
By
Joseph E Morris

London Adam & Charles
Black
Soho Square W
1911
CONTENTS
CHAPTER | PAGE | |
I. | The Island as a Whole | 5 |
II. | Concerning Peel | 10 |
III. | Tynwald Hill and the Northern Parts of the Island | 18 |
IV. | From Ramsey to Laxey | 40 |
V. | Castletown and the South Side of the Island | 48 |
Index | 64 |
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
1. | The Waterfall in Dhoon Glen | Frontispiece |
FACING PAGE | ||
2. | Douglas Bay (a Midsummer Night) | 9 |
3. | Maughold Church | 16 |
4. | A Breezy Morning at Point of Ayre | 25 |
5. | Ramsey Bay looking Northwards | 27 |
6. | Sulby Glen and Snaefell | 30 |
7. | Glen Maye | 32 |
8. | The Calf of Man from Spanish Head | 43 |
9. | Port St. Mary | 46 |
10. | Castletown and Castle Rushen | 49 |
11. | Peel Harbour and Castle | 56 |
12. | Bradda Head, Port Erin | On the cover |
THE ISLE OF MAN
CHAPTER I
THE ISLAND AS A WHOLE
Either Ruskin or Wordsworth—I forget for the moment which—says somewhere that the English Lake Country begins where its mountains first become visible over the sands of Morecambe Bay. This, indeed, is a proper rebuke to the foolish modern tendency—so entirely subversive of all real aesthetic appreciation—which wishes always to hurry us (too frequently by railway) into the very heart of a beautiful district, instead of encouraging us to approach it by insensible gradations, thus allowing its beauties to work up gradually to their natural and proper climax. Luckily this mistake is impossible in the case of the Isle of Man, which is necessarily approached by water. It is astonishing, indeed, from what great distances its mountains are visible over the Irish Sea. On any fine evening they are plainly conspicuous from anywhere along the level strip of land that constitutes the south-west coast of Cumberland; it is not necessary, in fact, to climb to the summit of Black Comb in order to see
Far into silent regions blue and pale—
And visibly engirding Mona's Isle.
The prospect thus afforded is one of singular distant attractiveness, though the Isle of Man presents no such splendid group of huddled peaks as the Cumberland fells present, in their turn, as seen from the Isle of Man. Only North Barrule, indeed, towards the north end of the island, rises to a distinct and graceful cone.
The Isle of Man has suffered, if we may say so without paradox, from the excess of its own popularity. For many