An account of Askern and its mineral springs; together with a sketch of the natural history, and a brief topography, of the immediate neibourhoodJohn Churchill, 1842 - 151 pagina's |
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Pagina
... called for by , the inhabitants and visitors of Askern . My intention , in the first instance , was to adopt this suggestion , but , as I pro- ceeded , new matter so accumulated , that I found it would be more difficult to incorporate ...
... called for by , the inhabitants and visitors of Askern . My intention , in the first instance , was to adopt this suggestion , but , as I pro- ceeded , new matter so accumulated , that I found it would be more difficult to incorporate ...
Pagina 2
... called the Mount , which , although now clothed with verdure , was at one time undoubtedly a naked rock , elevating its rugged sides above the adjoining plain . To those accustomed to trace the origin of words , it will be easily ...
... called the Mount , which , although now clothed with verdure , was at one time undoubtedly a naked rock , elevating its rugged sides above the adjoining plain . To those accustomed to trace the origin of words , it will be easily ...
Pagina 6
... called the Hall - garth , which is the spot on which stood the mansion known by the name of Askern Hall it was built by Toby Humfrey , Esq . , and was once , undoubtedly , the pride and ornament of the place , but scarcely a vestige of ...
... called the Hall - garth , which is the spot on which stood the mansion known by the name of Askern Hall it was built by Toby Humfrey , Esq . , and was once , undoubtedly , the pride and ornament of the place , but scarcely a vestige of ...
Pagina 7
... called the Mount , that rises abruptly from the level of the surrounding plain , forming an elevated ridge , seventy or eighty feet in height , and extending north and south for about five or six hundred feet . At first , this elevation ...
... called the Mount , that rises abruptly from the level of the surrounding plain , forming an elevated ridge , seventy or eighty feet in height , and extending north and south for about five or six hundred feet . At first , this elevation ...
Pagina 8
... called Sutton Com- mon . At its south - western extremity , is a portion elevated above the surrounding flat , and upon this are to be seen , very distinctly , the remains of an ancient camp . There are at present existing con ...
... called Sutton Com- mon . At its south - western extremity , is a portion elevated above the surrounding flat , and upon this are to be seen , very distinctly , the remains of an ancient camp . There are at present existing con ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
An Account of Askern and Its Mineral Springs: Together with a Sketch of the ... Edwin Lankester Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2016 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
abundant action amongst analysis animalcules animals appears Askern Pool Askern water Brewerton Bromine Burghwallis Camps Mount Campsall Park Campsall Woods carbonate of lime carbonic acid Charity Bath chloride chronic colour constituents contain cure cutaneous disease deposit derangements district ditches Ditto Doncaster effects erected existence formation frequently Gallienus gaseous Gateforth glairine Harrogate ingredients large quantity layers Madder Close magnesian limestone Manor Bath medicine mineral springs mineral waters Miss Brooke mucous membranes nature neighbourhood nitrogen Norton origin Owston Patients persons plants Pontefract portions precipitate present probably produced proportion remedy rheumatism rock Roman salts sandstone Saxon seen side Skelbrook Skellow Smeaton Crags Snail soda South Parade South Parade Bath species specimens strata substance sulphate of lime sulphureous springs sulphureous waters sulphuretted hydrogen sulphuric acid supposed surface Sutton Common temperature Terrace Bath Tetricus tion various vegetable matter village watering places waters of Askern whilst Wine Pint
Populaire passages
Pagina 56 - The grand transition, that there lives and works A soul in all things, and that soul is God. The beauties of the wilderness are his, That make so gay the solitary place Where no eye sees them.
Pagina 30 - Thirst knows neither mean nor measure, Robin Hood's Well was my treasure ; In a common dish enchained I my furious thirst restrained ; And, because I drank the deeper, I paid two farthings to the keeper.
Pagina 31 - Heu nimium sociis nota, Robine, tuis. Me pudet innocuos latices fudisse scelestis, Jamque viatori pocula tuta fero. En pietatis honos ! Comes hanc mihi Carliolensis JBdem sacravit, qua bibis, hospes, aquas.
Pagina 16 - Gros al to torn ; Remember his wondis that for the did smart; Gotten without syn, and on a virgin born: Al his hed percid with a crown of thorn. Alas ! man, thy hart ought to brest in too. Jiewarof the devyl when he blawis his horn, And pray thy gode aungel convey the.
Pagina 10 - Thorn, that these trees were natives of the place, and cut down by the Romans, because the Britons, when defeated in battle, retired into such morasses and woods, and were secure, continually making sallies out and retreats in again, intercepting their provisions, taking and destroying their carriages, &c.
Pagina 143 - ... that continual desquamation of the cuticle, which is frequently one of the most obstinate symptoms with which the physician has to contend ; but is itself also the sole agent under which all the formidable symptoms successively disappear.
Pagina 11 - Saxon camp, and history relates, that a battle was fought there between Ceadwalla, King of the Britons, and Penda, the Pagan King of Mercia, against Edwin, the first Christian King of Northumberland, in which Edwin, and Offride his eldest son, were slain.
Pagina 23 - Skern, who had heretofore been a benefactor to the same college ; and that natives of Yorkshire and Lincolnshire should have the preference.
Pagina 145 - ... Askern, and > wrote on its waters, informs us that rheumatism has been more benefited than any other malady — the chronic form of course, where there is rigidity of the joints, with swelling. A course of the baths, at a temperature varying from 95 to 105 degrees, will frequently effect a cure.
Pagina 104 - ... the microscope. It will be found to consist of a mass of large cells (Fig.