Description

The bogs of Templecarne

The cultivation of Templecarne

The fish stocks of Templecarne

The metals of Templecarne

The rivers of Templecarne

Bluestack Mountain

Geese and Swans on Lough Erne

Rivers Pettigo, Omna and Scillies

The agriculture of Donegal

The mineral springs of Donegal

The mountains of Donegal

The ruined abbeys of Donegal

Gazetteer description of view from lake shore

An account of the stations

Letter, Robert Jamison, Baronscourt, to [Marquess of Abercorn, London].

Feijoo's critique of Purgatory

"A mere rock"

"Dore bowden with iron and stele"

"Foundations can scarcely now be traced"

"Here where thy saints have trod"

"If there was no appearance of the pilgrim, he was given up for lost"

"It was originally a pagan idol"

"Long ago filled up"

"St. Patrick most likely did visit the lake"

"The mark of St. Patrick's knee"

"The pilgrimage was again resumed"

"The pilgrimage was suppressed and the cave destroyed"

Clogh-oir, the golden stone

The ancient pilgrimage

"A huge quarry"

"Rich in legendary, historic, and poetic association"

"There is no grandeur in the surrounding scenery"

"Two islands which have made it famous"

Lough Erne, "The Windermere of Ireland"

Timeline: 1184

Seavog Mountain Pilgrim Road Archaeological Survey

Station Island Archaeological Survey

"Wild and gloomy loneliness"

A 1603 description of Lough Derg

The general appearance of Templecarn

"A landscape that is usually a monotonous monochrome of either brown or grey tints"

"That's the Red Lake unless I mistake"