A D VER TISEMENTS. 



SPORTS AND ANECDOTES OF BYGONE DAYS. 



In England, Scotland, Ireland, Italy, and the Sunny South. 



By C. T. S. BIRCH REYNARDSON, 



Author of " Down the Road. " With Illustrations in Colour. Second Edition. 

 Large crown bvo. 12. 



" Bright and entertaining and brimming over with pithy stories such as sportsmen love. . 

 A delightful book of reminiscences. . . . The author is a famous hand at telling stories that is 

 to say, anecdotes as distinguished from untruths and no matter what their subject may be, he 

 provides them with a lavish hand, the quality equalling the quantity. . . . Although it may be 

 expecling too much to wish that he may, at his present ripe age, write many more books, it is 

 earnestly to be hoped that Mr. Birch Reynardson may give the world a further taste of his power 

 as a story-teller at no distant period "Morning Post. 



" We can unhesitatingly advise those who have not read this book to do so at once. A more 

 amusing collection of reminiscences of hunting and (to the author) more congenial topics of 

 wild-fowl shooting aiid fishing, has seldom been offered to the public." Illustrated Sporting and 

 Dramatic News. 



DOWN THE ROAD: REMINISCENCES 

 OF A GENTLEMAN COACHMAN. 



By C. T. S. BIRCH REYNARDSOX, 



Author of "Sports and Anecdotes of Bygone Days." With Coloured Illustrations. DemySvo. 12s. 

 " No one, coachman or no coachman, who has a spark of sentiment for the past, can take up 

 Mr. Birch Reynardson's Reminiscences without deriving a great pleasure from their perusal." 

 Broad Arrow. 



_ LONDON : CHAPMAN & HALL, LTMITED. _ 



" Fascinating and charmingly written." Land and Water. 



RECORDS OF STAG-HUNTING ON EXMOOR. 



By the Hon. JOHN FOETESQUE. 



With 14 full-page Illustrations by EDGAR GIBERNE. Large crown 8vo, 16*. 



From the PALL MALL GAZETTE. 



alified to write the history of English stag-hunting, 



"Few men are better qualified to write the history of English stag-hunting, or to describe 

 with the authority of experience this noble chase, than the present author. The volume will be 

 read with lively interest both by those who feel a pride in the continued survival in England of 

 the red deer the l;ist of our larger 'beasts of chase' and by the more numerous class who 

 delight in our national sport of hunting. . . . The volume is ornamented by some spirited illus- 

 trations, which add greatly to its attractiveness." 



From the ILLUSTRATED SPORTING AND DRAMATIC NEWS. 



"An excellent description of Exmoor and the sport upon it, as it was and is. . . The style of 

 the book is easy, unaffected, rmd agreeable, and Mr. Giberne's illustrations are well done." 



" A capital little book." Vanity Fair. 



DEEB-STALKING. 



By AUGUSTUS GRIMBLE. With 6 Full-page Illustrations. Large cm. 8vo, 6s. 



From the SCOTSMAN. 



"He has written the book as a practical deer-stalker, who ardently loves the sport. He has 

 obviously a keen eye and great power of observation, and he has had regard to all the details of 

 the sport down to the proper luncheon that the stalker ought to carry. To our thinking, such 

 a book is extremely useful. Sportsmen are very much in the habit, when they write a book on 

 sport, of assuming that they are only appealing to sportsmen. They forget that a sportsman is 

 made and not born. He may have an inclination to sport ingrafted in him by nature, but he 

 must learn what may be called the process of sport ; and if it be assumed that all this is known 

 to the reader, practically the book shuts off a large number of young men who would otherwise 

 find it a useful guide. Mr. Grimble has fallen into no such mistake. His book is at once an 

 eulogy of deer-stalking and a guide to the practice of it. He writes in a cheerful, bright manner ; 

 he is fenile in practical suggestions, and he sums them up with apt anecdote. It is, in short, a 

 good readable book." 



LONDON : CHAPMAN & HALL, LIMITED. 



8 



