Lynton and Lynmouth: A Pageant of Cliff & Moorland. John Presland

Lynton and Lynmouth: A Pageant of Cliff & Moorland - John Presland


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       John Presland

      Lynton and Lynmouth: A Pageant of Cliff & Moorland

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066193430

       LEE BAY . . . . . . . . . . . . frontispiece

       LYNTON AND LYNMOUTH

       CHAPTER I

       DEVONSHIRE

       Bossington Hill from Porlock Hill

       CHAPTER II

       SOME LITERARY ASSOCIATIONS

       Dunkerry Beacon

       The Doone Valley

       CHAPTER III

       BARNSTAPLE

       Woody Bay and Duty Point, West Lynton

       The Shepherd's Cottage, Doone Valley

       CHAPTER IV

       LYNTON

       Lynmouth Bay and Foreland

       The Valley of Rocks

       Heddon's Mouth, near Lynton

       Castle Rock, Lynton

       CHAPTER V

       LYNTON (continued) , COUNTISBURY, AND NORTHWARD

       Duty Point

       The Moors near Brendon Two Gates

       CHAPTER VI

       PORLOCK AND EXMOOR

       Harvest Moon, Exmoor

       CHAPTER VII

       IN SOMERSET

       The Doone Valley in Winter

       CHAPTER VIII

       LUNDY

       Lynton: The Devil's Cheesering

       CHAPTER IX

       THE LAST STRONGHOLDS OF TRADITION

       Dunkery Beacon, from Horner Woods

       Table of Contents

       BOSSINGTON HILL

       DUNKERY BEACON

       THE DOONE VALLEY

       WOODY BAY AND DUTY POINT, WEST LYNTON

       THE SHEPHERD'S COTTAGE: DOONE VALLEY

       LYNMOUTH BAY AND FORELAND

       THE VALLEY OF ROCKS

       HEDDON'S MOUTH, NEAR LYNTON

       CASTLE ROCK, LYNTON

       DUTY POINT

       THE MOORS NEAR BRENDON TWO GATES

       HARVEST MOON, EXMOOR

       THE DOONE VALLEY IN WINTER

       LYNTON: THE DEVIL'S CHEESERING

       DUNKERY BEACON FROM HORNER WOODS

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      The original Celtic name for Devonshire, the name used by the Britons whom Caesar found here when he landed, was probably "Dyfnaint," for a Latinized form of it, "Dumnonia" or "Damnonia," was used by Diodorus Siculus when writing of the province of


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