Black's Guide to the Channel IslandsDavid Thomas Ansted |
Common terms and phrases
Alderney Aubin's beach beautiful BLACK Bouley Bay Braye Harbour breakwater Brelade's building called Casquets Castle Cornet caverns Channel Islands chapel Church Clement's cliff cloth coast of Guernsey Coloured Corbières cove covered Creux Crevichon cromlech Crown 8vo curious detached Distance from Harbour Distance from St east Edition Elizabeth Castle England English extremity Fcap feet Fort Regent French Gorey Gouliot grand granite Grève de Lecq Grosnez ground Grouville Grouville Church headland Helier's Herm Hotel Icart Illustrated inches interesting interior Jerbourg Jersey Jethou L'Ancresse L'Etac Lançon land Lihou LL.D low-water Martin's miles Minquiers Mont Orgeuil Moulin Huet Moye Point narrow nearly Noirmont northern numerous Ouen's parish Peter Port picturesque Pleinmont principal Prof quarries reached rises road rocks rocky Rocquaine Rozel Sampson's Sark scenery seen Serk shore side stone tide tourist tower town valley Vazon vols volumes fcap Waverley weather
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Page 186 - The appearance is thus described by M. Quatrefages, an eminent French naturalist, who, some years ago, published a delightful work on the coast of Normandy, entitled " Eambles of a Naturalist." He says, " Blocks of every variety of form and size are grouped together in a thousand different ways, some rising into pyramids, others graduated and cut into irregular tiers of steps ; others again, heaped into confused masses like the ruins of some giant structure ; at...
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Page 176 - They correspond to the presence of a peculiarly decomposing rotten material, that alternates with the hard parts of the rock. As there are generally hard walls to these softer hollows, they are often in the highest degree picturesque, for the action of the sea having worn away a deep inlet, the wall of rock on each side allows of the inlet being approached pretty closely without inconvenience. Up one such hollow the telegraph-wire communicating from Portland, through.
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Page 175 - ... broom, heather, and grass. At one place a huge arched rock is seen, the light piercing through from the further side. In another is a small beach, covered with black sand, mixed up with numerous large rounded blocks of granite. Here the rocks descend at once into a deep black pool ; there the water is so clear that the rocky bottom is visible from the cliffs above, although their height is nearly 200 feet. Continuing to work our way round the various inlets, we come again, after a time, to the...