Thomas Hobbes (1665) by J B Caspar and W HollarDerbyshire Record Office
De Mirabilibus Pecci
In 1636, the philosopher Thomas Hobbes published 'De Mirabilibus Pecci: Being the Wonders of the Peak in Darby-Shire'. Of his seven wonders, six are natural wonders: caverns, wells and a hill, and one is man-made. Here are the wonders as Hobbes described them.
1. St Ann's Well in Buxton
Unto St. Ann the Fountain sacred is:
With waters hot and cold its sources rise,
And in its Sulphur-veins there’s med'cine lies.
This cures the palsied members of the old.
And cherishes the nerves grown stiff and cold.
2. The Ebbing and Flowing Well
A thousand paces off, a fount doth rise.
From the low caverns of a grassie hill;
With double mouth its waters gushing still.
Which since the admir'd flux of the greater sea
Doth by report in its small channel play
3. Poole's Cavern in Buxton
One thing remained, but highly worth our view,
Pool's hole, a cave so called and near us too.
Pool was a famous thief, and as we're told
Equal to Cacus, and perchance as old.
Shrowded within this darksome hid retrieve
By spoils of those he robbed, he used to live
4. Peak Cavern in Castleton
A noble Cave between two rocks appears,
Unto the sun unknown, but to the stars
Fearing to be immerg'd, and both the bears
Turn'd, it its mouth with horrour does present:
Just like a furnace, or as Hell they paint,
Swallowing with open jawes the damned croud
5. Chatsworth House near Bakewell
On the English Alps, where Darbies Peak doth rise,
High up in hills, that emulate the skies,
And largely waters all the vales below,
With rivers that still plentifully flow,
Doth Chatsworth by swift Derwins Channel stand
Fam'd for its Pile, and Lord, for both are grand
6. Mam Tor near Castleton
Got out, as is the pole a Mountain tall
Lifts up his head, like an old ruin'd Wall
Ready made weak by breaches now to fall.
Tis said eternally the Sand falls down,
Without the hills least diminution;
7. Eldon Hole near Castleton
...the stone
We drop, which circled in thick mist is thrown.
Against a rock, the cavern groans the while,
Loud sighs are vented from the shaken pile.
from rock to rock, the sound goes downward still,
Less heard by us but the more heard by Hell
Title page for 'De Mirabilibus Pecci being the Wonders of the Peak in Darby-Shire' (1678) by Thomas HobbesDerbyshire Record Office
Hobbes' book has been reprinted many times. Its wonders remain popular attractions today, 400 years after his book was first published.