| Hardwicke Drummond Rawnsley - 1894 - 270 páginas
...seen from Ash Course lay yet in view: and, side by side with Eskdale, we now saw the sister vale oif Donnerdale, terminated by the Duddon Sands. "But the...not to be conceived. We now beheld the whole mass of the Great Gavel from its base—the Den of Wastdale at our feet, a gulph immeasurable—Grasmire, and... | |
| Hardwicke Drummond Rawnsley - 1901 - 294 páginas
...of the mountains below and close to us is not to be conceived. We now beheld the whole mass of the Great Gavel from its base — the Den of Wastdale...Crummock — Ennerdale and its mountains, and the sea beyond."1 We can stand with Wilkinson and Wordsworth, and feel the same awful silence sink into our... | |
| Hardwicke Drummond Rawnsley - 1901 - 292 páginas
...air. The vales which we had seen from Ash Course2 lay yet in view : and, side by side with Eskdale, we now saw the sister vale of Donnerdale, terminated by the Duddon Sands. 1 Tours to the British Mountains, with Poems of Lowlher and Eamont Vale. 1824. pp. 229, 230. 2 An error... | |
| William Wordsworth - 1906 - 260 páginas
...the air. The vales which we had seen from Ash-course lay yet in view ; and side by side with Eskdale we now saw the sister Vale of Donnerdale terminated...its base, — the Den of Wastdale at our feet — a gulf immeasurable ; Grasmere and the other mountains of Crummock ; Ennerdale and its mountains ; and... | |
| 1891 - 614 páginas
...the air. The vales which we had seen from Esk Haws lay yet in view ; and, side by side with Eskdale, we now saw the sister vale of Donnerdale, terminated...Sands. But the majesty of the mountains below, and tin-.! to us, is not to be conceived. We now beheld the whole mass of Great Gable from its base ; the... | |
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