Sketches of short tours at home and abroad, Volume 1Hamilton, Adams & Company, 1878 |
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Abbey afternoon afterwards appeared arrived ascended Barnard Castle Barnstaple bathing beautiful Blair Athol breakfast bridge Bridlington Bristol Brockenhurst Budleigh Salterton building called carriage Cathedral chapel charming Chiavenna church cliffs Clifton coach coast conveyance crossed Cushendall descended diligence distant drive early England entered excursion favourite Fécamp finest Forest glad Glen Tilt going grounds Guernsey half-past handsome harbour hill Hotel hour Ilfracombe Ilkley island lady lake Langdon Beck large number Loch Katrine lofty look Lynmouth miles Monday morning mountains neighbourhood night Normandy o'clock objects of interest ourselves Parracombe passed passengers peep Perth picturesque pleasant pleasing pretty railway reached remarkable river road rock Rouen route ruins scenery seen SHORT TOUR side spot stands station steamer stone stream Sunday table d'hôte tarry thought took the train tower town trees Trocadéro valley view is obtained village visited walk wooded Yarmouth
Popular passages
Page 175 - YE, who with warmth the public triumph feel Of talents dignified by sacred zeal, Here, to devotion's bard devoutly just, Pay your fond tribute due to Cowper's dust ! England, exulting in his spotless fame, Ranks with her dearest sons his favourite name.
Page 200 - Its meadows fertile, and, to crown the whole, In one delightful word, it is our home — Our native isle !
Page 183 - England's hill and dale, have passed by Heaven's decree, A changing light, a chequer'd shade, a mingled company. The good, the bad, have had their day, the Lord hath worked His will ; And England keeps her ancient faith, purer and brighter still. Where are they now, the famous men who lived in olden time ? They never see the noonday sun, nor hear the midnight chime. They sleep within their narrow cell, waiting the trumpet's voice ; Lord ! grant that I may rest in peace, and when I wake — rejoice.
Page 109 - Thou makest darkness, and it is night, wherein all the beasts of the forest do creep forth. 0 Lord, how manifold are thy works ! in wisdom hast thou made them all : the earth is full of thy riches.
Page 20 - We miss the cantering team, the winding way, The roadside halt, the post-horn's well-known air, The inns, the gaping towns, and all the landscape fair...
Page 150 - ... outside edge of the buttresses, and thus forms interior chapels all round, in addition to the aisles, gives a vast multiplicity of perspective below, which fills out the idea produced by the gigantic height of the central space. Such terms will not be considered extravagant when it is recollected that the vault is half as high again as the roof of Westminster Abbey.
Page 198 - Visitors are permitted to wander at their pleasure through the woods of Bolton, except on Sunday ; and an hour or two will not be misspent in exploring their beauties. The STRID is a contraction of the channel of the Wharfe, about two miles above the priory.
Page 63 - Creek, near the point where the Exe river joins it and forms a lake-like sheet of water. Crossing the bridge (adjoining which is the modern representative of the old mill of the abbey), and passing through the gate-house, overhung, like the long wall of the precincts, •with thick masses of ivy, you find...
Page 36 - ... mounts some cannon, and is garrisoned by a regiment of soldiers; but though there are some good houses and strong works within, it is not, in the modern acceptation of the word, a formidable fortification. Nothing can be more charmingly picturesque than the town of St. Peter's, seen from the water. It is built on the slope of an eminence, with the houses overtopping each other; and on approaching after sunset, the various lights from the windows give it a brilliant appearance of illumination....
Page 45 - ... two headlands, terminates in a fine rocky bay, within which are many caverns, and also the entries to one of those curious funnel-shaped openings called creux, of which the Pot in Little Serk, and several others round the coast, are less perfect examples. The " Creux du Derrible," as this is called, is a large natural shaft or chimney, communicating below with the sea, and opening above into a field. It resembles the shaft of a mine, and a wild growth of brambles and furze surrounds the opening,...