A chapel is said to have once stood close to the Bield and Tarn at Chapel Mire. |
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Goldsmith's cross is located in the Fox Tor Mire area between Childe's Tomb and Nun's Cross, on the Monks' Path. |
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This is said to have been the inspiration for the fictional Grimpen Mire in the novel The Hound of the Baskervilles by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. |
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Somewhere in the heart of the great Grimpen Mire, down in the foul slime of the huge morass which had sucked him in, this cold and cruel-hearted man is forever buried. |
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The infamous Fox Tor mire in the vicinity of the cross became an inspiration for the Grimpen Mire, which Sir Arthur Conan Doyle described in his The Hound of the Baskervilles. |
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Fox Tor Mires was supposedly the inspiration for Great Grimpen Mire in Conan Doyle's novel The Hound of the Baskervilles, although there is a waymarked footpath across it. |
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A stop of 15 seconds or more can mire a driver at the back of the field among inexperienced racers and those with ill-handling cars. |
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Its muddy streets, although probably no muddier than those of Greensboro, symbolized the mire in which any of her charges might run amuck. |
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She played the character as a fragile English rose struggling to take root in the immoral mire of Berlin. |
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The shadow that stretches back to grandparents, great-grandparents, and sometimes into the mire of genealogical research. |
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This will create age structure in the heather, improve habitat for grouse and allow us to see if there are any drainage channels taking water away from the raised mire. |
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They would not have him ploutering through any more mire and flood. |
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Claims on exclusive entitlements based on religious belief multiply, and given the inseparability of the personal from the political, exclusivist claims mire civil discourse. |
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But he and Congress are both stuck in the mire of health-care reform, so the chances of progress in time for Copenhagen grow slighter by the day. |
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But the wicked are like the troubled sea, when it cannot rest, whose waters cast up mire and dirt. |
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The terrain supports lowland heath communities, Ancient woodland and blanket mire which provide a habitat for some scarce flora and fauna. |
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The Protestant Reformation dragged the kingdom ever more deeply into the mire of religiously charged wars. |
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It is incumbent on the Government not to let this opportunity pass, or to mire progress in another eight years of start-stop-start and change of direction. |
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Willibald's vita describes how a visitor on horseback come to the site of the martyrdom, and a hoof of his horse got stuck in the mire. |
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No matter, we head to the Kassam Stadium first up, where 12th-placed Oxford host Lincoln, themselves very much in the relegation mire, and one of the few whose miserable form ranks them as value to oppose. |
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Left unsettled, these conflicts will, at best, be a hindrance to any substantial progress in this regard, and, at worst, mire the sector in a never-ending debate. |
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That you do not have enough strength of will to escape from the mire in which you find yourselves, or from the laziness caused by the bonds that tie you to the material, and that is the beginning of all vices and errors. |
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Sutherland Lyall, the AR's diligent web vole, plashes questingly through the autumn mire of cyberspace. |
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The US imperialists and the Lee Myung Bak group are now in the mire, he said, adding that the patriotic forces will surely emerge victorious no matter how wildly the traitorous forces go on the rampage. |
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Premier John Major was back in the BSE mire last night after Europe crushed his bid to wriggle out of the cattle cull deal. |
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Water drains from surrounding sandy banks into a peaty bowl where it is held by underlying clay, an example of a soligenous mire. |
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The ghost hypnotized them, and they wandered into the mire, fell through the ice, and were sucked into the thick bog. |
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They decided to punish him, and the next time he was hunting, one of the witches turned herself into a hare, and led both Bowerman and his hounds into a mire. |
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