Southward from Lyndhurst the road goes over undulating ground and through magnificent oaks and beeches to Brockenhurst, past a heronry at Vinney Ridge.
Here the woods took another character: dark firs grew in the place of beeches and oaks.
He now entered the part of the woods where the beeches and oaks grow so closely together that at midday the sky seems green, rather than blue.
On one side of the little path was the dark fir-wood, impenetrable in its gloom, on the other, beeches and oaks.
Ties deep as the tangled roots of the bindweed, strong as the great hawsers of the beeches that reached below the mud of Undern Pool, held him to it, the bondslave of a beauty he could not understand, a terror he could not express.
She hurried along, leaving the beaten track, creeping under the broad skirts of the beeches and over the white prostrate larch-boles where the resin ran slowly like the dark blood of creatures beautiful, defeated, dying.
The small patens of the beeches shone like green glass, and the pale spired chestnuts were candelabras on either side of the steep path.
A night watch in the woods opened for John Gore; he and his horse would have to make the best of such quarters as they had, the shelter of the beeches and the litter of leaves and bracken.
The beeches themselves were a-glitter with ruddy gold.
From the Burnley Beeches I drove as I 'ad been directed, past the Ambly Arms, and three mile further I found the great North Road, and there I wore.
Here the brilliant green of the beeches is diversified by the dark blue-greens of fir and cedar.
Outside, the beeches continued sighing in the night wind, and our two dogs, shut up in a shed, were whining and howling in an uncanny fashion.
The solid rain does away with all the hills, and shows only the solitary thorns at the edge of an oak wood, or a row of beeches above a hazel hedgerow and, beneath that, stars of stitchwort in the drenched grass.
Is this the Pilgrims' Way, in the valley now, a frail path chiefly through oak and hazel, sometimes over whin and whinberry and heather and sand, but looking up at the yews and beeches of the chalk hills?
In this anomalous state he advanced, until he came to a grove of old beeches that grew at the foot of one of the hill-ranges we have described, and here the noises he heard were not calculated to diminish his terrors.
He then bid her good-bye, turned from the road, and bent his steps in the direction of the Rabbit Bank, on one of the beeches of which he had intended to hang the miser.
Lights began to shine through the casements, she saw the candles brought into the dining-room, the darkness thickened about her, only the trunks of the nearer beeches gave back a gleam.
I replied by telegram that I would arrive at Beeches by a late train that evening.
I cannot leave Beeches until this matter is satisfactorily cleared up.
Captain Ponsonby had arrived at Beeches about a fortnight ago, had proposed for Lady Violet, who had accepted him not without a certain unwillingness, and the marriage was arranged to take place immediately after Christmas.
It was from Lord Erstfield, requesting me to go to Beeches immediately.
I shall remain at Beeches until to-morrow, and even longer if necessary.
When I remembered the blooming, healthy girl who had gone to Beeches two months ago, I was appalled by the change.
He rose up with a sigh, wiped his eyes, so that none should see that he had wept, and hastened in silent sorrow by the side of the lofty oaks and beeches of the high-road which he now reached.
Above at the spring house, lower down sitting under the spreading beeches he taught the children to build altars, and wind wreaths.
Near the summit a few bunches of the brake fern rise out of the grass; then the foremost trees are reached, beeches as yet but faintly tinted here and there.
On the smooth bark of those beeches the shepherd lads have cut their names with their great clasp-knives.
Here the beeches show great spots of orange; yonder the same tree, from the highest branch to the lowest, has become a rich brown.
They came about half-way in their ride through the village of Penshurst; and on reaching the Park turned off under the beeches towards the house.
But what does he do here among the stones and mortar when he has the beeches of Penshurst to walk beneath.
The narrow road, at this point, was through a dense forest of oaks and beeches that crowded to the very edge of the track and formed an arch over it.
The beeches that stand across the road in front of Wordsworth's house, at Rydal Mount, have boles nearly as green as the surrounding hills.
These beeches develop finely in the open, and make superb shade-trees along the highway.
It was a scene as unlike as could be conceived to the Cottage at Windyhill: the trees were all glorious in colour; yellow birches like trees made of light, oaks all red and fiery, chestnuts and elms and beeches in a hundred hues.
It looked very peaceful seated in that fold of the hill, no tossing of trees about it, though a little higher up the slim oaks and beeches of the copse were flinging themselves about against the grey sky in a kind of agonised appeal.
It is an indemonstrable assumption that oaks and beeches in the days of Socrates and Cicero were not slightly better trees than the oaks and beeches of to-day.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "beeches" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.