Letters on the scenery of WalesBaldwin, Cradock, and Joy, 1821 - 80 sider |
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Side xiv
... Lake - its cha- racter . - Dolbadarn Tower . - Best time for viewing lake scenery . Caernarvon . - Views of the Castle . - Excur- sions from Caernarvon . - Bangor . - Nant Fangon.- Beaumaris . View of the Castle . - Cromlech at Plâs ...
... Lake - its cha- racter . - Dolbadarn Tower . - Best time for viewing lake scenery . Caernarvon . - Views of the Castle . - Excur- sions from Caernarvon . - Bangor . - Nant Fangon.- Beaumaris . View of the Castle . - Cromlech at Plâs ...
Side 22
... this singularity are Llandough , at what is called the lake , and between Flemingstone and St. Athans . † * Malkin's South Wales , p . 61 . + Ibid . p . 54 . Caerphilly * is an increasing little town , village you 22 LETTERS ON THE.
... this singularity are Llandough , at what is called the lake , and between Flemingstone and St. Athans . † * Malkin's South Wales , p . 61 . + Ibid . p . 54 . Caerphilly * is an increasing little town , village you 22 LETTERS ON THE.
Side 90
... lugh , light ; Dowrdwy , loud water , from duraah , noise ; Edwy , swift stream , from ehed , to fly . Camden , Edit . Gibson , p . 587. Llyn Gwyn is the white lake . left , stands a solitary stone pillar , like that 90 LETTERS ON THE.
... lugh , light ; Dowrdwy , loud water , from duraah , noise ; Edwy , swift stream , from ehed , to fly . Camden , Edit . Gibson , p . 587. Llyn Gwyn is the white lake . left , stands a solitary stone pillar , like that 90 LETTERS ON THE.
Side 109
... lake itself is worth a visit . It is about three miles round , encircled with sloping mountains , a * The seat of Idris . Tradition makes Idris an enormous giant . He is supposed to have been a prince of these parts ; but the period is ...
... lake itself is worth a visit . It is about three miles round , encircled with sloping mountains , a * The seat of Idris . Tradition makes Idris an enormous giant . He is supposed to have been a prince of these parts ; but the period is ...
Side 116
... Lake of Three Grains , a small pool by the road side , with three masses of rock lying near it : the giant Idris , they tell you , shook them out of his shoe , when he stopped to drink there . The shaggy head of the mountain rising into ...
... Lake of Three Grains , a small pool by the road side , with three masses of rock lying near it : the giant Idris , they tell you , shook them out of his shoe , when he stopped to drink there . The shaggy head of the mountain rising into ...
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Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
Abbey Aberystwith Anglesey appear arch artist bank Barmouth beautiful Beddgelert Bingley Brecon Bring Bualt Cader Idris Caermarthen Caernarvon called Cambr Cambrian Capel Curig Cardigan Castle character church colour Conwy Conwy Castle Corwen cottages Cromlech cross curious Denbigh descend Devil's Bridge Dinas dingle distance Dolbadarn Dolgelle Dolmelynllyn drawing excursion fall feet foot Girald Hafod hanging wood height hill Kilgerran lake landscape LETTER Llan Llanberis Llanrwst Llaugharne Llyn looking Machynllaeth Malkin Mawdach Mawr Merioneth miles mill Monmouth Mynach Narbeth Neath North Wales objects outline painter pass pedestrian pencil Penmaen perpendicular picture picturesque Pont Aberglasllyn Pontneath Vechan precipice principal Rhaiadr Rhayader Rhydoll river road rock rocky ruins scene scenery seen side sketch Snowdon South Wales spot STATION steep stone sublimity Swansea Tenby torrent Tour tower town trees Tregaron vale variety village walk waterfall Welch whole
Populære avsnitt
Side 72 - Loved the Church so well, and gave so largely to it, They thought it should have canopied their bones Till doomsday ; — but all things have their end — Churches and cities, which have diseases like to men, Must have like death which we have.
Side 77 - He is now numbered with the classics of the art, though little more than the fifth part of a century has elapsed since death relieved him from the apathy of cognoscenti, the envy of rivals, and the neglect of a tasteless public ; for Wilson, whose works will soon command prices as proud as those of Claude, Poussin, or Elzheimer, resembled the last most in his fate, and lived and died nearer to indigence than ease.
Side 110 - But leading all his life at home in peace, Always in sight of his own smoke, no seas, No other seas he knows, no other torrent, Than that which waters with its silver current His native meadows ; and that very earth Shall give him burial which first gave him birth. ' To summon timely sleep, he doth not need...
Side 126 - Mr. Parry* has been here, and scratched out such ravishing blind harmony, such tunes of a thousand years old, with names enough to choke you, as have set all this learned body a-dancing, and inspired them with due reverence for my old Bard, his countryman, whenever he shall appear. Mr. Parry, you must know, has put my Ode in motion again, and has brought it at last to a conclusion.
Side 93 - Under an oak whose antique root peeps out Upon the brook that brawls along this wood ; To the which place a poor sequester'd stag, That from the hunter's aim had ta'en a hurt, Did come to languish...
Side 92 - To-day, my lord of Amiens and myself Did steal behind him, as he lay along Under an oak, whose antique root peeps out Upon the brook that brawls along this wood...
Side 56 - IB this station the sea bounds the distance. Nature's compositions are seldom complete or correct; but here nothing seems in the wrong place, and little which one would wish away. The only liberties, necessary to be taken, are a tree or stump, planted at the left, corner, and the uniformity of the long hedge on the right of the fore ground somewhat broken. " About five miles from Llaugharne you pass Green Bridge, by some thought a curiosity, though nothing more than a small stream on the right side...
Side 77 - Wilson, without so great a feature, had a more varied and more proportionate power: he observed nature in all her appearances, and had a characteristic touch for all her forms. But though in effects of dewy freshness and silent evening lights, few...
Side ii - Producing change of beauty ever new. —Ah ! that such beauty, varying in the light Of living nature, cannot be portrayed By words, nor by the pencil's silent skill; But is the property of him alone Who hath beheld it, noted it with care, And in his mind recorded it with love!
Side 77 - Wilson,' says Fuseli, discoursing on art in 1801, ' observed nature in all her appearances, and had a characteristic touch for all her forms. But, though in effects of dewy freshness and silent evening lights few have equalled and fewer excelled him, his grandeur is oftener allied to terror, bustle, and convulsion, than to calmness and tranquillity. He is now numbered with the classics of the art, though little more than the fifth part of a...