- Scott's View
Scott's View refers to a viewpoint in the Scottish Borders, overlooking the valley of the
River Tweed , which is reputed to be one of the favourite views of SirWalter Scott .The viewpoint can be located directly from a minor road leading south from
Earlston just off the A68 and by travelling north from the village ofSt. Boswells up the slope of Bemersyde Hill. The view is around 3 miles east of Melrose. The view is to the west, and is dominated by the three peaks ofEildon Hill . To the south west the view is extensive and open, taking in rolling farmland beyond the village ofNewtown St Boswells . Immediately below the viewer is a meander of the Tweed itself. Often a fly fisherman can be seen fishing the river. To the north west the viewer looks along the Tweed valley to Melrose. Towards the north-west the viewer can see theBlack Hill , a Marilyn nearEarlston .Immediately below the view point, on the cliffs above the River Tweed, is one of the few remaining fragments of semi-natural woodland in the area. The oak trees that remain are the decendants of trees used to supply wood for the manufacture of coffins in the area.
According to a popular story, Sir Walter Scott stopped at this point so often on the way to his home at Abbotsford, that his horses would halt without command. After his death in 1832, his funeral cortege passed this way en route to his burial at
Dryburgh Abbey , and his horses stopped at his favourite view to allow their master a last look at the Borders landscape. In fact, although the funeral procession did pass this way, the halt was due to 'some accident' [http://www2.arts.gla.ac.uk/SESLL/STELLA/STARN/prose/WSCOTT/LIFE/chap18.htm] .Fittingly, a large and somewhat romanticised statue of Scotland's hero,
William Wallace , stands nearby, in the grounds ofBemersyde House .External links
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