| 1838 - 574 페이지
...in the. centre full of filth, banked uj> ou each side by a border of mire. The houses are in general two or three stories high ; they are built of unburnt...lattices, windows stopped up with boards, paper, or rags, walla out of the perpendicular, and pitched roofs threatening to fall.' — vol. ii. pp. 118, 119.... | |
| 1838 - 728 페이지
...serving for little else than to fill up the interstices of the latter ; they are not plastered, arc badly constructed, and are mostly in a neglected and...perpendicular, and pitched roofs threatening to fall.'— vol. ii. pp. 118, 119. But the following account is still more deplorable ; and thing's have progressively... | |
| 1838 - 574 페이지
...constructed, and are mostly in a neglected and ruinous condition, with broken doors, or no doors nt all, with shattered lattices, windows stopped up with...perpendicular, and pitched roofs threatening to fall.' — rol. ii. pp. 118, 119. But the following account is still more deplorable ; and things have progressively... | |
| William Moorcroft, George Trebeck - 1841 - 538 페이지
...in the centre full of filth, banked up on each side by a border of mire. The houses are in general two or three stories high ; they are built of unburnt...threatening to fall. The roofs are formed of layers of birch bark covered by a coating of earth, in which seeds dropped by birds, or wafted by the wind, have... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero - 1838 - 580 페이지
...in the centre full of filth, hanked up on each side by a border of mire. The houses are in general two or three stories high; they are built of unburnt...perpendicular, and pitched roofs threatening to fall.' — vol. ii. pp. 118, 119. But the following account is still more deplorable ; and thing's have progressively... | |
| 1847 - 508 페이지
...up on each side by a border of mire. The houses are in general two or three stories high ; they arc built of unburnt bricks and timber, the former serving...threatening to fall. The roofs are formed of layers of birch bark, covered by a coating of earth, in which seeds dropped by birds, or wafted by the wind,... | |
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