Rigg Beck

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rigg Beck is a minor river of Cumbria in England.

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]

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.

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

Coordinates: 54°34′16″N 3°11′02″W / 54.571°N 3.184°W / 54.571; -3.184


Retrieved from ""