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Country Fair - Max  Hastings


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      Country Fair

       Tales of the Countryside, Shooting and Fishing

      Max Hastings

       For Nigel and Anna, with whom I have shared so many happy sporting memories over forty years

      Table of Contents

       Cover Page

       Title Page

       9 Love Affair With Labs

       10 A Future for the Countryside

       11 No Eye for a Horse

       12 Poachers’ Roles

       13 Naver Magic

       14 With the Beaters

       15 Every Shot a Record

       16 An Idyll in Kenya

       17 Tweed at Autumn

       18 Pheasants

       19 The English and the Scots

       20 A Fishing Party

       21 Rummage in the Gun Cupboard

       22 Rough and Smooth in Cornwall

       23 Hitting Some Low Notes

       24 Glorious Grouse

       25 Arctic Waters

       26 Nightlife

       27 Saying Please and Thank You

       28 Level Pegging

       29 New Ways and Old

       30 Places we Know

       31 Pigeons in the Offing

       32 Marauders do it in the Rough

       Index

       By the same author

       Copyright

       About the Publisher

       Introduction

      IN THE EYES of most people likely to read this book, as well as in my own, the countryside is fundamental to the vision of the Britain which we love, and to which we bear allegiance. This is why we find it so distressing today to be ruled by a government which not only cares nothing for the rural community, but has shown itself contemptuously hostile to it. The countryside and its inhabitants are perceived by New Labour as anachronisms, reflecting traditions of patrician paternalism, plebeian deference and bloody pastimes which have no place in the pavement society Tony Blair and his party aspire to enforce. While Labour claims to have abandoned the old ideals of socialism, it displays a disdain for rights of private ownership of a single commodity – land – which would be deemed intolerably socialistic if applied to any other form of property. New duties of care are thrust upon landowners, even as a host of new rights of access are granted to the public. The government proposes a programme of housing development which, if it is fulfilled, will carpet in concrete great tracts of fields and woodland, poisoning the green lungs of this overcrowded island, and especially its south-eastern corner. Foremost among the aspirations of rural dwellers today is a desire to see those who rule us once again acknowledge the virtue and importance of Britain’s countryside to our society, not as a mere park in which the urban population can seek recreation at appointed hours on licence, but as a place where wilderness sustains its historic freedoms, not least those of the hunter, both animal and human.

      This book is intended to serve two purposes: first, like my earlier country collections, to entertain rural sportsmen with tales of the pleasures which we share, embracing fields and streams, dogs and guns, rods and horses. Second, at a time when the traditional rural community feels imperilled as never before, I have included essays on two critical issues: the struggle to sustain our landscape, and the tensions between English and Scots, a source of concern to all of us for whom the Union of the two kingdoms means so much. I hope that these more sombre pieces will not jar on readers to whom I am otherwise seeking to offer a little bedside amusement.

      Even in these troubled times for rural Britain, I cherish a spirit of optimism, inspired by the happiness which so many of us still gain from the countryside. One of my favourite pastimes, while casting a fly or waiting for a drive to begin, is to muse upon the same experiences in the days of our ancestors. A sense of continuity, of doing things which they did, in the old settings, is one of the deepest satisfactions of field sports. As they look down upon our doings with horse, rod and gun, how pampered they must think us! First, mobility offers free rein. We think nothing


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