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black’s guide book advertiser.
31
NOTICE.
No person visiting the beautiful Scenery of the English Lakes
should omit calling at
BBOWW’S
PRINCE OF WALES LAKE HOTEL,
GRASMERE,
Which stands upon the margin of the lake, has been built ex¬
pressly for a Hotel, and fitted up with Hot-, Cold, and Shower
iBaths, and every modern improvement for a first-rate establish-
iment. The following mountains, etc., may be seen from the
^ windows of the Hotel,—Nab Scar, Loughrigg Fell, Red Bank,
(Silver How, Sargeant Man, High Raise, Steele Fell, Helen Crag,
iDunmail Raise, Seat Sandal, Stone Arthur, the whole of the
Lake, Valley, and Church, the last resting-places of Wordsworth
and Hartley Coleridge, etc. etc.; and the views from the house
and pleasure grounds surpass any others in the whole of the
[ Lake District.
. The Coffee-room is the largest in the North of England.
E. B. had the distinguished honour of entertaining the Prince
iof Wales and Suite, the greater part of the time they were in
'the Lake District, the early part of May 1857. And from his
'louse they made their daily excursions to Fairfield, Helvellyn,
[Rydal Falls, Loughrigg, the Langdales, and across the mountains
;o Borrowdale.
Grasmere will be found, on reference to the map, to be the
lost central situation for making daily excursions to and from
the other Lakes and Mountains.
A Refreshment Room and Coach Office is attached to the
Hotel, where omnibuses and coaches run to and from the Win-
lermere steamers, Windermere, Broughton, Penrith, and Cocker-
nouth Railway Stations, and to all parts of the Lake District.
Carriages, Cars, Ponies, Boats, etc.