قراءة كتاب The Old Inns of Old England, Volume II (of 2) A Picturesque Account of the Ancient and Storied Hostelries of Our Own Country
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اللغة: English

The Old Inns of Old England, Volume II (of 2) A Picturesque Account of the Ancient and Storied Hostelries of Our Own Country
الصفحة رقم: 2
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| SEPARATE PLATES | |
| A Mug of Cider: the “White Hart” Inn, Castle Combe. (Photo by Graystone Bird) | Frontispiece |
| FACING PAGE | |
| The Cromwell Room, “Lygon Arms” | 8 |
| The Dining-room at “The Feathers,” Ludlow | 22 |
| Courtyard of the “Maid’s Head,” Norwich, showing the Jacobean Bar | 42 |
| The “Bell,” Barnby Moor: Meet of Lord Galway’s Hounds | 56 |
| The “Four Swans,” Waltham Cross | 152 |
| Sign of the “Pack Horse and Talbot,” Turnham Green | 194 |
| The “Running Footman,” Hay Hill | 194 |
| Interior of “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” | 196 |
| “Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” Bluepitts, near Rochdale | 196 |
| The “Talbot,” Ripley. (Photo by R. W. Thomas) | 212 |
| The “Anchor,” Ripley, in the Days of the Dibbles and the Cycling Boom. (Photo by R. W. Thomas) | 214 |
| The “Swan,” Sandleford | 216 |
| The “Swan,” near Newbury | 216 |
| The Ingle-nook, “White Horse” Inn, Shere | 240 |
| Ingle-nook at the “Swan,” Haslemere | 242 |
| The Ingle-nook, “Crown” Inn, Chiddingfold | 244 |
| Ingle-nook, “Lygon Arms,” Broadway | 246 |
| The “Vine Tavern,” Mile End |

