| Walter Scott - 1917 - 1000 pages
...of deer, that with dogs, guns, arrows, durks, and daggers, in the space of two hours, fourscore Tat deer were slain ; which after are disposed of, some...miles, and more than enough left for us, to make merry withall, at our rendezvous.' NOTE XXII. By lone Saint Mary1 s silent lake.— P. 102. This beautiful... | |
| Sir Walter Scott - 1923 - 896 pages
...are all let loose, as occasion serves, upon the herd of deer, that with dogs, guns, arrows, durks, and daggers, in the space of two hours, fourscore...miles, and more than enough left for us, to make merry withall, at our rendezvous.' NOTE 23, p. 51 The talc of the Outlaw Murray, who held out Newark Castle... | |
| Alexander Inkson McConnochie - Deer - 1923 - 372 pages
...of deer, so that with dogs, guns, arrows, dirks, and daggers, in the space of two hours, four score fat deer were slain, which after are disposed of some...left for us to make merry withal at our rendezvous. . . . Being come to our lodgings, there was such baking, boiling, roasting, and stewing, as if Cook... | |
| Robert Southey, John Jones - Poets, English - 1925 - 240 pages
...hundred couple of strong Irish greyhounds, they are let loose as occasion serves upon the herd of deer, that with dogs, guns, arrows, dirks, and daggers,...sonnets following. " Why should I waste invention, to endite Ovidian fictions, or Olympian games ? My misty muse enlightened with more light, To a more noble... | |
| Nationalism - 1905 - 414 pages
...four score fat deere were slain, which after are disposed of some one way and some another, twenty or thirty miles, and more than enough left for us to make merry withal at our rendevouze." Let us now proceed to examine the question of deer forests from the Gaelic legal point... | |
| Eleanor Mabel Valentine Brougham (Hon.) - English literature - 1926 - 314 pages
...had stayed three hours or thereabouts, we might perceive the deer appear on the hills round about us (their heads making a show like a wood), which, being...left for us to make merry withal at our rendezvous. BONNIE GEORGE CAMPBELL This spirited little song is said to refer to the death of one of the adherents... | |
| Military art and science - 1844 - 662 pages
...score fat deere were slaine, which after, are disposed of, some one way and some another, twenty or thirty miles, and more than enough left for "us to make merry withall at our rendezvouse." Other curious accounts are preserved of extraordinary assemblages for... | |
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