Whatever is imaged in the wildest tale, if giants, dragons, and enchantment be excepted, would be felt by him, who, wandering in the mountains without a guide, or upon the sea without a pilot, should be carried, amidst his terror and uncertainty, to the... The Lord of the Isles: A Poem - 315 ページWalter Scott 著 - 1815 - 443 ページ全文表示 - この書籍について
| Sir Walter Scott - 1923 - 1122 ページ
...MacLeod: 'Whatever is imaged in the wildest tales, if giants, dragons, and enchantment be excepted, would be felt by him, who, wandering in the mountains...hospitality and elegance of Raasay or Dunvegan.' NOTE 79, p. 263 The Sewer, to whom, rather than the Seneschal, the office of arranging the guests of an... | |
| Samuel Johnson - 1924 - 562 ページ
...magnificence. Whatever is imaged in the wildest tale, if giants, dragons, and enchantment be excepted, would be felt by him, who, wandering in the mountains...the hospitality and elegance of Raasay or Dunvegan. To Coriatachan at last we came, and found ourselves welcomed as before. Here we staid two days, and... | |
| 1944 - 352 ページ
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