Stable Talk and Table Talk: Or, Spectacles for Young Sportsmen, Volum 1Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans, 1846 - 452 sider |
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Side 25
... tion of cruelty by the appearance of it ; whereas , on the other hand , many acts of absolute cruelty are daily practised without the suffering object of them exciting the slightest sympathy or commiseration . In reference to German ...
... tion of cruelty by the appearance of it ; whereas , on the other hand , many acts of absolute cruelty are daily practised without the suffering object of them exciting the slightest sympathy or commiseration . In reference to German ...
Side 61
... tion and interest . I should feel every blow he got , and warmly wish him success : but if such men as Hammer Lane or Johnny Broome ( two very respect- able men in their way ) chose to quit , the one his trade , the other his home , to ...
... tion and interest . I should feel every blow he got , and warmly wish him success : but if such men as Hammer Lane or Johnny Broome ( two very respect- able men in their way ) chose to quit , the one his trade , the other his home , to ...
Side 62
... tion will be certain to be met with not only neglect but ridicule and contempt : the collecting a crowd of idle persons together in the public highways , or on another's lands , is what is objected to ; and this would be objected to if ...
... tion will be certain to be met with not only neglect but ridicule and contempt : the collecting a crowd of idle persons together in the public highways , or on another's lands , is what is objected to ; and this would be objected to if ...
Side 65
... tion of constant kicks , within the reach of which you will always find the dog fastened . A degree of sophistry was used to show , or rather an assertion was made by some one , that a man would not ill - use a dog more than a horse ...
... tion of constant kicks , within the reach of which you will always find the dog fastened . A degree of sophistry was used to show , or rather an assertion was made by some one , that a man would not ill - use a dog more than a horse ...
Side 100
... tion of a martingal did not at once exclaim against it ; and though they might not exhibit quite as much horror in their countenance as Priam did of old when he found the ghost wishing to cultivate his acquaint- ance in his bed - room ...
... tion of a martingal did not at once exclaim against it ; and though they might not exhibit quite as much horror in their countenance as Priam did of old when he found the ghost wishing to cultivate his acquaint- ance in his bed - room ...
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Stable Talk and Table Talk: Or, Spectacles for Young Sportsmen, Volum 1 Harry Hieover Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1845 |
Stable Talk and Table Talk, Or, Spectacles for Young Sportsmen Harry Hieover Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1844 |
Stable Talk and Table Talk: Or, Spectacles for Young Sportsmen, Volum 1 Harry Hieover Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2015 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
allow animal ARTHUR HILL HASSALL asked better bought bring C. R. COCKERELL carriage certainly cloth coach coachman consider course cruelty dealer drive Edinburgh Review fair feeling fellow fox-hunting gallop gentleman give hands harness head Hints History horse-dealer horse's hounds hundred hunter hunting JAMES MARTINEAU jockey JOHN F. W. HERSCHEL judge judgment keep lady look Lord lose mare martingal master means Meddler mentioned merely miles morocco never Nickem once opinion owner pace pair perhaps persons phaeton Plates Post 8vo pounds probably proper purchase Queen's Plates race race-horses racter Rascal reader Repository respectable revised ridden ride rider Second Edition sell servants sold sort sporting stable steeple-race suppose tell temper thing tingal tion told vols whip wish Woodcuts worth
Populære avsnitt
Side 394 - 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.