Suddenly a king and his army galloped into town, mounted on powerful steeds. |
|
They wore clothes that suggested the warm weather I had felt was just beginning, and their steeds only had blinders and saddles on. |
|
Three suitors had kissed it, mounted their red roan steeds and ridden away. |
|
Leaving their overnight camp by the riverbed, they turn their sure-footed local steeds toward the steep, rocky outline of the Spur. |
|
Each morning we have to prepare our steeds, check their hooves, talcum powder them, saddle them and harness them. |
|
Their riders were pitched onto the road and then ploughed under the hooves of the other six steeds. |
|
Leaving our panting steeds, we made a simultaneous rush on the boar, as he stood at bay in the water. |
|
Their steeds were coated in lather, after their wild run weaving between the tall ancient trees of Nevermore's forest. |
|
Shortly afterward, the others heard whinnies and neighs and the two rescuers urging their steeds forward. |
|
Even the lowest ranking soldier could maintain a stable of miniscule steeds. |
|
Here, through the mist of the plateau, we can see black steeds, cows and sheep as well as the bright eyes of some children in the Napahai area. |
|
There were bailees, the two wheeled bullock carts with bright canopies, and palkees, and there were graceful English phaetons or buggies, drawn by well groomed Arab steeds. |
|
One by one, our valorous battle steeds conquer uneven bridle paths with simple strides. |
|
They are some of the most experienced cavalrymen in Europe and can persuade their steeds into breathtaking acts of speed. |
|
The more talented cavalrymen in the armies of Wesnoth are trained in the use of the crossbow, and matched with much more powerful steeds. |
|
It means that for much of the race the horses are barely cantering and it is not the pace of the steeds but their courage and stamina that matters. |
|
Transporting your best friends from point A to point B, the horse trailer gets your Schleich steeds from where they are to where they need to be. |
|
Right now it's down to these three sailors to prepare their steeds well, to stow everything away and lash everything down. |
|
The first steeds, which perhaps came from America, produced elongated and pungent fruit. |
|
Their steeds are fast and carry them to key points on the battlefield in what seems like a heartbeat. |
|
|
Today our steeds and needs have changed, and our bags have grown appropriately. |
|
The sinews and muscles of the jet black steeds bulged and rippled as they trotted the coach around so that it pointed properly down the Beget Road. |
|
The romance eclipses as the couple rides those beautiful white steeds down a path lined by evergreens. |
|
Able men, high atop their steeds, lassoing things. |
|
France's eternal Province region, with its intricate fabrics and white steeds, is as young-looking as ever. The shadow of writer Frederic Mistral, the 1904 Nobel prize winner, still hovers over the banks of the Rhone River. |
|
Over the decades, Sunset covers have frequently featured steep mountain trails, rearing steeds, and grizzled cowpokes rolling their own. |
|
Instead of embracing on a ship's prow, Sully and Neyfiri ride their banshee steeds in ecstatic communion across the Pandoran sky. |
|
There will certainly be a great deal of exchanges about their various steeds as, though they may be the same length, the level of power is very different. |
|
The antelope's ability to run swiftly has also led to their association with the wind, such as in the Rig Veda, as the steeds of the Maruts and the wind god Vayu. |
|
For already close at hand the Argive host in full array marches and scours along, and the whitening foam beflakes the plain with drops from the deep breath of the steeds. |
|
Within the boldly-wrought voluted architectonic framework prance symmetrical pairs of vivacious steeds to support the circular Garter containing the Earl's arms. |
|
Some of his rural clients would park their long-eared steeds under the chinaberry trees in the back yard, and Atticus would keep appointments on the back steps. |
|
It also plays an important part of myth and legend, such as the contest between the steeds of the god Odin and the giant Hrungnir in Norse mythology. |
|