The New Statistical Account of Scotland: Roxburgh, Peebles, SelkirkW. Blackwood and Sons, 1845 - Scotland |
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Page 53
... streams in this pa- rish . The Tweed , and three tributaries which it receives from the north ; the Gala , the Allan , and ... stream , nearly concealed in many places by overhanging woods , and its course , five miles in length , is all ...
... streams in this pa- rish . The Tweed , and three tributaries which it receives from the north ; the Gala , the Allan , and ... stream , nearly concealed in many places by overhanging woods , and its course , five miles in length , is all ...
Page 76
... stream , falls into the Tiviot near the southern extremity of the parish , and the Slitridge or Slitrig joins it at Hawick . II . CIVIL HISTORY . From the proximity of Wilton to Hawick , considerable notice has been taken of this parish ...
... stream , falls into the Tiviot near the southern extremity of the parish , and the Slitridge or Slitrig joins it at Hawick . II . CIVIL HISTORY . From the proximity of Wilton to Hawick , considerable notice has been taken of this parish ...
Page 89
... streams ; but this may be owing to the shallowness of the latter . It is during the autumnal floods that the greatest quantities of fish come up . They commence their run upwards about the end of October , and continue coming and going ...
... streams ; but this may be owing to the shallowness of the latter . It is during the autumnal floods that the greatest quantities of fish come up . They commence their run upwards about the end of October , and continue coming and going ...
Page 94
... streams would only be conferring a bounty on the good citizens of Berwick , at the expense of depriving their own peasantry of a very savoury morsel to their often scanty potato sup- per on winter evenings . IV . INDUSTRY . Agriculture ...
... streams would only be conferring a bounty on the good citizens of Berwick , at the expense of depriving their own peasantry of a very savoury morsel to their often scanty potato sup- per on winter evenings . IV . INDUSTRY . Agriculture ...
Page 99
... streams , and in the digging of deep ditches on various farms . One partly discovered in a water - course at the head of the Jed , was 3 feet in diameter . What is further remarkable in this is , that it was found high up among the ...
... streams , and in the digging of deep ditches on various farms . One partly discovered in a water - course at the head of the Jed , was 3 feet in diameter . What is further remarkable in this is , that it was found high up among the ...
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Common terms and phrases
acres agriculture amount ancient Ancrum annual annum appears arable Ashkirk attended average number banks barley Bedrule belonging bolls border breed Buccleuch burgh Castle cattle Cavers chalders Cheviot chiefly coal considerable Crailing crop cultivated distance district Duke of Buccleuch Duke of Roxburghe east Edinburgh English erected extent farm feet former formerly glebe greywacke ground Hawick heritors hills husbandry improvement inhabitants Jedburgh Kelso Kilbucho Kirk Yetholm kirk-session labour land late Lempitlaw Lilliesleaf lime manse Melrose MERSE miles minister Minto Morebattle nearly neighbourhood number of families number of persons parish pasture Peebles plantations plough population PRESBYTERY present proprietors rent repair residence rish river road rocks Roxburghshire sandstone Scotland Scott sheep side situated soil Southdean Sprouston Statistical Account stipend stone stream tenants Teviot Teviotdale tion town Town Yetholm trees turnips Tweed upwards V.-PAROCHIAL ECONOMY village whole wood Yetholm
Popular passages
Page 437 - Thou crownest the year with thy goodness ; and thy paths drop fatness. They drop upon the pastures of the wilderness : and the little hills rejoice on every side. The pastures are clothed with flocks ; the valleys also are covered over with corn ; they shout for joy, they also sing.
Page 8 - ... meetings in the field, or in any house where there be more persons than the house contains, so as some of them be without doors (which is hereby declared to be a field conventicle) or who shall convocate any number of people to these meetings, shall be punished with death, and confiscation of their goods.
Page 276 - ... grand features of the landscape around me ; and the historical incidents, or traditional legends connected with many of them, gave to my admiration a sort of intense impression of reverence, which at times made my heart feel too big for its bosom. From this time the love of natural beauty, more especially when combined with ancient ruins, or remains of our fathers...
Page 374 - The storm is changed into a calm, At His command and will ; So that the waves which raged before Now quiet are and still ! Then are they glad,— because at rest And quiet now they be : So to the haven He them brings Which they desired to see.
Page 7 - A notary-public signed for all the parties to the deed, none of whom could write their names. The original is still in the charter-room of the present Mr Scott of Harden. By the Flower of Yarrow...
Page 479 - The greatest want,' says Pennecuik, ' is timber. Little planting is to be seen in Tweeddale, except it be some few bushes of trees about the houses of the gentry ; and not one wood worth naming in all this open and windy country.
Page 63 - ... wandering echoes thrill The shepherd, lingering on the twilight hill, When evening brings the merry folding hours, And sun-eyed daisies close their winking flowers. He lived, o'er Yarrow's Flower to shed the tear, To strew the holly leaves o'er Harden's bier; But none was found above the minstrel's tomb, Emblem of peace, to bid the daisy bloom : He, nameless as the race from which he sprung, Saved other names, and left his own unsung.
Page 471 - ... fit of good fellowship, they use it as a cement and bond of society, and not to foment or revenge quarrels and murders, which is too ordinary in other places. And they are of so loyal and peaceable dispositions, that they have seldom or never appeared in arms against their lawful sovereign, nor were there amongst that great number, twelve persons from Tweeddale, at the...
Page 47 - ... his horses, a small farm is nearly unknown. The displacing of the old small tenants, distinguished as they were by a primitive simplicity of manners, was at first viewed with deep regret ; that an entire barony should be committed to one man, was exclaimed against as a public grievance.