The Natural and Artificial Wonders of the United KingdomG.B. Whittaker, 1825 - 360 páginas |
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The Natural and Artificial Wonders of the United Kingdom Sir Richard Phillips Sin vista previa disponible - 1825 |
Términos y frases comunes
abbey aisles altar alto-relievo ancient antiquity apartments appears arches architecture beautiful Bishop breadth brick building built called castle cathedral ceiling centre chapel choir church circular columns compartments consists contains Corinthian order court cromlech crown diameter ditch Dock-yard door Doric order edifice Edward Edward IV elegant entablature entrance erected feet high feet in length feet long figures four front FURNESS ABBEY gallery gardens gate Gothic grand Hamoaze height Henry Henry VIII hill inches King late Lord magnificent Majesty marble ment miles monuments nave navy nearly NETLEY ABBEY octagon officers ornamented painted palace Park pavement pediment pillars placed Portland stone Portsmouth present Prince principal Queen reign remains Roman roof round royal ruins Saxon ships situated Southampton river stone style supported temple tion tower transept upper vallum various vault wall west end whole William William the Conqueror WRead yards
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Página 231 - Park, many hundreds of coaches and gallants in attire, but most shameful powdered hair men, and painted and spotted women. Some men played with a silver ball, and some took other recreation.
Página 96 - ... feet wide, little vestige now appears, except the foundation of a range of cloisters that formed its western boundary, and under the shade of which the monks, on days of high solemnity, passed in their customary procession round the court. What was the belfry is now a huge mass of detached ruin, picturesque from the loftiness of its shattered arches, and the high inequalities of the ground within them, where the tower that once crowned this building, having fallen, lies in vast fragments, now...
Página 105 - Now sunk, deserted, and with weeds o'ergrown, Yon prostrate walls their harder fate bewail ; Low on the ground their topmost spires are thrown, Once friendly marks to guide the wandering sail. " The ivy now with rude luxuriance bends Its tangled foliage through the cloister'd space, O'er the green window's mouldering height ascends, And fondly clasps it with a last embrace.
Página 194 - Garden, of which the principal entrance, with a stand on each side for rare flowers, forms one end. The two sides are enclosed with high trees, and the end facing the principal entrance is occupied by an aviary of a vast depth, in which is kept a numerous collection of birds, foreign and domestic.
Página 242 - That where an event so memorable had happened might not hereafter be unknown this stone was set up by John Lord Delaware who had seen the tree growing in this place anno 1745.
Página 60 - tis now demolished, and all this glory lieth in the dust, buried in its own ruins; there being nothing standing but a few broken walls, which seem to mourn their own approaching funerals.
Página 60 - What was finished may be thus described : Before the door of the great hall was a noble walk, whose length was the breadth of the court, arched over with curiously carved freestone, supported in the...
Página 164 - Mghly-jinished pieces of Gothic architecture in the world. On its site formerly stood a chapel, dedicated to the Virgin Mary, and also a tavern, distinguished by the sign of the White Rose. Henry, resolving to erect a superb mausoleum for himself and his family, pulled down the old chapel and tavern ; and on the llth of...
Página 187 - Florence, received four thousand two hundred and fifty ducats, for what he had already done; and 380/. 18i. had been paid for gilding only half of this monument. The cardinal dying soon after his disgrace, was buried in the cathedral at York,' and the monument remained unfinished. In 1646, the statues and figures of gilt copper, of exquisite workmanship, were sold. James II. converted this building into a popish chapel, and mass was publicly performed here. The...
Página 249 - The rolls from the time of King John to the beginning of the reign of Richard III. are kept here in fifty-six wainscot presses. They contain...