The Sportsman1842 |
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Pagina 22
... five are most cunningly laid to make sure of the beleaguer , and all other paths where her supposed egress or regress may possibly be diverted to , are equally snared ; the cap- ture is as sure as two and two , & c . & c . In the manner ...
... five are most cunningly laid to make sure of the beleaguer , and all other paths where her supposed egress or regress may possibly be diverted to , are equally snared ; the cap- ture is as sure as two and two , & c . & c . In the manner ...
Pagina 28
... FIVE YEARS OLD . ... Mr. Hodgson's Careless . Mr. Hodgson's Naughtylass . his Crafty . his Relish . his Conquest . Mr. Chadwick's Novelty . his Gadfly . Mr. Drake's Brilliant . his Wrathful . Mr. Hodgson's Cruel . Mr. Foljambe's Tempest ...
... FIVE YEARS OLD . ... Mr. Hodgson's Careless . Mr. Hodgson's Naughtylass . his Crafty . his Relish . his Conquest . Mr. Chadwick's Novelty . his Gadfly . Mr. Drake's Brilliant . his Wrathful . Mr. Hodgson's Cruel . Mr. Foljambe's Tempest ...
Pagina 30
... five minutes . Day deserves the thanks of those who hunt with the Quorn . The meet was a large one , including all the ' elite ' from Melton , with the exception of Lord Wilton , who was too late , although Mr. Greene waited a quarter ...
... five minutes . Day deserves the thanks of those who hunt with the Quorn . The meet was a large one , including all the ' elite ' from Melton , with the exception of Lord Wilton , who was too late , although Mr. Greene waited a quarter ...
Pagina 32
... five others , are also at the Bell . Now one would think that so much road work as there must be for hunters going and returning from hunting , that a man would prefer the country to the bustle of an hotel . This , however , is ...
... five others , are also at the Bell . Now one would think that so much road work as there must be for hunters going and returning from hunting , that a man would prefer the country to the bustle of an hotel . This , however , is ...
Pagina 33
... five o'clock , the distance from Paris being thirty - five miles . Immediately upon our arri- val , I threw off my knapsack ; this , by the bye , is a very convenient article , which , with its present contents , weighs twenty - seven ...
... five o'clock , the distance from Paris being thirty - five miles . Immediately upon our arri- val , I threw off my knapsack ; this , by the bye , is a very convenient article , which , with its present contents , weighs twenty - seven ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
agst Alice Hawthorne amongst angler animal appearance Attila Auckland Ballinkeele Bay Middleton beaten beating beautiful Bellona Bentinck's betting birds Broadwath brother chase Chatham Chester Cup colt course Cruiskeen Dee Stakes Derby distance dogs Duke eyes Fakeer favour favourite field filly fish France Galaor gentleman ground half hand head heard honour horse hounds hour hunting Jockey Club July Cup lady Lanercost length look Lord G Lord George Bentinck Lord of Holderness Marshal Soult meet miles Moloch morning Muley Moloch never Newmarket night Oaks party passed pheasant present pretty race readers river Rory O'More Satirist season shooting shot side soon Soult sport sportsman spot Stakes stream tiger town trout Velocipede Vulcan whilst William William de Fortibus yards young
Populaire passages
Pagina 507 - Truly, shepherd, in respect of itself, it is a good life; but in respect that it is a shepherd's life, it is naught. In respect that it is solitary, I like it very well ; but in respect that it is private, it is a very vile life. Now in respect it is in the fields, it pleaseth me well ; but in respect it is not in the court, it is tedious.
Pagina 334 - He was bred to the law, which is, in my opinion, one of the first and noblest of human sciences ; a science which does more to quicken and invigorate the understanding than all the other kinds of learning put together ; but it is not apt, except in persons very happily born, to open and to liberalize the mind exactly in the same proportion.
Pagina 230 - I fly from pomp, I fly from plate, I fly from Falsehood's specious grin ; Freedom I love, and form I hate, And choose my lodgings at an inn. Here, waiter! take my sordid ore, Which lackeys else might hope to win; It buys what courts have not in store, It buys me freedom at an inn.
Pagina 101 - And the withe-woven pannier lies flung on the mead ; He looks to the lake through its fane of green trees, And sighs for the curl of the low summer breeze.
Pagina 90 - WINTER. THE mill-wheel's frozen in the stream, The church is deck'd with holly, Misletoe hangs from the kitchen beam, To fright away melancholy; Icicles clink in the milkmaid's pail, Younkers skate on the pool below, Blackbirds perch on the garden rail, And hark, how the cold winds blow! There goes the squire to shoot at snipe, Here runs Dick to fetch a log; You'd swear his breath was the smoke of a pipe, In the frosty morning fog. — Hodge is breaking the ice for the kine, Old and young cough as...
Pagina 192 - ... marks. Having seen them, he has got an idea where the birds are, and will, with the utmost caution, endeavour to catch sight of them. I will suppose him fortunate enough to do so, and that they are perfectly unconscious of his near approach. He must lower his head in the same cautious manner, and look for some refuge at a fair distance from the birds, through which he may fire the deadly sitting shot. After...
Pagina 464 - The wolffis are right noisome to tame beastial in all parts of Scotland, except one part thereof, named Glenmorris, in which the tame beastial gets little damage of wild beastial, especially of tods (foxes); for each house nurses a young tod certain days, and mengis (mixes) the flesh thereof, after it be slain, with such meat as they give to their fowls or other small beasts, and so many as eat of this meat are preserved two months after from any damage of tods ; for tods will eat no flesh that gusts...
Pagina 192 - ... of the shore for some distance ; then, taking out his glass, he must reconnoitre it by inches, noticing every tuft of grass or stone, to which wild-fowl asleep often bear so close a resemblance, that, except to a very quick eye, assisted by a glass, the difference is not perceptible. If the loch be well frequented, he will most likely first discover a flock of divers, but must not be in a hurry to pocket his glass, until he has thoroughly inspected the shore, in case some more desirable fowl...
Pagina 390 - Fn>m an abbess disposed to turn author, we might more reasonably have expected a manual of meditations for the closet, or select rules for making salves, or distilling strong waters.
Pagina 256 - ... Disliking our appearance however, and not relishing the smell of gunpowder, he soon abandoned the grove, and took up his position on the summit of an adjacent stony hill., the base of which being thickly clothed with thorn trees, we could only obtain a view of him from the distance of three hundred yards. Crouched on this fortified pinnacle, like the sculptured figure at the entrance of a nobleman's park, the enemy disdainfully surveyed us for several minutes, daring us to approach with an air...