Mn Whi) ia i f N OCARLET & DILEK BY FOS RUSSELE ILLUSTRATIONS BY BENCH MASON Presented to The Library of the University of Toronto by Fort William Public Library i : : ee * io ee oy sat Na N SCARLET AND SILK JUST PUBLISHED NEW SPORTING STORIES By G. G. AUTHOR OF “SPORTING STORIES AND SKETCHES 3s. 6d. net. BELLAIRS.& CO., 9 HART STREET BLOOMSBURY, LONDON IN SCARLET AND SILK OR RECOLLECTIONS OF HUNTING AND STEEPLECHASE RIDING BY FOX RUSSELL AUTHOR OF ‘‘CROSS COUNTRY REMINISCENCES” WITH TWO DRAWINGS IN COLOUR BY FINCH MASON SECOND EDITION ns 1" LONDON Bret LATRS’ & CoO. 1896 To His GRACE THE DUKE OF BEAUFORT, K.G., ‘this Volume zs, by permission, most respectfully dedicated, with the heartfelt admiration of his grateful servant THE AUTHOR CONTENTS PAGE INTRODUCTORY : P . : ‘ ; I Huntinc— Fox-HuntTInG : : : EG STAGHOUNDS . , ; : 5a 0.5 HARRIERS. ; ; : : 2 82 DRraAGHOUNDS : : : 93 STEEPLECHASING— Earzy Days. : ; ; : 5 asa CELEBRITIES OF THE Past Torrty YEARS. 136 STEEPLECHASE Ripine . 5 ‘ 3 Hurpie Racine . : : ; 5 = 220 Some Equine ErraATICS z : ‘ » H2An On Conpitioninc HUNTERS . : : 2 25 In THE OFF Season. . 269 Ye t =f on a : s ‘ished : ~ i yoo 7 5 INTRODUCTORY INTRODUCTORY THE desire to excel in one particular pursuit has always been so prominent a feature with sportsmen—each piously believing in his own particular hobby, and in his inmost heart believing not at all in the hobbies affected by his brother-men—that all attempts at cohesion on the part of the general body, and of fighting shoulder to shoulder for the sake of the common weal, have hitherto resulted in failure. Now, however, we have a Sporting League, and—we shall see what we shall see! But despite rivalry and jealousy ; despite the efforts made by the noble army of Anti- gamblers, humbugs in general, and declaimers against that crowning iniquity (no joke in- tended here!) the Royal Buckhounds, Sport lives, and will continue to live, because there is deep down within the heart of every 3 4 In Scarlet and Silk Englishman a real and strongly-rooted love of it for its own sake. When, however, by means of the Rack, thumbscrews, Acts of Parliament, Police- court summonses, and other deadly weapons, the kill-joys of the world have finally succeeded in eliminating all such feelings from our breasts, surely then even the most sanguine and most patriotic amongst us must begin to look anxiously for the advent of the aboriginal gentleman from New Zealand whom Macaulay has forewarned us shall one day indulge in the cheap, though draughty, entertainment of sitting on the ruins of London Bridge. But these nineteenth-century Aladdins will have to rub their lamps for a long time before they bring about the changes they are striv- ing for, and cause themselves and their fel- low-men to live the sort of Arcadia-and-water existence which they think the only fitting one; so taking advantage of the interval they are kind enough to allow us, between now and the time of our final annihilation in the world of sport, let us leave the discussion Introductory 5 of these ‘angels without wings,’ who are obviously too ethereal for this earth, and turn to the more congenial subject of good horses and good men, and make our way, in spirit, with them as they cross a country. At that very moment I was just on the point of falling into the error I made allusion to in the first line of this chapter ; «.e., I was about to let the sportsman-jealousy run away with me, and launch into panegyrics upon my own particular manias, hunting and steeple- chasing, making comparisons—which we are told are always “odious”—with other branches of sport. But having now, metaphorically speaking, written out a warning and pasted it into my hat, I will endeavour, in these pages, to “put up a strong jockey” on my hobby- horse, and keep him from bolting into the crowd, and treading on the corns of any of my fellow-men whose sporting tastes take another form to my own. I think I must have caught the horrible habit from Jorrocks. Do we not all remember how, with the best intentions in the world, 6 In Scarlet and Silk he never could avoid “running amuck” with racing and coursing men, stag-hunters, and what he contemptuously designated “ mug- gers.” All I will say is this: Is there any- thing on earth so good, so grand, so—well, you know what I mean!—as riding across country ? If I live to the age of Methuselah, I shall never forget my own first gallop over fences ; ? and this was the “ how” of it, as the Yankees say. My grandfather—may the turf lie lightly over one of the best and hardest cross-country riders that ever lived—had just bought a very handsome chestnut cob, a half-broken four- year-old. One day he said to me— “Come up into the meadow, and you can have a ride on the new cob.” My small heart glowed with delight. What promotion from the broken-winded pony! As Penley observes, “What glory!” Be it known that I was then of the mature age of seven. A groom led up the four-year-old, looking as if butter wouldn’t melt in its mouth. I Introductory 7 was hoisted up, and the moment his head was let go, away he went as if he had been fired out of a gun! My grandfather shouted some directions to me, which I did not catch—whoever does hear directions under such circumstances? A small brush fence at the end of the meadow did not stop him; he jumped high at it, but I jumped a good deal higher even than he did, and was embracing his neck when we landed. The next field was bounded by a high wall, so that he could go no farther. With undiminished speed he raced round it, and gradually bore away back again towards the meadow we started the cruise in. Again he charged and topped the low fence; this time I seemed to be sitting on his ears. He went about twenty yards farther, and then stopped dead, and with great calmness and methodical precision kicked me off, after which he quietly commenced grazing. I rose to my feet, and waited to receive my grandfather’s sympathy as I screwed my knuckles into one eye. I waited, however, 8 In Scarlet and Silk in vain. Instead of sweet, die-away expres- sions of the ‘‘ Never-mind - then -it- was -a- naughty - pony” order, stern, austere tones demanded to know “Who told you to come tumbling off like a flour-sack? Get up on to the pony im- mediately. You ought to be ashamed of yourself.” His motto was “ Men, not mollycoddles.” Nature, I think, intended me for a light- weight jockey; fate willed otherwise, and called me to the Bar. Between inclination and duty I have, at times, got into some curious and complex situations. For example, I remember that at a time when I| was acting as Deputy-Judge at a certain Criminal Court of Record, I sat, on the Thursday, in all the glory of wig and gown, sentencing my fellow- men to various terms of imprisonment; the next day I was sporting silk in some Hunt Steeplechases. During that afternoon the “open ditch” proved fatal to me ; and being rather knocked out of time, several people came up and assisted in jerking me on to my Introductory 9 feet again. The following day I was waiting for my train on the platform at Charing Cross, when a nondescript kind of individual sidled up to me, and with a sad sort of smile on his face, exclaimed— “‘ How de do, sir ?, Hope you're well. You don’t seem to know me, but I know you well enough.” “The deuce you do,” thought I to myself. And then I racked my brain to solve the pro- blem of whether this was one of my rescuers at the fatal ‘‘ ditch fence,” or a witness [’d insulted in cross-examination, and who was now about to punch my head. I dared not say much for fear of “ giving myself away.” It would never do for a ‘‘ Counsel learned in the law,” still less for a Deputy-Judge, to confess to any- thing so frivolous as riding in silk. So I “Jaid low,” saying nothing, but indulging in the safe investment of a smile. “Last saw. you, sir, in a very different place to this,’ he went on. ‘“‘He means a race-course,” | thought, and then ventured to reply— 10 In Scarlet and Silk “Yes; rather a bigger crowd there, eh?” “Bit of a ‘turn-up’ for me, sir, wasn’t it?” “Somebody for whom I’ve won a race; good business. Now I can speak freely,” re- flected I. Then aloud, I said— “Very stupid of me that I can't quite remember your face. Always had a bad memory for faces. I think you said your name was +” “T didn’t exactly say, sir; but it’s Tupkins.” Tupkins. I was as much in the dark as before. “Don’t you remember the day, sir?” he went on in lugubrious tones. ‘“ Oh—ah—well—not quite,” I stammered. ‘Somebody for whom I’ve lest a race appa- rently,” I added to myself, more mystified than ever. “Don’t you remember what you gave me that day, sir?” “*No—o. I—I can’t say Ido. What was it 2” “Three months—‘’ard. ,9) I fled. It was aman I had tried and sen- Introductory II tenced at the Quarter-Sessions two years before. During the years I was in practice, I was generally able to get away for the bi-weekly gallop with the Royal Artillery Draghounds at Woolwich. Handy to town, I could often stay in the Temple until half-past one o'clock, and then be in time for the run at three. What glorious fun we used to have! It has fallen to my lot to hunt with many packs, and in many countries, but there will be a soft spot in my heart for the memories of the good old Drag until the end of my life. On several occasions I had to cut things rather fine in order thus to combine business with pleasure. Once, I remember that, led by Mr. Lumley Smith, Q.C. (now a County Court Judge), I was areuing a case before Lord Chief-Justice Coleridge, until nearly twelve o'clock, at the Royal Courts of Justice, and by dint of cabbing to Cannon Street Station, railing to Blackheath, there changing and cantering the remaining two miles to 12 In Scarlet and Silk Woolwich on a hack, I was enabled to be pre- sent at the inaugural luncheon of the season, by half-past one, at the Royal Artillery mess : rather sharp work. On another occasion I won a case at Bow County Court, attended a summons before the Judge at Chambers, and then arrived in time to get my gallop— and also a rattling fall over a piece of stiff timber—with the Drag. I also remember that one ‘“‘Grand Military” day, when the Woolwich Drag, for the convenience of such of its followers as wished to go to Sandown, met at 8 a.m., I was enabled to ride the line with them, change horses, and jog on to Farningham, hunt with the Mid-Kent Stag- hounds, and then rail back to town in time to change and attend a consultation of counsel at 5.30 P.M. with the late Sir Henry Jackson, Q.C., in Lincoln’s Inn. Mention of Lincoln’s Inn reminds me of the time I was a student there, in the chambers of that eccentric genius, Thomas Brett. A profound theoretical lawyer, and author of three or four most erudite legal Introductory 13 works, nothing pleased him so much as to get away to a race-course. He did not “throw much style” into his “get up.” We started together once for a day at the old Croydon Steeplechases. Tom Brett's idea of a suitable costume for this and every other occasion was a tall hat, with the nap all brushed the wrong way, and stuck on hind side before ; a thin black necktie, fastened in a bow, and slewed round under one ear; an overcoat left open and flying out to the breeze, as he sped along at a pace that no man on earth could keep up with, except at a trot; trousers of equal parts, grey cloth and ink spots; ink-spotted cuffs and collar ; with pince-nez which never remained for five consecutive seconds on his nose. He was on these race days always armed with a quart bottle, the black neck of which protruded boldly from his side-pocket, and three or four cigars wrapped up in a bit of newspaper. He absolutely declined to go on a Stand, or even into an enclosure, and the way he raced from one fence to the other 14 In Scarlet and Silk to see horses jump was a sight for the gods! On every race he religiously punted half-a- crown, never more or less; and in all the years I knew him, I never remember his backing a winner but once. Poor Tom Brett had a heart of gold, but it was certainly hidden beneath a strange, uncouth exterior. Why lawyers should be generally considered incapable of sympathy with sport, is passing strange ; and how false the notion is, is easily shown by mentioning such names in con- nection with hunting and racing as those of the Lord Chief-Justice (Lord Russell); the late Mr. Granville Somerset, Q.C., one of the best men who ever crossed Exmoor; Sir Henry Hawkins; Lord Justice Lopes; Mr. Justice Grantham ; Sir Frank Lockwood, Q.C., M.P., the late Solicitor-General ; Mr. Butcher, M.P.; and Mr. Darling, Q.C., M.P.—all of whom, by the way, took great interest in the first Bench and Bar Point to Point race, run April 10, 1895. That so grave and learned a profession could do anything of such a decidedly “frisky” nature as indulge Introductory 15 in a steeplechase, took all the old-fashioned lawyers by surprise. Shades of Erskine, Mansfield, and Brougham! suppose any one had been rash enough to propose such a thing in their day! Excommunication would surely have been deemed too good for him. But “autre temps, autre meurs,’ and an assemblage which included England’s then Prime Minister and Lord Chancellor, and Sir R. Webster, the present Attorney-General, were at Combe to give the event a good ‘send off,’ and witness the success of Mr. Gee on Defiance in the Light Weight, and of the Hon. Alfred Lyttleton’s Corunna (a Retreat horse), ably handled by Mr. H. Godsal, in the Heavy Weight contest. An unfortunate accident, at a wretched little fence with an awkward landing on a litter- covered road, brought three horses to grief, of which Mr. Smith - Bosanquet’s Ladybird and Mr. Higgins’s Cymbeline were both killed on the spot. At the same time and place Mr. Terrell, on Gaylad, who had made strong running during the early 16 In Scarlet and Silk part of the contest, swerved and knocked down Lord Justice Lopes, who was watching the race; whilst Mr. Croxall, riding Pepper, was also brought down in the mélée. A splendid race home, between four, resulted, as I have said, in the victory of Corunna— bought by Mr. Lyttleton for sixty guineas, and entirely made into a jumper by him— Mr. Butcher, M.P., being second on Fingall, whilst Messrs. Cope and Terrell made a dead heat of it for third place. Turn we now from law and the lawyers to the greatest and best of all cross-country work, the hunting of the fox. vee EU NT ENG: FOXx-H UN TING I To speak of the early days of a comparatively ‘modern sport like steeplechasing is, it will readily be seen, a very different matter from embarking on a description, however slight, of olden time hunting. ‘ Lost in the mists of antiquity” is a phrase that would be no more true to apply to the beginning of the sport than ‘“ Lost in the mazes of perplexity,” if applied to the seeker after such prehistoric knowledge. And, indeed, if it were intended to amplify the present small tome into a work of as many volumes as “Harry Hieover,” of immortal memory, produced, there would still be insufficient space to give anything more than a mere glossary of the doings in a pastime of which Homer sang, and wherein Xenophon took part. 19 20 In Scarlet and Silk But, strangely enough, it would appear that our ancestors living before the time of Richard II. did not hunt the fox. Amongst the earliest of quarry, we find allusions to the bear, wolf, stag, boar, wild-cat, and hare, but the ‘little red-rover” was either left unmolested, or else, perhaps, regarded as merely unworthy vermin, to be despatched when by trapping, or a knock on the head caught! Perhaps it was the difficulty of laying hands on him that first suggested the idea of calling in the aid of hounds for his destruction. Be that as it may, there is proof that the fox was looked upon as a “ beaste of venerie” in this reign, and by the vast majo- rity of men who hunt to-day would surely be accorded pride of place amongst them all. Well may hunting be called a ‘ Royal” sport, for from earliest ages a large propor- tion of our monarchs have followed hounds; and it is recorded of ‘‘ Good Queen Bess” that she was still hunting when past her seventy-sixth year: a truly wonderful per- formance for any woman, Fox-hunting 21 One of the Lords of Wilton has stated in his “Sports and Pursuits of the English,” that hounds were never entered solely to fox until the year 1750; and the “ Badminton” book on hunting tells us that the famous pack of the Dukes of Beaufort was only in 1762 ‘steadied from deer and encouraged to ” fox.” Charles II. seems to have had a some- what catholic taste in hunting countries, for there are records existing of his hunting in the West country at various places, in Essex and Middlesex; whilst my own grandfather lived within the country of the Crawley and Horsham Foxhounds in a little moated old house which was said to have been used ex- clusively as a hunting box by the Merry Monarch, from which place of abode I have sallied forth for many a good day’s sport. Henry VIII. favoured Essex as well as the Windsor district ; whilst ‘‘Good King George” appears to have affected the last-named locality chiefly, but also hunted on the South Downs. And coming down to the present day, it is pleasant indeed to reflect that 22 In Scarlet and Silk nearly all the members of the reigning house are well-known figures in the hunting field. When we look back at our past hunting life, what difficulty we experience in deter- mining which country we think is actually the best we have ever ridden over. I have never been fortunate enough to follow our premier pack, the Quorn—which, by the way, has in Lord Lonsdale, its present Master, one of the hardest and best men I ever saw cross a country—but in my own small experience I hardly know which to give the preference to. Sometimes I think the fine pastures and flying fences of the Grafton, or the Pytchley, or the eminently ‘‘ jumpable” tract hunted by the Bicester; anon, that the Blackmoor Vale’s big doubles, or Leighton or Ayles- bury’s galloping country, afforded me the most real pleasure. All were superlatively good in their several ways; and, of course, | it depends so much upon how one was mounted as to the exact measure of en- joyment one extracted from the different Fox-hunting 23 countries. Unhesitatingly, I say that I would rather hunt a donkey on the Thames Embankment than not hunt at all; but at the same time, I am equally sure that to obtain a good country it is worth taking any amount of extra trouble, rather than, by pursuing the dolce far mente method, to hunt in a bad one. And contrasting good and bad countries brings me to the con- sideration of a rather curious thing —the facility with which a horse, taken out of such countries as Kent and Surrey, for example, will adapt himself to even Nor- thamptonshire in its most strongly fenced parts. A good horse simply loves hunting, and, ridden freely, will do his best to see where hounds are going, be the change in ground never so great. I have seen more than one instance of an animal which has been hunting in the worst parts of Kent, where, many a day, you never even see a fence worth calling a jump, transferred to the Grafton and the Pytchley country, facing boldly the big fences there, and with the 24 In Scarlet and Silk utmost success. Another queer transition case was that of a horse belonging to Mr. John White, of Taunton, which he sent up to me from the Devon and Somerset to hunt with the Blackmoor Vale. I never got on a bigger, bolder fencer, and in the Cheriton run of, | am afraid to say how many years ago, she carried me to the finish in a way I shall never forget, although she had not before this been outside Devonshire in her life. I had also a curious experience with a Welsh-bred horse, brought straight out of his native fastnesses into a flying country. Nothing would induce him to jump or even scramble through brush fences at first, but over a line of gates, or stiff timber of any sort, he could not be defeated. I hunted him for five seasons, and in that time rode over more gates than I have ever done before or since, and, save once, he never gave me a fall at any of them. As far as I could find out of his previous history—and as he came to me at a very early age he could not have had a lengthy one—the horse had had Fox-hunting 25 hardly any previous experience of timber- jumping, but seemed to take to it quite naturally. What an extraordinary combination of fortuitous circumstances is necessary for the making of a really fine run! Fox-hunting is so intrinsically good a sport that, year in, year out, it is well calculated to satisfy us all to the full; but how many—or rather, how few—first-rate runs do we get in a season? one might almost substitute the words “in a lifetime.” Amongst the mani- fold requirements are a good scent, a good start, a good horse, and a good country. Let one of these be absent, and probably no good run will be recorded, as far as we, individu- ally, are concerned. And can anything be more maddening than to find that your neighbour has had a good one, and that you yourself “got left.” Yes, I know it sounds horribly selfish to say this, but can any poor, weak mortal deny that it is true? “Once upon a time,” as the story-books say, I ven- tured forth upon a gay and corky four-year- 26 In Scarlet and Sitk old to hunt the “red-rover.” We were a long time before we found, during which period my mount persistently reared, and “made a beast of himself.” At last a fox was found a genuine “traveller.” Away we went across a big meadow, with a nice brush fence at the far end, over which my young ‘un bounded like a stag. I secretly hugged myself on being “in for a good thing.” I was—but not quite in the way I had anticipated. We crossed a fallow field, bounded by a post and rails, about three feet six high. My haughty Pegasus, doubtless disdaining so un- important an obstacle as this, tried to run through them. Result: Chaos! We picked ourselves up, and resumed. Taught, doubtless, by this incident “not to despise your enemy,” the four-year-old jumped the next ditch as though it were a navigable river; then sailed away at such a pace that we rapidly overhauled the leading brigade again. Just as I had (involuntarily, Fox-hunting 27 for I could not hold the little brute !) attained the proud position of leading the —— field (it was over one of the best parts of North- amptonshire), hounds ran down to, and crossed, some jumping, some swimming, a_biggish brook. Pulling and fighting for his head the young ’un went to his fate, and the pace felt like forty miles an hour! Up to within a length we got, and then, too late, he tried to “put on the brake” ; found it impracticable to stop, and finally soused in, tail over head ! By the time we had finished our tug-of- war, he in the water and I| on the opposite bank, a few bobbing black coats and one red one disappearing over the brow of the opposite hill were all the traces left of the field. Rochefoucauld says, ‘‘ Philosophy triumphs over future and past ills; but present ills triumph over philosophy,” and at that junc- ture [ must confess that the thermometer of my philosophy was below freezing-point. We were nine miles from everywhere. The erstwhile corky four-year-old had not only had the steam taken out of him, but was = 28 In Scarlet and Silk also slightly lame behind. Nothing for it but to walk back to B——. How I hate walking! and walking in top-boots, which surely, though unostentatiously, chafes away all the skin from your heels, is doubly hor- rible. I shall never forget that melancholy tramp, driving the now thoroughly dejected young ’un in front of me as I went. Then it came on to rain! ‘There was only one thing needed to complete my woe. I did not have to wait long for it. Two miles from B— I was overtaken by a splashed and ridiculously happy looking man in pink. “ Halloa, old chap, you do look a picture. Weve had the very best gallop of the whole season!” he exclaimed. I knew it. I was as certain that when my chance was settled they would have the “ best gallop of the season” as I was of death and quarter day ! “Tt keeps one young!” said one of the “Grand Old Men” of the chase to me a short time since, and his words, verily, are | Fox-hunting 29 borne out to the letter every day, What a list we might make of those we have seen “ocoing” at a time of life when, but for the rejuvenating properties of hunting, men would have preferred the comfort of their easy chairs at home. It was but last year that I was talking to the Rev. Mr. Fane, whilst the Essex hounds were breaking up a fox after a sharp hour’s gallop. Mr. Fane was then eighty-three, and always managed, some- how or other, to see most part of a run; and Lord Macclesfield, who hunted the South Oxfordshire for thirty years, was carrying his eighty summers bravely at the Peterboro’ Foxhound Show this very year. Handsome old Mr. Digby, too, in the Blackmoor Vale country—what a delightful thing it was to watch him make his way along, to such good purpose that he got plenty of enjoyment out of his day. Captain Philpott, R.N., also in that country, I have seen following hounds at a very advanced age. And, to my mind, far more wonderful still, there is a lady now hunting—as I give her age my readers will, 30 In Scarlet and Silk I am sure, readily understand that unless I were prepared to immediately emigrate I dare not mention her name !—who is seventy- five, and the year before last broke her thigh riding over a fence. It must have required pretty good nerve to have braved the perils of the chase after that, at her age, and she is hunting this season in one of the home counties. Mr. Robert Bird was another wonderful example of “keeping young.” He used to go right well, not merely potter along, in the Fitz- william country—which takes some doing, by the way—until he was past eighty ; and I see that Custance, in his interesting ‘“ Riding Recollections,” states that this good sports- man offered to run any horse_in the Fitz- william Hunt for £50, 12 st. 7 Ibs. each, owners up, the challenger being then of the age of seventy-eight! And is it not matter of history, engraved in every fox-hunter’s heart, how the immortal “Squire of Ted- worth,’ Thomas Assheton Smith, ‘ the best and hardest rider England ever saw,’ accord- fox-hunting 31 ing to Nimrod, was not only hunting, but going hard to hounds, and taking falls, until he was eighty years of age. Until the very last he rode up to his own gallant advice to others, ‘‘Throw your heart over; your horse will follow.” And I cannot refrain from mentioning an incident wonderfully charac- teristic of that ‘ not-to-be-denied” spirit in which he always rode across country. It was whilst he was hunting in Leicestershire, and the line taken by the fox was so severe, and the pace so hot, that, after going for about twenty minutes, he found himself accompanied by only one man, Mr. White. They came to a fence so big that there only seemed one practicable place in it. Mr. White was first at it, and when the Squire came up he found his friend stuck fast in it. ‘“‘Get on!” roared Mr. Smith; “pray get out of the way!” “If you're in such a hurry, why don’t you charge me?” was the reply. No sooner said than done, and Mr. Smith knocked horse and rider clean into the next field, and away they both went again in hot pursuit of the pack. 32 In Scarlet and Silk Few men have taken more falls, and got off more cheaply from them, than the hard squire. ‘‘There’s no place you can’t get over with a fall,” he used to say, and he never let go of the reins when he was down; a most excellent plan, but attended with a certain amount of risk. In trying to follow this great horseman’s advice, I nearly lost my left eye some years ago, as the hand that should have been guarding my face was employed in holding my reins; the con- sequence being that the four-year-old on top of me struck out, and cut my cheek down to the bone, exposing the eye in a most unpleasant manner. There are few more striking figures in the hunting-field of to-day than that of Charles Shepherd, huntsman to Lord Leconfield, in the Sussex country. At the age of seventy- six, and probably senior by several years to any other of his craft in England, he still goes right well across a country, and is always with his hounds. He began hunting at the age of thirteen with Mr, Hall, of fox-hunting 33 Holbrook, Somerset, and was for six years under the huntsman there, James Treadwell. He early acquired such a reputation as a whip that, in the words of a famous hunting parson, the Rev. Mr. Blackbourne—now an octogenarian—he was so good that he ‘could whip hounds into your pocket.” From there Shepherd went for two seasons to Lord Yarborough as second whip, under Tom Smith. Then Mr. Conyers, of Copthall, near Epping, offered him the place of first whip, and with him he remained for nearly seven years. Yorkshire and Lord Middleton next obtained his services as first whip, but a record of twenty-one blank days drove so keen a man as Shepherd from the country after the one season.* This was probably a lucky accident for him, as Mr. Scratton, of the Essex Union, then offered him his first place as huntsman, and it was in this country that he enjoyed what he always considers was the finest run of his life. On this particular day Shepherd found his fox just by the * This country now has an abundance of foxes. C 34 In Scarlet and Silk Chelmsford race-course, on Galleywood Com- mon. ‘They ran him through Hunt’s Woods, past Stock, and right away over a fine line of country to the sea, killing him in a church- yard. The time was an hour and fifty minutes, and the distance covered must have been considerably over twenty-five miles. For over thirty years past Charles Shepherd has been with Lord Leconfield’s pack, first taking the post of huntsman there under the Mastership of the present earl’s father. He is never in bed after 5 a.M., winter or summer, and in the warm weather is out with his hounds in the park by half-past four. He has always been facile princeps at his profession ; and even at his present age one might look a long time before finding any one to beat him. Truly “it keeps one young.” Although it is said that huntsmen are “born, not made,” the saying is only true in a very limited sense. There is much to learn even by the heaven-born genius, and it is only reasonable to suppose that no one Fox-hunting 35 has so good a chance of picking up the widely diversified acquirements of a thoroughly good huntsman as a whipper-in. This berth, of ‘ course, is the regulation ‘‘ school” for recruits to the huntsmen ranks. But when the aspiring amateur wishes to hunt a_ pack, there is nothing like physicking himself, so to speak, with a mixture consisting of three parts watchful experience to one of written advice. To a man who is naturally a lover of hounds, few sights are prettier than a clever “draw” up wind for a fox. Some men, thoroughly efficient in other respects, are apt to hurry this part of the business in their anxiety to get away for a gallop. But it is a bad fault. You may draw over a fox, and very soon get yourself a name as a bad finder of foxes. Besides which it unsettles hounds, and they grow careless and slack. As a rule, in open ground you will draw up wind—or it may sometimes be found advisable to draw with the wind slightly “abeam” of you. A fox is often to be found in withy osier beds, or curled up on a sunny 36 In Scarlet and Silk bank, asleep, after his nocturnal perambula- tions. Naturally, if you are drawing down wind, instead of up, you serve him with too long a notice to quit. This remark, however, does not apply to the average small covert, which should always be drawn down wind, or hounds will have a great chance of chopping him, a most undesirable thing. In “Extracts from the Diary of a Huntsman,” written by the celebrated “Tom” (not Thomas Assheton) Smith, Master of the Craven, and afterwards of the Pytchley, and published fifty or sixty years ago, occurs this passage: “It is no uncommon thing for a good fox, on his being first found, to go up wind for a mile or two, and then head down wind, and never turn again; probably instinct tells them that hounds will go such a pace up wind that they will be a little blown, and that the change of scent, down wind, creates a slight check, which gives him the advantage,” and this is a thing we should all try to remember in hunting hounds, Fox-hunting 37 In big woodland countries plenty of voice and horn are essential on the huntsman’s part, especially the former, when drawing the coverts, and no part of them that is at all ‘“get-atable” should be passed over. No creature in the world understands the art of “lying low” better than a fox. Although you may well “kick up a row” until your fox is away and hounds after him, there is nothing to be gained by noise when once clear of covert and settled to the line. Then you may afford to be happy until you check—unless, mirabile dictu! you kill him instead. But in most cases you do get a check, or, to speak more correctly, a good many checks. Again, the field depend upon the huntsman’s patience, discretion, and skill. His patience should restrain him from undue interference ; hounds must always be allowed to try and recover the scent for themselves first. If they cannot do so, then the skill of the huntsman is seen to the greater ad- vantage. Perhaps the fox has been headed and turned; perhaps chased by a cur; per- 38 In Scarlet and Silk and this is one of the most curious haps things in hunting, as all practical men know —the scent has lifted from the ground, and is then floating in the air above hounds’ heads, only to rest again on the ground a few minutes later. Having satisfied himself that his assistance is essential in recovering the scent, the huntsman must now get hold of his hounds and make his cast. And here he should remember that of the many things which may have headed his fox, a flock of sheep is not likely to have done the mischief. I have many times found the tracks of foxes in the snow going right through a lot of sheep. Of course they can do an infinity of mischief in the way of foiling a scent, but I am perfectly confident that a fox, hunted or otherwise, would never condescend to go out of his way for the sake of a flock of sheep. If your fox has been chased by a cur it is a bad business, for scent ceases, as from the scene of the incident. Shepherds’ dogs are a terrible nuisance in this respect, and do nine-tenths of the work of spoiling sport. Fox-hunting 39 It is obviously a most desirable thing that the huntsman should be as much as possible with his hounds during a run; one great reason for it being that he will then be able to see for himself, in the event of a check, what it is that has turned them—they can’t tell him when he comes up ten minutes after- wards. Probably no living creature thoroughly understands that great mystery Scent, except the fox himself; and this knowledge he shows at every point of the game; never more so than when dead beat and unable to trust any longer to his speed and stamina for safety. When, in addition to this, it is re- membered that, in his own country, there is probably not an inch of it unfamiliar to him, that he can swim like an eel, is as fast as a race-horse, and as cunning as a member of the Anti-Gambling League; when, | say, we consider all this, it will be readily conceded that huntsman and hounds must “get up y) very early in the morning” to circumvent him! 40 In Scarlet and Silk A word as to over-riding; every year seems to make things worse in this respect. How can men tear right along when hounds are at fault, and do, in thirty seconds, such harm as means diminished or total lack of sport for the rest of the day? It is simply disgusting to see the extent to which this is carried. And when the offenders are re- proved, we are treated, forsooth! to a lot of bunkum about their “coming out to please themselves!” The fact that they spoil every one else’s fun of course goes for nothing ¢ with this class of cock-tail ‘ sportsman.” Unfortunately, many of the culprits are big subscribers, and the Master dare not give utterance to the thoughts that must neces- sarily be uppermost in his mind. Apropos of this, a well-known M. F. H., who had been sorely tried in this respect, caught his second whipper-in in a slight transgression of the same nature, and roundly swore at him before the whole field, winding up with, “ At all events, I may d—n you!” POx-HUNTING II TimE was when Essex, though always a sporting country, was rather looked upon as a hunting ground to be avoided, on account of its wealth of “plough” and circumscribed area of grass land. But during the last ten or fifteen years there has been a general move amongst Essex farmers to lay more and more of their land for grass, whilst, as draining is synonymous with high-class culti- vation, the ground rides lighter and _ better than it did in the days of yore. Steam ploughing, the Powers be praised! is not much in evidence, and in the Roothings the “plough” is almost as good-going as the grass. The Essex Foxhounds, having their kennels at Harlow, run over an extremely 41 42 In Scarlet and Silk fine sporting country, and the establishment is one of which Mr. Bowlby and Mr. Loftus Arkwright, the joint masters, may well feel proud. No more efficient huntsman than Baily, who has carried the horn for several seasons here, could be found, and he and his whips are always thoroughly well mounted. Personally, I may say that I was under a strangely false impression when fate first took me into this country, for I thought that it was a singularly easy one to ride over. Viewing the matter in the light of actual experience, I at once confess my mistake. I am not saying that it admits of any comparison with really “big” countries, such as, for instances, the Blackmoor Vale, Grafton, or Pytchley, but, nevertheless, to be carried across Essex you must be on a performer: that admits of “no possible doubt whatever.” The ditches are both big and deep; many of them have rotten banks into the bargain, but this last remark does not apply to the Roothings. The Essex Union country is rather a smaller one to jump, and lies on the east Fox-hunting 43 side of the main road from London to Col- chester. Mr. Ashton, in his one season’s Mastership (1894-5), deserves the thanks of followers of the pack for the great improve- ment he effected in it; but his constant pre- ference of the fortiter in re to the suaviter am modo in dealing with the conduct of affairs in the field was hardly calculated to make him popular, and he is now replaced by Colonel Hornby, who gives up the Devon and Somerset in order to take over this pack, which obtains in him such a Master as it has not known for some time past. Although, at the time of writing, he has not yet been seen in pink over the ditches, his conduct of the famous west-country hounds puts it beyond all doubt that he will be an unequi- vocal success in his new position. Not only the gallant Colonel himself, but five of his children go, and go well, to hounds. Talking of keeping a ‘“‘field” in order, I always think that no man in the world ever fathomed the great mystery better than Lord Penrhyn. One never saw any unrulivess in 44 In Scarlet and Silk the Grafton country, and, speaking for my- self, | never heard the noble Master use even a sharp expression. He was invariably cour- teous to all—but no one ever thought of disobeying him. Mr. Sheftield Neave’s Staghounds go, about three days a fortnight, over much the same country as the Essex Foxhounds, and though the pack is hardly an ornamental one, they have shown good sport for many seasons past. Mr. Brindle now whips in to them, vice Mr. Edward Neave resigned, whilst the Master most ably carries the horn in propria persona. It was in the Essex country that Major Foster met with his fatal accident several seasons back. His horse refused, and then fell with him, at a deep ditch. Some time elapsed before the animal could be got off his prostrate rider, and then it was found that, unhappily, the pommel of the saddle had pressed him down, and literally choked him. I commenced this chapter by saying that Essex was always a sporting country. This Fox-hunting 45 year the farmers are keeping up its character, for when, in their interests, it was proposed to devote the funds usually expended upon Harlow Steeplechases to a big champagne luncheon, no less than three hundred of the sturdy agriculturists rose up in revolt, and appended their signatures to a request which signified that, although champagne might be good, sport was better! and Harlow Steeple- chases were duly held. I never saw so big a gathering at a country race-meeting before. During the past season foxes must have had a comparatively good time in their im- munity from hounds, though, amongst others, Mr. Ashton, on four occasions, brought out his pack for a day’s hunting on the snow. But in spite of the severity of the winter —one that will be remembered as stopping hunting for a longer period than any ex- perienced since the “Crimean” year, 1857— cubs have been discovered in this country —KEssex—very early. One litter that came under my notice, in especial, seems to be worthy of remark. ferreting a bank on 46 In Scarlet and Silk the 29th of January, the ferret got into a fox-earth, and paid the penalty with his life. Then, seizing up one cub, the vixen made a bolt with it, leaving another behind her which, on examination, appeared to be about three weeks old. One or two other early litters have also been discovered, but none, that I have heard of, quite so soon in the year as this. The ruthless builder is slowly, but none the less surely, exterminating foxes and fox- hunting in Kent and Surrey, and, alas! also in many parts of Sussex where I have en- joyed many a good gallop, notably with the Crawley and Horsham Foxhounds. Here, as a boy, I obtained (and deserved) the undying hatred of everybody in the field by riding a horse I could no more hold than I could have stopped a steam-roller. But good old George Loader—a better huntsman never lived —always refrained from using “ cuss- words” at me, and said he “liked to see the young ’uns going.” With only about seven stone on his back, the old steeplechase Fox-hunting 47 horse I rode used to go as if the devil had kicked him. In connection with Sussex hunting, it is sorrowful news that after keeping the Good- wood hounds for twelve years, the Duke of Richmond is now giving them up. The best part of Kent, to my mind, is the country over which the Mid-Kent Stag- hounds travel. Round Maidstone and Water- ingbury, indeed, there are some really fine lines to be traversed, with plenty of grass and good fencing. After manifold chops and changes of Mastership, this pack has now reverted to the Leney family, and in their hands | trust it may long remain. It is now several years since I had the pleasure of a run with them, but, with luck, I shall hope to renew their acquaintance ere long. The West Kent Foxhounds hunt over a very varied country, good, bad, and indif- ferent. The Hon. Ralph Nevill, who presided over the destinies of this pack for so many years, has now resigned, to the great regret of all, but Bollen still remains to hunt them. 48 In Scarlet and Silk A fine horseman, with nerves of iron, he is a thorough master of his craft. I shall not readily forget his performance one day, some ten years back, when hounds had just streamed across the metals of the South- Eastern Railway. Bollen trotted up to some high and new post-and-rails, jumped them, on to the line, and crossing it, faced and overcame in like manner another obstacle of the same sort, the other side; and not one of us would follow him! In the days when, by bringing any wretch out of a training stable to see hounds half- a-dozen times, you could qualify it to take part in “Hunter's” (save the mark!) flat races, the Old Surrey and other Surrey packs were always favoured with a plentiful supply of smooth-snaflled, martingaled, and bandaged “rips,” ridden by big-headed and prematurely old-looking boys, who artfully lay in wait for the Master, and after rushing their mounts over or through a gap or two, would ask him for their “certificate.” And, only too thankful to be rid of them, the much-worried fox-hunting 49 Master would probably say, ‘“ Yes” — and other things as well! The resignation of Lord Chesham as Master of the Bicester, was a matter for real sorrow amongst hunting men. As a splendid type of an Englishman, both in mind and body, he would be (as he is in riding to hounds) “hard to beat.” An extraordinary number of “the right sort” may always be seen follow- ing this pack and the Duke of Grafton’s, in- cluded amongst them being such well-known personages in the hunting world as Sir Rainald (or is it “Lord” now?) Knightley and Lady Knightley, Lord and Lady Law- rence, Lord Capel, Lord Bentinck, Hon. Douglas Pennant, Baron de Tuyll, Earl of Ellesmere, Messrs. Lambton, George Drake, Grazebrooke, Campbell, Harrison, Mr. Walter and Lady D. Long, Hon. R. Grosvenor, Messrs. Fuller, Peareth, and last, but by no means least, Captain Edward Pennell Elm- hirst (‘‘Brooksby” of The Field). Many more there be, but, alas! treacherous memory deserts me, and I must pass on. D 50 In Scarlet and Silk In these busy times, when the vast majority of men are engaged in some occupation re- quiring constant attendance in London, it may not be out of place to indicate a few of the countries which can be conveniently reached from there on the hunting morning. Between the pleasure of hunting from home and hunting from London, I think there can be hardly any comparison drawn. We should all like to hunt from home; but, unfortu- nately, we don’t all get what we like in this bad world, and if we can’t hunt from home, many can snatch a day’s enjoyment here and there by using the iron horse as a covert hack. The Queen’s Staghounds, Lord Rothschild’s, and the Mid-Kent are all the more easily accessible on account of the later hour at which they meet—11.30 and 12 o'clock re- spectively—and may well be reached without the awful ordeal of “‘ getting up in the middle of the night.” The Essex Staghounds, which go three days a fortnight, mostly over the Roothings, and the Warnham, in the Crawley Fox-hunting 51 and Horsham country, can also be met with- out much trouble. Or if foxhounds are pre- ferred, the Crawley and Horsham, the West Kent, the Essex, the Essex Union, the Old Surrey, and the Surrey Union all lie handy. Of course, if soaring ambition takes you in her toils, and nothing short of the “ crack” packs will satisfy your yearnings, you can reach the Grafton, the Bicester, or even get to Rugby and Harboro’ by leaving London at a somewhat “pallid and ghastly” hour. If you do, all I hope is that you will be more fortunate in your initial effort than was a plucky friend of mine, some time back, who danced all night at the Artillery ball at Woolwich, got back to his quarters at 4 A.M., started an hour later for London, and caught the 7.30 from Euston to Rugby. Here he and a brother “gunner” got their hunters and spent the whole of the day trotting up and down lanes in a thick fog, and returned that night to town without ever having seen hounds at all! The Old Berkely, Mr. Garth’s, the Burstow, 52 In Scarlet and Silk and Hertfordshire, are good packs for the Londoner in point of distance; but of all those mentioned above, undoubtedly the best country is that over which Lord Rothschild holds sway. Leighton or Aylesbury will be found most convenient for hunting with this excellent pack, whilst the Mid-Kent trysts are mostly within reach of Maidstone—the kennels are at Wateringbury, close to that town—or Tonbridge. Mr. Sheffield Neave’s (the Essex Stag) kennels are at Ingatestone, and his pack is equally well met from Chelms- ford or Ongar. Billericay, Ingatestone, and Chelmsford are handy stations for the Essex Union, whilst the Essex (Fox) country lies more adjacent to Harlow (kennels) and Ongar. Horsham, Crawley, and Steyning, give facili- ties both for the Warnham Stag- and Crawley and Horsham Fox-hounds, and the West Kent may be met from Farningham and Penshurst —the latter is by far the better country, but with a train service which does not always accommodate the metropolitan Nimrod. And now a word or two as to the class Fox-hunting 53 of country met with whilst following these packs. With Lord Rothschild’s, the glorious Vale of Aylesbury lies stretched before you ; all grass, practically ; fair fences, with not a few brooks. You want a jumper here, and a galloper as well; but it is by no means a very big country. Compared with parts of Northamptonshire, or with the average tract galloped over by, say, the Blackmoor Vale or Cattestock, it is an easy one to ride over; and certainly I know none more pleasant. The Queen’s varies very much indeed. Some parts are first-rate, and others—well, are not ! The Mid-Kent get some beautiful pieces of jumping and galloping ground in the vicinity of Maidstone and Wateringbury, but on the Farningham side it is not at all good. In the former part plenty of grass and flying fences ; in the latter, flint stones, cold clay, and sticky fallow; while the immense woodlands make things even worse for the West Kent Fox- hounds than they are for the more artificial sport of stag-hunting. With the Crawley and Horsham Fox, and the Warnham Stag, a most 54 In Scarlet and Silk excellent sporting country can be ridden over, though there is lots of plough, and you must take the rough with the smooth. Mr. Garth’s and the Old Berkely I have never hunted with. It must be confessed that the Surrey packs, and also the West Kent, have a bad country as a whole. Many is the day I have spent with them, toiling over flint stones and clay fallows, climbing hills like the side of a house, and threading almost interminable woodlands, in return for the very minimum of sport. Fruit-growing and wire also seri- ously militate against hunting here. But as I said before, the West Kent get their compensation when they meet in the Penshurst country. The East Kent is an awful tract, except just in a very few parts. I have treated of the Essex district in the early portion of this chapter, and the two foxhound packs, the Essex and Essex Union, are turned out and hunted in really smart fashion. To those who lke a ditch country—perhaps it is rather an acquired taste—nothing better could be recommended Fox-hunting 55 than to try your luck here. But I would remind all “ birds of passage ” that the Essex does not advertise, and expects the trifle of a thirty guineas’ subscription from those out- side its boundaries. In fact, of all the packs we have just been dealing with as easily accessible from the Metropolis, only two— the Queen’s and Lord Rothschild’s—are non- subscription ones. I should never advise a man to keep his hunters in London. The eternal bother and ever-present risk of the boxing to and from the scene of action on hunting days, and the almost impossibility of properly exercising horses in town, are drawbacks so great, as to more than counterbalance the admitted advantage of keeping them (and your groom) under your own eye. But if this plan is adopted, always see that your man starts in plenty of time for the departure platform, for a slip upon the greasy paving may be the result of an extra sharp trot to catch his train. And after hunting is over, don’t ride straight off to the 56 In Scarlet and Sitk railway station and put your horse in his box; attend to his wants first. He should always be put into some stable, if possible, wisped over, and given either a pail of oat- meal gruel, or a light feed, preceded by a little chilled water. If oatmeal is not to be - had, a double handful of common flour will serve the purpose. Then, being warm and comfortable, he will not be so likely to take harm on the return journey as he would when boxed home straight away. As to the system of hiring hunters, I think if a man is still young, blessed with good nerves, and can “take a toss” with equa- nimity, that he might do far worse than adopt this plan. I have very pleasant memories of the “jobbed” hunter, and I don't know that the average “hireling” has put me down oftener than my own horses have done. Iam quite aware, however, that this is not an universal experience. Out of many hired ones I have ridden, and over all sorts of countries, I can only remember get- ting one serious fall, and badly injuring one Fox-hunting 57 horse. That injury, however, was a fatal one: he pitched on to the point of his shoulder in landing over a drop fence, and although I was able to walk him home, he never came out again. In hiring, too, there is one material advantage to a poor man; he knows the extent of his loss when “ grief” results. If you can hunt from home, however, I am quite sure that the poor man’s “best value” is to buy something cheap. ‘There are as many good cheap ones as good dear ones,” an old farmer used to say to me; and speak- ing as one who never had much more money than he knew what to do with, I can add that I have always been able, with, of course, a certain amount of trouble, to get cheap hunters—and they haven't all been bad ones either ! Through the kindness of friends I have had many a fine day on three and four hundred guinea hunters, and am profoundly thankful to say, never had any bad luck with one of them. Once, however, when mounted 58 In Scarlet and Silk by a dear old friend of mine, the horse fell down dead with me. A post-mortem revealed the fact that fatty degeneration of the heart existed, and although, no doubt, the sharp gallop we had just had, and the exertion of jumping fences, did not improve matters, still the horse might well have died even had he been standing in his stable at the time. Taken on the whole, I think I feel happier when riding over fences on horses that don’t cost any money! ‘There is such a glorious feeling of irresponsibility about the thing then. Without exception, the very fastest hunter I ever owned was a_half-worn-out steeple- chase horse, which I bought for fifteen sovereigns. He was fired all round and ‘“dicky” in front; but there seemed to be nothing he would turn his head from, and it never gave him any trouble to gallop down every other horse in the field. He was a very hard puller, and gave me one nasty fall, simply because I could not hold him. Every hunting man probably remembers, fox-hunting 59 with fondness, his two or three best runs. The two most enjoyable ones | ever had were in no single respect alike, and yet | must bracket them together. One was a very fast twenty-five minutes with the Graf- ton, over as fine a country as even Northamp- tonshire can boast of. I was riding a five- year-old, a recent purchase; and when one’s “latest” carries you well, is not the enjoy- ment always doubled? We simply raced all the way, and finally saw the fox rolled over in the open, under our horses’ noses. The other run, which I love to look back upon, was a grand gallop of nearly two hours in the Blackmoor Vale. This, also, was very fast for an hour and a half, or a little more, perhaps: from then, our fox gradually ran us out of scent, and we finally lost him. It was quite a select few which got through that gallop, and the way our beaten horses “chanced” their last three or four fences, has since given me food for reflection. One of the “survivors” (I think it was Captain Luttrell) came down a crumpler at the very 60 In Scarlet and Silk last fence we jumped, but got off cheaply, as luck would have it. Mr. Merthyr Guest, I remember, was right in front during the whole, or nearly the whole, of the run. A truly wonderful man, the Master of the Blackmoor Vale: surely he must share with the Marquis of Worcester the distinction of hunting more than any man in the kingdom. Six days a week is, I believe, the Marquis of Worcester’s ordinary allowance, and he is undoubtedly one of the finest amateur hunts- men in the world; and to hunt a big country like the Duke of Beaufort’s is no small tax upon a man’s physical powers, to say nothing of his skill. Hunting, and indeed all high-class English sport, has had no better friend, no more splendid patron, than the Duke of Beaufort, and as a huntsman he is unsurpassed. In every way he has set a grand example for true sportsmen to follow, whilst among his neighbours and tenantry he is simply worshipped. No finer type of an English nobleman—in every sense of the word—ever Fox-hunting 61 lived than the present Lord of Badminton, and the turf has sustained a great loss indeed by his retirement. His Grace, however, still takes a lively interest in racing, and is a regular attendant at covert-side. For a man who, this year (1895), has celebrated his golden wedding, the way in which he slips over his own stone-wall country is marvellous, and would puzzle most men of half his age to imitate. Although the blue and white jacket will be sorely missed on the race-course, the blue and buff livery will still be to the fore at covert-side. May it be so for many a year to come, and the best of good luck go with it! In the class of amateur huntsmen, Lord Willoughby de Broke takes high rank, and to his undoubted skill he, ike Lord Worcester, adds the invaluable quality of being a grand horseman. Mr. Fellowes, whom I have had the pleasure of following with the Shotesham, in Norfolk, always struck me as a beautiful huntsman, and, at a very advanced age. got over a by no means small country in a 62 In Scarlet and Silk surprising manner. ‘What a quartette of grand sportsmen!” must be the thought of all hunting men when the names of the Duke of Beaufort, Mr. George Lane Fox of the Bram- ham Moor, the ever-to-be revered ‘‘ Parson” Jack Russell, and Mr. Fellowes are mentioned. I suppose it would be a safe thing to say that a hound is at his best in his third season, that is, when he is about four years old; but it by no means follows that he will not be as good, with ordinary luck, when he is six. The first failing usually noticeable about a hound that is ‘‘ getting on in years” is that his turn of speed fails him. If he has been a leading hound, he will now, perhaps, drop back into the ruck in running, especially if the pace be very good; soon after he will begin to tail, and must be drafted. A constant supply of puppies must be had recourse to to supply the places of the worn out; and it is always, of course, necessary to breed many more than you are likely to want, so that only the best may be retained at the close of the cub- Fox-hunting 63 hunting season. Probably not much more than half the entry will be worth keeping ; which is not to be wondered at when one considers the manifold qualities required in order to produce a first-rate hound — nose, speed, stamina, good looks; all should be there. Well might the breeding of fox- hounds be regarded as a separate and distinct profession, so great is the demand upon a man’s knowledge, experience, and skill, so onerous the task of producing a truly good hound. ‘‘ Like produces like” in many cases, as we know; but in hound-breeding, perhaps more than in anything else, nature oft-times seems to take a pleasure in defying and setting at naught all the “ well-laid schemes of men and mice.” It has been well said that to get a perfect pack means fifty years of work. A somewhat curious custom, but one which has been attended with success, is that of cub-hunting in the evening instead of at early dawn. ‘The present and the late Lords Yarborough have, inter alia, practised this 64 In Scarlet and Silk system, and I have often thought that instead of meeting at 11 or 12 oclock at the end of the regular hunting season, when the days are drawing out and evenings are fairly light, that a much later hour for the tryst would produce far better sport. Towards Easter time the ground is frequently as dry as a turnpike road, and we often find that hounds only begin to run just as we are leaving off and going home. SLAGHOUNDS Ir would hardly be using the language of exaggeration to say that for one man who has crossed Exmoor in pursuit of the wild red deer, at least a thousand are familiar with the chase of the animal who is driven up to the meet, and when the fun is over returns to his home in his own carriage “like a gentleman,’ as a well-known sporting writer once put it. But if we wish for the poetry of the chase, if we would conjure up visions of Dian fair, of Hippolyta in Midsummer Nights Dream when speaking of the “hounds of Sparta,” these words : ‘** Never did I hear Such gallant chiding; for, besides the groves, The skies, the fountains, every region near Seem’d all one mutual cry: I never heard So musical a discord, such sweet thunder ”— then we must hie us to the West—substituting, 65 E 66 In Scarlet and Silk alack and alas, in these prosaic times, the Great Western Railway for the winged heels of Mercury —and, by the borders of the Severn sea, pursue the timid hind or her antlered lord across the heather and the moor. That the beauty of the scene has much to do with the charm of. the sport here, goes without saying. The lovely Devonshire coombes, the vales of Somerset, the magni- ficent moorland, with its wealth of purple heather, the wild beauty ,of the Quantocks, and the picturesque “setting” of the Bristol Channel, cannot fail to imspire the naturalist side of us with joy, even at the moment that the ‘‘sportsman half” is looking askance at the terrible roughness of the country that must be ridden over in order to see anything of the chase itself. The rocky ground, the uncompromising hills, the long distances to be covered, and, withal, the pace that will enable you to be ‘‘in front,’ must all be borne in mind when selecting a horse for this work. He must be thoroughly stout and clever, have feet as hard as the nether Staghounds 67 millstone ; he must be able to go a great pace, be short coupled, and possess undeniable shoulders. With such a nag under him, a man may “harden his heart,” and prepare for certainly a long, probably a good, day’s sport. When the fortunes of the Devon and Somer- set Staghounds were at a very low ebb, Mr. Fenwick Bisset stepped into the breach, and in spite of difficulties which would have deterred many another man, he held the Mastership, with infinite credit to himself and benefit to the country, for no less than twenty-seven years. Old Jack Babbage, who had been huntsman to Mr. Carew, was ap- pointed to carry the horn when Mr. Bisset assumed the command, and Arthur Heal was whipper-in. Good as Babbage was, it seems to be generally admitted that Arthur Heal was better, when, in due course, he became huntsman to the famous pack; and it takes a clever man to do himself and his employers justice in this position; a much more trying one, I venture to think, than that of hunts- 68 In Scarlet and Sitk man to an ordinary provincial pack of stag- or fox-hounds. The natural difficulties of the country could be successfully encountered only by a huntsman thoroughly conversant with his duties; and it is not awarding too high praise to say that Arthur Heal was always “the right man in the right place.” In addition to his other undeniable qualifica- tions, his ight weight must always have told in the long and trying days which are the rule rather than the exception here. Mr. Fenwick Bisset himself laboured under the disadvantage of riding over twenty stone, but, in spite of this, he was always “ forward.” Of course, the class of horse he rode was very different to that capable of carrying his huntsman ; and the prices he paid for his weight-carriers were, as the famed “‘ Dominie ” would have put it, “‘ prodigious.” In December 1880, Mr. Bisset having re- signed, Lord Ebrington became Master, and Mr. Bisset generously presented the pack to the hunt. About this time one of its warmest supporters, Mr. Granville Somerset, Staghounds 69 Q.C., with whom I was, for a time, in chambers at Kine’s Bench Walk, died, and two years later saw the death of another revered old follower of the hunt, the im- mortal “Parson” Jack Russell. Old Bab- bage, too, was gone, and gaps such as these are hard to fill. As after events proved, no better substitute for Mr. Bisset could have been found than Lord Ebrington, who con- tinued to show the same good sport which was always associated with his predecessor. And now let us imagine ourselves, on a bright morning in late August, jogging along in the warm and genial sunshine to meet the hounds at Hawkcombe Head, and here the North Devonian “rank and fashion,” to say nothing of the North Devonian “rank and file,” are assembled in force. Without delay a move is made for Larkbarrow, where by the lonely shepherd’s cottage, right out upon the moor, the pack is kennelled. In due course the huntsman makes his selection of those hounds he requires for ‘“ tufters,” some five couple in all, and in company with 70 In Scarlet and Sitk the ‘‘ harbourer” and the Master trots away in one direction, whilst the whip gallops off in another. After a long wait we hear that a stag has crossed Badgworthy, and has gone away over Brendon. ‘The pack is hastily unkennelled, and laid on. Scent is bad at first, and the great, solemn-looking 25-inch hounds can only puzzle out the line slowly. Then, as they go over Badgworthy Hill, the pace improves, and they run sharply down over the heather to Farley Water. Over Cheriton Ridge, they go by Hoar Oak and the Chains, across Lynton Common. All this time horses are on good, sound ground, and can gallop on clean and hard “ going.” As they cross the West Lynn, hounds are travelling at best pace and heading for Wood- barrow. ‘The aspect of the chase then quickly undergoes an entire change, for whereas be- forehand we could gallop freely, we are now reduced to scrambling through mire and dirt, almost hock deep, and have to follow one another like a flock of sheep. Woe be, now, to the budding hero who would try a short Staghounds 71 cut, surely would he get ‘‘bogged.” Scent continues to improve, and we must hustle along somehow. Fortunately we are riding to a leader who is at once bold and cautious, and our friend ‘‘ Cinqfoil,” we know, will lead us into no difficulties. Without any sign of a check onwards they go over the Exe Plain, and head for Brendon Two Gates. Our quarry has gone down the Doone Valley, and thence he turns, left-handed, into Badgworthy Wood. Just by the deer park a momentary respite enables us to give our steaming horses a blow, and take one for ourselves. But before we can slip off our horses hounds are away again, and we get a rattling gallop over Black Barrow to the Colley Water. Then comes the long hill up to the Exford road, ee and, ‘“‘ grinning and hugging,’ we clamber up foro) o>? it at the best pace our steeds can command. Faster than ever they run over Porlock Com- mon, and along Hawkcombe, past Porlock Vale, and down to the sea. There, in Por- lock Bay, is the closing scene witnessed, and the obsequies celebrated, of this good stag. 72 In Scarlet and Silk He was a veteran, and in point of freshness at the finish looked like “giving points” to many of the dead-beat horses which had been ‘toiling along in his wake. But having spoken of the poetry, let us not forget the prose of stag-hunting, and I cheerfully acknowledge the very real enjoy- ment that has fallen to me whilst following the carted animal, in various countries, good, bad, and indifferent. The four best-known packs of staghounds —the Queen’s, Lord Rothschild’s, the Essex, and the Mid-Kent—are all within easy rail of London. Roughly speaking, much of the Q@ueen’s and the Essex, all of Lord Roths- child’s, and about half of the Kentish country, is good. The Vale of Aylesbury is as near perfection as possible: it is all grass, practi- cally, with beautiful flying fences, over which no first-rate hunter, until he tires, at least, ought to come to grief. Speaking for myself, I would sooner take an average run and two average falls over the Vale, than the best of runs, minus the tumbles, in an indifferent Stazhounds Fie: country. The “fields” are enormous, but, generally speaking, there is plenty of room at the fences. When I was last there, and following this splendid pack, which, by the way, was started in 1839, Fred Cox was still hunting them, and despite the manifold injuries he has sustained in falls innumerable, which have made his seat on a horse cramped and unnatural, was always with his hounds. Mark Howcutt was then first whip, and a bolder cross-country horseman I never want to see. He was going then, and goes now, as hard as we happy youths did at the age of eighteen or twenty, when we “feared nothin’ cos we knowed nothin’,’ as old Jem Hills, the huntsman of the Heythrop, used to put it. Some fine runs fall to the lot of the con- stant follower of the Essex Staghounds, espe- cially when they fly across the open Roothings. The plough is hght riding—almost as light as grass—and it would take a very big “field” indeed to cause any crowding at the big open ditches. You can “have” them pretty much where you like, and there is no need to follow 74 In Scarlet and Silk even so good a pilot as Mr. Sheffield Neave, the Master and Huntsman, would be. Asa matter of fact, small fields are the almost invariable rule in this country ; indeed, a few additional followers (subscribers!) would be an unquestionable advantage to the pack. Every Tuesday—almost always in the Rooth- ings—and each alternate Saturday, are their hunting days. The Roothing ditches are formidable—more, as a former whip to this pack, Mr. Edward Neave, was saying to me, a day or two since, from their depth than their breadth; for a broad ditch may often be negotiated by scrambling half-way down before jumping. The Roothings is, probably, the nearest approach to a flying country that Essex can show. To the Londoner casting about for a “‘ happy hunting ground,” I should ? certainly say “hunt in Essex” rather than in Kent or Surrey, and as I said before, there is, with the Essex Staghounds, the great ad- vantage of small fields and plenty of room. I have had some fine runs with the Mid- Kent Staghounds from time to time, and Staghounds 75 parts of their country are very good to ride over. They have not yet discovered a greater traveller amongst their deer than the famous “ Moonlight,” which after being enlarged about mid-day, ran on, or at all events was not taken, until eight o'clock that night! But it is no unusual thing for a run of twenty to thirty miles to take place over the Maidstone side of the country, which is certainly their best. The Surrey Staghounds, over whose destinies Mr. Tom Nickalls, of Nutfield, has for very many years presided, have always shown good sport when the country has afforded them opportunity. The demon builder, alas! is always on their track, and on too many occa- sions, each season, they have to contend with serious difficulties. But for all that, I have enjoyed some capital spins with them over the steep Surrey hills, and live in hopes of doing so again. The Surrey Farmers’ staghounds, which hunt the district around Epsom, Surbiton, Ewell, and Leatherhead, and have their kennels at Chessington, near the place of 76 In Scarlet and Silk that good sportsman George Bird, have just been deprived by death of their new Master, Mr. D’Avigdor. By his death the hunt has ‘sustained a great loss. He had been Master but a very short time, and had assumed the reins of office at a time when such a man was badly wanted. To go on into the adjoining county of Sussex, one may get some fine sporting runs with the Warnham, and either Dorking (where the kennels are) or Horsham are very acces- sible places for these hounds. With the Enfield Chase (Colonel Somerset’s) I never had the pleasure of going, but should imagine that they must be rather cramped for room. A somewhat erroneous notion seems to prevail with regard to a deer’s sagacity. Mr. Jorrocks, we know, likens the hunting of the deer to the “’unting of a hass,” but, as a matter of fact, a deer is by no means a fool. Witness the clever way, for instance, in which a hunted stag will go and push up another to take his place before hounds. When faddists talk of the cruelty of stag- Staghounds Gy) hunting, and the terrible sufferings under- gone by the quarry in his fear of the hounds, they are either speaking in guileless igno- rance, or else doing their best to belittle the fame of the late Ananias. I cannot call to mind a single instance of the ordinary paddock-fed deer showing any fear of hounds ; many an one calmly starts grazing when first enlarged, and has to be actually driven away. ven so, they usually start at a very casual trot: it is well authenticated that in a certain hunt the deer used to jog out to the meet beside the huntsman’s horse, and in the middle of the pack; run his line, and then return to his paddock in the same way. And if the “cruelty” criers, who are con- stantly running a tilt against the Royal pack, would only come out and ride to the finish with staghounds, then get off their horses and tackle the deer, probably some of their sympathy would be reserved for themselves ) instead of “slopping over” on the “ victim.” A stag is often a nasty customer to collar, and [| have seen hounds, and men, too, “ for- 78 In Scarlet and Silk warded” in relentless fashion by a wicked one at the end of a long and fatiguing gallop. One particularly amusing scene I witnessed some eight or nine seasons back. Our stag had “soiled,” or taken to the water, in a mill-dam. The water was shallow, and the stag set his hind quarters against the mill wall, and with lowering eye waited for the coming struggle. Hounds, whose valour exceeded their discretion, plunged in, and half swam, half waded, towards the quarry. One after the other they retired howling, as they were struck and beaten off, the stag seeming to enjoy the fun. Our second whip —whom we will call Tommy—made a lasso of the thong of his crop, and leaning as far as he could over the wall, dropped his noose securely over the animal's head. At that moment another hound attacked the foe in front, and the said foe suddenly lowered his head to give him a warm reception. Poor Tommy, who hadn’t allowed for this action, was forcibly jerked off his precarious perch on the wall, and fell neck and crop over Staghounds 79 the stag’s back and souse into the water beside him, amid the roars of merciless laughter from “all and sundry” who stood watching the performance. If he had only let go of the crop he might have saved him- self easily, but one never does manage to think of those things at the right moment. Wire is a terrible bugbear to a stag; he never seems able to see it, and I have wit- nessed several of the poor brutes get falls, more or less severe, over this ever-to-be execrated thing. I only hope that here- after all our ‘“‘cuss-words account,” swelled as if is to enormous dimensions through making speeches on the subject of wire, will be sent in to the people who invented and the people who use such an abomination. ! I have wasted half- an-hour trying to think of an adjective that As to barbed wire shall adequately express what I think upon the subject. I have failed to do so, and, therefore, pass on to another subject. For the man who can only snatch a day with hounds occasionally, the stag offers, So Ln Scarlet and Silk perhaps, more attractions than foxhounds. To such an one, a blank day is a more serious matter than it is to the votary of the chase whose time is his own, and who gets his two or three days a week. With the stag, you are sure of your gallop; and in addition to this, the meet is generally at a later hour—an additional advantage not to be underrated by the Londoner or business man. A_ bigger hound and a bigger quarry, coupled with a stronger scent, makes the pace, as a rule, . much faster than it is with foxhounds; but even the chase of the lordly stag gives way, in point of speed, to that of the gay red herring !—which, by the way, is not a herring at all, but, in most cases, a rabbit skin well ”) “scented” with aniseed, or other unholy compound. If a man wants pace alone in following hounds, undoubtedly he should place the drag first, stag second, and fox third. But, given a good fox-hunting country, I much doubt whether many people would be found following either drag or stag. “Ay, there’s the rub!” Fate does not plant us all Staghounds 81 in a first-rate fox-hunting country; and if she did, the fickle jade would probably uproot us just as we had got spoilt for any other! As far as I have been able to see, a deer, whilst still full of running, cares little or nothing as to whether he runs up wind or down. In fox-hunting you can always cal- culate, with more or less certainty, on your quarry following out certain vulpine rules under given circumstances ; but, according to my observation—and I merely, of course, give it in the most humble manner for what it is worth—there is no calculating upon how a deer will run. They seem to have no preference for hill over vale, for open down over stiffly fenced country, or vice versd. I have seen deer dodge about on an open down, and run perfectly straight over a cramped country thickly interspersed with formidable obstacles. You don’t know where to have them in this respect, so the very best plan is to follow Assheton Smith’s example, and ‘go into every field with the hounds!” HARRIERS ‘“UNcouPLE at the timorous flying hare,” says Shakespeare, and in no parts of these Islands has the injunction been more largely obeyed than in the West country, where the sport is, to-day, more popular than ever. But harriers are to be found pretty well distributed all over the country now, and the chase of the hare is by no means a thing to be looked down upon. It is often said that “harriers should not be allowed to hunt fox,’ and I think to that saying might be added, “‘ fox- and stag-hunters should not be allowed to hunt hare,’ because when they do so comparisons, which, as we know, are “odious,” will inevitably be made, and always to the disadvantage of the slower, if more scientific, sport. As a school, no less for young horses than 82 Flarrwers 83 for budding sportsmen, nothing can be better than to follow (not too closely, bien entendu !) a pack of harriers. With regard to the former, in my humble opinion, this plan is by far the best one to inoculate your beginner with a love for hunting. Harriers are slow enough to enable a horse to look about him, and, if he is sensible, he will soon begin to take an interest in the sport. Again, he can “have” his fences as slowly as he likes, and even if he gets down, there is usually plenty of time to pick himself up again and catch hounds before they have got very far. To those men who love hunting for hunt- ing’s—as distinguished from riding’s—sake, few things can be prettier than to watch the work of these patient, clever, though quarrelsome, little hounds. Of all the harrier packs it has been my good fortune to follow, I always thought the Shotesham, in Norfolk, hunted by Mr. Fellowes, was the best. Once a tremendously ‘‘hard” man in the Shires, Mr. Fellowes afterwards made the perfection of a harrier huntsman. It was whilst following 84 In Scarlet and Sitk him on one occasion that I got a curious fall, for galloping at a fence my girths flew, and so did I! whilst almost at the same moment my horse slipped up on his side and measured his length on the ground. Harriers ought to be encouraged to spread themselves well when drawing a field, for many a hare almost requires to be kicked up; they are real adepts at lying low, and “sitting tight.” The “field,” too, may be of considerable service here, especially in beating up hedgerows, for harriers are none too keen on doing this for themselves. A hare will rarely give much sport before January, and in that month and February I have occasionally seen them make a four or five mile point, and go a great pace, too, in- stead of constantly ringing, as is their wont. Beckford says, in speaking of harriers, that “‘ you should never exceed twenty couple in the field”; but in most countries little more than half that number will be found to suffice; they run better together, and there is less chance of their foiling the ground, As Harriers 85 to the sort of hound best adapted to show sport, it is rather dithcult to describe it, and far harder still to breed it. The small fox- beagle, the foxhound, and what the above- named great authority describes as “ the large, slow-hunting harrier,” must be judiciously blended in order to produce the likeliest kind of hound. About nineteen inches is the best size. Of course an even keener sense of smell, less pace and dash, and more patience are required than suffice in the foxhound. To over-match a hare is to at once spoil your own sport. When once a hare is found, huntsman and field cannot be too quiet. ‘** Let all be hushed, No clamour loud, no frantic joy be heard, Lest the wild hound run gadding o’er the plain Untractable, nor hear your chiding voice,” sings Somerville, the poet of the Chase, and I may add that for such an one as he describes, an early ‘‘hanging day” might well be fixed ! A policy of ‘ masterly inactivity” is a useful thing at a check, when hounds should be 86 In Scarlet and Silk severely left alone. Speaking to them merely distracts their attention from the business in hand, and gets their heads up. Of course if the “fault” is a long one, the huntsman’s assistance will be needed. It is impossible to lay down any rule for making a cast; the circumstances of the moment will be the best guide to a man in this. It is notorious that a hare will always run at his best and straightest when in a strange country, or in a mist, and where hares are scarce. Up wind or down seems to make no difference to them; and in this respect they resemble a deer, and are very unlike a fox, which, it is well known, almost invariably goes away down wind. As it is a common thing with hares to either cross or run up roads, it is most desirable that in every pack there should be a few hounds who can hunt on such ground—a peculiar and distinct gift. Years ago I had many a good day with Mr. Henry Lubbock’s harriers, in the West Kent country, and with the redoubtable “Jack” at the head of affairs we saw the Harriers 87 end of many a stout Kentish hare after a three or four mile point. When following harriers we ought to be especially careful, as farmers are much more severely tried by a hare-hunting field than by the following of either fox or stag. The pursuit of both of the last-named usually involves the crossing of a field but once, whereas a hare will often double back, cross and re-cross the same piece of ground over and over again, and thus pave the way to doing considerable damage, unless horsemen exercise a certain amount of self-control. I am sure | did the farmers a very good turn when, years back, I frequently whipped- in to a pack of harriers, and the huntsman and I being old cronies, and fond of a gallop, we used to often manage to slip the field, and have a jolly good run all to ourselves; the only thing was, that “the field” didn’t quite see the fun of subscribing for our express benefit, and the game was, consequently, put down with a firm hand! The establishment of the Peterborough 88 ln Scarlet and Silk Harrier and Beagle Show is a step in the right direction, and will do much to improve the status of hare-hunting, and the method of kennel management, in the near future. “First catch your hare,” goes the old say- ing, but having caught her, the moot point of “what to do with her” arises. There is certainly no need to give the quarry to the pack, and it may do far more good in the interests of hare-hunting to present it to the farmer on whose land it was found — the inside is quite sufficient to distribute to the hounds. As to the argument that hounds lose their keenness when deprived of the spolia opima, I would ask, ‘‘How about hounds hunting the carted deer, or a drag ?” Depend upon it, hounds will be equally keen, if they are worth their salt, with or without the spoils of victory to crunch. Some huntsmen are great sinners for the sake of blood, and wink at their hounds chopping hares. This should be prevented at any cost, as nothing is more annoying to the field—and the hare! Harriers 89 A hare in running will generally describe a circle, its size varying with circumstances, such as the nature of the country, the state of her own vigour, &c. Puss is by no manner of means a fool, and the cunning and shifts a hunted one will display are astonishing, such as, for instance, doubling back on her own footprints; and when this trick is practised on a highroad or dry footpath, it is very effective in bothering hounds. After doubling they often make a most astound- ing spring, and wait till hounds have passed, then creep quietly back the same way they came. There are few things more extraordinary to me than the fact that when drawing for a hare there seems, as long as she lies quietly in her form, to be no scent; for, have we not all, at times, watched hounds sniffing about within a yard of the terrified quarry, or actually passing over her form without winding her? Scent, as we know, is one of the hidden mysteries of the chase, which not even so great an authority as the Duke of 90 In Scarlet and Silk Beaufort has fathomed ; for, in the Badminton book on hunting, he writes: ‘Scent it un- questionably is which enables the hounds to follow the line of the fox, but from what portion of the frame it emanates—whether it sometimes lies on the ground, or rises a few inches above it, and what are the atmospheric conditions most favourable to its development—seem to be vexed ques- tions. ...” It has been suggested that the solution to the case of the hare in her form, is that the animal gives out no scent until she begins to travel. Be this as it may, it is well known that as a hare is sinking, when before hounds, scent gets perceptibly less, until it very nearly dies out altogether. A friend of mine, a Master of harriers, told me that he bought a useful hunter at the hammer for fifty guineas, and rode him nine seasons ; after which, thinking he would like a souvenir of the old horse, he had him painted. His groom was very pleased with the likeness, and asked his master “‘ how much Flarriers on them artist chaps charged” for such a thing ? p] “T paid fifty guineas for this,’ was the reply, whereat the groom was struck dumb with astonishment. Later on in the day the following was reported from the servants’ hall: ‘‘ Master's been tryin’ to deceive me. Wanted to make me believe that picture of Old Jack cost fifty guineas! Why, that’s all he paid for the horse itself!” Almost the same thing happened to Mr. MacWhirter, the well-known painter, who told me the story himself. After the artist had sold his famous picture of “The Van- guard,’ he naturally took considerable in- terest in the splendid bull which he had painted as the central figure, and meeting the worthy Scotch farmer who had owned it, inquired after the animal’s welfare. ‘“‘T did varra weel wi’ him. I sold him for just —— guineas.” (I forget the amount now.) “What a curious thing!” exclaimed Mr. MacWhirter ; “ that is the exact amount I got for the picture of him.” 92 In Scarlet and Sitk The artist told me he should never forget the look the man gave him. He said nothing, but there was no mistaking the language of theeye. It plainly said that Mr. Mac Whirter was telling a stately lie! The bare notion of a picture of the bull making the same money as the bull itself was altogether too much for Highland credulity ! DRAGHOUNDS Ir the saying of Montaigne, the wise French philosopher, be true, that “ Nothing gives us more satisfaction than to witness the mis- fortunes of our friends,” surely the “ moving accidents by flood and field” almost insepar- able from the “pursuit of the red herring,” must be pleasant to witness for those prudent folk who keep “‘ out of the hurly-burly!” It may be open to objections—what sport is not ?—but of all the wholesome, inspiriting, rough-and-tumble games for a horseman, I think nothing beats drag-hunting, and I have had as long an experience of it as most people. Now, a drag pack should be well done, or not done at all; that is to say, if men bring out a lot of hounds just fit for the halter, and see them stringing all over the place— 93 ; 94 In Scarlet and Sitk in fact, your pack being in several parishes at one and the same time—if you turn out dressed as though huntsman and whips were going to kill rats in a barn; and above all, if you seek to emulate the example of old Bill Bean, the arch-trespasser, as the Druid calls him, then the whole thing becomes a farce, and you make enemies in the neigh- bourhood, not only for dragging, but, much more serious still, for hunting. If I were asked what is the first and most important thing in establishing and keeping up a drag pack, I should answer unhesitatingly, a tactful Master. Farmers, landowners, and Masters of hounds all have to be propitiated and kept friendly; a bad Master of drag- hounds will wreck the whole concern in a single season. A model Master of draghounds is Colonel Yorke, R.H.A., who has now ruled at Wool- wich for several seasons past. The district is very fortunate in retaining his services for so long a time. In the following account— which I originally wrote for Bailey's Maga- Draghounds 95 zine, and which, by the kindness of the Editor, I am permitted to reprint here—the Royal Artillery draghounds will be found fully dealt with. It is nearly a quarter of a century since Mr. Thacker, the senior veterinary surgeon at Woolwich, and one of the finest horsemen that ever rode “‘ between the flags,” conceived the idea of starting a pack of draghounds. Mr. Thacker, who was formerly in the 1oth Hussars, was a small, spare man, his face badly scarred from the contests he had had, and the falls sustained when ridmg young and vicious horses. Nearly every bone in his body had been broken at one time or another, but his nerve was of iron, and he was “hard” to the backbone. After one season, he handed over the Mastership to Captain (now Colonel) Lynes, R.H.A., who had then just returned from Canada, and a better man could hardly have been chosen. On being appealed to, the neighbouring farmers and landowners met the newly- formed hunt in a thoroughly sportsmanlike 96 In Scarlet and Silk manner, and such names as those of the three brothers Russell, true type of the fine old English gentleman-farmer; Cook, who then held the Government lands by the side of the river at Plumstead, and in days gone by used to ride with the drag; Christie, May, Maxwell, and Colonel Forster will be held in affectionate esteem as long as the hunt has its being. Many of the lines then available—and the drag extended its opera- tions then, as now, as far as Sevenoaks—are now partly or wholly built over, and what used to be one of the best in the way of big fencing, the Burnt Ash line, is now entirely covered by bricks and mortar. The number of hounds has never varied very materially ; at the outset there were about 154 couples, drafts from the Duke of Beaufort’s, Bramham Moor, Belvoir, Lord Portsmouth’s, &¢., whilst the present strength of the establishment is 14} couples, including contributions from Mr. Lort-Phillips’s, Lord Portsmouth’s, the Good- wood, and others. The kennels at first were built against the Remount Establishment, and Draghounds 97 were very good of their kind, including benches, feeding-yard, playground, boiling- house, and yard for isolating any hounds when necessary. The present kennels con- sist of a detached building standing in the rear of the Remount Establishment, and con- taining still better accommodation. Colonel Lynes, following Mr. Thacker’s good example, was always in the habit of feeding the hounds himself at four o’clock each day, and during the period of his Mastership he only missed doing so on three occasions. Despite his care, however, they were nearly going without their Christmas dinner on one occasion. The gallant Colonel was to walk out with a friend to Southend, about six miles from Woolwich, to dine on Christmas Day, and as they had to pass within two hundred yards of the kennels, they just looked in to see that all was well. On going there they found the hounds locked up, but as they appeared restless, Colonel Lynes tried to find the kennel-man, but without avail. Thereupon they climbed over G 98 In Scarlet and Silk the palings, found no fire in the copper, and no feed ready, so without more ado the Master and his friend, ‘‘ handsome Jack For- ster,” the sobriquet by which he was known throughout the army, set to to prepare them a meal, fed them, and then proceeded on their journey just as darkness fell. Before getting half a mile they came across a drunken man lying in the middle of Shooters’ Hull Road, and when they went like good Samari- tans to pull him out of the way of being run over, lo and behold! the missing kennel-man. The first words he uttered were unfortunate ones for himself. He said on recognising Colonel Lynes, “I’ve fed the hounds!” As Colonel Lynes, although the best-hearted man in the world, doesn’t wear wings or travel about with a portable halo, deponent sayeth not what then took place, but the proceedings did not commence with prayer. At that period the Master had to find his own Whip, and Colonel Lynes’s head groom turned them to him during his tenure of office. The only attempt at a hunt uniform Draghounds 99 then was a black coat with black buttons, on which were inscribed the letters, in white, R.A. H. That season they ran a drag in the vicinity of Woolwich twice a week, and, in addition, took the hounds by invitation into the Windsor district once a week, where they obtained some very brilliant gallops. In order to do this it became necessary to make some arrangements with the South-Western Railway Company for the conveyance of hounds and horses to Windsor, and the General Manager met the gallant Master in the most friendly spirit, and generously offered the needful horse-boxes for nothing ! On sounding the South-Eastern Railway people it was found that they would do nothing, and would not abate their usual charges a penny. At this Mr. Barth, a large contractor at Woolwich, came forward in the most sportsmanlike manner and offered to van the hounds up to Waterloo and back, which he did, throughout the season, at his own expense. 100 In Scarlet and Silk The first Windsor run was from Skindle’s to Eton, by a zigzag line of about six miles, and the field numbered no less than sixty, including many officers of the Household Brigade. It was a grand spin, and plenty of erief resulted, the Master getting a fall at the fence before the check. Lord Charles Ker was the worst sufferer on the list of the wounded, as Northern Light, the steeplechase horse, gave him a very bad cropper indeed. A notable run about this time was one in the Woolwich district, upon an occasion when the officers of the 9th Lancers (stationed at Hounslow) were the guests of the R.A. There was a lot of jealous riding that day, and when one finds, in the list of those following the pack, such well-known names as, mter alia, “Sugar” Candy, Lord “ Bill” Beresford, Grant, Dick Clayton (killed at polo in India), M‘Calmont—all of the goth Lancers — Lynes, Thacker, and ‘“ Daddy” Annesley, of the Gunners, such a state of things is hardly astonishing. That season, during two gallops in the Draghounds 101 Windsor country, the Hon. Greville Nugent, better known to the race-going portion of the public as “Mr. St. James,” a most brilliant steeplechase rider, had the ill-luck to break two horses’ legs, a very curious circumstance. Two ladies—Lady Julia Follett and Mrs. Richardson (afterwards Lady Parker), a sister of Captam Harford—came out pretty fre- quently with the pack. Lieutenant Custance, R.A., assumed the reins of office when Colonel Lynes resigned. Each year, of course, the builder made fresh inroads on the existing lines, but, nevertheless, the hunt was carried on much as_ usual. Other lines were found, or the old ones slightly deviated from, in order to avoid those parts no longer available; and good spins have been had of recent years on the Essex side of the river, besides two or three (by permission) in the Old Surrey country. The best—if that is synonymous with biggest —lines now are Bromley, starting from the house of that capital sportsman and good friend of the hunt, Mr. Payne ; Farningham, 102 In Scarlet and Silk which includes in its second half the land of Mr. John Russell ; Mottingham, not quite so good, alas! as it was when we galloped over its big fences of eight or ten years ago ; and the “home” line, commencing out of the Shooters’ Hill Road, skirting Welhall and Mr. George Russell’s land, and finishing, as to the first half, in the Crown Wood, about midway between Eltham and Black Fen. It should be mentioned that the Mottingham track is now extended by making the finish on the famous Middle Park Stud Farm, where the Messrs. Blenkiron have bred so many good winners in times gone by. A soldier’s pack must necessarily know a constant supply of fresh Masters, and, during the writer's con- nection with it, such “good men and true” as Captain Allsopp, Major Hickman, Captain “ Bill” Russell (killed by his horse falling on him in India), Captain Jeffreys, Captain Saunders, Mr. Mackenzie, and last, but by no means least, Major, now Colonel Yorke, the present Master, have all held office, the latter resuming the reins for the second time Draghounas 103 after an interval of seventeen years. It would be impossible to find any better man for the position than Colonel Yorke, a keen sportsman, a lover of hounds, and, both in and out of the Service, enjoying a personal popularity that is as thoroughly well deserved as it 1s useful to him as Master of the Drag. In the summer of 1879 dumb madness broke out, and the whole pack had to be destroyed. The following season a new pack was formed by drafts from Lord Tredegay’s, the Cumberland, and one or two others, but was again broken up on the death of the then Master, Major Ward Ashton, in March 1880. Then comes an interval of about four years, during which the kennels stood empty; but in 1883-4 another lot was got together, and Major Hickman became Master. In the following spring madness again destroyed the pack. Captain Allsopp took over the hounds from Major Hickman, and it was during his term of office that, for the first time, a regular uniform was adopted, and the Master and whips now wear the colours 104 In Scarlet and Sitk of the Gunners (red and blue) in the form of a blue coat with red collar, than which nothing could look neater against the ortho- dox white breeches and black velvet cap. They hunted then three days a fortnight, but soon after changed it to twice a week, as now. The present fixtures are made for Tuesdays and Fridays. Very few claims for damage are ever sent in by the farmers and landowners. At the annual dinner given at the Mess, two or three of them have even declared their belief that a fence looks more picturesque after a charge of cavalry has swept over it ! During Major Yorke’s first period of Master- ship, 1874-5, he was in the habit of sending the kennel-man on, by train, with the “worry” to the finish. One day he never arrived, and on the Master getting back to kennels, he rated the man for his remissness. “Beg pardon, sir,” said the culprit, “ but as we wasn’t out last Toosday, J kept the worry, and when I got to the station they wouldn’t let me intothe train; they said a smalt too bad!” > Draghounds 105 Amongst the many good horses I have seen following the pack may be mentioned The Midshipmite, old Ballot-Box, who ran third for the Liverpool with twelve stone up, Southdown, and Ingle-go-Jang, Willoughby, Chopette, Athlete, Confidence, and Surprise, the last seven all Point to Point winners; The Roman and Gold Dust, a wonderful couple of heavyweight hunters belonging to that good sportsman Colonel Hutchinson ; and Shane O'Neil, a winner at Punchestown and Aldershot. An account of the falls and general mis- haps I have witnessed, and at times most un- willingly shared whilst enjoying these truly cheery gallops, would fill a volume, but in all the years [ have been with them there has never been a life lost, except indirectly. The House- hold Brigade pack has not been so fortunate, and the sad death of Colonel Robinson, whilst following them in March of this year (1895), is fresh in the memory of all. On one occa- sion, at Farningham—always a stiff line—my horse fell at the third fence, and it was some 106 In Scarlet and Silk time ere he consented to be mounted again. I jogged on after hounds until a strange sight met my gaze in a water meadow separated from the field I was in by a big dyke. It was a horse which was walking slowly along with apparently something hanging down by his side. Fearing I hardly knew what, I scrambled into the field, and after going some distance found that the apparition was a man hanging head downwards from his saddle, his feet being firmly wedged into the stirrup- irons ; a very unpleasant position unless help had come. Another curious accident happened when running the Shooters’ Hill line. After the check, and at the beginning of the second line, four of us charged the first fence abreast, and every one was: simultaneously grassed ! Once a ludicrous thing happened at Bexley, in the boggy water meadows. My horse was taking off at a brook when the rotten bank let him in head first, just as I slipped over his tail and took my seat upon “the flure” behind him. That incident nearly robbed the Service of a most promising young officer, Draghounds 107 with whom I rode home afterwards, for he laughed so immoderately at the recollection of the scene that once or twice I seriously feared an apoplectic attack for him. Either on the Bromley or Farningham line—I forget which now—one deplorably wet day, when horses sank up to their hocks, the whole field fell, and hounds finished alone! It has never fallen to my lot to ride with the Household Brigade pack at Windsor, but they have, | know, a very pretty country to go over, and I have seen some of their lines, which are, unquestionably, stiff ones. The Windsor drag will sometimes detrain at Southall, on the Great Western Railway, and ride a line by Hanwell Church to Green- ford Green, where, by the way, Mr. Perkin’s kennels testify to the existence in a flourish- ing condition of the Greenford Drag Hunt. I have seen this pack laid on within a stone’s throw of Acton railway station, which is the nearest point to London at which hounds are ever seen nowadays. Tor a five-guinea sub- scription a man may see a great deal of fun 108 In Scarlet and Silk on Saturday afternoons if he possess a horse that can jump, and is not afflicted with nerves when the cry is “‘ War’ wire!” Several years ago I had some good gallops with the Epsom drag. The “field” was all “quality” as a rule, and with the faces of W. H. Moore, Harry Beasley, Jack Jones— who then trained and rode H.R.H. the Prince of Wales’ “ chasers”—Arthur Hall, C. Law- rence, the Nightingalls, J. Adams, et hoc genus omne around, it was difficult to believe you were not riding in a steeplechase. A drag pack is essentially useful in a bad country. By means of the human runner— and here | may mention that the best “two- legged fox” I have ever followed is Gunner Grainger, who has officiated in this capacity for the Woolwich Drag for a great number of years—even a country like West Kent can be made into an “all grass and flying fences” line. Major Porteous—a real good man both across country and on the polo eround—once lent me a pony for the winter, a game little Draghounds 109 chestnut, rejoicing in the name of Dinah, and although it was rather a case for the 8.P.C.A., I rode her with the drag one day, really meaning to pull up at the first big obstacle. But the game little mare sailed along so gaily, and jumped so well, that I went on until we came to a five-barred gate, chained and locked. I was about to pull up and go back when I saw my diminutive mount cock her ears at the obstacle. A ‘Come on, old girl,” and she flew at the gate and topped it like a sparrow hopping over a twig! She jumped two or three more fences, and then came to a big hairy one which stood up too high for even her powers. But she never hung fire fora moment. With an amount of “cheek ” which was absolutely sublime for so tiny a steed, she dived clean through it, like a circus clown through a paper hoop! We were both scratched all over, but no fall. Dinah would jump a single hurdle standing alone. This year the Royal Artillery Drag have, on two or three occasions, been honoured with the presence of TField-Marshal Lord 110 In Scarlet and Silk Roberts, V.C., who, mounted either by Colonel Yorke or Captain Ferrar, has gone right well with them, and been “on hand” at the finish, in spite of a fall in the early part of the run. The man who was undeterred by a hugely outnumbering host of Afghan warriors, was not to be stopped by a drag-line, however stify it might be fenced ! As far as I am aware, none of the drag packs advertise their meets. These are kept strictly private, and properly so, both in the interests of the farmers, who would hardly welcome a big field, and also in those of the followers of the packs themselves. Assimi- lating more nearly to a cross-country race than merely riding to hounds, there is a cer- tain amount of crowding and haste to “get off” from the mark, usually followed by a little jostling and jealousy at the first fence or two, which makes a limited number of starters a welcome thing. As it is, with often less than thirty men out, the Record- ing Angel has to be fairly “sat down on and ridden” when the refusing and falling begin | Draghounds Lit What would it be if a hundred or two of impatient sportsmen were waiting their turn at the ‘‘jumpable” places in the first fence ? But what glorious fun it is when once you are off! You know hounds are not going to stop ; there is none of that horrible quaking one experiences during a run with foxhounds, that scent will fail and the gallop abruptly terminate. And if you exercise common care to see that you ride in the track of hounds, you know you can’t be turned over by that now, alas! almost universal curse, wire. On you go, speeding over the grass nicely, in the wake of the flying pack, with perhaps only a dozen men around you. A thorn fence, which can be taken anywhere, permits you all to spread, fan-like, each to the spot he has been selecting ever since the obstacle came into view. One after the other you all get over, except that gentleman to the left there, who didn’t jump when his horse did. He now “sits on the floor,” whilst his rider- less nag continues the wild fun of the chase on its own account. Now you jump into and 112 In Scarlet and Silk out of a lane, and then a fine stretching grass meadow, with a ‘“ useful” looking brook right ‘down there, in the bottom, its edges fringed with lopped pollards, catches your eye. You take a slight pull at your nag to save his wind, then, just as the last of the hounds scrambles out of the water, making a momen- tary pause on the farther bank to give his dripping sides a shake, you take right hold of your horse’s head, press your legs back and send him at it. One hind leg drops in, but with a flourish of the tail your horse is on terra firma all right. Splash goes your nearest follower, who has jumped short. Over come the next half-dozen, in gallant style; two more get in and out again; no one damaged, and off you set again. Hounds have got still farther ahead, but as you are rising a gentle slope now, it would not be judicious to push on just yet. At the top of the long sloping meadow stands a post and rails, to which you at once give your best attention. Crack! goes the top rail, and the rest of the field sing a little hymn of praise Draghounds ch to you for thus clearing the way. You turn sharply right-handed, over a small piece of fallow, jump a fence, and, not seeing the ditch on the far side of it, your horse blunders on to his knees and nose. Up again, and no fall. Now you gallop along a footpath with a hog-backed stile at its far end. Stiles, we know, must not be played with, so we go at this only after carefully pulling our horses well back on to their hind legs. ‘‘ By Jove! he hit that pretty hard!” exclaims a man, as he narrowly misses getting a crumpler. Then across a village green, almost before the resi- dent yokels have time to open their mouths to their full extent in astonishment. A low gate, jumped in single file, and then we all gallop “hell for leather” across a pretty park, topping some beautiful brush-fences that are positively made to be galloped over en route, and finally pull up our smoking horses at the spot where the drag has been lifted for the check. We get off our steeds, which, with heads down, tails quivering, and flanks heay- ing, are glad enough of the time to “blow.” H 114 In Scarlet and Silk The owner of the park comes out and gives us a jolly welcome, and then two or three of things ! his servants arrive with soda and The liquid goes down hissing, after that ex- tremely warming gallop! Whilst we wait, men cast up from here, there, and every- where; some with dirty coats, some without hats, others with a lost iron or broken stirrup- leather to complain of. After a ten minutes’ halt on we go again, at a “ hound’s jog,” to start the second line. This time there is a diminished field, casualties in the shape of falls, refusals, blown or injured horses, &c., preventing several from essaying the winding- up gallop of the day. ‘Let them get over the first fence, gentle- men,” says the Master, as he sits quietly on his horse, in the gateway of a field, intently watching the pack. Hounds have just picked up the “smell,” and with a “tow, yow!” from one, which is quickly taken up by the rest, away they go like lightning, charging and tumbling over the fence at the far side of the field in Draghounds 11S merry style. ‘Now you can go,” exclaims the Master, and the whole field is quickly in motion once more. Three formidable black- thorn fences have to be jumped or “ tunnelled.” The leader, mounted on a weedy, undersized thoroughbred, jumps ito the first of these, and sticks fast. But the man immediately behind him, not expecting this stoppage in transitu, and unable to pull up his very impetuous steed, charges right into him, and, applying as it were a hammer to a nail, knocks him clean through the fence on to his nose in the field beyond. The rest get over in another place, and wading across a shallow stream, jump the next two fences, and come to a water meadow, intersected with more or less rotten- banked ditches. They are not big, however, which is fortunate, considering that our horses are now galloping in peaty ground, well over their fetlocks. This does not last long, and we soon emerge on to a lovely tract of sound grass, with nice, jumpable fences. Here and there a post and rails varies the monotony of the scene, a 116 In Scarlet and Silk couple of stiles are negotiated, and again water looms in sight. Five men are pretty close together as we come to this, and the leading horse whips round and refuses, gallop- ing right across the second man, and causing him to pull up sharply to avoid a collision. These two men are strangers, so they only glare at each other, and say nothing. Then the same thing exactly happens with the third and fourth horses; but the respective riders of this last pair being bosom friends, they proceed, forthwith, to slang each other like pickpockets! Hounds are now stream- ing along a wood-side, packing closely, and running as though they knew the finish was near at hand. Indeed, a couple of the most aged and artful—those two qualifications so often go together, by the way !—well knowing this particular line, have dodged across a field to the left, thus cutting off a big corner, to where they know a tasty paunch awaits them. But the rest stick to the scent, and we follow in their train. Along the head- lands of a wheat-field we go carefully; for Draghounds E07 farmer Joskins is a terror of a man, and objects “on principle”—though he doesn’t know what principle—to the drag coming over his land, and has been persuaded to allow it “for this occasion only,” because it is simply an impossibility for any one to re- sist our Master’s frank good-nature and _per- suasive eloquence. We jump the hurdles at the far end, and emerge on to a stretch of fine old turf. And now as we near the finish, those who have any steam left in their horses at once proceed to turn it on. A bit of racing takes place, one flight of sheep hurdles and a slenderly constituted railing being ‘knocked to blazes,” as our irreverent second Whip calls it, on the way. We pull up our blown and panting steeds, ‘ and watch the “worry,” as with a blast or two on the horn our Huntsman (and Master) fetches the paunch from the dragsman’s cart, and rewards the eagerly expectant hounds with the nastiest conceivable morsels. Then, after a short interval for rest, we light up our cigars, and having thoroughly enjoyed a 118 In Scarlet and Silk gallop, which, had it taken place after a fox, we should probably have alluded to as one of the smartest of the season, jog leisurely homewards. Drag-hunting is hardly a lady’s sport, as may well be imagined. But amongst the few I have seen go well with them may be mentioned Lady Julia Follet, Lady Parker, Mrs. Porteous, Mrs. Harrison, Miss Hoare, and Mrs. C. G. Mackenzie. I have ridden “all sorts and conditions of” horses with draghounds at different times, but I am persuaded that the ideal mount for them is an old steeplechaser, temperate enough for one to hold with ease. Such an one may, perhaps, be too slow to win steeple- chases, but plenty fast enough to hold his own with the drag. My experience of them is that they hardly ever refuse their fences, their courage is undeniable, and you rarely have to send them out of a canter in order to keep pace with the average “hairy.” The great drawback is, that after a horse has been any time in a training stable he often gets into the way of pulling hard and rushing his fences. STEEPLECHASING ney AS “EVERYTHING must have a beginning,” and steeplechasing was no exception to the rule. Although in ‘Scott and Sebright” we read of a contest taking place as early as 1792, in Leicestershire—the course being from Barkby Holt to the Coplow and back, about eight miles—between Mr. Charles Meynell, Lord Forester, and Sir Gilbert Heathcote, who finished in the order named, it was not much before 1825 that steeplechasing began to be a popular amusement amongst the hunting fraternity. At that time, and for many years afterwards, the sport was exclusively that of hunting men. Would we might say the same of it to-day! Alas! time has brought its changes on steeplechasing, as it has, and will, on everything, and a decree of divorce has been pronounced between two grand pastimes 121 122 In Scarlet and Silk which formerly walked so amiably hand in - hand. Nowadays, many a man owns steeple- chase horses who is not even in sympathy with hunting, let alone a participator in “ the sport of kings.” Unfortunately, the game has got more and more into the hands of the racing fraternity, and farther and farther away from hunting and its votaries. The era of the jovial dinner, the merry challenge across the table, the laughing acceptance, the stakes deposited then and there, time, con- ditions, and place settled on over the last cigar—all this has passed away, never to return. There is too much of the “I’ve got a good horse, but I don’t mean anybody to know it” spirit abroad, and too little of the fine old rough-and-ready “V1l match mine against yours, and may the best horse win” principle. There is too much planning and “clearing the way,” too little of running for the sport’s sake alone. We ought to be very thankful for the great revival of Point to Point races, which will go far to warm up the chilly blood of steeplechasing, and which Early Days nag not unfrequently introduces us to a useful horse or two whose merit was before un- suspected. So popular have these events become, that almost every well-known hunt has its “‘ Point to Point” as regularly as the season comes round. But I am getting on too far ahead, and dealing with our own times instead of with those of our fathers and grandfathers before us. A match, or a sweepstake between three, was the form usually taken by steeplechasing in its infancy. And what a healthy, robust sort of infant it was! With men like the Marquis of Waterford, Mr. Osbaldeston, Captain Ross, Captain Becher, Sir David Baird, Lord Clanricarde, Sir Harry Good- ricke, cum multis aliis, to ride, and horses such as Moonraker, Gaylad, Peter Simple, Grimaldi, Lottery, and Vivian running, how could steeplechasing fail to become a success ? Gaylad was bought as a three-year-old by Mr. Davy, a tenant farmer in the Brocklesby country, a rare old-fashioned sportsman. He 124 In Scarlet and Silk broke the horse himself, and soon found out -he had got a wonder. With his owner in the saddle, Gaylad ran and won at Rugby, Newport Pagnell, and two or three other places, until Elmore, the hunter dealer, cast loving eyes on him, and finally bought the horse for a thousand, with another hundred contingency in case he won the Liverpool. In the Grand National of 1842 Elmore started both Gaylad (ridden by Tom Olliver) and Lottery (Jem Mason). Both horses got the course safely, and Gaylad came out full of running at the last fence, and won. Moonraker, who won the great ’chase at St. Albans in 1831 from eleven others, had a very humble beginning. To speak quite accurately, no one seems to know what his actual “beginning” was. What is known about him, however, is that before his trans- moegrification into a steeplechaser he was drawing a water-cart in, it is said, the streets of Birmingham. ‘The purchase price was the extremely modest one of eighteen sovereigns, and the horse owned to almost as many years Early Days 125 when he was victorious in a field of a dozen, as before stated. In 1832 the large concourse of twenty came to the post for the St. Alban’s event, including such good ones as the grey Grimaldi —Squire Osbaldeston’s—and Corinthian Kate, but old Moonraker, ridden by Dan Seffert, was again successful. Grimaldi was a horse with a great turn of speed, but he never would face water if he could help it ; though with Dick Christian’s assistance on foot, and his owner’s in the saddle, he beat Colonel Charritie’s Napoleon, one of the best jumpers even of that day, although rather slow, in a match at Dunchurch; albeit both he and his opponent got into the Lem, and indulged in a swimming contest en route, The names of Jem Mason and Lottery will always be inseparable in the minds of the older generation of steeplechase devotees ; and Captain Becher, on the great Vivian, is another pleasant ‘‘ mind-picture” for the memory to dwell upon. I am not old enough to have even seen such celebrities, 126 In Scarlet and Sitk but one of my forebears, who himself was -fond of a gallop between the flags, has many a time given me a description of their prowess. We are much indebted to the late Henry Hall Dixon (“The Druid”) for chronicling many of their doings, which would otherwise have been swept away into the forgotten limbo of the past. Some of those fine old-fashioned matches, such as that between Vivian and Cock Robin, with Becher and the Marquis of Waterford riding ; Grimaldi and Moonraker, steered respectively by Osbaldeston and Seffert; and the match between Captain Horatio Ross’s Pole Cat (owner up) and Mr. Gilmour’s Plunder, the hard-riding farmer, Field Nicholson, steering the latter, must have been events worth travelling any distance to see. The dull dead level of the modern galloping course gives no such opportunity for the exercise of a man’s sound judgment (or any, indeed, of his knowledge of, or eye for, a country) as these contests of a past age did. But for all that, where will you find a prettier Early Days 127 sight all the world over than a modern steeplechase at, say either Liverpool, Man- chester, Sandown, or Kempton Park ? The great drawback of the early steeple- chase, run over a natural country, was that so little of the fun could be seen by the spectators —unless, indeed, they were mounted on clever hunters, and prepared to do a and the same plentiful supply of fencing objection, unfortunately, applies to the Point to Point race of to-day. In the month of February 1836 was run the first Liverpool steeplechase at Aintree. Its conditions, however, varied very widely from those obtaining in the Grand National of to-day. “A sweepstake of ten sovereigns each, with eighty added; 12 st. each; gentle- men riders. The winner to be sold for two hundred sovereigns, if demanded ;” and Captain Becher won this event with The Duke. St. Albans, Aylesbury, Cheltenham, and Newport Pagnell were all in a flourishing condition just about this period, with their 128 In Scarlet and Silk “Grand Annuals;” and in 1839 the Liver- - pool executive substituted for the selling race alluded to above “a sweepstake of twenty sovereigns each, with one hundred sovereions added; 12 st. each; gentlemen riders; four miles across country; second horse to save his stake; the winner to pay ten sovereigns towards expenses; no rider to open a gate, or ride through a gateway, or more than 100 yards along any road, foot- path, or driftway.” In an old sporting paper I have found a complete list of the starters and jockeys for this, the first Grand National, and it may not be inopportune to reproduce it here in eatenso. GRAND LIVERPOOL STEEPLECHASE, Jockey Captain Child’s Conrad. ; . Captain Becher, Mr. Ferguson’s Rust. : : . W. M‘Donough. ns * Daxon . : . Owner. a “4 Barkston . : . Byrne, Lord M‘Donald’s The Nun .. . Alan M‘Donough. Sir D, Baird’s Pioneer. : . Mr, Walker, Mr. Elmore’s Lottery ; ; . Jem Mason. Sir G, Mostyn’s Seventy-four , . Tom Olliver, Early Days 129 Jockey Captain Lamb’s Jacky. ‘ . Wadlow. Mr. Newcombe’s Cannon Ball . . Owner. Mr. H. 8S. Bowen’s Rambler . . Morgan. Captain Marshall’s Railroad. . Mr. Powell. Mr. Stephenson’s True Blue. . Mr. Barker. Mr. Theobald’s Paulina . ; . Mr. Martin. Mr. Oswell’s Dictator. : . Carlin. Mr. Robertson’s Cramp . : . Wilmot. Mr. Vevers’ Charity . : F . Hardy. This was the particular contest in which the obstacle called to this day ‘ Becher’s Brook” obtained its name. Captain Becher, in order to steady Conrad, who was a very headstrong horse, came along directly Lord Sefton dropped his flag, and with Daxon, made joint running to the first brook. Conrad tried to run through the timber set in front of it, shooting his rider clean over his head into the ditch beyond. Becher was in a “tioht place,” with the whole field streaming after him. In a moment he had scrambled close under the bank, and in this way the rest of the oncoming field cleared him in safety. Jem Mason on Lottery won in a canter by three lengths that day, and it is recorded that, so full of running was the I 130 In Scarlet and Silk horse, that he cleared thirty-three feet over the last fence. It must obviously be impossible within the limited space here available to even make mention of many of the celebrities, human and equine, of these early days. I must ask my readers’ pardon for thus merely skimming over some, and even omitting men- tion altogether of other, of the glories of that ‘“‘oood old time,” when steeplechasing was in the “ palmiest” of its palmy days. Gaylad, a rare stayer, and a most accom- plished jumper; Peter Simple, a peculiarly beautiful mover, and grand-looking horse, the hero of two Liverpools ; the Nun, winner of several chases, True Blue, Cigar, and Cannon Ball were all running about then, and the “hunter dealers,” the Elmores and Mr. Tilbury, flourished. The latter owned amongst others Prospero and Culverthorpe, but neither of them was good enough for Lottery and Vivian. “Jack” Elmore did much for the sport, and in his day owned many a good one, Lottery, of course, being Early Days 131 the gem. But men of the stamp of Squire Osbaldeston, Lord Clanricarde, and the Mar- quis of Waterford were those most deserving of honourable mention as supporters of steeple- chasing about this time. Although not coming under the heading of cross-country sport, one can hardly refrain from alluding to the Squire’s great match against time at Newmarket. In an old sport- ing magazine of December 1831, there is a capital account of the way in which he galloped his four mile heats, and won his 41000 bet with Colonel Charritie, having an hour and twenty-one minutes to spare from the stipulated ten hours’ time. In doing the 200 miles, he used twenty-eight different horses, and amongst them was a good little mare, Dolly, by Figaro, owned either then, or immediately afterwards, by my grandfather, and which bred him two or three very useful colts. Lord Strathmore strongly supported steeple- chasing, and was often seen in the saddle to great advantage ; Captains Powell and Peel, 132 In Scarlet and Silk Jem Mason, the wonderful brothers M‘Don- ough (Alan and William), Tom Olliver, and many more too numerous to mention here, were amongst the “very best” of the cross- country riding contingent of these early days, and a whole history might be written upon their splendid performances in the saddle. It is not a little remarkable that gallant old Alan M‘Donough actually donned silk at the age of sixty-four to ride his last steeplechase. In the Liverpool of 1840 the almost in- vincible Lottery came down at the wall * in’ front of the Stand. He sinned in good com- pany, for no less than five fell at the same place. Charity beat him the following year, and Lottery’s penalties effectually stopped him from ever adding a second ‘“ National” to his score. Tom Olliver won on Gaylad in 1842 and on Vanguard in 1843, Lottery and Jem Mason being behind him on each occasion. — Poor Tom Olliver was always “up to his hat” in debt, and often emerged from durance * Done away with the following year. Early Days 133 vile to ride in a steeplechase and then return to his stone retreat. ~ How our forefathers read the conditions of the race as affecting the status of the riders, is one of those things that ‘‘no fellow can understand.” ‘Gentlemen riders,’ say the conditions. What about Jem Mason, Tom Olliver, Byrne, and the two M‘Donoughs ? The tape, I imagine, was seldom, if ever, requisitioned in steeplechasing’s very early days, and it was left until the year 1847 for a “record” feat to be established, which, as far as we know, stands unrivalled to-day. Chandler, owned at the time by the well- known Ousely Higgins, and ridden by Captain Broadley, was running at Warwick when parts of the course were under water, and the “Badminton” book on steeplechasing tells us that ‘The brook was swollen to the dimensions of a small river—it was impos- sible, indeed, to tell how far on each side the overflow extended ; but Chandler, coming down to the brook at a great pace, cleared the water at a bound. Onlookers were so 134 In Scarlet and Silk struck, that the distance from the hoof-marks on the taking-off to the hoof-marks on the landing-side was measured, and it was found that the horse had jumped thirty-nine feet.” The Steeplechase Calendar gives the following record :—“‘ Regalia led to the brook, into which all fell except Chandler, who thus obtained a great lead, nothing but King of the Valley ever getting near him again.” The followimmg year Captain Little, a dis- ) ciple of ‘ Black Tom’s”—Tom Olliver—won the Liverpool on this horse. Mr. “Thomas” (Mr. Tom Pickernell) seemed for some time to be a link between the past and the present. He has ridden three Grand National winners, and had a mount in no less than eighteen Liverpools. Anatis, The Lamb, and Pathfinder were all steered most brilliantly by this gentleman to victory; the latter exactly twenty years ago, 1875. Pathfinder had been used as a hack and a Whip’s horse before trying his luck at Liverpool, and he was one of the worst horses that ever won. A short time Early Days 135 after this Mr. “Thomas” got a fall at San- down, which seriously affected his eyesight, and rendered his retirement from the saddle imperative. His second winner, The Lamb, was probably as good as, if not better than, any previous winner of the event. As a clever jumper, few have ever equalled him, and he showed this, with a vengeance, when he cleared four prostrate horses and their riders without touching one of them whilst running at Aintree. If memory serves me, Mr. Arthur Yates was one of the “mighty fallen” on that occasion. But mention of Mr. “Thomas” and Mr. Arthur Yates reminds me that I have now emerged from the confines of the past, and entered upon the regions of the present. In the next chapter, | propose to run over the names of several of the chasers and their riders which have ‘‘ made history” for the past thirty years. CELEBRITIES OF THE PASS THIRTY YEARS I Just as in the teeth of all “ten thousand pounder” opposition the Derby is still the Derby to the racing man, so is the great event decided each March upon “ Aintree’s bleak plain” the highest of all prizes to the votary of steeplechasing. It matters not that Manchester, in the north, puts forth such subtle attractions as a shortened course and a pile of added money, or that Sandown and Kempton, in the south, strive to tempt the best of our cross-country performers to their charming courses—the National’s the National “for a’ that,” and in the steeple- chasing world Liverpool always has been, and we sincerely trust always will be, “a name to conjure with.” 136 Celebrities of the Past Thirty Years 137 In 1865 a remarkably good field came to the post for the Grand National, including that sterling performer L’Africaine, a fear- fully hard puller, Emblem, Thomastown, Joe Maly, who was made favourite, Alcibiade, and Hall Court, a rare old-fashioned type of hunter. Mr. “Thomas” cut out the work for part of the journey on Thomastown, but this time he had nothing to do with the finish, which was left to Captains Coventry and Tempest on “Cherry” Angell’s Alcibiade and Hall Court respectively. The result of a desperate race home was in favour of the former by only a head. L’Africaine, beaten by his weight and the pace combined, was early out of the race. A rare good judge of a horse, Mr. Studd, was destined to own the next year’s winner, Salamander. Mr. Studd was travelling in Ireland on the look-out for some hunters when he chanced upon a rough-coated colt sheltering in a dirty hovel. Taken with his make and shape he soon struck a bargain with the owner for him, and brought him 138 In Scarlet and Sitk across St. George's Channel. Here he was put into training, and quickly developed into a really great horse, winning the Liverpool, in the experienced hands of Mr. Alec Good- man, from twenty-nine opponents. The following settling day Mr. Studd took a sum out of the Ring which fairly “ knocked the stuffing” out of two well-known book- makers at the least. On the occasion of his first victory The Lamb — one of the very best of Liverpool winners — was steered by Mr. George Ede, perhaps as fine a horseman as ever lived, who fairly outrode the jockey of Pearl Diver, though it was a tight fit at the last for supremacy. Mr. Ede was, in many respects, a most remarkable man, and from an old friend of mine, in Northamptonshire (where Mr. Ede was studying as a farm pupil in his early days), for whom he rode and won many steeplechases, I have learnt some interesting details of his career. On the farm in ques- tion the future gentleman rider first met Celebrities of the Past Thirty Years 139 Ben Land, then in good fettle as trainer and rider, and that worthy at once took a great fancy to the fearless young fellow. He never cared much about farming, but either with hounds or in wearing a silk jacket he was thoroughly at home. Land soon gave him plenty of public practice, and within a very short space of time the brilliant young amateur was in great demand all round the country. He was a man of most charming manners and disposition, a gentleman from top to toe. His kindness of heart endeared him to everybody with whom he was brought in contact, and his death, which he met whilst riding Chippenham over a fence at Liver- pool, seemed almost like a national calamity in the world of sport. For Lord Poulett, one of the keenest steeple- chasing owners that ever lived, he won the Liverpool, as before mentioned, on The Lamb, probably the smallest horse in point of inches ever successful for the big event. Nobody rightly seemed to know just what height he stood, but I believe I am stating George Ede’s 140 In Scarlet and Silk own opinion of it when I say that he was a shade under fifteen—though, as far as I know, the great gentleman rider never actually put him under the standard. Mr. Ede showed great patience and skill upon Mr. William Blencowe’s Acrobat, a horse with a most extraordinary temper. I have a letter by me now in which Mr. Blencowe tells me how he became possessed of this singular animal. “YT went,” he writes, “to Mr. Bennett of Stone Castle to buy a charming hunter, Othello, and seeing a big bay horse in the stable, with fired hocks, I remarked, ‘ This is the sort I want to win some hunt steeple- chases with. What will you take for him ?’ Mr. Bennett laughed, and said that if I could ride him out of the yard he would give him to me. I had him saddled, and rode him out without his giving any trouble, though I dared not touch his mouth. After some joking about my present of a horse, I[ eventually gave eighty guineas for him. He won me seven steeplechases. In fact, he always won when in good temper. He won Celebrities of the Past Thirty Years 141 the Bedford Hunt Cup with poor George Ede up by half a field, easily beating Captain Machell’s Leonidas, who had won the National Hunters’ a few weeks previously.” Soon after this performance, Captain Machell bought Acrobat from Mr. Blencowe for six hundred guineas, and started him for the Liverpool; that is, he meant to start him for that race, but Acrobat himself entertained other views on the subject, and declined to budge an inch when the flag fell, although a man with a hunting crop had been specially detailed to assist in getting the craft under way. No one knows exactly how good the horse was, as when he meant going he was never beaten; when he didn’t, he wouldn’t try a yard! No mortal ever devised the fence that would stop him, but he wanted “a man” on his back, and George Ede was just that man. Lord Ronald, owned by that best of good sportsmen the Duke of Beaufort, was also . piloted in the many races he won by the same accomplished rider. Lord Ronald will 142 In Scarlet and Silk best be remembered by the present generation as the sire of The Cob, who has done Bad- minton good service in long distance races within the past few years, and was one of the pleasantest race-horses | ever got on. Whilst writing of Mr. Ede, let me not forget to record the sad death of the poor little ‘“‘Lamb.” He was sold to go to Germany, and whilst running in a steeple- chase at, I think, Baden, he fell on ground as hard as a turnpike road—be it remembered that steeplechasing is a summer amusement in the land of Hochs and Bocks—broke his leg, and had to be destroyed. That wonderful horse The Doctor, who, despite his being a weaver, a noisy one, a crib- biter, and having a club- foot, was perhaps the very best hunter in Leicester- shire during the nine seasons Custance the jockey rode him there, and was only beaten by half a length for the Liverpool by The Colonel (a dual winner) in 1870, when receiving 6 lbs. The Colonel was a great leathering horse, and perhaps one of the very Celebrities of the Past Thirty Years 143 best that ever won a National. The Doctor, when bearing the weight of seventeen years, was entered for the jumping competition at Oakham, and won, with. Dick Shaw, the steeplechase jockey, on his back; his owner electing to ride his second string, a_hot- headed brute that would only do his best in Custance’s own hands, and this one took second honours. A great horseman was, and is, Captain “Doggy” Smith, who won the National Hunt Steeplechase at Melton on Game Chicken as far back as 1864. He was also successful in the same race, in 1871, with Daybreak, and in 1874 on Lucellum, and his last win in that contest was on New Glasgow in 1880. During the whole of this period he was one of the very best men across Leicestershire, but has now left Melton and gone to live and hunt in Sussex. Captain H. Coventry, who won the Liverpool on Alcibiade, was another of the same sort, and few, if any, better amateurs, either on the flat or across country, have ever been seen in silk. 144 In Scarlet and Silk I hardly know which Liverpool winner can lay claim to being the very worst that ever took such honours, but I suppose it would be a close race between Shifnal, who gave Robert T’Anson his “blue,” and Casse Téte, splendidly ridden by J. Page. Almost every- thing else fell down in the latter’s year (1872) and “lucky Teddy Brayley” (who, sad to say, in spite of his luck died some years back at Bath in abject poverty) saw the mean- looking little chestnut mare, hopelessly beaten by Scarrineton to the last hurdles, come in alone, as the latter injured his leg so much at them that he could hardly hobble past the post; and once more Robert [’Anson, prince of professionals, and my boyhood’s hero, was baulked of the chief ambition of his life. What a shadow I’Anson looked at the time he could go to scale at less than ten stone ; what an impossibility it seemed that he ever could have done so when | last shook hands with him at the Grand Military meeting, this very year! That luck is a strong element in the game Celebrities of the Past Thirty Years 145 is undoubted. The names of Casse Téte, Shifnal, Pathfinder, and Old Joe are handed down throughout succeeding generations as Grand National winners; whilst those of Scarrington, Congress, Schiedam, and Rysh- worth, infinitely better horses, as I think most unprejudiced people would admit, are thought much less of. Scarrington—who fell dead whilst running in a ’chase at the old Croydon course—must have beaten Casse Téte, bar accident, in 1872; Congress, one of the grandest-looking horses [ ever saw, was only defeated a neck by Regal, giving away plenty of weight to the winner; Schie- dam (winner of the Grand National Hunters’ Steeplechase of 1870) was considered by Mr. J. M. Richardson, who rode him, the best he ever got on—as ill-luck would have it, a horse fell just in front, and Schiedam was brought down on top of him; whilst the last of the quartette I have chosen (merely for purposes of illustration), Mr. Chaplin’s Ryshworth, looked all over a winner until close home, but pecking as he landed over the last K 146 [un Scarlet and Silk fence before the race-course, Mr. Richardson, on Disturbance, just managed to get up. Ryshworth’s rider was not very experienced, and in the last quarter of a mile the amateur beat him “all ends up.” At the same meeting Ryshworth won the Grand Sefton ; Reugny, who was destined to win the great event in the following year, being behind him, in receipt of a stone. On the last-named animal, the late “member for Brigg” completed his highly meritorious “double”; but the horse was never anything like so good as Commotion’s son, who ended his career unfortunately, by ricking his back. It is said that Mr. “Pussy” Richardson was of opinion that the course at Liverpool was not half so stiff as the line which had to be negotiated at the famous “Grand National dinner” at Brigg, given to celebrate his victory, where, at Sir John Astley’s suggestion, the dinner tickets bore the suitable inscription, ‘‘ Disturb- ance, but no Row !” Chandos never struck me as looking like Celebrities of the Past Thirty Years 147 a safe conveyance over a big country. And Liverpool is a very big country, despite all that the “fogey” school can say about it. The beautiful chestnut carried his head too much tucked into his chest and galloped too high for a chaser, but as a hurdle-jumper he was absolutely invincible. What par- ticularly struck me about him was that he didn’t seem to look where he was going. That does not so much matter “over the sticks,” but I have taken too many falls from this sort of horse, at thick fences, not to be rather shy of them now. However, far cleverer heads than mine made him favourite for the big ‘chase, and as Jewitt, a first-rate man over a country, and the horse’s own trainer, elected to ride him instead of the little black Regal, on whom Joe Cannon had the mount, | dare say it was only prejudice on my part. All the same, it was a lucky prejudice for me person- ally, for I followed “the Captain’s” example which he set at Sandown, and had my coppers on the five-year-old. Chandos 148 In Scarlet and Silk jumped the country much better than I had imagined he would, but he managed to blunder badly at the water and smash one of the rails in front of a fence; after which he landed on his head and turned over, leaving Cannon and Regal to go on and tackle Congress, which they did to such good purpose that the black won by a neck. Austerlitz, in 1877, was a veritable wonder, and it is difficult to say what weight would have stopped him that day. He must have been a very pleasant horse to ride, and galloped, like his sire, Rataplan, “ casually.” As a fencer he was magnificent, and just the horse to carry Mr. “ Freddy” Hobson home triumphantly. But how he could manage to spare a hand to catch hold of the cantle of his saddle at every fence I cannot, for the life of me, imagine. How- ever, he won, and that is everything. In 1879 The Liberator was steered to victory by Mr.. “Garry” Moore, a very popular win for the Irish brigade, who came over Celebrities of the Past Thirty Years 149 in great force to back him. I remember this gentleman effecting an extraordinary reformation in “the manners and customs” of Furley, a chestnut gelding by Honiton. This horse I saw win the Great Metropolitan Steeplechase at Croydon, Mr. J. M. Richardson up, from a big and, in point of quality, ex- cellent field, shortly after which he point- blank refused to jump a stick, and turned very savage into the bargain. For a long time nothing could be done with him, but somehow or other “Garry” got him to face his fences again, and once more I witnessed his victory in the same race at Croydon, this time ridden by his trainer. Of the latter | was once told a story, apocryphal perhaps, but here it is. A friend of his—an Englishman—crossed the Irish Channel in the famous rider's company, and whilst discussing the medita- tive cigar together at their hotel in Dublin, the Saxon observed— “Garry, I’m a stranger to this country, as you know. What should you advise me 150 In Scarlet and Silk to do by way of getting a little fun and excitement, eh ?” “Do, isit? Well, go to the top of the hotel steps there, and just shout ‘To h— wid Parnell!’ an’ if ye don’t get enough fun and excitement to last ye a fortnight, Ill be mightily surprised !” This was at the time that the “ uncrowned King” was in the zenith of his power. The year 1880 saw The Liberator—this time with the steadier of 12 st. 7 lbs. on his back carry Mr. Moore again into the front rank, finishing third ; whilst another representative of the Green Isle, Empress, ridden by Mr. Tom Beasley, won. What a wonderful family for turning out first-class steeplechase riders, this! Unhappily, William has now met his death at the game in Ireland. Speaking of William Beasley’s death, it is somewhat strange that, since beginning this chapter, I should have, most unexpectedly, chanced upon the very horse that killed him when he was down at the fatal “double,” All’s Well, now regularly ridden to hounds Celebrities of the Past Thirty Years 151 by the Countess of Warwick. Being at Easton, Lady Warwick’s place near Dun- mow, | took the opportunity of going through the stables and looking at the hunters. Whilst discussing their merits later on, the Countess told me that All’s Well was one of the most perfect of hunters, and extraordi- narily fast. To use Lady Warwick’s own words, ‘‘he doesn’t know how to fall.” Certes, he ought not, with such a precious burden to bear as the most beautiful woman in Christendom. In 1881 the little black horse Regal was second, beaten pretty easily by Woodbrook, a “noisy” one; and the next year Lord Manners got Seaman home by a short head, after a desperate race with Tom Beasley on Cyrus. I always think Seaman, fit and well, was one of the horses of the century. The year before he won the Grand National he simply ‘‘made hay” of a good field of horses in the Liverpool Hunt Steeplechase, and won by the length of a street, after making the whole of the running. Afterwards he went rS2 In Scarlet and Silk very queer behind, and Jewitt had to do all he knew to bring him out sound for subsequent engagements. After winning the National he went hopelessly in one hind fetlock joint. Zoedone, ridden by her owner, Count Kinsky, a good man across country, won in 1883. She was a clever fencer, but could not gallop fast enough to keep herself warm. Then in 1884 and 1885 came “Teddy,” Wilson’s brace of triumphs. In October 1883, at a sale of Lord Rosebery’s “rubbish” at Newmarket, Voluptuary, by Cremorne out of Miss Evelyn, was knocked down at 150 guineas to the bid of Mr. E. P. Wilson, and the horse never ran in public over a country until he faced the starter for the Grand National of the following spring. With the Shipston-on-Stour horseman on his back, he never put a foot wrong all the way, and cantered in a very easy winner. The last piece of work I saw the old horse perform , was “tittuping” across the stage at Drury Lane Theatre. Rather an inglorious finish for a National winner ! Celebrities of the Past Thirty Years 153 That year The Scot (belonging to the Prince of Wales) started favourite, but had bad luck, and galloped into a fence ; whilst old Frigate—who did the trick at last in 1889 after many a meritorious failure—was second, and that very shifty gentleman Roquefort (Captain “‘ Brummy ” Fisher’s) finished third. Soon afterwards Roquefort was sold by auction for 1250 guineas, and left Mr. Arthur Yates’s place at Alresford, to be put under the charge of Mr. E. P. Wilson. The weak spot about Roquefort’s temper was a rooted aversion to going straight on a right-handed course. Liverpool being a left- handed one, his trainer hoped he would give his true running, and not try to bolt out. As a matter of fact, Roquefort, although he nearly got knocked down at one fence, ran his race gamely throughout and won, poor old Frigate again being second. It was said by good judges at the time, and after-events proved to a great extent that they were right, that “it was no good buying Roque- fort unless you bought Teddy Wilson with 154 In Scarlet and Silk him,” for nobody else seemed to understand how to ride this good but eccentric horse. Old Joe was essentially of the slow, stay- ing “hunter” type, and had not a very good field to tackle when he won in 1886. Game- cock, an immense favourite with o2 pollot, took the race the following year, and then Tom Cannon sent out a winner, in Playfair, from the famous stable at Danebury in 1888. As I before said, Frigate’s turn to win came at last. She was a wonderfully clever fencer, never made mistakes, and could stay, at her own pace, for a week. The mare was very wiry, but a bit too light, apparently, to be in the very first class. Ilex was a good horse, but ‘‘no catch” to train, and never (speaking from memory) did any good after winning the Liverpool. Come Away again put the Irish on good terms with themselves in 1891, and, caught at his best, he was an out-of-the-common good horse. Captain (now Major) E. R. Owen rode his first Grand National winner in the queer-tempered little Father O'Flynn, which had not long before Celebrities of the Past Thirty Years 155 been sold out of the Marquis of Cholmondeley’s stable. He has changed hands pretty often in the course of a somewhat chequered career, and has the credit of having beaten this year’s Grand National hero, Wild Man from Borneo, in November 1893, in the Jolliffe Steeple- chase, on which occasion he was ridden by his present owner, Mr. Cecil Grenfell, a capital man between the flags, as he is at cricket, fencing, and racquets. Why Not is a game little horse that thoroughly deserved his victory in 1894. He was jointly owned by Mr. Jardine and Mr. Charley Cunningham—the latter a splendid horseman, though full tall for a jockey—and, ridden by him, ran a good second at Liver- pool as far back as 18 . This year he again ran extremely well, and finished in the first half-dozen. Beyond all cavil, Cloister has proved him- self the champion cross-country performer of the age—perhaps of any age—for on the day that he simply squandered his field in the Grand National of 1893, winning with 12 st. 156 In Scarlet and Silk 7 lbs. on his back, what weight would horses of the Lottery and Gaylad type have been likely to concede him successfully? Is it not quite likely that, but for going amiss, he might have made that solitary Grand National victory into a triple crown, all the weight notwithstanding? He was owned, in turn, by Captain Orr-Ewing and Lord Dudley, before passing into possession of his present owner, Mr. C. Duff. I remember walking down to the post at Sandown to witness the start for the Grand Military, and looking over the great son of Ascetic—whose mission in life seems to be the getting of first-rate steeplechase horses—and the magnificent Bloodstone, and thinking that the country might well be proud of such a couple. Two grander horses it would be a puzzle to find anywhere, and they were as good as they were good-looking. Cloister has won the Grand Sefton Steeplechase on two occasions, and is always seen at his best on the Aintree course. In November 1894, with the hunt- ing weight of 13 st. 3 lbs. on his back, he Celebrities of the Past Thirty Ye cars 157 won this race (the Grand Sefton) in a canter by twenty lengths, beating such good-class horses as Midshipmite, Ardearn, Fanatic, and Leybourne. The extraordinary seizures — which seem to be something akin to paralysis —to which the horse is subject have doubtless robbed him of victory on more than one occasion, unfortunately. Mention of Cloister reminds me—and, par parenthése, | may say that when you are writing on this subject one thing brings to mind another in such a way that the dithiculty is to know how to leave off!—of another horse belonging to Mr. Duff; I believe the first he ever owned, old Edward, by King Alfred (who, it well be remembered, ran second to Blue Gown in the Derby). The horse was twelve years old when Mr. Duff bought him from Mr. Arthur Yates, and after that he won over twenty races, and was running up to the age of fifteen—truly a “useful slave.” Whilst riding one of this order some years ago, which had certainly not been “eating the bread of idleness,” he made a mistake 158 /n Scarlet and Silk and came down half a mile from home, and, thoroughly pumped out, lay without making an effort to rise. I escaped without a scratch, and was taking hold of the horse’s bridle to try and get him on his feet again, when a voice from the crowd exclaimed— “Let ’im alone, guvnor. It ain't orfen as ’e gits a rest; let ‘im lie down while ’e can, unless yowre a-goin’ to run ’um agen wm the next race!” From time to time I have ventured to point out, in different publications, two or three matters which I think are mainly accountable for the present depression in the steeplechasing world. I prefer to use the word depression to decadence: I believe, and, as an enthusiastic lover of the sport, fervently hope, that this state of things is only tem- porary. One of the stumbling-blocks to the farmer who breeds and breaks, and to the hunting-man who owns, horses smart enough to try conclusions with others over a steeple- chase course, is the artificial character of the fences, and particularly of that wretched Celebrities of the Past Thirty Years 159 travesty of a fair hunting jump, the guard- railed ditch. Most of the people who have opened the floodgates of their wrath upon me for thus abusing the “open grave” have, I honestly think, misunderstood my meaning. It is altogether begging the question to ex- claim, “Surely you don’t object to a ditch on the take-off side of a fence?” Of course nobody objects to such an obstacle. But the “orave” is not a ditch; it is a long, sharply- cut trench, with no natural growth to warn a horse of what he has to do. At a Hunt meeting in the Midlands some years ago I assisted in marking out the course, and in a fine line of stiff hunting country, we were enabled to get in two big ditches, or, to be quite accurate, one ditch and one small brook, both on the take-off side of stout thorn fences. No guard-rail was placed before either, and with just upon fifty horses running—not one from a training stable—we had not a single fall, or even blunder, at either of them. No, it just comes to this, that if natural ditches can be obtained in the course no objection 160 Ln Scarlet and Sitk could be raised to them; if they cannot be found, for Heaven’s sake don’t attempt to manufacture them. A fence you can “copy” with fair success, but until a ditch has been made for a number of years, it will look like a sawpit. Upon this subject the present editor of the Sporting Infe—and no keener lover of cross- country sport, nor finer judge of it, exists— writes: “Surely it is not out of the way to appeal to the members [of the National Hunt Committee] to consider at the next meeting this question of the regulation ditch. What is it they are waiting for? If it is for signs of the natural disinclination of horses to take such an obstacle, evidence is supplied them at every meeting in the land. If it is for the dangerous nature of the fence, let them set their clerks on a compilation of the accidents that occur through its existence— accidents too often fatal, both to horse and man... . Farmers, breeders, hunting-men, all have written in one strain of deadly opposition to it.” Celebrities of the Past Thirty Years 161 The other point I wish to call attention to is not of such importance to the well-being of the sport as the question of the regulation ditch, but it certainly is of sufficient gravity to demand attention. I refer to the present rule as to the qualification of riders, and the way it works out in practice. Officers of the Army and Navy, and members of certain well- known clubs, are most properly admitted to ride as amateurs, without further qualifica- tion. But why stop there? Surely a Barrister, a Doctor of Medicine or of Civil Law, any man who has taken a degree at a recognised university, and many others whom one need not more particularly specify here, should be as eligible to ride as officers of the two Ser- vices? And there must be “something rotten in the State” when we are treated to the daily sight of trainers, men, half-professional jockey, half-groom, and others of the same . kidney, riding as amateurs. I have personally known several men debarred from riding, because as members of “learned” professions they dared not put themselves up for election L 162 In Scarlet and Silk as qualified riders for fear that some Maw- worm or Stiggins should find it out, and do them some injury in the business by which they earn their daily bread. II Amongst that far too numerous class of “the little birds that can sing and won't sing” must be ranked Sir John Astley’s Scamp, who won the big hurdle race at Croydon, and seemed cut out for a high-class steeplechaser. But beyond scrambling over—or more often still, knocking down—the hurdles, he wouldn’t have jumping at any price, but he did “Jolly Sir John” a turn. here and there whilst trained by Fothergill Rowlands, at Pitt Place, Epsom. Even that past master of the jump- ing art, Mr. Arthur Yates, could not make Scamp take to cross-country work. Talking of Mr. Yates, it may fairly be said that probably no man living has had such a varied experience, both of riding and training jumpers, as the Master of Bishop’s Sutton. Celebrities of the Past Thirty Years 163 Through sheer ill-luck he has never known the joys of victory in Aintree’s big race, but of all other coveted prizes in the steeplechase world he has had his share and a bit over. I never met a man who had a word to say against him, and I don’t believe he has an enemy in the wide world. One incident in connection with his good-nature well illus- trates ‘‘what manner of man” he is. Riding down to the post for a steeplechase, he turned to a man whom he hardly knew at all, and asked him if he had remembered to weigh out with a penalty the horse had recently incurred? As a matter of fact, the cireum- stance of the penalty had been clean forgotten, and the startled rider was at his wits’ ends to know what to do. “Never mind,’ said Mr. Yates kindly, “hurry back and get your weight right, and I'll ride on and explain matters to the starter.” It is almost sad to relate that having returned to the post, with the penalty up, he won the race, his kindly mentor being second. Harvester ; Congress, a grand-looking horse 164 In Scarlet and Silk that ought to have won the Liverpool; Scarrington, of whom the same words might be used; Scots Grey; Master Mowbray ; Schiedam ; Phryne; the “bolter” Royalist ; Messager, winner of the big ‘chase at Croy- don, when owned by old Jack Percival, then living at Marden Park, and ridden by Gregory, a wonderfully hard bit of stuff; Despatch, who always galloped “sky-scrap- ing” fashion, and never seemed to look at his fences; Ryshworth, second for the Liver- pool in Disturbance’s year; Marin; Snow- storm; and Footman—all these were very useful ’chasers, which I remember running about the country some twenty odd years ago. Early in the 80s H.R.H. the Prince of Wales owned a good class ’chaser in The Scot, by Blair Athol, a wonderfully handsome chestnut horse with a lot of white markings about him. He was not of much use on the flat, but turned out a really fine cross-country performer, securing amongst other events the Great International Steeplechase at San- Celebrities of the Past Thirty Years 165 down, and the Great Metropolitan on the old Croydon course in 1881, steered by Mr. Arthur Coventry. I do not think the Prince bought him until after this (the horse originally belonged to Mr. Mackenzie of Kintail), but he was in the Royal stables when started for the Grand National of 1884, and was made favourite. He was trained and ridden by John Jones of Epsom, but fell when going strongly. A remarkably good performance on the part of The Scot was his safely getting the big course at Liverpool, and finishing in the first five, when only four years old. Fred Webb, the famous flat race jockey, rode him, and showed that he was as much at home across a stiff country as he is over the Rowley mile. Chimney Sweep, who lived and died in Jones's charge, was a wonder at jumping, and Jones told me that the old Sweep had never made a mistake but once in his patriarchal career; he was nineteen years old when he died. He seemed to me in dropping his forefeet over a fence exactly 166 In Scarlet and Silk like a cat jumping off a high wall. What a conveyance for Liverpool! He gave Jones some nice easy rides in his time, and simply loved jumping. Here was another that deserved to win a Grand National, but never got nearer than second. For make and shape, coupled with extra- ordinary weight-carrying power, few better ‘chasers than The Sinner (by Barabbas) and Roman Oak (by Ascetic) have been seen by the present generation of race goers. The Sinner seemed equally good on the flat or over a country, and was as easy to ride as a pony. The horse had been ridden regularly to hounds by a lady before being put to steeplechasing. He has won an extraordinary number of good races, mostly with Mr. “Denny” Thirlwell, who was “one of the best” in the saddle. ‘The last time I ever saw The Sinner run was at Croydon in March 1887, where he beat Count Kinsky’s crack, St. Galmier, a real “nailer” at two and three miles, with the greatest ease. The Honourable George Lambton, a_ beautiful Celebrities of the Past Thirty Years 167 horseman, who now has a useful string of horses in training at Newmarket, rode St. Galmier, and although unsuccessful on this occasion, the famous amateur had all the best of it at the meeting, riding his own mare, Bellona, to victory in the Grand International Hurdle, and winning the Great Metropolitan Steeplechase, four miles, the next day, on Sir W. Throckmorton’s Phan- tom. In the first-named race particularly, he rode a masterly finish. Roman Oak was owned by Mr. W. Leetham when, in 1890, he made his appearance at the Grand Military meeting at Sandown, and won the Hunt Cup, ridden by Mr. Leetham himself. After this he crossed St. George’s Channel, and won the Irish Grand Military at Punchestown. He ran second for the big Manchester event, giving a stone and a half to the winner, Dominion, and was then weighted at twelve stone for the Liverpool. He was not successful there, and the distance, four and a half miles, was avowedly too long for him. ‘The following day, however, ridden 168 Ln Scarlet and Silk by Mr. W. Beasley—whose sad death I have already alluded to—he beat old Gamecock easily enough. After one or two more unsuccessful appearances, Roman Oak, who had now become the property of Sir H. de Trafford, ran in the Irish International Steeplechase, and, well ridden by ‘“‘ Roddy” Owen, won in a canter. From that time he seemed to get on the down grade, but at his best he was a really great horse, and quite a notable figure amongst ‘chasers of his time. Amongst bygone celebrities mention ought not to be omitted of old Medora, who won some nice races in her time, and took three steeplechases within a week when in her fifteenth year. And it was only in 1894 that Parasang, then owned and ridden by Mr. Percy Tippler, won a steeplechase at the mature age of seventeen. It really is wonderful how long some of them last. Old Breach of Promise was another of the same sort. Robert [Anson had always to hustle him along to get the stiffness out of his limbs Celebrities of the Past Thirty Years 169 when he emerged from the saddling paddock, but the old chap could move to a fair tune when he got warm, and won a lot of small chases. And to come down to more recent times, Gamecock, who won the Liverpool in 1887, and the old grey Champion, have done yeoman’s service for their owners. Never was a horse more aptly named than the former, for courage and gameness were the secret of many of his wins. Champion is now nearly white, and is an immense favourite with racegoers. The British public always loves a good horse; and Mr. W. Hope- Johnstone has had the gratification of sharing the old fellows many successes, having been on his back, I believe, every time he has won. Of ‘soldier riders,” some of the best were Captain Harford, “Driver” Browne of the Gunners (killed on the railway at Sandown), Lord Charles Innes Kerr, Major Dalbiac, who I am delighted to see has just got into Parliament, Mr. Hope-Johnstone, Captain Annesly, and ‘“ Curly” Knox, who rode King 170 In Scarlet and Silk Arthur, the winner of the Grand Military at Rugby seven and twenty years ago. The army can also claim such ‘‘good men and true” in the present day as Major E. R. Owen; Sir Cuthbert Slade, who has steered Captain Michael Hughes’s Alsop in most of his successful races; Major Fisher; Captain Bewicke (who, if the racing reports are to be believed, is ‘“‘ Captain” one day and ‘ Mr.” the next!); Mr. Beevor, R.A.; Captain Walter Beevor, Scots Guards, who at one time trained and rode for Mr. Harry MacCalmont, M.P., the owner of Isinglass; Mr. I. B. Atkinson, late 5th Lancers; Major Crawley, who rode this years Grand Military winner, Mr. Eustace Loder’s Field Marshal, a rare good-looking horse, with a crest like a stallion’s—Field Marshal, by the way, came past the post second, Athlumney galloping in ahead. Un- fortunately, however, for Mr. Lawson the horse forgot to bring his jockey home with him. Captains Ricardo, Barry, Yardley, and Paynter, Major Carter, Captain Ferrar, and Mr. Murray-Threipland have all been seen Celebrities of the Past Thirty Years 171 to advantage “ between the flags.” Amongst prominent “soldier owners” are to be found Captain Michael Hughes, of the 2nd Life Guards: Mr, H. 4.. Powell, R.H.A:; Mr.G. C. Wilson, R.H. Guards, who won the Grand National with Father O'Flynn; Captaim Whi- taker, late 5th Fusiliers, whose plucky pur- chase of Ormerod for 3000 guineas was so promptly rewarded by the horse winning the Grand Military for him; Mr. Baird; Captain Fenwick; Mr. Eustace Loder, 12th Lancers ; Captain Orr-Ewing, 16th Lancers ; and Lord Shaftesbury, roth Hussars. Few men in recent years have been blessed with two smarter steeplechase horses. in a very small: stud than Mr. H. L. Powell, with the magnificent Bloodstone and Midshipmite. Horses, it is truly said, run in all shapes, and whereas the last named is a plain horse, although a well-made one, with rather “ up- setting” action in front, Bloodstone was a veritable picture, and when galloping a realisation of the poetry of motion. Mr. Powell bought him from the ill-fated ‘‘ Bay” 172 In Scarlet and Silk Middleton —I think in 1889—and with “Roddy” Owen up, he won for him, amongst several other races, the Grand Military Hunters’ Steeplechase at Sandown. After being sold to Lord Dangan (now Earl Cowley) he was pulled out for the Mammoth Hunters’ Steeplechase at Sandown, and ridden again by Captain Owen, won a desperate race by a short head. An objection followed on the ground of boring, which was overruled. For my own part, I am bound to say—though my sympathies and interests were all the “other way ’—that I thought Bloodstone did interfere very considerably with the second horse. He was extraordinarily speedy, and a very safe and quick fencer. But he had this peculiarity, that he must be ridden amongst his horses; neither in front nor behind. His fancy was to always form one of the cluster in the front rank. He won many races, and seemed equally good over a country at hurdle racing, or on the flat in hunters’ races. Gat- land trained him at Alfriston, and both at home and in public his jumping was bold’ and Celebrities of the Past Thirty Years 173 clean, until he met with an unlucky fall ina race by tumbling over a prostrate horse in front of him. For many a day after that he was so nervous that he could not be depended on at his fences, but confidence gradually returned, and he forgot the con- tretemps. Bloodstone was one of the 124 horses competing for the twenty-nine Queen’s Premiums at the Agricultural Show in March 1895, and deservedly obtained an award. A more beautiful and bloodlike horse I never saw, added to which he was, whilst on the Turf, a performer of the highest class, and almost invincible over three miles, which was his favourite distance. Captain (as he was then) Owen rode him every time he won, if I may trust my memory ; and apropos of the gallant Fusilier, I think he will be as much amused if he sees this as I was in over- hearing it. Two cross-country trainers were praising his prowess in the saddle, and one of them informed the other that he (Captain Owen) had had fever, been in action and got wounded, all since the day he came home 174 In Scarlet and Silk triumphantly, at Aintree, on the queer-tem- pered little Father O’F lynn. “Has he, now? you don’t say so. And they couldn’t kill the little devil, even with all that, eh ?” answered the other. It is rather a noteworthy circumstance that the three judges officiating at the show just named were all men who had ridden in the Liverpool Grand National—NMr. “ Pussy ” Richardson, who rode Disturbance and Reugny to victory in successive years; Mr. Danby, who was on Pluralist in 1847, when that good horse fell early in the contest, but lost so little time that he finished less than 150 yards behind Matthew, the winner; and Mr. Charley Cunningham, who steered Why Not into second place as far back as 1889. What a wonderful little horse the last-named has proved himself. He has run consistently well at Liverpool, on which severe course he always seems a stone better than else- where; and not the least of his remarkable performances was in the National of 1895, where, with twelve stone up, he was always Celebrities of the Past Thirty Years 175 in the front rank, and finally carried Mr. Guy Fenwick into fifth place; this son of Castlereagh and Twitter was then fourteen years old. If the ages of hunters could always be ascertained, I suspect some of us would be astonished to find what veterans we were on. I suppose that few “antiquities” could be found to beat Ingle-go-Jang, winner of many hunters ‘chases and Point to Point events in times past, and an admirable “‘fox-” catcher, who is still hunted by Major Carter, R.A., in Essex, although his years number those of a quarter of a century. To return to Mr. Powell’s two good ’chasers. Bloodstone should now be as serviceable at the stud as he has been on the Turf; and it would be a difficult matter to find any horse better calculated for getting hunters of the highest type. Breeders should also bear in mind that he is a grandson of Touchstone. Midshipmite is a horse of quite another colour, literally and metaphorically speaking. My first introduction to him was rather a 176 In Scarlet and Sitk strange one. I was riding in a gallop with the Royal Artillery draghounds, and crossing Lamerby Park I noticed a big, leathering, young bay pegging along in front, until on reaching the stiff flight of rails which guarded a big ditch on the far side he charged them, was caught by the top bar, and turned head over heels into the ditch. There he lay, feebly waving all four legs in the air, and two or three of us, as we slipped off our horses to lend a hand, thought that it was a case of a broken back. “And I gave £800 for him last week,” said his owner (who was then Whip to the drag) to me, in calm tones, as we assisted to turn the animal over and get him “right side up.” That horse was Midshipmite, then three years old, and seeing hounds for the first time in his life. What he has accomplished since is now a matter of Turf history; Gatland broke the horse in, and trained him for most of his earlier engagements. He used to fall sometimes two or three times a week on the jumping ground at Alfriston, but before he Celebrities of the Past Thirty Vears 177 ever won a race I remember Mr. Powell saying, “This young horse will make me another Bloodstone” — words of prophecy, indeed. One of his first efforts in public was on the old Croydon course. For the honour and glory of the Royal Artillery Drag we backed him, and the bookmakers, I remember, laid us nice healthy prices, for the young Torpedo horse was doing a bold thing in tackling Cameronian on the flat, the latter being at that time almost invincible. Our joy was correspondingly great when we saw the young one sticking to the favourite all the way up that tiring hill, and finally beating him. Midshipmite is a very big jumper, and of his many riders none handled him so well as poor “ Billy” Sensier, though the horse ran very well in the Liverpool under Mr. Atkinson’s able guidance. On_ that occasion he overjumped himself, after get- ting four miles of the journey, some say ‘pumped out,” and others, including, I believe, his jockey (who ought to know), M 178 In Scarlet and Silk P] “full of running.” In 1893 he finished in the first five at Aintree, with Sensier on his back; and just previously to that he had won the Grand Military in magnificent style, Captain Burn-Murdoch riding, and riding him very well, too, for he is not “every- body’s money” to pull together at his fences. At the water, the last time round, he made a tremendous leap, which I much wish had been measured. From that point he had everything dead settled, and came in prac- tically alone. A week after Wild Man from Borneo had proved his excellence by winning the Grand National at Liverpool I found myself in Eastbourne, and hacking over the breezy South Downs, passed through Jevington, and arrived in time for some excellent roast beef at the quaint old ‘ Star,” situate in the equally quaint village of Alfriston. In the afternoon I was taken to see the “Wild Man” in his box, “with all his blushing honours thick upon him.” Hard and wiry as he looked—his golden chestnut Celebrities of the Past Thirty Years 179 coat laying as close, smooth, and silky, as though the month had been July instead of April, trained to perfection as he was, and, indeed, must have been, in order to accom- plish his stupendous task—I must confess that he did not “fill the eye” as a victor in the greatest steeplechasing struggle of the world. In the stable he looks hardly big enough for the work, and is certainly no weight-carrier. But I have his trainer’s authority for saying that the horse did a preparation which, in point of severity, would have broken down anything except either the Wild Man himself or a traction engine. Mr. Gatland is wise in his genera- tion, and when he turns out a horse to run in a big ’chase, that horse, depend upon it, is not only fit, but can jump the course. The Liverpool hero has a wonderfully lean, clever-looking head, with that unerring sign of brain power, great width between the eyes. On his side was still visible the “one” which Mr. Widger had to administer, left-handed. just as the horse cleared Cathal in the final 180 In Scarlet and Silk run home. From his box we proceeded to that in which Waterford was unconcernedly resting his stately frame. This great banging bay, looking a Grand National horse all over, would have taken his own part in the contest had not the death of his owner, just a fort- night before the race, prevented his starting. Both these horses are magnificent fencers in private, and, barring those mishaps to which all horseflesh is liable, it might fairly be said of them that they never fall. Snaplock—a very corky-looking gentleman in the stable—and two or three more, useful ones, and that win in their turn, were briefly visited, before | was conducted into as charm- ing a little house as one could picture, faced by a large wooden veranda, where Mr. Gatland smokes his cigar, and dreams of Liverpool winners, past, present, and to come. Once inside the door, my eyes were quickly glued to the numerous good pictures of equine heroes who have brought fame and fortune to their clever trainer. But a sea-mist began to show itself, the afternoon waned; and as I Celebrities of the Past Thirty Years 181 have a positive genius for losing myself in any country, it struck me that to order my hack and gallop back across the downs before it got either darker or more misty would be my wisest course, so with a farewell to my host off I set, and after missing the track twice, and riding plump into a straw-rick in the sea-fog, reached Eastbourne in safety again. Cathal, who ran second to the “Wild Man” this year for the Liverpool, commenced his jumping career, in a very mild way, in Ireland. He ran four times, and won thrice, in his initial season, but these were only ‘“ twenty- five pounder” stakes. Fanatic beat him very easily, and the late Duke of Hamilton's horse is hardly to be described as a flyer. The following year he came to grief whilst running in the Conyngham Cup, after win- ning the Dunboyne Plate at the Ward Union meeting. In November 1894 he made his bow to an English public at Aintree, and won the Valentine Steeplechase very easily from Ballyohara, giving away 7 lbs., and was sold 182 In Scarlet and Silk afterwards to Mr. F. B. Atkinson (in whose colours he ran for the Grand National) for a thousand pounds. LEscott trained and rode him, and after jumping on to the race-course, the two Sussex-schooled horses had the rest of the fight to themselves, Alfriston just beat- ing Lewes in the run home. SUE EPEECHASE RIDING Nimrop, writing of Mr. Meynell’s reign in Leicestershire, tells us that it was in that ereat sportsman’s day that “the hard riding, or we should rather say, quick riding to hounds which has ever since been practised was first brought into vogue. The late Mr. Childe, of Kinlet Hall, Shropshire—a sports- man of the highest order, and a great personal friend of Mr. Meynell—is said to have first set the example ... and the art of riding a chace may be said to have arrived at a state of perfection quite unknown at any other period of time.” Doubtless this increased pace in “the art of riding a chace” it was that first turned men’s thoughts in the direction of steeplechasing. We all remember that now historic mot: “ What fun we might have if it wasn’t for these d d hounds!” 183 184 In Scarlet and Sitk If some good fairy would come down to earth, and appearing before a young man about to embrace the delightful, if perilous, pursuit of steeplechase riding ; if the fay were to offer him the choice of many gifts for his protection, unhesitatingly would I counsel him to take the gift of coolness. Not that coolness is, in itself, by any means “the whole armour of light,” but that without it all other qualities, such as pluck, good judg- ment, seat, and hands, are rendered almost nugatory. The plucky rider without dis- cretion, the man whose seat and hands are undeniable, but who is apt to get in a flurry the moment he finds himself in difficulties, had better ‘‘be wise in time,” and refrain from trying his luck and perilling his neck by riding between the flags. One can hardly go through the hunting season without see- ing Courage take a man into many a “tight place,” and Coolness bring him out of it with credit. Another most important part of the equip- ment of a steeplechase rider—one that is Steeplechase Riding 185 very generally overlooked too—is strength. A man who has never ridden in steeplechases can have no idea of the immense expenditure of muscular and nervous force by a jockey riding a hard race. To be in hard condition is a prime necessity for a steeplechase jockey, and even then the wear and tear is such that only a sound constitution will enable a man to support these constant demands upon his streneth. The power of calling up these forces instantly and constantly is, perhaps, the best definition I can give of being “strong on a horse.” Fred Archer was a very delicate man, and, generally speaking, unable to stand even the exertion of a long walk, but very few have ever shown more power on a horse than he. Of all his contemporaries, I should be inclined to think that only Custance and Fred Webb were as strong horsemen as the shadowy, frail-looking jockey, whose mighty “finishes” delighted the racing world for over a decade. Custance and Webb, by the way, are both splendid men across country. 186 In Scarlet and Silk Memories of riding one’s first steeplechase are, | should say, hardly satisfactory ones as arule. Nor is this to be wondered at. The whole of the surroundings are strange to us, the noise of the race-course, the rush of the horses at their fences, the increased pace above that required for hunting, and the anxiety to win—all these things and a dozen others that do not occur to me at the moment of writing tend to confuse and agitate one. And, again, the novice is presumably very young, perhaps only a boy, and in such case the nerves are peculiarly susceptible and liable to easy disarrangement. MHalf-a-dozen rides in public will probably cure all this, but those half-dozen are hardly pleasurable ones to the generality of beginners. Such experiences might be mostly set to the music of “’H dunno where ’e are!” One of the worst dangers, in my humble opinion, is that of collision, and everybody knows what a little thing in that line suffices to “upset the apple cart.” It is always, therefore, good policy to jump even the Steeplechase Riding 187 highest place in a fence rather than follow in the general scramble for the weak spot. Even if actual collision is avoided, you may, whilst in mid-air, find something down in front of you, and in a crowded field it is often best, 1f you are on a fairly safe fencer, to push along in front, and so get out of the way of the fallers and refusers. At the same time, we can’t all expect to get Robert Nightingall’s luck, when, on one occasion in a field of twenty, he fell when leading, and never got touched by any of the odd nineteen ! We all know that, in the case of a steeple- chase accident, there is one thing which is even better than “presence of mind,” and that is ‘absence of body”; but when, in most of the ‘‘ tight places” a man gets into, neither of these good things is available, the con- sequences are apt to be disastrous ; and anent the subject of absence of mind [| heard a story, some years ago, of a north-country Curate, a very absent-minded man, though a good sportsman, who wanted badly to go to 188 In Scarlet and Silk Races, but dared not for fear of his Bishop, who was then staying in the town. In an inspired moment he conceived the idea of blacking his face and going as a nigger minstrel. All went well with the scheme until, just in front of the Stand, he came face to face with a large benevolent-looking old gentleman, the Bishop himself! In complete forgetfulness of the aid which burnt cork had lent to his toilet, the absent-minded Curate raised his hat, disclosing his fair and curly locks to the horrified Episcopal gaze! And even this case of clerical absence of mind was fairly capped by the following story, to the truth of which I can absolutely pledge my- self. The Curate in question had been invited by some friends to dine, and meet his Bishop. In due course he arrived, late in the winter afternoon, and was shown up to his room to dress. The dinner hour came, but the Curate did not. The hour, but not the man! All the suests, including the great ecclesiastic, were assembled; the minutes slowly passed, but still no sign. At length the host despatched Steeplechase Riding 189 a servant up to the young man’s room to announce that they were all waiting for him. Then the murder was out. The absent- minded one had undressed and gone to bed ! A good story is told of a certain profes- sional steeplechase jockey and a (?) gentleman rider who must both (perforce, and the law of the libel) be nameless here. There were four or five starters only for a steeplechase on the old Eltham course. Through falls and refusals all of them were out of the race, half a mile from home, except these two. The “ Pro.” was leading, and kept anxiously looking round for his solitary antagonist, who made no sign of ‘‘ coming along.” At last the horrible idea dawned upon each, that the other was not ‘on the job.” “Go on, sir, my horse is stone beat!” cried out the “ Pro.” In a flash, a bright inspiration came into the amateur’s mind. “By Jove! I’ve slipped off!” he exclaimed, and “suiting the action to the word,’ as 190 In Scarlet and Silk the story-books say, down he went, over his horse’s shoulder, leaving the wretched man in front to go on and win, nolens volens. II As instancing the calm and beautiful way in which some owners expect you to risk your life for the ‘honour and glory” of the thing and their peculiar benefit, 1 may mention a case that happened to me at a Hunt Steeple- chase meeting some years back. I was just getting “clothed and in my right mind” after riding in the first race, when an excited gentleman whom, to the best of my belief, I had never even seen before in my life, came up to me and said— “My jockey has failed me, and I’ve got two horses running here this afternoon. Will you ride for me?” I asked which they were, and he told me. Then with the utmost sang-froid he added— “T don’t think, as a matter of fact, that Steeplechase Riding 1g! either will get over the course. I should think both—I’m certain one—will fall !” I *‘ passed.” An old hand once said to me after I had been knocked down by another horse refusing in a steeplechase, ‘‘ Why did you go at it (the fence) to the left hand of the refuser’s name. ‘‘ You knew how un- ?” mentioning certain he was at his fences.” “Yes, but how could I tell which way he was going to run out?” I replied. ‘Nine horses out of ten whip round to the left, because you carry your flail in your right hand. You should have been where | was, on the right hand side of him,” was the answer. The loss of a stirrup-iron is a thing of fre- quent occurrence in steeplechase riding, and though we ought all to be able to get over the fences comfortably without them, “ finish- ing” is quite a different matter, and the loss a severe one. Besides this, if the iron is a biggish one, and we have “ weighed out fine,” it may mean disqualification. But if it has 192 In Scarlet and Silk merely slipped off the foot, a judicious kick with the toe turned very much inwards will often recover it. I don't think much of either whip or spur as a means of increasing speed in a horse, either across country or on the flat. Many a race has been lost by the injudicious use of one, or both; and were it not for a whole- some dread of the law of libel, I would give an instance of this, which occurred in the Cesarewitch, not very many years back, to a horse I frequently rode myself. Archer, who was close up with the leaders at the finish, was my authority for saying that the horse must have won by five or six lengths, instead of being beaten, but for the jockey picking up his whip “to win with a flourish.” The (a4 ” stable was nearly £9000 “out” over that whip mark! On returning to scale, the jockey immediately excused himself and blamed his horse for being “‘ ungenerous” in stopping. “And if he hadn’t stopped, J should have blamed him for being a d——d fool!” answered his trainer, looking straight at the Steeplechase Riding 193 young man in question. It was the last time he was troubled to ride for that stable. Unless a horse is of sluggish disposition and really will not gallop until made to do so, whip and spur would be better left at home in nine cases out of ten. What is the use of flogging a horse who, in the pure spirit of emulation, is trying his hardest to win? It shortens his stride, and finally so disgusts him, that he either “runs cunning,” or cuts racing altogether. Far more can be done by riding him with your hands and (unarmoured) heels. Although I shall be accused of hetero- doxy in so saying, I assert positively, that whips and spurs should be carried and worn rather as the exception than the rule. One of such exceptions is where a little fellow like Tommy Loates has to ride a great leathering horse such as Isinglass. Big horses are very hard for small jockeys to “oet out” unless with the adventitious aid of whip or spur. There was a good story going the rounds about Mr. MacCalmont’s pet jockey some time ago. He was being N 194 In Scarlet and Sitk weighed out for a race in a faded dirty- looking “silk,” at which Mr. Manning was gazing in some curiosity. Quoth the latter— ‘What colour do you call that, eh?” “Claret, sir,” was the answer. “Claret,eh? Well, there doesn’t seem much colour left in it, anyhow.” “Perhaps it’s a light dinner claret, sir,” promptly responded the redoubtable Tommy. Knowledge of pace is a thing we may talk or write about for ever, but the school of experience is the only place in which we shall learn what it actually means. “Don’t go away, it makes me feel lonely !” said Sam Daniels to the rest of the field one day when he was on that smart horse Reform (by Gunboat out of Untrue). He had got a ‘‘steadier” of between twelve and thirteen stone up in a hurdle race, and dared not come along with the others. The lightly weighted ones knew, of course, that their only chance was to “hurry,” but as Sam came by, a hundred yards from the finish, he said, “I knew you'd all come back to Steeplechase Riding 195 me.” It was knowledge of pace that made him confident, and told him he need not hurry his horse. Perhaps no greater example of this invalu- able quality has ever been afforded than John Osborne’s handling of Lord Clifden, in that memorable St. Leger when the ‘big horse” was like the “little boat,” all astern, until his pilot—who had never bustled him a yard to make up his lost ground—was enabled to collar the leaders close home, and win. Poor George Fordham, who had said he “would eat Lord Clifden, hoofs and all,” if he won, was frequently asked by his brother- professionals when he intended to commence the meal. Robinson, who was on Kilwarlin for the Leger of 1887, also showed great coolness and patience under singularly trying circum- stances, for the horse went straight up with him when the flag fell, and at one time he was over a hundred yards behind everything. Loud were the offers to lay 25 to 1 against him in running; but when once he took hold 196 In Scarlet and Silk of his bit, he came along with giant strides, and won by three-quarters of a length. George Fordham was as near perfection as a race-rider as it is possible to get in this sublunary sphere, and I suppose the worst race he ever rode in his life was the solitary Derby he won on Sir Bevys, on which occa- sion he came round Tattenham Corner so wide that he lost lengths, and then after taking the lead at the Bell, rode his horse right out to the end, as though hotly pressed, nothing, as a matter of fact, being near him. Contrast that performance with those of the Fordham of old days, the Fordham of the wonderful finishes at Newmarket, when with Tom Chaloner, Custance, Tom French, old John Morris (as good as most of them if he had not been so deaf), et hoc genus omne, “he witched the world with noble horsemanship.” Despite the fact that we have now many really sterling jockeys, I almost feel inclined to relapse into the cry of “ fogeydom ;” laud- ator tempores acti. Mention of Tom Chaloner reminds me of Steeplechase Riding 197 that Derby day, now some three and twenty years ago, when he, on Brother to Flurry * —one of Alec Taylor's specially kept dark ones—gave the backers of Cremorne such a terrible fright. The colt had hardly been mentioned in the betting—no one, other than his own connections, seemed even to know of his existence—until the week before the race, when his owner got some money on at 100 to 1. On the morning of the race he gene- rously offered Alec Taylor as much as he liked to take of his own bets, and the trainer told me how much he took over on his own ac- count, but I am sorry to say I have forgotten the amount. All went well in the race until the finish, but Chaloner came too late. “Poor old Tom; he didn’t often make mistakes, but he left it too long that day,” said Alec Taylor, when he was telling me the story of the contest. The colt was going great guns as they passed the post, and the mighty Cremorne only beat him by the shortest of heads. They had some good * Afterwards named Pell Mell. 198 In Scarlet and Silk horses behind them, too, that day— Prince Charlie, the ‘“‘ King of the Rowley mile”; Wenlock, who subsequently won the St. Leger ; and Lord Falmouth’s Queen’s Mes- senger, to wit. Amongst the most interesting of latter- day turf celebrities must be classed the late Alec Taylor, of Manton. A greater master of his art never lived than “grim old Alec,” as he was called. ‘“ Grim” in a sense he might be, but speaking for myself, I can safely say that not only was his grimness never shown to me, but that I always found him one of the cleverest men—entirely apart from his training skill—I ever met. It was my good fortune to stay near Manton, regu- larly riding the morning gallops each day, for some weeks, in 1888, and every hour I found some fresh amusement and pabulum for the mind in Alec Taylor’s dry and caustic humour. After the work had been got through one morning, and whilst my arms were still aching from the attentions of the hard-pulling Stourhead, the great trainer invited me to Steeplechase Riding 199 accompany him round the boxes wherein the yearlings reposed, a large proportion of them being the grey-ticked young Buchanan’s. Whilst on the tour of inspection, one of the lads in attendance came into the stable, ex- hibiting a very fine specimen of what is vulgarly called “a black eye.” Taylor’s keen optic fixed him at once, and the proprietor of the black eye obviously jibbed under the inspection. He began in a somewhat lame and halting manner to explain— “‘[—I had a bit of an accident, sir, last night, sir. I was just a-runnin’ into the cottage, sir, and I runned against the door- post, sir, and—and—and that’s how I got this black eye, sir.” Taylor waited patiently for the whole of the explanation; then with an absolutely immovable face, he replied— “Quite right, Tommy. Always tell the truth, my boy, whatever it costs you,” and turning on his heel, he led the way out of the stable, leaving the hero of the overnight “‘scrap- ping match” a crushed and withered thing. 200 In Scarlet and Silk On one occasion I was with him when a person of the “sporting gent” order, bolder than most (for it took a bold man to ask Alec Taylor impudent questions!) accosted him with “ Morning, Mr. Taylor. Which is it to be for next week’s race, the horse or the mare?” alluding to Eiridspord and Réve d’Or, then being backed for the City and Suburban at Epsom. I “sat tight” for an explosion, but none came. The master of Manton merely ob- served— “Well, should you back Eiridspord if he could give So-and-So a stone over the dis- tance?” and the clever gentleman on the “‘nod’s- as-good-as-a-wink ” principle, exclaimed— “T should, Mr. Taylor!” and walked off, highly pleased with the result of his impudent questioning. “And so should I,” drily observed Taylor, as we got out of earshot, “ but he can’t!” The photograph of the man who succeeded in getting “a rise” out of Alec Taylor would be an unique possession. Steeplechase Riding 201 Occasionally, too, he could be very severe in his observations. In that phenomenal year, 1887, when the Manton horses were fairly sweeping the board, after having ex- perienced a long spell of adverse fortune— always borne by the Duke of Beaufort with- out a murmur, a thing which could not be truthfully said of the Duchess of Montrose— the shrewd old trainer was watching the unsaddling of a horse belonging to the latter, which had just won a race at Goodwood, when her Grace came down from the Stand, and shaking hands with Taylor, exclaimed— “What a wonderful trainer you are!” “Yes, your Grace—when I win!” was the reply. Whilst I was at Manton, we rode together one morning across the Downs, and Taylor pointed out to me the exact course over which Teddington’s wonderful Derby trial took place at dawn of day. Teddington met Storyteller at level weights, gave two stone to Gladiole, 21 lbs. to the Ban, and 6 202 In Scarlet and Silk lbs. to Vatican. He won in a canter, and Taylor naturally looked upon the Derby as over. But there was trouble in store for ‘the colt. A week before the race his off fore- leo filled, and he had to be stopped in his work. The leg fined down all right, but when Teddington got to Epsom, the change of stables and the journey combined upset him, and he declined to feed. However, despite these drawbacks, he made short work of his opponents, and beat the large field of thirty-one with a bit to spare. To have an eye “all round about you,” is an invaluable thing in riding a race. You ought not only to know what your own horse is doing, but be able to form a fairly accurate opinion of how other people’s horses are getting on. You may be beat, but that does not so much matter if every other horse in the race is in the same condition. Again, if your most dangerous opponent is at all in- clined to “turn thief,” you ought to be able to see it, and then go up to him, and never give him a moment’s peace. Many a race Steeplechase Riding 203 has been won that way, when all seemed smooth sailing for the rogue. Horses are wonderfully quick to find out how far they can take liberties with their fences, and so are some of their riders! One man, who rides almost as many winners between the flags nowadays as anybody, said to me a few weeks back, when we were dis- cussing the relative merits of the Sandown and Kempton obstacles, ‘Sandown looks the worst of the two, but you can brush through the tops of the fences there. You can’t do that at Kempton.” Now, although a horse can’t be too good a jumper to win steeplechases, he may be too big a jumper to do so. Young or inex- perienced animals usually jump a great deal bigger at their fences than they need, and this is a fault—one on the right side, be it always remembered—that practice alone will cure. “It’s all mght when they rise high enough ; never mind the rest,’ said Gatland to me, speaking of the schooling of young horses to jump, and no one can teach the 204 In Scarlet and Silk Alfriston trainer much in his own line of business, as we know. But if an animal jumps much bigger than he need when racing, it is perfectly clear that he will beat himself. As a rule, however, a horse, be he hunter or ‘chaser, measures his fence very accurately, and whilst taking care not to hit the top too hard for safety, rarely wastes his strength by overjumping an_ obstacle. Indeed, the close shave some of them will make is calculated to cause the rider to “sit up” a bit on occasions. One thing that has always been a puzzle to me, is that many a horse which is by no means either a good or a safe hunter acquits himself very much better when running over a Point to Point steeplechase course than he does in following hounds. The fences are, as a general rule, larger, and the pace more severe, and yet I have seen over and over again the indifferent hunter running under these conditions take his revenge on, and fence better than, the horse which has invari- ably proved his superior as a “ fox-catcher.” Steeplechase Riding 205 If anybody has fathomed the mystery, I wish he would publish the solution. And why is it that we not infrequently find a bad hunter make a good ’chaser ? Roughly speaking, in riding a race, if your horse is one of the slow, staying sort, you must go in front and keep there as long as you can; if of the speedy order and deficient in stamina, then you must wait with him and rely upon one effort—which must not be made, on the one hand, too soon, or the “yun” will not last him as far as the post; or, on the other, too late, for there the consequences are so obvious as not to need mention. But we ought to make very sure of our facts beforehand, for many a horse that has been merely regarded as a sprinter has shown himself later in life capable of getting long courses; amongst others, Lord Coventry’s famous sisters, Emblem and Em- blematic, both Grand National winners, for example. If you could, indeed, have “eyes in the back of your head,” you would not find them 206 In Scarlet and Silk at all superfluous in steeplechase riding. A chance to get the rails at the bend for home, ) the sight of a “dangerous” opponent ‘ peck- ing,” as he lands over a fence—in which case it may be sound policy to push along a bit, so as to give him all the more ground to make up—the chance of getting on a sounder piece of ground than the rest, all these and many more like matters are things to watch for throughout the whole contest. Apropos of eyes, Mr. “Johnny” Dormer, who was one of the boldest and best of cross-country riders, sustained a terrible injury (whilst riding Miss Chippendale for the late Duke of Hamilton) which resulted in the loss of an eye. A lady asked him, some time afterwards, whether he intended to continue steeplechase riding, to which he made the smart reply — “What! with only one eye? I always wanted three eyes whilst I was riding.” How sorry we all were when Cloister only just failed to give him the prize he coveted at Liverpool. Steeplechase Riding 207 So quickly and unexpectedly may the whole aspect of the race be changed, that “instructions” to a competent rider have often proved themselves a very doubtful blessing. ‘It is more blessed to give than to receive,” and this is especially true of instructions. A few instances will best illustrate what I mean. “You are not to go in front on any account whatever.” In this race a very crafty gentleman made running, or, to speak more correctly, he ‘‘ waited in front,” that is, that wanting to stop the pace, he just kept going, his horse travelling well within him- self, all the time, whilst the rate of progres- sion did not suit the jockey told to wait at all. The latter very well knew that unless he could go up and increase the pace he would assuredly be beaten. Hampered with “instructions,” however, he dared not set them at defiance, and thus the race was thrown away. “Lay right off—never mind what you think. about it. I don’t want to see you 208 In Scarlet and Silk even attempt to come until the corner of the enclosure rails.” Result: At the point indicated the horse comes with one run, and going twice as fast as anything in the race, is beaten half a length! There was not time for him to get up. ‘Never mind how hot they try to make it for you, come right through.” In strict obedience to orders the rider came right through: the pace was a tremendous one, and his horse was beaten off a hundred yards, when, by regulating his tactics according to surrounding circumstances, things might have been entirely different. At all events, a week later the defeated animal beat his conqueror, and the one that finished third to him over the same distance, and at the same weights, within a pound or two. One more example, and I have finished. “Don’t let me see you in front till you are over the last fence.” The horse was a hard puller, and very impetuous at his fences. He was usually sent along in his races, and Steeplechase Riding 209 always settled down as soon as he had gota lead. After half a mile or so a child could ride him. But the instructions were impera- tive, and pulling his rider’s arms out, fighting like a very demon for his head, he fairly beat both himself and his jockey, and lobbed in an ignominious last. Do not let it be imagined for a moment that I am saying anything against the broad principle of a trainer or owner ordering how his horse shall be ridden. I have far too high an opinion of the average owner or trainer to think that he is given to making this sort of mistake. All I mean is to point out the imexpediency or, at all events, the risk of strictly tying down a competent jockey with cast-iron instructions, and espe- cially where the rider knows the horse and his peculiarities well. As to instructing the average mannikin in flat racing, I suppose that as most of them can neither hold a horse nor ride one, it doesn’t really much matter whether you give them orders or not! To see Nature’s most beautiful productions in O 210 In Scarlet and Silk the equine world butchered along, and their tempers ruined by this class of jockey, always “draws” me considerably! Of course, owners cannot help themselves in the matter on account of the weights, but, oh, the pity of it! If by chance the mannikin does win, it mostly means that his horse has at least 7 lbs. in hand. Apropos of instructions, a most respected trainer for whom I have now and then ridden was an extremely nervous, fidgety man, and rather given to tutoring his riders. Once he had got hold of a very rough specimen of the groom-jockey to ride for him in a steeple- chase, and whilst we were walking down to the post, a bitter March wind chilling one to the marrow at the time, I overheard the following colloquy :— Trainer.—“ Now lay off, mind, till you get to the foot of the hill, and——’ Jockey.— Yes, I know; all right.” Trainer.— And ‘you're not to come with him till i Jockey.—* All right, all right!” (blow- Steeplechase Riding 211 ing the tips of his blue fingers to warm them). Trainer.—“ And mind you keep cool—-—— Jockey (fairly roused).—‘Garn and_ stuff ’ yourself! ’ow could I keep anything else a day like this!” I am rejoiced to see that the “ powers that be” have now come to allow a 9g st. 7 lbs. minimum in steeplechasing. In a former book, published some eight years ago, I wrote, “,. 1 think-that at least 7 lbs. might-be taken off steeplechasing weights, making the minimum 9g st. 7 lbs. You may own a re- markably smart horse, which is put up in the handicap scale so much, that, although he might stand a fair chance of giving the weight away to the rest, is yet not big and powerful enough to carry 13 st. or 13 st. 7 lbs, three or four miles across country, and then, as in many cases, race up a hill with it to the finish. In my opinion, nothing is gained by putting these crushing weights on a horse, and surely, if it be right for an animal ever to carry them racing, then it would be for a 212 In Scarlet and Silk comparatively short distance on the flat, and not when he has to lift them over big fences, at a time of the year when the ground is almost invariably in a heavy state, and under conditions which make the course two miles in length at the very least.” I believe that most owners and trainers will agree that the change has been a beneficial one. The worst place to fall on the average steeple- chase course is at the guard-railed ditch. I have seen horses brought down in all manner of ways at this ridiculous obstacle. I say “ridiculous,” because it is not natural to make a steep-sided cutting in smooth turf where no growth gives evidence of what there is to be jumped, erect a foot-high rail in front of it, and then expect a horse to get over that and the fence beyond, unless he has been specially trained to it. No one objects to a ditch on the take off side of a fence; it is begging the question when men ask you this. The nicest steeplechase fence I ever rode over was the “ditch fence” on the Brackley course, bnt then it was a ditch, and no guard-rail Steeplechase Riding 213 was placed there. Many men, both now and for years past, have declined to risk valuable young horses over the “regulation ditch,” and thus the sport has suffered, and will continue to suffer, simply because the autho- rities are so supine or so obstinate that they will go on in their own way, regardless of the best interests of steeplechasing. What was the thing invented for? ‘To check the pace,” is the reply. ‘‘Has it done so?” Every one knows that ’chases are run to-day faster than they ever were before. John Jones, whilst taking me through his stables one day some seven years ago, said, “Oh, the open ditch is nothing very dangerous, if you properly teach a horse to do it.” That is just the poimt: “If you teach a horse to do it.” But a steeplechase is not a circus. You don't want a “trick horse;” you want a hunter, and, in my humble opinion, every steeplechase course should contain only hunting jumps, such as require no previous curriculum of the training stable to enable the candidate to do in safety. 214 In Scarlet and Silk Smashing the guard-rail; not seeing the ditch properly, and galloping into it; fright of it causing the horse to take off too soon, and thereby jump into the fence beyond— all these, and many more besides, are the accidents one may look for at this unnatural obstacle. ‘To wind up an argument upon its merits and demerits, a friend of mine once said to me— “T believe you funk it!” “T do,” was my answer, and I am not at all ashamed to say so. Beware then, oh neophyte! when coming at this fence; but remember there must be no “sniffing” at it! Come right along and rouse your horse, without hustling him, at it. The man who “rides his horse’s head off,” is simply bound to come to grief here. Never shall I forget seeing a gentleman rider, sitting very high in his saddle, driving his horse as if he were in the thick of a Derby finish, as he hasted to the ditch. The horse put his toes in the ground and stopped, but not so the gallant gentleman on his back. Without Steeplechase Riding 215 any effort, nay, without any volition of his own, he sailed gaily through the blue em- pyrean, absolutely clearing the ditch and merely brushing the fence beyond, as he alighted on terra firma once again! Noth- ing, apparently, could have exceeded his own astonishment at finding himself where he was! And now for one of the most important parts of the steeplechase rider's equipment, nerve. Before we reached the mature age of twenty, of course we all scoftingly answered the question of what was want of nerve, in the one word “ Funk.” But it is not funk, nevertheless. When we are very young at such pursuits as steeple- chase riding, we are, for the most part, so gloriously ignorant of the danger, that we rather rejoice at a roll over than otherwise. Later on, when we become alive to the fact that we are engaged in a somewhat risky pastime, the consciousness of it may momen- tarily unsteady us, and this we call ner- vousness. One of the boldest and best of 216 [un Scarlet and Silk steeplechase riders I ever contended against, told me himself that oftentimes, and especially before the start of a race, he “suffered the tortures of the damned.” Now if ‘“ funk” had been the true seat of the disease, surely that feeling would have endured until he had landed in safety over the last fence. But it did not. Directly the field was despatched upon its journey all nerve troubles vanished, and he was not only bold, but one of the coolest-headed men I ever saw ride. What is the explanation ? Again, where no question of personal risk enters into one’s calculation, as, for example, in riding a race on the flat, why, in the name of all that is wonderful, do we sometimes feel an increased action of the heart, and a sensa- tion of profound wretchedness before mount- ing? or more extraordinary still, why do we feel it, say at Kempton to-day, and not at all at Sandown to-morrow? Why do we say to ourselves that it is ‘‘really time we gave up race riding” this week, whilst in the next we laugh to scorn the idea of resigning the Steeplechase Riding o17 silk jacket, and swear we have taken a new lesse of racing life? These things be hidden mysteries that I think few, if any, have really found the solution of. When analysed, the feelings to which we allude as occasionally the bane of the horseman, resemble those of a swimmer. It is not a sense of danger in either case; it is not a want of courage obviously, for the proposed ordeal is a voluntary one. There is distinct conscious- ness that a shock has to be undergone, that it will be undergone, and that afterwards all will be well. But meantime the swimmer stands shivering on the brink, and the horse- mau trembles. ‘The spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak.” The moral will triumph over the physical, real courage over nervousness! The plunge once taken, the start once made, brings one a sense of exalta- tion, that I don’t think anything else in the world can produce. One moment of time seems amply sufficient for you to take in the whole situation. You see how your own horse is going; you tell, as though by in- 218 In Scarlet and Silk stinct, which of your opponents you will ultimately have to reckon with just before the judge’s little white-painted box is reached. There is no question of “nerves” now! All your energies are concentrated into the one desire to beat your opponents—no matter how, no matter at what personal risk. You feel like a gambler, only more reckless than he—you play not with paltry sovereigns; your stake is life and limb. There is an opening be- tween the horses racing in front of you; a very small one, ’tis true. But you hesitate not a moment, and catching your horse by the head, set your teeth, and ram him through. All but one drop back beaten, and then you set to, head, hands, and heels, to beat the survivor. Amid the most intense excitement, shouting, flying of dust, and cracking of whips, the two of you shoot past the post locked together. A dead heat? No, as you turn, after pulling up your horse, you catch sight of the numbers being hoisted, and your heart gives a great leap when you see your own—the mystic 7—at the top! Steeplechase Riding 219 When riding a horse that you have reason- able grounds for supposing will fall with you, it is a good plan to leave your spurs behind. They are apt to get crosswise in the stirrup- irons, and hang you up in the event of an upset. Always try to fall away from your horse; that is, if he falls to the left, do you try and fall to the right, and wice versd. Although I have no affection for a whip, it is not without its uses: as when a horse is fencing carelessly ; and again, when he seems doubtful in his mind whether to jump or refuse. In Casse Téte’s Grand National, Page had to use his whip heavily at the final hurdles to keep the little mare on her legs at all. And if a horse les too far out of (44 ”) his ground, a judicious ‘‘one” may be of service in getting him to go up and join his horses. Again, one or two strokes may be invaluable just at the finish of a race. But to keep on whipping a horse, merely proclaims to everybody that his rider is both a butcher and an ass. These remarks, of course, do not apply to men who regularly 220 In Scarlet and Silk ride their own horses, and know their char- acter and peculiarities thoroughly: no rules need be laid down in such cases. One of the most important of all things in race riding, whether on the flat or across country, is to take a pull at your horse in order to steady him and get him well back on to his legs for the final struggle. The greatest nicety is required in making your effort, for horses rarely ‘‘come” a second time, and if your “run” does not last to the finish you may, generally speaking, drop your hands and give it up as a bad job. Finally, it is wise not to leave too much ground to be made up at the finish. Dis- tances, like many other things in this wicked world, are deceptive. Above all things, never put yourself in the truly awful position of losing your race after you have got it well won. Think of the Recording Angel’s efforts to keep pace with the eloquence of your luckless backers, and never get “caught napping !” I may just add a few words as to the Steeplechase Riding 221 danger of steeplechase riding. No one dis- putes the fact that a certain amount of risk to life and limb is involved. I should be the last to do so. But I do not think it is either so bad as it is painted, or so dangerous as it looks. I have had my fair share of accidents, and have broken ribs, collar-bone, and arm, some two or three times each, and once sustained a slight concussion of the brain, but have never been seriously, that is, dangerously, injured in my life except once, when a horse rolled on me. I suspect we are all pretty tough, and really take a lot of kill- ing. Ifa man goes in for the sport, he must be prepared to take his falls good-humouredly. They will come, even to the best, and the sooner one gets used to the idea the better. Anthony Trollope, one of our few literary sportsmen, once declared that hunting men did not incur so much damage to life and health as they who played whist every after- noon at their club, and ate a heavy dinner afterwards. If we take the number of men who, either hunting or steeplechase-riding, 222 In Scarlet and Silk regularly go across country year after year, and then compare that number with the cases of fatal accident, we shall find the death-rate a very low one. Beside the few cases I have already mentioned, I may just recall that within the last twenty years or so, the Hon. Greville Nugent (“‘ Mr. St. James”), one of the pluckiest little horsemen ever seen—he never weighed eight stone in his life—and Mr, Goodwin have been killed at Sandown; and Lord Rossmore on the Windsor course, while riding Harlequin. Lord Rossmore was too tall for a jockey, though a bold, good horse- man; he had been terribly unlucky in getting dangerous falls for some time before his fatal ride. Sandown was also the scene of fatal accidents to Clay, the professional, and to Captain Boyce. It was a remarkable cir- cumstance that Captain Boyce rose from his fall with apparently little injury. He re- turned to the stand, dressed, and went up to town by train, dined at his club, and a few hours after going to his rooms was suddenly taken ill and expired. A horse called Coercion Steeplechase Riding Bee fell at the regulation ditch when running at Four Oaks Park (Birmingham), killing Sly who rode him, one of the best conducted young men in his profession. If my memory serves me the horse belonged to Mr. H. Barclay (the owner of the great Bendigo), and it was on Woodhouse, another of the popular brewer’s animals, that poor young George Brown — barely twenty years of age — met with his fatal accident this summer (1895) at Brighton. Willy Macdonald, on the flat, and Sensier, in a hurdle race, were both killed through their horses falling and leay- ing them defenceless on the ground for others to gallop over. Mr. Lamport, of the Royal Artillery, was killed whilst riding a gallop over fences at Epsom four or five years ago, and some time before that Sam Daniels lost his life in schooling the hurdle-racer Thunder. As to fatal accidents in the hunting-field, there is nothing in the shape of a record, however rough, to refer to. But if there were, | venture to think that they are very few, especially considering the vast number 224 In Scarlet and Silk of people who hunt nowadays, and the — not inconsiderable proportion of rash chil- dren, inexperienced “City gents,” and un- utterable “duffers” of every class amongst them. In concluding this chapter, I may just name some of the prominent horsemen of my time, who have either recently ceased riding, or may still be seen in the saddle. Of course the list does not pretend to be an exhaustive one. Of the amateurs, I would mention Mr. Arthur Yates, Messrs. G. 8. Thomp- son, “Thomas,” Peter Crawshaw, Captain “Doggy” Smith, Lord Marcus Beresford, E. P. Wilson, Hon. George Lambton, the present Karl of Minto (‘‘ Mr. Rolly”), Majors Fisher, K. R. Owen, Crawley, and Dalbiac ; Captains W. B. Morris (killed riding over a small fence in the Cheshire country), “ Bay” Middleton (killed in a steeplechase in the Midlands) ; Messrs. Hope-Johnstone, C. J. Cunningham, Arthur Coventry—now the official starter of the Jockey Club—J. M. Richardson, D. Thirl- well, the Beasleys, the Moores (Garrett and Steeplechase Riding 22% William), Mr. Brockton, Captains Lee Barber and Beevor. Of another school are those rare good men the Cheneys; Sir C. Slade, Mr. G. B. Milne, Mr. Cecil Grenfell, Mr. C. Thompson, Mr. Lushington, Lord Molyneux, the Ripley brothers, Mr. “Joe” Widger, Mr. Guy Fen- wick, Mr. P. Tippler, Mr. J. Phillips—who has been riding a rare lot of good races on the flat this season, and winning in his turn — Mr. Moncrieff, Mr. Beatty, and Mr. Thursby. Of the professionals, the following were, or are, well-known and excellent horsemen: Robert Anson, James Adams, James Jewitt, J. Jones, Harry Barker, Joe Cannon, G. Williamson, Arthur, William, and Robert Nightingall, Harry Escott, G. Morris, Sam and W. Daniels, Mawson, the Danebury cross-country rider, poor Sensier, and Dollery, both brought up with Mr. Arthur Yates at Bishop’s Sutton, and attached to that gentle- man’s stable. May I be permitted to say a word or P 226 In Scarlet and Silk two in conclusion, which applies equally to riding in silk or scarlet? It is this, that for jumping on to a fallen rider there is absolutely no excuse. Were I to quote five hundred examples of the horrible mischief done in this way, it would add nothing more of weight to the warning than by just men- tioning two typical cases, one in years gone by, and another of modern times. A man literally landed over a fence on the top of Squire Osbaldeston, and broke his leg in two or three places; the sufferer barely escaped amputation of the limb as the consequence. The other instance occurred in Northamp- tonshire, where a lady was the sufferer and another of the same sex the culprit. As we know, this, most unhappily, ended fatally. There is nothing gained by the practice except “a lead.” Is it right to jeop- ardise a human life in order to obtain it ? i } HURDLE RACING HURDLE “RACING ‘To get a flat-racehorse fit for the business of “ timber-topping” is obviously a far easier matter than to prepare him for crossing a country in public. Some animals take to the game so readily, that half-a-dozen visits to the schooling ground will make them well qualified to try their luck in a hurdle race. In fact, on one occasion a friend of mine bought a four-year old out of a selling race —five furlongs—in which he had been third, on the Tuesday, and I rode him in a hurdle race on the Thursday following, and what is more, he gave me a very comfortable ride until the last flight of hurdles but one, where he came down (vulgarly speaking) “a buster.” A thoroughbred horse learns very quickly— unless, indeed, he has made up his mind, like several I could name, that jumping doesn’t 229 230 In Scarlet and Silk agree with him; and then, of course, it is a case of “pull devil, pull baker!” as to who shall win the deal. But in the ordinary course of things, your hurdle racer will not take long to prepare if he is only even moderately willing. There are degrees, too, of willingness. Scamp—a horse I have alluded to elsewhere was quite agreeable to do his best in a hurdle race, although he would gallop hard against three hurdles out of five and knock them down; Quits, on the other hand, was not willing to do even this. In fact he was so imbued with Conservatism—he came from Shardeloes !— that he resolutely set his face against the b “illegitimate” game altogether, and would have none of it. To begin with —and this, whether you are schooling a horse for hurdle jumping, or getting over a country a small obstacle, such as a pole laid on uprights dressed up with fresh gorse, and not exceeding three feet in height, should be set up, and the novice “led” over it by a staid and clever jumper. Let him have it as slowly flurdle Racing 231 as he likes, at first; jumping it at full speed will very soon follow when once the young- ster’s natural nervousness shall have worn off. If the beginner shows a disinclination to jump, a good plan is to ride him by himself over a farm, taking him over very low places, gaps in hedges, small grips, &e., until something like confidence comes to him, then bring him back to your gorse fence again. When he has surmounted this two or three times in safety (and be careful not to make his lessons too long, for fear of dis- custing him with the whole business), he may be taken at a low hurdle, with the lead, again, of a good reliable jumper. If his progress is still satisfactory, imcrease the pace a bit, and let him come fairly up to his fence at galloping pace. But you cannot be too patient with him; if he is nervous or even perverse, you must be good-humoured with him; it is not a bit of use meeting ill- temper with ill-temper; you only make things worse. As Charles Mathews said of ? “Honesty” being “the best policy,” so can 232 In Scarlet and Silk I say that “I have tried both ways, and I know.” But always keep this “ pasted into your hat.” However small the obstacle is, and whether it be hurdles, or pole, or what not, it has got to be ywmped, not run through or in any way knocked down. Nothing is more mischievous than for a beginner to find that he can do this. Be you very sure that he will take an early opportunity of trying to run through something stiff, such as a stile or post and rails, in which case the horse is sure to finish a poor second to the timber! After he has galloped satisfactorily over three or four flights of low hurdles, you can increase them to the ordinary height which he will have to encounter on the race-course, and a couple of good gallops over these, in the company of two or three more horses to give him confidence, will pretty well fit him for his new business in life. It should be borne in mind that in a hurdle race a horse must not stop to jump; neither, indeed, may he do so in a modern steeplechase. He ought to gallop right up Flurdle Racing 233 to his hurdles, be over and away again as quick as a rabbit. If he “pitches” over, and lands with a jerk, he must inevitably lose ground, as he takes all the “way” off himself, and has to be set going afresh. A horse that jumps too big, again, is sure to “oet left” at hurdle racing, as he takes too much out of himself at his fences: this, however, is a fault that most horses soon cure themselves of. In fact, as soon as a horse gets at all beat, whether racing or otherwise, he will, in most cases, be more inclined to run into the opposite extreme and “chance” his. fences. Although to ride in a hurdle race looks at the first blush a less risky thing than steering a horse over the fences, I am not at all sure that it is not, in fact, more dangerous; and I can eall to mind several very bad accidents that have happened by collision, horses jumping into their hurdles, others jumping upon a fallen rider, &c. Notably Robert TAnson’s fall on Lord Clive (Sir George Chetwynd’s) at Brighton; J. 234 In Scarlet and Silk Page’s at Sandown, when Lord Marcus Beresford, who was then starter to the Jockey Club, told me that he had been to see him, and found his head literally split open: how he ever recovered is a marvel; but then Page himself 7s a marvel! Poor Sensier, again, and Sam Daniels both lost their lives over the “sticks.” I remember seeing a comical hurdle race run at Bromley, where a blundering old black mare, named (I think) Queen Bee, made all the running—it was in the old days of ‘“ mile and a half over six flights,” for the abolition of which our thanks are due to Lord Mareus Beresford—and she knocked down a hurdle at every flight. I don’t think .we had to jump one! It was on this course, too, that I saw a ridiculous incident, many years ago. One horse kept breaking away at the start, until “the man with the flag” got into a fearful rage, and let out at the jockey of the recalcitrant in no measured terms. I must say I think the rider in question was trying to ageravate him in order to make the rest Flurdle Racing 235 laugh. We were about a hundred yards behind the post as the starter kept fuming at us to ‘Go back; turn round, all the lot of you, and go back!” and all but one—I fancy it was old Dick Shepherd—did go back. That one, however, was standing stock still up at the post, and the starter, being short- sighted, never noticed him. We were “all over the place,” and naturally thought the wrathful official would call the ‘“ advance ouard” back, but suddenly we were electrified by hearing him scream out “Go!” and seeing his flag drop. Away went the man in front like lightning, and no one ever got near him throughout the race! One of the dangers of hurdle racing— especially when there are a lot of runners, and not too much room at the obstacles— is that your horse’s view is obscured, and he consequently takes off a bit late, or, perhaps, too soon. Again, if a refuser suddenly comes right across you, you will be lucky to escape coming down. And here let me pause for a moment to assure my readers that however 236 In Scarlet and Silk rich their vocabulary may, and probably will, be under such circumstances, the flow of language is not half so effectual as a quick snatch at the reins! Nowadays, we get such wonderful ‘ class” horses running in hurdle races, that the old saying of, ‘Oh, he’s use- less; put him into a selling hurdle race,” has pretty well died out. Chandos, Hesper, Hampton, and Lowlander, a few years back, didn’t read like being beaten by the ordinary “leather flapper”; and Stourhead, winner of the Goodwood Stakes ; Benburb; Cornbury, winner of this years Metropolitan at Epsom; Pitcher, and others of the same sort, too numerous for mention here, that have been at the timber-topping trade, would all take some catching by the average “rip,” which in times past was wont to find < ) a last over the ‘refuge for the destitute’ sticks. An incorrigible joker once said to me as we watched the horses gallop on Newmarket Heath— “There goes one that ought to make a Flurdle Racing 237 good hurdle racer,’ pointing at the time to Charon, a son of Hermit and Barchettina. In the unsuspicious blush of innocence I asked him why. “Well,” he said, ‘if Charon can’t go across the Styx (sticks), it’s a pity!” and this puts me in mind of a smart mot in connection with Orme’s Derby. Sir John Blundell Maple’s Saraband had been freely backed, and report said that he was ro lbs. better than The Bard.