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 X - FARMER WILLUM'S PLACE: SNIPE-SHOOTING
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
One October morning towards the end of the month, Orion and I started to beat over Redcote Farm upon the standing invitation of the occupier. There was a certainty of sport of some kind, because the place had remained almost unchanged for the last century. It is ‘improvement’ that drives away game and necessitates the pheasant preserve.
The low whitewashed walls of the house were of a dull yellowish hue from the beating of the weather. They supported a vast breadth of thatched roof drilled by sparrows and starlings. Under the eaves the swallows’ nests adhered, and projecting shelves were fixed to prevent any inconvenience from them. Some of the narrow windows were still darkened with the black boarding put up in the days of the window tax.
In the courtyard a number of stout forked stakes were used for putting the dairy buckets on, after being cleaned, to dry. No attempt was made to separate the business from the inner life of the house. Here in front these oaken buckets, scoured till nearly white, their iron handles polished like silver, were close under the eyes of any one looking out. By the front door a besom leaned against the wall that every comer might clean the mud from his boots; and you stepped at once from the threshold into the sitting-room. A lane led past the garden, if that could be called a lane which widened into a field and after rain was flooded so deeply as to be impassable to foot passengers.
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- Chapter
- Information
- The Amateur Poacher , pp. 177 - 194Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1879