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Broiig"ht forward. • . . 



Stowel, and Temple Coombe Wood, and thence to 

 Inwood, where the Pack got up to him, and Earthed 

 him in Yeanston Coppice, after a brilliant burst 

 of forty minutes. A brace of Foxes being hallooed 

 away from Inwood, we laid on immediately to one of 

 them, g-oing- away to Caundle Brake, Plumley Wood, 

 and Hanover, and thence to North Wootton, and on to 

 Sherborne Park, where we stopped the Hounds, after 

 three hours a7id three quarter's hard running, with a 

 brace of Foxes before them 



Tuesday, November 17th, 1829. 



One hundred and twenty-five horse met this day 

 at Stock House, and proceeded with the Pack to Rooks- 

 moor, where they found a brace and half of Foxes; — 

 g-oing- away with the dog-, and with an execrable scent 



(the frost being- hardly out of the g-round) to Deadmoor, 

 and to Plumber and under Fifehead Coppice to the edg-e 

 of Sturminster Common, and by Hazelbury to Dead- 

 moor and Ramsbury to the Plantation at the Green 

 Man, where a dog coursed the Fox; we hit him again, 

 however, after a long- check, by Rodmoor towards Wood- 

 bridge, into the road opposite the Lodg-e Gates at Stock 

 House, where it was deemed prudent to stop, and not 

 to disturb Stock Wood, a large Field being- expected 

 there on the eig-hth of December 



Friday, November 20th. 



Found a brace of Foxes at Compton Pauncefoot; — 

 running the hunted Fox to Earth at Sigwells in thirty 

 minutes; the Badgers having unluckily opened the 

 Earths there. Walked the Pack on to Elscombe 

 Wood, where they found immediately, going away to 

 Shepton Montague and Hadspen ; and after a capital 

 run of two hours and twenty minutes, the Fox close 

 before them for the last mile, and in view of the 



Carr ied forward 



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