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Examples
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"Hurlers" -- so we turned aside at once to look at them from a nearer point of view.
Rambles Beyond Railways; or, Notes in Cornwall taken A-foot Wilkie Collins 1856
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The three circles known as the Hurlers lie close together with their centres nearly in a straight line in the direction N.N.E. by S.S.W. At
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"Hurlers"; eleven in one circle, fourteen in another, and twelve in a third -- thirty-seven in all; but only about one-half of them remained standing.
From John O'Groats to Land's End Robert Naylor
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Basically it's a Shameless Marketing Ploy, and I can't get the damn thing to work anyway, although you do wind up on a page where you can watch a video of a very good track called `The Hurlers' with Seth Himself looking extremely hunky in a fiddle-and-rugged-coastline scenario and is worth checking out.
June 26th, 2008 2008
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Actually, I've listened to `The Hurlers' a couple of times now, and I think it's a magnificent track.
June 26th, 2008 2008
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Then would come a fine morning, and a challenge perhaps from the Hurlers of St. Ive or North
Legend Land, Vol. 1 Being a collection of some of the Old Tales told in those Western Parts of Britain served by The Great Western Railway. George Basil Barham
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Craddock Moor, four or five miles north of Liskeard, you may find to-day the remains of three ancient stone circles known as "The Hurlers."
Legend Land, Vol. 1 Being a collection of some of the Old Tales told in those Western Parts of Britain served by The Great Western Railway. George Basil Barham
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From father to son, from grandparent to child, through long centuries, the story has been handed down of how "The Hurlers" came to be fixed in eternal stillness high up there above the little village of St. Cleer.
Legend Land, Vol. 1 Being a collection of some of the Old Tales told in those Western Parts of Britain served by The Great Western Railway. George Basil Barham
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The district abounds in mysterious piles of rock such as the Trethevy St.ne, and the Hurlers; while the student of folklore will not fail to be attracted by the sacred wells of St. Keyne and St. Cleer.
The Cornish Riviera Sidney Heath 1907
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Abandoning any more minute observation of the Hurlers than that already recorded, in order to husband the little time still left to us, we soon shaped our course again in the direction of the Cheese-Wring.
Rambles Beyond Railways; or, Notes in Cornwall taken A-foot Wilkie Collins 1856
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