... become associated with a high degree of picturesque beauty, something distinctive, if not unique in character. For, as Vigne justly remarks, " Softness mantling over the sublime, snugness generally, elsewhere incompatible with extent, are the prevailing... Travels in Kashmir, Ladak, Iskardo, the Countries Adjoining the Mountain ... - Page 60by Godfrey Thomas Vigne - 1842 - 474 pagesFull view - About this book
| Asia, Central - 1874 - 418 pages
...mantling over the sublime, is the prevailing characteristic of the scenery of Cashmere ; verdure and forest appear to have deserted the countries on the...additional richness to its plains, and combine with its delightful climate to render it not unworthy of the rhyming epithets applied to it in the East, —... | |
| William Wakefield - Jammu and Kashmir (India) - 1879 - 360 pages
...picturesque beauty, something distinctive, if not unique in character. For, as Vigne justly remarks, " Softness mantling over the sublime, snugness generally,...additional richness to its plains, and combine with its delightful climate to render it not unworthy of the rhyming epithets applied to it in the East of "... | |
| William Wakefield - Jammu and Kashmir (India) - 1879 - 356 pages
...For, as Vigne justly remarks, " Softness mantling over the sublime, snugness generally, elsewhere B 2 incompatible with extent, are the prevailing characteristics...additional richness to its plains, and combine with its delightful climate to render it not unworthy of the rhyming epithets applied to it in the East of "... | |
| Bayard Taylor - Asia, Central - 1893 - 348 pages
...mantling over the sublime, is the prevailing characteristic of the scenery of Cashmere ; verdure and forest appear to have deserted the countries on the...additional richness to its plains, and combine with its delightful climate to render it not unworthy of the rhyming epithets applied to it in the East : '... | |
| W. Wakefield - Social Science - 1996 - 344 pages
...picturesque beauty, something distinctive, if not unique in character. For, as Vigne justly remarks, " Softness mantling over the sublime, snugness generally,...additional richness to its plains, and combine with its delightful climate to render it not unworthy of the rhyming epithets applied to it in the East of "... | |
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