Page:Letters from England.djvu/162

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BACK IN ENGLAND

densest of quickset hedges, the biggest of sheep, the greatest quantities of ivy, coppices and hawthorn, as well as the bushiest trees and cottages covered with the thickest thatches that I have ever seen. An old tree in Devon shire is as compact as a rock and as perfect as a statue. Then come straggling, bare, forlorn hills without a single tree; this is Dartmoor. Here and there projects on the solitude of furze a granite boulder upraised like the altar of giants or primeval lizards; these are tors, I may tell you. Sometimes among the furze there flows a black streamlet,

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