The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction. Volume 12, No. 333, September 27, 1828

Throughout Scotland and Ireland there are scattered great numbers of round towers , which have puzzled all antiquarians. They have of late obtained the general name of Fire Towers , and our engraving represents the view of one of them, at Brechin, in Scotland. It consists of sixty regular courses of hewn stone, of a brighter colour than the adjoining church. It is 85 feet high to the cornice, whence rises a low, spiral-pointed roof of stone, with three or four windows, and on the top a vane, making 15 feet more, in all 100 feet from the ground, and measuring 48 feet in external circumference.
Many of these towers in Ireland vary from 35 to 100 feet. One at Ardmore has fasciæ at the several stories, which all the rest both in Ireland and Scotland, seem to want, as well as stairs, having only abutments, whereon to rest timbers and ladders. Some have windows regularly disposed, others only at the top. Their situation with respect to the churches also varies. Some in Ireland stand 25 to 125 feet from the west end of the church. The tower at Brechin is included in the S.W. angle of the ancient cathedral, to which it communicates by a door.
For this curious relic we are indebted to Mr. Godfrey Higgins's erudite quarto, entitled The Celtic Druids, already alluded to at page 121 of our present volume.
( For the Mirror. )
(Stirbitch Fair, as our correspondent observes, was once the Leipsic or Frankfurt of England. He has appended to his Account a ground plan of the fair, which we regret we have not room to insert; the gaps or spaces in which, serve to show how much this commercial carnival (for such it might be termed) has deteriorated; for the remaining booths were built on the same site as during the former splendour of the fair. Our correspondent accounts for this decay, by the facilities of roads and navigable canals for the conveyance of goods; the shopkeepers, &c, being able to get from London and the manufacturing districts, every article direct, at a small expense, the fair-keepers find no market for their goods, as heretofore. His paper is, however, a curious matter-of-fact description of Stirbitch, sixty years since. We have been compelled to reject all but one verse of the Chaunt, on account of some local allusions, the justice of which we do not deny, but which are scarcely delicate enough for our pages.

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2005-02-17

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Popular literature -- Great Britain -- Periodicals

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