| Ann Ward Radcliffe - 1794 - 478 pages
...Annette, concerning .it, with very unpleafant emotions. She looked fearfully on the almoft rooflefs walls, green with damps, and on the gothic points...the windows, where the ivy and the briony had long fupplied the place of glafs, and ran mantling among the broken capitals of fome columns, that had once... | |
| Ann Ward Radcliffe - 1795 - 476 pages
...Annette, concerning it, with very unpleafant emotions. She looked fearfully on the almoft rooflefs walls, green with damps, and on the gothic points...the windows, where the ivy and the briony had long fupplied the place of glafs, and ran mantling among the broken capitals of fome columns, that had once... | |
| Ann Ward Radcliffe - 1799 - 478 pages
...Annette, concerning it, with very unpleafant emotions. She looked fearfully on the almoft rooflefs walls, green with damps,, and on the gothic points...the windows, where the ivy and the briony had long fupplied the place of glafs, and ran mantling among the broken capitals of fome columns, that had once... | |
| Ann Ward Radcliffe - 1824 - 820 pages
...be in ruins, and she immediately recollected a former conversation of Annette, concerning it, with very unpleasant emotions. She looked fearfully on...gothic points of the windows, where the ivy and the bnony had long supplied the place of glass, and ran mantling among the broken capitals of some columns,... | |
| Ann Ward Radcliffe - 1826 - 836 pages
...be in ruins, and she immediately recollected a former conversation of Annette, concerning it, with very unpleasant emotions. She looked fearfully on the almost roofless walls, green v, ¡th damps, and on the gothic points of the windows, where the ivy and the briony had long supplied... | |
| Ann Ward Radcliffe - 1859 - 654 pages
...to he in ruins, and she immediately recollected a former conversation of Annette concerning it, with very unpleasant emotions. She looked fearfully on...capitals of some columns, that had once supported the room. Barnardine stumbled over the broken pavement, and his voice, as he uttered a sudden oath, was... | |
| Bradford K. Mudge - Literary Criticism - 2000 - 298 pages
...whence they descended, a few steps, into a chapel, which . . . Emily observed to be in ruins. . . . She looked fearfully on the almost roofless walls,...of some columns, that had once supported the roof. Barnadine stumbled over the broken pavement, and his voice, as he uttered a sudden oath, was returned... | |
| Ann Ward Radcliffe - Fiction - 2005 - 718 pages
...to be in ruins; and she immediately recollected a former conversation of Annette concerning it, with very unpleasant emotions. She looked fearfully on...Gothic points of the windows, where the ivy and the bryony had long supplied the place of glass, and ran mantling among the broken capitals of some columns... | |
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