Berkeley Castle: An Historical Romance, 1 tomasRichard Bentley, 1836 - 874 psl. |
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4 psl.
... Forest ; and further yet , in our rear , the Malvern Mountains , rising in comparatively solitary magnificence . We are now passing over Wickster's Bridge , and are distant from Gloucester ten miles . Right and left the Castle Estate ...
... Forest ; and further yet , in our rear , the Malvern Mountains , rising in comparatively solitary magnificence . We are now passing over Wickster's Bridge , and are distant from Gloucester ten miles . Right and left the Castle Estate ...
76 psl.
... forest and field , but more indolently inclined than either of the others ; though those who were present on the fatal day on which he lost his brother at Chatillon , said , that , when he saw him fall , there was no want of activity ...
... forest and field , but more indolently inclined than either of the others ; though those who were present on the fatal day on which he lost his brother at Chatillon , said , that , when he saw him fall , there was no want of activity ...
122 psl.
... forest of Alweston , which I had heard my father say had been in the custody of the Berkeley family since the reign of King John . * Here we entered on , to me , a fairy land of imagination ; my horse now trod that soil where the heroes ...
... forest of Alweston , which I had heard my father say had been in the custody of the Berkeley family since the reign of King John . * Here we entered on , to me , a fairy land of imagination ; my horse now trod that soil where the heroes ...
125 psl.
... forest bounds , and that we had entered upon the private domains of Berkeley Castle . Here was news for me ; and I whispered to Isabel to let us ride to some situation whence the castle might be visible ; for though residing within ten ...
... forest bounds , and that we had entered upon the private domains of Berkeley Castle . Here was news for me ; and I whispered to Isabel to let us ride to some situation whence the castle might be visible ; for though residing within ten ...
127 psl.
... Forest . We both stopped , in admiration of the scene , Isabel regarding the immediate view , and the ex- treme beauty which it offered ; while my mind ran back for hundreds of years , to all the stories that had ever been told me of ...
... Forest . We both stopped , in admiration of the scene , Isabel regarding the immediate view , and the ex- treme beauty which it offered ; while my mind ran back for hundreds of years , to all the stories that had ever been told me of ...
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Berkeley Castle– An Historical Romance, 1 tomas Grantley Fitzhardinge Berkeley Visos knygos peržiūra - 1836 |
Berkeley Castle– An Historical Romance, 1 tomas Grantley Fitzhardinge Berkeley Peržiūra negalima - 2016 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
Annette appearance arms arrived Aust Aust Cliff beneath Berkeley Castle Berkeley family Bishop of Worcester Black blow Bristol brother called castle Castro de Berkeley chase Cirencester command conversation Countess of Shrewsbury court cousin dark daughter dear Herbert death deer door Earl endeavouring enemy eyes father forest Forest of Dean garden gaze Gloucester hand hath head heard heart Henry VI honour horse hour Hugh Mull immediately Ingram Isabel King Lady Shrewsbury late leave light looked Lord Berkeley Lord Darcy Lord Lisle Lord Warwick manors Master Mead Master Rufus Mull Matford Maurice King Maurice's ment mind morning mother never night observation party passed present prisoners proceeded remained reply ride scarcely seemed Severn side Sir Maurice soon spot stood sword tears thee thing Thomas Berkeley thou hast thought tion trees voice walls Wanswell window words Wotton yards
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28 psl. - ... should have seen above one hundred churches and oratories in the counties of Gloucester and Somerset, and in the cities of Gloucester, Bristol, and Bath (besides as many more in other counties and places, as mine acquaintance have faithfully related to me), having their coats of arms and escutcheons, yea some their pictures, set up in their windows and walls, in and before this Lord's days, and their crosses formées in their true bearings.
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147 psl. - ... that period. Abel was present at the siege of Hereford, AD 1645, and invented a sort of hand-mill by which the wheat could be ground into flour for the soldiers. His ingenuity obtained for him the praise of Charles I., and the honourable title of "The King's Carpenter.