The Prose Works of Sir Walter Scott, Bart: Periodical criticismR.Cadell, 1836 - France |
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Page 15
... provided with the material of his enter- prise , and with the human force necessary to carry it into effect , the planter's next point is to choose the scene of operation . On this subject , reason ON PLANTING WASTE LANDS . 15.
... provided with the material of his enter- prise , and with the human force necessary to carry it into effect , the planter's next point is to choose the scene of operation . On this subject , reason ON PLANTING WASTE LANDS . 15.
Page 21
... effects are pointed out , few would wish to resort to it , unless it were a humorist like Uncle Toby , or a martinet like Lord Stair , who planted trees after the fashion of battalions formed into line and column , that they might ...
... effects are pointed out , few would wish to resort to it , unless it were a humorist like Uncle Toby , or a martinet like Lord Stair , who planted trees after the fashion of battalions formed into line and column , that they might ...
Page 22
... effects to the eye , varying in every point of view , and affording new details of the landscape , as the plantations became blended together , or receded from each other . About five or six years after this transformation had been ...
... effects to the eye , varying in every point of view , and affording new details of the landscape , as the plantations became blended together , or receded from each other . About five or six years after this transformation had been ...
Page 31
... effect : its appearance on the ridge of a hill is also unfavourable , resembling the once fashionable mode of setting up the manes of ponies , called by jockeys hogging . But where the quantity of ground plant- ed amounts to the ...
... effect : its appearance on the ridge of a hill is also unfavourable , resembling the once fashionable mode of setting up the manes of ponies , called by jockeys hogging . But where the quantity of ground plant- ed amounts to the ...
Page 51
... - dung , has in this case produced the same effect which the application of lime or the turning the turf , in the former experiments , is calculated to attain . The clover , whether as a seed or plant our dull ON PLANTING WASTE LANDS . 51.
... - dung , has in this case produced the same effect which the application of lime or the turning the turf , in the former experiments , is calculated to attain . The clover , whether as a seed or plant our dull ON PLANTING WASTE LANDS . 51.
Common terms and phrases
acres advantage afford Allanton ancient appearance attended Banks bark beauty betwixt Blind Harry branches called castle character circumstances consequence considerable considered crime currency degree Earl earth Edinburgh England English exist expense exposed favour feet forest garden gold ground Highland honour improvement inhabitants interest King King of Scots kingdom kingdom of Scotland labour land larch least Lord Hailes MALACHI MALAGROWTHER manner Matthew of Westminster means ment mode natural necessary neighbours object operation opinion ornament Patrick Fraser Tytler perhaps person Picts plant plantation planter possessed present principle profit proprietor purpose reason recommended rendered respect roots Roxburghe Club Scot Scotland Scottish shelter shillings shoot Sir Henry Steuart Sir Walter Scott situation soil species stem suppose taste tenant thin tion Torthorwald transplanted trees Tytler Wallace whole wood
Popular passages
Page 82 - With mazy error under pendent shades Ran Nectar, visiting each plant, and fed Flowers worthy of Paradise, which not nice art In beds and curious knots, but nature boon Pour'd forth profuse on hill, and dale, and plain, Both where the morning sun first warmly smote The open field, and where the unpierced shade Imbrown'd the noontide bowers. Thus was this place A happy rural seat of various view...
Page 151 - That will never be. Who can impress" the forest, bid the tree Unfix his earth-bound root?
Page 297 - Britain; with this difference betwixt the laws concerning public right, policy and civil government and those which concern private right, that the laws which concern public right, policy and civil government may be made the same throughout the whole United Kingdom, but that no alteration be made in laws which concern private right, except for evident utility of the subjects within Scotland.
Page 88 - There were thickets of flowery shrubs, a bower, and an arbour, to which access was obtained through a little maze of contorted walks calling itself a labyrinth. In the centre of the bower was a splendid Platanus, or Oriental plane — a huge hill of leaves — one of the noblest specimens of that regularly beautiful tree which I remember to have seen.
Page 79 - Sick of his civil pride from morn to eve ; I curse such lavish cost and little skill, And swear no day was ever pass'd so ill. Yet hence the poor are clothed, the hungry fed; Health to himself, and to his infants bread, The labourer bears : what his hard heart denies, His charitable vanity supplies.
Page 177 - After being hanged, but not to death, he was cut down yet breathing, his bowels taken out, and burnt before his face. His head was then struck off, and his body divided into four quarters. His head was placed on a pole on London Bridge, his right arm above the bridge at Newcastle, his left arm was sent to Berwick, his right foot and limb to Perth, and his left quarter to Aberdeen.
Page 68 - Then up I rose And dragged to earth both branch and bough, with crash and merciless ravage . . . And the shady nook Of hazels, and the green and mossy bower, Deformed and sullied, patiently gave up Their quiet being...
Page 368 - Journalist, there has been in England a gradual and progressive system of assuming the management of affairs entirely and exclusively proper to Scotland, as if we were totally unworthy of having the management of our own concerns.
Page 68 - ... crash And merciless ravage: and the shady nook Of hazels, and the green and mossy bower, Deformed and sullied, patiently gave up Their quiet being: and unless I now Confound my present feelings with the past...
Page 170 - This was cultivated in various proportions by the higher ranks of the husbandmen, who possessed it, either in part or in whole, as their own property, which they held by lease, and for which they paid a rent, or by the villeyns and cottars, who were themselves, in frequent instances, as we shall immediately see, the property of the lord of the soil. Thus, by a similar process, which we find took place in England under the Normans, and which is very clearly to be traced in Domesday Book, the greater...