This magnificent park, so far from being kept locked up to exclude mankind from partaking of its scenery, is always open, and parties are permitted to bring their refreshments; which circumstance tends to enliven the scene, to extend a more general knowledge... History of Longleat - Page 34by John Edward Jackson - 1857 - 34 pagesFull view - About this book
| Humphry Repton - Architecture, Domestic - 1840 - 684 pages
...towards the Welsh hills, beyond the Bristol Channel. This magnificent park, so far from being kept locked up to exclude mankind from partaking of its scenery, is always open, and parties are permitted to bring their refreshments; which circumstance tends to enliven the scene, to... | |
| Humphry Repton - Architecture, Domestic - 1840 - 672 pages
...towards the Welsh hills, beyond the Bristol Channel. This magnificent park, so far from being kept locked up to exclude mankind from partaking of its scenery, is always open, and parties are permitted to bring their refreshments; which circumstance tends to enliven the scene, to... | |
| Edward Hungerford Goddard - Archaeology - 1857 - 462 pages
...the north side of the house, which had been for many years in ruins, he found in the present kitchen chimney an old flue, containing 100 skeletons of jackdaws,...amuse themselves ; which circumstance tends to enliven tho scone; to extend a more general knowledge of its beauty to strangers; and to mark the liberality... | |
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