Rural Rides: In the Counties of Surrey, Kent, Sussex, Hants, Berks, Oxford, Bucks, Wilts, Somerset, Gloucester, Hereford, Salop, Worcester,j Stafford, Leicester, Hertford, Essex, Suffolk, Norfolk, Cambridge, Huntington, Nottingham, Lincoln, York, Lancaster, Durham, and Northumberland, During the Years 1821 to 1832, with Economical and Political Observations, Band 2Reeves and Turner, 1885 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 83
Seite 2
... England until 1657 , at which time it was sold for £ 6 , and even £ 10 , per lb. From 1660 to 1689 , a duty was levied on the drink made with tea , at the rate of 8d . per gallon ; but at the latter date & duty of 5s . per lb ...
... England until 1657 , at which time it was sold for £ 6 , and even £ 10 , per lb. From 1660 to 1689 , a duty was levied on the drink made with tea , at the rate of 8d . per gallon ; but at the latter date & duty of 5s . per lb ...
Seite 3
... England now is . The people must never more , after a few years , have tasted mutton , though living surrounded with flocks of sheep . Easton , near Winchester , Wednesday Evening , 9th Nov. I intended to go from Uphusband to Stonehenge ...
... England now is . The people must never more , after a few years , have tasted mutton , though living surrounded with flocks of sheep . Easton , near Winchester , Wednesday Evening , 9th Nov. I intended to go from Uphusband to Stonehenge ...
Seite 7
... England . Those colonies are a dead expense without a possibility of their ever being of any use , There are , I see , a church and a barrack destroyed . And , why a barrack ? What ! were there bayonets wanted already to keep the people ...
... England . Those colonies are a dead expense without a possibility of their ever being of any use , There are , I see , a church and a barrack destroyed . And , why a barrack ? What ! were there bayonets wanted already to keep the people ...
Seite 9
... England was , out of all com- parison , more populous than it is now . When we began to get up towards the Downs , we , to our great surprise , saw them covered with Snow . " Sad times coming on for poor Sir Glory , " said I to Richard ...
... England was , out of all com- parison , more populous than it is now . When we began to get up towards the Downs , we , to our great surprise , saw them covered with Snow . " Sad times coming on for poor Sir Glory , " said I to Richard ...
Seite 10
... England . from her oppressors ? A little to our right , as we came along , we left the village of Kimston , where ' Squire Græme once lived , as was before related . Here , too , lived a ' Squire Ridge , a famous fox- hunter , at a ...
... England . from her oppressors ? A little to our right , as we came along , we left the village of Kimston , where ' Squire Græme once lived , as was before related . Here , too , lived a ' Squire Ridge , a famous fox- hunter , at a ...
Inhalt
13 | |
56 | |
68 | |
85 | |
103 | |
112 | |
157 | |
160 | |
223 | |
240 | |
272 | |
285 | |
290 | |
318 | |
319 | |
339 | |
163 | |
180 | |
191 | |
209 | |
221 | |
222 | |
351 | |
361 | |
372 | |
378 | |
388 | |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Abbey acres amongst appears Appleshaw Avon beautiful believe Bill Botley bread Burghclere called cattle Chiddingfold church clothing Cobbett corn Cotswold crop dare say Devizes England farm farmers fellow Forest gentlemen give Gloucestershire grass ground half Hampshire Herefordshire Hexham Heytesbury Highworth hill Holbeach horse hundred labourers land Lincolnshire live locust London look Lord meadows means meat miles Milston miserable morning nearly never o'clock paper-money parish park Parliament parsonage-houses persons Petersfield poor poor-rates population pounds present pretty produce ride river road Romsey ruin Salisbury Scotch seen sheep shillings side Sir James Graham sort South spot Steeple Langford suffered suppose tax-eaters taxes thing thousand Thursley tithes told town trees turnips vale valley village wages Warminster wheat whole Wiltshire Winchester woods Worcestershire
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 85 - Hear this, O ye that swallow up the needy, Even to make the poor of the land to fail, Saying, When will the new moon be gone, that we may sell corn? And the sabbath, that we may set forth wheat, Making the ephah small, and the shekel great, And falsifying the balances by deceit? That we may buy the poor for silver, And the needy for a pair of shoes ; Yea, and sell the refuse of the wheat?
Seite 292 - There is abundant authority for saying that Christianity is part and parcel of the law of the land...
Seite 205 - WITH regard likewise to animals ferae naturae, all mankind had by the original grant of the creator a right to pursue and take any fowl or insect of the air, any fish or inhabitant of the waters, and any beast or reptile of the field : and this natural right still continues in every individual, unless where it is restrained by the civil laws of the country.
Seite 205 - All these things, so long as they remain in possession, every man has a right to enjoy without disturbance ; but if once they escape from his custody, or he voluntarily abandons the use of them, they return to the common stock, and any man else has an equal right to seize and enjoy them afterwards.
Seite 163 - «country gentlemen? The last to bid the cry of warfare cease, The first to make a malady of peace. For what were all these country patriots born? To hunt, and vote, and raise the price of corn? But corn, like every mortal thing, must fall, Kings, conquerors, and markets most of all.
Seite 57 - ... it seemed to me, that one way of exposing this mixture of madness and of blasphemy was, to take a look, now that the harvest is in, at the produce, the mouths, the condition, and the changes that have taken place, in a spot like this, which God has favoured with every good that he has had to bestow upon man.
Seite 55 - Milston ; and at the end of about a mile, from the top of a very high part of the down, with a steep slope towards the valley, I first saw this Valley of Avon ; and a most beautiful sight it was ! Villages, hamlets, large farms, towers, steeples, fields, meadows, orchards, and very fine timber trees, scattered all over the valley.
Seite 207 - Law, now arrived to, and wantoning in, its highest vigour : both founded upon the same unreasonable notions of permanent property in wild creatures; and both productive of the same tyranny to the commons : but with this difference ; that the Forest Laws established only one mighty hunter throughout the land, the Game Laws have raised a little Nimrod in every manor.
Seite 242 - expelled: the cottages and the churches were burnt: and " more than thirty square miles, of a rich and populous district "were withdrawn from cultivation and converted into a wil"derness, to afford suff1cient range for the deer, and ample "space for the royal diversion.
Seite 296 - They are all painted or washed white ; the sails are black ; it was a fine morning, the wind was brisk, and their twirling altogether, added greatly to the beauty of the scene, which, having the broad and beautiful arm of the sea on the one hand, and the fields and meadows, studded with farmhouses, on the other, appeared to me the most beautiful sight of the kind that I had ever beheld3.