The Sporting review, ed. by 'Craven'., 第 39 巻John William Carleton 1858 |
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... taken from thisr 8 2 S 38 Second Sunday af . Christmas . r 8 4M Moon HIGH WATER rises & London Bridge sets . morn . aftern . m . d . h . m . h . m . h . m . 2 58 3 9 319 10 9 5 9 5 30 82011 25 5 50 6 12 816 RISES afternoon [ day.s 4 117 ...
... taken from thisr 8 2 S 38 Second Sunday af . Christmas . r 8 4M Moon HIGH WATER rises & London Bridge sets . morn . aftern . m . d . h . m . h . m . h . m . 2 58 3 9 319 10 9 5 9 5 30 82011 25 5 50 6 12 816 RISES afternoon [ day.s 4 117 ...
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... taken off his team , united , in the course of the year , was not lacking ; and he bore away a second fat ox prize in one of the classes at York , and the second fat pig prize to boot . Cresswell's engagement with him has ceased , and ...
... taken off his team , united , in the course of the year , was not lacking ; and he bore away a second fat ox prize in one of the classes at York , and the second fat pig prize to boot . Cresswell's engagement with him has ceased , and ...
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... vertised at the same , and Ellington at 15 gs . , is a pure absurdity : too many stallion - owners have this high - fee mania . Amid the London fogs of December , and the long 2 THE OMNIBUS . FAges of Horses taken from thisr 2.
... vertised at the same , and Ellington at 15 gs . , is a pure absurdity : too many stallion - owners have this high - fee mania . Amid the London fogs of December , and the long 2 THE OMNIBUS . FAges of Horses taken from thisr 2.
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... taken back ; and owing to this , he only reached 145gs . under Mr. Wetherell's hammer . The Rugbœans have had their Crick run ; and six miles over heavy country there , nearly up to the gorse which Sir Charles Knightley planted in his ...
... taken back ; and owing to this , he only reached 145gs . under Mr. Wetherell's hammer . The Rugbœans have had their Crick run ; and six miles over heavy country there , nearly up to the gorse which Sir Charles Knightley planted in his ...
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... upon Leicester , Sir G. Wombwell ( who has taken Luffenham Lodge for seven years , and intends , it has been said , to keep staghounds ) , Lord Grey de Wilton , Captain Lloyd , Mr. Phillips , and Mr. Sidebottom , 6 THE OMNIBUS .
... upon Leicester , Sir G. Wombwell ( who has taken Luffenham Lodge for seven years , and intends , it has been said , to keep staghounds ) , Lord Grey de Wilton , Captain Lloyd , Mr. Phillips , and Mr. Sidebottom , 6 THE OMNIBUS .
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Aldborough amusement angler animal appeared Bay Middleton beautiful Berkshire Billesdon birds Blink Bonny boat Captain Charley Scupper chesnut Chester Cup colt Connaught Ranger course deer delight Derby Doncaster favour favourite filly fish Fluker foal forest fox-hunting gentleman Gorse ground hand hare head Hill Hobbie Noble horse hounds hour hunting huntsman jockey keeper kennel killed lady leaving legs Leicestershire Littleborough look Lord mare Margate master meet miles mind minutes morning never Newmarket night occasion pack portmanteau present pretty quail Queen's Plate Quorn race remarkably replied riding river Royal scene season shooting shot Sir Reginald Sir Tatton Sykes snipe soon sport sportsman spot Squire Stakes Steeple Chases stream thought trout Truck untried Vainboy weasel whilst wild wind Wood yacht yards young
人気のある引用
431 ページ - Where, as to shame the temples deck'd By skill of earthly architect, Nature herself, it seem'd, would raise A Minster to her Maker's praise ! Not for a meaner use ascend Her columns, or her arches bend; Nor of a theme less solemn tells That mighty surge that ebbs and swells, And still, between each awful pause, From the high vault an answer draws, In varied tone prolong'd and high, That mocks the organ's melody.
336 ページ - How long didst thou think that his silence was slumber ? When the wind waved his garment, how oft didst thou start ? How many long days and long weeks didst...
79 ページ - I do not like thee, Dr Fell. The reason why I cannot tell, But this I know, I know full well, I do not like thee, Dr Fell.
226 ページ - Mine honest friend," replied Diana, "do not, if you will be guided by my advice, bait your hook with too much humility; for, ten to one, it will not catch a single compliment. You know I belong to the unpopular family of Tell-truths, and would not flatter Apollo for his lyre.
336 ページ - For, faithful in death, his mute favourite attended, The much-loved remains of her master defended, And chased the hill-fox and the raven away.
323 ページ - For time is like a fashionable host That slightly shakes his parting guest by the hand, And, with his arms outstretch'd, as he would fly, Grasps in the comer: welcome ever smiles, And farewell goes out sighing.
154 ページ - Philip" of Tennyson, as regarded the coltish chronicle, and one of our pleasantest paddock walks some twelve years ago with him, was to see Lanercost in his stall, and then on to the Muley Moloch mare, and divers others which gambolled about with foals and yearlings beneath the York walls. His room was characteristic. A large-sized Lanercost, painted by Herring Senior, stood over the fire, and Chorister, St. Giles, Lottery, and others, all bits of his favourite blood, kept it in countenance. Orvile's...
258 ページ - The next day, while fishing near the spot named by our four-pound friend, I hooked his veritable fish with the gut and two flies attached. He was a fine trout, and fought well, in defiance of his harness. I took him to the hotel, together with some larger than himself, and in the evening...
333 ページ - Woodgate, finding oat where they had been removed to, in the absence of Wallace, repossessed himself of them, upon which Wallace brought his action ; and the defence was that Woodgate had a right to retain the horses until the keep was paid for, he having a lien by agreement. There is another phase of the law of warranty. We give it, with the two subjoined paragraphs also, nearly just as we find it : — " As to resale by a purchaser with a warranty, where a purchaser, relying upon his warranty,...
129 ページ - Then why recommend to fish up ? He sets up his hobby-horse in one page for the purpose of knocking it down in another. Here is a further extract from p. 112 : " The advantage of having a number of flies is entirely lost by casting straight up, as they all come down in a line, and it is only the trout in that line that can see them ; whereas, if thrown partly across, they all comedown in different lines, and the trout in all these lines can see them.