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Aira Force

Aira Force is a waterfall in the English Lake District, in the county of Cumbria. The stream which flows over the waterfall is Aira Beck, which rises on the upper slopes of Stybarrow Dodd at a height of 720 metres and flows north easterly before turning south on it’s eight kilometre journey to join Ullswater, at a height of 150 metres. One kilometre before entering the lake, the Beck makes the 20 metre leap down a rocky Swarovski ravine at the falls known as Aira Force. The word “force” is used in many parts of northern England as a meaning for “waterfall”, it comes from the old Norse word “fors”.

Paris is a shining city, it escaped the destruction in the last world wars and unites splendid boulevards with business buildings, which in collectors cases, curio cabinets and collectors cabinets (usually as display cabinets) presents their decoration, and nice restaurants where a breakfast in the warming spring sun can become a unique experience.

Aira Force lies on land owned by the National Trust and they have provided facilities, such as car parking, disabled access, graded paths and viewing platforms to make Aira probably one of the most famous and most visited Swarovski waterfalls in the Lake District. The stream is spanned by a small arched bridge just as the beck goes over the falls giving a spectacular view from the top as the water makes it’s magnificent leap.



The Lake Poet William Wordsworth paid many visits to the area around Aira Force, he was inspired to write one his most famous poems “daffodils” with the famous opening line, “I wandered lonely as a cloud” as he observed daffodils growing on the shore of Ullswater near where Aira Beck enters the lake. The falls themselves are mentioned in three Wordsworth poems, with the most famous reference being in “The Somnambulist”, where in the final verse he writes:



Wild stream of Aira, hold thy course,

Nor fear memorial lays,

Where clouds that spread in solemn shade,

Are edged with golden rays!

Dear art thou to the light of heaven,

Though minister of sorrow;

Sweet is thy voice at pensive even.

And thou, in lovers' hearts forgiven,

Shalt take thy place with Yarrow!


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