Baily's Magazine of Sports and Pastimes, 21. sējumsBaily Bros., 1872 |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 16.
. lappuse
... Gipsy Tongue , 20 . John Scott , 27 . A Cruise to St. Laurence on Sea , 28 . Our Van , 32 , 112 , 173 , 234 , 297 , 360 , 419 . Hunting : List of Hounds , their Masters , Huntsmen , Whips , Kennels , & c . , 45 . The Earl of Radnor : a ...
... Gipsy Tongue , 20 . John Scott , 27 . A Cruise to St. Laurence on Sea , 28 . Our Van , 32 , 112 , 173 , 234 , 297 , 360 , 419 . Hunting : List of Hounds , their Masters , Huntsmen , Whips , Kennels , & c . , 45 . The Earl of Radnor : a ...
20. lappuse
... GIPSY TONGUE . ' Colchus an Assyrius ; Thebis nutritus an Argis ? ' - HORACE . FOR more than four centuries , tribes of wanderers , wild in aspect , and of swarthy complexion ... GIPSY TONGUE . [ November Slang Terms and the Gipsy Tongue,
... GIPSY TONGUE . ' Colchus an Assyrius ; Thebis nutritus an Argis ? ' - HORACE . FOR more than four centuries , tribes of wanderers , wild in aspect , and of swarthy complexion ... GIPSY TONGUE . [ November Slang Terms and the Gipsy Tongue,
21. lappuse
... to examine their language ( the Rommaney Tschib ) , to trace it to its roots , and to show the important influence which it has exercised on our own familiar discourse . These gipsy 1871. ] 21 SLANG TERMS , AND THE GIPSY TONGUE .
... to examine their language ( the Rommaney Tschib ) , to trace it to its roots , and to show the important influence which it has exercised on our own familiar discourse . These gipsy 1871. ] 21 SLANG TERMS , AND THE GIPSY TONGUE .
22. lappuse
... gipsy word for a snake , in Hindostanee it is sarp , in Sanscrit sarpa , in Latin serpens , in English serpent . Yog is fire in gipsy , ag in Hindostanee , agni in Sanscrit , ignis in Latin , whence we have igneous . Devas is day in Gipsy ...
... gipsy word for a snake , in Hindostanee it is sarp , in Sanscrit sarpa , in Latin serpens , in English serpent . Yog is fire in gipsy , ag in Hindostanee , agni in Sanscrit , ignis in Latin , whence we have igneous . Devas is day in Gipsy ...
23. lappuse
... Gipsy is darkness ; in Hindostanee tämä has the same signification . In Gipsy tattepen is summer , tatta is hot in Hindostanee ; tapta has the same meaning in Sanscrit , whence the Latin tepidus , and the English tepid . In Gipsy ...
... Gipsy is darkness ; in Hindostanee tämä has the same signification . In Gipsy tattepen is summer , tatta is hot in Hindostanee ; tapta has the same meaning in Sanscrit , whence the Latin tepidus , and the English tepid . In Gipsy ...
Citi izdevumi - Skatīt visu
Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
Ainsty amongst Atherstone Badsworth beat Bedale better BOWLING AVERAGES Bramham Bramham Moor brother Capt Captain Carhaix Castle Charles chase Club Colonel course covert Derby Doncaster Duke Durham Earl favourite fences field foxhounds gallop gentleman George Gipsy Gorse Grand ground Hall hard head Hill Hindostanee horse hounds hour hunting huntsman Hurworth Jack John John Gregson kennel killed Lady Lambton late Leicestershire look Lord Lord Hawke Lord Portsmouth mare Master meet miles minutes morning never Newmarket Nobbler Oats once pace pack Park peasants Punchestown Pytchley Quorn race ride rider rode Russley scent season Sedgefield side Sir Tatton Sykes sport sportsman stable Stakes steeplechase stud Tailby Thur took Tues Turf turned Vale Whin whip wild winner Wood word York and Ainsty Yorkshire young
Populāri fragmenti
100. lappuse - The expectancy and rose of the fair state, The glass of fashion and the mould of form, The observ'd of all observers, quite, quite down! And I, of ladies most deject and wretched, That suck'd the honey of his music vows, Now see that noble and most sovereign reason, Like sweet bells jangled, out of tune and harsh; That unmatch'd form and feature of blown youth Blasted with ecstasy: O!
334. lappuse - Full fathom five thy father lies ; Of his bones are coral made : Those are pearls that were his eyes : Nothing of him that doth fade, But doth suffer a sea- change Into something rich and strange.
92. lappuse - BAWDIN. *HE feathered songster chanticleer Had wound his bugle horn, And told the early villager The coming of the morn. King Edward saw the ruddy streaks Of light eclipse the gray ; And heard the raven's croaking throat Proclaim the fated day. "Thou'rt right," quoth he, "for, by the God That sits enthroned on high ! Charles Bawdin, and his fellows twain, To-day shall surely die.
24. lappuse - If thou hast much, give plenteously: if thou hast little, do thy diligence gladly to give of that little : for so gatherest thou thyself a good reward in the day of necessity. Tobit iv. He that hath pity upon the poor lendeth unto the Lord : and look, what he layeth out, it shall be paid him again.
65. lappuse - On the straightest of legs and the roundest of feet, With ribs like a frigate his timbers to meet, With a fashion and fling and a form so complete, That to see him dance over the flags is a treat.
6. lappuse - I have lived my life — I am nearly done, — I have played the game all round ; But I freely admit that the best of my fun I owe it to horse and hound. With a hopeful heart and a conscience clear, I can laugh in your face, Black Care ; Though you're hovering near, there's no room for you here, On the back of my good grey mare.
173. lappuse - He saith among the trumpets, Ha, ha ; and he smelleth the battle afar off, the thunder of the captains and the shouting.
5. lappuse - The free, wide plain to meet, With the lark and his carol high over my head, And the bustling pack at my feet, I feel no fetter, I know no bounds, I am free as a bird in the air, While the covert resounds in a chorus of hounds Right under the nose of the mare. We are in for a gallop ! Away ! away ! I told them my beauty could fly, And we'll lead them a dance ere they catch us to-day, For we mean it — my lass and I ! She skims the fences, she scours the plain, Like a creature winged, I swear, With...
334. lappuse - Can such things be, And overcome us like a summer cloud, Without our special wonder...
66. lappuse - Catch ye who can. From the find to the finish, the whole blessed day, How he cut out the work, how he showed us the way. When our fox doubled back where the fallow-deer lay, How he stuck to the line, and turned short with his prey.