The index below will direct you to extracts from HDR's published writings. These extracts have been selected from his many poems, journal articles, letters to newspapers, sermons, lectures and books, etc. Each Index has been subdivided alphabetical to make searching easier. Clicking on an entry in the index will take you directly to the extract.
Subject Index (K-O)
Kendal
Kendal and a North Country Eisteddfod
Kennard, Constance
Keswick (See also Derwentwater)
The Consecration Crosses, St. Kentigern’s Church
Morning and Evening at Crosthwaite
Past and Present in the Keswick Vale
Keswick High School
Co-Education or a Dual School of the Higher Grade for Keswick
Keswick School: Foundation of a Scholarship: Generous Offer by Canon and Mrs Rawnsley
Keswick Old Folks’ Christmas Do
Rhyme of the Keswick Old Folks’ Dinner
T’ Keswick Auld Fwokes’ Do, 1905
T’Ald Fwoks’ Cursmas, December, 1904
T’Auld Fwoks’ Cursmas “Do”, 1903
Keswick School of Industrial Arts
Our Industrial Art Experiment at Keswick
Ruskin and the Home Art Industries in the Lake District
Kymin Hill
Kynance Cove
La Verna
Lady Nefert
Lake District
Arctic Splendours at the English Lakes
Braithwaite and Buttermere Railway
Coach Drive at the Lakes. Part I. From Windermere to Rydal Water
Coach Drive at the Lakes. Part II. From Rydal to Thirlmere
Coach Drive at the Lakes. Part III. From Thirlmere to Keswick
Easter at the Lakes: Colours and Flowers of Spring
Lake District: Protection of the Scafell Region
Proposed Permanent Lake District Defence Society
Reverence for Natural Beauty: Part I
Reverence for Natural Beauty: Part II
Safeguarding of the Lake Country
Windermere: The Government Protection of the Lake Country
Lake District Defence Society
Proposed Permanent Lake District Defence Society
Lake Maggiore
Lanherne
Lauener, Ulrich
League of Nations
Leigh Woods
Early Morn and Eventide, in Leigh Woods
Lighthouse
TLight-Ship, Seen from Seascale
Lilies
Lincolnshire
Linton, Eliza Lynn
Literature
Litter and Vandalism
Desecration of Nature – Leaflet to Schools
Desecration of Nature (Thurstaston)
Memorial Stone at Grisedale Tarn
Reverence for Natural Beauty: Part II
Lodore
Lucerne
The Revival of the Decorative Arts at Lucerne
March
Mardale
Maritime Disaster
Martineau, Harriet
May
May Day
Meydoum Pyramid
Minchinhampton Common
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus
Muchelney Priest’s House
Muchelney Priest's House, and Barrington Court
Muncaster
A Quiet Autumn Day, from the Terrace at Muncaster
Music Festivals
Kendal and a North Country Eisteddfod
Nab Cottage
Nab Cottage: A Memory of Hartley Coleridge
Nannau
Narcissuses
National Trust
National Trust: Its Work and Needs
National Trust for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty
National Trust – Properties
Barras Headland and the Old Post-Office, Tintagel
Muchelney Priest's House, and Barrington Court
Unveiling of the Ruskin Memorial at Friar’s Crag
Nature Study (see also Education)
Desecration of Nature – Leaflet to Schools
Reverence for Natural Beauty: Part I
Reverence for Natural Beauty: Part II
What Shall We Do With Our Scholars?
Nether Stowey
Nettleship, Richard Lewis
Newquay
Norse (see Vikings)
November
Oakley, John
Oberammergau
October
Old Age
Orvieto
Otters
Owen, Richard
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First, about the “murderous millinery.” [It is not only the barbarous cruelty involved that torments one] it is the unkindness to far generations, and the loss to posterity, that moves one. The Ardea gracilis, the little white Florida heron that supplies the egret plume, is going the way of the Impeyan pheasant, and the glossy-winged African starling. This murderous millinery is destroying them or it has already destroyed several varieties of our brightest-plumaged birds from off the face of the earth. (p. 5)
Now these birds are so many winged miracles of beauty to tell us of the glory of our God. They were sent into the world, each of them with a message from the Most High. (p. 5)….
Now may I ask your attention to the urgent matter of mercy in our cattle markets. You know how difficult it is to drive the timid country cattle to the trucking or to the mart. I daresay you also know that the cattle driver’s whip or goad rains merciless blows between the horns and on the flanks of these dumb-driven sacred beasts. It is not an unknown matter that a beast’s eye is sometimes actually torn from its socket in the process…. [The solution, which has been adopted in many countries in Europe is] to train the calves to the use of the halter, and so get all grown cattle to follow a hand that leads, rather than fly from a stick that drives. (pp. 5-6)
Next, I am extremely anxious that we in Britain should lay to heart one of the lessons of this terrible war in South Africa. Our losses in horse flesh have been enormous. More than 100,000 horses, I am assured, have perished. One of the contributory causes was that vicious habit and cruel fashion of docking the horses’ tails. It is mercifully forbidden in the army, and so the army horses proper could defend themselves from what is the chief scourge of an African campaign, the plague of flies…. Owing to the foolish fashion of horse docking, thousands of horses had to go to the war without their natural protection, and the agonies that were added to them for want of it may be imagined…. The custom is as useless as it is cruel, and, as this war has helped to prove, it is a dead loss to the nation. (p. 6)
This brings me to my concluding appeal for mercy to our dumb friends. More than 100,000 horses have died for Great Britain and the Empire during this past year. We shall have monuments to our brave soldiers who come not home again. How shall we build to those brave horses…. We will build their monument and the monument of our debt to them by an appeal to the Geneva Convention. It ought to be possible in future war to have, by some general agreement between the powers, a regular army corps of men to accompany an army on the march and battlefield, whose sole duty should be to care for the wounded and the dying horses and baggage animals, and see that the happy dispatch of a bullet behind the ear is accorded to those who fall. The matter, I am told, is a complicated one. (pp. 6-7)
(Nature Notes, 1901, January, vol. XII, no. 133, pp. 4-7)
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Those who have realised what deep pleasures the appearance of a well-beloved migrant gives, as, punctual to his hour, he makes himself heard or flashes into sight, will feel something of the pain in knowing that, unless we can be more enlightened in our entertainment of these strangers, we shall each year entertain fewer angels unawares, and England will be immediately the poorer. (pp. 545-6)
For is it not a fact that England, in its weariness and its city banishment from sunshine and sweet country sounds, is becoming each year, by means of an educational process, more fully sensible of such joy as these wild bird presences can yield? (p. 546)
The rich man may find his pleasure in foreign travel, the poor man must find his in his native fields. (p. 546)
The pleasure that habits of natural history observation give, the happiness of being able to use one’s eyes, is a pleasure and happiness within the reach of the poorest of the poor, and we shall be wise in time if we take care that the joy that our bird-life, carefully studied, provides for the poorest of the people, is not sensibly or thoughtlessly diminished. An Edwards, a Dick, a Jonathan Otley may not be found in every village yet, but the time may come when no boy shall leave his village school without knowing something of the ministry of the fowls of the air and something of the seasons in which to look for the visitors from across the sea, and of the sounds that proclaim their arrival. (p. 546)
It is certain that the education of the future will insist more and more on accurate use of hand and eye; if the Sloyd system or the industrial art school bench and tool is to help towards the former, how better can the latter, viz., accuracy of eye, be attained, than by educating it to habits of careful, accurate, and systematic observation? and what better field for the practice of these habits is to be found for the average English boy or girl than the field of natural history? (p. 546)
It is then a matter of serious concern not only from the cheap pleasure side of the question, but from the practical education side also, that the field for the observation of natural history objects be not narrowed in the British Isles. The impetus given to habits of observation by our natural science books, our good elementary “school readers,” and our excellent museums, of late has awakened a dormant appetite for the pleasure and the education derivable therefrom. Where one collector of plants and bird specimens existed ten years ago we have three to-day. Meanwhile the craze for possession of specimens outruns the discretion of observers, who are only beginning to learn the secrets of the naturalist. (p. 546)
In consequence of this revival of scientific interest we find plants and animals which were a real possession for the nation disappearing entirely from sight, and as real a national loss, beyond computation, is the result. It is asked what can be our remedy? (p. 546)
We answer, public opinion so enlightened as to make it impossible for a collector to root up wholesale the last small patch of “Scheuchzeria palustris” in the bog (of whose destruction, by-the-bye, the poor black-backed gulls in the Scotch marsh are, it seems, blameless) or to shoot the last bittern that may boom in the fens. (p. 547)
We answer, knowledge more wide-spread and accurate of the actual habits of our feathered friends. (p. 547)
Surely, too, the time will come when the kite will be looked upon as chiefly the devourer of arts and snakes, the honey-buzzard and the hobby will be seen to be feeders on wasps, beetles, and cockchafers, and not on young pheasant chocks or grouse eggs. We shall one day realise that the buzzard has made “mice and frogs and such small cheer” his simple food for many a year; that the kingfisher seeks as much for slugs and watersnails as he does for trout-spawn and minnows, and that that miracle of beauty, the wind-hover or kestrel, never stole a partridge’s egg in its life, and cares more for a plump field mouse than any other food the earth can give. (p. 547)
We who can now, thanks to telegraphy, know to a day the movements of the birds, need not be one whit less weatherwise than he. What better news have we who live in villages of how the open country or the seashore fares than by noting the presence or absence of the birds in quest of food. The great flocks of winter migrants out in the open break up into serious village bands, and give up gipsying at the first real spell of hard weather. (pp. 547-548)
Moreover, the interchange of field and garden bird life, so admirably described for us by the author of “A Year with the Birds” has much to tell us of the actual temperature and fruitage of the year. No agriculturist can neglect to use the message that the sensitive followers of the sun and seekers of their food bring with them from across the sea. (p. 548)
The mysterious appearance of rare visitors, such, for instance, as the recurrent flights of “crossbills,” if only we could read their riddle, doubtless would do much for us; but here at home the regular migrations of our well-known birds from south to north, from north to south, have many a lesson for the farmer. (p. 548)
If the actual utilitarian side of this question of the use of wild birds should seem to be likely to accomplish something, as a motor to their protection, we say that charity will accomplish more. (p. 548)
We look far forth to the time when humanity and “the love of being kind to such as needed kindness” will put down the cruel use of unnecessary snares or the prowling gun. (p. 548)
As I write, news is brought me that a tawny owl, which had just begun to make his interesting to-whoo echo of nights in our vale, was shot – because it was an owl. A bittern, rarer visitor still, paid the penalty of appearing upon the margin of a neighbouring lake a few weeks since, and will never boom again. (p. 548)….
Those who have seen the havoc made by brutal sticks and cowardly sportsmen upon the weary-winged woodcock who have crossed far seas on the back of a nor’easter, and are hoping for short shelter and rest upon the moonlit banks of Lincolnshire; those who have watched the gathering of the cuckoo, in sad, diminished, anxious, voiceless bands upon the shores of the “Wash,” before they bid a land that loves them not adieu, will feel it needs small effort of imagination to conjure up a vision of inhospitality to the birds that add such beauty, and life, and wealth, and good to the land, which will make the most unthinking amongst us ask whether we deal fairly and honourably with our feathered friends. (p. 549)
But the process of forming an enlightened public opinion is a gradual one. Knowledge of the habits and food of birds, and the power to distinguish friends from foes amongst them, spreads very slowly. (p. 549)
The tender loving-kindness of a poet’s heart for the people of the air cannot be expected to be the common possession of the people of the earth. (p. 549)
Yet there are signs not wanting that the hearts and the imagination of Englishwomen are being touched to pity our fair-winged friends. The fact that the beautiful little crane, “ardea gracilis,” was becoming exterminated to provide the Parisian bonnet makers with egret-plumes a year or two ago did not much move the world of fashion; but as soon as it came out that the lovely feather was only worn by the bird in the season of love making, and that every egret-plume obtained meant the probable starving of a callow brood of helpless “ardeas,” the ladies of tender hearts and love in England felt compassion, and egret-plumes were less sought for. (p. 550)
Where is the kingfisher? In Scotland nearly extinct, in England rarer every year. Faber’s sonnet will remain, but only once in five years was the flashing emerald that inspired that sonnet seen at his task upon the Brathay shore. Ten years ago five pairs were known of in Derwentwater district: only one pair is known of now. In the English Lake District we are blessed with quite a remarkable number of rarer winter visitors – but the red-wing and tufted duck were not likely to be counted amongst them until the past few years. Of summer visitors, the dotterel, whose flocks made glad Skiddaw and Helvellyn, and the red-backed shrike, were once common enough, but they are looked upon as scarce birds now. (pp. 550-551)
Of our Lake District native residents it is curious to observe that the linnet is scarcer grown – this is said to be owing to the burning or the doing away with the furze or whin-bushes. The goldfinch, that prince of livery-men, is hardly ever seen, but then, says my friend, the local naturalist, the thistles are hardly ever seen either. Where are the skylarks that used to be abundant? One seldom even hears their song now. (p. 551)
The owls, beyond the raise, are still fairly plentiful; Wansfell is well beloved of them, and they may be heard on the Furness fells pretty frequently, but round Derwentwater the tawny owl is infrequent, and the white owl positively rare; only one pair is known of in the Crosthwaite Valley. (p. 551)
The kite has ceased to exist with us also. The last bird in the Keswick vale was shot in Lord William Gordon’s wood near Derwentwater by a man named John Pearson in 1832. One pair of Peregrine falcons are all that remain. Six years ago five pairs nested within a radius of twenty miles of Keswick. Ravens are not much scarcer than they were. Sparrow-hawks are seldom or never seen. The fierce little merlins, common within the memory of man, are never seen on Lonscale or Bleaberry now, and the innocent buzzards may be looked for only in certain places and are almost countable. Six nests, to use a colloquial term, “got flown” in the neighbourhood last season. (p. 552)
The kestrel alone enjoys his mouse-hunt in increasing numbers, but the gamekeeper’s eye is always on him. Yet we in the Lake District have to be thankful to providence for an increase in some varieties of birds; the golden-crested wren, the pied flycatcher, and the redstart have of late multiplied, and whether we are to attribute that to some special increase of food in England, or decrease of it elsewhere, we cannot tell. The provisions of the “Wild Birds’ Protection Act” is probably in part the reason. (p. 552)
It is generally believed that the increase of that large section of our British birds, the coast-fowl, is attributable directly to the beneficent working of that Act, but when ornithologists are pressed, they generally only point to the eider duck as being very largely on the increase among the sea birds that frequent our northern British shores, and they all speak as if the common skua needed protection still. (p. 552)
Doubtless, an island home of fishermen as we are, we shall be wise in time if we see to it that the fisherman’s friends do not diminish. If the owl and the kestrel are needed by the harvestmen of the land, the gulls are needed as much by the harvesters of the sea. They are not only the safest finders of the herring “schools,” but they are the surest scavengers in our fishery ports also. Anyone has watched the gulls at work after the herring boats have come in at Whitby, or at low tide, has seen what excellent public service they do by the British quays, will realise that the “ocean at her task of pure ablution” round our “shores has, in the sea-gulls, a very competent and assiduous band of helpers. (pp. 552-553)
But has the “Wild Birds’ Protection Act” failed? We answer, not entirely. Mr. Dillwyn, M.P., has directly benefited our national life by his carefully considered Bill of 1880. That Bill gave protection to all wild birds during the breeding season from the 1st of March to the 1st of August, and though it left in the hand of the owner and occupier power to destroy them on his own land, it scheduled certain rarer land birds and some sea-fowl as exceptions, and prevents even the owner or occupier destroying these during the close season. (p. 553)
But there was this flaw in the Bill: it did not touch the question of protecting the birds’ eggs. And the bird-nester is to-day as free as ever to rob and destroy. The hardship of this is seen when one considers that there are certain birds who make the British Isles their one and only nesting ground. Professor Newton tells us that during the breeding season the area of our lesser British redpoll is confined to the British Isles. Unless we protect its eggs, we in reality do a harm to other lands beside our own. (p. 553)
There are not wanting those who assert that Sir William Harcourt’s Act, passed in 1881, practically rendered useless the Act of 1880. If we cannot get that Act appealed, at any rate why not attempt to get a longer closing time for our wild birds than at present exists? February is a month when birds are in fullest beauty of plumage and seen in their lovemakings most easily to forget the gun of the destroyer. (p. 553)
Why should wild birds that are early breeders not have the protection accorded to game birds? September sees many second broods still callow, but the poor wild birds have no aegis of the law thrown over them in September, and many sea-fowl perish piteously, starved in their nests by reason of the murder of their parents. (p. 553)
The egg-robber must be dealt with, and that vigorously. Let us extend the protection of that Wild Birds’ Act to the eggs of certain of our feathered friends for a period of years. Let us take a leaf out of the book of the islanders of Dominica, of our neighbours, the Manxmen, or, to come nearer home, out of our Statute Book of last Session, and provide a temporary but strict protection for such varieties of our British birds and their eggs as competent naturalists shall advise us are in sore need of such provision. (p. 554)….
As I write, there lies before me a list, compiled by one of our ablest ornithologists in the north, or rare birds that he would wish so protected—birds that each year endeavour to breed in Britain. I will not give it in detail, or they will all be shot off in view of possible legislation, but the list contains twenty-nine varieties and he sends me a supplementary schedule of eighteen others. The list is a striking one; it does not take into account such wanderers as the waxwings, or such come-and-go visitors as the crossbills, it does not provide for such rare birds as can take care of themselves, but if it be simple truth that there are forty-seven varieties of wild birds sorely needing the succour that a short Act of Parliament would accord to them, the sooner a Rare Birds’ Preservation Act for the United Kingdom is passed the better. (p. 555)
(Gentleman’s Magazine, 266 (June 1889), 545-58)
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A wasted life is like a wreck that lies
Half sunk in sands of fearful solitude
As ’twere the ribs of some huge shore-washed whale
That once plunged master of the mighty storm
But driven by that strange ocean river came
From realms Hyperborean and from seas
Rough with their steel blue mounds of hillocked ice
And sickening in these southern latitudes
And summer simmering seas forgot its strength
And helpless drove upon these sandy shoals
And lashing anger felt the cruel tide
Forsake its slimy sand-bespotted bulk,
And all the tortures of the high noon sun,
So gaping died the prey of pigmy men,
Who, soon as death had dimmed the giants’ eyes,
Clomb hand in hand the mountain of warm flesh,
And with mock bravery, piercing thro’ the depths
Of fatness, struck the mammoth’s purple heart,
And laughed to see the red tide flush the sand,
Or, doubting if the brute might still relax
The stiffening sinews of the death-wide jaws,
Bade their rough dames and wondering children walk
Into the mighty bone-fenced mouth, and take
Clusters of clinging tangle and sea shells
To deck their house shelves as memorials.
July 1872
(Unpublished poem. RR/1/7 – Catherine Rawnsley’s Commonplace Book)
- Hits: 4240
Subject Index (A-E)
Animal Cruelty
A Plea for the Birds
A wasted life is like a wreck that lies
Ad Misericordiam
Bitter Cry of Brer Rabbit
Death Aboard our Transports
Dying Charger
Eagle at the Zoological Gardens
Harassed Horses
My Feathered Lady
Pigeon Shooting at Ambleside
Starved to Death
The End
The Plumage Bill: “Murderous Millinery”
The Stag Impaled
War-Worn Horses’ Appeal
Wild Birds’ Protection Amendment Act
Animal Legislation (see Animal Cruelty)
Animal Protection (see Animal Cruelty)
Archaeology
A Day at the Meydoum Pyramid
Barrington Court
Muchelney and Barrington Court
Bede Memorial
Bede Memorial
Bede, Venerable
Bede Memorial
Biographical Portraits
Forster, William Edward
Birds
A Plea for the Birds
A Service of Song in Duchess’ Park, on a May Morning
Ad Misericordiam
Chaffinch’s Nest
Chorus of the Dawn
Eagle at the Zoological Gardens
Fieldfares
Great Spotted-Woodpecker at Allan Bank
In a Cumbrian Gullery
My Feathered Lady
Pigeon Shooting at Ambleside
Sea-Gulls at Saint Bees
The Plumage Bill: “Murderous Millinery”
To a Thrush, Heard on Clifton Down in a January Mist
Wild Birds’ Protection Amendment Act
With the Black-Headed Gulls in Cumberland
Buildings and Monuments
Muchelney and Barrington Court
Bede Memorial
Nether Stowey
Pier at Saltburn
Rock of Names
Saltburn Viaduct
Skegness House
Story of the Caedmon Cross
Unveiling of the Ruskin Memorial at Friar’s Crag
Butterflies
In Butterfly-Land
Caedmon
Story of the Caedmon Cross
Chaffinch
Chaffinch’s Nest
Christian Brotherhood
Calls of Christian Brotherhood
Greatness of Service
Christian Manliness
Forster, William Edward
Churches (see also Buildings and Monuments)
At Skelton Old Church
Crusader’s Tomb
In Thun Churchyard
Old Skegness Church
Sermon Preached in Halton Holgate Church
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor
Nether Stowey
Rock of Names
Dane’s Dyke
Dane’s Dyke, Flamborough Head
Deer
The Stag Impaled
Dogs
Sheep-Dog Trials at Troutbeck
Story of Gough and His Dog
We meet at Morn, my Dog and I
Eagles
Eagle at the Zoological Gardens
Earthquake
Earthquake
Egypt
A Day at the Meydoum Pyramid
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