... fight, drag them to the shore. Others, having escaped by another road, are entering the gates of the town amid the shrieks and lamentations of those within. Towers, ramparts, and battlements are crowded with inhabitants, who are chiefly bearded old... The Family Library (Harper). - Page 1831842Full view - About this book
| 1830 - 606 pages
...lamentations of those within. , Towers, ramparts, and battlements are crowded with inhabitants, who are chiefly bearded old men and women. A party of the...turban mark him out as some distinguished chieftain ; on each side of the town are large bodies of infantry and a great force of chariots issuing out of... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero - 1830 - 620 pages
...those within. Towers, L 2 ramparts, ramparts, and battlements are crowded with inhabitants, who are chiefly bearded old men and women. A party of the...turban mark him out as some distinguished chieftain ; on each side of the town are large bodies of infantry and a great force of chariots issuing out of... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1830 - 622 pages
...lamentations of those within. Towers, ramparts, and battlements are crowded with inhabitants, who are chiefly bearded old men and women. A party of the...and high turban mark him out as some distinguished chiettain; on each side of the town are large bodies of infantry and a great forc,e of chariots issuing... | |
| Michael Russell - 1831 - 376 pages
...lamentations of those within. Towers, ramparts, and battlements are crowded vjith inhabitants, who are chiefly bearded old men and women. A party of the...apparently by different routes to attack the besiegers. The ardour with which the hero of the piece is advancing has already carried him far beyond the main body... | |
| Michael Russell - 1831 - 536 pages
...lamentations of those within. Towers, ramparts, and battlements are crowded with inhabitants, who are chiefly bearded old men and women. A party of the...apparently by different routes to attack the besiegers. The ardour with which the hero of the piece is advancing has already carried him far beyond the main body... | |
| Michael Russell - 1831 - 514 pages
...lamentations of those within. Towers, ramparts, and battlements are crowded with inhabitants, who are chiefly bearded old men and women. A party of the...of the town, are observed large bodies of infantry, jand a great force of chariots issuing from the gates, aBsi^dvancing apparently by different routes... | |
| British Museum. Department of Egyptian Antiquities - 1832 - 440 pages
...lamentations of those within. Towers, ramparts, and battlements are crowded with inhabitants, who are chiefly bearded old men, and women. A party of the...turban mark him out as some distinguished chieftain: on each side of the town are large bodies of infantry and a great force of chariots issuing out of... | |
| George Long - 1832 - 446 pages
...lamentations of those within. Towers, ramparts, and battlements are crowded with inhabitants, who are chiefly bearded old men, and women. A party of the...turban mark him out as some distinguished chieftain : on each side of the town are large bodies of infantry and a great force of chariots issuing out of... | |
| George Long - 1832 - 442 pages
...lamentations of those within. Towers, ramparts, and battlements are crowded with inhabitants, who are chiefly bearded old men, and women. A party of the...turban mark him out as some distinguished chieftain : on each side of the town are large bodies of infantry and a great force of chariots issuing out of... | |
| Michael Russell - 1835 - 356 pages
...lamentations of those within. Towers, ramparts, and battlements are crowded with inhabitants, who are chiefly bearded old men and women. A party of the...apparently by different routes to attack the besiegers. The ardour with which the hero of the piece is advancing has already carried him far beyond the main body... | |
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