The Sporting review, ed. by 'Craven'.John William Carleton 1841 |
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Página 15
... sold one to Mr. Assheton Smith , on that gentleman's late celebrated visit to Leicestershire , for £ 400 . No. 16. Count Batthyany . - No stranger would , even for a moment , imagine the Count a foreigner . He speaks English like a ...
... sold one to Mr. Assheton Smith , on that gentleman's late celebrated visit to Leicestershire , for £ 400 . No. 16. Count Batthyany . - No stranger would , even for a moment , imagine the Count a foreigner . He speaks English like a ...
Página 25
... sold upon these occasions ; while much of the remaining portion falls to Mr. Tattersall's hammer at the various private auctions that take place in the country . Horses intended for sale must be in by noon on the preceding Friday ; and ...
... sold upon these occasions ; while much of the remaining portion falls to Mr. Tattersall's hammer at the various private auctions that take place in the country . Horses intended for sale must be in by noon on the preceding Friday ; and ...
Página 27
... sold for a fixed price — or " just as much as they will bring , " as the case may be . Being parted with , Her Majesty becomes entitled to a certain per centage , Messrs . Tattersall to another , and the vender receives the balance , in ...
... sold for a fixed price — or " just as much as they will bring , " as the case may be . Being parted with , Her Majesty becomes entitled to a certain per centage , Messrs . Tattersall to another , and the vender receives the balance , in ...
Página 35
... sold with impunity , and are , at the same time , in request . But it would be better than any of the substitutes we have suggested , if one of the party would himself proceed before the others to Edin- burgh , and there find keepers ...
... sold with impunity , and are , at the same time , in request . But it would be better than any of the substitutes we have suggested , if one of the party would himself proceed before the others to Edin- burgh , and there find keepers ...
Página 59
... sold at high prices , or used by grandees and chiefs who reside in fixed habita- tions and towns . This " The Persian . — If we were to judge from ancient sculptures , the Persian horses of antiquity were as heavy as the present Flemish ...
... sold at high prices , or used by grandees and chiefs who reside in fixed habita- tions and towns . This " The Persian . — If we were to judge from ancient sculptures , the Persian horses of antiquity were as heavy as the present Flemish ...
Índice
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225 | |
323 | |
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352 | |
66 | |
89 | |
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107 | |
113 | |
123 | |
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162 | |
177 | |
356 | |
361 | |
370 | |
385 | |
408 | |
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425 | |
438 | |
461 | |
484 | |
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Palavras e frases frequentes
50 sovs 9 lb 9 st agst allowed 3 lb Ascot Bay Middleton beaten Bentinck's Betting bowled Broadwath canter Capt Champagne Stakes Chapple Connelly course Darling declared Dee Stakes Derby distance Doncaster extra favourite fillies five subscribers five years old four subscribers four years old Gardnor's geldings allowed gentlemen Goodman's half a length half-bred Handicap heats Hippodrome Houghton Meeting hounds hunting Langar Leger Liverpool Lord Albemarle's Lord Eglinton's Lord Exeter's Lord G mares and geldings Match miles Moloch Muley Moloch Mynn Newmarket Oaks once round Park Park Hill Stakes Peel's Pettit placed Plate of 50 Produce Stakes Queen's Plate race second horse six and aged six years old sport Stakes at Goodwood Stakes at Liverpool Stakes of 25 Sussex Stakes Sweepstakes Sweepstakes of 50 three years old Two-year-old Stakes Velocipede winner won a Sweepstakes
Passagens conhecidas
Página 243 - When the proud steed shall know why man restrains His fiery course, or drives him o'er the plains; When the dull ox, why now he breaks the clod, Is now a victim, and now Egypt's god: Then shall man's pride and dulness comprehend His actions', passions', being's use and end; Why doing, sufFring, check'd, impell'd; and why This hour a slave, the next a deity.
Página 122 - ... in a thicket. I rushed up and fired — at the same time the critter leaped over the dogs and came within three feet of me, running like mad; he jumped into the lake, and tried to mount the log I had just deserted, but every time he got half his body on it, it would roll over and send him under; the dogs, too, got around him, and pulled him about, and finally Bowieknife clenched with him, and they sunk into the lake together.
Página 83 - Alas ! our young affections run to waste, Or water but the desert ; whence arise But weeds of dark luxuriance, tares of haste, Rank at the core, though tempting to the eyes, Flowers whose wild odours breathe but agonies, And trees whose gums are poison ; such the plants Which spring beneath her steps as Passion flies O'er the world's wilderness, and vainly pants For some celestial fruit forbidden to our wants.
Página 121 - Having completed every thing to my satisfaction, I started at sunrise, and to my great joy, I discovered from the way the dogs run, that they were near him; finding his trail was nothing, for that had become as plain to the pack as a turnpike road.
Página 122 - ... I had lost my caps, my gun had snapped, the fellow with me had fired at the bar's head, and I expected, every moment, to see him close in with the dogs, and kill a dozen of them at least. In this thing I was mistaken, for the bar leaped over the ring formed by the dogs, and giving a fierce grow], was off; the pack, of course, in full cry after him.
Página 120 - I walk into the varmints though, and it has become about as much the same to me as drinking. It is told in two sentences — a bar is started, and he is killed. The thing is somewhat monotonous now — I know just how much they will run, where they will tire, how much they will growl, and what a thundering time I will have in getting them home.
Página 118 - social hall," that part of the cabin fitted off for a bar; then was to be heard a loud crowing, which would not have continued to have interested...
Página 121 - The bar shook his head as the ball struck it, and then walked down from that tree as gently as a lady would from a carriage. 'Twas a beautiful sight to see him do that — he was in such a rage that he seemed to be as little afraid of the dogs as if they had been sucking pigs; and the dogs warn't slow in making a ring around him at a respectful distance, I tell you; even Bowie-knife, himself, stood off. Then the way his eyes...
Página 123 - It was, in fact, a creation bar, and if it had lived in Samson's time, and had met him in a fair fight, it would have licked him in the twinkling of a dice-box.
Página 119 - ... perhaps you have been to New Orleans often; I never made the first visit before, and I don't intend to make another in a crow's life. I am thrown away in that ar place, and useless, that ar a fact.