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1
In the
old
coaching
days, Brighton was a foregone conclusion.
2
They'll miss the
old
coaching
system some day-markmy word.
3
She sighed for the
old
coaching
days, and hated the thought of all locomotives propelled by steam.
4
People had glanced at him curiously as he had ridden through villages, following the
old
coaching
road.
5
From outside, this neighbourhood pub is deceptively large, a long, low building resembling a grand
old
coaching
inn.
6
That is more the modern method and is in direct contrast to the
old
coaching
method, which, alas!
7
It is, perhaps, the most accurate picture extant of the
old
coaching
era and all that was corollary to it.
8
At one point, he glanced over at the Sacramento bench and caught himself trying to communicate with his
old
coaching
staff.
9
The hotel was accurately, but still somehow misleadingly, described as 'an
old
coaching
inn', and had been recommended by a friend of Hal's.
10
The inn, a rambling ancient house, the atmosphere of the
old
coaching
days still about it, apparently did not welcome him too warmly.
11
But these flights of fancy could be indulged in even n the New Inn, Gloucester, or any similar
old
coaching
inn, if one so desired.
12
Ralph meant to take a meal at the
old
coaching
house, the Woodman, in Kirkland, by the river Kent, and then push on till nightfall.
13
Abernathy's Ford in Co Cork used to be set into an
old
coaching
house and you could see the showroom through two gorgeous, arched windows.
14
'The times have never been half as good as in the
old
coaching
days, before we ever smelt a funnel in New South Wales.
old
coaching
old