The New sporting magazine, Bind 11841 |
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Side 6
... wood , near Solden , for an out - lying deer , but not being able to find him , we returned to the Chase , and immediately started a fine buck , and after a run of an hour and a half , he was shot by a keeper . During this run , both ...
... wood , near Solden , for an out - lying deer , but not being able to find him , we returned to the Chase , and immediately started a fine buck , and after a run of an hour and a half , he was shot by a keeper . During this run , both ...
Side 9
... Wood's grocery - May be you never heard tell of the Squire . Well , he is what Judge Jones calls " a villanous compound of ignorance , stupidity , and vanity . " The way the thing happened was just about so - a new comer got his skin ...
... Wood's grocery - May be you never heard tell of the Squire . Well , he is what Judge Jones calls " a villanous compound of ignorance , stupidity , and vanity . " The way the thing happened was just about so - a new comer got his skin ...
Side 12
... wood ; had a good ring in the wood , but there not being scent enough to make him break , the ground got stained , and we lost him . Found a second fox in a spiney near Charley Hall , and ran him to ground in the rock ; bolted , and ...
... wood ; had a good ring in the wood , but there not being scent enough to make him break , the ground got stained , and we lost him . Found a second fox in a spiney near Charley Hall , and ran him to ground in the rock ; bolted , and ...
Side 13
... wooden axle - trees , it must have been a load of itself for four horses , and we were given to understand that it required nearly the whole day to drag it to Leicester and back again , by the aid of the four bob - tailed blacks ...
... wooden axle - trees , it must have been a load of itself for four horses , and we were given to understand that it required nearly the whole day to drag it to Leicester and back again , by the aid of the four bob - tailed blacks ...
Side 15
... wood to rejoice before him - it is paying the Almighty , I say , no compliment to suppose , that he can be either ... wood , called Budden - wood ( 1 had always believed it to be Quorn - wood ) , which went well away for Southland- wood ...
... wood to rejoice before him - it is paying the Almighty , I say , no compliment to suppose , that he can be either ... wood , called Budden - wood ( 1 had always believed it to be Quorn - wood ) , which went well away for Southland- wood ...
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agst ALKEN amongst animal appeared Bay Middleton beat Lord beautiful Bentinck's betting Bibury bred breed Captain Club Colonel colt course Cowes Cutter Deciding Derby Dick Dick Knight Ditto Duke Earl eccellenza Eringo excellent favourite field filly fish forest fox-hounds fox-hunting gentleman guineas hare head horse hounds hunter hunting huntsman I.-NEW SERIES keeper kennel killed Lady Leicestershire London look Lord Douglas's Lord Eglinton's Lord Exeter's Lord G mare Marquis Marshal Soult master master of hounds meeting miles Moloch months old morn Muley Moloch never Newmarket pack Park poachers prize Quar Quorn Raby race ran a bye riding round Schooner season SMITHFIELD CLUB sovs sport sportsman thing Tomboy turf turnips Velocipede weather whilst whip Winks winner won the Stakes yacht young
Populære passager
Side 411 - O now, for ever, Farewell the tranquil mind ! Farewell content ! Farewell the plumed troop, and the big wars, That make ambition...
Side 94 - Tradition, legend, tune, and song Shall many an age that wail prolong ; Still from the sire the son shall hear Of the stern strife and carnage drear Of Flodden's fatal field, Where shivered was fair Scotland's spear And broken was her shield ! XXXV Day dawns upon the mountain's side.
Side 167 - Epaminondas, for example, one of the greatest generals and most perfect characters that Greece ever produced, was a patron of, as well as conspicuous in, all such exercises ; and it is gravely stated in history that a knowledge of the art of wrestling gave to the Thebans under his command the battle of Leuctra, and decided the fate of Sparta. Having read of all this, his wonder ceased at finding that master of the wrestling art, Hippomachus, declare that he could discover his scholars at a distance,...
Side 122 - The grand point is to prevent a competitor from getting before them. The horses, on their part, are not without emulation ; they tremble and are impatient, and are continually in motion. At last, the signal once given, they strike, devour the course, hurrying along with unremitting velocity.
Side 170 - Presently the whole village became alarmed for the safety of Master Francis. Out ran the apothecary from his house, and the mother of one of the Amstead housemaids from hers, both insisting on some of the lookers-on interfering, and putting an end to the fight. It happened, however, that the coachman had walked down to the village with his young master, and he stoutly asserted that Master Francis was "all right.
Side 224 - This opinion is embraced without even an attempt being made to discover the component parts of manure, or to become acquainted with its nature. In addition to the general conditions, such as heat, light, moisture, and the component parts of the atmosphere, which are necessary for the growth of all plants, certain substances are found to exercise a peculiar influence on the development of particular families.
Side 22 - No place in the United States presents such a series of events, interesting in themselves, and permanently affecting, as they occurred, its progress and prosperity. Five times its flag has changed, three different sovereignties have claimed its allegiance, and since it has been held by the United States, its government has been thrice transferred; twice it has been besieged by the Indians, once captured in war, and once burned to the ground."* On the 13th of September, 1759, a battle occurred between...
Side 245 - They tell me that six more horses, and a few more couples of hounds than he now has, would do ; and I am sure you could hunt fox as well as you do hare." Dick. — "Your papa will never keep foxhounds, sir. He is the best master of harriers this day in England, but don't take delight in. fox-hunting. Then, again, sir, you are wrong about thinking I could hunt fox as well as I do hare. When you turns fox-hunter, which no doubt you will do when you gets...
Side 167 - ... carrying meat from the shambles; or that crowns of olive should have been bestowed by the Eleans on boys of his own age, who had excelled in gymnastic exploits. Nor was the art of boxing exhibited to his young, but aspiring mind, in less glowing colours. He found not only that Milo, one of the athletae of his day, could knock down a bull by a blow of his arm, but, by the example of Dares, that the science of self-defence, as the modern term is, was not beneath the notice of a prince. So far from...
Side 359 - ... woods. Each raft was eighty or ninety feet long, with a small house erected on it; and on each was a stack of hay, round which several horses and cows were feeding, while the paraphernalia of a farm-yard, the...