Rigg Beck

Rigg Beck is also the name of a famous dwelling – the Purple House[1] - placed where the Beck crosses the Keskadale road, and which formed an excellent starting point for exploring the fells.[2]

Rigg Beck is a minor river of Cumbria in England.

Source and course

Rigg Beck arises at the top of the high pass between Ard Crags and Causey Pike, of the latter of which it forms one boundary.[3] The beck flows eventually into Newlands Beck.[4]

The path alongside Rigg Beck forms an attractive pedestrian route between Newlands Valley and Buttermere.[5]

Literary associations

  • The Scottish poet Margot Adamson wrote of the beck “Young as the grass that fringes where it sprays,/Old as the clefts from whence it takes its flight”.[6]
  • The Purple House (Rigg Beck) was associated with poets like Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes.
gollark: To some extent, the internet's culture of free expression is going away, and being replaced with "please pick from this list of acceptable political views to use [any large platform]".
gollark: "Remember the internet before Facebook bought TCP/IP?"
gollark: Ah yes, HTML hackerman?
gollark: Did you know: some jellyfish and 0.43% of osmarks.tk users are immortal?
gollark: No, these might just be the 1337 h4xx0r types

See also

References

  1. Famous Purple House...
  2. A Wainwright, The North-Western Fells (Kendall 1964) Ard Crags 3
  3. A Wainwright, The North-Western Fells (Kendall 1964) Ard Crags 1 and Causey Pike 2
  4. A Wainwright, The North-Western Fells (Kendall 1964) Causey Pike 2
  5. A Wainwright, Wainwright in the Valleys of Lakeland (London 1996) p. 214
  6. G Lindop, A Literary Guide to the Lake District (London 1993) p. 199



This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.