For myself, I love better the densely-peopled fields than this human desert, this beflagged and macadamised man-made solitude.
3
A false belief and macadamised roads dotted is both the tempter and the (sic) the place,' et cetera.
4
It was an extremely rugged path, and appeared to have been macadamised with stones the size of a man's head.
5
It is distant about a hundred and twenty miles from Cincinnati, but there is a macadamised road (rare blessing!)
6
On the upper plain the surface is often a dead level for a hundred miles, and as firm as a macadamised road.
7
Simple though it sounds, it is astonishingly effective, and, indeed, the sensation is almost that of walking on a hard, macadamised road.
8
On ascending the heights after leaving Smyrna, the road was remarkable in being formed of the broken relics of ancient edifices partly macadamised.
9
There they turned off to a little path leading to the high road to Epinay where we lost the traces in the newly macadamised highway.
10
The country has not been covered with a network of macadamised roads, and the bridges are by no means as safe as could be desired.
11
There is a main street with macadamised roadway and stone pavements, real flat stone, for they were laid before the appearance of the all-conquering cement.
12
They crossed the park and went west along Washington Boulevard, beautiful with its broad macadamised road, and large frame houses set back from the sidewalks.
13
A broken piece of granite used for macadamising a road is a more complex instrument, about the toolishness of which no doubt can be entertained.
14
"Mighty lucky for you that it wasn't a macadamised boulevard instead of a sandy country road," observed the doctor.