| John Charles Carrick - 1907 - 336 pages
...— Sweet are the paths, O passing sweet ! By Eske's fair streams that run, O'er airy steep, through copsewood deep, Impervious to the sun. There the rapt...paid, By blast of bugle free, To Auchendinny's hazel shade, And haunted Woodhouselea. Who knows not Melville's beechy grove And Roslin's rocky glen, Dalkeith,... | |
| Sir Walter Scott - 1908 - 992 pages
...castr facere pome, eo quod in ea civitate esaet mulier venefica ct scelerata ; tune exulatur.' NOTE I. broke, The beacon-light is quench'd in smoke, The trumpet's silve P. 671. The barony of Pennycuik, the property of Sir George Clrrk, Bart., is held by a singular tenure... | |
| Walter Scott - 1909 - 992 pages
...blood. Sweet are the paths, O passing sweet, By Eske's fair streams that run, O'er airy steep, through copsewood deep, Impervious to the sun ; There the...And haunted Woodhouselee. Who knows not Melville's beectyy grove, And Roslin's rocky glen, Dalkeith which all the virtues love, And classic Hawthornden... | |
| Lady Clark (Charlotte Coltman) - 1909 - 618 pages
...excellent recipe for Cold Curry recalls a romantic legend, referred to by Scott in " The Grey Brother " : "From that fair dome where suit is paid By blast of...Auchendinny's hazel glade And haunted Woodhouselee." Scott knew the old house well, when he himself lived at Lasswade. At the date of his visit to Woodhouselee... | |
| 1912 - 756 pages
...Poetry. Sweet are the paths, O passing sweet ! By Esk's fair streams that run O'er airy steep through copsewood deep Impervious to the sun. There the rapt...Beauty, led by timid Love May shun the telltale ray. No afternoon stroll could be more delightful than through the valley of the Esk as far as Roslin. Many... | |
| Charles Sumner Olcott - 1913 - 578 pages
...to pot Sweet are the paths, 0 passing sweet I By Esk's fair streams that run O'er airy steep through copsewood deep Impervious to the sun. There the rapt...Beauty, led by timid Love May shun the telltale ray. No afternoon stroll could be more delightful than one through the valley of the Esk as far as Roslin.... | |
| Francis Watt - 1913 - 332 pages
...the Burghmuir. Hence the motto of the family, " Free for a blast," and Sir Walter Scott's lines — From that fair dome where suit is paid By blast of bugle free. Stevenson erroneously transfers all this to General Kay's monument. Scattered through the four volumes... | |
| 1921 - 892 pages
...Crichton. Scott in his fine ballad of "The Grey Brother" thus alludes to Woodhouselee as haunted : 226 From that fair dome where suit is paid By blast of bugle free, To Auchendinny's hazel shade And haunted Woodhouselee, Who knows not Melville's beechy grove, And Roslin's rocky glen, Dalkeith... | |
| Walter Scott - 1923 - 824 pages
...blood. Sweet are the paths, O passing sweet ! By Eske's fair streams that run, O'er airy steep through copsewood deep, Impervious to the sun.* There the...that fair dome where suit is paid By blast of bugle free,1 To Auchendinny's hazel glade 2 And haunted \Voodhouselee. Who knows not Melville's beechy grove... | |
| 1892 - 388 pages
...the entrance to Mortonhall. The tenure is referred to by Sir Walter Scott in ' The Gray Brother'— ' That fair dome, where suit is paid By blast of bugle free.' a * This summer I bought from Mr. Sinclare of Roslin the superiority of the lands of Camhill, Easter... | |
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