Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I THE FIRST GUN
- CHAPTER II THE OLD PUNT: A CURIOUS ‘TURNPIKE’
- CHAPTER III TREE-SHOOTING: A FISHING EXPEDITION
- CHAPTER IV EGG-TIME: A ‘GIP’-TRAP
- CHAPTER V WOODLAND TWILIGHT: TRAITORS ON THE GIBBET
- CHAPTER VI LURCHER-LAND: ‘THE PARK’
- CHAPTER VII OBY, AND HIS SYSTEM: THE MOUCHER's CALENDAR
- CHAPTER VIII CHURCHYARD PHEASANTS: BEFORE THE BENCH
- CHAPTER IX LUKE, THE RABBIT-CONTRACTOR: THE BROOK PATH
- CHAPTER X FARMER WILLUM'S PLACE: SNIPE-SHOOTING
- CHAPTER XI FERRETING: A RABBIT-HUNTER
- CHAPTER XII A WINTER NIGHT: OLD TRICKS: PHEASANT-STALKING: MATCHLOCK VERSUS BREECHLOADER: CONCLUSION
CHAPTER VIII - CHURCHYARD PHEASANTS: BEFORE THE BENCH
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I THE FIRST GUN
- CHAPTER II THE OLD PUNT: A CURIOUS ‘TURNPIKE’
- CHAPTER III TREE-SHOOTING: A FISHING EXPEDITION
- CHAPTER IV EGG-TIME: A ‘GIP’-TRAP
- CHAPTER V WOODLAND TWILIGHT: TRAITORS ON THE GIBBET
- CHAPTER VI LURCHER-LAND: ‘THE PARK’
- CHAPTER VII OBY, AND HIS SYSTEM: THE MOUCHER's CALENDAR
- CHAPTER VIII CHURCHYARD PHEASANTS: BEFORE THE BENCH
- CHAPTER IX LUKE, THE RABBIT-CONTRACTOR: THE BROOK PATH
- CHAPTER X FARMER WILLUM'S PLACE: SNIPE-SHOOTING
- CHAPTER XI FERRETING: A RABBIT-HUNTER
- CHAPTER XII A WINTER NIGHT: OLD TRICKS: PHEASANT-STALKING: MATCHLOCK VERSUS BREECHLOADER: CONCLUSION
Summary
The tower of the church at Essant Hill was so low that it scarcely seemed to rise above the maples in the hedges. It could not be seen until the last stile in the footpath across the meadows was passed. Church and tower then came into view together on the opposite side of a large open field. A few aged hawthorn trees dotted the sward, and beyond the church the outskirts of a wood were visible, but no dwellings could be seen. Upon a second and more careful glance, however, the chimney of a cottage appeared above a hedge, so covered with ivy as hardly to be separated from the green of the boughs.
There were houses of course somewhere in Essant, but they were so scattered that a stranger might doubt the existence of the village. A few farmsteads long distances apart, and some cottages standing in green lanes and at the corners of the fields, were nearly all; there was nothing resembling a ‘street’—not so much as a row. The church was in effect the village, and the church was simply the mausoleum of the Dessant family, the owners of the place. Essant Hill as a name had been rather a problem to the archaeologists, there being no hill: the ground was quite level. The explanation at last admitted was that Essant Hill was a corruption of D'Essant-ville.
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- Information
- The Amateur Poacher , pp. 137 - 154Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1879