The Tourist's New Guide: Containing a Description of the Lakes, Mountains, and Scenery, in Cumberland, Westmorland, and Lancashire, with Some Account of Their Bordering Towns and Villages. Being the Result of Observations Made During a Residence of Eighteen Years in Ambleside and Keswick, Volym 1R. Lough and Company, 1819 |
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Sida 8
... direct from Lancaster by way of Kendal and Bowness to Ambleside , or through Ulverston and by Con- iston Water to Ambleside . Mr. West says that " Mr. Gray was too late in the season for enjoying the beauties of pros- pect and rural ...
... direct from Lancaster by way of Kendal and Bowness to Ambleside , or through Ulverston and by Con- iston Water to Ambleside . Mr. West says that " Mr. Gray was too late in the season for enjoying the beauties of pros- pect and rural ...
Sida 17
... direct line from Sand - gate to Ulverston , but when higher up the river , the way to the sands is by Holker- Hall or Wharf - flat ; at present the sands are taken at the latter place . D " In short , on a fine summer day , a ride ...
... direct line from Sand - gate to Ulverston , but when higher up the river , the way to the sands is by Holker- Hall or Wharf - flat ; at present the sands are taken at the latter place . D " In short , on a fine summer day , a ride ...
Sida 58
... direct them to a principle of their own hearts , which , if duly attended to , would introduce rec- titude of mind , simplicity of manners , a life and * History of the people called Quakers , Vol . I. p . 56 . conversation adorned with ...
... direct them to a principle of their own hearts , which , if duly attended to , would introduce rec- titude of mind , simplicity of manners , a life and * History of the people called Quakers , Vol . I. p . 56 . conversation adorned with ...
Sida 85
... direct job like the present , the horses generally return after resting about two hours . No post horses are kept at the New Inn , which prevents those who wish to see the country from the water in their day's excursion , from ...
... direct job like the present , the horses generally return after resting about two hours . No post horses are kept at the New Inn , which prevents those who wish to see the country from the water in their day's excursion , from ...
Sida 88
... direct to Ambleside , by which the tremendous hill from the New Inn by Mr. Knotts will be avoided . Near the church and bridge at Coniston , and out of the fields on the way from the bridge to Coniston Hall , there are many most ...
... direct to Ambleside , by which the tremendous hill from the New Inn by Mr. Knotts will be avoided . Near the church and bridge at Coniston , and out of the fields on the way from the bridge to Coniston Hall , there are many most ...
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The Tourist's New Guide: Containing a Description of the Lakes ..., Volym 1 William Green (of Ambleside.) Obegränsad förhandsgranskning - 1819 |
The Tourist's New Guide: Containing a Description of the Lakes, Mountains ... William Green (of Ambleside ) Ingen förhandsgranskning - 2020 |
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Abbey Ambleside amongst ancient appear artist ascend assemblage banks beautiful Beck bleside Borrowdale Bowness Brathay buildings called Chapel charming church Coniston Water cottages craggy dale Derwent Water descent distance Easedale elegant elevated Esthwaite Esthwaite Water excursion farm house ferry-house foot Furness Furness Abbey grand Grasmere green grounds Grove half a mile Hall Hartshope Hawkshead Haws Water head Helm Crag Helvellyn hill Holm inclosures island Kendal Keswick lake land Little Langdale Loughrigg Fell Loughrigg Tarn Low Wood moun mountains Nab Scar neighbouring Newby Bridge objects passes Patterdale Penrith picturesque Pike Place Fell pleasant Powley Bridge present pretty quarry rises river road rocks rocky Rothay rugged Rydal Water scene scenery seat Seat Sandal Seathwaite seen shore stands steep stones sublime summit tains tion traveller trees Troutbeck Ulls Water Ulverston vale valley village wall western side Westmorland Windermere winds writer Yewdale
Populära avsnitt
Sida 402 - See the wretch that long has tost On the thorny bed of pain, At length repair his vigour lost, And breathe and walk again ; The meanest floweret of the vale, The simplest note that swells the gale, The common sun, the air, the skies, To him are opening paradise.
Sida 197 - ... adorned in the sweetest manner with every object that can give variety to art, or elegance to nature ; trees, woods, villages, houses, farms, scattered with picturesque confusion, and waving to the eye in the most romantic landscapes that nature can exhibit.
Sida 182 - The poet's eye in a fine frenzy rolling, Doth glance from heav'n to earth, from earth to heav'n; And as imagination bodies forth The forms of things unknown, the poet's pen Turns them to shape, and gives to airy nothing A local habitation and a name. Such tricks hath strong imagination.
Sida 391 - The bosom of the mountains spreading here into a broad basin, discovers in the midst Grasmere Water ; its margin is hollowed into small bays, with bold eminences, some of rock, some of soft turf, that half conceal and vary the figure of the little lake they command ; from the shore a low promontory pushes itself far into the water, and on it stands a white village with the parish...
Sida 32 - The abbey, which was formerly of such magnitude as nearly to fill up the breadth of the glen, is built of a pale red stone, dug from the neighbouring rocks, now changed by time and weather to a tint of dusky brown, which accords well with the hues of plants and shrubs, that every where emboss the mouldering arches.
Sida 24 - SEE the wild waste of all-devouring years! How Rome her own sad sepulchre appears ! With nodding arches, broken temples spread, The very tombs now vanish'd like their dead!
Sida 344 - Walked over a spungy meadow or two, and began to mount the hill through a broad straight green alley among the trees, and with some toil gained the summit. From hence saw the lake opening directly at my feet, majestic in its calmness, clear and smooth as a blue mirror, with winding shores and low points of land covered with green inclosures, white farm-houses looking out among the trees, and cattle feeding.
Sida 287 - It is seen from a summer-house; before which it's rocky cheeks circling on each side form a little area; appearing through the window like a picture in a frame. The water falls within a few yards of the eye, which being rather above its level, has a long perspective view of the stream, as it hurries from the higher grounds; tumbling, in various, little breaks, through...
Sida 37 - ... to the Abbot, to be true to him against all men, excepting the King. Every mesne lord obeyed the summons of the Abbot, or his steward, in raising his quota of armed men, and every tenant of a whole tenement furnished a man and...
Sida 41 - ... he would give vent to the effusions of his fancy, and harangue in the most animated manner upon the subject of his art, with a sublimity of idea, and a peculiarity of expressive language, that was entirely his own, and in which education or reading had no share. These sallies of natural genius, clothed in natural eloquence, were perfectly original, very highly edifying, and entertaining in the extreme. They were uttered in a hurried accent, an elevated tone, and very commonly accompanied with...