The New sporting magazine, Volum 191850 |
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Side
... give grace to the New Year so often as it shall be our fate to welcome its recurrerce . A cheerful spirit is the most grateful sacrifice the creature can offer to the Creator . .... upon such sacrifice The gods themselves throw incense ...
... give grace to the New Year so often as it shall be our fate to welcome its recurrerce . A cheerful spirit is the most grateful sacrifice the creature can offer to the Creator . .... upon such sacrifice The gods themselves throw incense ...
Side 1
... give grace to the New Year so often as it shall be our fate to welcome its recurrerce . A cheerful spirit is the most grateful sacrifice the creature can offer to the Creator . . . . ..... 66 66 upon such sacrifice . The gods themselves ...
... give grace to the New Year so often as it shall be our fate to welcome its recurrerce . A cheerful spirit is the most grateful sacrifice the creature can offer to the Creator . . . . ..... 66 66 upon such sacrifice . The gods themselves ...
Side 3
... give expression to my abhorrence of the system of legging , ' whe- ther practised by the patrician who has won the silken garter for his knee , or the plebeian who is a candidate for the hempen collar for his throat . Racing once a ...
... give expression to my abhorrence of the system of legging , ' whe- ther practised by the patrician who has won the silken garter for his knee , or the plebeian who is a candidate for the hempen collar for his throat . Racing once a ...
Side 4
... give him pause . " From some of our studs appropriated to that energetic sport there might be made " elegant extracts " that would come up , probably , to the Oriental standard . How- ever , the glove has fallen into fair hands ; the ...
... give him pause . " From some of our studs appropriated to that energetic sport there might be made " elegant extracts " that would come up , probably , to the Oriental standard . How- ever , the glove has fallen into fair hands ; the ...
Side 7
... gives an account of a Scotch gentleman of the name of Cumming that he fell in with in the course of his travels , who ... give their tenants carte blanche to shoot over their farms , and to invite a friend occasion- ally to carry a gun ...
... gives an account of a Scotch gentleman of the name of Cumming that he fell in with in the course of his travels , who ... give their tenants carte blanche to shoot over their farms , and to invite a friend occasion- ally to carry a gun ...
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animal appearance beat better brought called Captain carrying character chase close coach course cover Derby dinner distance doubt effect England fact fair favourite feeling field fish five four give given ground half hand head hope horse hounds hour hunting interest John kind ladies land late leave length less look Lord master match means Meeting miles mind minutes morning mouth nature nearly never Newmarket occasion once pace pack passed perhaps persons present quarters race ridden ride road season seen short side soon sovs sport Spring Stakes stand started tell thing took true turf turn whole young
Populære avsnitt
Side 289 - In a morning up we rise, Ere Aurora's peeping : Drink a cup to wash our eyes, Leave the sluggard sleeping : Then we go To and fro, With our knacks At our backs, To such streams As the Thames, If we have the leisure. When we please to walk abroad For our recreation, In the fields is our...
Side 222 - Come, let us go while we are in our prime, And take the harmless folly of the time.
Side 106 - Where slaves once more their native land behold, No fiends torment, no Christians thirst for gold. To Be, contents his natural desire, He asks no Angel's wing, no Seraph's fire; But thinks, admitted to that equal sky, His faithful dog shall bear him company.
Side 106 - Lo, the poor Indian! Whose untutored mind Sees God in clouds, or hears Him in the wind; His soul, proud science never taught to stray Far as the solar walk, or milky way; Yet simple Nature to his hope has given, Behind the cloud-topped hill, an humbler heaven...
Side 80 - As if increase of appetite had grown By what it fed on; and yet, within a month, Let me not think on't: Frailty, thy name is woman!
Side 75 - The difficulties which my health, my indecision, my 'procrastination,' as M. de Charlus called it, placed in the way of my carrying out any project, had made me put off from day to day, from month to month, from year to year, the elucidation of certain suspicions as also the accomplishment of certain desires.
Side 169 - From a similar principle to which, though the forest laws are now mitigated, and by degrees grown entirely obsolete, yet from this root has sprung a bastard slip, known by the name of the game law, now arrived to and wantoning in its highest .vigour: both founded upon the same unreasonable notions of permanent property in wild creatures; and both productive of the same tyranny to the commons; but with this difference, that the...
Side 105 - No, I never knew before how useful a drudge you were : now I have found what you are good for, you may depend upon it I will keep you to it.
Side 365 - Buonaparte, having collected the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 6th corps of the French army and the Imperial Guards, and nearly all the cavalry on the Sambre and between that river and the Meuse, between the 10th and the 14th of the month, advanced on the 15th and attacked the Prussian posts at Thuin and Lobez, on the Sambre, at daylight in the morning.
Side 366 - Maitland, on the 26th in . the afternoon. The troops took the hornwork, which covers the suburb on the left of the Somme, by storm, with but small loss ; and the town immediately afterwards surrendered, on condition that the garrison should lay down their arms and be allowed to return to their homes.