The Badminton Magazine of Sports and Pastimes, Volumen3Alfred Edward Thomas Watson Longmans, Green, and Company, 1896 |
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Página 33
... things , responsibility will be taken out of your hands before long . ' What Mrs. Lindsay meant was that she was ... thing as a liberty . ' She added , after a pause , ' I got Topper from the kennels . They wouldn't keep him there ...
... things , responsibility will be taken out of your hands before long . ' What Mrs. Lindsay meant was that she was ... thing as a liberty . ' She added , after a pause , ' I got Topper from the kennels . They wouldn't keep him there ...
Página 49
... things , ' replied the girl composedly . ' Amongst others , that he is a thorough gentleman and a good sportsman . What I must confess that it was rather stupid of me not to see before now was that he has cared for me since we were ...
... things , ' replied the girl composedly . ' Amongst others , that he is a thorough gentleman and a good sportsman . What I must confess that it was rather stupid of me not to see before now was that he has cared for me since we were ...
Página 77
... thing in the mouth . After the vet . had left I thought I would try and find out for myself what was the matter , and my pains were rewarded by finding a large piece of broken tooth embedded in the gum . I succeeded in getting it away ...
... thing in the mouth . After the vet . had left I thought I would try and find out for myself what was the matter , and my pains were rewarded by finding a large piece of broken tooth embedded in the gum . I succeeded in getting it away ...
Página 79
... second season , and in such early days the most hardened prophet would hardly dare to predict success or failure for a stallion . These things lie in the lap of the Gods . SWIMMING AND LIFE - SAVING BY THE HON . SYDNEY AMPHION 79.
... second season , and in such early days the most hardened prophet would hardly dare to predict success or failure for a stallion . These things lie in the lap of the Gods . SWIMMING AND LIFE - SAVING BY THE HON . SYDNEY AMPHION 79.
Página 96
... things which attend upon stag - hunting , and which it is sometimes difficult to suffer gladly . He must have been familiar as we are now with the good - natured but irresponsible foot people , with the deer which runs up and down the ...
... things which attend upon stag - hunting , and which it is sometimes difficult to suffer gladly . He must have been familiar as we are now with the good - natured but irresponsible foot people , with the deer which runs up and down the ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Badminton Magazine of Sports and Pastimes, Volumen20 Alfred Edward Thomas Watson Vista completa - 1905 |
The Badminton Magazine of Sports and Pastimes, Volumen7 Alfred Edward Thomas Watson Vista completa - 1898 |
Términos y frases comunes
Amphion Ascot Badminton ball batsman beat better birds boat bowler bowling Captain Leycester club course cover covey cricket croquet Davis deer Derby Dilazak distance drive feet field fish followed Frusquin gallop give golf ground hand hard Hardwicke Stakes hare head horse Houmea hounds hunting huntsman Jack Goodwin K. S. Ranjitsinhji killed Kingsclere lady legs look Lord Lichfield match miles Miss Hylton Moors morning never night occasion once pack partridges perhaps Persimmon play players race riding runner saddle Sam Fisher school sharks score season seemed shark shikari shooting shot side soon sport sportsman stag straight stream stroke swim tail thing tiger Topper trout turned W. G. Grace walking wicket wicket-keeper wild yards
Pasajes populares
Página 306 - Dogget, the greatest sly drole in his parts, In acting was certain a master of arts ; A monument left — no herald is fuller, His praise is sung yearly by many a sculler; Ten thousand years hence, if the world lasts so long, Tom Dogget will still be the theme of their song ; When old Noll, with great Lewis and Bourbon, are forgot, And when numberless kings in oblivion shall rot.
Página 428 - KOREAN GAMES: WITH NOTES ON THE CORRESPONDING GAMES OF CHINA AND JAPAN, Stewart Culin.
Página 297 - ... Piece out our imperfections with your thoughts ; Into a thousand parts divide one man, And make imaginary puissance : Think, when we talk of horses, that you see them Printing their proud hoofs i...
Página 327 - I might well mainteine that of all chases, the hare maketh greatest pastime and pleasure, and sheweth most cunning in hunting, and is meetest for gentlemen of all other huntings, for that they may find them at all times, and hunt them at most seasons of the yeare, and that with small charges. And againe...
Página 107 - Charles Davis's horsemanship was as stainless as King Arthur's morals. But I imagine his riding appealed to the head rather than the heart. As we have seen, the expression on his features was severe and serious, and I cannot help thinking that his riding to hounds may have been a little wanting in geniality — perfect in form and satisfying in result— but somehow wanting in that impalpable quality which makes riding over an intricate country with certain people so amusing. .In a point-to-point...
Página 108 - ... grave. Perhaps, too, Davis took himself a little seriously. He read the newspapers religiously ; went to church regularly ; never had a horse out on Sundays; made an excellent speech ; favoured the Whigs in politics. All these things contributed to make up a valuable and respectable citizen. Moreover, the even and deserved prosperity of his career, his converse — almost identity — with great personages, and the responsible authority of his position may easily have induced a certain semi-royal...
Página 107 - ... horsemanship was as stainless as King Arthur's morals. But I imagine his riding appealed to the head rather than the heart. As we have seen, the expression on his features was severe and serious, and I cannot help thinking that his riding to hounds may have been a little wanting in geniality — perfect in form and satisfying in result— but somehow wanting in that impalpable quality which makes riding over an intricate country with certain people so amusing. .In a point-to-point steeplechase...
Página 108 - ... respectable citizen. Moreover, the even and deserved prosperity of his career, his converse — almost identity — with great personages, and the responsible authority of his position may easily have induced a certain semi-royal aloofness. I feel confident that he was never in anything like a scrape — this is of itself quite a misfortune — and I question whether he ever had much to do with the scrapes and shifts of others.
Página 275 - Inhuman, barbarous, unchivalrous." But the genius of modern war requires the use of those weapons which shall inflict the greatest possible damage upon an enemy in the shortest possible time, and hence the once despised torpedo now occupies a place in the front rank. In the short space of a magazine article it is impossible to take more than a mere cursory glance at our subject ; but so complete in its details was the first recorded torpedo boat that it merits more than passing notice. Mr. David...
Página 73 - Remote from cities lived a swain, Unvexed with all the cares of gain; His head was silvered o'er with age, And long experience made him sage; In summer's heat, and winter's cold, He fed his flock and penned the fold; His hours in cheerful...