A Tour in a Phaeton Through the Eastern CountiesRichard Bentley & Son, 1889 - 403 psl. |
Knygos viduje
Rezultatai 15 iš 55
3 psl.
... matter this , in these days of personally conducted tours , when scenery is catalogued auction fashion , and all things described , even as to the best point of view , so that the ordinary tourist , armed with his faithful handbook , is ...
... matter this , in these days of personally conducted tours , when scenery is catalogued auction fashion , and all things described , even as to the best point of view , so that the ordinary tourist , armed with his faithful handbook , is ...
6 psl.
... matter necessary to be considered was , what portion it should be . A map was consulted , and after some discussion we selected the three counties of Norfolk , Suffolk , and Essex , as the scene of our perambulations . Unless I am ...
... matter necessary to be considered was , what portion it should be . A map was consulted , and after some discussion we selected the three counties of Norfolk , Suffolk , and Essex , as the scene of our perambulations . Unless I am ...
25 psl.
... matter , for I know more than one pretty peep of country whose sylvan loveliness , so charming and restful to the town - tired eye , has to me been for ever destroyed by the unsightly structures raised therein ; freaks in bricks and ...
... matter , for I know more than one pretty peep of country whose sylvan loveliness , so charming and restful to the town - tired eye , has to me been for ever destroyed by the unsightly structures raised therein ; freaks in bricks and ...
27 psl.
... matter , for the tips came pretty often . Seventy - two coaches passed the old house in the twenty - four hours ; them was lively times . I can well remember when fifty coach - horses and upwards were kept in these stables , besides ...
... matter , for the tips came pretty often . Seventy - two coaches passed the old house in the twenty - four hours ; them was lively times . I can well remember when fifty coach - horses and upwards were kept in these stables , besides ...
28 psl.
... even then have spare material . Whether the new stables would last as long or require as little attention in the way of re- pairs , is quite another matter . WAYSIDE MONUMENTS . 29 Leaving Brentwood , by the side 28 A TOUR IN A PHAETON .
... even then have spare material . Whether the new stables would last as long or require as little attention in the way of re- pairs , is quite another matter . WAYSIDE MONUMENTS . 29 Leaving Brentwood , by the side 28 A TOUR IN A PHAETON .
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
abbey altar-tombs ancient artist beauty Beccles Bramfield brass building built carved charming church churchyard clerk coaching inns Colchester colour comfortable cottage Cromer curious delightful discovered driving drove England English Essex farmhouse farmstead Faulkbourne fresh gables grand green grey guide-book Hadleigh Halesworth half-timbered highwayman horses hostelry inns inscription interest journey KENTWELL HALL land landlord landscape Langdon Hills Layer Marney LAYER MARNEY TOWER Little Braxted look manifestly mansion miles modern monument never Norfolk Norfolk towns noticed old coaching old house old-fashioned old-time once ourselves painted passed past phaeton photograph picture picturesque pleasant portion pretty quaint quiet railway rain rambling rector Reepham remarked rest river road roof ruined rural scenery seemed side sketch spot Stalham stone strange structure Suffolk thatched thing tion told tomb took tourist town traveller trees village walls wayside weather whilst wild wind windmill wonder woods Yarmouth
Populiarios ištraukos
4 psl. - And see all sights from pole to pole, And glance, and nod, and bustle by; And never once possess our soul Before we die.
232 psl. - Like as a plank of drift-wood Tossed on the watery main, Another plank encountered, Meets touches parts again ; So tossed, and drifting ever, On life's unresting sea, Men meet, and greet, and sever, Parting eternally.
114 psl. - Resigned unto the heavenly will, His son keeps on the business still.
111 psl. - MY sledge and hammer lie declin'd, My bellows, too, have lost their wind; My fire's extinct, my forge decay'd ; My vice is in the dust all laid ; My coal is spent, my iron gone, My nails are drove, my work is done.
332 psl. - Sir: I am scornfully amused at your appeal to me, of all people in the world the precisely least likely to give you a farthing! My first word to all men and boys who care to hear me is " Don't get into debt. Starve and go to heaven, but don't borrow. Try first begging, I don't mind, if it's really needful, stealing! But don't buy things you can't pay for!
157 psl. - If she had not been catcht and Supported by her Intended Husband. Of which Invisible Bruise After a struggle for above sixty Hours With that grand enemy to Life (But the certain and...
172 psl. - Were I in my castle of Bungay, Upon the river of Waveney, I would no care for the King of Cockney.
16 psl. - Such a prodigious valley, everywhere painted with the finest verdure, and intersected with numberless hedges and woods, appears beneath you that it is past description; the Thames winding through it, full of ships, and bounded by the hills of Kent. Nothing can exceed this amazing prospect, unless it be that which Hannibal exhibited to his disconsolate troops when he bade them behold the glories of the .Italian plains...
266 psl. - I pity the man who can travel from Dan. to Beersheba, and cry, 'Tis all barren and so it is; and so is all the world to him, who will not cultivate the fruits it offers.
86 psl. - Tis a finely toned, picturesque, sunshiny place, Recalling a dozen old stories ; With a rare British, good-natured, ruddy-hued face, Suggesting old wines and old Tories : Ah, many's the magnum of rare crusted port, Of vintage no one could cry fie on, Has been drunk by good men of the old-fashioned sort At the