Letters written during a tour through South WalesC. and R. Baldwin, 1804 - 80 sider |
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Side x
... Head - Y Maen Sigl , or the shaking stone - Anecdote of Henry II - Isle of Ramsey - Peculiar breed of sheep - Bishop and his clerks - Birds which frequent these cliffs various- Falconry - Account of this ancient fashionable amusement ...
... Head - Y Maen Sigl , or the shaking stone - Anecdote of Henry II - Isle of Ramsey - Peculiar breed of sheep - Bishop and his clerks - Birds which frequent these cliffs various- Falconry - Account of this ancient fashionable amusement ...
Side 8
... head of the Iter . What tends to confirm the conjecture is , that the Romans always , if possible , fixed their stations so as to be able to form commu- nications by signals from one to the other . From the camp at Lansdown this of ...
... head of the Iter . What tends to confirm the conjecture is , that the Romans always , if possible , fixed their stations so as to be able to form commu- nications by signals from one to the other . From the camp at Lansdown this of ...
Side 21
... head of an extensive sand - bank , called the Welsh Hook , and to which it forms an admonitory beacon . The finny tribes were now in pleasing pastime ; and among them the plunderer of the ocean , the porpoise , was playing his gambols ...
... head of an extensive sand - bank , called the Welsh Hook , and to which it forms an admonitory beacon . The finny tribes were now in pleasing pastime ; and among them the plunderer of the ocean , the porpoise , was playing his gambols ...
Side 25
... life . We were now upon the land of the ancient Silures , long the theatre of British valour and Roman prowess ; where the brave Caractacus , at the head 1 of the enraged and insulted Britons , charged the Port Skith Fort - Anecdote . 25.
... life . We were now upon the land of the ancient Silures , long the theatre of British valour and Roman prowess ; where the brave Caractacus , at the head 1 of the enraged and insulted Britons , charged the Port Skith Fort - Anecdote . 25.
Side 48
... head of the British confederacy , as Çassibelan and Caractacus were at an earlier epoch of British history this continued for several centuries afterwards , and was faintly visible in the authority exercised by the last Llewelyn , till ...
... head of the British confederacy , as Çassibelan and Caractacus were at an earlier epoch of British history this continued for several centuries afterwards , and was faintly visible in the authority exercised by the last Llewelyn , till ...
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Letters Written During a Tour Through South Wales John Evans Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2023 |
Letters Written During a Tour Through South Wales John Evans Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2020 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
abbey abounds ancient appear arches beauty Bishop bridge Bristol British Britons building built Caerleon Caernarvonshire Caerwent called Cantref Cardigan castle cattle church cliffs coal coast consequence considered consisting David's defended descended discovered distance Dubricius Earl England English erected farm favour feet formed former formerly frequently furnish garrison Glamorgan ground Gryffydd Gyraldus Henry Henry II hills inhabitants inscription iron King labour land limestone Llewelyn Lord miles mountains nature neighbourhood Normans North Wales numerous observed Ogmore pass Pembroke Pembrokeshire port Portishead possession present prince principal probably produce remains residence Rhys Rhys ap Tewdwr rising river road rocks Roman ruins sands Saxons schistose scite Severn sheep shew side Silures South Wales spirit stands stone strata supposed Swansea Tenby tide tion tower town Uske vale Vale of Glamorgan vessels vicinity village walls Welsh William wood
Populære avsnitt
Side 346 - guilt with pallid fear To sheltering caverns fly, And justly dread the vengeful fate That thunders through the sky. Protected by that hand, whose law The threat'ning storms obey, Intrepid virtue smiles secure As in the blaze of day. In the thick cloud's tremendous gloom, The lightning's
Side 101 - Mark the year, and mark the night, When Severn shall re-echo with affright, The shrieks of death through Berkley's roof that ring, Shrieks of an agonizing king.
Side 374 - sky, Which in it such a shape of solitude doth bear, As Nature at the first appointed it for prayer; Where in an aged cell, with moss and ivy grown, In which not to this day the sun hath ever shone, That reverend British saint, in zealous ages past, To contemplation lived
Side 349 - in that state of life in which it has pleased God to call us, we shall, after death, change this poor uncertain life for a better, where we shall be
Side 349 - And keep their impious turbans on, without Good morrow to the sun. Hail thou fair Heaven ! We house i'the rock, yet use thee not so hardly As prouder livers do.
Side 226 - Sate upon a flowery bed, With my hand beneath my head, While stray'd my eyes o'er Tbwy's flood, Over mead and over wood, From house to house, from hill to hill, Till contemplation had- her fill.
Side 349 - as low as ours. Stoop boys, this gate Instructs you how t'adore the heavens, and bows you To morning's holy office. The gates of monarchs Are arched so high, that giants may get
Side 288 - the Dane was to give the king a hawk for liberty every time he landed to traffic through England. Sir John Stanley had a grant of the Isle of Man from Henry IV. to be held of the king his heirs and successors, by homage and service of two falcons
Side 225 - in whose silent shade, For the modest Muses made, So oft I have the evening still, At the fountain of a rill,
Side 378 - Thomas, and his son, William Earl of Pembroke, who was beheaded at Banbury. Sir William Thomas lived in the reign of King Henry V. (1413), and was present with the king, in company with Sir David Gam, at the ever memorable battle of Agincourt, where he lost his life. What corroborates this opinion is, that