Baily's Magazine of Sports and Pastimes, 16. sējumsBaily Bros., 1869 |
No grāmatas satura
1.5. rezultāts no 83.
2. lappuse
... once accepted , and the supposed best man in France . chosen to compete with him . The contest excited the greatest interest , but the affair was affair was one way throughout , Mr. Herbert taking the lead , keeping it throughout , and ...
... once accepted , and the supposed best man in France . chosen to compete with him . The contest excited the greatest interest , but the affair was affair was one way throughout , Mr. Herbert taking the lead , keeping it throughout , and ...
4. lappuse
... once or twice a week . Mr. Wood's principal employment , besides overlooking the kennel establishment , was to provide a hebdomadal relay of foxes for this purpose - and hard enough work he found it . as Mr. Wood was enjoying his glass ...
... once or twice a week . Mr. Wood's principal employment , besides overlooking the kennel establishment , was to provide a hebdomadal relay of foxes for this purpose - and hard enough work he found it . as Mr. Wood was enjoying his glass ...
7. lappuse
... once ; ' and , looking with the eye of a sportsman over the hounds , as clustering round Sam Caird's horse they came suddenly round the corner , a beautiful lot they are surely . Call them harriers ! Why ' I never set eyes on a likelier ...
... once ; ' and , looking with the eye of a sportsman over the hounds , as clustering round Sam Caird's horse they came suddenly round the corner , a beautiful lot they are surely . Call them harriers ! Why ' I never set eyes on a likelier ...
10. lappuse
... once more put them on the track of the beaten fox , now heading directly for the forest , which nevertheless he did not enter , but ran as though he had a point beyond , though what that could be no one could guess . As the reader knows ...
... once more put them on the track of the beaten fox , now heading directly for the forest , which nevertheless he did not enter , but ran as though he had a point beyond , though what that could be no one could guess . As the reader knows ...
12. lappuse
... once enlist the interest and support of a body as yet uneducated in Turf pursuits , then only the cards were wanting to make the game their own , and for this purpose names of horses alone were almost sufficient ; and it mattered little ...
... once enlist the interest and support of a body as yet uneducated in Turf pursuits , then only the cards were wanting to make the game their own , and for this purpose names of horses alone were almost sufficient ; and it mattered little ...
Citi izdevumi - Skatīt visu
Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
animal appear become believe better blood brought called carried cause close Club coming considered course cover Crisp Derby doubt England equally excellent expected eyes fact fair favourite field four friends give ground half hands head hope horse hounds hour hunting huntsman interest keep killed known Lady land late leave less look Lord lost mare Master match means meet miles mind minutes month morning nature nearly never night once Oxford pack pass perhaps play present question race remark ride scent season seen side sport stand success sure taken tell thing took Turf turned usual week Wood young
Populāri fragmenti
173. lappuse - We may live without poetry, music, and art ; We may live without conscience, and live without heart ; We may live without friends ; we may live without books ; But civilized man cannot live without cooks. He may live without books, what is knowledge but grieving ? He may live without hope, what is hope but deceiving ? He may live without love, what is passion but pining ? But where is the man that can live without dining ? XX.
66. lappuse - ORPHAN hours, the year is dead, Come and sigh, come and weep ! Merry hours, smile instead, For the year is but asleep. See, it smiles as it is sleeping, Mocking your untimely weeping.
228. lappuse - O'er fallow and pasture he sweeps like a bird, And there's nothing too wide, nor too high, nor too strong ; For the ploughs cannot choke, nor the fences can crop, This Clipper that stands in the stall at the top.
227. lappuse - A head like a snake, and a skin like a mouse, An eye like a woman's, bright, gentle, and brown, With loins and a back that would carry a house, And quarters to lift him smack over a town.
137. lappuse - How blest should we be, have I often conceived, Had we really achieved what we nearly achieved ! We but catch at the skirts of the thing we would be, And fall back on the lap of a false destiny.
228. lappuse - There were eight of us had it, and seven got in! Then he shook his lean head when he heard them go plop! This Clipper that stands in the stall at the top. Ere we got to the finish, I counted but few, And never a coat without dirt, but my own; To the good horse I rode all the credit was due, When the others were tiring, he scarcely was blown; For the best of the pace is unable to stop The Clipper that stands in the stall at the top.
228. lappuse - Yd a lead of them all when we came to the brook, A big one a bumper and up to your chin; As he threw it behind him, I turned for a look, There were eight of us had it, and seven got in! Then he shook his lean head when he heard them go plop! This Clipper that stands in the stall at the top.
70. lappuse - On the eve of Christmas-day they carry mistletoe to the high altar of the Cathedral, and proclaim a public and universal liberty, pardon, and freedom to all sorts of inferior and even wicked people, at the gates of the city, towards the four quarters of heaven.
113. lappuse - ... bad one to beat." They told me that night he went best through the run, They said that he hung up a dozen to dry, When a brook in the bottom stopped most of their fun, But I know that I never went near it, not I. For I found it a fruitless attempt to compete With this rum one to follow, this bad one to beat.
338. lappuse - WHITE-MIST. THE sequel of to-day dissevers all This fellowship of straight riders, and hard men To hounds the flyers of the hunt. I think That we shall never more in days to come Hold cheery talk of hounds and horses (each Praising his own the most) shall steal away Through brake and coppice-wood, or side by side Breast the sharp bullfinch and deep-holding dyke, Sweep through the uplands, skim the vale below, And leave the land behind us like a dream.