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The Master of Game

Chapter 6 OF THE WILD BOAR AND OF HIS NATURE

Word Count: 1921    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

beast of this world that is strongest armed, and can sooner slay a man than any other. Neither is there any beast that he could not slay if they were alone s

eth a man with one stroke as with a knife, and therefore he can slay any other beast sooner than they could slay him. It is a proud67 beast and fierce and perilous, for many times ha

t considered so fatal as one from the antlers of a stag. An old fourteenth-century

himself been thrown to the ground, he with his courser, by a wild boar and the courser kill

east of St. Andrew69, and are in their brimming love three wee

, burning heat. It was also used in th

vembe

57, adds: "com

he sows. They abide not in one place one night as they do in another, but tfind their pasture for (till) all pastures fail them as hawthorns71 and other things. Sometimes a great boar has another with him but this

which is not quite clear. G. de F. has "a

See Appendi

outs which is right hard; they root deep in the ground till they find the roots of the ferns and of the spurge and other roots of which they have the savour (scent) in the earth. And therefore have I said they wind wonderfully far and marvellously well. And also they eat all the vermin and carrion and other foul things. They have a hard skin and strong flesh, especially upon their shoulders which is called the shield. Their season begins from the Holy Cross day in September76 to the feast of St. Andrew77 for then they go to the brimming of the sows. For they are in grease when they be withdrawn from the sows. The sows are in season from the brimming time which is to say the twelfth day after Christmas till the time wh

ell or better than a bear, but nothing abo

F. ren

pendix: W

ptemb

vembe

0, says that he only trusts in his defences an

be a young boar of three years old. In the third March counting that in which he

ed we have followed G. de F.'

and also they call the tusks above gres80 (grinders) for they only serve to make the others sharp as I have said, and when they are at bay they keep smiting their tusks together to make them sharp and cut better. When men hunt the boar they commonly go to soil and soil in the dirt and if they be hurt the soil is their medicine. The boar that is i

h grès, grinding-

side. And if that time he seeth anything that he thinks might hinder him in the way he would go, then he turneth again into the wood. Then will he never more come out though all the horns and all the holloaing of the world were there. But when he has undertaken the way to go out he will spare for nothing but will hold his way throughout. When he fleeth he maketh but few turnings, but when he turne

, has "fortress" i

d, singularly enough, also in the Shirley MS. the following words have

s) as other swine do, according t

urée nor are they judged as of th

d no longer, and then they chase their first pigs away from them for by that time they be two years old and three Marches counting the March in which they were farrowed.84 In short they are like tame sows, excepting that they farrow but once in a year and the tame sows farrow twice. When they be wroth they run at both men and hounds and other beasts as (does) the wild boar and if they cast down a man they abide longer upon him than doeth a boa

iting beasts the trace, and of red beasts foot or view, an

pendix: W

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1 Chapter 1 THE PROLOGUE2 Chapter 2 OF THE HARE AND OF HER NATURE3 Chapter 3 OF THE HART AND HIS NATURE4 Chapter 4 OF THE BUCK AND OF HIS NATURE5 Chapter 5 OF THE ROE AND OF HIS NATURE6 Chapter 6 OF THE WILD BOAR AND OF HIS NATURE7 Chapter 7 OF THE WOLF AND OF HIS NATURE8 Chapter 8 OF THE FOX AND OF HIS NATURE9 Chapter 9 OF THE GREY (BADGER) AND OF HIS NATURE10 Chapter 10 OF THE (WILD) CAT AND ITS NATURE11 Chapter 11 THE OTTER AND HIS NATURE12 Chapter 12 OF THE MANNER AND HABITS AND CONDITIONS OF HOUNDS13 Chapter 13 OF SICKNESSES OF HOUNDS AND OF THEIR CORRUPTIONS14 Chapter 14 OF RUNNING HOUNDS AND OF THEIR NATURE15 Chapter 15 OF GREYHOUNDS AND OF THEIR NATURE16 Chapter 16 OF ALAUNTES AND OF THEIR NATURE17 Chapter 17 OF SPANIELS AND OF THEIR NATURE18 Chapter 18 OF THE MASTIFF AND OF HIS NATURE19 Chapter 19 WHAT MANNER AND CONDITION A GOOD HUNTER SHOULD HAVE.20 Chapter 20 HOW THE KENNEL FOR THE HOUNDS AND THE COUPLES FOR THE RACHES AND THE ROPES FOR THE LYMER SHOULD BE MADE21 Chapter 21 HOW THE HOUNDS SHOULD BE LED OUT TO SCOMBRE22 Chapter 22 HOW A HUNTER'S HORN SHOULD BE DRIVEN23 Chapter 23 HOW A MAN SHOULD LEAD HIS GROOM IN QUEST FOR TO KNOW A HART BY HIS TRACE24 Chapter 24 HOW A MAN SHOULD KNOW A GREAT HART BY THE FUMES17725 Chapter 25 HOW A MAN SHOULD KNOW A GREAT HART BY THE PLACE WHERE HE HATH FRAYED HIS HEAD26 Chapter 26 HOW THE ORDINANCE SHOULD BE MADE FOR THE HART HUNTING BY STRENGTH AND HOW THE HART SHOULD BE HARBOURED27 Chapter 27 HOW A HUNTER SHOULD GO IN QUEST BY THE SIGHT28 Chapter 28 HOW AN HUNTER SHOULD GO IN QUEST BETWEEN THE PLAINS AND THE WOOD29 Chapter 29 HOW A HUNTER SHOULD GO IN QUEST IN THE COPPICE AND THE YOUNG WOOD30 Chapter 30 HOW AN HUNTER SHOULD GO IN QUEST IN GREAT COVERTS AND STRENGTHS31 Chapter 31 HOW A HUNTER SHOULD QUEST IN CLEAR SPIRES AND HIGH WOOD19832 Chapter 32 HOW A GOOD HUNTER SHALL GO IN QUEST TO HEAR THE HARTS BELLOW33 Chapter 33 HOW THE ASSEMBLY THAT MEN CALL GATHERING SHOULD BE MADE BOTH WINTER AND SUMMER AFTER THE GUISE OF BEYOND THE SEA34 Chapter 34 HOW THE HART SHOULD BE MOVED WITH THE LYMER AND RUN TO AND SLAIN WITH STRENGTH35 Chapter 35 HOW AN HUNTER SHOULD SEEK AND FIND THE HARE WITH RUNNING HOUNDS AND SLAY HER WITH STRENGTH36 Chapter 36 OF THE ORDINANCE AND THE MANNER OF HUNTING WHEN THE KING WILL HUNT IN FORESTS OR IN PARKS FOR THE HART WITH BOWS AND GREYHOUNDS AND STABLE