The Channel Islands |
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Page xiii
... rocky groups . - Lighthouses on the French coast . - Chasse Marées Page . 1 CHAPTER II . ALDERNEY , ORTACH , AND THE CASQUETS . Geographical position of Alderney . - Its form , dimensions , and eleva- tion . - Survey of the coast ...
... rocky groups . - Lighthouses on the French coast . - Chasse Marées Page . 1 CHAPTER II . ALDERNEY , ORTACH , AND THE CASQUETS . Geographical position of Alderney . - Its form , dimensions , and eleva- tion . - Survey of the coast ...
Page xxiv
... rocky cliff called the Etacquerel . 15. A Ruined Arch , part of an old castle , near the ex- tremity of Cape Grosnez • 16. A Stone Anchor : a Sketch on the Coast , the Mar- tello tower in Grouville Bay in the middle dis- tance 17. View ...
... rocky cliff called the Etacquerel . 15. A Ruined Arch , part of an old castle , near the ex- tremity of Cape Grosnez • 16. A Stone Anchor : a Sketch on the Coast , the Mar- tello tower in Grouville Bay in the middle dis- tance 17. View ...
Page 4
... rocky groups clearly import ) received visits from the northern navigators . When the Nor- mans afterwards united with the Saxon and Danish tribes , who had already occupied England , these islands continued to be held by them . For a ...
... rocky groups clearly import ) received visits from the northern navigators . When the Nor- mans afterwards united with the Saxon and Danish tribes , who had already occupied England , these islands continued to be held by them . For a ...
Page 5
... rocky ledge , very little of which is sunk twenty fathoms , and which rises at frequent intervals to form groups of rocks and rocky islets . From the Casquets rocks , a line of about sixty - five miles , clearing the rocks off the west ...
... rocky ledge , very little of which is sunk twenty fathoms , and which rises at frequent intervals to form groups of rocks and rocky islets . From the Casquets rocks , a line of about sixty - five miles , clearing the rocks off the west ...
Page 7
... rocky coves and inlets , important for shelter , or requiring to be known that they may be avoided - are also of very considerable interest . Few parts of the world present , in so small a space , so much variety as is the case with ...
... rocky coves and inlets , important for shelter , or requiring to be known that they may be avoided - are also of very considerable interest . Few parts of the world present , in so small a space , so much variety as is the case with ...
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Common terms and phrases
a-half Alderney Aubin's beach beauty Bouley Bay BRAYE HARBOUR breakwater Brechou Britany broken Burhou called Casquets Castle Cornet caverns Channel Islands chapter church cliffs climate common connected covered Creux crustaceans cultivated deep detached rocks distance east Elizabeth Castle England English extending extremity fathoms favourable feet fish France Gouliot granite Grosnez ground Hanois rocks harbour headland Helier's Herm high water houses important interesting islands and rocks islets Jerbourg Jersey Jersey and Guernsey Jethou kind Lihou Little Sark low water mass miles Minquiers narrow natural nearly Normandy north-east northern obtained pebbles peculiar Peter's Port picturesque plants porphyry present rare remarkable rising road rocky sand sand-stone scenery sea-weed seen shore side singular species stone syenite table land temperature tide town trees Vale Castle valley variety vegetation veins visited vraic vulgaris walls weather whole wind yards
Popular passages
Page 122 - the horizon. The whole group of rocks and islands occupy an irregular area, measuring six and a-half miles from east to west, and five miles from north to south. The largest island, called La Grande He, is the furthest to the south, and is the only one of any importance.
Page 55 - not unpicturesque at a distance, although almost all have lost the stone tracery of the windows, and have been greatly neglected. Most of them have low spires; but St. Saviour's and St. Peter's-in-the-wood have towers. There are some interesting morsels of Norman work in some of the doorways, especially the Vale * and St. Martin's.
Page 125 - Blocks of every variety of form and size are grouped together in a thousand different ways, some rising into pyramids, others graduated and cut into irregular tiers of steps, others again heaped into confused masses, like the ruins of some giant structure; at one place, appearing like colossal Druidical stones; at another, entangled together like the rude materials of some
Page 395 - which warning we order to be published in all parts of our kingdom of England, and throughout our realms and dominions under our obedience, wheresoever they lie or are situated : that if any of our said officers or subjects shall be so rash as to presume to transgress these, our strict orders and commands, wo
Page 196 - 64 690 41 95 35 135 257 70 222 253 1862 equals, or even exceeds that island in the number of species. Thus, of twenty-five known species of ferns found in the islands, twenty-one occur in Guernsey and only twenty in Jersey. Five species are found in Guernsey only, and two in Jersey