[Madam How and Lady Why by Charles Kingsley]@TWC D-Link bookMadam How and Lady Why CHAPTER XII--HOMEWARD BOUND 30/68
We are here in a sort of amphitheatre, or half a one, with the limestone hills around us, and the new red sandstone plastered on, as it were, round the bottom of it inside. But what is this high bit with E against it? Those are the high hills round Bath, which we shall run through soon. They are newer than the soil here; and they are (for an exception) higher too; for they are so much harder than the soil here, that the sea has not eaten them away, as it has all the lowlands from Bristol right into the Somersetshire flats. * * * * * There.
We are off at last, and going to run home to Reading, through one of the loveliest lines (as I think) of old England.
And between the intervals of eating fruit, we will geologize on the way home, with this little bit of paper to show us where we are. What pretty rocks! Yes.
They are a boss of the coal measures, I believe, shoved up with the lias, the lias lying round them.
But I warn you I may not be quite right: because I never looked at a geological map of this part of the line, and have learnt what I know, just as I want you to learn simply by looking out of the carriage window. Look.
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