A View of the Present State of the Scilly Islands:: Exhibiting Their Vast Importance to the British Empire; the Improvements of which They are Susceptible; and a Particlar Account of the Means Lately Adopted for the Amelioration of the Condition of the Inhabitants, by the Establishment and Extension of Their FisheriesF. C. and J. Rivington; Longman, and Company; Carthew, County Library, Truro; and all other booksellers., 1822 - 344 páginas |
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Página 11
... five sail of the line and two hundred mer- chant vessels , in the different harbours ; but adds that , by building two Moles , or Break- waters , - ( the one nearly midway , and in a curvilinear form , in the Broad Sound , between St ...
... five sail of the line and two hundred mer- chant vessels , in the different harbours ; but adds that , by building two Moles , or Break- waters , - ( the one nearly midway , and in a curvilinear form , in the Broad Sound , between St ...
Página 13
... five thousand , and forty tons ; making a total of four millions , seven hundred and thirty thousand , and forty tons , to be cast into the sea for these important works . Having thus shewn , from my own observation and the accurate ...
... five thousand , and forty tons ; making a total of four millions , seven hundred and thirty thousand , and forty tons , to be cast into the sea for these important works . Having thus shewn , from my own observation and the accurate ...
Página 33
... when Britons , Saxons , and Danes , were alternately harrassing , and harrassed by , each other , under all the circumstances of barbarian D warfare , -occasion a chasm of nearly five hun- dred Chap . II . ] 33 THE SCILLY ISLANDS .
... when Britons , Saxons , and Danes , were alternately harrassing , and harrassed by , each other , under all the circumstances of barbarian D warfare , -occasion a chasm of nearly five hun- dred Chap . II . ] 33 THE SCILLY ISLANDS .
Página 34
... five hun- dred years in the history of Scilly , which no writer has attempted to supply . This is the more to be regretted , as it was probably in this interval that those changes occurred in the natural state and appearance of the ...
... five hun- dred years in the history of Scilly , which no writer has attempted to supply . This is the more to be regretted , as it was probably in this interval that those changes occurred in the natural state and appearance of the ...
Página 41
... five thousand pounds , to stand in the pillory , to have his ears cut off , and afterwards to be imprisoned for life , for writing " seditious , schismatical , and libellous books ; " -after re- ceiving the former part of his severe ...
... five thousand pounds , to stand in the pillory , to have his ears cut off , and afterwards to be imprisoned for life , for writing " seditious , schismatical , and libellous books ; " -after re- ceiving the former part of his severe ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
A View of the Present State of the Scilly Islands: Exhibiting Their Vast ... George Woodley Sin vista previa disponible - 2008 |
Términos y frases comunes
abbots of Tavistock acres Agnes amongst ancient Annet appearance basons boats breadth Bryher burrows Carn Castle channel Church cliffs coast Cornwall Cressa cultivated denomination different Islands distance distress Duchy of Cornwall East England erected expence extending fathoms feet high fish fishery formerly forty garrison Godolphin grant ground Gugh half Harbour Heath height Helen's hill hogshead houses Hugh Town hundred inhabitants Isles Isles of Scilly kelp land Land's End ledges Longships Lord Lord Proprietor Martin's Mary's mile nature nearly North noticed observed Off-Islands Old Town passage Peninis Phoenicians pilots Piper's Hole Pool Porth Porth Cressa present probably quay Rat Island remains remarkable rock called rocky Samson sand sandy says Scilly Islands shew ships shore Society for Promoting soil Star Castle stones Teän tide tion Tresco Troutbeck twelve twenty vessels walls weather West White Island whole yards
Pasajes populares
Página 24 - Tarshish was thy merchant by reason of the multitude of all kind of riches; with silver, iron, tin, and lead, they traded in thy fairs.
Página viii - I returned, and saw under the sun, that the race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong, neither yet bread to the wise, nor yet riches to men of understanding, nor yet favour to men of skill; but time and chance happeneth to them all.
Página 19 - Every thing that may abide the fire, ye shall make it go through the fire, and it shall be clean : nevertheless it shall be purified with the water of separation : and all that abideth not the fire ye shall make go through the water.
Página 49 - ... the remainder of the day is passed in gaiety and mirth. In the small fishing village of Ambleteuse, in the neighbourhood of Boulogne, lived a peasant, Francois Gerval by name, whose only wealth consisted in those mental possessions which dignify even poverty. By the...
Página 39 - all the churches of Sully, with their appurtenances," and the land as the monks or hermits held it in the time of King Edward the Confessor, and Burgal, Bishop of Cornwall.
Página 325 - Churches in England; applied to the Purposes of the Society for Promoting the Enlargement and Building of Churches and Chapels.
Página 115 - About three or four o'clock in the afternoon, the kiln is usually lighted, which is done by placing a little ignited furze into the bottom of the pit, and gently strewing some of the driest ore-weed on the flame, which, by having the fuel continually renewed, in a short time becomes and remains a lofty and vivid blaze, surmounted by a column of snowwhite smoke...
Página 68 - I conclude therefore" says he, " that these Islands have undergone some great catastrophe; and besides the apparent diminution of their islets by sea and tempest, must have suffered greatly by a subsidence of the land, (the common consequence of earthquakes) attended by a sudden inundation in those parts where the above-mentioned ruins, fences, mines, and other things of which we have no vestiges now remaining, formerly stood. This inundation probably destroyed many of the ancient inhabitants, and...
Página 191 - Water, descending, as it distills from the Sides of the rocky Passage: By the Fall of Water heard, farther in, it is probable there may be rocky Descents in the Passage: The Drippings from the Sides have worn the Passage, as far as it can be seen, into very various angular Surfaces.
Página 20 - Druses, that a mineral was discovered which produced both lead and silver; though, as such a discovery would have ruined the whole district by attracting the attention of the Turks, they made haste to destroy every vestige of it.