Briggflatts Meeting House
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Briggflatts Meeting House is a Quaker meeting house near Sedbergh in Northwest England, built in 1675[1]. It is the subject of Basil Bunting's poem “At Briggflatts meetinghouse” (1975)[2] [3].
Most references use the spelling "Briggflatts", with two 'g's and two 't's. This is the spelling Bunting used for his poem. However, some sources give the spelling of the meeting house with a single 'g': "Brigflatts"[1] or with a single 't': "Briggflats"[4]. A single source is not always consistent with spelling of this name. It is not clear which spelling(s) are correct.
[edit] External links
- VisitCumbria.com "Brigflatts Meeting House" page with several good photos[1].
- north-west-quakers.org.uk photo of Briggflats, external view, black and white[4]
- north-west-quakers.org.uk photo of road to Briggflats, black and white[5]
[edit] References
- ^ a b c Thurgood, Julian (2005-12-12). Brigflatts Meeting House. VisitCumbria.com. Julian Thurgood. Retrieved on May 7, 2006. "'WWW.VISITCUMBRIA.COM' in an independent personal guide to Cumbria and the English Lake District by Julian Thurgood, and is not sponsored or endorsed in any way by the Cumbria Tourist Board, whose official site is at www.golakes.co.uk."
- ^ Jacket Magazine (October 1999). Basil Bunting - poem - At Briggflatts meetinghouse (1975). Jacket Magazine. Retrieved on December 1, 2006.
- ^ Basil Bunting Poetry Centre (2004-02-25). Bunting texts. Retrieved on December 1, 2006. Cites the poem as Odes II:11, 1975.
- ^ a b Grant, Simon; John Arnison (photographer) (2002-04-06). Briggflats Meeting House. North-West Quakers web site > 1652 country. Simon Grant. Retrieved on May 7, 2006.
- ^ Grant, Simon; John Arnison (photographer) (2002-04-06). Close to Briggflats. North-West Quakers web site > 1652 country. Simon Grant. Retrieved on May 7, 2006.