its course past Tower Lindsay, the churchyard of St. Constantine, or Kirkton, the woods and lawns of Abington, and the fragment of Lamington Tower, [344];
Tinto Hill—“Hill of Fire”—and the prospects it commands, [344], [345];
its meandering through haughs and holmlands, by Covington, Carstairs, and Hyndford Bridge, [345];
scenes of Wallace’s exploits, [345];
the Church of St. Bride of Douglas and the struggle between the “good Sir James” and St. John de Walton, [345], [346];
Falls at Bonnington Linn, [347], [348];
Corra Linn Falls—“Clyde’s most majestic daughter,” [348]–[350];
meeting the Douglas Water, [347];