| 1861 - 972 pages
...is carried on. Bishop Wearmouth adjoins Sunderland, so that the two places form one great town ; and it is difficult to tell where one begins and the other ends. There are some very good streets, especially in the Bishop Wearmouth part of the town ; the parks are... | |
| George Bradshaw - 1865 - 444 pages
...otherwise would be a small church ; but in doing this, the church and convent are so mixed up together, that it is difficult to tell where one begins and the other ends^^fergusis king, who died at Oporto, 1842. There are also marbles of Vittorio Amadeo making his... | |
| History - 1869 - 730 pages
...ocean with innumerable branches pouring into the Atlantic. And so combined is it with the Atlantic that it is difficult to tell where one begins and the other ends. Sailing along the coast, and long before you see any indications of a continent, you are already in... | |
| James Fergusson - Architecture - 1873 - 616 pages
...otherwise would be a small church; but in doing this the church and the convent are so mixed up together that it is difficult to tell where one begins and the other ends ; and, as is too frequently the case with these buildings, the falsehood is so apparent that both parts... | |
| Tennessee. Bureau of Agriculture, Statistics, and Mines - Agriculture - 1887 - 956 pages
...manner. He said that the relations were so close, politically, socially and in a sense of commerce that it is difficult to tell where one begins and the other leaves off. He gave a glowing description of the many superior industrial and commercial advantages... | |
| Frank Brinkley - Art - 1901 - 340 pages
...produced by Japanese poetry, Japanese music, and Japanese dancing. The affinity between them is so close that it is difficult to tell where one begins and the other ends.1 The music of words, the music of motion, and the music of song rank equally in popular appreciation.... | |
| Ernest Wilson Clement - Japan - 1903 - 492 pages
...worked out by the 'woven paces and waving hands' of the dance. The affinity between them is so close that it is difficult to tell where one begins and the other ends." Japanese poetry is also conspicuously different from that of the Occident. It is a form of word painting... | |
| Frank Brinkley - Art - 1903 - 340 pages
...produced by Japanese poetry, Japanese music, and Japanese dancing. The affinity between them is so close that it is difficult to tell where one begins and the other ends.1 The music of words, the music of motion, and the music of song rank equally in popular appreciation.... | |
| Robert Archey Woods, Albert Joseph Kennedy - Social settlements - 1911 - 362 pages
...relief and aid, educational, industrial, and religious, but the lines of demarcation are so shifting that it is difficult to tell where one begins and the other ends. All of our work is in a sense relief and aid, all is educational, all carries with it industrial characteristics... | |
| |