IN TWO VOLUMES—VOL. I.

LONDON
BELLAIRS & CO.
1897


CONTENTS

PAGE
The Influence of Field Sports on Character[1]
By Sir Courtenay Boyle
Old-Fashioned Angling[21]
By Captain R. Bird Thompson
Partridge Day as it Was and as it Is[36]
By "An Elderly Sportsman"
Simpson's Snipe[53]
By Terence le Smithe
Podgers' Pointer[80]
By Ben B. Brown
The Dead Heat[101]
By "Old Calabar"
Only the Mare[134]
By Alfred E. T. Watson
Hunting in the Midlands[155]
By T. H. S. Escott
A Military Steeplechase[171]
By Captain R. Bird Thompson
How I Won my Handicap[181]
Told by the Winner
The First Day of the Season and its Results[193]
By "Sabretache"
A Day with the Drag[210]
By the Editor
Stag-Hunting on Exmoor[221]
By Captain Redway
Sport amongst the Mountains[237]
By "Sarcelle"
A Birmingham Dog Show[251]
By "Old Calabar"
Huntingcrop Hall[268]
By Alfred E. T. Watson
A Dog Hunt on the Berwyns[286]
By G. Christopher Davies
Some Odd Ways of Fishing[298]
By G. Christopher Davies
Shooting[306]
By Captain R. Bird Thompson

⁂ "The Dead Heat," by "Old Calabar," was originally contributed by the veteran sportsman to the pages of "Baily's Magazine," and is here reproduced by the permission of the Proprietors.


THE INFLUENCE OF FIELD SPORTS ON CHARACTER

Field sports have been generally considered solely in the light of a relaxation from the graver business of life, and have been justified by writers on economics on the ground that some sort of release is required from the imprisoned existence of the man of business, the lawyer, or the politician. Apollo does not always bend his bow, it is said, and timely dissipation is commendable even in the wise; therefore by all means, let the sports which we English love be pursued within legitimate bounds, and up to an extent not forbidden by weightier considerations.