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The Keen Foxhunter's Miscellany

Peter Holt
Barcode 9781846890659
Book

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Original price £16.95
Original price £16.95 - Original price £16.95
Original price £16.95
Current price £14.10
£14.10 - £14.10
Current price £14.10

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Availability:
Out of stock

Release Date: 12/08/2010

Genre: Sports & Hobbies
Label: Quiller Publishing Ltd
Language: English
Publisher: Quiller Publishing Ltd
Pages: 224

An intriguing collection of 350 entries on the subject of fox hunting past and present. Everything to do with fox hunting is here, including hunting eccentricities such as Mad Jack Mytton and Harry, Marquis of Hastings, whose tendency to arrive on the field two hours late and sozzled made his brief Mastership of the Quorn a disaster.

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The Keen Foxhunters Miscellany is an intriguing collection of hunting lore with 350 entries on the subject of fox hunting past and present. Articles range from snippets such as the fact that the Essex Foxhounds of the early 18th century had to cancel a day because one of their members, a Piccadilly fishmonger, smelled so strongly of fish that the hounds were put off their scent, to a description of the 1869 Newby ferry tragedy, which resulted in the greatest loss of human life on a hunting field.

There is plenty of advice such as: 'He may be right and he may be wrong, but all must acknowledge that the word of the Master is absolute law' (19th century Irish MFH Sir Hercules Langrishe, BT.) and 'It is not a good idea to have puppy show judges with such entirely opposing views that they are still judging the doghounds at 9pm', (hunting write Arthur James).

Meanwhile, we learn from an American MFH that the annual farmers' thank you dinner is usually supposed to make the embarrassed and uncomfortable guests feel entirely all right about such items as broken fences, misplaced stock, trampled wheat and murdered poultry.'

Everything to do with fox hunting is here, including profiles of hunting eccentricities such as Mad Jack Mytton (who was so obsessed by his appearance that he owned 150 pairs of breeches) and Harry, Marquis of Hastings, whose tendency to arrive on the field two hours late and sozzled made his brief Mastership of the Quorn a disaster.