button to main menu  Clarke's Survey of the Lakes, 1787

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Page 192 (numbered 188):-
nature, and certainly we see it best in these wilds where it is not corrupted by familiarity; for all animals, tamed, or attempted to be tamed, loose much of their native art and sagacity; for if we had not tamed an horse and an ass, we should not have had a mule, no more than a breed between the red and fallow deer; and nature seems to abhor such productions, because they are not suffered to breed again. The buck gets a point to his horn every year; first the brow-antlet, next the south-antlet, &c. one thing however observe, that you are to count the points from the far horn, to know the deer's age, for the horns are not both alike; the doe breeds once a-year, but the hind only once in two years. As every one of my readers may not know the proper names for deer at their different ages, I shall here recount them.

OF RED DEER

THE MALE.THE FEMALE.
The first year, isa Calf,A Calf.
second, -a Brockett,A Brockett's sister.
third, -a Staggard,A Heinuse.
fourth, -a Stag,A Hind.
fifth, -a Stag at all points.
sixth, -a Great Stag.
seventh, -a Hart.
eighth, -a Hart of Grease.

OF FALLOW DEER

THE MALE.THE FEMALE.
The first year, isa Fawn,A Fawn.
second, -a Pricket,A Prick.
third, -a Sorrel,A Sorrel's sister.
fourth, -a Buck first head,A Doe.
fifth, -a Buck.
sixth, -a Great Buck.
Some have said that the buck not only gets new horns every year, but also a new pizzle; when young I was taught to believe so, but now know it to be false: the reason for such a conjecture probably is, that after rutting time the hair from that part groweth to the length of seven or eight inches, and hangs down twisted like a cord till the Spring, when they cast it, their horns, and * pens, near all together.
  fox
Foxes we have not many, owing to the pains the shepherds take to destroy them: of their cunning it is unnecessary to say any thing, as it is so well known, but their art in catching of growse, partridges, and hares, many may be surprised at: tracing one in the snow I observed him to have made a stand, afterwards form a pretty large circle, then a less, and so on till he made seven, when he made a leap to where were many feathers, and blood of a growse; and by his tumbling had certainly killed one there: therefore, I conclude, that they have a nose like a pointer, and finding the game, go round and round it, drawing a little nearer every time, whilst the bird, not perceiving its nearer approach, is taken; perhaps the head of the bird is a little giddy by watching the circling motion of the fox. In like manner they take hares and partridges: some of them are fishers, but in what manner they kill fish I do not know, but have found them laid for their cubs to feed upon, also many kinds of small birds. Some foxes run when hunted a long time, others not so much, as some hares. A remarkable instance of one I shall here give the reader: A farmer of the Duke of Norfolk's in Patterdale, went out one Saturday afternoon a shepherding, his hound dog (Mountain) followed him, and upon a mountain-side unkenneled a fox; this was about two o'clock, and the farmer being busy did not pursue them; the dog did not return home that evening, nor was heard of till next day; when, as the people were coming out of the church (Patterdale) the dog was just passing it, hardly ever giving mouth, and the fox was about forty yards before him; he made shift to get half a mile further, when he run into a garden and laid him down under a gooseberry tree; the dog was so fatigued that he lay down beside him, without offering to lay hold of him, and a man with a pitch-fork killed the fox: they afterwards heard that the dog and fox had been at Rydal, and on the Saturday evening at Wythburn, and at Legberthwaite on the Sunday morning; they must therefore have run twenty hours †, which at ten miles an hour is 200 miles: but I am willing to believe that they run many more miles, as when seen at the different places the dog was never far behind him, for no one of those who saw them ever gave an account of them being more than three or 400 yards distant. The dog was a very swift one, and when they passed Patterdale church they were above a footman's pace, yet all ran from the church, men, women, and children. The owner of the dog is still living, his name is Anthony Thompson: when that dog grew old, he never run with the other hounds after a fox was unkenneled, but took a road of his own, was generally in at the death, and often had killed the fox before the other dogs came up, unless the fox run directly to his holds.
I have
* The hair or coat of all deer in heraldry is called Pens.
† A longer chace than the stag mentioned in the Countess of Pembroke's memoirs, (see p.3.)
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