Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I THE MAN HIMSELF: HIS HOUSE AND TOOLS
- CHAPTER II HIS FAMILY AND CASTE
- CHAPTER III IN THE FIELDS
- CHAPTER IV HIS DOMINIONS: THE WOODS, MEADOWS, AND WATER
- CHAPTER V SOME OF HIS SUBJECTS: DOGS, RABBITS, ‘MICE, AND SUCH SMALL DEER’
- CHAPTER VI HIS ENEMIES: BIRDS AND BEASTS OF PREY—TRESPASSERS
- CHAPTER VII PROFESSIONAL POACHERS; THE ART OF WIRING GAME
- CHAPTER VIII THE FIELD DETECTIVE: FISH POACHING
- CHAPTER IX GUERILLA WARFARE; GUN ACCIDENTS; BLACK SHEEP
CHAPTER IX - GUERILLA WARFARE; GUN ACCIDENTS; BLACK SHEEP
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I THE MAN HIMSELF: HIS HOUSE AND TOOLS
- CHAPTER II HIS FAMILY AND CASTE
- CHAPTER III IN THE FIELDS
- CHAPTER IV HIS DOMINIONS: THE WOODS, MEADOWS, AND WATER
- CHAPTER V SOME OF HIS SUBJECTS: DOGS, RABBITS, ‘MICE, AND SUCH SMALL DEER’
- CHAPTER VI HIS ENEMIES: BIRDS AND BEASTS OF PREY—TRESPASSERS
- CHAPTER VII PROFESSIONAL POACHERS; THE ART OF WIRING GAME
- CHAPTER VIII THE FIELD DETECTIVE: FISH POACHING
- CHAPTER IX GUERILLA WARFARE; GUN ACCIDENTS; BLACK SHEEP
Summary
Scarcely a keeper can be found who has not got one or more tales to tell of encounters with poachers, sometimes of a desperate character. There is a general similarity in most of the accounts, which exhibit a mixture of ferocity and cowardice on the side of the intruders. The following case, which occurred some years since, brings these contradictory features into relief. The narrator was not the owner of the man-trap described previously.
There had been a great deal of poaching before the affray took place, and finally it grew to horse-stealing: one night two valuable horses were taken from the home park. This naturally roused the indignation of the owner of the estate, who resolved to put a stop to it Orders were given that if shots were heard in the woods the news should be at once transmitted to headquarters, no matter at what hour of the night.
One brilliant moonlight night, frosty and clear, the gang came again. A messenger went to the house, and, as previously arranged, two separate parties set out to intercept the rascals. The head keeper had one detachment, whose object it was to secure the main outlet from the wood towards the adjacent town—to cut off retreat. The young squire had charge of the other, which, with the under keeper as guide, was to work its way through the wood and drive the gang into the ambuscade. In the last party were six men and a mastiff dog; four of the men had guns, the gentleman only a stout cudgel.
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- The Gamekeeper at HomeSketches of Natural History and Rural Life, pp. 193 - 216Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1878