7 Metaphors for granges

"A grange is a farm, with its farm- house.

My Lord Grange was the principal man in Prestonpans parish; and Master Carlyle, with his excellent father, had great reverence for the patron who had been the cause of the family's transplantation from Annandale.

"A grange is a farm and farm house.

The Grange, close by, is also the work of Prior Cantlow; but the porch is a later addition, of Jacobean times.

The ten o'clock Edinburgh express from King's Cross next morning took me up to Doncaster, and hiring a musty old fly at the station, I drove three miles out of the town on the Rotherham Road, finding Whiston Grange to be a fine old Elizabethan mansion in the center of a great park, with tall old twisted chimneys, and beautifully-kept gardens.

Place House, once a grange of Shaftesbury Abbey, at the end of the village, is an early Tudor manor.

François de la Grange, Seigneur de Montigny and de Sery, was a member of the Court of Henri III, and was one of his mignons.

7 Metaphors for  granges