Woodwell-head cover, evidently his point from the first, the pack pulling him down in the middle of a large grass field, every hound but one at his brush. Jack Stevens with him in his hands would be a subject worthy of Edwin Landseer himself ; a blackthorn,... The New sporting magazine - 47 ページ1842全文表示 - この書籍について
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - 1832 - 626 ページ
...evidently his point from the first ; the pack pulling him down in the middle of a large grass field, every hound but one at his brush. Jack Stevens with...Landseer himself: a black-thorn, which has laid hold of iiis cheek, has besmeared his upper garments with blood, and one side of his head and cap are cased... | |
| 1832 - 496 ページ
...evidently his point from the first; the pack pulling him down in the middle of a large grass field, every hound but one at his brush. Jack Stevens with...are cased in mud, by a fall he has had in a lane, bis horse having alighted in the ruts from a high flight of rails ; but he has ridden the same horse... | |
| Pierce Egan - 1832 - 426 ページ
...evidently his point from the first; the pack pulling him down in the middle of a large grass field, every hound but one at his brush. Jack Stevens with...his head and cap are cased in mud, by a fall he has bad in a lane, his horse having alighted in the ruts from a high Sight of rails ; but he has ridden... | |
| Pierce Egan - 1832 - 432 ページ
...evidently his point from the first; the pack pulling him down in the middle of a large grass field, every hound but one at his brush. Jack Stevens with...has laid hold of his cheek, has besmeared his upper garment* with blood, and one side of his head and cap are cased in mud, by a fall he has had in a lane,... | |
| Philip Alexander Prince - 1843 - 776 ページ
...Woolwell-hcad, evidently his point from the first ; the pack pulling him down in the middle of a large grass-field, every hound but one at his brush. Jack"...worthy of Edwin Landseer himself: a blackthorn, which had laid hold of his cheek, has besmeared his upper garments with blood ; and one side of his head... | |
| Nimrod - 1843 - 324 ページ
...evidently his point from the first, the pack pulling him down in the middle of a large grass field, every hound but one at his brush. Jack Stevens with him in his hands would be a subject refused, from the late Lord Middleton, the enormous sum of two thousand two hundred pounds for two... | |
| Nimrod - 1853 - 342 ページ
...pulling him down in the middle of a large grass field, every hound but one at his brush. J,ack Steyens with him in his hands would be a subject Worthy of...which has laid hold of his cheek, has besmeared his ujpper garments with blood, and one side of his head and. cap are cased in mud, by a fall he has had... | |
| Nimrod - 1898 - 402 ページ
...evidently his point from the first ; the pack pulling him down in the middle of a large grass field, every hound but one at his brush. Jack Stevens with...has laid hold of his cheek, has besmeared his upper 1 The only son of Sir Henry Peyton, Bart, one of the best and hardest riders of the present day. F... | |
| John Benjamin Firth - 1926 - 462 ページ
...of Landseer himself, a black-thorn which has laid hold of his cheek has besmeared his upper quarter with blood, and one side of his head and cap are cased in mud by a fal 1 he had had in a lane, his horse having alighted in the ruts from a high flight of rails : but... | |
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