Choose quotes font
The Welsh have everywhere adopted the Cymric tongue; they hug themselves in the belief that they ar
The Welsh have everywhere adopted the Cymric tongue; they hug themselves in the belief that they ar
The Welsh have everywhere adopted the Cymric tongue; they hug themselves in the belief that they ar
The Welsh have everywhere adopted the Cymric tongue; they hug themselves in the belief that they ar
The Welsh have everywhere adopted the Cymric tongue; they hug themselves in the belief that they ar
The Welsh have everywhere adopted the Cymric tongue; they hug themselves in the belief that they ar
Next quotes
Sabine Baring-Gould:
The Dumnonii, whose city or fortress was at Exeter, were an important people. They occupied the whoSabine Baring-Gould:
The Devonian and Cornishman will be found by the visitor to be courteous and hospitable. There is nSabine Baring-Gould:
A residence of many years in Yorkshire, and an inveterate habit of collecting all kinds of odd andSabine Baring-Gould:
I look back with the greatest pleasure to the kindness and hospitality I met with in Yorkshire, wheSabine Baring-Gould:
Each man seeks his own interest, not the general interest. Let his own selfish interests be touchedSabine Baring-Gould:
The whole of society is like a cabbage-stalk covered with caterpillars, and none is satisfied tillSabine Baring-Gould:
No man need go blindly to destruction, for God has given him guidance and power of seeing whither hSabine Baring-Gould:
The fold is that place where He keeps His flock shut behind the hurdles of the Ten Commandments. EvSabine Baring-Gould:
Cyder was anciently the main drink of the country people in the West of England.Sabine Baring-Gould:
At the English Revolution, when William of Orange came to the throne, the introduction of French wi