... this way ; but in regard to the other, it would appear, as if the distinguished founders of these mansions were utter enemies to the all-cheering comforts of light and air ; for notwithstanding small windows and apertures in the walls, agreeable to... Wensleydale: Or, Rural Contemplations : a Poem - Página 6por Thomas Maude - 1816 - 122 páginasVista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Edmund Burke - 1774 - 606 páginas
...agreeable to the mode of thofe days, might tend to give ftability and fafety to the inhabitants, in thofe military and feudal ages, certain it is, that much of this precaution might have been fpared, more efpecially aloft, without prejudice to either. Let us add to this account, the firft of... | |
| Francis Grose - 1784 - 422 páginas
...light and air ; for notwithstanding small windows and apertures in the walls, agreeable to the mode of those days, might tend to give stability to the pile,...aloft, without prejudice to either. Let us add to this account the first of all considerations, the circumstance of health, which must have been frequently... | |
| 1793 - 602 páginas
...agreeable to the mode of thole day«, might tend to gbe íhbiüty a¡ d fa'ety to the inhabitants, in thofe military and feudal ages, certain it is, that much of this precaution might have been fpared, morecfpecially aloft, without prejudice to either. Let us add to this account, the fin! of... | |
| 1803 - 598 páginas
...windows and apertures in the walls, agreeable to the mode of those days, , might tend to give stability and safety to the inhabitants, in those military and...might have been spared, more especially aloft, without preludice to eiiher. Let us add to this account, the first of all considerations, the circumstance... | |
| Arthur Jewitt - 376 páginas
...notwithstanding the small windows and apertures m the walls, agreeable to the mode of those days, might tend to stability to the pile and safety to the inhabitants...military and feudal ages, certain it is, that much of the precaution might have been spared, more especially aloft, without prejudice to either. Let us add... | |
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