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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #52307 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/52307)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Life of a Foxhound, by John Mills
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Life of a Foxhound
-
-Author: John Mills
-
-Illustrator: John Leech
-
-Release Date: June 11, 2016 [EBook #52307]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE OF A FOXHOUND ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-THE LIFE OF A FOXHOUND.
-
-[Illustration: THE MEET.]
-
-
-
-
- THE
- LIFE OF A
- FOXHOUND.
-
- BY
- JOHN MILLS,
- AUTHOR OF “THE OLD ENGLISH GENTLEMAN,” “THE LIFE OF A
- RACEHORSE,” ETC.
-
- THE FIFTH EDITION,
- WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY
- JOHN LEECH.
-
- [Illustration]
-
- LONDON
- PHILIP ALLAN & CO.
- QUALITY COURT, CHANCERY LANE
-
- First Edition 1848
- Second Edition 1861
- Third Edition 1892
- Fourth Edition 1910
- Fifth Edition 1921
-
- Printed by WHITEHEAD BROS., WOLVERHAMPTON.
-
-
-
-
- TO
- HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS
- THE PRINCE OF WALES
- K.G., G.M.M.G., G.M.B.E., M.C., &c.
-
-
-SIR,
-
-That fox-hunting is an ancient and honourable pastime all will agree:
-ancient in that the fox was held to be a beast of venery by our
-Anglo-Saxon ancestors, honourable because it is a sport that has ever
-been associated with those excellent qualities of manhood which are the
-prerogative of our race. That it is a royal pastime is equally plain:
-for hunting has been regarded, in all ages, as the chief sport of Kings
-and Princes. Indeed it is due principally to the encouragement and
-protection accorded to it by the Royal House of England that the noble
-sport of fox-hunting is in so flourishing a condition to-day. And so
-it is both fitting and proper, Sir, that this, the fifth edition of a
-notable contribution to our sporting literature, should be dedicated to
-you who uphold so admirably the traditions of British sport.
-
- Your Royal Highness’s
- humble, obedient servant,
- THE EDITOR.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-Trimbush told his story--the story of his life--long ago, and a
-generation of sportsmen having, probably, been succeeded by another
-since then, the autobiography of that old and sagacious hound is
-now presented to the notice of those who may have been denied the
-opportunity of profiting either by his sage advice or experience.
-
-It will be conceded that, whatever egotism taints his arguments,
-Trimbush was “a shrewd philosopher, having a why for every wherefore.”
-He spoke of men and foxes as he found them; and if occasionally
-somewhat too severe upon the commissions and omissions of the former,
-he was equally ready, at all times, to show his teeth to the latter.
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
-
- THE MEET _Frontispiece_
-
- “HEAD AND HANDS WILL BEAT HEELS” 66
-
- A CURIOUS FINISH 76
-
- “HOLD HAR-R-R-D!” 100
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- CHAPTER. PAGE.
-
- I. 1
-
- II. 16
-
- III. 39
-
- IV. 51
-
- V. 67
-
- VI. 79
-
- VII. 91
-
- VIII. 102
-
- IX. 111
-
- X. 121
-
- XI. 139
-
- XII. 147
-
- XIII. 158
-
- XIV. 172
-
- XV. 182
-
- XVI. 193
-
-
-
-
-THE LIFE OF A FOXHOUND.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-
-I had the excellent fortune, begins Ringwood’s memoir, to be put at
-walk at a farm-house, where I enjoyed the treatment observed to all the
-animals under the care and protection of the farmer and his wife--that
-of universal kindness. Sweet milk, meal, and broth were my provisions;
-and I never was without a clean, dry, and warm bed. Basking in the sun,
-playing with the shepherd’s dog, following the men at work, and in a
-complete state of perfect freedom, my early puppyhood passed. I mention
-these apparently trifling circumstances, because so much depends, as
-will be shown hereafter, upon the way in which we are brought up. I was
-one of a litter of five, consisting of three brothers and two sisters,
-and each had been placed at a separate walk; so that, until we were
-sent to the kennel to be drafted, we had not seen each other since the
-day of separation.
-
-Sorry as I was to leave my kind benefactors, still I felt no small
-degree of pride as, on a bright, sunny, spring morning, I was led
-into a court of the kennel, and met with greater admiration from the
-huntsmen and whips than any other of the young entry therein assembled,
-consisting of eleven couples and a half.
-
-“Upon my word,” said the huntsman, looking at me carefully from head to
-stern, “I don’t think that I ever saw such a beauty in my life. Such
-deep quarters, straight legs, round feet, and broad back are not to be
-met with every day, mind ye.”
-
-“Look at them shoulders and elbows too,” rejoined the first whip.
-
-“And what a muzzle!” returned the second.
-
-“Bless’d if he ain’t perfect symmetry!” echoed the feeder, after a long
-and silent gaze.
-
-“I _do_ think he is,” added the huntsman, emphatically. “Or if he
-isn’t, _I_ can’t see a bad point in him.”
-
-“That shows what the walk will do,” said the feeder, an old grey-headed
-man, pointing to four of our company. “Nobody would believe those were
-of the same litter, didn’t they know it.”
-
-But for this I should not have recognised my brothers and sisters, who
-certainly bore a very different appearance from that given of me by the
-huntsman. As we appeared strangers to each other, I at once made myself
-known, and inquired after their health and treatment since we last met.
-
-“Oh,” replied one of my brothers, snappishly, “I was sent to the
-village ale-house, where I had to pick up my own living, and got more
-kicks than good will. I was always in somebody’s way, try as I did to
-keep out of it; and the consequence is, I can’t run a mile without
-feeling as if my back’s broken. We don’t always die on the day we are
-killed,” continued he.
-
-“As for me,” said my other fraternal relative--a mangy,
-out-of-the-elbow, shy-looking, down-cast hound--“I was tied up from one
-month’s end to another at a butcher’s shop, with nothing to eat but
-the offal from the slaughter-house. I never, scarcely, was let loose,
-except to fight with one of the bull-dogs or terriers chained in the
-yard with me; but as I was always over-matched when I fought, and got
-well thrashed when I refused, the end was the same in either case. The
-best part of a hound,” continued he, “as the best part of a horse, goes
-in at the mouth; and as none, since I was a sucker, has gone into mine,
-I suppose I must consider myself no better than I should be; and I
-fear,” concluded he, with a sorrowful expression, “not so good.”
-
-“Let me hope that my sisters were more fortunate,” said I.
-
-“We were together in the same village,” replied one, “although at
-different homes. I was at the saddler’s and my sister at the miller’s,
-and both shared the common hardships of being continually worried by
-a set of idle boys. Stoned, hallooed at, kettles tied to our tails,
-and all kinds of tricks were played upon us. Whenever anything eatable
-was missed or stolen, it was invariably laid to our charge; so that we
-could not even put our heads into a doorway without having a stick or a
-broom flung at us. Day after day this was our treatment, and although
-we did not suffer from a scarcity of food, yet from being obliged to
-shift for ourselves in getting beds where we could find them, sometimes
-cold, sometimes wet, and no system being observed in either our meals
-or lodgings, we were seldom without lameness or ill-health of one kind
-or other.”
-
-My sister was about giving the further details of their grievances,
-when the second whip, a fine, young, athletic man, interrupted her
-narration by observing that “he would draft all the litter but me.”
-
-“No, no,” returned the feeder, shaking his head. “You’ll not find the
-Squire do that: we must keep ’em for their blood.”
-
-“Come,” added the huntsman, turning upon his heel, “they’re all in now,
-and to-morrow will show what are to be entered. We’ve no voice in the
-matter.”
-
-“And don’t want to have,” rejoined the feeder, “with such a master as
-the Squire is.”
-
-Soon after my entry I was taken under the protection of an old hound
-called Trimbush, and the favourite one in the pack. He had been hunted
-six seasons, and, as may be supposed, was awake to every wrinkle.
-
-“Hounds, like men,” said he, one day, as we stretched ourselves
-together in the shade of a large chestnut-tree overhanging the court,
-“should first learn their duties, and then perform them. Now, young-un,
-I’ve taken a fancy to you,” continued he, giving me a playful flip
-with the tip of his stern; “and if you follow my advice you will save
-yourself many a stinging cut from our Whip’s double-thong. He hits
-terribly hard, I assure ye.”
-
-“Does he?” replied I, believing, in my innocence, that such a
-good-tempered, laughing fellow would scarcely brush a fly from our
-hackles.
-
-“So you’ll say,” continued my friend, “when you’ve tasted it.”
-
-“But I mean to avoid flogging,” I rejoined, “by obeying orders.”
-
-“Pooh, pooh,” returned Trimbush, testily. “Intentions are good enough;
-but a fig for orders when the blood’s up! I don’t always obey them
-myself, old as I am. However, as you haven’t yet viewed a fox, it’s no
-use my mentioning anything about the field. We shall begin cub-hunting
-in a few weeks, and then you will get a little insight as to what you
-are to do there. In the meantime I’ll cut some notches in your memory
-regarding kennel discipline, and relate a few peculiarities concerning
-your companions.”
-
-“Thank you,” said I to the friendly offer.
-
-“In the first place I should tell you,” began Trimbush, “that the best
-step to take at the outset is to endeavour to become a favourite with
-those in authority over you. This is easily acquired, by doing that
-which you are told cheerfully, and without the trouble of compulsion
-being exercised. For it’s one thing to disobey an order when hunting,
-and quite another in the kennel. We all love our huntsman, Will Sykes;
-but he is very strict, and never allows a fault to pass without a rate
-or the thong being applied. When called, walk up to him with your
-ears thrown back smilingly, and carry your stern high and proudly.
-Will can’t bear a hound to look like a sneak. Don’t be quarrelsome at
-feeding time, or indeed at any other; for although family differences
-will occasionally arise over the meal and broth, never be among the
-first to cause them. I am far from meaning by this that you are not to
-maintain your rights; on the contrary, you, like everything that lives,
-not only possess them, but are bound, in self-defence, to support them.
-There is as much danger, if not more, in always giving way to the
-domineering of tyrants as in acting the tyrant yourself; although,”
-continued Trimbush, with a growl at the reminiscence, “the results
-proved the same here not more than three seasons since.”
-
-“How was that?” inquired I.
-
-“Why,” replied he, “in all packs there is a master hound, who lords
-it over the rest just as he pleases. Now it frequently happens that
-this master becomes a regular bully, and so worries and torments his
-companions, that there is no living in comfort with him. We had a
-governor of this kind three years ago, and what do you think we did?”
-
-“Can’t say,” rejoined I.
-
-“Killed and ate him,” returned Trimbush, with no more concern than if
-speaking of the death of a rabbit.
-
-“Killed and ate him!” repeated I, horrified.
-
-“Ay,” rejoined he, “marrow, bones, and all, with the exception of his
-head.”[1]
-
- [1] This took place some years since in Mr. Conyer’s kennel, at
- Copthall, Essex.
-
-“Dog eat dog!” I exclaimed, scarcely believing the statement to be true.
-
-“It’s not an every-day occurrence,” coolly replied Trimbush; “but what
-I’ve told ye is by no means a solitary instance, as you shall learn.
-There was a shy, broken-spirited puppy entered the same season with me,
-and whenever any of us began a bit of fun with him, he’d shriek and
-howl ‘pen-an-ink’ just as if he was being murdered. This, of course,
-led every one to take advantage, and the poor devil never had any peace
-of mind or body. One day, however, when a few of us had pinned him in a
-corner of the court, and were baiting him for sport, who should step in
-but Ned Adams, the second whip. How he paid us off, to be sure! Not one
-escaped but with every bone in his body aching fit to split.”
-
-“But it served all of you right,” interrupted I.
-
-“Perhaps it did,” rejoined Trimbush; “but we thought otherwise, and no
-sooner had Ned turned his back than we commenced making a retaliation
-upon the cur who had caused us such a drubbing. We had scarcely begun,
-however, when Ned again made his unwelcome appearance, and flogged us
-until every stroke from his double-thong seemed to soak right through
-our bodies. Before the cock gave notice of the coming day,” continued
-Trimbush, significantly, “Tricksy--for that was the name of the
-hound--was disposed of so as to leave no trace behind.”
-
-“Eaten!” I ejaculated.
-
-“We didn’t leave,” replied my friend deliberately, and dropping his
-words like peas from his jaws, “even his _head_.”
-
-“But why was this done?” inquired I.
-
-“The simplicity of infancy is truly refreshing!” observed Trimbush.
-“There’s an adage, that a dead dog _may_ tell how he was killed,”
-continued he; “but an _eaten_ one never can. Do you comprehend?”
-
-“Perfectly,” responded I.
-
-“From what I have said,” he resumed, “you must now be aware of the
-policy of neither being overbearing to your fellows, nor too tame or
-submissive to them. I am now master here, and this is the rule I both
-teach and observe.”
-
-“And a very good one too,” I remarked; “but don’t let me interrupt you.
-Pray proceed.”
-
-“You would find out in time,” resumed Trimbush, “but may as well profit
-by my experience, and learn it at once, that most men who go with us
-to the covert-side know little about hunting and less about hounds. So
-long as their patience is not cramped with drawing blanks, and we go
-the pace with heads up and sterns down, they are satisfied, and take
-little further interest in us. Not one in fifty can tell even what
-the points of a hound are; and as for understanding anything about
-our habits and dispositions, they think that we are as much alike as
-cherries upon the same stalk. So far, however, from that being the
-case, we differ from each other in every respect as much as man to man
-engaged in the same pursuit, and frequently inherit the peculiarities
-of our fathers and mothers, as they do. You see that black-and-tan
-hound basking in the sun?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“That’s Valentine. Now, his father, who was killed from a kick three
-years ago, always trotted to and from kennel just under the huntsman’s
-off stirrup, and Valentine does precisely the same. There’s Graceful, a
-bitch in the next court--she invariably is the first home and the last
-to covert, and her mother did the like before her.”
-
-“That appears to be innate laziness,” I observed.
-
-“No,” replied Trimbush. “So far from that being the case, there never
-were better working hounds on earth.”
-
-“Then how do you account for it?” inquired I.
-
-“There are many things,” returned Trimbush, with the air of a
-philosopher, “as clear to our vision as the sunshine at noon, and yet
-their causes are hid in impenetrable darkness. I cannot,” continued he,
-“tell why Graceful and Valentine should inherit the eccentricities of
-their parents, but only see that they do so.”
-
-“Are these the only two instances coming under your observation?” I
-asked.
-
-“By no means,” replied my companion. “I could recite a dozen others
-of a similar nature, but I fear they might prove wearisome. You see
-that badger-pied hound amusing himself by snapping at the flies buzzing
-about him? Well, he is a nephew of mine, and makes it a rule, as his
-father did, to carry home whatever part of the varmint that falls to
-his share, and never eats it, unless there is a great chance of its
-being dragged away from him, till he gets to the kennel door.”
-
-“Perhaps he wishes to show everybody on the road that he had a hand in
-the breaking up,” said I.
-
-“I think vanity has something to do with it,” replied my friend; “but
-if so, he inherits the pride from his sire, just as those peculiarities
-I have named are inborn in others.”
-
-“I suppose, if these habits descend from parent to child,” I observed,
-“that vices are also inheritable.”
-
-“Decidedly,” replied Trimbush, beginning to evince symptoms of
-drowsiness. “Rioting, skirting, babbling, and all such-like faults, are
-inheritable, and as much so as the defective points in symmetry.”
-
-“It appears to me somewhat harsh, then,” rejoined I, “to punish us for
-them.”
-
-“That’s a matter,” added Trimbush, “I must leave to be decided between
-you and Ned Adams;” and then turning upon his side he closed his eyes,
-and a deep, low snore quickly proclaimed him to be in the land of
-shadowy dreams.
-
-I found kennel life at first very tedious, and soon began to pine for
-the farm-house, liberty, and a romp with the shaggy old shepherd’s dog.
-I became so home-sick at length, that had the opportunity offered, I
-should have run away; but when taken for exercise, I was always coupled
-with a companion, and no chance given of an escape from my thraldom.
-Notwithstanding the kindness of the feeder, in offering me food twice,
-and occasionally even three times a day, I got thinner and thinner,
-and instead of the sleek and bright coat which I had upon leaving my
-walk, my hackles now began to stare and to look little less rough than
-a badger’s skin. Trimbush, too, essayed to relieve me from my load of
-misery, and recounted many a tale of interest to wean me from gloomy
-reflections; but it was all to no purpose. I could not forget the
-pleasures of home.
-
-“He’ll be right enough in a day or two,” said the huntsman to an
-expression of regret from the feeder at my altered appearance. “Let
-him go cub-hunting once, and he will not sulk another hour.”
-
-“I believe ye,” rejoined the feeder. “There’s too good blood in him for
-that, after he has winded a fox.”
-
-“Well, then,” added the huntsman, “to-morrow at daylight we draw
-Wiverton Gorse; and if it does not hold a litter, it will be the first
-time since my servitude--a matter of twenty-five years and more.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
- “But, look! the morn, in russet mantle clad,
- Walks o’er the dew of yon high eastern hill.”
-
-
-The dew fell, dropping from leaf to leaf, and hung on the greensward in
-an endless succession of glistening gems. The mist floated on a light
-breeze, scarcely strong enough to waft the wet spider’s film meshed
-on sprig, and bough, and hawthorn spray. Mushrooms marked the rings
-where the elves of the night had held their orgies, and the fairy’s
-light--the glowworm’s lamp--still shone faintly on the moss-bank. Like
-a bride, veiled but not hidden, the young, gay morning broke, with a
-smile, the slumbering hours. Drooping flowers raised their petals, and
-folded blossoms opened to her kiss. Wild and happy birds heralded her
-coming, and all things of the day welcomed her.
-
-At daybreak we were on our road to Wiverton Gorse, accompanied by Will
-Sykes, the huntsman, Tom Holt and Ned Adams, the assistant whippers-in.
-I could not suppress the delight I felt in going to cover; and, instead
-of the homesick and sullen feeling which I had had for a length of
-time, I was ready to jump out of my skin with spirits.
-
-“Pray, keep quiet!” said Trimbush, in a reproving tone, as I galloped
-to his side, and laid hold of one of his ears, by way of an invitation
-to a romp. “Pray, keep quiet!” repeated he; “you can’t be too steady in
-going to cover. Nurse your strength,” he continued, “until it’s wanted.”
-
-“I could race for thirty miles this morning, without a check!” replied
-I, boastfully.
-
-“Pooh, pooh!” rejoined Trimbush; “that’s the way with you
-young-uns--all brag and self-conceit; and when it comes to hard
-running, where are ye in a brace of shakes? Somewhat in this form,”
-continued he, hanging down his head, with outstretched tongue and
-drooping stern.
-
-I laughed heartily at Trimbush’s acting a fagged and beaten hound; and,
-although I had not seen one at the time, I subsequently learned that it
-was a very faithful representation.
-
-“One would think, from that puppy’s gambolsome larking,” observed the
-huntsman, pointing to me, “that he knows what he’s going about.”
-
-“Perhaps he do,” sagely returned Tom Holt.
-
-“How the devil should he?” rejoined Will Sykes. “Isn’t this his first
-day’s cub-hunting?”
-
-“Yes,” added the first whip. “But don’t you think them dumb animals
-have a language of their own? I’m blest if they don’t almost talk to us
-sometimes.”
-
-“Ha! ha! ha!” laughed Will Sykes. “You’re a pretty kind of a Christian,
-Tom. I suppose, by-an’-bye, you’ll say they sing hymns.”
-
-“I don’t see why they shouldn’t,” replied the imperturbable Tom Holt.
-“At least,” continued he, “if they don’t, they’re a sight more sensible
-than many of those that do.”
-
-“Come, come,” said the huntsman, in a correcting tone; “try back, Tom.
-We shall have stones fall from the clouds presently, if you go on in
-that way.”
-
-“It wouldn’t surprise me if they did,” replied the whipper-in, as cool
-as a cucumber. “When so many folk, both gentle an’ simple, are building
-castles in the air, it’s nothing but reasonable that some o’ the stones
-should tumble.”
-
-“Ca-a-pital!” added Will Sykes admiringly. “I like a sharp and ready
-tongue. But you don’t really mean to say, Tom, that you think hounds
-have a way of speaking to one another?”
-
-“Yes, I do,” replied the whipper-in; “and have no doubt of the fact.
-They have the sense,” continued he, “to understand what we say _to_
-them, and a great deal, in my opinion, of what we say _of_ them; and
-it’s quite as natural, if not more so, that they should have a language
-of their own, as it is for them to comprehend a foreign one.”
-
-“Your notions are queer ones, Tom,” observed the huntsman. “And you’d
-have me believe, I suppose, that Ringwood there has been _told_ what
-he’s going to do?”
-
-“Nothing more likely,” replied Tom Holt.
-
-We were now on the verge of Wiverton Gorse--an extensive brake of some
-forty acres of high but not thick furze, except in patches where it had
-been lately cut.
-
-“Don’t let a hound get away,” said the huntsman. “We’ll rattle the
-covers well; but be sure and hold the hounds in.”
-
-At this moment Bluecap and Dauntless made an attempt to sneak away;
-and, before getting a rate from Ned Adams, found his double thong
-cracking round their loins.
-
-“That’s for not waiting orders,” observed Trimbush.
-
-“Cover-hoik! cover-hoik!” hallooed the huntsman; “Elooin-hoik!” and
-into the brake we crashed like a flash of lightning.
-
-“That’s the dash of the old blood!” said the huntsman, as I rushed
-through the gorse with the ambitious eagerness to find. “I’d bet a
-season’s capping,” continued he, “that he takes as kindly to work as a
-baby does to sucking.”
-
-“You’d better keep by me,” observed Trimbush, “and learn a little of
-your business, instead of tearing your eyes out in that blundering,
-stupid manner. One would think, if you were not a greenhorn of a puppy,
-that a dying fox stood before ye, instead of not having so much as
-found one.”
-
-But I was in no humour to be dictated to; and in spite of lacerating
-the corners of my eyes, ears and stern, I flew right and left through
-the furze, in the hope of being the first to challenge. In pressing
-through a thick patch, I scented that which I instantly concluded must
-be a fox; and, immediately afterwards catching a glimpse of something
-spring across a ride, I threw up my head, and made the cover echo as I
-dashed along the line. I was much surprised, however, that none of the
-old hounds joined me, and that, with the exception of three or four
-of the same age as myself, who merely gave tongue because I did, no
-response or cheer was given to my efforts.
-
-In a few seconds we found ourselves through the brake at the farthest
-corner up wind, and in close proximity to the dreaded presence of Ned
-Adams.
-
-“War hare, puppy!” hallooed he, riding at me, and cracking his heavy
-whip. “War hare! war hare! Hark back! hark back!”
-
-Learning that I had committed an error, I was not slow to obey the
-caution, by getting out of the reach of the thong; although, as I
-afterwards discovered, there was no fear of being punished for a fault
-until it had been repeated. Scarcely had I again turned into the brake,
-when my friend Trimbush gave a deep-toned note, announcing that a fox
-was afoot.
-
-“Hoik to Trimbush!” hallooed the huntsman--“Hoik to Trimbush!” and, as
-a bunch of hounds took up the cry, he added, “Hoik together, hoik!”
-
-Galloping on the line where three or four couple of the knowing ones
-were feathering their sterns and ringing their music, I for the first
-time winded a fox. Anxious to distinguish myself, I at once began
-making more din about it than all the old hounds put together.
-
-“Don’t jingle your tongue as if you were currant-jelly hunting,” said
-Trimbush, contemptuously, as I joined his side. “A workman,” continued
-he, “never wastes his breath with too much whistling.”
-
-Feeling that there was truth in his chiding, I changed my tone, and
-gave tongue only when my friend did.
-
-“That’s right,” remarked Trimbush, flattered at my observing his
-dictate: “now you sound like business.”
-
-“Have at him!” hallooed Will Sykes. “Yoo-oo-it, hoik!”
-
-Hounds were now hunting in every direction of the cover; and it was
-evident that several foxes were before them.
-
-“The vixen and the whole litter are a-foot!” I overheard the first whip
-say.
-
-“Did you view her?” inquired Will Sykes.
-
-“Yes!” was the reply; “and she’s gone away.”
-
-“Then there’s a dog-fox behind,” rejoined the huntsman.
-
-“I thought so,” quietly observed Trimbush, stooping his muzzle to the
-ground, and drawing, with infinite gratification to his olfactory
-nerves. “I thought so,” repeated he: “a vixen, except she’s barren,
-never carries such a scent as that.”
-
-“You know the difference, then?” returned I.
-
-“Ay,” rejoined Trimbush; “as well as if I had helped to break her up.
-And so will you in a couple of seasons.”
-
-“But how?” asked I.
-
-“By experience,” replied my companion; “and from the natural aversion
-most animals have to destroy anything with or about to have young. But
-come,” he continued, “this is no time for talking, although we shall
-be stopped from getting away if they can get to our heads in time.
-However, keep close to me, and I’ll try to get a bat by ourselves in
-spite of ’em.”
-
-“Who-whoop,” hallooed the huntsman.
-
-“They’ve chopped a cub,” said Trimbush. “Now’s our time, if Ned Adams
-doesn’t head him back.”
-
-A succession of loud cracks from a whip followed; but no halloo was
-given.
-
-“He’s gone away,” remarked Trimbush, with glee; “and we’ll be on good
-terms with him. Stick to me.”
-
-Keeping close to my companion’s stern, I ran stride and stride with him
-through the brake until we came to a corner of the cover where the fox
-we were hunting broke away.
-
-“Now then,” said Trimbush cheerily; “up with your head and down with
-your stern. Come along, the scent’s a burning one.”
-
-The instant that Trimbush was free of the cover, he laid himself upon
-the line, and raced like a greyhound; I following in his wake. Hearing
-the heavy stride of a horse in our rear, I turned my head to see who
-was following.
-
-“Take no notice,” said the old hound: “If Ned gets to our heads--and
-he’ll prick blood for it, I’ll be sworn--the sport’s all over with us.”
-
-“What the deuce does he want to stop us for?” inquired I.
-
-“Pooh,” rejoined Trimbush. “Rattle on.”
-
-The second whip came spurring on with the evident desire of reaching
-us; but the faster he came, the faster we flew.
-
-“Ha, ha!” laughed Trimbush; “we’ll give ye a sob for it.”
-
-Along two open grass fields we led the whipper-in; and then, for more
-than a mile, up a long, narrow lane, flanked by two high banks.
-
-“I haven’t carried a bit of scent since we left the turf,” observed I.
-
-“Nor I either,” replied my companion.
-
-“Then what’s the use of flashing on in this way?” I asked.
-
-“You’ve no cunning in ye yet,” replied Trimbush, “or you wouldn’t ask
-such a simple question. However, so much the better. Craft in the young
-is unwholesome; while, if the old don’t possess some, they have lived
-too long unprofitably. Now, we have no time to stop, and if we had we
-could do nothing with the scent on this hard, dry road: but having
-found our fox _up_ wind, and as he turned _down_ upon breaking cover, I
-know that he will _not_ turn again. We have, therefore, but to make our
-own cast good one way; and then, in the event of not being able to hit
-it off, to try the other to be certain of getting on the line--unless,
-indeed, he should chance to head short back, which not one fox out of a
-hundred will do, unless it is to die.”
-
-“But we shall have no chance of making a cast,” said I, “with Ned at
-our sterns.”
-
-“I know the point he’s making for,” returned my friend; “and if we once
-get clear of this everlasting lane on to the scrubs, I’ll forgive Ned
-if he stops us this time. I _do_ like,” continued he, “a run o’ this
-kind. There’s a spice about anything stolen.”
-
-Upon coming to a sudden turn in the road, Trimbush all but stood still
-at seeing a flock of sheep in our way; who, upon our nearing them,
-began scampering before us, and became wedged together like one solid
-body.
-
-“The devil!” exclaimed my companion, making an ineffectual effort
-to reach the edge of the steep bank, and reeling almost over in the
-attempt. “No matter,” continued he, as springing upon his feet, and
-rushing forwards, he galloped along the backs of the scared flock; and,
-following his example, we cleared the impediment, and found ourselves
-on the right side of a great obstacle to our pursuer, Ned Adams.
-
-“Now we’re all right,” said Trimbush, exultingly; “and we shall have it
-to ourselves in spite of ’em.”
-
-The long twisting and twining lane led on to an open heath or
-sheep-walk, covered here and there with patches of broom, furze, and
-dwarf blackberry bushes.
-
-“We’ll first try down wind to the right,” said Trimbush; “for although
-Will Sykes very often takes us just the other way, so as to make sure
-the varmint hasn’t given us the artful dodge by slipping back on his
-foil, it’s a bad cast except with a beaten fox, and generally widens
-the distance between us and him. Always,” continued the old hound,
-stooping his muzzle to the ground as he trotted cautiously along, “try
-the way first you think he’s gone; and, having made that good, it’s
-quite time enough to take the other.”
-
-On coming to some sloping, moist ground, Trimbush stopped, and,
-feathering for a moment, threw up his head and made the air ring with
-melody as he hit off the scent again.
-
-“We are all right,” said he, exultingly. “We’ll either kill or burst
-him to earth.”
-
-I could now wind the varmint with my head stretched in the air; and it
-was as easy hunting as a bagman sprinkled with aniseed.
-
-“There’s nothing like break-o’-day hunting,” observed my companion:
-“the ground is cool and unstained; and there are no people about. Those
-terrible enemies to our sport, shepherd’s dogs, too, are not often in
-the way; and the hundred-and-one difficulties to be picked through at
-noon removed.”
-
-“But we are not thrown off generally at this hour, are we?” inquired I.
-
-“Never,” replied my friend, “except at this season. In times gone
-by,” continued he, “as I have heard tell, the meet used to be before
-cock-crow; and often hounds would be waiting at the cover-side for
-daylight. But fox-hunting, like most other things, has undergone a
-great change; and instead of the old slow-and-sure system of occupying
-minutes to find and hours to kill, we are now, taking the season
-through, hours finding, and minutes killing.”
-
-“Which afforded most sport, do you think?” inquired I.
-
-“It’s difficult to say,” returned Trimbush. “Unless we go the pace,
-men now consider that there is no sport whatever; but some years since,
-the merits of a good hunting run had nothing to do with the time in
-which it was done, like a horse-race. With a cold scent, stained
-ground, and an unruly field--heading the fox, riding over us, and
-hallooing at everything from a cow’s tail to a jackdaw--we frequently
-pick through, and even hold it on with extraordinary keenness; but
-seldom, indeed, do we get any credit for our pains. If, however, the
-scent is breast high--as it is this morning, or I couldn’t talk to
-you--and we fly along without a check, for fifteen or twenty minutes,
-with blood for the finish, then there is no end to the praise, and
-we receive nothing but commendation and renown. Not that _I_ am an
-advocate for slow hunting:--for the enjoyment of sport, there must
-be a dash, spirit, and fire; and in creeping along at snail’s speed
-there can be neither one nor the other. But what I wish our admirers
-and critics to understand is, that a fast run by no means shows our
-qualities, but a slow one may do so; and often that both our praise and
-our censure are equally unmerited.”
-
-“Still,” said I, beginning to pant for wind as we rattled up a steep
-hill, with the scent improving, if possible, at every stride, “as
-the old exploded system wanted that dash and spirit which, you say,
-are indispensable for first-rate sport, there can be no doubt of the
-present one being the most desirable.”
-
-“On the whole I think so,” rejoined my companion; “but that may be,” he
-continued, “from not being practically acquainted with any other. At
-the same time, ‘honour to those to whom honour is due;’ and my belief
-is that our ancestors, the line hunters, _hunted_ their fox as well, if
-not better, than we who now _race_ him down.”
-
-“Your judgment’s an impartial one,” returned I.
-
-“Good or bad, better or worse,” resumed Trimbush, “it’s no use arguing
-about the matter: ’tis the pace now that’s wanted, and will be had. If
-we can’t hunt, we must race; and the moment we’re at fault you’ll hear
-a dozen tongues holloa:--‘Lift ’em hard, Will. That’s your time o’ day.
-Chink-wink ’em along!’”
-
-“There’s no time given, then?” said I.
-
-“Time!” repeated Trimbush with a sneer. “I’ll just give ye an instance
-of what may be deemed a fair sample of the patience of sportsmen of
-the age we live in. One day last season we had been running a merry
-bat, for about twenty minutes, as hard as we could split, and leading
-the field over enough yawners to satisfy the greatest glutton or
-steeple-chase rider that ever crammed at a rasper. The fox was dying,
-and, heading short on his foil up wind, brought us to a momentary
-check. ‘Hold hard, gentlemen!’ hallooed Will Sykes; ‘pray hold hard!’
-‘Consume me!’ exclaimed one who had been jamming his horse close to
-our sterns; ‘what sport one might have, if it wasn’t for these d----d
-hounds!’”
-
-“A pretty kind of a foxhunter, truly!” I remarked.
-
-“A faithful description of the majority, I can assure ye,” replied my
-companion. “But I must not lose any more breath in talking to you,”
-continued he; “I may feel the want of it.”
-
-I had already done so, but was too proud to let the symptoms be visible
-in any flagging on my part. Desirous as I was, however, to maintain the
-pace we had been going for some minutes, and over part of an enclosed
-country with strong fences, I began to feel my strength failing, and
-the absurdity of my boast of endurance becoming manifested. I now, in
-spite of every exertion, dropped in the rear; and although Trimbush
-cheered me to hold on, I could not but think there was a chuckle
-of triumph in his often-repeated query, “Why don’t you come along?
-Recollect what you said about thirty miles without a check.” And then,
-as if to mock me, the old hound increased his speed, and, upon reaching
-a wide and level common, ran completely out of view, leaving me alone
-in my glory.
-
-For a short time I endeavoured to struggle forwards, but quickly losing
-the line, and becoming bewildered and giddy from fatigue, I soon
-staggered to a stand-still. Ignorant of my way home, and not knowing
-what to do better, I gave tongue for assistance, and was heartily
-glad to have my cry responded to by the loud barking of a shepherd’s
-dog, whom I perceived with his master, in a valley at the foot of the
-hill on which I stood. In a few seconds he came trotting up to me,
-and mutual delight was experienced in finding that we were familiar
-acquaintances, and had had many a game of fun together when I was at
-walk at the home of my puppyhood, the hospitable farm-house.
-
-“What, Ringwood, lad!” exclaimed the shepherd upon approaching me, and
-patting my sides, “is it you? Zounds, but it is!” continued he. “I’d
-know thee anywhere, skeleton though ye be.”
-
-For that night I was housed in my old home, and the following day again
-conducted to the kennel.
-
-“I wouldn’t have lost him for the whole entry,” said Will Sykes,
-receiving me with a warm welcome. “I can’t think,” continued he,
-turning to the second whip, who, I thought, regarded me with rather a
-savage expression, “how you let ’em get away.”
-
-“I’ve told ye twenty times already,” replied Ned Adams, in a tone and
-manner portraying his humour, “that the devil himself couldn’t get to
-their heads. I did my best, and, like many o’ my betters, was beaten.”
-
-“Well, well!” rejoined the huntsman with glee, “it’s the first time
-that I ever heard of a whipper-in not being able to stop a puppy,
-cub-hunting. Ha, ha, ha.”
-
-“It was Trimbush, and not him,” returned the irate Ned.
-
-“Oh!” added Will Sykes, “It was Trimbush, eh? It wasn’t worth while
-then, I suppose, to get to the head of one without the other, and
-yet, if I am told rightly, it would have been a difficult job to have
-separated them.”
-
-The second whip was evidently chafed at this bantering, and turned away
-with a flushed cheek, and a tongue muttering anything but his prayers.
-
-Upon entering the kennel again, all my companions came round me, and
-each, in turn, licked my torn ears and eyes, and were as kind and
-friendly as if I had been a brother to each.
-
-“I am glad to see you back again,” observed Trimbush, raising himself
-from a corner of the court, and stretching his limbs. “I began to think
-some danger had befallen ye.”
-
-“No thanks to you for having escaped it,” replied I, somewhat sharply.
-
-“Oh!” rejoined the old hound, carelessly: “in a run it’s every hound
-for himself, and a kick for the hindmost. There’s no consideration
-then.”
-
-“What did you do with the varmint?” inquired I, anxious to learn the
-result of our hunt.
-
-“Within five minutes of tailing you off,” replied he, “I ran him from
-scent to view; and if he had not gone to ground, I’d have broken him
-up without any sharers in the feast. As it was,” he continued, “he
-was so hot and beaten that he couldn’t lie more than a few inches from
-the mouth of the earth; and there we remained, with our red rags out,
-panting and grinning at each other for hours. Now and then I had a
-scratching dig for him; but finding that I could make no progress for
-the roots, left at last reluctantly, and pointed for home, where I
-arrived when the stars were twinkling.”
-
-“Did you see Ned Adams upon your return?” I inquired.
-
-“No,” replied Trimbush. “Mark, the feeder, was waiting for me, knowing
-that I should be back in the course of the night, let the distance be
-ever so great; and the good old fellow examined my feet and gave me a
-good supper, without the least show of bad temper for having kept him
-from bed.”
-
-“The second whip would not have treated ye so,” I observed.
-
-“Perhaps not,” returned he. “You mustn’t suppose, however, that Ned
-bears any malice. He might feel vexed and chafed at not being able to
-obey orders, but he always lets bygones be bygones.”
-
-In the course of discussion relative to the events of our stolen run,
-and during which the remainder of our companions formed a willing
-auditory, I asked Trimbush how he discovered the difference between the
-scent of a dog fox and that of a vixen.
-
-“In the first place,” responded he, “it is never so strong; and when
-she has either laid down her cubs, is about to do so, or has not left
-off suckling, there is a peculiar odour with her which cannot be
-mistaken. Now, most animals,” continued he, “as I observed yesterday,
-have an aversion to kill those in any of the situations just described;
-but I should have added, _when the purpose is to eat them_. For
-instance, a stoat will not touch a rabbit when about to litter; but
-a terrier would kill her in a moment. This is the reason that so few
-birds are killed whose nests are on the ground. The weazel avoids the
-partridge and lark whilst setting, and the fox passes the pheasant.”
-
-“What!” exclaimed I. “Won’t a fox snap a pheasant from her nest?”
-
-“Gamekeepers,” resumed Trimbush, “would tell you, ‘Always when an
-opportunity presents itself;’ but I know better. A vixen, with a large
-litter, and food scanty, will do so now and then, I don’t deny; but
-what does she get? Skin, bone, and feathers--a most unsavoury morsel,
-for which the cubs will scarcely care to fight. The mother knows this
-well enough, and, unless driven to extremities, never takes any kind of
-bird from her nest.”
-
-“The farmer’s wife tells a different story,” I observed.
-
-“The farmer’s wife, like the gamekeeper, is a sworn enemy to foxes,”
-returned Trimbush, “and with equally groundless cause. If a single head
-of poultry is missed, the robbery is always ascribed to a fox, and,
-however devoid of foundation, never forgotten. The old trot dates her
-subsequent life from the event, and begins her tale with, ‘About six
-months after the fox took my duck,’ and so keeps the matter fresh and
-vivid to the end of her days.”
-
-“One would think you were a preserver instead of a killer of foxes,”
-said I.
-
-“Ay,” rejoined the speaker; “if it was not for preserving, we should
-have no opportunities of killing.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
- “We will, fair queen, up to the mountain’s top,
- And mark the musical confusion
- Of hounds, and echo in conjunction.”
-
-
-Will Sykes was designed by nature for a huntsman. With a short stature
-and wiry frame, he possessed activity, indomitable courage, patience,
-and judgment. His voice, too, seemed to come from his heart, as he
-cheered with lusty lungs; and his strong grey eyes encompassed a whole
-parish, when he threw them forward for a view. Good humour sat upon his
-lip, and there was a great secret in his possession, of being capable
-of pleasing everybody without any apparent effort. Proud--perhaps a
-little vain--was our Will of his exterior; but then there might be
-sufficient cause; for although his short-cropped hair was grizzled
-and frosted by time, and a few wrinkles--albeit the joint effects of
-laughter and age--were stamped on his ruddy cheeks, few could boast of
-a larger circle of admirers. Will could never pass through a village,
-in pink and boots, but old women and young--but more especially the
-young--and mothers and maids flocked to their cottage doors and windows
-to exchange nods and friendly greetings with him. Ladies, too, of the
-first degree acknowledged his polite lift of the cap with friendly
-smiles, and, at convenient seasons, inquired after the health of Mrs.
-Sykes, and took quite an interest in sundry other of his domesticities
-and household economy. And was the huntsman’s better half--the plump,
-the prim, the comely Mrs. Sykes--jealous of these attentions? By
-no means. That excellent and discriminating person considered that
-the favour in which Will was held by the gentle and simple might
-be ascribed to her tactics and general measures of expediency; and
-popularity, she had cogent reasons for supposing, had greatly to do
-with the liberal capping so invariably bestowed upon the huntsman,
-whenever his right and title to the gratuity accrued. Worthy indeed
-is the care to be recorded with which the worthy dame bleached and
-starched the cravat, folded and tied without a crease, around Will’s
-neck. The white cords, too, stained as they have been in many a run,
-with the mud flying in showers over them, are spotless, and without a
-speck to note the wear and tear of bygone seasons. His tops also bore
-evidence of a division of Mrs. Sykes’s accomplishments. Scratched and
-rubbed, it is true, they were; but no erasible mark was permitted to
-remain. His spurs, too, glittered again; and in short, “no baron or
-squire, or knight of the shire,” had greater attention paid to his
-toilet than had our huntsman.
-
-“Personal appearance,” observed Mrs. Sykes to Will, one evening,
-sitting in a cozy corner of his parlour, in a dreamy, winking, blinking
-state, lulled by the influence of a blazing yule log--“personal
-appearance,” repeated she, somewhat louder, “is necessary for personal
-respect; and unless we look as if we respected ourselves, it’s
-unreasonable to suppose that other people will go for to respect us.
-We must best know,” continued she, “our own in’ards; and if we show,
-by our out’ards, that they’re all gammon and bacon, rest assured they
-won’t pass as the _best_ of chitlins.”
-
-And was it for this, then--this worldly object--that Mrs. Sykes might
-be seen on every succeeding Sunday, volume in hand, walking with
-stately and measured tread along the path leading to the gray-mossed
-and ivy-twined church? Was it for this that the ribbed silk dress
-and most treasured bonnet were donned on the seventh day, when the
-likelihood was great of many eyes beholding them? Was it for this that,
-from the bright buckle in her shoe to the topmost ribbon stuck jauntily
-to flutter in the breeze, Mrs. Sykes evinced such elaborate taste and
-dainty care? Mrs. Sykes, like countless hosts of her betters, would
-have been justly indignant had such prying interrogatories been put to
-her for solution, however blandly they might have been effected; and
-as there is no confession on her part, and no justifiable ground for
-speculation in the replies, they must remain unanswered to the end of
-time.
-
-Tom Holt, the first whipper-in, and consequently second in command, was
-a very different _genus homo_ to our huntsman. As may already have
-been learned from his expressed opinions and sentiments, he possessed
-strange quirks and notions, and, to use his own graphic description of
-his imaginary pedigree, might have been “a cross between a bull-dog
-and a flat iron.” Much nice sophism might be used to support the
-poetical origin of Tom Holt; but if volumes were written to define his
-allegory more clearly, the end could not be more satisfactorily arrived
-at than by briefly saying, “it can far more easily be conceived than
-described.” Tom was a reflective man; he could not see an infant in its
-mother’s arms without the endeavour to picture to his vivid imagination
-how it would look when blear-eyed with age. A piece of thistle-down,
-whirling here and there, now catching in a bramble, and then skimming
-along in its varied, uncertain course, would make him think of “cause
-and effect” for an hour. A dew-drop, a feather in the air, a film of
-gossamer, often set Tom Holt “a-thinking” for the livelong day. He was
-a dreamer, and had more strange fantasies, with eyes wide and staring
-open, than a thousand such will-o’-the wisps fanned by the fairies’
-midwife, Queen Mab. And yet Tom Holt, although his face was pale and
-thin, and his dark hazel eyes always bore a serious look, enjoyed right
-heartily his duties, and all thereunto pertaining. He studied the
-attributes and affections of the animals with which he had to deal,
-and took little less delight in the cunning and subtle tricks of the
-crafty fox than he did in the sagacity of his darling hounds hunting
-him. Like many enthusiasts, however, Tom went very strange lengths upon
-occasions; and it was generally reported in a wide ring in the country,
-that he asserted, when “much wrought,” at the Duck and Gridiron, upon
-a memorable occasion, “that a spider might teach a weaver more in one
-hour, than he could learn in a seven years’ apprenticeship.” Be this
-as it may, there is no doubt whatever that, upon Tom’s recovering
-consciousness from a stunning fall, causing the blood to flow from his
-nose profusely, he remarked, brushing a few of the sanguinary drops
-from the tip of it, that, “he did not see why they shouldn’t be blue
-instead of red.” This is an ascertained and acknowledged fact, and,
-without further detail of his oddities and eccentricities, Tom Holt
-must be left, like the cork against the tide, to work his own way.
-
-It appears indispensable--stale as the necessity may prove--to
-introduce the persons spoken of previously to relating the scenes
-and incidents in which they may assist. The second whip, Ned Adams,
-therefore, must not be permitted to escape notice altogether, like
-one of immaterial consequence and account; and although slight will
-be the sketch of his virtues, vices, and tendencies, still, to render
-that which is justly due is but to yield the very bare bones of common
-honesty. As with the greater number of second whippers-in, Ned was a
-connexion of the huntsman, and had the right--needlessly, be it said,
-on the maternal side--to call him “uncle,” Ned’s uncle embraced divers
-opportune occasions to impress upon his nephew’s mind the onerous duty
-and essential service which may be performed by a whipper-in if he
-will only _keep in his place_. “But,” observed the huntsman, “most of
-you hot-blooded young ’uns are so eager to get for’ard, that ye forget
-the first principles of what you ought to do, and instead of keeping
-behind, to bring on the tail hounds, hang me if you don’t jam to the
-sterns of the leading ones.”
-
-“It’s more than mortal patience can endure,” replied Ned, by way of
-justification, “to stick in the rear on some occasions.”
-
-“But your duty, Ned,” seriously rejoined Will Sykes, “won’t bear
-excuse. It’s as much your place to be behind hounds as it is mine to be
-with them. In my judgment,” continued he, “there are but these couple
-of proper causes for a whip to be seen for’ard:--when hounds are to be
-stopped, and when ordered to clap to an open earth or hold a fox in
-covert, if not on such terms that we can run him.”
-
-“But you seldom give me the chance of doing the last,” returned his
-nephew.
-
-“And the less the better,” added Will Sykes. “It’s too much like
-mobbing a fox to please me; but still there are occasions, as in
-lifting hounds, to justify us in so doing. If the scent be cold and the
-fox a long way ahead, so that hounds can’t hunt, we must, in order to
-have any chance, get them nearer to him, and then it is that a whip may
-get for’ard to the point and head him in.”
-
-“But this only applies to a fresh fox, I suppose?” said Ned Adams.
-
-“To be sure,” responded his uncle, “unless, indeed, he’s a dying
-one: for then, as he can show no more sport, the sooner he is killed
-the better. I’m one of the last men living,” continued the huntsman,
-emphatically, “to kill a fox by either lifting hounds or any other
-means, except by a fair find--a fair rattle from scent to view, and
-pulling him down when he can’t run any farther. But it isn’t every day
-that we can have such cream of sport; and for any one to say that it’s
-unjustifiable to lift or assist hounds to run when they can’t hunt, or
-that we should never hold a fox in covert, is to acknowledge himself to
-be too tame a hand for a killer of foxes.”
-
-“Nobody will accuse you of being that,” rejoined his nephew, laughing,
-“if they count the noses on the kennel-door at the end of each season.”
-
-“I hope not,” returned the huntsman, seriously. “I hope,” continued
-he, “that when Will Sykes’s tally comes to be reckoned up and squared,
-those noses will go in the scales with his morals, and make ’em kick
-the beam.”
-
-It has been said that Will Sykes possessed a wide circle of admirers;
-and therefore to be quite silent upon the matter respecting his
-nephew, would be an act approaching injustice; for, although the
-number was more choice, and--to be strictly correct--comprised no old
-women whatever, yet there is no question but every pretty, young, and
-unmarried one within the wide range of Ned’s jaunts and wanderings
-might be fairly registered among them. And no wonder; for Ned was
-spruce and handsome, and had soft looks, and yet softer words, for
-those with whom he wished to be in favour. His jest and laugh, too,
-were free and hearty; and where-ever he went, “Welcome” awaited him.
-
-The short sketches of those in immediate authority would still be
-incomplete if Old Mark the Feeder was allowed to escape observation.
-Whether he possessed a surname is a subject known only to himself; for
-nobody ever heard him spoken of, or to, but as “Old Mark.” From infancy
-he had been employed in the kennel, and owed his want of promotion
-to a nervous inability to become a horseman. No exertions on his own
-part, or those of others, could render him anything like competent
-to ride to hounds; and the result was that, after a long and patient
-trial to obtain this necessary accomplishment for a whipper-in, Mark
-was compelled to abandon the design, and to fall back on his former
-position. After this, no second attempt was made; and so years and
-years rolled on, and at length discovered the failure of a whipper-in
-in Old Mark the feeder. As may be supposed from his long experience, no
-one knew more about us than he did; and the moment his practised eye
-fell on a hound, he could instantly tell a defective point, let it be
-never so trifling. Proud and enthusiastic in his calling, the courts
-and lodging-houses were always clean, dry, and wholesome; and, late or
-early, the old man never allowed the most insignificant part of his
-duties to pass unfinished. The feet of each were carefully examined
-after returning home, and if foot-sore, washed with bran, warm water,
-and vinegar. A warm bath, too was also in readiness, and plenty of
-clean straw to roll in for the purpose of drying.
-
-Little can be said of Mark’s outward man; for his back was
-crooked--perchance from continually bending over the troughs and
-copper--and his legs were lean and long, like a daddy-long-legs; but
-one of the best attributes of human nature sat reflected in his mild,
-open, honest face; and that was gentle kindness of heart. Oh! if the
-world was more thickly populated with “Old Marks,” how many hearts and
-hides would cease to throb with anguish!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
- “In the barn the tenant-cock,
- Close to partlet, perched on high,
- Briskly crows (the shepherd’s clock),
- Jocund, that the morning’s nigh.”
-
-
-With a yawn, a stretch, and a shake, Trimbush completed his toilet
-one misty morning, just as a neighbouring cock had thrice thrown his
-chivalrous challenge on the breeze, and invited me, with a crack of his
-stern across my muzzle, to follow his early example of industry.
-
-“Come,” said he, “it’s time to be awake and stirring. How do ye fare?”
-
-“Hearty and hungry,” replied I, reluctantly arousing myself from a
-dream of enjoyment.
-
-“Ha, ha, ha!” laughed Trimbush. “You’ll have to wait, then,” continued
-he, “till sunset for a meal, unless you earn a share for yourself.”
-
-“How so?” inquired I.
-
-“This will be the first meet o’ the season, and your first day of
-regular work. Mind,” said Trimbush, admonishingly, as he showed a
-long row of very white and strong teeth, “to let me see that you have
-profited by my lessons and the experience you’ve had in cub-hunting, or
-your jacket may be well shaken when least expected.”
-
-“You needn’t begin to threaten,” rejoined I, somewhat indignantly,
-“without any cause. A rate’s well enough,” I continued, “when a fault
-is committed; but there’s no occasion to meet it half-way.”
-
-“True,” returned Trimbush, “quite true; and your remark only proves
-that a young head may sometimes correct an old tongue, despite
-what may be said to the contrary. One of the greatest faults with
-all whippers-in,” resumed he, “is the rating us in anticipation
-of our doing wrong; or, after committing it, before soaking in the
-double-thong; whereas, they should wait until the cause is given, and
-then--after blistering us with the flax--proceed to lecture upon the
-impropriety of the conduct. It’s quite remarkable what effect a sound
-drubbing has upon the memory.”
-
-“I shall not forget the first I received,” observed I.
-
-“But you’ll never repeat that riot,” significantly returned Trimbush.
-“It was a christening not to slip through the memory as if it had no
-knots tied in it.”
-
-“But then,” added I, “in coming across the slot of deer, the scent was
-so sweet and grateful that I couldn’t refrain from carrying a head.”
-
-“Well,” said Trimbush, “like luxuries of other descriptions, you paid
-for the enjoyment.”
-
-“And dear as the cost was,” replied I, “it’s very doubtful whether I
-might not be inclined to have another flutter at the same feather.”
-
-“What! swallow a hackle of the dog that bit ye?” rejoined my friend.
-
-“It’s a common case, I’ve heard, with our betters,” returned I.
-
-“Right again,” added my companion. “Fire puts out fire.”
-
-“I suppose,” observed I, “that you’ve felt, before now, an inclination
-to repeat an error, convinced as ye may have been of its impropriety.”
-
-“Ah!” exclaimed Trimbush, drawing in the breath between his teeth with
-a hissing sound; “that I have. We are as clannish as Scotsmen, and
-support each other through thick and thin, in the same mortar-an’-brick
-fashion. If one of us is a marked and confirmed rebel, he seldom
-repeats his fault without lots of company to back him. The season
-before last, a hound was sent here from the north country, and as sulky
-and ill-tempered a brute as was ever seen in a kennel. We all hated
-him; and yet, strange as it may appear, upon Ned Adams attempting to
-drive him from the lodging-house one morning, in consequence of his
-refusal to come when called, he flew at him, and, fastening upon his
-shoulder, was instantly joined by half the hounds in the court.”
-
-“I can’t understand that,” replied I.
-
-“The cause lies in our blood and bone,” rejoined my friend. “The
-impulse with us,” continued he, “is paramount--to follow the leader
-however wrong he may be in his example.”
-
-“And what was the finish of this attack on Ned Adams?” inquired I.
-
-“But for his lusty lungs for help,” replied Trimbush, “it might have
-gone hard with him. However, Will Sykes, Tom Holt, and Old Mark
-quickly made their appearance, and put an end to the fray with little
-difficulty. As for our new companion, we never saw him afterwards.”
-
-“He was sent away, I suppose?” remarked I.
-
-“Yes,” returned Trimbush, “to dance in the air with a hempen cord round
-his throttle.”
-
-“And no wonder, either,” added I, “for such an offence.”
-
-“Breaking up a whipper-in is certainly no joke,” said my companion.
-“But there was one picked as clean as ivory once, without any
-unpleasant interruption to the spread.”
-
-“Gracious powers!” ejaculated I, “what do you mean?”
-
-“Simply what I have said,” replied Trimbush, licking his jaws with a
-peculiar relish, and coolly adding, “I had a hand in the supper.”
-
-“You?” I exclaimed.
-
-“Listen,” returned the old hound, checking my impetuosity, “and you
-shall hear. I was not bred in this kennel, but came from the west at
-the end of my first season. It so happened that about the middle of
-this season, and when all of us were full of fire and devilry, our
-regular whipper-in died, and his place became filled by a perfect
-stranger to us. His cottage being within a short distance, he could
-hear any quarrel or disturbance, and was ready to quell it at a
-moment’s notice. Trifles light as air, I’ve heard, will frequently
-cause the most vital consequences; and such was the case that I am
-alluding to. A ray of the moon, streaming through a chink in the door
-of our lodging-house, occasioned a hound of the name of Restless to
-bay it. This broke the sleep of all; and in a few minutes a regular
-fight began, each running a-muck and attacking friend and foe with
-equal want of consideration. In order to quell the row, the whipper-in
-made his appearance amongst us, as he quitted his bed, undressed; but
-scarcely had he lifted the latch of the entrance, when--not recognising
-his voice or his person--he was seized by the throat; and, before the
-morning light, there was nothing left but a cleanly picked skeleton.”
-
-“I’m not surprised at his death, under the circumstances,” rejoined I;
-“but to eat him!”
-
-“In my opinion,” added Trimbush, “that was the most innocent part of
-the affair.”
-
-“And how,” said I, curious to learn further particulars, “how did he
-taste?”
-
-“Take my word for it,” replied the old hound, in a tone and manner
-conveying much conviction of the correctness of the assertion, “take
-my word for it,” repeated he, “that with a little broth, daintier food
-could not be eaten.”
-
-“Who was the first to discover the remains?”
-
-“Our feeder,” returned he.
-
-“And what did he say?”
-
-“Well!” added Trimbush, scratching an ear with his off hind foot, as
-if tickled with the reminiscence which the question created, “I should
-observe, in the first place,” continued he, “that Harry Bolton, our
-feeder, was one of the coolest fellows that ever boiled a copper
-of kit, and never known to exhibit the slightest astonishment at
-anything. Whenever he read an astounding piece of news in the _County
-Chronicle_--natural phenomenon, accident, or offence, or anything
-sufficient to cause the generality of his neighbours’ hair to stand
-on end was related to him--his short unchanging observation was,
-‘Shouldn’t wonder!’ However, thought I, the ice of your surprise will
-be broken at last.”
-
-“And was it?” inquired I.
-
-“You shall hear,” resumed Trimbush. “When Harry came to the kennel, as
-was his wont just at break o’ day, and his eyes fell on the white bones
-of the unfortunate whipper-in spread upon the ground, he continued
-puffing a short black pipe, constantly between his lips, for a few
-seconds in silence, and then taking it from them with a slow deliberate
-movement, ejaculated, ‘Shouldn’t wonder! D--n me if they an’t hashed
-the whip.’”
-
-“And was that all he said?” I asked.
-
-“Every word,” returned my companion.
-
-At this moment Will Sykes arrived mounted, accompanied by the two
-whippers-in; and to his order, Mark threw back the door of the court
-upon its hinges, and out we rushed with a chorus of merry tongues
-ringing for our freedom, and the joy that we knew to be in store for
-us.
-
-“Unkennelling hounds,” remarked Trimbush, as we trotted along the road,
-side by side, “is one great illustrative fact of the difference between
-high-bred and low-bred animals. A puddle-blooded mongrel, or one of low
-caste, licks and fondles only the hand that gives him _food_; but we,
-and all possessing similar tendencies, love him and those who show and
-give us _sport_. See the difference with which we hail our feeder’s
-appearance, and that of our huntsman. We have affection for both; but
-there is no comparison between either the kind or strength of the
-feeling.”
-
-“We may like Will, too, all the better,” I observed, “on account of his
-not flogging us.”
-
-“A huntsman should never use the thong,” replied my companion. “It
-should be his study to be on such terms of friendship and good-will
-with his pack, that each hound is ready to fly to his voice like a bird
-to her nest; and among the varied tempers and dispositions which he
-has to deal with, this is impossible if he unites with his office the
-duties of whip.”
-
-“I always feel inclined to head just the other way when I hear Ned
-Adams,” observed I.
-
-“To be sure,” returned Trimbush. “The thrashed hound fears the whip;
-and getting away to his cry of ‘for’ard’ is as essential as obeying the
-huntsman’s horn; but the feelings for the two are far from being akin.”
-
-We now turned a sharp angle in the lane, down which we were gently
-trotting: and on a large open piece of waste ground--the coarse grass,
-patches of thistles and rushes, being cropped by a few donkeys and
-a flock of desolate-looking geese--my eyes first saw the assembled
-members of “our hunt.”
-
-Deny it who will--it is a heart-stirring, gladsome, inspiring,
-_English_ sight, to witness a country gentleman and popular master
-in the field. There are his friends and neighbours, his tenants and
-yeomen, stout and true, his servants and dependents, met together for
-a noble amusement, and one which unites them in the bond of goodly
-fellowship. It has been well observed, “What is a gentleman without his
-recreations?” and, to alter the query slightly, it might be said, “What
-is a _country_ gentleman unless he be a _sportsman_?” Like a fish out
-of water, a bull in a china shop, a bear in a tea-garden, or anything
-else strangely awkward and much out of his element.
-
-There they were, in showy red and Lincoln green, in leather, cords, and
-kersey drabs; white tops, brown, and black; hats, caps, and thatch;
-some mounted and some afoot. From the high-mettled hunter with his
-shot-silk and glistening coat, to the rough and shaggy tailor’s pony;
-in short, all sizes, shapes, colours, and conditions, might be seen
-congregated, expectant, and prepared for our arrival.
-
-“Here they are!” shouted an urchin, perched on the topmost limb of a
-tree. “Here they are!” repeated he, hallooing to the stretch of his
-lungs; and then a whooping crew of his fellows took up the cry, making
-the welkin echo with their din.
-
-“Your servant, gentlemen,” said Will Sykes, touching the peak of his
-cap; and during a short delay, waiting the arrival of the Squire, he
-proceeded to point out the young hounds, making me an especial object
-of notice.
-
-“What’s his pedigwee?” lisped a pale-faced gentleman in spectacles,
-famous for riding hard along roads and over nothing but hounds at
-check.
-
-“By Osbaldeston’s Furrier out of Crafty, sir,” replied the huntsman.
-
-“By Fuwier out of Quafty!” repeated the interrogator.
-
-“Yes,” rejoined Will; “and I’m much mistaken if he doesn’t equal the
-celebrity of his father.”
-
-“What do you call him?” further inquired he of the ghostly countenance.
-
-“Ringwood, sir,” returned the huntsman.
-
-“Wingwood, eh?” added the questioner.
-
-“That’s one of the sort,” said Trimbush to me, “I was mentioning some
-time ago. He comes out just to show himself and have an excuse for
-wearing a red coat; but as for taking any interest in either the sport
-or us, he fears the one and knows nothing of the other. A man, from
-age, or other causes, may be unable to ride straight and live with us,
-and yet take as much pleasure in joining the meet, nicking in, and
-pottering on to the end of a run, as those who are in the first flight
-from the find to the finish; but I am certain, from what I have seen,
-that if a man is so naturally timid as to be afraid to ride to hounds,
-he can never be--in the sense of the word--a foxhunter.”
-
-“And who is he?” I asked, pointing to a thick-set and jolly-looking man
-in a green coat, and occupied in the act of taking up the girths of his
-saddle.
-
-“A very different description of sportsman,” replied Trimbush; “that’s
-farmer Stockdale, a tenant of the Squire’s, who has forgotten more
-about hounds and hunting than the majority of men ever learn. You see,”
-he continued, “that he’s making a careful examination of his horse, and
-the few alterations necessary, whilst there is plenty of time; as none
-but the greenhorns leave them to the last moment. I remember a man,
-upon one occasion, tightening a curb-chain at the moment we unkennelled
-our fox; and such were the impatient plunges of his horse, that he
-could not mount him again in time to get away with us, and he never saw
-an inch of the run--long and gallant as it proved.”
-
-My attention being turned to a young man superbly mounted, and dressed
-with the most scrupulous care, I inquired of my companion if he was one
-of the timid school.
-
-“No,” rejoined Trimbush; “_that_ he is not. From the delicate look
-of his boots, breeches and gloves, one might feel disposed to imagine
-that he was not in the habit of dirtying them; but so far from that
-being the case, he is not only the boldest but the best rider in the
-hunt--for the two do not always go together. It used to be thought,”
-continued he, “by men of the old school, that a white top was the
-certain mark of a he-haw, know-nothing, gal-drawing, watering-place
-snob; but I have no hesitation in saying that the white tops of the
-present day could show the dark and mahogany ones their heels without
-the slightest difficulty, or more than ordinary exertion.”
-
-“You think, then, that men ride bolder and better now?” I remarked.
-
-“Without a doubt of it,” replied Trimbush. “The stamp of
-horse--thorough-bred and up to the mark in condition--the pace we go,
-and the modern style of _racing_ a fox down, require both bolder and
-better riding than in the days when they found him at cock-crow and
-killed him at noon. Not only is courage indispensable to be near the
-‘sinking one,’ but hands, head, and heels must be exercised with the
-best of judgment. I grin,” continued he, “to see a first-flight man,
-after a fifteen minutes’ burst, blown to a stand-still; while farmer
-Stockdale gives him the go-by with his goose-rumped, short-legged,
-long-necked nag, just in the wind.”
-
-“And does that often take place?” I inquired.
-
-“Very frequently,” replied my companion. “Head and hands will beat
-heels all the world over.”
-
-At this moment the Squire came trotting briskly up on his hack; and as
-he rode through the throng, hats were lifted and salutations exchanged.
-Our master, be it remembered, although an old English gentleman, was
-not a gentleman of the old school. He neither swore the roundest oaths,
-nor horsewhipped those whom he dared or could afford to pay; he boasted
-not of the number of bottles it took to make him oblivious of sublunary
-matters, or laughed only at the practical joke and coarsest jest. His
-object was not to be the oracle of grooms and stable-boys, or the
-subject of discussion in the village tap-room. With an affable bearing,
-he possessed a kind and generous disposition, and a heart more ready to
-befriend the deserving and destitute than to check the imposter and
-depraved. His house was one wherein hospitality reigned the seasons
-round; and it mattered not who were the guests, a hearty welcome
-awaited each and all. In the pursuit, too, of his favourite sport, he
-never permitted an injury to pass unrecompensed, although careful that
-no false application should succeed. Not a gate nor a bar was broken,
-a head of poultry lost _suspiciously_, or the most trifling damage
-done, but what, instantly and liberally, amends were made. Sternly
-discountenancing all unfair riding over wheat, young grass, and layers,
-he was regarded by the farmers as a friend to their interests; and so
-far from objecting to a fixture in their neighbourhood, they were glad
-when it came to their turn. By proper and simple judicious means the
-end is always attainable; and if those masters of hounds who complain
-of a dearth of foxes, and opposition to their sport, would but take a
-memorandum out of the note-book of “our Squire,” many a blank day might
-be rendered as fruitful as the vine “clustering with a thousand rings.”
-
-[Illustration: “HEAD AND HANDS WILL BEAT HEELS.”]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
- “For easy the lesson of the youthful train
- When instinct prompts, and when example guides.”
-
-
-“I hope I’m to my time,” said the Squire, pulling out his watch. “Yes,”
-continued he, glancing at the dial, “to a minute.”
-
-Immediately after the Squire’s arrival, we were thrown into the cover,
-and, when about the middle of it, I saw Trimbush feather his stern, and
-before I could reach him he threw his tongue, and, as he did so, Will
-Sykes gave a cheer which Echo took pleasure to repeat.
-
-“Hark to Trimbush! Hark to Trimbush! Have at him! Whoop!”
-
-We clustered to him, and, poking my nose to the ground, I drew in a
-scent which made every hackle on my body stiffen with delight. Up went
-my head, and forth I sent some music that came from my very heart.
-
-“See that puppy,” said the Squire. “How he loves it.”
-
-“Have at him, Ringwood,” hallooed the huntsman, rising in his stirrups.
-“Have at him, good hound!” and then, turning to the Squire, I heard him
-remark, “He’s a perfect wonder, sir.”
-
-“Yes,” was the reply, “he’s the most promising I have ever seen.”
-
-We now got to our fox in a body, and crashed him through the cover.
-Full swing we flew, and, as we swept out of the furze, I was astonished
-to lose the scent which we had carried so strong up to the corner of
-the brake, and flung myself here and there to pick it up again. Most of
-us were sorely puzzled for a few seconds, when Trimbush, after stooping
-his nose to the ground for some distance, down wind and up, along the
-verge of the cover, said to me, “The artful dodger’s slipped back, and
-shot into the brake again.”
-
-“Tally-ho! tally-ho! Gone away,” hallooed a voice from the farthest end
-of the cover.
-
-“I told you so,” said Trimbush. “We were too close to him, and he
-headed back to make the distance greater at the burst.”
-
-I now sniffed the scent again, and, thinking I was showing off, made as
-much noise as I possibly could.
-
-“Keep your tongue still,” snapped Trimbush. “Like most puppies,
-two-legged and four, if they possess a good voice, they seldom exhibit
-equal good sense in using it.”
-
-Twing, twing, twang, twa--a--ng, went Will Sykes’s horn, as he jammed
-his horse through bush and briar.
-
-“For’ard, for’ard,” shouted Tom Holt. “Get to him, hounds, get to him.”
-
-“Come along,” said Trimbush. “Stick to me.”
-
-“What a clean, fine, lengthy fellow he is!” I heard some one remark.
-“His point’s Picton Brake.”
-
-“Yes,” replied another. “His brush must be two feet: and what a snowy
-tag to it!”
-
-“Indeed!” observed Trimbush. “Then we’ll give it such a dusting as to
-change its colour pretty quickly.”
-
-A bunch of old hounds flew out of cover with us, and, taking up the
-scent, away we rattled in a body, as close as a swarm of bees.
-
-“They won’t over-ride us to-day,” remarked I.
-
-“Not if the scent lasts as good as it is,” replied Trimbush; “but
-that’s doubtful.”
-
-For fifteen minutes we burst him along as hard as we could split. The
-day was fine and warm, and, sinking the wind, the pace began to tell
-most terribly upon some of us young ones.
-
-“I feel very choky,” said I, doing my best to keep my place.
-
-“Hold on,” returned Trimbush. “He must have crossed the Kulm stream,
-and there we shall get a cooling plunge.”
-
-In a handful of seconds we neared the water, and dashed into it with as
-much delight as a flock of thirsty ducks.
-
-“Now,” said Trimbush, “you’ll be able to reach the brake, where, I’d
-bet my stern to a buck rabbit’s scut, he’ll hang as long as he can and
-dare.”
-
-“Why so?” inquired I.
-
-“Why so!” repeated Trimbush, rather contemptuously. “Because he must
-know by this time that he can’t outrun us. The scent’s too good, and
-we got away with him on such terms that nothing but reaching a strong
-earth, or changing to a fresh fox, can save him.”
-
-“We must try to keep to our hunted one,” said I, thinking it was
-exhibiting some wisdom.
-
-“Try!” repeated my friend; “of course we shall try. We always do; but
-it’s sometimes impossible to distinguish the difference between the
-scent of our hunted fox and a fresh one. It’s easy enough, when a fox
-is viewed, to know, because it can be seen whether he’s been shoved
-along at the expense of his bellows and toilet; but our noses can’t be
-depended upon.”
-
-As Trimbush said, upon gaining the brake we found the fox hanging in
-it; and, although very hot, we gave him such a towelling, that, so far
-from improving his condition, he had better have taken to his pads and
-faced the open. I saw him a dozen times in cover, and his red rag hung
-from his open jaws, and his brush dragged along the ground. We pressed
-him up and down across the rides at a killing pace, and although there
-was no bullying by holding him in cover, and every opportunity given
-him to quit it, he still stuck to his quarters.
-
-“You shall either run or die,” said Trimbush, going through the cover
-like a bullet.
-
-A clear, musical “Tally-ho” now echoed far and wide.
-
-“Gone away at last, eh?” observed my friend, and, throwing up his head,
-he rushed to the halloo.
-
-“Hold hard!” roared the Squire, as one, too eager, rode nearly over me
-as I leaped from the cover. “You almost killed, sir,” continued he,
-“the best of my young entry, and perhaps the most valuable puppy I ever
-bred.”
-
-“I beg your pardon, sir; but my horse pulls so, that----”
-
-“Then he is not fit to ride to hounds, sir,” hastily rejoined the
-Squire.
-
-Being high on our mettle, we flashed forward, after just touching the
-scent on a dry-lying fallow, thinking that we had struck on his line;
-but Trimbush, and a few of the old hounds, soon found that they were
-wrong, and, throwing up their heads, came to a check.
-
-“Let them alone,” said the Squire, as Will Sykes indicated a
-disposition to make a hasty cast down wind. “Let them alone,” repeated
-he.
-
-“He’s certain to be making for the belt of covers on the ridge, sir,”
-replied Will, “and the ploughs are so dry that it is impossible for
-hounds to carry it over them.”
-
-“Let them alone,” quietly rejoined the Squire. “Let them alone.”
-
-“When allowed to make our own casts, which we always should at first,”
-remarked Trimbush, poking his nose to the ground, “we try down wind
-first, because that’s the way foxes constantly run. It’s time enough to
-cast up when we’ve made good the cast down. Humph!” continued he, as if
-puzzled, “I begin to think Will’s wrong.”
-
-“What do you mean?” inquired I.
-
-“I don’t fancy he’s pointed for the covers on the ridge,” returned
-Trimbush; “let’s see whether he hasn’t headed back,” continued he.
-
-We now tried up wind, and, sure enough, hit it off again under a
-hedgerow.
-
-“Ha, ha!” laughed Trimbush. “He’s a sinking one, and has turned to die.”
-
-We now rattled on full swing over a common, and on climbing a steep
-hill I saw a magpie darting to the ground and then rising high in the
-air to swoop again.
-
-“What’s that chattering pie doing?” inquired I, directing Trimbush’s
-attention to the bird.
-
-“Mobbing him,” replied he. “The magpie, jay and crow love to mob a
-sinking fox. Keep your eye forward; it will soon be from scent to view.”
-
-“Are those covers strong?” I asked, seeing that we were making for a
-long line of trees.
-
-“Little more than spinnies,” replied my friend. “He can’t hang in them
-a minute.”
-
-We drove him through these little covers without let, check, or stop;
-and at the last, out he flew in view of all of us. We rushed at him
-like greyhounds from the slips; but, with a desperate effort to save
-his life, he managed to dash round the corner of a barn, and, as we
-turned, I saw him slipping along on the top of a thick square-topped
-hawthorn fence, and, springing upon the trunk of a tree covered with
-ivy, disappear. None of the others saw this artful dodge; but all
-flashed forward, and were bewildered at not either viewing or being
-able to hit him off. Trimbush flung himself here and there in a perfect
-fury, and would not pay the smallest attention to what I had to say.
-
-“Put your nose down and work,” said he passionately, “don’t talk to me.”
-
-“But I tell you----”
-
-“Pshaw!” interrupted Trimbush. “What’s your head in the air for?”
-
-“Because the _fox_ is in the air,” replied I.
-
-“What do you mean?” asked he, seeing that I was serious.
-
-I then told him that which I had seen, and inquired what I should do.
-
-“Hold your tongue,” returned the artful old rogue; “it shows a wise
-head, I’ve heard. Leave the matter to me.”
-
-In order to monopolize the whole of the credit to himself, Trimbush
-galloped to the tree and dashed at it, in the attempt to climb the
-knarled and knotted trunk.
-
-“What’s that hound about?” said the Squire, looking greatly astonished.
-
-I now saw that Trimbush would get all the praise of discovering our
-fox’s hiding place, and felt greatly vexed with myself that I had not
-gone at once to the tree and thrown my tongue. The rest now clustered
-round the leader, who, managing to stick and cling to the ivy, got some
-dozen feet from the ground.
-
-“He’s gone to tree, sir,” said Will Sykes, exultingly, as he threw
-himself from the saddle.
-
-“That he has,” returned the Squire, scarcely knowing which to be--more
-astonished or pleased.
-
-To the infinite surprise of the field, who came dropping up one by one,
-they saw the huntsman drag a fox by the brush from a hollow in the
-tree, and catching him by the neck to prevent the visitation of his
-grinders, hold him up over his head with a halloo that might wake the
-dead.
-
-“Who-whoop, who-whoop!” cried Tom Holt.
-
-“Who-whoop, who-who-whoop!” hallooed Ned Adams, in his good and choice
-voice, which always had the effect of working us into a frenzy.
-
-“He’d give us a run now,” lisped a young gentleman in pink, “if he was
-turned down and had a little law given him.”
-
-I could have bitten his head off.
-
-[Illustration: A CURIOUS FINISH.]
-
-“My hounds deserve their fox, sir,” replied the Squire. “He is beaten,
-and nothing but an accidental escape--like this might have been--could
-have saved him. There have been no unfair means used, from the find to
-the finish; and the only illiberal, unsportsman-like act, would be now
-to run the risk of robbing the hounds of that which they have justly
-won and made their own.”
-
-Not exactly among us, but not far from where I stood--I think Will
-did it on purpose to please me--the fox was thrown, and my teeth were
-the first to fix themselves across his loins. I had been taught in
-cub-hunting not to gripe elsewhere; but as it was, he gave me a nasty
-pinch in the cheek.
-
-In a few moments afterwards he was given to us to be broken up, and
-then somebody asked the Squire “if he would not try for another fox, as
-it was early?”
-
-“No,” replied our master, shaking his head. “We are fifteen miles from
-kennel. The hounds have had a good deal of fatiguing work in cover, and
-are satisfied with a novel but glorious finish. I shall not run the
-risk of tiring them more, perhaps for nothing, and doing away with that
-spirit which the sport of the day must have given, I hope, to every one
-present.” And lifting his hat, string high, he bowed and joined the
-side of his huntsman.
-
-As we trotted along down a bye road, with our sterns well up over our
-backs, and feeling as proud as peacocks, I heard Will Sykes remark, “It
-was a good forty minutes, sir.”
-
-“Yes,” replied his master with a slight smile, “but it would not have
-been so long if you had made that cast.”
-
-“If I had done _that_, sir,” replied the huntsman, dropping his voice
-to a whisper, “if I had done that, sir,” repeated he, “_we should have
-lost our fox_.”
-
-“Let them alone, eh?” rejoined the Squire, smiling more perceptibly.
-
-“Ay,” returned Will. “_Let them alone_ is a beautiful rule.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
- “See, the day begins to break,
- And the light shoots like a streak
- Of subtle fire; the wind blows cold
- While the morning doth unfold:
- Now the birds begin to rouse,
- And the squirrel from the boughs
- Leaps to get him nuts and fruit:
- The early lark that erst was mute,
- Carols to the rising day
- Many a note and many a lay.”
-
-
-I woke the following morning soon after the first tinge of day had
-streaked the east, and found myself terribly stiff and foot-sore. My
-nose, too, was hot, and I felt very thirsty.
-
-“What’s the matter?” asked Trimbush, waking, as I gave a whine of
-uneasiness.
-
-“I’m not well,” replied I, limping from the bench.
-
-“Oh, it’s nothing to care about,” replied he, yawning and stretching
-his limbs. “Yesterday’s work has taken the steel and wire out of ye,
-that’s all.”
-
-“It does not appear to have touched you,” rejoined I.
-
-“Me!” returned Trimbush, grinning so that he showed every tooth in his
-head. “Do you know, youngster, what you are?”
-
-“Yes,” answered I proudly: “one who does his duty, and gives as much
-satisfaction as any of you _oldsters_.”
-
-“Well, well!” responded he, “I must admit that you allow yourself to be
-_taught_; and both the duty and satisfaction which you give at present
-are concentrated in that one great and good quality.”
-
-Feeling somewhat humbled at this reply, and smarting under the
-advantage taken of me the day before, I added sharply, “There was no
-teaching me to instruct you how to obtain all the credit of the finish
-yesterday.”
-
-“Hear, hear, hear,” said one of our companions called Chancellor.
-
-“At him again!” exclaimed a spaded bitch named Levity, and of the same
-age as myself. “Take a suck at the lemon, and at him again!”
-
-“You’re a sharp lot,” replied the old hound, with a mingled look of
-contempt and indifference, “a very sharp lot indeed. I couldn’t think,”
-he continued, turning to me, “what made the tip of your stern curl over
-your head and tickle your nose until now. I have heard of a French
-poodle’s being so stiff in the bend that he couldn’t get his hind legs
-to the ground; but hang me if your conceit is not about a match for
-his.”
-
-“But you must admit,” observed Chancellor, “that without him we should
-not have broken up our fox yesterday.”
-
-“Well!” returned Trimbush, “and supposing I _do_ admit it, what then?”
-
-“You should not have snatched the honour from him,” replied Levity.
-
-“Honour?” rejoined Trimbush. “Pooh! The honour was already gained
-before we mouthed the fox. We all like blood for the finish--men as
-well as hounds--but it does not follow that there may not be quite
-as much credit due to both without a _who-whoop_ as with it. For
-instance,” continued he, “if that youngster Ringwood had had his nose
-to the ground--as he should have done the moment the fox was lost to
-view, instead of occupying himself by stargazing--we should, in all
-probability, have lost our fox. What would have caused us to have done
-so? A mere accident, for which no one would have been to blame. And
-what, let me ask, enabled us to obtain a more desirable result? Just as
-accidental a circumstance. Honour? Fudge!”
-
-“At any rate,” said Chancellor, “I heard everybody praising what they
-called your sagacity for discovering the fox in the tree.”
-
-“It’s the way with those fools of men,” replied Trimbush. “They often
-laud that in us which deserves no praise whatever, and pass by in
-silence some of our most remarkable accomplishments.”
-
-I felt that there was much truth in Trimbush’s argument; and although
-a sly twinkle in his eyes led me to suspect that he made thus light of
-my information for a selfish purpose, I lost a great deal of the vanity
-which I hitherto had entertained from being the agent of so fine a
-finish.
-
-“You chanced to remark yesterday,” said I, “that foxes constantly run
-down wind. Why do they? Is it to render the scent less strong for us?”
-
-“Certainly not,” responded Trimbush. “The scent has nothing whatever
-to do with it, notwithstanding what a parcel of cackling geese may
-have said and written. The truth is, a fox is a timid, sly animal with
-extraordinary quick ears and eyes, and a famous nose. When found, he,
-of course, must break where there’s an opening; and as no men place
-themselves up wind of us, or very seldom, that side is generally
-left free, and away he rattles _up wind_ at the burst. I am now, of
-course, speaking of the rule, and not the exceptions. He does not go
-far, however, before he smells, hears, or sees something unpleasant,
-which turns him either to the right or left. Another lurking cause of
-suspicion that there’s an enemy in front, as well as those in the rear
-turns him again, and so on until he gets his head straight down wind,
-when, smelling and hearing nothing before him, he tries to make his
-point and get out of the reach of our ringing cries, and, as he knows
-full well--whetted appetites.”
-
-“That sounds reasonable,” remarked I.
-
-“Thank you,” rejoined the old hound, flourishing his stern. “I’m
-flattered with your approval.”
-
-“I noticed that the scent continued to improve after the first ten
-minutes,” said I, “until within a short time of running him to view,
-when it seemed to gradually die and become more faint.”
-
-“It not only seemed,” replied Trimbush, “but it did so, and from
-obvious reasons. Every animal with a skin--and I don’t remember at
-this moment any without,” facetiously continued he, “smells stronger
-when hot than cold. Fear often produces the same effect, but from
-the like cause--as any excitement, whether pleasurable or the
-reverse, produces physical heat. Now, after a fox is found, his scent
-_increases_--although, from the state of the weather and ground, we may
-not be able to hunt him a yard, nevertheless--so long as _exhaustion_
-does not take place; and then as he sinks, so does the scent
-_decrease_. The reasons for this,” continued Trimbush, “are as simple
-as they are indubitable. The perspirable matter escaping through the
-skin augments for a time from exertion, and the devil of a fright he
-is in from our rattling behind him: but this begins to die away after
-excessive evaporation, and often has caused us to lose a fox scarcely
-able to crawl.”
-
-“I thought the scent came from the pads,” remarked Levity.
-
-“And what made ye think that?” sneered the old hound.
-
-“I don’t exactly know,” replied Levity; “but certainly such was my
-opinion.”
-
-“Then never express such a foolish one for the future,” rejoined
-Trimbush. “If it came from the foot, how could we carry a good head in
-a body, and each have a fair share of the scent? We should have to run
-and follow each other in a string, and one or two might do the work,
-after drawing, as well as twenty or five-and-twenty couples. Again, if
-it came from the foot, how could we carry it through water? I say, and
-ought to know something about the matter,” continued the old hound,
-emphatically, “that the scent proceeds from the entire animal. The
-back, belly, head, foot, brush, and--and--and--exactly so, and every
-part else.”
-
-Old Mark was now heard approaching, which at once put a stop to the
-discussion; and as soon as the good old man saw that I was lame he
-examined my feet and washed them with something which he took from a
-bottle hung by a piece of string to the button-hole of his frock. A
-few others he served in the same way; and calling us each by name, let
-us into another court, saying, “You puppies shall feed by yourselves
-this morning; you all want a little nursing, I find.”
-
-Will Sykes entered soon afterwards, and, seeing Mark’s arrangement for
-our comfort, observed, “That’s right; those puppies want taking care
-of.”
-
-“Ay,” replied Mark, smoothing down my sleek ears and patting my sides,
-“I hear some of ’em deserve it.”
-
-“That Ringwood,” rejoined the huntsman, “is more like a third-seasoned
-hound than a puppy at the beginning of his first.”
-
-Old Mark’s eyes glistened again at this; and looking at me for a few
-seconds as I lashed my stern to and fro and stared him full in the
-face, to let him understand I knew all that was being said of me, he
-muttered, “If a draft of hounds ever goes to heaven, you’ll be one of
-’em, my lad.”
-
-All this praise tended to make me a little vainer than I otherwise
-should have been, perhaps; but at the same time it fixed my resolution
-to merit as much as I could of it. And I have often thought since, that
-there is nothing like encouragement to the young and inexperienced.
-The difficulties of attaining anything worth learning are always great,
-and using harsh and severe means on the part of the teachers only makes
-the attempt more painful and repulsive. Punishment is, occasionally,
-indispensable for obstinacy or repeated offences; but there is nothing
-like a cheer for improvement.
-
-After breakfast, and when we were all assembled in the court,
-the subject of scent was again renewed by Levity observing, in a
-confidential whisper to me, but which was overheard by Trimbush, “that
-she very much questioned the correctness of the old hound’s opinion
-concerning it.”
-
-“You question?” snarled Trimbush. “We shall certainly hear,” continued
-he, “of mewling, puking babes teaching their grandmothers to suck eggs,
-by and bye.”
-
-Levity looked abashed at this satirical remark, and, burying her nose
-between her fore feet, appeared resolved to give herself to silence
-bordering on the sulky.
-
-“There’s nothing so puzzling, nothing so difficult to comprehend by
-the best and most experienced of us,” said Trimbush, addressing me,
-“as the philosophy of scent; and yet, forsooth, we are to be told by a
-babbling puppy that----”
-
-“Well, well!” said I, interrupting his irate speech, “don’t get in a
-passion about a trifle.”
-
-“Right,” replied my friend, smoothing the bristling hackles on his
-back. “Quite right. Life is made up of trifles, as the hours are of
-seconds, days of hours, years of days, and ages of years. Life’s
-trifles are the atoms in unity, forming the whole.”
-
-Not wishing to enter into a discussion of this sort, I led Trimbush
-back to the original subject by saying, “I should like to hear a little
-more about the philosophy of scent.”
-
-“There is little more to add,” returned he, “as far as I know.
-Depending, as I have before said, on the weather, which changes
-sometimes three or four times in a day, and the state of the ground,
-the rule is, that it is invariably uncertain. In windy weather we are
-often accused of being wild and flashy; but the fact is, that the
-particles of scent being widely spread and wafted about, one hits it
-here, another there, and we fly from one to the other, each thinking
-that some are on the right line, and may slip away with it unseen down
-wind. There is nothing more tiresome than a gale of wind in hunting,
-both to us and men. We can’t hear each other, and they can’t hear us;
-and it is matter of doubt to me which is the worst of the two--a thick
-fog, or a blowing gusty wind. I may here remark,” continued Trimbush,
-“that there is a strange fact connected with scent, which I have not
-heard attempted to be accounted for. On the going off of a frost, we
-can run the drag hard, right up to the kennel, and yet be unable to run
-an inch afterwards.”
-
-“That seems very singular,” said I.
-
-“I suppose it to be,” resumed my companion, “that the scent clings to
-whatever the animal rubs against or passes over during the night; and
-having gone slowly, a greater portion is emitted, which is preserved by
-the frost, and the thaw having loosened the particles, enables us to
-take them up.”
-
-“But how do you account for not being able to run after he is
-unkennelled?” asked I.
-
-“Because his skin is cold; and going at a greater pace, there is not
-sufficient time for the small quantity of scent escaping to lie strong
-enough to overcome the exhalations from the ground, occasioned by the
-warmth of the day.”
-
-This sage reasoning on the part of Trimbush made me feel very small in
-my own estimation, and I made up my mind to follow his advice for some
-time to come, and listen rather than give tongue.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
- “To hear the lark begin his flight,
- And singing startle the dull night,
- From his watch-tower in the skies,
- Till the dappled dawn doth rise;
- Then to come in spite of sorrow,
- And at my window bid good morrow,
- Through the sweet-briar, or the vine,
- Or the twisted eglantine.
- …
- Oft listening how the hounds and horn
- Cheerly rouse the slumbering morn.”
-
-
-“I hate this meet,” observed Tom Holt, as we arrived at four cross ways
-close to the market town nearest our kennel. “I hate this meet worse
-than any we have in the country.”
-
-“It’s not a pleasant one, certainly,” replied the huntsman.
-
-“Pleasant?” repeated Tom. “In the first place there’s a nasty, close,
-woodland country with banks as high as churches. Then we have a pack
-of riff-raff counter skippers to over-ride hounds, halloo, head the
-fox, and play the devil. And as if this was not enough for one blessed
-day’s misery the Squire himself generally finds fault all day long with
-everybody and everything, when the fixture’s at these four cross ways.”
-
-“We had better christen them the cross purposes then,” returned Will
-Sykes.
-
-“I don’t mean to say,” continued Tom, without noticing the huntsman’s
-remark, “but he may have--heaven knows!--lots of causes to put him out
-of temper; still it’s rather hard to feel oneself suffering for the
-faults of others.”
-
-“It is not an unusual circumstance, though,” said Will Sykes. “I have
-often heard of similar instances unconnected with hounds and hunting.”
-
-Some of the field had arrived before us, and others were trotting
-briskly up, the hoofs of their horses clattering along the roads in all
-directions.
-
-“We must look out for ourselves to-day,” said Trimbush, “or there will
-be cases for the hospital.”
-
-“They are a rough-looking set,” replied I, glancing at some thirty
-horses, not one of which would fetch ten pounds, and all in a high
-state of perspiration, with their riders puffing cigars and smelling
-of all kinds of horrible mixtures. I felt quite ill, and a little more
-would have turned my stomach.
-
-“If any of these gentlemen,” remarked Trimbush, sneezing, “of high rank
-and particular smell, get down wind of us to-day, we shall not be able
-to hunt a yard.”
-
-“What a dreadful thing it is,” returned I, “that men should make
-themselves so offensive. I don’t suppose they have any noses, have
-they?”
-
-“Can’t you see they have?” replied my companion.
-
-“But it doesn’t follow that they are any use,” said I.
-
-“Well!” added Trimbush, “as far as that goes I don’t think they are,
-although I have heard of some men capable of smelling a rat.”
-
-A few of the gentlemen who regularly joined us now came up on their
-hacks, and instantly afterwards their clothed and hooded hunters,
-being led up and down by neatly dressed and light-weight grooms,
-were stripped and mounted by their respective owners. The contrast
-was strangely striking between these and the “roughs,” and, perhaps,
-caused my admiration to be greater as I regarded each climbing into the
-pigskin.
-
-Our master, as was his wont, and which should be that of every one
-entitled to the dignity of a M. F. H., made his appearance to the minute
-of the hour fixed, and, lifting his hat, saluted the field generally,
-while he gave his hand, and exchanged warmer salutations with his
-friends and associates.
-
-Our first draw was Pickton brake, a large furze cover about a mile
-and a half from the meet, and there we trotted with the gratifying
-expectation of a sure find.
-
-“Mind what I say,” remarked Trimbush, “if you don’t keep your eyes and
-ears backward as well as forward to-day, you will have a dozen horses
-go over ye and not a bone left in your skin unbroken. Be quick as
-lightning, and if you flash over the scent, never mind; don’t throw up
-and check if there’s a chance of being ridden over. I never do. It’s
-not our fault if they won’t give us room.”
-
-“I’ll take care of myself,” replied I.
-
-Upon nearing the cover the office was given, and into it we dashed, and
-shortly afterwards the whimperings in various parts proved that there
-was more than one fox in it. I hit upon a drag and opened loudly, when
-Trimbush reproved me, after poking his nose where I had mine, saying,
-“Not so noisy, not so noisy. Let’s have a distinction between opening
-on a drag, and a good hearty challenge when he’s found.”
-
-An old favourite line hunter, called Rasselas, now threw his tongue.
-
-“That’s it,” said Trimbush, flying to the cry, and taking it up, his
-roar thundered through the brake.
-
-“Have at him!” hallooed Will Sykes. “Have at him, hoik. Hoik, hoik
-together!”
-
-It was evident that a brace was on foot, and the Squire, looking more
-serious than usual, desired that the field might move away from one
-side of the cover and be quiet, otherwise there was a probability of a
-chop taking place.
-
-About a minute afterwards, out came a fine, lengthy dog-fox.
-
-“Tally-ho!” shrieked a muffin on a hired knacker, and back the fox
-dived into the brake again.
-
-“It is most strange, sir,” said the Squire, riding up to the side of
-the offender, “that you should give yourself the trouble of hallooing,
-I pay three servants to do that work, and, although I am extremely
-obliged for your voluntary assistance, I shall feel much more indebted,
-as will many of the gentlemen present, if, for the rest of the day,
-you’ll hold your tongue.”
-
-I never saw a muffin so browned in the whole course of my life. If
-he had been sworn at and called a parcel of hard names--which always
-recoil upon the utterers of them--he might have been made more angry;
-but nothing could be more effective than the rate from the cutting,
-gentlemanlike tone and manner which accompanied it.
-
-In consequence of being scared with this halloo, the fox showed the
-greatest disinclination to break a second time, and the day being very
-warm, and the cover strong, we began to feel as if a spider had been
-spinning cobwebs in our throats.
-
-“It’s choking work this,” said I.
-
-“Yes,” replied Trimbush. “There’s no wind here. Let’s press him as
-hard as we can; for he feels it as well as us, recollect.”
-
-We now rattled him up to the top of the cover, and, crossing a ride,
-Will Sykes viewed him, and giving us a ringing view-halloo, convinced
-us we were on our hunted fox.
-
-“There’s a leash a-foot, sir,” said the huntsman, as the Squire now
-came to his assistance.
-
-“Then get them as near to him as you can,” replied the Squire, “and
-prevent them getting on the other lines.”
-
-Ned Adams now viewed the fox in a broad open ride, and hallooed,
-“Tally-ho!”
-
-“Never mind,” said Trimbush, as I was about leaving the scent to fly
-to the halloo. “Ned Adams, like yourself,” continued he, “is young and
-cannot be depended upon. Keep your nose down; we are quite close enough
-to carry him over the other lines of scent without changing.”
-
-Immediately afterwards I heard the Squire ask in a loud, angry voice,
-“Why did you halloo?”
-
-“Because I viewed the hunted fox, sir,” replied Ned, touching his cap
-deferentially.
-
-“Where?”
-
-“At the bottom of the ride, sir.”
-
-“And you standing at the top,” returned the Squire, “when you must hear
-that the body is well settled to him, halloo them away. What could be
-your object?”
-
-“I thought the stragglers----”
-
-“Would rather fly to their tongues than to your foolish halloo,”
-interrupted the Squire, “or you ought to have thought so.”
-
-“You see,” added Trimbush, “I was right. But all young ’uns think they
-know everything, and the study and experience of the oldsters go for
-nothing.”
-
-We had now given him such a dusting that he could hang no longer, and
-Tom, holding up his hat at the farthest end of the brake up wind,
-quietly announced that he had gone away.
-
-Following Will, crashing through the furze, I heard Tom say to him,
-“He’s just crossed the road,” pointing with his whip to the exact spot.
-
-We flew in a body to it, and, taking up the scent, away we went.
-
-“Get on,” said Trimbush, “and we may, perhaps, shake off the rabble and
-have a run. It’s our only chance.”
-
-We carried a fine head across the first field of some thirty acres of
-grass, and crossing two wide ditches--which would be called brooks in
-some counties--we began to hope that these would prove of essential
-service in stopping the mob. A blind bullfinch, too, increased our
-sanguine hopes on this head, and we began to flatter ourselves that a
-good day’s sport was in store, when we had to throw up and check.
-
-“That ploughman’s headed him,” said Trimbush, making a cast to the
-right, “and he’s down wind as sure as I’m a foxhound.”
-
-He was right, and hitting it off, with an improving scent, we down with
-our sterns and raced along at our best pace. A large flock of sheep
-was before us, and, notwithstanding they ran some distance, we managed
-to carry it through the stained ground, with a little careful picking,
-without much loss of time. I saw Will Sykes in doubt as to whether he
-should not cast us forward; but thinking, perhaps, of the sensible rule
-of “letting us alone,” and as we did not throw up, he, luckily for
-himself, kept his horn quiet. Had he twanged it he would have had the
-Squire about his ears.
-
-As the ground was good and we had a turn of wind in our favour, we
-set to work and soon recovered the little time lost through the sheep.
-There was now every probability of having a glorious day’s sport. The
-field had been thinned materially at the burst, and those with us were
-not near enough to do any harm.
-
-“It will be short and fast to-day,” said Trimbush, exultingly.
-
-The scent was now a burning one, and we all bristled for blood. Across
-three deep fallows we carried it in great force into and across a green
-lane, flanked by two tall quicks, when suddenly the leading hounds
-threw up.
-
-“What’s the matter?” inquired several, throwing up their heads.
-
-“Find out,” briefly replied Trimbush, doing his best to accomplish the
-deed himself.
-
-In a few seconds the lane became full of horses; for it is wonderful
-how courageous men are in spinning along the roads. Some came screaming
-up and cracking their whips, and instead of sticking to our work we
-began flying about in every direction.
-
-The Squire scolded, Will roared, Tom lost his patience, and Ned Adams
-thundered out “Hold har-r-r-d!” until black in the face.
-
-[Illustration: “HOLD HAR-R-R-D!”]
-
-At this juncture, a fellow with his hat hanging by the string, his long
-lank hair streaming in the wind, coat tails sticking well out, and his
-horse’s head close to his chest, came tearing up the lane. Bang he went
-against me, rolling me over and over like a football. I thought my back
-was broken, and sung out with pain and fright most lustily.
-
-“William,” said the Squire, sternly. “Take the hounds home.”
-
-Will touched his cap, and the order was obeyed.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
- “Oh! what avails the largest gifts of heaven
- When drooping health and spirits go amiss?
- How tasteless then whatever can be given;
- Health is the vital principle of bliss.”
-
-
-“Lick that stain off your flank,” said Trimbush, pointing to the dirt
-on my side.
-
-“Why should I be so particular?” replied I, obeying his instructions,
-“we don’t go out to-day.”
-
-“No,” rejoined he; “but the Squire’s coming to inspect us, and, I
-suppose, you’d like to appear nice and comely in _his_ eyes.”
-
-“What do you mean by that?” I asked, applying my tongue more diligently
-to the completion of my toilet.
-
-“You’ll see in a few minutes,” added Trimbush, “and if everything
-isn’t in gingerly order, I’ll bet a week’s meal and broth, those will
-hear of it who are responsible for their neglect.”
-
-The greatest neatness and cleanliness were always observed in our
-kennel; but I noticed old Mark had put a polish on his shoes, and a
-white neckerchief was tied, with much skill displayed in the bow, round
-his throat. Will Sykes, too, Tom Holt, and Ned Adams, upon entering the
-court, exhibited more care than usual in their dress on non-hunting
-days.
-
-The huntsman, glancing round and seeing all was unobjectionable as
-far as his hope and belief went, pulled a watch out of his fob, and
-observed that “the Squire will be here in seven minutes three-eighths.”
-
-“Can you time him to a second?” said Mark smiling.
-
-“Ay,” replied Will, “it doesn’t require a gauge to do that with his
-rules.”
-
-As a distant clock was striking, the bell rung at the kennel door.
-
-“I said so,” remarked the huntsman, and upon opening it he lifted his
-hat, and in walked our worthy master.
-
-“Now for my frock,” said he, and one as white as snow was brought by
-old Mark, who was sensitively jealous of the privilege of assisting
-the Squire to make his kennel toilet.
-
-When attired he proceeded to the boiling-house, examined the boiling
-flesh, coppers, and everything belonging to that department. Then
-turning into the feeding-room, he looked at the troughs and expressed
-himself satisfied with the perfect order that all things were in
-belonging to this.
-
-In going to the lodging rooms, Will Sykes said, “How would you like to
-have them drawn, sir?”
-
-“Each hound singly,” replied the Squire, “and the entry first.”
-
-It was some little time before it came to my turn; but when my name was
-called out I sprang, and as soon as I made my appearance, the Squire
-took a piece of biscuit from his pocket and throwing it to me, said
-“Here Ringwood, beauty,” and caressed me kindly.
-
-One or two of my young companions evinced some temper and jealousy at
-this, and growled deeply with up-reared hackles.
-
-“Come, come,” hallooed Tom, correctingly, and a crack from his thong
-soon silenced the grumblers.
-
-“His nose is hot,” observed the Squire, touching my nostrils, and
-standing a few feet back followed up the remark by saying, “What is
-that redness on his flank?”
-
-“A little heat, I think, sir,” replied the huntsman, making a more
-careful examination of me.
-
-“Then cool him,” was the reply, “and let him stay at home to-morrow.”
-
-I was very sorry to hear this order given; for although I felt far
-from being in health, I was anything but disposed to be placed on the
-hospital list.
-
-Being passed forward to the others, Vanquisher was summoned, and the
-Squire noticing him limp, said, “What is the matter with that hound?
-He’s lame.”
-
-“He has cut his near fore-foot a little,” replied Will.
-
-“Let me see,” rejoined our master, and upon lifting it up, said, “He
-has sprung a claw, and _you_ ought to have known it.”
-
-The huntsman’s face became a little flushed, and he looked as if he
-felt the rebuke keenly.
-
-There was no further remark of censure after this, and when the entire
-presentation had been gone through with, the Squire took his departure,
-expressing himself perfectly satisfied and content with the general
-arrangements of the establishment.
-
-“I’m not going out to-morrow,” said I to Trimbush, with my spirits down
-to zero.
-
-“Never mind,” replied my friend; adding, by way of consolation, that he
-would give me a good account of the day’s sport.
-
-“Yes,” rejoined I, “but that’s a poor makeshift for the disappointment
-of not joining in it.”
-
-“Well, well!” added he, hastily. “We can’t have everything as we could
-wish, and must make the best of crooked matters when they occur. I dare
-say,” continued Trimbush, “that the blow you received the other day,
-with the fright, may have put you out of sorts.”
-
-“Probably,” said I, “and I wish the fellow----”
-
-“Pish, pish!” interrupted my companion. “You might as well wish him
-good as wish him evil. We have no more power in the one case than in
-the other, and it’s old womanish to snap your teeth when you can’t
-bite.”
-
-“I heard a man say, when we were out last,” said I, resolved to take
-advantage of Trimbush’s present loquacious humour; for the old hound
-spent most of his time in a sort of dreaming, winking, blinking state
-in the kennel, and was excessively out of temper if disturbed, “I heard
-a man say when we were out last,” repeated I, “that he liked to see a
-flying hound, and would hang every line-hunter that was ever bred.”
-
-“He must have known a great deal about fox-hunting,” replied Trimbush,
-with a sarcastic grin, “a very great deal indeed. I should like to have
-his name and address.”
-
-“Of course he was wrong,” observed I, with a slight touch of the
-interrogative in the remark.
-
-“Wrong?” repeated Trimbush. “Ha, ha, ha! It makes my old sides ache
-again. What would the flying, flashy devils do when the scent fails at
-head if it was not for the line-hunters? By a line-hunter, I don’t mean
-one of those old pottering fools who stick their noses to the ground as
-if they intended them to take root there; but a hound, that when he has
-stopped long enough to satisfy himself that he is on the line, holds
-forward, and occasionally feels for the scent. That is what I call a
-_killing_ line-hunter, and is a guide and pilot for the pack. Often
-will you see the flyers with their heads up and sterns down, and no
-more notion of stooping than a flock of stray pigeons, flash a field or
-two over the scent, and then back they turn and follow the line-hunter
-in his cast, and the moment he touches it, at him they dash, catch it
-up, and away they race again. But who gets all the praise?” continued
-the old hound, “Why, those who did none of the work.”
-
-“The Squire would give the applause to whom it was due, though,”
-replied I.
-
-“Yes, yes, yes,” rejoined my companion, “and so would every true
-sportsman; but where there is one who understands fox-hunting as a
-_science_, there are five hundred who know no more about it than
-un-hatched tom tits. There are foxes and circumstances,” continued
-he, “that will beat the best huntsman that ever cheered a hound or
-blew a horn; but in nine cases out of ten the cause lies in not paying
-attention to the line-hunters. Hang every line-hunter that was ever
-bred! Ha, ha, ha!” and the old hound’s laugh of derision rung through
-the courts and lodging-houses far and wide.
-
-“I am very glad you told me this,” returned I; “for I began to think,
-from what I heard, there was nothing so likely to insure the praise of
-the field as having one’s head in the air and flying like a bird.”
-
-“Nor is there,” added Trimbush. “But who cares for the praise of a set
-of fools? I’d rather have one ‘Yo--o’ from our master, or a ‘Hark to
-Trimbush, have at him, hark,’ from Will Sykes, than all the yells and
-whoops from the greatest mob that ever met by a cover-side.”
-
-“That’s true,” said I. “There’s no pleasure to be had from their cheer.”
-
-“Only last season,” continued my friend, “some fellow who was dressed
-as if he knew better, absolutely cheered a second-season hound babbling
-the moment he was in cover. ‘Softly, softly,’ hallooed Will, cracking
-his whip. ‘Why, it’s a challenge,’ said the gentleman in pink. ‘Yes,
-sir,’ replied Will, ‘such a challenge that will cause him to have a
-hempen cord put round his throat to-morrow morning. We’ve put up with
-his noise long enough, and longer than the Squire would have done had I
-obeyed his orders strictly.’”
-
-“And was he hung!” inquired I, feeling a cold shiver run through my
-veins.
-
-“Yes,” replied Trimbush. “He was led out of the court the next day,
-with a rope round his neck, to suffer for his repeated offence. It made
-us very sad to see him taken away; but no caution or punishment could
-break him of the habit, and his example was a shocking one for the
-young entry.”
-
-“I’ll take great care not to acquire such an one,” said I.
-
-“Several made the same remark,” replied Trimbush, “and some, who were
-rather prone to indulge in kicking up a row for nothing, made serious
-resolutions to avoid doing so for the future, when the fate of the
-babbler was witnessed.”
-
-“It was necessary, I suppose, for the discipline of the pack?” rejoined
-I.
-
-“Ay,” added the old hound, “if it were not for strict discipline we
-should be as ungovernable, wild, and useless as a lot of untamed
-tigers. Indeed,” continued he, “I’m not certain that the tigers
-couldn’t be turned to greater advantage.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
- “Cold grew the foggy morn: the day was brief:
- Loose on the cherry hung the crimson leaf:
- The dew dwelt ever on the herb, the woods
- Roared with strong blasts, with mighty showers the floods.
- All green was vanished, save the pine and yew,
- That still displayed their melancholy hue,
- Save the green holly with its berries red,
- And the green moss that o’er the gravel spread.”
-
-
-It was the last day of November, and, consequently, the concluding
-one of the first month of regular hunting, that I was left at home
-in consequence of indisposition. The huntsman had given me the night
-before a dose of something which tasted horribly bitter, and I tried
-to reject taking it; but, from my position between his knees, and his
-ramming a bullock’s horn half down my throat, I was obliged to swallow
-the nauseous mixture against my will. Between the effects of this, and
-the mortification of being deprived of the pleasure of a day’s hunting,
-my spirits became sadly depressed, and I could do nothing but creep
-about the court whining, and feeling as miserable a dog as any on four
-feet.
-
-The day was very windy, and the light clouds, looking like fleecy wool,
-scudded before the gale, charged with rain; but with the exception of
-a few drops which occasionally fell, there was nothing as yet but the
-threatening of the flooding storm.
-
-Sighing, moaning, whistling, screaming--now in fitful gusts, then in
-one solid sweep, mighty nature’s breath snaps the tree top and rends
-up the gnarled roots of a century’s growth. On, on, he goes. Bough,
-branch, twig, and leaf--clinging like affection to the dead--he
-whirls and scatters in his stormy path, and with mad delight flings
-destruction in his wake. O-ho for the wind. Away, o’er heath and waste,
-and through dark and deep woods, and by lone churchyards, humming
-through ivy-twined belfries, and jarring rickety casements, shaking old
-hinges, and ripping up thatched eaves and roofs, he holds his course,
-like a fiery unchecked steed. O-ho for the wind. Breasting the wave,
-he drives the surge high, and higher yet. Rolling mountains, topped
-with white and hissing foam, duck from cresting clouds to the wide
-chasms below. O-ho for the wind--death to others is fun to him. A ship!
-Boldly she braves his mighty thrust. Again. With one fell swoop, and,
-quivering, down to the depths she sinks. O-ho for the wind.
-
-It was late in the day, and darkness began to drop around before there
-were any symptoms of my companions’ return. At length I heard the
-welcome clink of the horses’ feet along the gravel road leading to the
-kennel, and shortly afterwards old Mark threw open the door, and in
-they trotted.
-
-“Well,” said I, as Trimbush entered “what sport?”
-
-“Oh!” replied he, “none at all. Such a wind as this,” continued he, “is
-as bad as a blind fog or a hard frost; for the result is just the same.
-We can do nothing with a fox while it lasts.”
-
-“I didn’t think of that,” rejoined I, “or I should not have been so
-envious of ye all day.”
-
-“Might as well have been at home,” returned the old hound, in a
-grumbling humour.
-
-“You found?” said I.
-
-“Of course we did,” he replied. “We never get a blank day. They are too
-staunch and true preservers in _our_ country for that to take place.”
-
-My companion was now called to take his turn in the warm bath, which
-Mark had prepared, and after his body and limbs were well laved, he was
-ordered into the lodging-room, where there was plenty of clean straw to
-roll in.
-
-“There’s nothing like this,” said Trimbush, rubbing his back, with all
-his feet in the air. “There’s nothing like this,” repeated he, “after a
-cold, wretched day. It warms one’s blood, prevents rheumatism, and is a
-real blessed preventative to many disorders. I like my bath as well as
-my meal.”
-
-“You are no bad judge,” replied I, laughing.
-
-“I should say not,” returned he. “I should say that I was anything but
-a bad judge between what’s good for us and what is not.”
-
-After all had been washed, and each had enjoyed a good tumble among the
-straw, Mark summoned them to the feeding-room, where a bountiful meal
-was ready for their sharpened appetites. When this was finished--and
-it did not occupy many minutes--they were conducted to another
-lodging-house, so that there might be no damp or chill remaining from
-the wet straw in the one used as the _drying_ apartment. Nothing could
-be more perfect than all the arrangements made for our health and
-comfort, and yet, in themselves, they consisted of little more than a
-simple method of doing that well, which would have occupied quite as
-much time and trouble in the end to do badly.
-
-“There,” remarked Trimbush, with his ribs sticking out as if they were
-well lined within, “now I feel comfortable, and at peace with all the
-world.”
-
-“Except the foxes in it,” replied I.
-
-“Oh!” rejoined he, “I have no enmity towards them. It’s the combined
-joy of finding, running, and beating them, and the pleasure of----”
-
-“Eating them,” added I.
-
-“Well?” continued he, as if weighing the sentence, “I suppose we may
-say that, too; but I am rather doubtful about it.”
-
-“About what?” inquired I.
-
-“About the eating part of the business,” replied he. “It’s true that
-we break up a fox, and swallow him as if we loved his carcase better
-than any other kind of flesh. But, in my opinion, it is more from
-the excitement we are worked into than from any desirable flavour he
-possesses. A fox is too near ourselves for him to be considered proper
-food for our stomachs. It’s approaching particularly close to dog
-eating dog.”
-
-“But that you did once,” said I.
-
-“Yes,” responded Trimbush, carelessly, “I know I did, and might again,
-under similar circumstances. It only shows,” he continued, “what we
-will do when in a rage or in an excited state. There is nothing with
-life, from an elephant to a cockroach, but we would have a shy at.”
-
-“Then you don’t believe that we really love the varmint as a dainty
-morsel?” rejoined I.
-
-“No,” returned he, “I think not. Fancy, for instance, your killing and
-eating the poor little vixen chained just outside the kennel door.”
-
-“Ugh!” said I, disgusted at the thought.
-
-“Does not that prove what I say?” asked my companion. “We pass her
-continually in going out and coming in, and yet not one of us ever
-thinks of making a meal of her. But if the fox was our _natural_ food,
-we couldn’t help doing so, and the first opportunity that presented
-itself she would be digested victuals.”
-
-“But, perhaps, the fear of getting a good drubbing may operate as a
-check to the inclinations of others,” observed I.
-
-“If that were the case,” replied he, “how is it that the hounds, which
-occasionally come home by themselves hungry, never make the slightest
-attempt to injure her? Nothing would be easier than to kill and eat the
-fox without the smallest risk of being discovered.”
-
-“There’s great force in your argument,” I remarked.
-
-“I flatter myself that there generally is,” returned the egotistical
-old hound. “Now, look at a cat with a bird,” he resumed, “the cases
-are very different. Whether the bird is wild or not--let it be on the
-tree or in a cage--she will be equally disposed to make it her prey.
-Birds, like mice, are her natural food; and she, therefore, takes them
-without any other motive than to please her palate; but foxes, not
-being ours, we require the ardour of the chase to make them agreeable
-to _our_ tastes.”
-
-“What do you think would be the effect if we were not allowed to break
-the fox up?” inquired I.
-
-“That we should be just as eager to find, run and pull him down,”
-replied he. “You hear sometimes of men talking about hounds wanting
-blood. It’s all nonsense. We may want to _kill_; but hounds never flag
-from want of _blood_. All highly bred dogs like _us_ love sport, and
-we hunt for the enjoyment of it; not for our bellies. But men are such
-selfish beasts, and think so much about eating that they can’t give us
-credit for being more disinterested than themselves.”
-
-“You are very severe on our masters,” rejoined I.
-
-“Not more so than they deserve,” returned Trimbush. “Not one in a
-thousand of ’em thinks for himself; but just repeats that which he’s
-told, and so they go on babble, babble, babble, with about as much
-meaning and sense as a flock of cackling geese. It’s a strange thing,
-too,” continued he, “that what they see in one case, forms no precedent
-or guide to their addlepated brains in another. I don’t mean to compare
-pointers, or setters, or greyhounds with _us_, of course; but they
-never get blood, and yet they take as much pleasure in their work, and
-are as eager to find game, as if every bird shot over them was plucked,
-roasted, and served up in rich gravy, on silver, for their suppers.
-Now, it is quite clear that they don’t hunt for blood, and, therefore,
-why should we? It is true that we look for it at the finish from habit,
-and because we are cheered even to take it, and I never feel wilder
-than when Tom and Ted are _who-whooping_ over us; but, to say that we
-absolutely require _blood_, is all nonsense.”
-
-“But the more we kill, the greater kill-devils we become,” said I.
-
-“That’s true,” added my companion. “As in everything else, the supreme
-gratification lies in securing the object sought to be gained, and
-the running into our fox is ours. The same rule would apply to our
-killing but seldom, and consequently being generally disappointed, as
-to pointers and setters having very few birds shot over them. Continued
-mortification would render all much less ardent for the work, in
-consequence of the dearth of the great _climax_ to sport; not from the
-covetous, greedy, piggish, grovelling want of the material to lick our
-chops.”
-
-Finding Trimbush getting warm upon the subject, I thought it better not
-to provoke the discussion further, and made no reply. The old hound,
-however, continued to abuse mankind in general, for some minutes, for
-entertaining such a low estimate of our motives in the chase, and wound
-up his observations by saying, “It’s not to be wondered at; for true
-sportsmen are born, like poets--chaps with as much music in their souls
-as we have in our tongues--now and then; but fools come into the world
-every second.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
- “For with a sigh, a blast of all his breath,
- That viewless thing, called life, did from him steal.”
-
-
-We were trotting leisurely to cover, one morning, when I remarked that
-Trimbush was more serious and silent than usual.
-
-“What are you thinking about?” said I.
-
-“We’ve got our work cut out to-day,” replied he, “and I was just
-turning a few matters over in my brain, to untie some of the knots and
-difficulties which always beset us when we draw Berry brake.”
-
-“Is that our first draw?” said I.
-
-“Yes,” returned my companion, “and a sure find. For the last four
-seasons we have challenged the same fox, and, as he lives, I need not
-say that he has, hitherto, beaten us.”
-
-“But how?” I asked. “He must be something extraordinary to beat ye
-four whole seasons.”
-
-“He is,” added Trimbush: “but he must be more than _that_, even to live
-till sun-down to-day.”
-
-“Tell me all about him,” said I, “and what your plans are; for I see
-your mind is made up for mischief.”
-
-“Why, in the first place, then, I should tell you,” replied my friend,
-“that Berry brake is the strongest cover I ever was in. It cuts our
-chests and sterns, and makes our heads swell terribly, to get through
-at any pace. The scent, too, is very good in it, and from having given
-Old Charley some good dusting, he will not hang a moment now. This, in
-so far as the strength of the cover is concerned, is all the better
-for us; but he is so wary that he bolts at the slightest noise, and
-has taken to his pads long before Tom has been even able to occupy his
-station at the upper part of the cover. Whatever his tactics may be,
-however, he invariably breaks away fresh, and with a good start, and
-being as strong a fox as ever stood before hounds, he has managed to
-outrun and beat us up to this time.”
-
-“Is he a big one?” I inquired.
-
-“I have viewed many a one in my day,” replied Trimbush; “but never
-did I put eyes upon such a wolf-like looking animal. He’s as black as
-thunder, and as long as a rope-walk. You can’t mistake the devil’s own,
-as Will Sykes christened him, if you chance to view him; but we have
-not done so for the last six times of hunting him.”
-
-“View or no view,” rejoined I, “we’ll stick to him.”
-
-“For a month, if we can but hunt, yard by yard, inch by inch,” said the
-old hound, with fixed determination expressed in his proudly erected
-head and lashing stern.
-
-“You’ve got some manœuvre or artful dodge in store for him, I know,” I
-remarked.
-
-“I have,” responded my companion, “and you shall not only hear what
-it is, but shall join in the scheme. As I told you a short time
-since, most foxes hang in cover as long as they dare or can. It is
-their nature to screen themselves as much as possible, and they
-face the open only when compelled and pressed. A fox that has been
-often hunted, however, is of course more shy than one who has not,
-and the devil’s own, having invariably met with a precious rattling
-whenever he attempted to thread the covers, never hangs fire now, but
-sweeps straight through them. In order to be on good terms with him,
-therefore, we must act in the same manner, and to lose no precious
-second of time, remember, that the moment we reach a cover, the chances
-are a hundred to one that he is already through. If not, we shall
-instantly know that the pull is in our favour by his hanging, for, if
-it was not for the general rule of foxes hanging in covers, they would
-serve us, in nineteen cases out of twenty, as the devil’s own does, and
-run us clean out of all scent.”
-
-“Being so crafty,” returned I, “I’m surprised that they don’t depend
-more upon that which would save them, _their speed_.”
-
-“The reason is this,” added Trimbush. “Although much faster than we
-are, and with power of equal endurance, they cannot bear the heat of
-the day as well as we can. It should be recollected also, that we have
-rested the night before, and commence our work with empty bellies in
-the morning; but the fox has been on the pad foraging for food when we
-were asleep, and, perhaps, is gorged at the moment we unkennel him. He,
-therefore, feels himself in no condition for racing, and tries all his
-cunning to elude us in preference to facing the open. I don’t know,”
-continued he, “how the devil’s own regulates his meals; but I fancy he
-must sup early, and go to bed long before cock-crow.”
-
-At this moment Will Sykes glanced round, and hallooed, “Give them more
-room, Ned, and let them empty themselves.”
-
-“Ay, ay,” replied Ned, checking his horse to leave greater space
-between himself and the huntsman.
-
-“That’s right,” observed Trimbush. “There should always be plenty of
-room between the second whip and the huntsman, so that we may not be
-hurried when we want to stop.”
-
-“Then you intend,” said I, resuming the subject, “then you intend----”
-
-“To fly straight to the farthest end, or opposite side of every cover
-he points for,” interrupted he, “and especially the moment we are
-thrown into Berry brake, in order to be on good terms with him at the
-burst. It’s our only chance,” continued the old hound, “and if he
-beats us to-day, with the ground in the order that it is, and this
-mild velvety wind, hang me if I shall have any hope of breaking up the
-devil’s own.”
-
-“Have you made known your plan to any of the others?” I inquired.
-
-“Yes,” replied my companion, “two couple and a half of the right sort
-stand in with us, and it will go hard but we’ll give a better account
-of him than he has met with yet.”
-
-We had not to travel far to the meet, and soon after Trimbush ceased
-speaking we came in sight of it. The Squire had just trotted up on his
-hack, and was dismounting at the moment of our arrival.
-
-“Well!” said he, addressing Will Sykes, “is the devil’s own to beat us
-again to-day?”
-
-“He may, sir,” replied the huntsman, giving a cursory glance at us, as
-if to direct his master’s attention to the draft; “but if he does, I
-shall think Tom’s suspicions are right.”
-
-“And what are they?” asked the Squire.
-
-“That he bears a charmed life,” replied Will, “and no hounds ever bred
-could run into him.”
-
-Our master laughed heartily at this, and said, “We must try to break
-the charm.”
-
-I felt all on fire as the cover appeared, and could scarcely refrain
-from dashing after Tom when he trotted off to take his station.
-Trimbush, seeing my impatience, said, “Gently, my lad, gently. There’s
-nothing like spirit; but wait for orders, and never yield to the
-impulse of committing a breach of discipline.”
-
-Notwithstanding this reasoning, however, I could see that he had enough
-to do to keep a check upon his own inclination to break away. But our
-impatience was not kept long upon the stretch. Will was as anxious to
-begin as we were, and no sooner had the whips taken their places than
-he threw us into cover, but without the slightest noise being made.
-There was not so much even as the crack of a thong.
-
-“That’s right,” said Trimbush, going like a bullet through the furze,
-“although I should not wonder but he’s gone.”
-
-The hounds, instructed by Trimbush, and agreeing to adopt his
-proceedings, were Dashwood, Hector, Loyalty, Wildboy, and Rubicon, all
-old friends of his. We went together in a body full swing, more as if
-we were flying to a view halloo than drawing a cover, and just when
-about the thick of it, a whimper from Chancellor announced that the
-devil’s own was afoot.
-
-“Tally-ho!” now rung from Tom Holt’s throat.
-
-“Shoot to the right,” said Trimbush, leading, and in a few strides we
-were outside the thick, almost impenetrable gorse.
-
-“Tally-ho, tally-ho!” again hallooed Tom.
-
-“Come along,” said the old hound, “we are close to his brush this time
-at any rate.”
-
-Racing to where the whipper-in stood with his cap in the air, we picked
-up the scent and found it sweeter than fresh-pulled flowers.
-
-Settling to him, and with a bunch of our companions, who likewise made
-play to the halloo as we did, away we rattled at the pace which only a
-burning scent and hounds bristling for a kill can show.
-
-For an hour-and-a-half we burst him along, and not one fox in a
-thousand could have stood before us for such a time and over such a
-country, in which there was not so much as a spinny to hide him; but he
-kept on at just the same rate, and a halloo, every now and then, told
-us that he was only just a-head. Several of us were tailed off, and
-some never reached the main body at all. The burst was so quick, that
-the field, too, couldn’t get well away with us, and the consequence was
-that nearly all the horses were run to a stand-still before getting
-their second wind.
-
-“I begin to think,” said Trimbush, still the leader of the chosen few,
-“that his point’s Gretwith rock, and if so, there’s not a bush to hold
-him for fifteen miles as straight as the crow flies.”
-
-“He can’t last the distance,” replied Rubicon. “We shall run him from
-scent to view in less than another mile.”
-
-“So I think,” rejoined Wildboy. “His red rag’s hanging from his jaws
-worse than mine, I know, and that feels like dried chalk.”
-
-“We shall come to soil presently,” returned Loyalty. “There’s the Loam
-stream not far a-head.”
-
-“Egad!” added Dashwood, “but I wish it was in my next stride. I’m
-blistered with thirst.”
-
-“I shouldn’t be surprised,” said Trimbush, “to find him try an artful
-move at the Loam. Be careful, my hearts, and don’t flash forward on
-the opposite bank. Feel for it as you go, and make good inch by inch,
-rather than be in doubt. We shall save time by the trouble.”
-
-Thus schooled, we took especial care, upon refreshing ourselves in the
-Loam, to follow the instructions given, and our first cast was along
-the verge down stream, which, also, chanced to be down wind.
-
-“This is his line,” said Trimbush, evidently puzzled, “and yet----”
-
-“Let us try up wind,” interrupted Dashwood, “he may have headed, as
-he’s a sinking one.”
-
-“You flatter yourself,” returned the old hound; “he has as much life in
-him as will serve to test your pluck and powers for an hour to come.”
-
-“But he may have headed back,” observed Wildboy.
-
-“He _may_,” quietly added Trimbush; “but make your work good as ye go.
-I think,” continued he, “that we have cast to the right, which was the
-probable line, far enough. Now let us try the left.”
-
-Will Sykes, Ned Adams, and the Squire, now came in sight; but their
-horses could not be spurred out of a trot. Their heads were between
-their knees, and their tails shook as if they must drop off.
-
-“How beautifully they work,” I heard the Squire say as he threw himself
-from the saddle. “Let them alone; pray let them alone.”
-
-We had now made the cast as far to the left as we had done to the
-right, and yet we could not hit him off.
-
-“I’m sure he’s headed back,” said Wildboy, confidently.
-
-“We’ll try,” replied Trimbush; “but I doubt it.”
-
-“It’s now quite clear,” said the Squire, as we failed to touch the
-scent in our track, “that the hounds can make nothing of it. They have
-had a fair trial; now let me see what you can do, William.”
-
-Will threw his strong, keen eye forward, and his ears were pricked for
-any halloo or indication of the line of the fox; but nothing appeared
-to enlighten him. He then out with his horn, and was about making a
-wider and more forward cast than we had made down wind, when Trimbush
-sprang into the stream, and swam to a small patch of sedge and grass,
-not a great deal bigger than a man’s hat, and apparently scarcely
-large enough to hold a rat, when bang the fox sprang from the middle
-and away he raced, whisking the water from his brush like a maid
-trundling her mop. We rushed at him in a body, but might as well have
-attempted to get to the head of a stroke of soaped lightning.
-
-“A trick worthy of the devil’s own,” said Trimbush, laughing, “but I
-proved a match for him this time.”
-
-“How was it that we could not carry the scent down stream?” inquired
-I, as the devil’s own became lost to view over the brow of a short but
-steep hill.
-
-“Because,” replied my companion, “he reached the water some seconds
-before ourselves, and swimming so far _down the stream_, he gained the
-little bank of mud, where he squatted, with all the scent _washed away
-from him_. We could, therefore, carry it no further than where he took
-water, and as he did not break from it, the reason is obvious for our
-being unable to act otherwise than we did.”
-
-“I can’t think how you came to suspect that he had laid up there,”
-remarked I.
-
-“I never knew a fox to do so before,” returned the old hound. “Soil is
-about the only dodge a stag has to try his cunning at; but a fox rarely
-hangs in or about water. I, however,” continued he, “was prepared for
-any trick with the devil’s own, and my anticipation of a deep one
-proved correct.”
-
-We now came to a more enclosed country, and the fences greatly added
-to our momentarily increasing distress. The hounds dropped off one by
-one, and some, attempting to jump the steep and wide ditches, fell into
-them, and there laid, not having strength enough to crawl out again.
-
-It was fearful work, and how I managed to stagger forward is a
-mystery to me to this day. Trimbush did his best to cheer us on, and
-continually reminded us “that a kill was certain if we only stuck to
-him a _little longer_.” But this “little longer” appeared to be a very
-indefinite period.
-
-The winter day was waning fast. Objects at a short distance began
-to loom through the thickening shades, and the sun’s last rays had
-scarcely left a faint tinge of his glory in the west. Still the chase
-went on. There was no check, let, or stop. On, on, we flew: the
-pursuing and pursued.
-
-“He dies, by the Lord!” cried Trimbush, in perfect ecstacy, as we
-flashed a few yards over the scent, and then, turning, hit it off short
-to the right. “He dies, he dies!” cried he, throwing up his head, and
-waking a loud echo from his deep-toned tongue.
-
-“What do you mean?” inquired I, reeling with weakness, and certain that
-my remaining strength was all but spent.
-
-“His point was Gretwith rock, as I thought long since,” replied the
-old hound; “but he can’t live the distance. He has now turned short to
-run up wind, which proves him to be a sinking one, and if he reaches
-Quaffam wood it is as much as he can do.”
-
-Seeing that Trimbush was serious, this sage opinion lent fresh aid to
-our flagging energies, and the skeleton of his force, comprising only
-Dashwood, Wildboy, and myself, answered his cheer by redoubling our
-efforts to run into the devil’s own.
-
-The wood which Trimbush spoke of now appeared at the bottom of a deep
-valley, and into the underbush we dashed, confident that the fox must
-hang, and also in the hope that he would not live to leave it. I had no
-sooner, however, entered the cover than, losing the cool refreshing
-wind at my nostrils, I fell to the ground, faint and breathless; but
-every effort proved fruitless; and crouching behind the trunk of a
-large tree, I was obliged to remain stationary sorely against my will.
-
-For a few minutes I heard my companions driving the devil’s own to the
-furthest end of the cover from where I laid, and then, as their cry
-approached, I knew they had headed him towards me. Putting my head
-close to the ground, I saw the fox creeping along with his back up,
-scarcely able to crawl. His tongue was drooping from his jaws, and his
-brush dragged along as if there was not strength enough in him even
-to lift that. Every now and then he stopped and turned his head, and,
-not perceiving me, continued to near the spot where I laid. Close and
-closer he came, and, at length, coming within springing distance, I
-made an effort which surprised myself, and fastened my teeth right
-across the middle of his loins before he had a chance of knowing from
-what quarter he was attacked. Catching me by the ear, however, he gave
-me a dying grip which made me remember the length of his teeth and the
-strength of his jaws for some time to come, and he had not unlocked
-them, before Trimbush, Dashwood, and Loyalty came to my assistance, and
-quickly put an end to the struggle.
-
-“We’ll break him up presently,” gasped Trimbush. “Let’s get a sob or
-two of wind first,” and forming a circle round the lifeless carcase of
-the devil’s own, we lay stretched upon the ground, panting and beaten
-to a crawl.
-
-At this moment something crashing through the brushwood was heard, and
-soon afterwards a labouring man came running up, and seizing the fox,
-lifted him above his head, and “who-whooped” most lustily. He then drew
-a great clasped knife from a sheath, and cut off the head, brush, and
-pads of the devil’s own.
-
-“Ah!” said he, “I heard ye, and thought there was something up more
-than common. I can guess all about it. You’ve beaten every one o’ the
-field, and tailed off all the rest o’ the pack.”
-
-“You’re right enough, old fellow,” observed Trimbush, “and I wish you
-could understand me as well as I can you. But what the deuce are ye
-about with the fox?”
-
-The astonishment of Trimbush was caused by seeing the man deliberately
-proceeding to skin the fox, as he might the body of a dead cat or
-rabbit.
-
-“I’ll soon whip off your jacket,” said the man, “and then they can eat
-ye nice and comfortably. Such a skin as this,” continued he, “must be
-terribly tough, I know.”
-
-“What a considerate Christian!” exclaimed Loyalty. “Old Mark could
-scarcely be more thoughtful.”
-
-“Besides,” resumed the labourer, finishing his job, “such a skin as
-this is worth half-a-crown, and it had much better go into my pocket
-than down your bellies.”
-
-“Ho, ho!” ejaculated Trimbush. “That’s the secret of your attention, is
-it?”
-
-“Who-whoop!” hallooed the man. “Who-whoop!” and throwing the
-dismembered carcase to us, we tore it into pieces and demolished, with
-more than ordinary relish, the devil’s own.
-
-“Now, what am I to do with ye?” observed the rustic, scratching the
-back part of his head.
-
-“Take us to the nearest best quarters,” said Trimbush; “give us a good
-supper, plenty of straw, and lead us home in the morning.”
-
-“It’s a long distance,” soliloquized the man; “but I shall get well
-paid for my trouble, I know. It can’t be done to-night, howsomever; and
-so I’ll get farmer Oatfield to give grub and lodgings, and journey home
-with ye to-morrow myself.”
-
-“A capital move,” said Trimbush, “and a sentiment after my own heart.
-Come along.”
-
-Most willingly we followed our conductor from the cover, and after
-proceeding about a mile, we came to one of those nests of comforts,
-a good farm-house. As we entered the yard, two rough and shaggy
-shepherd’s dogs ran barking towards us; but upon coming closer,
-they wagged their short stumpy tails by way of a welcome, and soon
-afterwards we had a famous supper of warm milk and meal, supplied to
-us by the hospitable Mr. Oatfield, who heard with infinite glee the
-rustic’s account of the way in which he discovered us; and then, by
-his orders, some bundles of fresh straw were shaken out, upon which we
-stretched ourselves, with that pleasure which only the wearied feel.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
- “The gorse is yellow on the heath,
- The banks with speed-well flowers are gay,
- The oaks are budding, and beneath
- The hawthorn soon will bear the wreath,
- The silver wreath of May.”
-
-
-“I hate to see those violets a-peeping on the banks,” said old Mark to
-the huntsman, one morning, “and always did.”
-
-“Why so?” asked Will.
-
-“Because they are a sure sign that hunting is drawing to a close,”
-replied our feeder.
-
-“Yes, yes,” rejoined Will Sykes. “True enough. When the speed-well
-flowers begin to show,” continued he, “we may be certain that the
-season’s almost at an end.”
-
-“Shall we kill a May fox?” inquired Mark, for he always coupled the
-_we_ in all relating to us and our doings.
-
-“No,” replied Will. “The season’s too forward, and the Squire said
-yesterday he would only hunt twice more.”
-
-“That’s bad news,” observed Trimbush. “However,” said he, “the noses on
-the kennel-door show that we have given a good account of our foxes.”
-
-“The devil’s own is not there,” replied I. “How is that?”
-
-“No,” rejoined the old hound. “His head was sent to be mounted as a
-cup, I heard Tom tell Ned Adams, and it is always to be placed in the
-middle of the table at the hunt-dinner.”
-
-“I’m glad of that,” returned I.
-
-“No doubt you are,” added Trimbush, “and so am I. It will be a lasting
-record of a run that, if equalled, was never beaten.”
-
-“What was the time, do you suppose?” inquired I.
-
-“Not a minute less than five hours,” responded my companion.
-
-“How proud the Squire and all of them were upon our return!” said I.
-
-“Yes,” rejoined the old hound. “I thought we should be killed by
-that which seldom forms the ground of coroners’ inquests--excessive
-kindness.”
-
-“Well!” exclaimed I, “since we have but two days remaining, we must
-endeavour to wind up the season with a good finish.”
-
-“To be sure,” returned Trimbush; “a brace more of noses must be added
-to the account, at least.”
-
-“How tired I shall be of kennel life throughout the long, hot summer,”
-said I, with a whine at the thought.
-
-“It is rather monotonous, I must say,” replied my companion.
-
-“And then to be continually shut up,” rejoined I.
-
-“Oh! but you’ll not be,” added he. “We are taken out always at
-daybreak, when the air and ground are nice and cool, and have a gentle
-trot for some eight or ten miles. Then a certain number, from three to
-four couple, are allowed, in turns, to remain at large all day about
-the kennel, or where we like, so long as we don’t get into mischief.”
-
-“That’s very kind and considerate,” said I, “and contributes greatly
-to our happiness.”
-
-“And health, you might have added,” continued Trimbush. “Nothing is so
-bad as close confinement for us, and, indeed, for all kinds of sporting
-dogs. The more liberty we have, the better for our condition, spirit,
-and general good. Trencher-fed hounds,” said he, “are remarkable for
-the superiority they possess over their kennelled brethren, and the
-only cause is from the freedom they enjoy.”
-
-“What a pity it is,” said I, “that we can’t make our rulers comprehend
-us as well as we understand them.”
-
-“Their heads are so thick,” replied Trimbush, contemptuously. “A great
-many are solid, like stones, all the way through, I’m sure.”
-
-“Some act as if they were,” rejoined I.
-
-“Act?” sneered the old hound. “Upon my soul I can’t think what nineteen
-out of twenty were born for. Certainly not for fox-hunting; that’s
-quite evident.”
-
-“It’s a good thing,” I remarked, “that our master is not one of the
-stone-heads.”
-
-“Yes,” returned he, “we are fortunate in that respect, and in most
-others. Will and Mark are as famous hound servants as ever entered
-a kennel, and, as a good huntsman makes good hounds, so does a good
-master make good servants.”
-
-“There’s a wonderful deal in the management,” I observed.
-
-“Everything,” replied Trimbush. “And, unless a master of foxhounds is
-a thorough-going sportsman, and is acquainted with all the apparently
-trifling details of his establishment, you may depend upon it that he’s
-very much out of his place.”
-
-“Your information concerning our liberty during the summer months,”
-said I, “has reconciled me somewhat to the mortification of closing the
-season.”
-
-“We need not examine farther,” resumed Trimbush, “than the effect
-produced upon birds, when caged, to learn the advantages of freedom.
-The plumage of a wild bird is close, smooth, and bright; while that
-of one in close confinement is dull and rough. There is strength and
-energy in the one, too, which is never seen in the other.”
-
-“The feather often shows which way the wind blows,” remarked I.
-
-“As well as the national banner of England floating in the breeze,”
-returned the old hound.
-
-“I have heard,” I remarked, after a pause, “with the greatest pleasure,
-all that you have said regarding us, and I do not think anything has
-been advanced without sufficient reason being given. But what would you
-say may be deemed a general rule for a huntsman to observe?”
-
-“In the field?” asked Trimbush.
-
-“Yes,” replied I.
-
-“Study the wind,” returned he, “let hounds alone, and keep his eyes on
-the line-hunters. On these important points,” he continued, “depends
-all the success in hunting. But when I say let hounds alone, I mean
-that they are to stand still just long enough for them to be sure that
-the scent is not at the point they are trying. We then go cheerfully to
-try another; but there is nothing so prejudicial as an imperfect, hasty
-cast.”
-
-“Nothing can be more obvious,” I replied; “and I wish, with all my
-heart, that such a golden rule could be indelibly carved in the memory
-of every one whom fate may decree to blow a horn to hounds.”
-
-“Ay,” rejoined Trimbush, “if abided by, there would be but little
-cause for grumbling about want of sport. We can generally do far
-better without assistance than with it, and the more we receive, the
-more helpless and artificial we become. I believe I told ye so a short
-time since, and it is the case, not only with us, but with everybody,
-two-footed and four, to look for support from those resources, which,
-through times of difficulties, save labour and exertion, rather than
-put our own shoulders to the collar. This is but natural, and the blame
-rests more with those who are unwise enough to forget that we all have
-our duty to perform, and in doing that of others they commit as great
-an error as in neglecting their own; because, if not idle themselves,
-they are the positive cause of neglect and idleness in their fellows.”
-
-“Upon my honour,” returned I, “you talk like a philosopher.”
-
-“Then a philosopher speaks but the simple truth,” added my companion,
-“in very simple language.”
-
-“You never hear,” said I, diving again more particularly into our
-subject, “of men admitting that they had anything to do with losing
-a fox, although they invariably claim a large share in the honour of
-killing him.”
-
-“You have noticed that, have you?” responded the old hound, laughing.
-“No; it is always _they_ lost him, but _we_ killed him. Ha, ha, ha!”
-
-“It ought to be just reversed,” rejoined I.
-
-“There would be much greater truth in the assertion, when generally
-applied,” returned Trimbush. “A fox is frequently lost through them,
-and rare, indeed, is the occurrence when any act on their part may be
-regarded as one of assistance in killing him.”
-
-“I begin to have a great contempt for the ignorance of human beings,”
-observed I.
-
-“All of us do at the end of our first season,” replied my friend. “We
-discover, by that time, what a set of know-nothings men are, and, if
-worthy to be retained in the pack, take no notice whatever of their
-cheers or rates; but merely avoid their horses’ feet, and get away from
-them as far and as fast as we can.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
- “When early primroses appear,
- And vales are decked with daffodils,
- I hail the new reviving year,
- And soothing hope my bosom fills.
- The lambkin bleating on the plain,
- The swallow seen with gladdened eye,
- The welcome cuckoo’s merry strain,
- Proclaim the joyful summer nigh.”
-
-
-It was the second week in April, and the last day of the season, that
-we jogged slowly along the road to the meet. The season had been
-unusually forward, and the air was fragrant with the early violets and
-primroses, decking the roadside banks. There was a haze rolling along
-the valleys, and the boughs and branches of the trees, now unfolding
-their luxuriant and freshest green, were glittering with myriads of
-dew-drops, flashing in the light of the young spring morn.
-
-Punctuality being the standing order with our Squire, Will often
-consulted his watch to regulate our pace, so that we should be at the
-fixture exactly at the time named; and as we approached Duvale village,
-the church clock was striking the hour of ten. Turning on to a patch of
-green, where a few geese and a lonely dejected-looking donkey cropped
-the meagre herbage, and a host of round-faced chubby children played,
-and madly screamed with joy to see us arrive, we formed a group around
-Will’s horse in eager expectation of the Squire’s coming. The hum of
-the last stroke had scarcely ceased, when the sharp pit-a-pat of a
-horse’s feet was heard, and immediately afterwards the Squire came
-cantering up, accompanied by three or four of his friends.
-
-I was glad to see that the field comprised those only who hunted
-regularly with us, and, although many of them were generally too
-anxious to get forward, and thought of little more than showing well
-in the first flight, yet there was no fear of much unsportsman-like
-conduct on their part.
-
-Without the loss of a minute we trotted off to our first draw, a long
-and narrow belt of fir trees, with thick brushwood at the bottom,
-which proved a blank. We then drew a line of small spinnies, and in one
-of them, at the furthest end up wind, I saw two or three old hounds
-flourish their sterns at one spot, and before I could reach it, a
-first-seasoned one, like myself, called Boaster, threw his tongue.
-
-“Gently, Boaster,” hallooed Will, giving an admonitory crack of the
-whip. “Gently, Boaster.”
-
-Upon pushing my nose among the group, I inhaled a slight scent of _the_
-animal; but it was very faint.
-
-“It’s a stale drag,” said Trimbush, “and he may be twenty miles away by
-this time. Who opened on it?” asked he.
-
-“Boaster,” replied I, fearing that he might think me guilty of the
-puppy-like deed.
-
-“Then I tell you this, youngster,” rejoined the old hound, “if you’re
-so free with your tongue, you’ll have reason to wish, some day, that it
-had been cut out at your birth.”
-
-“But it was the right scent,” expostulated Boaster; “and how could I
-tell if it was stale or not?”
-
-“Then your nose is not worth a damn,” returned Trimbush, passionately.
-“At any rate,” continued he, “you might have a little decent modesty,
-and not take precedency of _us_.”
-
-Trimbush placed a very strong emphasis upon the “us,” and Boaster,
-ashamed and abashed, drooped his stern, and, for the remainder of the
-day, did not again attempt playing first fiddle.
-
-We were now taken about two miles, and thrown into a large rambling
-cover, composed of patches of gorse, bramble, and nutwood.
-
-“I saw some fresh billets just now, sir,” said Ned Adams to the Squire.
-
-“Where?”
-
-“Just under that ash, and on the edge of the gap, sir,” replied the
-second whip.
-
-“Very well,” rejoined his master.
-
-I was close to Dashwood and Trimbush, when both stopped suddenly, and
-simultaneously throwing up their heads, both gave long bell-like notes,
-which rung and echoed far and near.
-
-“Hark to Trimbush!” cried Will Sykes; “hark to Dashwood, hark, hark!”
-and then, as I and others picked up the grateful scent, and threw our
-tongues cheerfully, he hallooed, “Hark together, hark!”
-
-Now we closed; now we went full swing. Up went Tom Holt’s cap.
-
-“It’s a vixen, sir,” I heard him say.
-
-“Stop them, then,” replied our master, “and let her go. We can’t spare
-a bitch fox now.”
-
-Out we crashed; but Tom charged at our heads, cracking his awful double
-thong, and being well mounted, the most daring of us knew that it was
-hopeless to endeavour to get away with her. Boaster was the only one
-who made a lame attempt, and he instantly got a cut across the loins,
-which sent him flying back into cover howling most piteously.
-
-“It’s a hard case,” said Trimbush, doggedly, “to be whipped off in this
-fashion, and I don’t think it’s fair. When too late to kill vixens,”
-continued he, with little apparent inclination to draw the cover again,
-“why not give up hunting altogether?”
-
-“You would be the last to carry out that principle, I’m sure,” observed
-Rubicon.
-
-“I don’t know that,” rejoined the old hound. “It’s very tantalizing
-and dispiriting to be stopped the moment a fox, which we have taken
-the trouble and pains to find, breaks away. We meet with enough
-disappointments which can’t be avoided, throughout a season, without
-having such as these thrust upon us.”
-
-“But we are continually so stopped in cub-hunting,” returned Rubicon.
-
-“That’s quite a different matter,” said Trimbush. “There are then two
-or three brace of ’em afoot, perhaps, and they get headed back as well
-as ourselves. We can always reckon, too, upon plenty of sport at that
-time; but at the end of a season, when foxes are thin, it----”
-
-At this moment I winded the glorious scent again, and, throwing my
-tongue, bang a great dark-coloured fox went across a ride. Trimbush cut
-short his harangue, and, forgetting the cause of his anger, flew to my
-side, and away we rattled.
-
-“Have at him!” hallooed Will. “Have at him, darlings! Yoiks, have at
-him!”
-
-Up went Tom Holt’s cap again.
-
-“All right, sir,” I heard him say. “As fine a dog-fox as ever was seen.”
-
-Through the furze we dashed, and out burst more than two-thirds of us
-close to his brush.
-
-_Twang, twang, twang, twang_, went Will’s horn.
-
-“For’ard, for’ard!” hallooed Ned Adams: “get to him hounds, get to him!
-For’ard! for’_ard_!”
-
-For fifteen minutes we flew along at our best pace, over a country,
-without even a bush strong enough to hold him. The scent being breast
-high, we cut out some of the sharpest work for the best and boldest to
-ride to us.
-
-“His point’s the main earth at the Curby brake,” said Trimbush; “but
-old ‘fox-fix’ has been there with his spade and pickaxe, I’ll be bound.”
-
-The cover spoken of by my companion was quickly gained, and on the
-slope of a steep bank, thickly twined with the stubborn roots of some
-neighbouring oaks, we ran straight to the mouth of a closed earth.
-
-“Ha, ha!” laughed Trimbush, “I said so. If he had poked his nose
-underground here, they might have dug for a week to no purpose.”
-
-We now carried it through the brake, and, sinking some rising ground,
-entered Bushford Woodlands. Here the small enclosures and thick fences
-began to tell both upon us and the field, and instead of carrying a
-head in one close and compact body, many began to tail and string in
-the rear. As near as I can guess we had ran ten miles from the find
-without the check of a moment, when we threw up at a gate leading into
-a road. We flew over it, and saw an old woman with a red cloak on,
-screaming most lustily; but whether from fright or joy I could not
-discover.
-
-To the left we went, but not making it out, turned short to the right,
-when Will blowing a “come-to-me,” off we swept to the summons.
-
-“I saw it, sir,” I heard the woman shriek; “I saw it, sir, as plain as
-the nose on your face, jump over the gate and then jump back again. And
-it’s put me all in such a twitter that----”
-
-A _twang, twang_, from the horn, drowned the conclusion of the old
-woman’s delivery, and, trying back, we were quickly on his line again,
-and making play at topping speed.
-
-“I thought,” observed Trimbush, “that the old woman had headed him;
-but it doesn’t do for us to try back until we have made our casts good,
-right and left. It is quite correct for a huntsman to do so if he
-learns from any cause that the fox has been headed; but we should not
-speculate upon chances or accidents.”
-
-We now carried it over some deep fallows, and, being very dry and
-flying, we had to pick through with great care. It was remarkable to
-see the difference between the old steady hounds and the young and
-eager ones in these difficulties. With their noses on the ground, the
-pilots of the pack felt for the scent, here and there and held it
-forward with patience and perseverance, while the too ardent and flashy
-ones dashed in all directions, with as much notion of the line of the
-fox, as that of the rook flying over their heads. After picking through
-the ploughs we were enabled to up with our heads again, cluster, and
-go full swing over some small grass fields to a village road, where
-unfortunately, some dung had been recently carted, and the horrid
-smell made me feel ready to vomit. Trimbush felt along the road a
-considerable distance, as it was down wind, before he was satisfied
-that this was not his line, and then turning up, made about as wide a
-cast, but to no purpose.
-
-“I wonder,” said the old hound, both vexed and puzzled, “if he has
-been headed back?”
-
-Rubicon, who must have had a remarkably strong stomach, now jumped upon
-the steaming, reeking, stinking heap, and, plunging his nose under a
-loose portion at the top, drew out the fox by a hind leg. In an instant
-we flew to his assistance, and for the first and last time in my life,
-I helped to kill a fox on a dung heap.
-
-“Well!” said our master, wiping his bald head, and looking as pleased
-as at any period that I ever saw him, “we wind up the season with a
-glorious finish. We were too far behind to see,” he continued; “but of
-course they must have viewed him into the manure.”
-
-“No doubt, sir,” replied Will, “or he would most likely have beaten us.”
-
-“It only shows,” rejoined the Squire, “to what improbable shifts a
-sinking fox will have resort. How often men’s brains are racked to
-discover the why and wherefore that a fox _could_ have beaten their
-judgment and experience, when, perhaps, he may be close to their elbows
-without the smallest blame to be attached to either hounds or them for
-his escape.”
-
-“Or merit to his craft and cunning, you might have added,” said
-Trimbush. “For when a fox sinks, not only his physical strength is
-expended, but his mental powers die with it. He is in such a mortal
-fright, that he cannot think; but like a blown chicken, pokes his head
-into the first hiding place which presents itself.”
-
-As we were trotting quietly homewards, as proud as peacocks, I saw
-Trimbush tip Rubicon over the nose with his stern, and drew him from
-the body on one side of the road.
-
-“Be candid,” said he, in a half whisper. “How was it that you made the
-fox out in that beastly manure?”
-
-“I winded him,” rejoined Rubicon, with a sly grin.
-
-“Pshaw!” replied the old hound. “It was impossible.”
-
-“Well, well!” interrupted Rubicon, “I admit it. The fact is I jumped
-on the heap for a very different purpose, and as I did so, I felt
-something move under my feet. A thought struck me----”
-
-“As it did me,” interrupted Trimbush, “before commencing your
-explanation. We owe the kill to chance.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
- “Now the hill, the hedge, are green,
- Now the warbler’s throat’s in tune,
- Blithsome is the verdant scene,
- Brightened by the beams of noon.”
-
-
-It was a sultry summer’s day, and Trimbush and myself were luxuriating
-under the wide-spreading and deep shade of a walnut tree growing near
-the kennel. Five or six of our companions, on the free list, like
-ourselves, were lounging about in the coolest spots, and their only
-occasional signs of life, as they laid upon the ground, consisted in
-brushing the buzzing flies from their nostrils and hides, and, now and
-then, making a snap at their enemies. Wearied, at length, with my own
-laziness, I made an effort to draw Trimbush into conversation, by
-asking him the cause of kennel lameness.
-
-The old hound rolled on his side, and giving a wide yawn, stretched out
-his legs as far as possible, with his stern stiffly turned over his
-back.
-
-“That’s comfortable,” said he, “very. And so you wish to learn the
-cause of one of the greatest afflictions that can visit us?”
-
-“Yes,” rejoined I, “it is my wish to know everything concerning our
-interests. For if mankind be the proper study for man, so must hounds
-and hunting be the proper study for me.”
-
-“A sensible remark,” returned my companion; “and as you are always
-ready to listen, there can be no doubt but that you’ll attain
-proficiency.”
-
-“I’m greatly obliged for your encouragement,” added I.
-
-“I remember two seasons ago,” said Trimbush, “hearing Tom Holt read
-aloud from _The Sporting Magazine_ a remarkably sensible article on
-the subject you wish to be informed about, and it made so deep an
-impression that I can now repeat it nearly word for word.”
-
-“I’m all attention,” I replied.
-
-My friend cleared his throat, and then commenced.
-
-“Peculiar conditions of the atmosphere have generally the effect of
-some disorders, which attack men and animals to so great an extent as
-to be denominated the prevailing diseases of the time--such as cholera,
-typhus fever, influenza, and many others. These results are not always
-contemporary with the weather, which in reality produces them. Indeed,
-they most frequently make their appearance some little time after a
-change of temperature has taken place, by which certain influences
-have been established, which become the sources of disorder in the
-functions of animal economy. Such disorders as those which are peculiar
-to any particular districts cannot fail to receive an impulse from
-such a season as the one we have lately experienced. Kennel lameness
-ranks among the number as likely to be one over which these powers may
-be expected to have a very considerable control. Much has been said
-and much has been written on the subject, and many possibilities have
-been suggested, and remedies proposed, which have so little reason for
-their basis, that it appears extraordinary how they could ever have
-entered the brain of reasonable and thinking men: but before going
-into a detail, I will introduce a few remarks on endemic diseases,
-for the purpose of more clearly establishing the point, ‘that certain
-situations produce the complaint, and will for ever be the cause of
-its continuance so long as those situations are preserved’; and also
-that certain modes of treatment are the causes of its prevailing in
-some instances with a greater degree of inveteracy. Indeed I have no
-hesitation in declaring, that bad management will, even on healthy
-sites, produce a modified degree of rheumatism, which assumes the name
-of kennel lameness.
-
-“There are certain diseases which afflict the human body, and which
-are found to rage in particular localities, termed endemic. They are
-attributable to some peculiarities of the soil, the air, the food,
-and in some instances of the habits of the inhabitants. Poverty, want
-of cleanliness, and, the consequence of poverty, bad and insufficient
-food and raiment, may be enumerated among the most conspicuous causes.
-A removal of them will naturally be followed by the disappearance
-of the endemic. So with hounds: if a slight degree of rheumatism
-exists, produced by irregular treatment, alter the treatment, and if
-those already affected do not recover, the list of invalids will not
-be augmented by its appearance in fresh subjects. Some may oppose me
-on this point, by observing, if bad management produces the complaint
-in a slight degree, may it not do so in a greater? To this I answer
-distinctly, No; inasmuch as in some kennels the disorder has never been
-known to emanate, but that unsound hounds brought from other kennels
-have recovered: besides which, there are many kennels in which the
-disorder rages where the hounds are treated precisely upon the same
-system as in establishments which are perfectly free from it.
-
-“It is well known to what an extent various diseases, such as
-cutaneous complaints and scurvy, have identified themselves with
-peculiar situations, more especially after certain seasons. Medical
-practitioners are of opinion, that, for the thoroughly comprehending
-the nature and the cure of endemical diseases, an accurate study of
-topography is essentially necessary. The inhabitants of countries or
-places where diseases prevail endemically are very often exempted from
-other serious indispositions; and the natives of a country or district
-frequently become inured by habit to influences which at once manifest
-their power over newly-imported strangers, especially in tropical
-regions. In countries inhabited by different races of men, the same
-circumstances do not always produce the same effects upon different
-varieties. The water of the Seine produces disorder in the Londoner, to
-which the Parisian, who is accustomed to it, is exempt. The treatment
-also of similar diseases often requires to be very different in
-consequence of the locality where it appears, and also the constitution
-and habits of the patient.
-
-“The miasmata, or particles which emanate from the surface of
-the earth, produce marked effects upon the human constitution in
-those places where they prevail. The districts where they are most
-conspicuous are the marshes, fens and swamps in Lincolnshire,
-Cambridgeshire, and Essex: intermitting fevers and agues are the
-consequence. Although marshy districts are pre-eminently capable of
-engendering miasmata, they are not exclusively so: the result of
-numerous observations proves that the circumstances essential to this
-phenomenon are the presence of water, or moisture, and the influence
-of solar heat: when the quantity of water is great at any particular
-time, the effects do not manifest themselves until it subsides. Many
-circumstances are supposed to influence the development of the effects
-of these exhalations. It is also asserted, that it has sometimes been
-carried to considerable distances, to situations naturally healthy,
-by currents of air. This is a consideration of vast importance in
-forming an opinion upon the fact of kennel lameness being indigenous
-to certain situations, and shows most clearly how little benefit
-can be anticipated in those cases where the malady is severe, by
-the interposition of impervious concretes, asphaltum, and such like
-preparations.
-
-“It has been asserted that attacks of paralysis have been mistaken
-for kennel lameness. How such mistakes can have originated with any
-persons conversant with the characteristics of the latter malady, it
-is difficult to conceive, unless that term is intended to comprehend
-all disorders in which lameness is apparent. If so, ere long, we
-shall have hounds, when lamed by thorns or bruises, included in the
-list. Kennel lameness, properly so termed, is intended to convey the
-idea of a malady whose distinctive symptoms are so identically similar
-to rheumatism, that there appears scarcely any visible reason why it
-should be distinguished by any other term; but as it has now acquired
-a standing in the huntsman’s nomenclature, it would be presumption
-to attempt to displace it: nevertheless, the term rheumatism would
-be quite as applicable and more universally comprehended. Before a
-physiologist pronounces to what class a disorder belongs, and before a
-physician attempts to prescribe a remedy for its cure, it is requisite
-to investigate the symptoms which exist. Now the symptoms of paralysis
-and rheumatism are so distinctly at variance, that it is utterly
-impossible to fall under a mistake. Paralysis is a nervous affection,
-in which the nerves, acting on the muscles, interrupt their motion,
-relaxing their tone and fibre, and very frequently distorting some
-particular limb. Rheumatism is a rigid or contracted state of the
-muscles, attended with a slight inflammatory condition of the tissue
-which covers the muscles, having the effect, when the animal has been
-some time at rest, of creating a certain degree of adhesion. Thus a
-hound badly affected with kennel lameness, on first being taken out, is
-so stiff and sore as scarcely to be able to move--a state in which I
-have seen so many, that the remembrance is accompanied with feelings of
-commiseration and pity that would prompt me to any trouble or exertion
-that would produce the effect of subduing the complaint. When hounds
-thus disordered have been in motion a short time, so as to increase
-the circulation of the blood, the extreme rigidity or stiffness goes
-off to a certain extent, dependent upon the violence of the attack.
-But paralytic affections would not be attended with any such results:
-exercise would rather tend to increase than to improve the capabilities
-of action.
-
-“I have very little doubt but the severe work which staghounds
-occasionally undergo, and the numerous changes of temperature which
-they have to contend against, are causes for the aggravation of this
-malady. A foxhound generally has some preparatory exercise, besides
-the exertion of going to covert, which latter is equivalent to the
-staghound going to the place of meeting. The former has to draw for
-and to find his fox, in which effort his powers are more gradually
-brought into play, and the circulation of his blood is more rationally
-increased; but the staghound is laid on to the scent of his game
-without any preparatory excitement of the system, when he immediately
-goes to work, straining every nerve in his ardour for the chase, and
-very frequently maintains those efforts during the period of several
-hours; and frequently, when in an evident state of exhaustion, a
-time when immersion is dangerous, he plunges into rivers, canals, or
-lakes--places which stags have such inordinate propensities for when
-severely pressed.
-
-“The high and stimulating food, which is no doubt found necessary to
-maintain condition during a long chase, is another cause for symptoms
-of kennel lameness making their appearance with staghounds. The
-circumstance of the canine species not throwing off perspirable matter
-through the pores of the skin, appears to be a very powerful reason why
-they are so susceptible of rheumatic affections, and more especially
-that it should assume a chronic character when once introduced into
-the system. It is asserted that the dog perspires through the tongue;
-admitting that as a fact, it is to a very trifling extent, and not
-equivalent to the vast effusion of violent perspiration which must
-ensue from the laborious exertions of the chase, providing a hound
-generates an equivalent proportion according to his bulk that either a
-man or a horse does under similar efforts; besides which, making its
-escape from one part only, the general relief to the animal cannot
-be equivalent to that which is experienced by those animals who have
-outlets in the immediate proximity of almost every muscle. It is very
-evident that a great portion of the extraneous fluid, which in some
-animals flies off in perspiration, is by the hound voided in urine. The
-vast quantity which he passes is a proof of this, and it is a reason
-why medicines acting upon the urinary functions should be resorted to,
-in cases of kennel lameness, as a palliative.
-
-“Seeing the announcement some months ago that ‘our right trusty
-and well-beloved friend’ and faithful correspondent, RINGWOOD, had
-forwarded his opinions and suggestions on the subject of Kennel
-Lameness, and appreciating most highly his experience on sporting
-subjects, I was buoyed up with the hope that his discoveries would have
-thrown some new light on the case; but was much disappointed at reading
-his recommendations to try the effect of fires in the lodging-rooms.
-Knowing them to have been tried by Sir B. Graham, Mr. Boycott, also in
-the kennels occupied by Mr. Nicol, I believe also by Lord Kintore, with
-prejudicial consequences, it only remains to intimate that the practice
-is incompatible. Moreover, the diuretic tendency which it produces, in
-encouraging hounds to perform their evacuations in the lodging-rooms,
-instead of in the yards, is a reason why the adoption of fires, however
-secured, in kennels, cannot be carried out consistently with the
-usual discipline and necessary observance of cleanliness. One of the
-most positive cases in proof, that on some occasions kennel lameness
-proceeds entirely from the unhealthy situation of their habitation, is
-that of Mr. Foljambe. With the utmost attention to kennel management,
-a long series of years passed with nothing but disappointment and
-vexation to crown the most liberal and judicious experiments. Nothing
-that human skill could suggest or accomplish was left untried, until at
-length it was determined to remove the hounds to a kennel at another
-part of the country, where, under precisely the same management, they
-are sound and well.
-
-“In conversation with a friend a short time since, a M. F. H., he
-made the remark, that if I could make the discovery of a cure for
-this disorder, I should be entitled to honors and distinctions too
-superfluous to mention. My reply was simply this: ‘A remedy has been
-discovered, not by myself, for I desire no merit which I am not
-entitled to, but it is clearly proved that removal to a healthy site
-will effect all that is desired.’ The removal must not, however, be
-undertaken without mature consideration, in order to ascertain if the
-proposed new situation is perfectly free from the causes which produce
-the disorder. Clay soils may be denominated the most eligible; light
-sandy soils and light soils on chalk, are the worst. Any attempt to
-cure the complaint on a situation which so evidently engenders it,
-is like trying to heal a wound while the substance which created it
-remains within. Removal on the first discovery that the kennel is
-so located as to be injurious will most assuredly be found the most
-satisfactory, and, in the end, the most economical determination.”
-
-I managed to keep myself from a most seductive doze during my
-companion’s somewhat prosy delivery; but scarcely had he finished, than
-I was in the land of dreams, and toying with
-
- “The children of an idle brain,
- Begot of nothing but vain fantasy.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
- “We still have slept together,
- Rose at an instant, learn’d, play’d, eat together;
- And wheresoe’er we went, like Juno’s swans,
- Still we went coupled, and inseparable.”
-
-
-It was late in August, and the weather so sultry, that we scarcely knew
-how to bear with the intense heat. Some did nothing but lap the water,
-always running in a clear fine stream, from the fountain in the court,
-and assuaged their thirst by continual sipping. Others drank deeply,
-but seldom; and all, more or less, evinced the feverish suffering they
-endured.
-
-I was lying in a shady corner of the court one day about noontide,
-when I happened to notice a hound of the name of Gameboy go two or
-three times towards the fountain, and then turn from it with a slight
-shudder.
-
-Rising from the ground, I went towards him and said, “What’s the
-matter?”
-
-“I don’t know,” replied he, “but I feel very strange. I’m dreadfully
-thirsty, and yet cannot go near the water.”
-
-I now perceived that his eyes looked dull and leaden, and his body
-shook, as if every nerve and sinew were shattered and unstrung.
-
-“Perhaps you have eaten something that has disagreed with you,”
-returned I.
-
-“No,” added he; “I picked up a bone in our walk this morning, but that
-couldn’t injure me.”
-
-“What’s that wound on your shoulder,” I asked.
-
-“A mere scratch,” said he, “I got from a cur three days ago. He flew at
-me while passing a cottage garden, and just touched me on the skin.”
-
-This intelligence struck me with the most inexpressible uneasiness, and
-I went to Trimbush, who was asleep, and waking him, repeated all I had
-seen and heard.
-
-In a moment the old hound jumped from his posture of indolence, and
-approaching Gameboy, regarded him minutely.
-
-“Are you unwell?” said he.
-
-“Yes,” replied Gameboy; “I never felt so queer before.”
-
-“Are you thirsty?”
-
-“Awfully so,” he rejoined, “and yet cannot drink.”
-
-“But why?” asked Trimbush.
-
-Gameboy gave an involuntary shudder, and said, “The sight, and even the
-noise of water, is more painful than I can describe.”
-
-“Let me see you make an effort to go near it,” responded my companion.
-“Perseverance may overcome this, seemingly, nervous affection.”
-
-In accordance with the desire, poor Gameboy turned his head towards
-the fountain, and endeavoured to approach it; but had scarcely taken a
-stride in the direction, when a spasm appeared to seize him, and with a
-howl he rushed cowering to the farthest corner of the court.
-
-The attention of the rest of the hounds was attracted by this, and
-several were trotting towards him to learn the cause, when Trimbush
-interposed by saying, “Stay--_he’s mad_.”
-
-As if each had received a shock of electricity, the whole stood still
-and mute, regarding in silent horror their miserable companion. It is
-impossible to convey the effect produced upon the communication made
-thus briefly by Trimbush. Every one seemed not to know what to do or
-say, until Gameboy, with a white thick foam dropping from his jaw,
-sprung upon his feet and rushed towards them. A wild bull would not
-have scattered us more completely. Frenzied with fear, we flew from the
-maddened wretch, who rushed staggering at everything in his way, and
-snapping his jaws with that fury which the mad can only show.
-
-“Get from him,” said Trimbush, in a thick husky voice, and exhibiting
-the greatest terror. “Pray get from him. It’s death if he touches ye.”
-
-The noise in the kennel now became furious. All were stricken with
-fright, and the howling and cries were most appalling.
-
-It could scarcely have continued more than a minute, however, when the
-stentorian voices of Will Sykes and Ned Adams were heard, calling for
-“quiet,” accompanied by the cracks of a heavy thong.
-
-“Thanks be to the saints!” exclaimed Trimbush, “assistance is at hand.”
-
-Immediately afterwards both entered the court, and the huntsman
-glancing round, said reproachfully, “What’s all this about, eh?”
-
-At this juncture, Mark the feeder made his appearance, and his eye
-instantly fell upon Gameboy. I never shall forget the old man’s
-countenance, the moment he saw the hound. A ghastly paleness came over
-it, and he looked almost stunned with the sight.
-
-“Great heaven!” ejaculated he, holding up both his hands. “Great
-heaven, Will, there’s madness among ’em!”
-
-“What!” said the huntsman, his question sounding like a sharp
-expression of pain.
-
-“Madness,” repeated Mark, “as sure as we live.”
-
-With staring eyes, the huntsman and second whip examined Gameboy at a
-short distance and, after a slight pause, the former exclaimed, “’Tis
-true! Run, Ned, and bring the Squire.”
-
-“Get in, get in,” hallooed Mark, and closing the lodging-room door, we
-were safe from the attacks of the wretched Gameboy, who was now left
-alone in the court.
-
-“Take care,” said Will, retreating towards the door, “he’s in a most
-rabid state.”
-
-“I wonder where it will end,” returned Mark, joining the huntsman’s
-side by the door.
-
-“Who can tell?” rejoined Will, bitterly. “We may lose half of ’em,
-perhaps.”
-
-“I noticed that he looked rather heavy about the eyes, for a day or
-two,” added the feeder, “but I accounted for it through the heat.”
-
-“It was only yesterday,” said Will, “that I gave him a dose of black
-brimstone and lard, seeing that he was feverish.”
-
-“It was a mercy no accident occurred to ye,” responded Mark. “A mere
-scratch from a tooth would have----”
-
-“What’s this?” interrupted a well-known voice, and there stood our
-master, breathless and exhausted with the speed he had used in
-attending the summons to the fearful scene.
-
-“Gameboy, sir,” replied Will, pointing to the convulsive and agonized
-hound, “is mad beyond a doubt.”
-
-“Are there any more with such symptoms?” hurriedly asked the squire,
-scrutinizing the object of their painful attention and interest.
-
-“We have not had time for a careful examination, sir,” returned the
-huntsman; “but I saw none as we hastily separated them.”
-
-“You have acted well,” said the Squire, “and we must continue the same
-prompt and sound judgment. Shoot that hound instantly.”
-
-No sooner was the order given than Mark produced a long,
-single-barrelled flint gun, with which he was in the habit of
-slaughtering rats about the precincts of the kennel, and handed it to
-Will.
-
-“Do it for me,” whispered he, with a quivering lip. “I feel quite sick.”
-
-Our feeder hesitated for a second or two; but after a short struggle
-with a corresponding reluctance to become the executioner, he brought
-the piece to his shoulder, and drove the charge crashing through
-Gameboy’s brain. Without a perceptible throe of anguish, poor Gameboy
-fell lifeless upon the flags, and so ended, to us, this terrible
-tragedy.
-
-“Before endeavouring to learn the cause of the disease in him,” said
-the Squire, “draft each hound singly, and let us see whether any have
-been bitten by him, or if the least cause of fear exists that more must
-be destroyed.”
-
-“I hope not, sir,” returned Will, with a strangely inarticulate voice.
-“What shall we do if----”
-
-“It’s useless to talk of what we _shall_ do,” interrupted his master
-irritably, “until we learn what we _can_ do. Draft the hounds.”
-
-One by one was called from the lodging-room by name, and after minutely
-examining the eyes, nose and mouth, every hackle was rubbed back to see
-if the slightest recent abrasion of the skin had been made. At length
-it came to my turn, and unfortunately a scratch made by myself, while
-brushing a flea from my neck in the morning, was found just under my
-left ear.
-
-“Reload your gun,” said the Squire.
-
-A trembling seized me at these words, so that I could scarcely stand,
-and a film spread itself across my eyes, which nearly blinded me.
-
-“Oh, sir,” exclaimed Will Sykes, “don’t have him shot yet. It does not
-look to me like a bite.”
-
-“But it does to me,” replied his master. “What think you, Mark?”
-
-The old man divided the hackles with his thumb and finger, and after a
-careful examination pronounced an opinion coinciding with that of the
-huntsman.
-
-“I know that the hound is a great favourite with both of ye,” said the
-Squire, “and with good reasons. But remember, if from any false feeling
-of kindness we spare one infected, the entire pack may be lost.”
-
-“I wouldn’t do it, sir,” returned Mark. “I wouldn’t do it, sir,”
-repeated he, “if he was my own child, and I thought him bitten. The
-intended kindness would be right down cruelty.”
-
-“Still,” added our master, shaking his head, “I entertain great doubt
-as to the policy of hesitating to take the safer course. However,
-let him be shut up by himself and watched incessantly; and in the
-event of the most trifling but certain symptom appearing, wait for no
-instructions from me, but shoot him.”
-
-I was now taken from the court and subjected to solitary confinement
-for six weeks; but as Tom Holt explained the cause of poor Gameboy’s
-malady, from having seen him attacked by the cur, and all the rest
-being found free from the smallest likelihood of inoculation, I was
-permitted to join my companions again soon after cub-hunting commenced.
-During my involuntary retreat, Mark paid me the greatest attention,
-and, that I might not be low-spirited for want of company, would often
-sit upon my bench and chat to me, and croon snatches of old ballads
-to himself. He took me long walks, too, when his work was done, and
-altogether the time was spent much more agreeably than might be
-imagined in the gloom of solitude.
-
-Hearty was the welcome upon my re-appearance in the court, and each
-of my friends expressed his warm delight at seeing me again; although
-a stranger to our ways and customs might deem the reception somewhat
-churlish, and of the growling mood. However, we do not ‘use our tongues
-for the concealment of our thoughts,’ and if devoid of the polish of
-refined manners, we at least possess an equal proportion of their
-honesty.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
- “Slow pass’d the night, and now with silver ray,
- The star of morning ushers in the day;
- The shadows fly before the roseate hours,
- And the chill dew hangs glittering on the flowers;
- The pruning-hook or humble spade to wield,
- The cheerful labourer hastens to the field.”
-
-
-“Trifles, light as air,” observed Trimbush, “are frequently of the most
-momentous importance. Who could have thought, now,” continued he, “that
-brushing a flea from your neck would have subjected ye to upwards of
-six weeks confinement from all society?”
-
-“Ah!” exclaimed I, “if I could have had any anticipation of such a
-result, he might have sucked my blood till now.”
-
-“I was in a terrible fright,” rejoined my friend, “that they were going
-to stop its circulation at once.”
-
-“It would have been one of the most unjustifiable murders ever
-committed,” returned I.
-
-“That may be all very true,” added my companion; “but what compensation
-would the act of injustice have been to you?”
-
-“None,” replied I.
-
-“There have been innumerable such-like mistakes committed,” said
-Trimbush, “and never discovered. Fortunately for you, the suspected had
-the benefit of the doubt.”
-
-“I consider that the Squire was far too hasty in his decision regarding
-myself,” responded I.
-
-“The convicted always think so,” rejoined the old hound. “However,”
-continued he, “I quite agree in the same opinion. There was sufficient
-cause for fearful apprehension, and it was impossible to calculate
-the amount of the calamity. But I do not think that any kind of fear
-should be allowed to exaggerate an injury. To observe sedulous care
-in preventing its extension is most wise and prudent. At the same
-time, if a hasty panic overrules the cooler judgment, the engendered
-evil may on evil’s head accumulate ten-fold. Our master was decidedly
-wrong in contemplating having you destroyed with such slight evidence
-of questionable inoculation; but he was quite right in ordering you
-to be drafted from the rest. The one was an unweighed, ill-judged
-impulse--the other, a wise precaution.”
-
-“A distinction, with a material difference,” I observed.
-
-“Yes,” replied he, “beyond the shadow of a doubt. I once heard,”
-resumed my friend, “of a M. F. H. having his entire pack destroyed, in
-consequence of a couple-and-a-half showing symptoms of hydrophobia--or,
-as we should say, in more intelligible language, a dread of water.
-Nothing could be more wanton or unjustifiable, and as well might an
-entire community of human beings be doomed to perish in consequence of
-one or more of its members becoming insane, as fifty or sixty couple of
-hounds, from the same cause.”
-
-“Were there any other doubtful cases besides myself?” I inquired.
-
-“No,” replied Trimbush. “All were turned over with the greatest
-scrutiny; but nothing suspicious appearing, we were allowed to remain
-as we were, with a great additional watch being kept over us. In
-fact, Mark, or Will Sykes, was always close by for a long time after
-Gameboy’s death; and if a hound growled even in his dream, one or the
-other was at hand in a moment. I never saw greater vigilance; and I
-can’t help thinking that the two kept an eye open for weeks in their
-sleep.”
-
-The tramp of three horses approaching the kennel door put an end to
-this, our first conversation since the fatal occurrence of Gameboy’s
-death.
-
-“Let ’em out, Mark,” said a well-known voice, and as the feeder threw
-back the door, we scrambled from the court, and ran and jumped in
-sportive circles about the horses. Although in the highest state of
-excitement, every tongue was mute, and a slight crack from Tom Holt’s
-whip put a considerable check to the rather violent gambols of a few
-of the youngest. It was not quite daylight as we trotted along between
-three and four miles; and as we entered a gate at the end of a by-lane,
-who should be standing with his reins over his arm, and leaning
-carelessly against the side of his horse, but our “up-with-the-lark”
-and excellent master.
-
-“You are behind your time, William,” said he, throwing himself into his
-saddle.
-
-“Begging your pardon, sir,” replied the huntsman, tugging at the curb
-chain securing his thick watch in a very deep fob, “I think not.”
-
-“By seven minutes,” rejoined his master.
-
-“Quite right, sir,” added Will, looking at his apoplectic time-keeper.
-“Seven minutes have given me the slip.”
-
-“No matter,” returned the Squire; “we have scarcely light enough as it
-is.”
-
-The narrow zig-zag lane led on to a large open grass field, on the
-borders of which was one of the best and strongest covers in our
-country.
-
-“Who has examined this cover?” asked the Squire.
-
-“Tom Holt, sir,” replied the huntsman.
-
-“Where did you find most billets?”
-
-“In the field beyond this, sir,” replied the whipper-in, with a touch
-of his cap.
-
-“Very good,” rejoined his master. “Then take them there, William,”
-continued he, “and let the puppies see the old hounds feel for the
-scent.”
-
-No sooner were we in the field spoken of by Tom Holt, than, stooping my
-nose to the ground, I inhaled that scent, which, from the first, sent
-my blood tingling through my whole body. Several began to hustle, push,
-and fling themselves about, and one, named Harbinger, threw his tongue.
-
-“So-oftly, Harbinger, so-oftly,” said Will. “You’re as noisy as ever, I
-see.”
-
-“He’s incorrigible,” replied the Squire. “Put him away.”
-
-“We shall cure him after a few more trials, sir, I hope,” rejoined the
-huntsman, who could never bear to have one of us destroyed.
-
-“He should have been cured before this,” rejoined his master, “and if
-not removed, he will render others as bad as himself. I hate a noisy
-hound,” continued he, “and I’m certain no drilling will stop Harbinger
-from riot and babbling. There is no vice so contagious and injurious as
-the one he possesses and persists in; and to use further forbearance in
-retaining him in the pack would be most unwise. You know, last season,
-that after being flogged three times in one day for riot at hare, he
-repeated the fault whenever he had the chance and thought the whips
-could not get at him.”
-
-“He’s to go, then, sir?” said Will.
-
-“The sooner the better,” replied the Squire. “I wish to have my hounds
-so perfect, that if any one of them speaks in cover, you may be certain
-that it’s a fox, and know that he may be cheered without fear of a
-mistake. Unless this be the case, what pleasure can there be to me, as
-their master, or satisfaction to you, as their huntsman?”
-
-Will gave no answer, and to account for the obstinate Harbinger’s fate,
-all I can say is, that he was led from the kennel the following day,
-with a coil of rope round his neck.
-
-We now carried the drag into the cover, and Trimbush and myself
-acknowledged the scent. Will gave us a cheer that startled many a
-pigeon from her roost, and Tom Holt and Ned Adams spurred right
-and left, with orders to head short back every fox that made his
-appearance. We got up to our cub, and drove him through the cover at a
-slashing rate. The morning being warm, and the scent good, there was
-no breathing time, and the pace soon began to tell upon the family of
-foxes, which we were now racing in divided lots.
-
-“How many of them are there?” inquired the Squire.
-
-“Not less than two brace and a half, sir,” replied the huntsman.
-
-“Very good,” rejoined his master. “Let the vixen go if she will.”
-
-He then galloped towards Tom Holt, and just as he was about cracking
-his whip, a signal from the Squire stopped him.
-
-“Come from this corner,” said he, “and let the old one go, and as soon
-as these hounds come out with the scent, stop them, and take them to
-William.”
-
-Scarcely were the instructions given, when the vixen took advantage of
-the opportunity, and broke away at her best pace. The lot settled to
-her were stopped, and taken to the huntsman at the top of a ride, in
-about the middle of the cover.
-
-Being joined in one body, we now pressed our cub most severely; and I
-viewed him cross two or three rides with his red rag out, in a truly
-sinking condition.
-
-“This cub is very much distressed, sir,” observed the huntsman, “and
-if they don’t get one of the others up, for they have all dropped but
-this, they’ll soon run into him.”
-
-I now heard a succession of cracks from a thong, which I knew to be Ned
-Adams’s.
-
-“He’s headed a fox back,” said Trimbush, exultingly, “but it isn’t our
-hunted one. He’s out--come along.”
-
-A bunch of us swept from the side of the cover, and with heads up,
-dashed across a field, before Will was aware that we had got away.
-
-“They’re out, by heaven!” exclaimed the huntsman. “Where can Ned be?”
-
-“All right,” returned the Squire. “They broke from the side, and no
-one’s to blame.”
-
-We carried the scent through the first hedge into a summerland, and
-threw up. Will, coming up, took hold of us rather hastily, and cast us
-down wind.
-
-“Gently, William, gently,” said his master, reprovingly. “You appear to
-have forgotten the golden rule of letting them alone.”
-
-We felt down wind for some distance, but not making it out, turned up,
-and as we were passing the spot where we had jumped through the hedge,
-a thought struck me that the cub might be skulking in the ditch on
-the other side. Popping my nose down, I dropped into it, and finding
-instantly that I was right, I rushed through the brambles, and just as
-he was about to spring out, I caught him across a tender part, and with
-one pinch he was as dead as a salt herring.
-
-“Who-whoop!” hallooed the Squire. “Who-whoop, my beauty!”
-
-To the envy of most of my companions, I received great praise for this
-kill from our master, who seemed not to know how to make enough of me
-on our road home.
-
-“Yo-o, Ringwood!” cried he, throwing me a bit of biscuit from his
-pocket. “Yo-o, Ringwood, darling,” and then turning to Will, said,
-“What a mercy such a hound as that was not destroyed through my haste!”
-
-“Ay, sir,” returned the huntsman, with a knowing shake of the head. “If
-we have as good, we’ve none better.”
-
-“Thanks to my instructions,” growled Trimbush.
-
-“Come, come,” said I, “don’t be jealous of the little praise I’m
-getting. You receive your share.”
-
-“Jealous?” repeated my companion, with a proud lash of his stern, “I
-flatter myself that I can afford to be _generous_.”
-
-Seeing, however, that he was a little annoyed at the attention I
-received, I said nothing more, but jogged in silence by the side of the
-Squire’s horse.
-
-“By the way,” said our master, addressing Will, “in speaking of haste,
-let this morning be another lesson to you not to take your hounds off
-their noses with a sinking fox. More are lost by that than by any
-other mistake committed. There was every probability of your leaving
-your fox behind in the ditch, and then you would have said that he had
-headed back to cover. A fresh one would have been got up, and the error
-remained undiscovered. Countless foxes, booked safe to die, are changed
-in this manner, and escape from no other reason than from taking hounds
-off their noses. Remember this, William.”
-
-The huntsman touched his cap, and the conversation dropped.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
- “For aught I see they are as sick that
- Surfeit with too much, as they that starve with
- Nothing.”
-
-
-We had just finished our breakfast one morning, and were lying about
-the court to assist digestion, when I chanced to remark that I
-considered the flesh not quite so nicely cooked as usual.
-
-“Your palate must be out of order,” returned Trimbush. “Mark is as good
-a boiler as ever heated a copper.”
-
-“Still the material might have been tough,” said I, “and consequently
-required longer boiling.”
-
-“I think not,” rejoined my friend, with a smack of his lips. “My taste
-may be depended upon in such important matters.”
-
-“A great deal of one’s comfort depends upon the cook,” I observed.
-
-“Beyond conception,” emphatically replied the old hound. “In addition
-to which,” he continued, “we can’t perform our duties unless
-properly kept. The meal must be good and old, the flesh well but not
-over-boiled, and the broth rich and sweet to enable us to kill foxes
-handsomely. Our strength, speed, and wind, depend upon the feeding.”
-
-“No doubt about it,” coincided I.
-
-“I remember,” resumed my friend, “hearing a scientific opinion given
-on this important subject to us from a thorough-going sportsman of the
-name of Cecil. In a few words I think more was never spoken.”
-
-“If not too much trouble,” said I, “it would gratify me to hear it
-repeated.”
-
-“A pleased and patient listener,” returned Trimbush, “invariably
-renders me a willing speaker.” And after settling himself in a position
-of the greatest ease, he commenced the following philosophical
-dissertation on catering for foxhounds:
-
-“It is a circumstance very universally remarked by masters of hounds,
-huntsmen, and others who are in the habit of making observations in the
-field, that hounds have appeared sooner blown when running on moist
-days during this season than usual. The cause has evidently arisen from
-the peculiar mildness of the weather. Whenever the atmosphere is damp
-and warm, it contains a less quantity of oxygen than when it is dry,
-clear, and bracing, and the effect on the respiratory organs of all
-animals when brought into active exertion is very apparent. Hounds have
-been observed to lap water when going to covert more freely on some
-occasions than others, which is also a symptom of the effect of the
-atmosphere.
-
-“Liebig’s very clever work may be consulted to advantage, to ascertain
-how and why certain causes and effects in the animal economy are
-produced; but as many persons who may be interested on the subject have
-not an opportunity of procuring it, I will introduce a few abbreviated
-extracts, which are most particularly connected with the effects of
-food and the peculiar conditions of the atmosphere.
-
-“Liebig says, ‘Two animals, which in equal times take up by means of
-the lungs and skin[2] unequal quantities of oxygen, consume quantities
-of the same nourishment which are unequal in the same ratio.
-
- [2] As hounds do not perspire through the skin, I apprehend
- they do not consume oxygen through that medium: hence a reason
- why the efforts of the lungs are so laborious when protracted
- exertions call them into increased action.
-
-“‘The consumption of oxygen in equal times may be expressed by the
-number of respirations: it is clear that in the same individual the
-quantity of nourishment required must vary with the force and number of
-the respirations.
-
-“‘A child, in whom the organs of respiration are naturally very active,
-requires food oftener than an adult, and bears hunger less easily. A
-bird deprived of food dies on the third day, while a serpent, with its
-sluggish respiration, can live without food three months or longer.
-
-“‘The number of respirations is less in a state of rest than during
-exercise or work. The quantity of food necessary in both conditions
-must vary in the same ratio.
-
-“‘The quantity of oxygen inspired is also affected by the temperature
-and density of the atmosphere.
-
-“‘It is no difficult matter in warm climates to study moderation in
-eating, and men can bear hunger for a long time under the Equator, but
-cold and hunger united very soon exhaust the body.’
-
-“Liebig also states, ‘That the quantity of food is regulated by the
-number of respirations, by the temperature of the air, and by the
-amount of heat given off to the surrounding medium.’
-
-“From the foregoing remarks, it will be seen how great an influence
-food has upon animals called upon to exert such violent labour as
-foxhounds are. The comparisons of the duration of life, when deprived
-of food, between the bird and the serpent, I apprehend, relates
-to birds whose nature it is to feed upon grain only, because the
-carnivorous birds live much longer without food, their respiration
-being slower: and I infer by this that the power of endurance in
-hounds, and their perfection of wind and condition, are regulated by
-feeding them with a due proportion of flesh, which, prepared by being
-boiled, is converted at once into blood.
-
-“All animals partaking of a mixed diet, partly of grain, will be
-greatly influenced in their respiratory organs by the proportions
-which are given to them and the state of the atmosphere. The quality
-of the blood being regulated by the quantity and the quality of food
-consumed, its capability of passing through the lungs is governed. When
-an animal has partaken largely of food which renders the blood of that
-character as to cause the consumption of a great quantity of oxygen in
-its passage through the lungs, and the atmosphere is deficient of that
-important gas--which is always the case in close damp weather, such as
-is occasionally experienced during the winter--it follows, as a matter
-of course, that hounds, and all such animals, will quickly evince
-symptoms of distress, or, familiarly speaking, will become blown, as
-the causes which produce that effect predominate.
-
-“In hot climates man consumes very little, if any, animal food; in
-cold ones, scarcely anything else: and the Esquimaux will partake of
-blubber, animal oils, or fat--a food nauseating and disgusting to the
-people of another climate.
-
-“With these facts it becomes apparent how the quantity and quality of
-food require to be regulated by circumstances, especially on the day
-before hunting.
-
-“There are few, if any, masters of hounds or huntsmen who are not
-aware of the necessity of giving small proportions of flesh during
-the warm weather at the commencement of the season, and again in the
-spring, when such a condition of the atmosphere generally prevails as
-that which we so universally experience during the months of November,
-December, and January. Without a certain proportion of flesh, it is
-well known that hounds cannot work; that is to say, they cannot go
-through the fatigues of a quick burst or a protracted chase; at the
-same time, too large a quantity will render them gross and plethoric,
-consequently incapable of exertion.
-
-“As the quality of the food depends in a very great degree upon the
-manner in which it is prepared, that becomes a subject worthy of
-considerable attention. It is a practice in many kennels to boil
-the flesh to a most unnecessary and prejudicial extent, but it is a
-custom which cannot be too strongly objected to. Flesh over-boiled is
-divested of its nutritive properties in a very great degree. It may be
-remarked by some, those who are advocates for excessive boiling, that
-if the nutritive properties are extracted from the flesh, they are
-contained in the broth, and _that_ broth being given to the hounds, the
-nutritious principles are still preserved--an argument which I can by
-no means agree to.
-
-“Like man, the hound is found to thrive best upon food composed of
-flesh and grain combined, consequently a comparison between the two
-may with propriety be introduced. When a man undergoes the ordeal of
-training for an athletic engagement, the animal food which he partakes
-of is only subject to the process of cooking in a moderate degree;
-overdone meat is studiously avoided. To the valetudinarian broth is
-prescribed as affording light nourishment with a moderate expenditure
-of the powers of digestion, but is never called in aid to form a
-principal portion of the aliment for the human subject at a time when
-great exertion is required. It is always found that broth creates
-thirst with us, and there is no doubt it has the same effect on the
-hound when given to a great extent, more especially when made very
-strong.
-
-“I must observe, that I am by no means about to recommend the disuse of
-broth in the kennel; but I wish to point out the propriety of giving it
-in moderate quantities, and of depending upon the flesh which is given
-for containing the bulk of nourishment, and giving it in that state
-when it contains the greatest quantity. It is an impression with some
-huntsmen, that by boiling the flesh to an excessive degree, the bad
-qualities are extracted--that is to say, if the horse had any disease
-about him, that the humours would be extracted from the flesh; but then
-it must be remembered that they would be contained in the broth, in
-which state they would be quite as injurious, or perhaps more so.
-
-“At the time when an animal is performing great exertion, it is
-essentially requisite that his stomach should contain but a small
-quantity of food, but that food should be of a nutritious character and
-easy of digestion. The practice that I would recommend, and it is one
-borne out by the reasons already assigned, as well as by experiment,
-is, not to give hounds any broth at all in their food _on the day
-before_ hunting.
-
-“The pudding must be reduced with pure water which has been boiled,
-and the usual allowance, or perhaps, on some occasions, a trifling
-addition to the accustomed portion of flesh must of course be given;
-by this method of feeding, hounds will most assuredly do their work
-far better than when a quantity of broth with very little or no flesh
-is given; a custom adopted in some kennels with very bad results. From
-such treatment, hounds will be observed light of muscle, big in their
-bodies, and incapable of running up at the conclusion of a severe day.
-By adopting the recommendation of substituting water which has been
-boiled, for broth, on the day before hunting, it will be found that
-hounds will not evince an equal degree of thirst by constantly lapping
-on their road to cover, nor will they be so soon blown in chase.”
-
-“There,” ejaculated Trimbush, upon the completion of his task, “that’s
-what I call giving the ‘why’s’ for all the ‘wherefores.’”
-
-Clever and philosophical as I deemed this delivery to be, I had become
-somewhat wearied with it, and in order to divert my companion from
-steeping his senses in forgetfulness, which his blinking eyelids bore
-evidence was fast approaching, I asked him if he had ever turned his
-attention to the poetry as well as to the practical details of hunting.
-
-“What do you mean?” inquired Trimbush, with a sleepy stare of surprise.
-
-“Simply, whether you have made the attempt of earning for yourself that
-fame,” replied I, “which I intend gaining for myself?”
-
-“I’m quite in the dark,” rejoined my companion, testily.
-
-“Well, then,” returned I, “to be more explicit, I mean to let my tongue
-appear _in print_.”
-
-“In print!” exclaimed Trimbush, husky with surprise. “How?”
-
-“Ah,” added I, quoting an early reply to one of my interrogatories,
-“there are many things as clear to our vision as the sunshine at noon,
-and yet their causes are hid in impenetrable darkness.”
-
-“Well, well!” added my friend, “I don’t wish to appear inquisitive, but
-if you should mix me up in your--your--”
-
-“Don’t say book,” remarked I. “It sounds so gent-like.”
-
-“Anything you please,” said Trimbush. “But as I was about saying,”
-continued he, “if you should come out so powerfully strong, perhaps
-you’d make room for a little slice of an attempt at a song upon our
-worthy master--God bless him!”
-
-“Of your composing?” inquired I.
-
-Trimbush coughed, licked his paws, examined the tip of his stern, as if
-a flea was taking a liberty in that quarter, but gave no answer.
-
-I repeated the question.
-
-“As you _will_ have it,” he rejoined, pettishly, “then it _is_ my
-composition.”
-
-“I feel assured that you need not be ashamed of it,” returned I. “Pray
-let me hear the effusion.”
-
-“You’ll not laugh?” said he, inquiringly.
-
-“Not if the intent be serious,” I replied.
-
-“In that case,” rejoined Trimbush, “here goes!” and in a subdued,
-melodious voice, he commenced his original song of
-
- THE OLD HUNTING SQUIRE.
-
- I’ll sing you a sporting song that was made by a sporting pate,
- Of a fine old hunting Squire, who has a fine estate,
- And who keeps his hounds and hunters at a liberal old rate,
- And plenty gives to the poor and old who enter at his gate;
- Like a fine old hunting Squire, one of the present day.
-
- His custom is, when at the Meet, to welcome great and small,
- And a hearty greeting gives he to friends and neighbours all;
- ’Tis here the laugh and joke and jest right merrily go round,
- “But hark, my boys! pray, cease your noise; for now sly Reynard’s found!”
- Cries our fine old hunting Squire, one of the present day.
-
- Although threescore and ten his years, he boldly takes the lead,
- And flies the gate, the brook, and wall, and sweeps along the mead;
- He never swerves nor cranes--not he; his true heart’s in the sport.
- Oh! our fine old hunting Squire is one of the right sort!
- A fine old hunting Squire, one of the present day.
-
- From scent to view they run him now, in vain fleet Reynard flies,
- The ringing pack have doomed his death--he struggles, but he dies!
- And at the finish who was there? Why he who at the burst
- Led the boldest and the best, in the foremost flight was first--
- Our fine old hunting Squire, one of the present day.
-
-“A beautiful chaunt!” ejaculated I, pleased with the sporting rhyme,
-“and one which shall have place in ‘The Life of a Foxhound.’”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Having doubtlessly made every note of value which could be drawn from
-his experience, Ringwood’s memoir here ends from want of material,
-and the earnest disposition on the part of his biographer of wishing
-to prove neither monotonous nor wearisome. It was deemed by that wise
-hound that a history or tale, when told, should, like a fox, when
-killed, be broken up and finished. To this, therefore, we will give an
-appropriate one in a ringing
-
- WHO-WHOOP!
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-
-
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-<pre>
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Life of a Foxhound, by John Mills
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-Title: The Life of a Foxhound
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-Author: John Mills
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-</pre>
-
-
-<p class="center larger">THE<br />
-LIFE OF A<br />
-FOXHOUND.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;" id="frontispiece">
-<img src="images/illus1.jpg" width="600" height="400" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">THE MEET.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="titlepage">THE<br />
-LIFE OF A<br />
-<span class="larger">FOXHOUND.</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">BY<br />
-<span class="larger">JOHN MILLS,</span><br />
-<span class="smaller">AUTHOR OF “THE OLD ENGLISH GENTLEMAN,” “THE LIFE OF A<br />
-RACEHORSE,” ETC.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="r15" />
-
-<p class="center">THE FIFTH EDITION,<br />
-WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY<br />
-<span class="larger">JOHN LEECH.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="r15" />
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
-<img src="images/publisher.jpg" width="100" height="137" alt="PHILIP ALLAN (publisher's mark)" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="titlepage">LONDON<br />
-<span class="larger">PHILIP ALLAN &amp; CO.</span><br />
-QUALITY COURT, CHANCERY LANE</p>
-
-<table summary="editions" class="editions">
- <tr>
- <td>First Edition</td><td class="tdr">1848</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Second Edition</td><td class="tdr">1861</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Third Edition</td><td class="tdr">1892</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Fourth Edition</td><td class="tdr">1910</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Fifth Edition</td><td class="tdr">1921</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="titlepage smaller">Printed by <span class="smcap">Whitehead Bros., Wolverhampton</span>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2>TO<br />
-HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS<br />
-THE PRINCE OF WALES<br />
-K.G., G.M.M.G., G.M.B.E., M.C., &amp;c.</h2>
-
-<p class="noindent">SIR,</p>
-
-<p>That fox-hunting is an ancient and honourable
-pastime all will agree: ancient in that the fox
-was held to be a beast of venery by our Anglo-Saxon
-ancestors, honourable because it is a sport
-that has ever been associated with those excellent
-qualities of manhood which are the prerogative of
-our race. That it is a royal pastime is equally
-plain: for hunting has been regarded, in all ages,
-as the chief sport of Kings and Princes. Indeed
-it is due principally to the encouragement and
-protection accorded to it by the Royal House of
-England that the noble sport of fox-hunting is in
-so flourishing a condition to-day. And so it is
-both fitting and proper, Sir, that this, the fifth
-edition of a notable contribution to our sporting
-literature, should be dedicated to you who uphold
-so admirably the traditions of British sport.</p>
-
-<p class="letter-sig">Your Royal Highness’s<br />
-humble, obedient servant,</p>
-
-<p class="right">THE EDITOR.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2>PREFACE.</h2>
-
-<p>Trimbush told his story&mdash;the story of his
-life&mdash;long ago, and a generation of sportsmen
-having, probably, been succeeded by another
-since then, the autobiography of that old and
-sagacious hound is now presented to the notice
-of those who may have been denied the opportunity
-of profiting either by his sage advice or
-experience.</p>
-
-<p>It will be conceded that, whatever egotism
-taints his arguments, Trimbush was “a
-shrewd philosopher, having a why for every
-wherefore.” He spoke of men and foxes as
-he found them; and if occasionally somewhat
-too severe upon the commissions and omissions
-of the former, he was equally ready, at all
-times, to show his teeth to the latter.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.</h2>
-
-<table summary="List of illustrations">
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">The Meet</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#frontispiece"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">“Head and Hands will beat Heels”</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_66">66</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">A Curious Finish</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_76">76</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">“Hold Har-r-r-d!”</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_100">100</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
- <tr>
- <td>CHAPTER.</td><td class="tdr">PAGE.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_I">I.</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_II">II.</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_16">16</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_III">III.</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_39">39</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">IV.</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_51">51</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_V">V.</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_67">67</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">VI.</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_79">79</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">VII.</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_91">91</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">VIII.</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_102">102</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">IX.</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_111">111</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_X">X.</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_121">121</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">XI.</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_139">139</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">XII.</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_147">147</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">XIII.</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_158">158</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">XIV.</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_172">172</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">XV.</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_182">182</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">XVI.</a></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_193">193</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-<h1>THE LIFE OF A FOXHOUND.</h1>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.</h2>
-
-<p>I had the excellent fortune, begins Ringwood’s
-memoir, to be put at walk at a
-farm-house, where I enjoyed the treatment
-observed to all the animals under the care and
-protection of the farmer and his wife&mdash;that
-of universal kindness. Sweet milk, meal,
-and broth were my provisions; and I never
-was without a clean, dry, and warm bed.
-Basking in the sun, playing with the
-shepherd’s dog, following the men at work,
-and in a complete state of perfect freedom,
-my early puppyhood passed. I mention these<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
-apparently trifling circumstances, because so
-much depends, as will be shown hereafter,
-upon the way in which we are brought up.
-I was one of a litter of five, consisting of three
-brothers and two sisters, and each had been
-placed at a separate walk; so that, until we
-were sent to the kennel to be drafted, we
-had not seen each other since the day of
-separation.</p>
-
-<p>Sorry as I was to leave my kind benefactors,
-still I felt no small degree of pride as, on a
-bright, sunny, spring morning, I was led into
-a court of the kennel, and met with greater
-admiration from the huntsmen and whips
-than any other of the young entry therein
-assembled, consisting of eleven couples and a
-half.</p>
-
-<p>“Upon my word,” said the huntsman,
-looking at me carefully from head to stern,
-“I don’t think that I ever saw such a beauty
-in my life. Such deep quarters, straight
-legs, round feet, and broad back are not to be
-met with every day, mind ye.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look at them shoulders and elbows too,”
-rejoined the first whip.</p>
-
-<p>“And what a muzzle!” returned the
-second.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Bless’d if he ain’t perfect symmetry!”
-echoed the feeder, after a long and silent gaze.</p>
-
-<p>“I <em>do</em> think he is,” added the huntsman,
-emphatically. “Or if he isn’t, <em>I</em> can’t see a
-bad point in him.”</p>
-
-<p>“That shows what the walk will do,” said
-the feeder, an old grey-headed man, pointing
-to four of our company. “Nobody would
-believe those were of the same litter, didn’t
-they know it.”</p>
-
-<p>But for this I should not have recognised
-my brothers and sisters, who certainly bore a
-very different appearance from that given of
-me by the huntsman. As we appeared
-strangers to each other, I at once made myself
-known, and inquired after their health and
-treatment since we last met.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,” replied one of my brothers,
-snappishly, “I was sent to the village ale-house,
-where I had to pick up my own living,
-and got more kicks than good will. I was
-always in somebody’s way, try as I did to
-keep out of it; and the consequence is, I can’t
-run a mile without feeling as if my back’s
-broken. We don’t always die on the day we
-are killed,” continued he.</p>
-
-<p>“As for me,” said my other fraternal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
-relative&mdash;a mangy, out-of-the-elbow, shy-looking,
-down-cast hound&mdash;“I was tied up
-from one month’s end to another at a
-butcher’s shop, with nothing to eat but the
-offal from the slaughter-house. I never,
-scarcely, was let loose, except to fight with
-one of the bull-dogs or terriers chained in the
-yard with me; but as I was always over-matched
-when I fought, and got well thrashed
-when I refused, the end was the same in
-either case. The best part of a hound,”
-continued he, “as the best part of a horse,
-goes in at the mouth; and as none, since I was
-a sucker, has gone into mine, I suppose I must
-consider myself no better than I should be;
-and I fear,” concluded he, with a sorrowful
-expression, “not so good.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let me hope that my sisters were more
-fortunate,” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“We were together in the same village,”
-replied one, “although at different homes. I
-was at the saddler’s and my sister at the
-miller’s, and both shared the common hardships
-of being continually worried by a set of
-idle boys. Stoned, hallooed at, kettles tied to
-our tails, and all kinds of tricks were played
-upon us. Whenever anything eatable was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
-missed or stolen, it was invariably laid to our
-charge; so that we could not even put our
-heads into a doorway without having a stick
-or a broom flung at us. Day after day this
-was our treatment, and although we did not
-suffer from a scarcity of food, yet from being
-obliged to shift for ourselves in getting beds
-where we could find them, sometimes cold,
-sometimes wet, and no system being observed
-in either our meals or lodgings, we were
-seldom without lameness or ill-health of one
-kind or other.”</p>
-
-<p>My sister was about giving the further
-details of their grievances, when the second
-whip, a fine, young, athletic man, interrupted
-her narration by observing that “he would
-draft all the litter but me.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no,” returned the feeder, shaking
-his head. “You’ll not find the Squire do
-that: we must keep ’em for their blood.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come,” added the huntsman, turning
-upon his heel, “they’re all in now, and to-morrow
-will show what are to be entered.
-We’ve no voice in the matter.”</p>
-
-<p>“And don’t want to have,” rejoined the
-feeder, “with such a master as the Squire is.”</p>
-
-<p>Soon after my entry I was taken under the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
-protection of an old hound called Trimbush,
-and the favourite one in the pack. He had
-been hunted six seasons, and, as may be
-supposed, was awake to every wrinkle.</p>
-
-<p>“Hounds, like men,” said he, one day, as
-we stretched ourselves together in the shade of
-a large chestnut-tree overhanging the court,
-“should first learn their duties, and then
-perform them. Now, young-un, I’ve taken a
-fancy to you,” continued he, giving me a
-playful flip with the tip of his stern; “and if
-you follow my advice you will save yourself
-many a stinging cut from our Whip’s double-thong.
-He hits terribly hard, I assure ye.”</p>
-
-<p>“Does he?” replied I, believing, in my
-innocence, that such a good-tempered, laughing
-fellow would scarcely brush a fly from our
-hackles.</p>
-
-<p>“So you’ll say,” continued my friend,
-“when you’ve tasted it.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I mean to avoid flogging,” I
-rejoined, “by obeying orders.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pooh, pooh,” returned Trimbush, testily.
-“Intentions are good enough; but a fig for
-orders when the blood’s up! I don’t always
-obey them myself, old as I am. However, as
-you haven’t yet viewed a fox, it’s no use my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
-mentioning anything about the field. We
-shall begin cub-hunting in a few weeks, and
-then you will get a little insight as to what
-you are to do there. In the meantime I’ll cut
-some notches in your memory regarding
-kennel discipline, and relate a few
-peculiarities concerning your companions.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you,” said I to the friendly offer.</p>
-
-<p>“In the first place I should tell you,” began
-Trimbush, “that the best step to take at the
-outset is to endeavour to become a favourite
-with those in authority over you. This is
-easily acquired, by doing that which you are
-told cheerfully, and without the trouble of
-compulsion being exercised. For it’s one
-thing to disobey an order when hunting, and
-quite another in the kennel. We all love our
-huntsman, Will Sykes; but he is very strict,
-and never allows a fault to pass without a rate
-or the thong being applied. When called,
-walk up to him with your ears thrown back
-smilingly, and carry your stern high and
-proudly. Will can’t bear a hound to look like
-a sneak. Don’t be quarrelsome at feeding
-time, or indeed at any other; for although
-family differences will occasionally arise over
-the meal and broth, never be among the first to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
-cause them. I am far from meaning by this
-that you are not to maintain your rights; on
-the contrary, you, like everything that lives,
-not only possess them, but are bound, in self-defence,
-to support them. There is as much
-danger, if not more, in always giving way to
-the domineering of tyrants as in acting the
-tyrant yourself; although,” continued Trimbush,
-with a growl at the reminiscence, “the
-results proved the same here not more than
-three seasons since.”</p>
-
-<p>“How was that?” inquired I.</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” replied he, “in all packs there is
-a master hound, who lords it over the rest just
-as he pleases. Now it frequently happens that
-this master becomes a regular bully, and so
-worries and torments his companions, that
-there is no living in comfort with him. We
-had a governor of this kind three years ago,
-and what do you think we did?”</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t say,” rejoined I.</p>
-
-<p>“Killed and ate him,” returned Trimbush,
-with no more concern than if speaking of the
-death of a rabbit.</p>
-
-<p>“Killed and ate him!” repeated I,
-horrified.</p>
-
-<p>“Ay,” rejoined he, “marrow, bones, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-all, with the exception of his head.”<a name="FNanchor_1" id="FNanchor_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_1" id="Footnote_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> This took place some years since in Mr. Conyer’s
-kennel, at Copthall, Essex.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Dog eat dog!” I exclaimed, scarcely
-believing the statement to be true.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not an every-day occurrence,” coolly
-replied Trimbush; “but what I’ve told ye is
-by no means a solitary instance, as you shall
-learn. There was a shy, broken-spirited
-puppy entered the same season with me, and
-whenever any of us began a bit of fun with
-him, he’d shriek and howl ‘pen-an-ink’ just
-as if he was being murdered. This, of
-course, led every one to take advantage, and
-the poor devil never had any peace of mind or
-body. One day, however, when a few of us
-had pinned him in a corner of the court, and
-were baiting him for sport, who should step in
-but Ned Adams, the second whip. How he
-paid us off, to be sure! Not one escaped but
-with every bone in his body aching fit to
-split.”</p>
-
-<p>“But it served all of you right,”
-interrupted I.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps it did,” rejoined Trimbush;
-“but we thought otherwise, and no sooner
-had Ned turned his back than we commenced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-making a retaliation upon the cur who had
-caused us such a drubbing. We had scarcely
-begun, however, when Ned again made his
-unwelcome appearance, and flogged us until
-every stroke from his double-thong seemed to
-soak right through our bodies. Before the
-cock gave notice of the coming day,” continued
-Trimbush, significantly, “Tricksy&mdash;for
-that was the name of the hound&mdash;was disposed
-of so as to leave no trace behind.”</p>
-
-<p>“Eaten!” I ejaculated.</p>
-
-<p>“We didn’t leave,” replied my friend
-deliberately, and dropping his words like peas
-from his jaws, “even his <em>head</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why was this done?” inquired I.</p>
-
-<p>“The simplicity of infancy is truly refreshing!”
-observed Trimbush. “There’s
-an adage, that a dead dog <em>may</em> tell how he was
-killed,” continued he; “but an <em>eaten</em> one
-never can. Do you comprehend?”</p>
-
-<p>“Perfectly,” responded I.</p>
-
-<p>“From what I have said,” he resumed,
-“you must now be aware of the policy of
-neither being overbearing to your fellows, nor
-too tame or submissive to them. I am now
-master here, and this is the rule I both teach
-and observe.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“And a very good one too,” I remarked;
-“but don’t let me interrupt you. Pray proceed.”</p>
-
-<p>“You would find out in time,” resumed
-Trimbush, “but may as well profit by my
-experience, and learn it at once, that most
-men who go with us to the covert-side know
-little about hunting and less about hounds.
-So long as their patience is not cramped with
-drawing blanks, and we go the pace with
-heads up and sterns down, they are satisfied,
-and take little further interest in us. Not one
-in fifty can tell even what the points of a
-hound are; and as for understanding anything
-about our habits and dispositions, they
-think that we are as much alike as cherries
-upon the same stalk. So far, however, from
-that being the case, we differ from each other
-in every respect as much as man to man
-engaged in the same pursuit, and frequently
-inherit the peculiarities of our fathers and
-mothers, as they do. You see that black-and-tan
-hound basking in the sun?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s Valentine. Now, his father,
-who was killed from a kick three years ago,
-always trotted to and from kennel just under<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-the huntsman’s off stirrup, and Valentine
-does precisely the same. There’s Graceful, a
-bitch in the next court&mdash;she invariably is the
-first home and the last to covert, and her
-mother did the like before her.”</p>
-
-<p>“That appears to be innate laziness,” I
-observed.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” replied Trimbush. “So far from
-that being the case, there never were better
-working hounds on earth.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then how do you account for it?”
-inquired I.</p>
-
-<p>“There are many things,” returned Trimbush,
-with the air of a philosopher, “as clear
-to our vision as the sunshine at noon, and yet
-their causes are hid in impenetrable darkness.
-I cannot,” continued he, “tell why Graceful
-and Valentine should inherit the eccentricities
-of their parents, but only see that they do
-so.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are these the only two instances coming
-under your observation?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p>“By no means,” replied my companion.
-“I could recite a dozen others of a similar
-nature, but I fear they might prove wearisome.
-You see that badger-pied hound
-amusing himself by snapping at the flies<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
-buzzing about him? Well, he is a nephew of
-mine, and makes it a rule, as his father did,
-to carry home whatever part of the varmint
-that falls to his share, and never eats it, unless
-there is a great chance of its being dragged
-away from him, till he gets to the kennel
-door.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps he wishes to show everybody on
-the road that he had a hand in the breaking
-up,” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“I think vanity has something to do with
-it,” replied my friend; “but if so, he inherits
-the pride from his sire, just as those
-peculiarities I have named are inborn in
-others.”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose, if these habits descend from
-parent to child,” I observed, “that vices are
-also inheritable.”</p>
-
-<p>“Decidedly,” replied Trimbush, beginning
-to evince symptoms of drowsiness. “Rioting,
-skirting, babbling, and all such-like faults,
-are inheritable, and as much so as the
-defective points in symmetry.”</p>
-
-<p>“It appears to me somewhat harsh, then,”
-rejoined I, “to punish us for them.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a matter,” added Trimbush, “I
-must leave to be decided between you and Ned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-Adams;” and then turning upon his side he
-closed his eyes, and a deep, low snore quickly
-proclaimed him to be in the land of shadowy
-dreams.</p>
-
-<p>I found kennel life at first very tedious, and
-soon began to pine for the farm-house, liberty,
-and a romp with the shaggy old shepherd’s
-dog. I became so home-sick at length, that
-had the opportunity offered, I should have run
-away; but when taken for exercise, I was
-always coupled with a companion, and no
-chance given of an escape from my thraldom.
-Notwithstanding the kindness of the feeder,
-in offering me food twice, and occasionally
-even three times a day, I got thinner and
-thinner, and instead of the sleek and bright
-coat which I had upon leaving my walk, my
-hackles now began to stare and to look little
-less rough than a badger’s skin. Trimbush,
-too, essayed to relieve me from my load of
-misery, and recounted many a tale of interest
-to wean me from gloomy reflections; but it was
-all to no purpose. I could not forget the
-pleasures of home.</p>
-
-<p>“He’ll be right enough in a day or two,”
-said the huntsman to an expression of regret
-from the feeder at my altered appearance.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-“Let him go cub-hunting once, and he will
-not sulk another hour.”</p>
-
-<p>“I believe ye,” rejoined the feeder.
-“There’s too good blood in him for that,
-after he has winded a fox.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then,” added the huntsman, “to-morrow
-at daylight we draw Wiverton Gorse;
-and if it does not hold a litter, it will be the
-first time since my servitude&mdash;a matter of
-twenty-five years and more.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“But, look! the morn, in russet mantle clad,</div>
-<div class="verse">Walks o’er the dew of yon high eastern hill.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The dew fell, dropping from leaf to leaf,
-and hung on the greensward in an endless
-succession of glistening gems. The mist
-floated on a light breeze, scarcely strong
-enough to waft the wet spider’s film meshed
-on sprig, and bough, and hawthorn spray.
-Mushrooms marked the rings where the elves
-of the night had held their orgies, and the
-fairy’s light&mdash;the glowworm’s lamp&mdash;still
-shone faintly on the moss-bank. Like a bride,
-veiled but not hidden, the young, gay morning
-broke, with a smile, the slumbering hours.
-Drooping flowers raised their petals, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-folded blossoms opened to her kiss. Wild and
-happy birds heralded her coming, and all
-things of the day welcomed her.</p>
-
-<p>At daybreak we were on our road to
-Wiverton Gorse, accompanied by Will Sykes,
-the huntsman, Tom Holt and Ned Adams, the
-assistant whippers-in. I could not suppress
-the delight I felt in going to cover; and,
-instead of the homesick and sullen feeling
-which I had had for a length of time, I was
-ready to jump out of my skin with spirits.</p>
-
-<p>“Pray, keep quiet!” said Trimbush, in a
-reproving tone, as I galloped to his side, and
-laid hold of one of his ears, by way of an invitation
-to a romp. “Pray, keep quiet!”
-repeated he; “you can’t be too steady in
-going to cover. Nurse your strength,” he
-continued, “until it’s wanted.”</p>
-
-<p>“I could race for thirty miles this morning,
-without a check!” replied I, boastfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Pooh, pooh!” rejoined Trimbush;
-“that’s the way with you young-uns&mdash;all
-brag and self-conceit; and when it comes to
-hard running, where are ye in a brace of
-shakes? Somewhat in this form,” continued
-he, hanging down his head, with outstretched
-tongue and drooping stern.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I laughed heartily at Trimbush’s acting a
-fagged and beaten hound; and, although I
-had not seen one at the time, I subsequently
-learned that it was a very faithful representation.</p>
-
-<p>“One would think, from that puppy’s
-gambolsome larking,” observed the huntsman,
-pointing to me, “that he knows what he’s
-going about.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps he do,” sagely returned Tom
-Holt.</p>
-
-<p>“How the devil should he?” rejoined
-Will Sykes. “Isn’t this his first day’s cub-hunting?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” added the first whip. “But don’t
-you think them dumb animals have a language
-of their own? I’m blest if they don’t almost
-talk to us sometimes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ha! ha! ha!” laughed Will Sykes.
-“You’re a pretty kind of a Christian, Tom.
-I suppose, by-an’-bye, you’ll say they sing
-hymns.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t see why they shouldn’t,” replied
-the imperturbable Tom Holt. “At least,”
-continued he, “if they don’t, they’re a sight
-more sensible than many of those that do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come, come,” said the huntsman, in a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-correcting tone; “try back, Tom. We shall
-have stones fall from the clouds presently,
-if you go on in that way.”</p>
-
-<p>“It wouldn’t surprise me if they did,”
-replied the whipper-in, as cool as a cucumber.
-“When so many folk, both gentle an’ simple,
-are building castles in the air, it’s nothing
-but reasonable that some o’ the stones should
-tumble.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ca-a-pital!” added Will Sykes admiringly.
-“I like a sharp and ready tongue.
-But you don’t really mean to say, Tom, that
-you think hounds have a way of speaking to
-one another?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I do,” replied the whipper-in; “and
-have no doubt of the fact. They have the
-sense,” continued he, “to understand what
-we say <em>to</em> them, and a great deal, in my
-opinion, of what we say <em>of</em> them; and it’s
-quite as natural, if not more so, that they
-should have a language of their own, as it is
-for them to comprehend a foreign one.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your notions are queer ones, Tom,”
-observed the huntsman. “And you’d have
-me believe, I suppose, that Ringwood there
-has been <em>told</em> what he’s going to do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing more likely,” replied Tom Holt.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>We were now on the verge of Wiverton
-Gorse&mdash;an extensive brake of some forty acres
-of high but not thick furze, except in patches
-where it had been lately cut.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t let a hound get away,” said the
-huntsman. “We’ll rattle the covers well;
-but be sure and hold the hounds in.”</p>
-
-<p>At this moment Bluecap and Dauntless
-made an attempt to sneak away; and, before
-getting a rate from Ned Adams, found his
-double thong cracking round their loins.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s for not waiting orders,” observed
-Trimbush.</p>
-
-<p>“Cover-hoik! cover-hoik!” hallooed the
-huntsman; “Elooin-hoik!” and into the
-brake we crashed like a flash of lightning.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the dash of the old blood!” said
-the huntsman, as I rushed through the gorse
-with the ambitious eagerness to find. “I’d
-bet a season’s capping,” continued he, “that
-he takes as kindly to work as a baby does to
-sucking.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’d better keep by me,” observed
-Trimbush, “and learn a little of your
-business, instead of tearing your eyes out in
-that blundering, stupid manner. One would
-think, if you were not a greenhorn of a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-puppy, that a dying fox stood before ye,
-instead of not having so much as found one.”</p>
-
-<p>But I was in no humour to be dictated to;
-and in spite of lacerating the corners of my
-eyes, ears and stern, I flew right and left
-through the furze, in the hope of being the
-first to challenge. In pressing through a
-thick patch, I scented that which I instantly
-concluded must be a fox; and, immediately
-afterwards catching a glimpse of something
-spring across a ride, I threw up my head,
-and made the cover echo as I dashed along the
-line. I was much surprised, however, that
-none of the old hounds joined me, and that,
-with the exception of three or four of the
-same age as myself, who merely gave tongue
-because I did, no response or cheer was given
-to my efforts.</p>
-
-<p>In a few seconds we found ourselves
-through the brake at the farthest corner up
-wind, and in close proximity to the dreaded
-presence of Ned Adams.</p>
-
-<p>“War hare, puppy!” hallooed he, riding
-at me, and cracking his heavy whip. “War
-hare! war hare! Hark back! hark back!”</p>
-
-<p>Learning that I had committed an error, I
-was not slow to obey the caution, by getting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-out of the reach of the thong; although, as I
-afterwards discovered, there was no fear of
-being punished for a fault until it had been
-repeated. Scarcely had I again turned into
-the brake, when my friend Trimbush gave a
-deep-toned note, announcing that a fox was
-afoot.</p>
-
-<p>“Hoik to Trimbush!” hallooed the huntsman&mdash;“Hoik
-to Trimbush!” and, as a
-bunch of hounds took up the cry, he added,
-“Hoik together, hoik!”</p>
-
-<p>Galloping on the line where three or four
-couple of the knowing ones were feathering
-their sterns and ringing their music, I for
-the first time winded a fox. Anxious to
-distinguish myself, I at once began making
-more din about it than all the old hounds put
-together.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t jingle your tongue as if you were
-currant-jelly hunting,” said Trimbush, contemptuously,
-as I joined his side. “A
-workman,” continued he, “never wastes his
-breath with too much whistling.”</p>
-
-<p>Feeling that there was truth in his chiding,
-I changed my tone, and gave tongue only
-when my friend did.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s right,” remarked Trimbush,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-flattered at my observing his dictate: “now
-you sound like business.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have at him!” hallooed Will Sykes.
-“Yoo-oo-it, hoik!”</p>
-
-<p>Hounds were now hunting in every
-direction of the cover; and it was evident
-that several foxes were before them.</p>
-
-<p>“The vixen and the whole litter are
-a-foot!” I overheard the first whip say.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you view her?” inquired Will Sykes.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes!” was the reply; “and she’s gone
-away.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then there’s a dog-fox behind,” rejoined
-the huntsman.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought so,” quietly observed Trimbush,
-stooping his muzzle to the ground, and
-drawing, with infinite gratification to his
-olfactory nerves. “I thought so,” repeated
-he: “a vixen, except she’s barren, never
-carries such a scent as that.”</p>
-
-<p>“You know the difference, then?”
-returned I.</p>
-
-<p>“Ay,” rejoined Trimbush; “as well as if
-I had helped to break her up. And so will
-you in a couple of seasons.”</p>
-
-<p>“But how?” asked I.</p>
-
-<p>“By experience,” replied my companion;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-“and from the natural aversion most animals
-have to destroy anything with or about to
-have young. But come,” he continued, “this
-is no time for talking, although we shall be
-stopped from getting away if they can get
-to our heads in time. However, keep close
-to me, and I’ll try to get a bat by ourselves
-in spite of ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who-whoop,” hallooed the huntsman.</p>
-
-<p>“They’ve chopped a cub,” said Trimbush.
-“Now’s our time, if Ned Adams doesn’t
-head him back.”</p>
-
-<p>A succession of loud cracks from a whip
-followed; but no halloo was given.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s gone away,” remarked Trimbush,
-with glee; “and we’ll be on good terms with
-him. Stick to me.”</p>
-
-<p>Keeping close to my companion’s stern, I
-ran stride and stride with him through the
-brake until we came to a corner of the cover
-where the fox we were hunting broke away.</p>
-
-<p>“Now then,” said Trimbush cheerily; “up
-with your head and down with your stern.
-Come along, the scent’s a burning one.”</p>
-
-<p>The instant that Trimbush was free of the
-cover, he laid himself upon the line, and raced
-like a greyhound; I following in his wake.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-Hearing the heavy stride of a horse in our
-rear, I turned my head to see who was
-following.</p>
-
-<p>“Take no notice,” said the old hound:
-“If Ned gets to our heads&mdash;and he’ll prick
-blood for it, I’ll be sworn&mdash;the sport’s all
-over with us.”</p>
-
-<p>“What the deuce does he want to stop us
-for?” inquired I.</p>
-
-<p>“Pooh,” rejoined Trimbush. “Rattle on.”</p>
-
-<p>The second whip came spurring on with the
-evident desire of reaching us; but the faster
-he came, the faster we flew.</p>
-
-<p>“Ha, ha!” laughed Trimbush; “we’ll
-give ye a sob for it.”</p>
-
-<p>Along two open grass fields we led the
-whipper-in; and then, for more than a mile,
-up a long, narrow lane, flanked by two high
-banks.</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t carried a bit of scent since we
-left the turf,” observed I.</p>
-
-<p>“Nor I either,” replied my companion.</p>
-
-<p>“Then what’s the use of flashing on in this
-way?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve no cunning in ye yet,” replied
-Trimbush, “or you wouldn’t ask such a
-simple question. However, so much the better.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
-Craft in the young is unwholesome; while, if
-the old don’t possess some, they have lived
-too long unprofitably. Now, we have no time
-to stop, and if we had we could do nothing
-with the scent on this hard, dry road: but
-having found our fox <em>up</em> wind, and as he
-turned <em>down</em> upon breaking cover, I know
-that he will <em>not</em> turn again. We have, therefore,
-but to make our own cast good one way;
-and then, in the event of not being able to hit
-it off, to try the other to be certain of getting
-on the line&mdash;unless, indeed, he should chance
-to head short back, which not one fox out of a
-hundred will do, unless it is to die.”</p>
-
-<p>“But we shall have no chance of making a
-cast,” said I, “with Ned at our sterns.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know the point he’s making for,”
-returned my friend; “and if we once get clear
-of this everlasting lane on to the scrubs, I’ll
-forgive Ned if he stops us this time. I <em>do</em>
-like,” continued he, “a run o’ this kind.
-There’s a spice about anything stolen.”</p>
-
-<p>Upon coming to a sudden turn in the road,
-Trimbush all but stood still at seeing a flock of
-sheep in our way; who, upon our nearing
-them, began scampering before us, and
-became wedged together like one solid body.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“The devil!” exclaimed my companion,
-making an ineffectual effort to reach the edge
-of the steep bank, and reeling almost over in
-the attempt. “No matter,” continued he,
-as springing upon his feet, and rushing
-forwards, he galloped along the backs of the
-scared flock; and, following his example, we
-cleared the impediment, and found ourselves
-on the right side of a great obstacle to our
-pursuer, Ned Adams.</p>
-
-<p>“Now we’re all right,” said Trimbush,
-exultingly; “and we shall have it to ourselves
-in spite of ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>The long twisting and twining lane led on
-to an open heath or sheep-walk, covered here
-and there with patches of broom, furze, and
-dwarf blackberry bushes.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll first try down wind to the right,”
-said Trimbush; “for although Will Sykes
-very often takes us just the other way, so as
-to make sure the varmint hasn’t given us the
-artful dodge by slipping back on his foil, it’s
-a bad cast except with a beaten fox, and
-generally widens the distance between us and
-him. Always,” continued the old hound,
-stooping his muzzle to the ground as he
-trotted cautiously along, “try the way first<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-you think he’s gone; and, having made that
-good, it’s quite time enough to take the
-other.”</p>
-
-<p>On coming to some sloping, moist ground,
-Trimbush stopped, and, feathering for a
-moment, threw up his head and made the air
-ring with melody as he hit off the scent again.</p>
-
-<p>“We are all right,” said he, exultingly.
-“We’ll either kill or burst him to earth.”</p>
-
-<p>I could now wind the varmint with my
-head stretched in the air; and it was as easy
-hunting as a bagman sprinkled with aniseed.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s nothing like break-o’-day hunting,”
-observed my companion: “the ground
-is cool and unstained; and there are no people
-about. Those terrible enemies to our sport,
-shepherd’s dogs, too, are not often in the way;
-and the hundred-and-one difficulties to be
-picked through at noon removed.”</p>
-
-<p>“But we are not thrown off generally at
-this hour, are we?” inquired I.</p>
-
-<p>“Never,” replied my friend, “except at
-this season. In times gone by,” continued
-he, “as I have heard tell, the meet used to be
-before cock-crow; and often hounds would be
-waiting at the cover-side for daylight. But
-fox-hunting, like most other things, has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-undergone a great change; and instead of
-the old slow-and-sure system of occupying
-minutes to find and hours to kill, we are now,
-taking the season through, hours finding, and
-minutes killing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which afforded most sport, do you
-think?” inquired I.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s difficult to say,” returned Trimbush.
-“Unless we go the pace, men now
-consider that there is no sport whatever; but
-some years since, the merits of a good hunting
-run had nothing to do with the time in which
-it was done, like a horse-race. With a cold
-scent, stained ground, and an unruly field&mdash;heading
-the fox, riding over us, and hallooing
-at everything from a cow’s tail to a jackdaw&mdash;we
-frequently pick through, and even
-hold it on with extraordinary keenness; but
-seldom, indeed, do we get any credit for our
-pains. If, however, the scent is breast high&mdash;as
-it is this morning, or I couldn’t talk to
-you&mdash;and we fly along without a check, for
-fifteen or twenty minutes, with blood for the
-finish, then there is no end to the praise, and
-we receive nothing but commendation and
-renown. Not that <em>I</em> am an advocate for slow
-hunting:&mdash;for the enjoyment of sport, there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-must be a dash, spirit, and fire; and in creeping
-along at snail’s speed there can be neither
-one nor the other. But what I wish our
-admirers and critics to understand is, that a
-fast run by no means shows our qualities, but
-a slow one may do so; and often that both
-our praise and our censure are equally
-unmerited.”</p>
-
-<p>“Still,” said I, beginning to pant for wind
-as we rattled up a steep hill, with the scent
-improving, if possible, at every stride, “as
-the old exploded system wanted that dash and
-spirit which, you say, are indispensable for
-first-rate sport, there can be no doubt of the
-present one being the most desirable.”</p>
-
-<p>“On the whole I think so,” rejoined my
-companion; “but that may be,” he continued,
-“from not being practically acquainted with
-any other. At the same time, ‘honour to
-those to whom honour is due;’ and my belief is
-that our ancestors, the line hunters, <em>hunted</em>
-their fox as well, if not better, than we who
-now <em>race</em> him down.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your judgment’s an impartial one,”
-returned I.</p>
-
-<p>“Good or bad, better or worse,” resumed
-Trimbush, “it’s no use arguing about the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-matter: ’tis the pace now that’s wanted, and
-will be had. If we can’t hunt, we must race;
-and the moment we’re at fault you’ll hear a
-dozen tongues holloa:&mdash;‘Lift ’em hard, Will.
-That’s your time o’ day. Chink-wink ’em
-along!’”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s no time given, then?” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“Time!” repeated Trimbush with a sneer.
-“I’ll just give ye an instance of what may be
-deemed a fair sample of the patience of
-sportsmen of the age we live in. One day last
-season we had been running a merry bat, for
-about twenty minutes, as hard as we could
-split, and leading the field over enough
-yawners to satisfy the greatest glutton or
-steeple-chase rider that ever crammed at a
-rasper. The fox was dying, and, heading
-short on his foil up wind, brought us to a
-momentary check. ‘Hold hard, gentlemen!’
-hallooed Will Sykes; ‘pray hold hard!’
-‘Consume me!’ exclaimed one who had been
-jamming his horse close to our sterns; ‘what
-sport one might have, if it wasn’t for these
-d&mdash;&mdash;d hounds!’”</p>
-
-<p>“A pretty kind of a foxhunter, truly!” I
-remarked.</p>
-
-<p>“A faithful description of the majority, I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
-can assure ye,” replied my companion. “But
-I must not lose any more breath in talking to
-you,” continued he; “I may feel the want of
-it.”</p>
-
-<p>I had already done so, but was too proud
-to let the symptoms be visible in any flagging
-on my part. Desirous as I was, however, to
-maintain the pace we had been going for some
-minutes, and over part of an enclosed country
-with strong fences, I began to feel my
-strength failing, and the absurdity of my
-boast of endurance becoming manifested. I
-now, in spite of every exertion, dropped in
-the rear; and although Trimbush cheered me
-to hold on, I could not but think there was a
-chuckle of triumph in his often-repeated
-query, “Why don’t you come along?
-Recollect what you said about thirty miles
-without a check.” And then, as if to mock
-me, the old hound increased his speed, and,
-upon reaching a wide and level common, ran
-completely out of view, leaving me alone in
-my glory.</p>
-
-<p>For a short time I endeavoured to struggle
-forwards, but quickly losing the line, and becoming
-bewildered and giddy from fatigue, I
-soon staggered to a stand-still. Ignorant of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
-my way home, and not knowing what to do
-better, I gave tongue for assistance, and was
-heartily glad to have my cry responded to by
-the loud barking of a shepherd’s dog, whom
-I perceived with his master, in a valley at the
-foot of the hill on which I stood. In a few
-seconds he came trotting up to me, and mutual
-delight was experienced in finding that we
-were familiar acquaintances, and had had
-many a game of fun together when I was at
-walk at the home of my puppyhood, the
-hospitable farm-house.</p>
-
-<p>“What, Ringwood, lad!” exclaimed the
-shepherd upon approaching me, and patting
-my sides, “is it you? Zounds, but it is!”
-continued he. “I’d know thee anywhere,
-skeleton though ye be.”</p>
-
-<p>For that night I was housed in my old
-home, and the following day again conducted
-to the kennel.</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t have lost him for the whole
-entry,” said Will Sykes, receiving me with a
-warm welcome. “I can’t think,” continued
-he, turning to the second whip, who, I
-thought, regarded me with rather a savage
-expression, “how you let ’em get away.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve told ye twenty times already,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-replied Ned Adams, in a tone and manner
-portraying his humour, “that the devil
-himself couldn’t get to their heads. I did my
-best, and, like many o’ my betters, was
-beaten.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, well!” rejoined the huntsman
-with glee, “it’s the first time that I ever
-heard of a whipper-in not being able to stop
-a puppy, cub-hunting. Ha, ha, ha.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was Trimbush, and not him,”
-returned the irate Ned.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” added Will Sykes, “It was Trimbush,
-eh? It wasn’t worth while then, I
-suppose, to get to the head of one without the
-other, and yet, if I am told rightly, it would
-have been a difficult job to have separated
-them.”</p>
-
-<p>The second whip was evidently chafed at
-this bantering, and turned away with a
-flushed cheek, and a tongue muttering anything
-but his prayers.</p>
-
-<p>Upon entering the kennel again, all my
-companions came round me, and each, in
-turn, licked my torn ears and eyes, and were
-as kind and friendly as if I had been a
-brother to each.</p>
-
-<p>“I am glad to see you back again,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-observed Trimbush, raising himself from a
-corner of the court, and stretching his limbs.
-“I began to think some danger had befallen
-ye.”</p>
-
-<p>“No thanks to you for having escaped it,”
-replied I, somewhat sharply.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” rejoined the old hound, carelessly:
-“in a run it’s every hound for himself, and
-a kick for the hindmost. There’s no
-consideration then.”</p>
-
-<p>“What did you do with the varmint?”
-inquired I, anxious to learn the result of our
-hunt.</p>
-
-<p>“Within five minutes of tailing you off,”
-replied he, “I ran him from scent to view;
-and if he had not gone to ground, I’d have
-broken him up without any sharers in the
-feast. As it was,” he continued, “he was so
-hot and beaten that he couldn’t lie more than
-a few inches from the mouth of the earth; and
-there we remained, with our red rags out,
-panting and grinning at each other for
-hours. Now and then I had a scratching dig
-for him; but finding that I could make no
-progress for the roots, left at last reluctantly,
-and pointed for home, where I arrived when
-the stars were twinkling.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Did you see Ned Adams upon your
-return?” I inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” replied Trimbush. “Mark, the
-feeder, was waiting for me, knowing that I
-should be back in the course of the night, let
-the distance be ever so great; and the good
-old fellow examined my feet and gave me a
-good supper, without the least show of bad
-temper for having kept him from bed.”</p>
-
-<p>“The second whip would not have treated
-ye so,” I observed.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps not,” returned he. “You
-mustn’t suppose, however, that Ned bears any
-malice. He might feel vexed and chafed at
-not being able to obey orders, but he always
-lets bygones be bygones.”</p>
-
-<p>In the course of discussion relative to the
-events of our stolen run, and during which
-the remainder of our companions formed a
-willing auditory, I asked Trimbush how he
-discovered the difference between the scent of
-a dog fox and that of a vixen.</p>
-
-<p>“In the first place,” responded he, “it is
-never so strong; and when she has either laid
-down her cubs, is about to do so, or has not
-left off suckling, there is a peculiar odour
-with her which cannot be mistaken. Now,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-most animals,” continued he, “as I observed
-yesterday, have an aversion to kill those in
-any of the situations just described; but I
-should have added, <em>when the purpose is to
-eat them</em>. For instance, a stoat will not
-touch a rabbit when about to litter; but a
-terrier would kill her in a moment. This is
-the reason that so few birds are killed whose
-nests are on the ground. The weazel avoids
-the partridge and lark whilst setting, and the
-fox passes the pheasant.”</p>
-
-<p>“What!” exclaimed I. “Won’t a fox
-snap a pheasant from her nest?”</p>
-
-<p>“Gamekeepers,” resumed Trimbush,
-“would tell you, ‘Always when an opportunity
-presents itself;’ but I know better. A
-vixen, with a large litter, and food scanty,
-will do so now and then, I don’t deny; but
-what does she get? Skin, bone, and feathers&mdash;a
-most unsavoury morsel, for which the cubs
-will scarcely care to fight. The mother knows
-this well enough, and, unless driven to
-extremities, never takes any kind of bird
-from her nest.”</p>
-
-<p>“The farmer’s wife tells a different story,”
-I observed.</p>
-
-<p>“The farmer’s wife, like the gamekeeper,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-is a sworn enemy to foxes,” returned Trimbush,
-“and with equally groundless cause.
-If a single head of poultry is missed, the
-robbery is always ascribed to a fox, and, however
-devoid of foundation, never forgotten.
-The old trot dates her subsequent life from
-the event, and begins her tale with, ‘About
-six months after the fox took my duck,’ and
-so keeps the matter fresh and vivid to the end
-of her days.”</p>
-
-<p>“One would think you were a preserver
-instead of a killer of foxes,” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“Ay,” rejoined the speaker; “if it was
-not for preserving, we should have no opportunities
-of killing.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.</h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“We will, fair queen, up to the mountain’s top,</div>
-<div class="verse">And mark the musical confusion</div>
-<div class="verse">Of hounds, and echo in conjunction.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Will Sykes was designed by nature for a
-huntsman. With a short stature and wiry
-frame, he possessed activity, indomitable
-courage, patience, and judgment. His voice,
-too, seemed to come from his heart, as he
-cheered with lusty lungs; and his strong grey
-eyes encompassed a whole parish, when he
-threw them forward for a view. Good
-humour sat upon his lip, and there was a
-great secret in his possession, of being capable
-of pleasing everybody without any apparent
-effort. Proud&mdash;perhaps a little vain&mdash;was
-our Will of his exterior; but then there might
-be sufficient cause; for although his short-cropped<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
-hair was grizzled and frosted by
-time, and a few wrinkles&mdash;albeit the joint
-effects of laughter and age&mdash;were stamped on
-his ruddy cheeks, few could boast of a larger
-circle of admirers. Will could never pass
-through a village, in pink and boots, but
-old women and young&mdash;but more especially
-the young&mdash;and mothers and maids flocked
-to their cottage doors and windows to
-exchange nods and friendly greetings with
-him. Ladies, too, of the first degree
-acknowledged his polite lift of the cap with
-friendly smiles, and, at convenient seasons,
-inquired after the health of Mrs. Sykes, and
-took quite an interest in sundry other of his
-domesticities and household economy. And
-was the huntsman’s better half&mdash;the plump,
-the prim, the comely Mrs. Sykes&mdash;jealous of
-these attentions? By no means. That
-excellent and discriminating person considered
-that the favour in which Will was
-held by the gentle and simple might be
-ascribed to her tactics and general measures
-of expediency; and popularity, she had cogent
-reasons for supposing, had greatly to do with
-the liberal capping so invariably bestowed
-upon the huntsman, whenever his right and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-title to the gratuity accrued. Worthy indeed
-is the care to be recorded with which the
-worthy dame bleached and starched the
-cravat, folded and tied without a crease,
-around Will’s neck. The white cords, too,
-stained as they have been in many a run, with
-the mud flying in showers over them, are
-spotless, and without a speck to note the wear
-and tear of bygone seasons. His tops also
-bore evidence of a division of Mrs. Sykes’s
-accomplishments. Scratched and rubbed, it is
-true, they were; but no erasible mark was
-permitted to remain. His spurs, too, glittered
-again; and in short, “no baron or squire, or
-knight of the shire,” had greater attention
-paid to his toilet than had our huntsman.</p>
-
-<p>“Personal appearance,” observed Mrs.
-Sykes to Will, one evening, sitting in a cozy
-corner of his parlour, in a dreamy, winking,
-blinking state, lulled by the influence of a
-blazing yule log&mdash;“personal appearance,”
-repeated she, somewhat louder, “is necessary
-for personal respect; and unless we look as if
-we respected ourselves, it’s unreasonable to
-suppose that other people will go for to
-respect us. We must best know,” continued
-she, “our own in’ards; and if we show, by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-our out’ards, that they’re all gammon and
-bacon, rest assured they won’t pass as the
-<em>best</em> of chitlins.”</p>
-
-<p>And was it for this, then&mdash;this worldly
-object&mdash;that Mrs. Sykes might be seen on
-every succeeding Sunday, volume in hand,
-walking with stately and measured tread
-along the path leading to the gray-mossed and
-ivy-twined church? Was it for this that the
-ribbed silk dress and most treasured bonnet
-were donned on the seventh day, when the
-likelihood was great of many eyes beholding
-them? Was it for this that, from the bright
-buckle in her shoe to the topmost ribbon stuck
-jauntily to flutter in the breeze, Mrs. Sykes
-evinced such elaborate taste and dainty care?
-Mrs. Sykes, like countless hosts of her betters,
-would have been justly indignant had such
-prying interrogatories been put to her for
-solution, however blandly they might have
-been effected; and as there is no confession on
-her part, and no justifiable ground for speculation
-in the replies, they must remain
-unanswered to the end of time.</p>
-
-<p>Tom Holt, the first whipper-in, and consequently
-second in command, was a very
-different <i lang="la">genus homo</i> to our huntsman. As<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-may already have been learned from his
-expressed opinions and sentiments, he
-possessed strange quirks and notions, and, to
-use his own graphic description of his
-imaginary pedigree, might have been “a
-cross between a bull-dog and a flat iron.”
-Much nice sophism might be used to support
-the poetical origin of Tom Holt; but if
-volumes were written to define his allegory
-more clearly, the end could not be more satisfactorily
-arrived at than by briefly saying,
-“it can far more easily be conceived than
-described.” Tom was a reflective man; he
-could not see an infant in its mother’s arms
-without the endeavour to picture to his vivid
-imagination how it would look when blear-eyed
-with age. A piece of thistle-down, whirling
-here and there, now catching in a bramble,
-and then skimming along in its varied,
-uncertain course, would make him think of
-“cause and effect” for an hour. A dew-drop,
-a feather in the air, a film of gossamer,
-often set Tom Holt “a-thinking” for the
-livelong day. He was a dreamer, and had
-more strange fantasies, with eyes wide and
-staring open, than a thousand such will-o’-the
-wisps fanned by the fairies’ midwife, Queen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-Mab. And yet Tom Holt, although his face
-was pale and thin, and his dark hazel eyes
-always bore a serious look, enjoyed right
-heartily his duties, and all thereunto pertaining.
-He studied the attributes and affections
-of the animals with which he had to deal, and
-took little less delight in the cunning and
-subtle tricks of the crafty fox than he did in
-the sagacity of his darling hounds hunting
-him. Like many enthusiasts, however, Tom
-went very strange lengths upon occasions; and
-it was generally reported in a wide ring in
-the country, that he asserted, when “much
-wrought,” at the Duck and Gridiron, upon a
-memorable occasion, “that a spider might
-teach a weaver more in one hour, than he
-could learn in a seven years’ apprenticeship.”
-Be this as it may, there is no doubt whatever
-that, upon Tom’s recovering consciousness
-from a stunning fall, causing the blood to
-flow from his nose profusely, he remarked,
-brushing a few of the sanguinary drops from
-the tip of it, that, “he did not see why they
-shouldn’t be blue instead of red.” This is an
-ascertained and acknowledged fact, and,
-without further detail of his oddities and
-eccentricities, Tom Holt must be left, like the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-cork against the tide, to work his own way.</p>
-
-<p>It appears indispensable&mdash;stale as the
-necessity may prove&mdash;to introduce the persons
-spoken of previously to relating the scenes and
-incidents in which they may assist. The
-second whip, Ned Adams, therefore, must not
-be permitted to escape notice altogether, like
-one of immaterial consequence and account;
-and although slight will be the sketch of his
-virtues, vices, and tendencies, still, to render
-that which is justly due is but to yield the
-very bare bones of common honesty. As with
-the greater number of second whippers-in,
-Ned was a connexion of the huntsman, and
-had the right&mdash;needlessly, be it said, on the
-maternal side&mdash;to call him “uncle,” Ned’s
-uncle embraced divers opportune occasions to
-impress upon his nephew’s mind the onerous
-duty and essential service which may be
-performed by a whipper-in if he will only
-<em>keep in his place</em>. “But,” observed the
-huntsman, “most of you hot-blooded young
-’uns are so eager to get for’ard, that ye forget
-the first principles of what you ought to do,
-and instead of keeping behind, to bring on the
-tail hounds, hang me if you don’t jam to the
-sterns of the leading ones.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“It’s more than mortal patience can
-endure,” replied Ned, by way of justification,
-“to stick in the rear on some occasions.”</p>
-
-<p>“But your duty, Ned,” seriously rejoined
-Will Sykes, “won’t bear excuse. It’s as
-much your place to be behind hounds as it is
-mine to be with them. In my judgment,”
-continued he, “there are but these couple of
-proper causes for a whip to be seen for’ard:&mdash;when
-hounds are to be stopped, and when
-ordered to clap to an open earth or hold a
-fox in covert, if not on such terms that we
-can run him.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you seldom give me the chance of
-doing the last,” returned his nephew.</p>
-
-<p>“And the less the better,” added Will
-Sykes. “It’s too much like mobbing a fox
-to please me; but still there are occasions, as
-in lifting hounds, to justify us in so doing. If
-the scent be cold and the fox a long way
-ahead, so that hounds can’t hunt, we must,
-in order to have any chance, get them nearer
-to him, and then it is that a whip may get
-for’ard to the point and head him in.”</p>
-
-<p>“But this only applies to a fresh fox, I
-suppose?” said Ned Adams.</p>
-
-<p>“To be sure,” responded his uncle,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-“unless, indeed, he’s a dying one: for then,
-as he can show no more sport, the sooner
-he is killed the better. I’m one of the
-last men living,” continued the huntsman,
-emphatically, “to kill a fox by either lifting
-hounds or any other means, except by a fair
-find&mdash;a fair rattle from scent to view, and
-pulling him down when he can’t run any
-farther. But it isn’t every day that we can
-have such cream of sport; and for any one to
-say that it’s unjustifiable to lift or assist
-hounds to run when they can’t hunt, or that
-we should never hold a fox in covert, is to
-acknowledge himself to be too tame a hand
-for a killer of foxes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nobody will accuse you of being that,”
-rejoined his nephew, laughing, “if they
-count the noses on the kennel-door at the end
-of each season.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope not,” returned the huntsman,
-seriously. “I hope,” continued he, “that
-when Will Sykes’s tally comes to be reckoned
-up and squared, those noses will go in the
-scales with his morals, and make ’em kick the
-beam.”</p>
-
-<p>It has been said that Will Sykes possessed a
-wide circle of admirers; and therefore to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-quite silent upon the matter respecting his
-nephew, would be an act approaching
-injustice; for, although the number was more
-choice, and&mdash;to be strictly correct&mdash;comprised
-no old women whatever, yet there is no
-question but every pretty, young, and
-unmarried one within the wide range of
-Ned’s jaunts and wanderings might be fairly
-registered among them. And no wonder; for
-Ned was spruce and handsome, and had soft
-looks, and yet softer words, for those with
-whom he wished to be in favour. His jest and
-laugh, too, were free and hearty; and where-ever
-he went, “Welcome” awaited him.</p>
-
-<p>The short sketches of those in immediate
-authority would still be incomplete if Old
-Mark the Feeder was allowed to escape observation.
-Whether he possessed a surname is a
-subject known only to himself; for nobody
-ever heard him spoken of, or to, but as “Old
-Mark.” From infancy he had been employed
-in the kennel, and owed his want of promotion
-to a nervous inability to become a horseman.
-No exertions on his own part, or those of
-others, could render him anything like competent
-to ride to hounds; and the result was
-that, after a long and patient trial to obtain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-this necessary accomplishment for a whipper-in,
-Mark was compelled to abandon the
-design, and to fall back on his former
-position. After this, no second attempt was
-made; and so years and years rolled on, and
-at length discovered the failure of a whipper-in
-in Old Mark the feeder. As may be
-supposed from his long experience, no one
-knew more about us than he did; and the
-moment his practised eye fell on a hound, he
-could instantly tell a defective point, let it be
-never so trifling. Proud and enthusiastic in
-his calling, the courts and lodging-houses
-were always clean, dry, and wholesome; and,
-late or early, the old man never allowed the
-most insignificant part of his duties to pass
-unfinished. The feet of each were carefully
-examined after returning home, and if foot-sore,
-washed with bran, warm water, and
-vinegar. A warm bath, too was also in
-readiness, and plenty of clean straw to roll
-in for the purpose of drying.</p>
-
-<p>Little can be said of Mark’s outward man;
-for his back was crooked&mdash;perchance from
-continually bending over the troughs and
-copper&mdash;and his legs were lean and long, like
-a daddy-long-legs; but one of the best<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-attributes of human nature sat reflected in
-his mild, open, honest face; and that was
-gentle kindness of heart. Oh! if the world
-was more thickly populated with “Old
-Marks,” how many hearts and hides would
-cease to throb with anguish!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“In the barn the tenant-cock,</div>
-<div class="verse">Close to partlet, perched on high,</div>
-<div class="verse">Briskly crows (the shepherd’s clock),</div>
-<div class="verse">Jocund, that the morning’s nigh.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>With a yawn, a stretch, and a shake, Trimbush
-completed his toilet one misty morning,
-just as a neighbouring cock had thrice thrown
-his chivalrous challenge on the breeze, and
-invited me, with a crack of his stern across my
-muzzle, to follow his early example of
-industry.</p>
-
-<p>“Come,” said he, “it’s time to be awake
-and stirring. How do ye fare?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hearty and hungry,” replied I, reluctantly
-arousing myself from a dream of
-enjoyment.</p>
-
-<p>“Ha, ha, ha!” laughed Trimbush.
-“You’ll have to wait, then,” continued he,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-“till sunset for a meal, unless you earn a
-share for yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>“How so?” inquired I.</p>
-
-<p>“This will be the first meet o’ the season,
-and your first day of regular work. Mind,”
-said Trimbush, admonishingly, as he showed
-a long row of very white and strong teeth,
-“to let me see that you have profited by my
-lessons and the experience you’ve had in cub-hunting,
-or your jacket may be well shaken
-when least expected.”</p>
-
-<p>“You needn’t begin to threaten,” rejoined
-I, somewhat indignantly, “without any
-cause. A rate’s well enough,” I continued,
-“when a fault is committed; but there’s no
-occasion to meet it half-way.”</p>
-
-<p>“True,” returned Trimbush, “quite
-true; and your remark only proves that a
-young head may sometimes correct an old
-tongue, despite what may be said to the
-contrary. One of the greatest faults with all
-whippers-in,” resumed he, “is the rating us
-in anticipation of our doing wrong; or, after
-committing it, before soaking in the double-thong;
-whereas, they should wait until the
-cause is given, and then&mdash;after blistering us
-with the flax&mdash;proceed to lecture upon the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
-impropriety of the conduct. It’s quite
-remarkable what effect a sound drubbing has
-upon the memory.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall not forget the first I received,”
-observed I.</p>
-
-<p>“But you’ll never repeat that riot,”
-significantly returned Trimbush. “It was a
-christening not to slip through the memory
-as if it had no knots tied in it.”</p>
-
-<p>“But then,” added I, “in coming across
-the slot of deer, the scent was so sweet and
-grateful that I couldn’t refrain from carrying
-a head.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Trimbush, “like luxuries of
-other descriptions, you paid for the enjoyment.”</p>
-
-<p>“And dear as the cost was,” replied I,
-“it’s very doubtful whether I might not be
-inclined to have another flutter at the same
-feather.”</p>
-
-<p>“What! swallow a hackle of the dog that
-bit ye?” rejoined my friend.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a common case, I’ve heard, with our
-betters,” returned I.</p>
-
-<p>“Right again,” added my companion.
-“Fire puts out fire.”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose,” observed I, “that you’ve<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-felt, before now, an inclination to repeat an
-error, convinced as ye may have been of its
-impropriety.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah!” exclaimed Trimbush, drawing in
-the breath between his teeth with a hissing
-sound; “that I have. We are as clannish as
-Scotsmen, and support each other through
-thick and thin, in the same mortar-an’-brick
-fashion. If one of us is a marked and
-confirmed rebel, he seldom repeats his fault
-without lots of company to back him. The
-season before last, a hound was sent here from
-the north country, and as sulky and ill-tempered
-a brute as was ever seen in a kennel.
-We all hated him; and yet, strange as it may
-appear, upon Ned Adams attempting to drive
-him from the lodging-house one morning, in
-consequence of his refusal to come when
-called, he flew at him, and, fastening upon his
-shoulder, was instantly joined by half the
-hounds in the court.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t understand that,” replied I.</p>
-
-<p>“The cause lies in our blood and bone,”
-rejoined my friend. “The impulse with us,”
-continued he, “is paramount&mdash;to follow the
-leader however wrong he may be in his
-example.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“And what was the finish of this attack
-on Ned Adams?” inquired I.</p>
-
-<p>“But for his lusty lungs for help,” replied
-Trimbush, “it might have gone hard with
-him. However, Will Sykes, Tom Holt, and
-Old Mark quickly made their appearance,
-and put an end to the fray with little
-difficulty. As for our new companion, we
-never saw him afterwards.”</p>
-
-<p>“He was sent away, I suppose?”
-remarked I.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” returned Trimbush, “to dance in
-the air with a hempen cord round his
-throttle.”</p>
-
-<p>“And no wonder, either,” added I, “for
-such an offence.”</p>
-
-<p>“Breaking up a whipper-in is certainly no
-joke,” said my companion. “But there was
-one picked as clean as ivory once, without any
-unpleasant interruption to the spread.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gracious powers!” ejaculated I, “what
-do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Simply what I have said,” replied Trimbush,
-licking his jaws with a peculiar relish,
-and coolly adding, “I had a hand in the
-supper.”</p>
-
-<p>“You?” I exclaimed.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Listen,” returned the old hound, checking
-my impetuosity, “and you shall hear. I
-was not bred in this kennel, but came from the
-west at the end of my first season. It so
-happened that about the middle of this season,
-and when all of us were full of fire and
-devilry, our regular whipper-in died, and his
-place became filled by a perfect stranger to
-us. His cottage being within a short distance,
-he could hear any quarrel or disturbance, and
-was ready to quell it at a moment’s notice.
-Trifles light as air, I’ve heard, will frequently
-cause the most vital consequences; and such
-was the case that I am alluding to. A ray of
-the moon, streaming through a chink in the
-door of our lodging-house, occasioned a
-hound of the name of Restless to bay it. This
-broke the sleep of all; and in a few minutes a
-regular fight began, each running a-muck and
-attacking friend and foe with equal want of
-consideration. In order to quell the row, the
-whipper-in made his appearance amongst us,
-as he quitted his bed, undressed; but scarcely
-had he lifted the latch of the entrance, when&mdash;not
-recognising his voice or his person&mdash;he
-was seized by the throat; and, before
-the morning light, there was nothing left<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-but a cleanly picked skeleton.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not surprised at his death, under the
-circumstances,” rejoined I; “but to eat
-him!”</p>
-
-<p>“In my opinion,” added Trimbush, “that
-was the most innocent part of the affair.”</p>
-
-<p>“And how,” said I, curious to learn
-further particulars, “how did he taste?”</p>
-
-<p>“Take my word for it,” replied the old
-hound, in a tone and manner conveying much
-conviction of the correctness of the assertion,
-“take my word for it,” repeated he, “that
-with a little broth, daintier food could not be
-eaten.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who was the first to discover the
-remains?”</p>
-
-<p>“Our feeder,” returned he.</p>
-
-<p>“And what did he say?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well!” added Trimbush, scratching an
-ear with his off hind foot, as if tickled with
-the reminiscence which the question created,
-“I should observe, in the first place,” continued
-he, “that Harry Bolton, our feeder,
-was one of the coolest fellows that ever boiled
-a copper of kit, and never known to exhibit
-the slightest astonishment at anything.
-Whenever he read an astounding piece of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
-news in the <i>County Chronicle</i>&mdash;natural
-phenomenon, accident, or offence, or anything
-sufficient to cause the generality of his
-neighbours’ hair to stand on end was related
-to him&mdash;his short unchanging observation
-was, ‘Shouldn’t wonder!’ However, thought
-I, the ice of your surprise will be broken at
-last.”</p>
-
-<p>“And was it?” inquired I.</p>
-
-<p>“You shall hear,” resumed Trimbush.
-“When Harry came to the kennel, as was his
-wont just at break o’ day, and his eyes fell on
-the white bones of the unfortunate whipper-in
-spread upon the ground, he continued puffing
-a short black pipe, constantly between his
-lips, for a few seconds in silence, and then
-taking it from them with a slow deliberate
-movement, ejaculated, ‘Shouldn’t wonder!
-D&mdash;n me if they an’t hashed the whip.’”</p>
-
-<p>“And was that all he said?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Every word,” returned my companion.</p>
-
-<p>At this moment Will Sykes arrived
-mounted, accompanied by the two whippers-in;
-and to his order, Mark threw back the
-door of the court upon its hinges, and out we
-rushed with a chorus of merry tongues ringing
-for our freedom, and the joy that we knew
-to be in store for us.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Unkennelling hounds,” remarked Trimbush,
-as we trotted along the road, side by
-side, “is one great illustrative fact of the
-difference between high-bred and low-bred
-animals. A puddle-blooded mongrel, or one
-of low caste, licks and fondles only the hand
-that gives him <em>food</em>; but we, and all possessing
-similar tendencies, love him and those
-who show and give us <em>sport</em>. See the
-difference with which we hail our feeder’s
-appearance, and that of our huntsman. We
-have affection for both; but there is no comparison
-between either the kind or strength of
-the feeling.”</p>
-
-<p>“We may like Will, too, all the better,”
-I observed, “on account of his not flogging
-us.”</p>
-
-<p>“A huntsman should never use the thong,”
-replied my companion. “It should be his
-study to be on such terms of friendship and
-good-will with his pack, that each hound is
-ready to fly to his voice like a bird to her nest;
-and among the varied tempers and dispositions
-which he has to deal with, this is
-impossible if he unites with his office the
-duties of whip.”</p>
-
-<p>“I always feel inclined to head just the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-other way when I hear Ned Adams,”
-observed I.</p>
-
-<p>“To be sure,” returned Trimbush. “The
-thrashed hound fears the whip; and getting
-away to his cry of ‘for’ard’ is as essential as
-obeying the huntsman’s horn; but the feelings
-for the two are far from being akin.”</p>
-
-<p>We now turned a sharp angle in the lane,
-down which we were gently trotting: and on
-a large open piece of waste ground&mdash;the
-coarse grass, patches of thistles and rushes,
-being cropped by a few donkeys and a flock
-of desolate-looking geese&mdash;my eyes first saw
-the assembled members of “our hunt.”</p>
-
-<p>Deny it who will&mdash;it is a heart-stirring,
-gladsome, inspiring, <em>English</em> sight, to witness
-a country gentleman and popular master in
-the field. There are his friends and neighbours,
-his tenants and yeomen, stout and true,
-his servants and dependents, met together for
-a noble amusement, and one which unites
-them in the bond of goodly fellowship. It
-has been well observed, “What is a gentleman
-without his recreations?” and, to alter
-the query slightly, it might be said, “What
-is a <em>country</em> gentleman unless he be a <em>sportsman</em>?”
-Like a fish out of water, a bull in a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-china shop, a bear in a tea-garden, or anything
-else strangely awkward and much out
-of his element.</p>
-
-<p>There they were, in showy red and Lincoln
-green, in leather, cords, and kersey drabs;
-white tops, brown, and black; hats, caps, and
-thatch; some mounted and some afoot. From
-the high-mettled hunter with his shot-silk
-and glistening coat, to the rough and shaggy
-tailor’s pony; in short, all sizes, shapes,
-colours, and conditions, might be seen
-congregated, expectant, and prepared for our
-arrival.</p>
-
-<p>“Here they are!” shouted an urchin,
-perched on the topmost limb of a tree. “Here
-they are!” repeated he, hallooing to the
-stretch of his lungs; and then a whooping
-crew of his fellows took up the cry, making
-the welkin echo with their din.</p>
-
-<p>“Your servant, gentlemen,” said Will
-Sykes, touching the peak of his cap; and
-during a short delay, waiting the arrival of
-the Squire, he proceeded to point out the
-young hounds, making me an especial object
-of notice.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s his pedigwee?” lisped a pale-faced
-gentleman in spectacles, famous for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-riding hard along roads and over nothing but
-hounds at check.</p>
-
-<p>“By Osbaldeston’s Furrier out of Crafty,
-sir,” replied the huntsman.</p>
-
-<p>“By Fuwier out of Quafty!” repeated
-the interrogator.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” rejoined Will; “and I’m much
-mistaken if he doesn’t equal the celebrity of
-his father.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you call him?” further
-inquired he of the ghostly countenance.</p>
-
-<p>“Ringwood, sir,” returned the huntsman.</p>
-
-<p>“Wingwood, eh?” added the questioner.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s one of the sort,” said Trimbush
-to me, “I was mentioning some time ago.
-He comes out just to show himself and have
-an excuse for wearing a red coat; but as for
-taking any interest in either the sport or us,
-he fears the one and knows nothing of the
-other. A man, from age, or other causes, may
-be unable to ride straight and live with us,
-and yet take as much pleasure in joining the
-meet, nicking in, and pottering on to the end
-of a run, as those who are in the first flight
-from the find to the finish; but I am certain,
-from what I have seen, that if a man is so
-naturally timid as to be afraid to ride to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
-hounds, he can never be&mdash;in the sense of the
-word&mdash;a foxhunter.”</p>
-
-<p>“And who is he?” I asked, pointing to a
-thick-set and jolly-looking man in a green
-coat, and occupied in the act of taking up the
-girths of his saddle.</p>
-
-<p>“A very different description of sportsman,”
-replied Trimbush; “that’s farmer
-Stockdale, a tenant of the Squire’s, who has
-forgotten more about hounds and hunting
-than the majority of men ever learn. You
-see,” he continued, “that he’s making a
-careful examination of his horse, and the few
-alterations necessary, whilst there is plenty of
-time; as none but the greenhorns leave them to
-the last moment. I remember a man, upon
-one occasion, tightening a curb-chain at the
-moment we unkennelled our fox; and such
-were the impatient plunges of his horse, that
-he could not mount him again in time to get
-away with us, and he never saw an inch of the
-run&mdash;long and gallant as it proved.”</p>
-
-<p>My attention being turned to a young man
-superbly mounted, and dressed with the most
-scrupulous care, I inquired of my companion
-if he was one of the timid school.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” rejoined Trimbush; “<em>that</em> he is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-not. From the delicate look of his boots,
-breeches and gloves, one might feel disposed
-to imagine that he was not in the habit of
-dirtying them; but so far from that being the
-case, he is not only the boldest but the best
-rider in the hunt&mdash;for the two do not always
-go together. It used to be thought,” continued
-he, “by men of the old school, that a
-white top was the certain mark of a he-haw,
-know-nothing, gal-drawing, watering-place
-snob; but I have no hesitation in saying that
-the white tops of the present day could show
-the dark and mahogany ones their heels without
-the slightest difficulty, or more than
-ordinary exertion.”</p>
-
-<p>“You think, then, that men ride bolder
-and better now?” I remarked.</p>
-
-<p>“Without a doubt of it,” replied Trimbush.
-“The stamp of horse&mdash;thorough-bred
-and up to the mark in condition&mdash;the pace we
-go, and the modern style of <em>racing</em> a fox
-down, require both bolder and better riding
-than in the days when they found him at cock-crow
-and killed him at noon. Not only is
-courage indispensable to be near the ‘sinking
-one,’ but hands, head, and heels must be
-exercised with the best of judgment. I grin,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-continued he, “to see a first-flight man, after
-a fifteen minutes’ burst, blown to a stand-still;
-while farmer Stockdale gives him the
-go-by with his goose-rumped, short-legged,
-long-necked nag, just in the wind.”</p>
-
-<p>“And does that often take place?” I
-inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“Very frequently,” replied my companion.
-“Head and hands will beat heels
-all the world over.”</p>
-
-<p>At this moment the Squire came trotting
-briskly up on his hack; and as he rode through
-the throng, hats were lifted and salutations
-exchanged. Our master, be it remembered,
-although an old English gentleman, was not a
-gentleman of the old school. He neither swore
-the roundest oaths, nor horsewhipped those
-whom he dared or could afford to pay; he
-boasted not of the number of bottles it took to
-make him oblivious of sublunary matters, or
-laughed only at the practical joke and coarsest
-jest. His object was not to be the oracle of
-grooms and stable-boys, or the subject of
-discussion in the village tap-room. With an
-affable bearing, he possessed a kind and
-generous disposition, and a heart more ready
-to befriend the deserving and destitute than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-to check the imposter and depraved. His
-house was one wherein hospitality reigned the
-seasons round; and it mattered not who were
-the guests, a hearty welcome awaited each and
-all. In the pursuit, too, of his favourite
-sport, he never permitted an injury to pass
-unrecompensed, although careful that no false
-application should succeed. Not a gate nor a
-bar was broken, a head of poultry lost
-<em>suspiciously</em>, or the most trifling damage
-done, but what, instantly and liberally,
-amends were made. Sternly discountenancing
-all unfair riding over wheat, young grass,
-and layers, he was regarded by the farmers as
-a friend to their interests; and so far from
-objecting to a fixture in their neighbourhood,
-they were glad when it came to their turn.
-By proper and simple judicious means the end
-is always attainable; and if those masters of
-hounds who complain of a dearth of foxes,
-and opposition to their sport, would but take
-a memorandum out of the note-book of “our
-Squire,” many a blank day might be rendered
-as fruitful as the vine “clustering with a
-thousand rings.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<img src="images/illus2.jpg" width="600" height="400" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“HEAD AND HANDS WILL BEAT HEELS.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.</h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“For easy the lesson of the youthful train</div>
-<div class="verse">When instinct prompts, and when example guides.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“I hope I’m to my time,” said the Squire,
-pulling out his watch. “Yes,” continued he,
-glancing at the dial, “to a minute.”</p>
-
-<p>Immediately after the Squire’s arrival, we
-were thrown into the cover, and, when about
-the middle of it, I saw Trimbush feather his
-stern, and before I could reach him he threw
-his tongue, and, as he did so, Will Sykes gave
-a cheer which Echo took pleasure to repeat.</p>
-
-<p>“Hark to Trimbush! Hark to Trimbush!
-Have at him! Whoop!”</p>
-
-<p>We clustered to him, and, poking my nose
-to the ground, I drew in a scent which made<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-every hackle on my body stiffen with delight.
-Up went my head, and forth I sent some
-music that came from my very heart.</p>
-
-<p>“See that puppy,” said the Squire.
-“How he loves it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have at him, Ringwood,” hallooed the
-huntsman, rising in his stirrups. “Have at
-him, good hound!” and then, turning to the
-Squire, I heard him remark, “He’s a perfect
-wonder, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” was the reply, “he’s the most
-promising I have ever seen.”</p>
-
-<p>We now got to our fox in a body, and
-crashed him through the cover. Full swing
-we flew, and, as we swept out of the furze, I
-was astonished to lose the scent which we had
-carried so strong up to the corner of the brake,
-and flung myself here and there to pick it up
-again. Most of us were sorely puzzled for a
-few seconds, when Trimbush, after stooping
-his nose to the ground for some distance, down
-wind and up, along the verge of the cover,
-said to me, “The artful dodger’s slipped
-back, and shot into the brake again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tally-ho! tally-ho! Gone away,”
-hallooed a voice from the farthest end of the
-cover.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I told you so,” said Trimbush. “We
-were too close to him, and he headed back to
-make the distance greater at the burst.”</p>
-
-<p>I now sniffed the scent again, and, thinking
-I was showing off, made as much noise as I
-possibly could.</p>
-
-<p>“Keep your tongue still,” snapped Trimbush.
-“Like most puppies, two-legged and
-four, if they possess a good voice, they seldom
-exhibit equal good sense in using it.”</p>
-
-<p>Twing, twing, twang, twa&mdash;a&mdash;ng, went
-Will Sykes’s horn, as he jammed his horse
-through bush and briar.</p>
-
-<p>“For’ard, for’ard,” shouted Tom Holt.
-“Get to him, hounds, get to him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come along,” said Trimbush. “Stick
-to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“What a clean, fine, lengthy fellow he
-is!” I heard some one remark. “His
-point’s Picton Brake.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied another. “His brush must
-be two feet: and what a snowy tag to it!”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed!” observed Trimbush. “Then
-we’ll give it such a dusting as to change its
-colour pretty quickly.”</p>
-
-<p>A bunch of old hounds flew out of cover
-with us, and, taking up the scent, away we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-rattled in a body, as close as a swarm of
-bees.</p>
-
-<p>“They won’t over-ride us to-day,”
-remarked I.</p>
-
-<p>“Not if the scent lasts as good as it is,”
-replied Trimbush; “but that’s doubtful.”</p>
-
-<p>For fifteen minutes we burst him along as
-hard as we could split. The day was fine and
-warm, and, sinking the wind, the pace began
-to tell most terribly upon some of us young
-ones.</p>
-
-<p>“I feel very choky,” said I, doing my best
-to keep my place.</p>
-
-<p>“Hold on,” returned Trimbush. “He
-must have crossed the Kulm stream, and there
-we shall get a cooling plunge.”</p>
-
-<p>In a handful of seconds we neared the
-water, and dashed into it with as much
-delight as a flock of thirsty ducks.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said Trimbush, “you’ll be able to
-reach the brake, where, I’d bet my stern to a
-buck rabbit’s scut, he’ll hang as long as he can
-and dare.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why so?” inquired I.</p>
-
-<p>“Why so!” repeated Trimbush, rather
-contemptuously. “Because he must know by
-this time that he can’t outrun us. The scent’s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
-too good, and we got away with him on such
-terms that nothing but reaching a strong
-earth, or changing to a fresh fox, can save
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>“We must try to keep to our hunted one,”
-said I, thinking it was exhibiting some
-wisdom.</p>
-
-<p>“Try!” repeated my friend; “of course
-we shall try. We always do; but it’s sometimes
-impossible to distinguish the difference
-between the scent of our hunted fox and a
-fresh one. It’s easy enough, when a fox is
-viewed, to know, because it can be seen
-whether he’s been shoved along at the expense
-of his bellows and toilet; but our noses can’t
-be depended upon.”</p>
-
-<p>As Trimbush said, upon gaining the brake
-we found the fox hanging in it; and, although
-very hot, we gave him such a towelling, that,
-so far from improving his condition, he had
-better have taken to his pads and faced the
-open. I saw him a dozen times in cover, and
-his red rag hung from his open jaws, and his
-brush dragged along the ground. We pressed
-him up and down across the rides at a killing
-pace, and although there was no bullying by
-holding him in cover, and every opportunity<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
-given him to quit it, he still stuck to his
-quarters.</p>
-
-<p>“You shall either run or die,” said Trimbush,
-going through the cover like a bullet.</p>
-
-<p>A clear, musical “Tally-ho” now echoed
-far and wide.</p>
-
-<p>“Gone away at last, eh?” observed my
-friend, and, throwing up his head, he rushed
-to the halloo.</p>
-
-<p>“Hold hard!” roared the Squire, as one,
-too eager, rode nearly over me as I leaped
-from the cover. “You almost killed, sir,”
-continued he, “the best of my young entry,
-and perhaps the most valuable puppy I ever
-bred.”</p>
-
-<p>“I beg your pardon, sir; but my horse pulls
-so, that&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Then he is not fit to ride to hounds, sir,”
-hastily rejoined the Squire.</p>
-
-<p>Being high on our mettle, we flashed
-forward, after just touching the scent on a
-dry-lying fallow, thinking that we had struck
-on his line; but Trimbush, and a few of the
-old hounds, soon found that they were wrong,
-and, throwing up their heads, came to a
-check.</p>
-
-<p>“Let them alone,” said the Squire, as Will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-Sykes indicated a disposition to make a hasty
-cast down wind. “Let them alone,” repeated
-he.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s certain to be making for the belt of
-covers on the ridge, sir,” replied Will, “and
-the ploughs are so dry that it is impossible
-for hounds to carry it over them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let them alone,” quietly rejoined the
-Squire. “Let them alone.”</p>
-
-<p>“When allowed to make our own casts,
-which we always should at first,” remarked
-Trimbush, poking his nose to the ground,
-“we try down wind first, because that’s the
-way foxes constantly run. It’s time enough
-to cast up when we’ve made good the cast
-down. Humph!” continued he, as if
-puzzled, “I begin to think Will’s wrong.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean?” inquired I.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t fancy he’s pointed for the covers
-on the ridge,” returned Trimbush; “let’s see
-whether he hasn’t headed back,” continued
-he.</p>
-
-<p>We now tried up wind, and, sure enough,
-hit it off again under a hedgerow.</p>
-
-<p>“Ha, ha!” laughed Trimbush. “He’s
-a sinking one, and has turned to die.”</p>
-
-<p>We now rattled on full swing over a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-common, and on climbing a steep hill I saw a
-magpie darting to the ground and then rising
-high in the air to swoop again.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that chattering pie doing?”
-inquired I, directing Trimbush’s attention to
-the bird.</p>
-
-<p>“Mobbing him,” replied he. “The magpie,
-jay and crow love to mob a sinking fox.
-Keep your eye forward; it will soon be from
-scent to view.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are those covers strong?” I asked,
-seeing that we were making for a long line of
-trees.</p>
-
-<p>“Little more than spinnies,” replied my
-friend. “He can’t hang in them a minute.”</p>
-
-<p>We drove him through these little covers
-without let, check, or stop; and at the last,
-out he flew in view of all of us. We rushed at
-him like greyhounds from the slips; but, with
-a desperate effort to save his life, he managed
-to dash round the corner of a barn, and, as we
-turned, I saw him slipping along on the top
-of a thick square-topped hawthorn fence,
-and, springing upon the trunk of a tree
-covered with ivy, disappear. None of the
-others saw this artful dodge; but all flashed
-forward, and were bewildered at not either<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-viewing or being able to hit him off. Trimbush
-flung himself here and there in a perfect
-fury, and would not pay the smallest attention
-to what I had to say.</p>
-
-<p>“Put your nose down and work,” said he
-passionately, “don’t talk to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I tell you&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Pshaw!” interrupted Trimbush.
-“What’s your head in the air for?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because the <em>fox</em> is in the air,” replied I.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean?” asked he, seeing
-that I was serious.</p>
-
-<p>I then told him that which I had seen, and
-inquired what I should do.</p>
-
-<p>“Hold your tongue,” returned the artful
-old rogue; “it shows a wise head, I’ve heard.
-Leave the matter to me.”</p>
-
-<p>In order to monopolize the whole of the
-credit to himself, Trimbush galloped to the
-tree and dashed at it, in the attempt to climb
-the knarled and knotted trunk.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that hound about?” said the
-Squire, looking greatly astonished.</p>
-
-<p>I now saw that Trimbush would get all the
-praise of discovering our fox’s hiding place,
-and felt greatly vexed with myself that I had
-not gone at once to the tree and thrown my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-tongue. The rest now clustered round the
-leader, who, managing to stick and cling to
-the ivy, got some dozen feet from the ground.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s gone to tree, sir,” said Will Sykes,
-exultingly, as he threw himself from the
-saddle.</p>
-
-<p>“That he has,” returned the Squire,
-scarcely knowing which to be&mdash;more
-astonished or pleased.</p>
-
-<p>To the infinite surprise of the field, who
-came dropping up one by one, they saw the
-huntsman drag a fox by the brush from a
-hollow in the tree, and catching him by the
-neck to prevent the visitation of his grinders,
-hold him up over his head with a halloo that
-might wake the dead.</p>
-
-<p>“Who-whoop, who-whoop!” cried Tom
-Holt.</p>
-
-<p>“Who-whoop, who-who-whoop!” hallooed
-Ned Adams, in his good and choice voice,
-which always had the effect of working us
-into a frenzy.</p>
-
-<p>“He’d give us a run now,” lisped a young
-gentleman in pink, “if he was turned down
-and had a little law given him.”</p>
-
-<p>I could have bitten his head off.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<img src="images/illus3.jpg" width="600" height="400" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">A CURIOUS FINISH.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“My hounds deserve their fox, sir,” replied<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
-the Squire. “He is beaten, and nothing but
-an accidental escape&mdash;like this might have
-been&mdash;could have saved him. There have been
-no unfair means used, from the find to the
-finish; and the only illiberal, unsportsman-like
-act, would be now to run the risk of
-robbing the hounds of that which they have
-justly won and made their own.”</p>
-
-<p>Not exactly among us, but not far from
-where I stood&mdash;I think Will did it on
-purpose to please me&mdash;the fox was thrown,
-and my teeth were the first to fix themselves
-across his loins. I had been taught in cub-hunting
-not to gripe elsewhere; but as it was,
-he gave me a nasty pinch in the cheek.</p>
-
-<p>In a few moments afterwards he was given
-to us to be broken up, and then somebody
-asked the Squire “if he would not try for
-another fox, as it was early?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” replied our master, shaking his
-head. “We are fifteen miles from kennel.
-The hounds have had a good deal of fatiguing
-work in cover, and are satisfied with a novel
-but glorious finish. I shall not run the risk
-of tiring them more, perhaps for nothing, and
-doing away with that spirit which the sport
-of the day must have given, I hope, to every<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-one present.” And lifting his hat, string
-high, he bowed and joined the side of his
-huntsman.</p>
-
-<p>As we trotted along down a bye road, with
-our sterns well up over our backs, and feeling
-as proud as peacocks, I heard Will Sykes
-remark, “It was a good forty minutes, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied his master with a slight
-smile, “but it would not have been so long
-if you had made that cast.”</p>
-
-<p>“If I had done <em>that</em>, sir,” replied the
-huntsman, dropping his voice to a whisper,
-“if I had done that, sir,” repeated he, “<em>we
-should have lost our fox</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let them alone, eh?” rejoined the
-Squire, smiling more perceptibly.</p>
-
-<p>“Ay,” returned Will. “<em>Let them alone</em>
-is a beautiful rule.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.</h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“See, the day begins to break,</div>
-<div class="verse">And the light shoots like a streak</div>
-<div class="verse">Of subtle fire; the wind blows cold</div>
-<div class="verse">While the morning doth unfold:</div>
-<div class="verse">Now the birds begin to rouse,</div>
-<div class="verse">And the squirrel from the boughs</div>
-<div class="verse">Leaps to get him nuts and fruit:</div>
-<div class="verse">The early lark that erst was mute,</div>
-<div class="verse">Carols to the rising day</div>
-<div class="verse">Many a note and many a lay.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>I woke the following morning soon after
-the first tinge of day had streaked the east,
-and found myself terribly stiff and foot-sore.
-My nose, too, was hot, and I felt very thirsty.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter?” asked Trimbush,
-waking, as I gave a whine of uneasiness.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not well,” replied I, limping from
-the bench.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it’s nothing to care about,” replied
-he, yawning and stretching his limbs.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
-“Yesterday’s work has taken the steel and
-wire out of ye, that’s all.”</p>
-
-<p>“It does not appear to have touched you,”
-rejoined I.</p>
-
-<p>“Me!” returned Trimbush, grinning so
-that he showed every tooth in his head. “Do
-you know, youngster, what you are?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” answered I proudly: “one who
-does his duty, and gives as much satisfaction
-as any of you <em>oldsters</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, well!” responded he, “I must
-admit that you allow yourself to be <em>taught</em>;
-and both the duty and satisfaction which you
-give at present are concentrated in that one
-great and good quality.”</p>
-
-<p>Feeling somewhat humbled at this reply,
-and smarting under the advantage taken of
-me the day before, I added sharply, “There
-was no teaching me to instruct you how to
-obtain all the credit of the finish yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hear, hear, hear,” said one of our companions
-called Chancellor.</p>
-
-<p>“At him again!” exclaimed a spaded
-bitch named Levity, and of the same age as
-myself. “Take a suck at the lemon, and at
-him again!”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a sharp lot,” replied the old<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-hound, with a mingled look of contempt and
-indifference, “a very sharp lot indeed. I
-couldn’t think,” he continued, turning to me,
-“what made the tip of your stern curl over
-your head and tickle your nose until now. I
-have heard of a French poodle’s being so stiff
-in the bend that he couldn’t get his hind legs
-to the ground; but hang me if your conceit is
-not about a match for his.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you must admit,” observed Chancellor,
-“that without him we should not have
-broken up our fox yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well!” returned Trimbush, “and
-supposing I <em>do</em> admit it, what then?”</p>
-
-<p>“You should not have snatched the honour
-from him,” replied Levity.</p>
-
-<p>“Honour?” rejoined Trimbush. “Pooh!
-The honour was already gained before we
-mouthed the fox. We all like blood for the
-finish&mdash;men as well as hounds&mdash;but it does not
-follow that there may not be quite as much
-credit due to both without a <i>who-whoop</i> as
-with it. For instance,” continued he, “if
-that youngster Ringwood had had his nose to
-the ground&mdash;as he should have done the
-moment the fox was lost to view, instead of
-occupying himself by stargazing&mdash;we should,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-in all probability, have lost our fox. What
-would have caused us to have done so? A mere
-accident, for which no one would have been
-to blame. And what, let me ask, enabled us
-to obtain a more desirable result? Just
-as accidental a circumstance. Honour?
-Fudge!”</p>
-
-<p>“At any rate,” said Chancellor, “I heard
-everybody praising what they called your
-sagacity for discovering the fox in the tree.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the way with those fools of men,”
-replied Trimbush. “They often laud that
-in us which deserves no praise whatever, and
-pass by in silence some of our most remarkable
-accomplishments.”</p>
-
-<p>I felt that there was much truth in Trimbush’s
-argument; and although a sly twinkle
-in his eyes led me to suspect that he made
-thus light of my information for a selfish
-purpose, I lost a great deal of the vanity
-which I hitherto had entertained from being
-the agent of so fine a finish.</p>
-
-<p>“You chanced to remark yesterday,” said
-I, “that foxes constantly run down wind.
-Why do they? Is it to render the scent less
-strong for us?”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly not,” responded Trimbush.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-“The scent has nothing whatever to do
-with it, notwithstanding what a parcel of
-cackling geese may have said and written.
-The truth is, a fox is a timid, sly animal with
-extraordinary quick ears and eyes, and a
-famous nose. When found, he, of course,
-must break where there’s an opening; and as
-no men place themselves up wind of us, or
-very seldom, that side is generally left free,
-and away he rattles <em>up wind</em> at the burst. I
-am now, of course, speaking of the rule, and
-not the exceptions. He does not go far,
-however, before he smells, hears, or sees
-something unpleasant, which turns him either
-to the right or left. Another lurking cause
-of suspicion that there’s an enemy in front,
-as well as those in the rear turns him again,
-and so on until he gets his head straight down
-wind, when, smelling and hearing nothing
-before him, he tries to make his point and get
-out of the reach of our ringing cries, and, as
-he knows full well&mdash;whetted appetites.”</p>
-
-<p>“That sounds reasonable,” remarked I.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you,” rejoined the old hound,
-flourishing his stern. “I’m flattered with
-your approval.”</p>
-
-<p>“I noticed that the scent continued to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-improve after the first ten minutes,” said I,
-“until within a short time of running him
-to view, when it seemed to gradually die and
-become more faint.”</p>
-
-<p>“It not only seemed,” replied Trimbush,
-“but it did so, and from obvious reasons.
-Every animal with a skin&mdash;and I don’t
-remember at this moment any without,”
-facetiously continued he, “smells stronger
-when hot than cold. Fear often produces the
-same effect, but from the like cause&mdash;as any
-excitement, whether pleasurable or the
-reverse, produces physical heat. Now, after
-a fox is found, his scent <em>increases</em>&mdash;although,
-from the state of the weather and ground, we
-may not be able to hunt him a yard, nevertheless&mdash;so
-long as <em>exhaustion</em> does not take
-place; and then as he sinks, so does the scent
-<em>decrease</em>. The reasons for this,” continued
-Trimbush, “are as simple as they are
-indubitable. The perspirable matter escaping
-through the skin augments for a time from
-exertion, and the devil of a fright he is in
-from our rattling behind him: but this begins
-to die away after excessive evaporation, and
-often has caused us to lose a fox scarcely able
-to crawl.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I thought the scent came from the pads,”
-remarked Levity.</p>
-
-<p>“And what made ye think that?” sneered
-the old hound.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t exactly know,” replied Levity;
-“but certainly such was my opinion.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then never express such a foolish one for
-the future,” rejoined Trimbush. “If it
-came from the foot, how could we carry a
-good head in a body, and each have a fair
-share of the scent? We should have to run
-and follow each other in a string, and one or
-two might do the work, after drawing, as well
-as twenty or five-and-twenty couples. Again,
-if it came from the foot, how could we carry
-it through water? I say, and ought to know
-something about the matter,” continued the
-old hound, emphatically, “that the scent
-proceeds from the entire animal. The back,
-belly, head, foot, brush, and&mdash;and&mdash;and&mdash;exactly
-so, and every part else.”</p>
-
-<p>Old Mark was now heard approaching,
-which at once put a stop to the discussion; and
-as soon as the good old man saw that I was
-lame he examined my feet and washed them
-with something which he took from a bottle
-hung by a piece of string to the button-hole of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-his frock. A few others he served in the same
-way; and calling us each by name, let us into
-another court, saying, “You puppies shall
-feed by yourselves this morning; you all want
-a little nursing, I find.”</p>
-
-<p>Will Sykes entered soon afterwards, and,
-seeing Mark’s arrangement for our comfort,
-observed, “That’s right; those puppies want
-taking care of.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ay,” replied Mark, smoothing down my
-sleek ears and patting my sides, “I hear some
-of ’em deserve it.”</p>
-
-<p>“That Ringwood,” rejoined the huntsman,
-“is more like a third-seasoned hound
-than a puppy at the beginning of his first.”</p>
-
-<p>Old Mark’s eyes glistened again at this;
-and looking at me for a few seconds as I
-lashed my stern to and fro and stared him full
-in the face, to let him understand I knew all
-that was being said of me, he muttered, “If
-a draft of hounds ever goes to heaven, you’ll
-be one of ’em, my lad.”</p>
-
-<p>All this praise tended to make me a little
-vainer than I otherwise should have been,
-perhaps; but at the same time it fixed my
-resolution to merit as much as I could of it.
-And I have often thought since, that there is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-nothing like encouragement to the young and
-inexperienced. The difficulties of attaining
-anything worth learning are always great,
-and using harsh and severe means on the part
-of the teachers only makes the attempt more
-painful and repulsive. Punishment is,
-occasionally, indispensable for obstinacy or
-repeated offences; but there is nothing like a
-cheer for improvement.</p>
-
-<p>After breakfast, and when we were all
-assembled in the court, the subject of scent
-was again renewed by Levity observing, in a
-confidential whisper to me, but which was
-overheard by Trimbush, “that she very much
-questioned the correctness of the old hound’s
-opinion concerning it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You question?” snarled Trimbush.
-“We shall certainly hear,” continued he,
-“of mewling, puking babes teaching their
-grandmothers to suck eggs, by and bye.”</p>
-
-<p>Levity looked abashed at this satirical
-remark, and, burying her nose between her
-fore feet, appeared resolved to give herself to
-silence bordering on the sulky.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s nothing so puzzling, nothing so
-difficult to comprehend by the best and most
-experienced of us,” said Trimbush, addressing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-me, “as the philosophy of scent; and yet,
-forsooth, we are to be told by a babbling
-puppy that&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, well!” said I, interrupting his
-irate speech, “don’t get in a passion about
-a trifle.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right,” replied my friend, smoothing
-the bristling hackles on his back. “Quite
-right. Life is made up of trifles, as the hours
-are of seconds, days of hours, years of days,
-and ages of years. Life’s trifles are the
-atoms in unity, forming the whole.”</p>
-
-<p>Not wishing to enter into a discussion of
-this sort, I led Trimbush back to the original
-subject by saying, “I should like to hear a
-little more about the philosophy of scent.”</p>
-
-<p>“There is little more to add,” returned he,
-“as far as I know. Depending, as I have
-before said, on the weather, which changes
-sometimes three or four times in a day, and
-the state of the ground, the rule is, that it is
-invariably uncertain. In windy weather we
-are often accused of being wild and flashy;
-but the fact is, that the particles of scent
-being widely spread and wafted about, one
-hits it here, another there, and we fly from one
-to the other, each thinking that some are on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-the right line, and may slip away with it
-unseen down wind. There is nothing more
-tiresome than a gale of wind in hunting, both
-to us and men. We can’t hear each other, and
-they can’t hear us; and it is matter of doubt
-to me which is the worst of the two&mdash;a thick
-fog, or a blowing gusty wind. I may here
-remark,” continued Trimbush, “that there
-is a strange fact connected with scent, which
-I have not heard attempted to be accounted
-for. On the going off of a frost, we can run
-the drag hard, right up to the kennel, and yet
-be unable to run an inch afterwards.”</p>
-
-<p>“That seems very singular,” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose it to be,” resumed my companion,
-“that the scent clings to whatever
-the animal rubs against or passes over during
-the night; and having gone slowly, a greater
-portion is emitted, which is preserved by the
-frost, and the thaw having loosened the
-particles, enables us to take them up.”</p>
-
-<p>“But how do you account for not being
-able to run after he is unkennelled?” asked I.</p>
-
-<p>“Because his skin is cold; and going at a
-greater pace, there is not sufficient time for
-the small quantity of scent escaping to lie
-strong enough to overcome the exhalations<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-from the ground, occasioned by the warmth of
-the day.”</p>
-
-<p>This sage reasoning on the part of Trimbush
-made me feel very small in my own
-estimation, and I made up my mind to follow
-his advice for some time to come, and listen
-rather than give tongue.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“To hear the lark begin his flight,</div>
-<div class="verse">And singing startle the dull night,</div>
-<div class="verse">From his watch-tower in the skies,</div>
-<div class="verse">Till the dappled dawn doth rise;</div>
-<div class="verse">Then to come in spite of sorrow,</div>
-<div class="verse">And at my window bid good morrow,</div>
-<div class="verse">Through the sweet-briar, or the vine,</div>
-<div class="verse">Or the twisted eglantine.</div>
-<div class="verse">…</div>
-<div class="verse">Oft listening how the hounds and horn</div>
-<div class="verse">Cheerly rouse the slumbering morn.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“I hate this meet,” observed Tom Holt,
-as we arrived at four cross ways close to the
-market town nearest our kennel. “I hate this
-meet worse than any we have in the country.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not a pleasant one, certainly,”
-replied the huntsman.</p>
-
-<p>“Pleasant?” repeated Tom. “In the
-first place there’s a nasty, close, woodland
-country with banks as high as churches. Then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
-we have a pack of riff-raff counter skippers to
-over-ride hounds, halloo, head the fox, and
-play the devil. And as if this was not enough
-for one blessed day’s misery the Squire himself
-generally finds fault all day long with
-everybody and everything, when the fixture’s
-at these four cross ways.”</p>
-
-<p>“We had better christen them the cross
-purposes then,” returned Will Sykes.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t mean to say,” continued Tom,
-without noticing the huntsman’s remark,
-“but he may have&mdash;heaven knows!&mdash;lots of
-causes to put him out of temper; still it’s
-rather hard to feel oneself suffering for the
-faults of others.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is not an unusual circumstance,
-though,” said Will Sykes. “I have often
-heard of similar instances unconnected with
-hounds and hunting.”</p>
-
-<p>Some of the field had arrived before us, and
-others were trotting briskly up, the hoofs of
-their horses clattering along the roads in all
-directions.</p>
-
-<p>“We must look out for ourselves to-day,”
-said Trimbush, “or there will be cases for
-the hospital.”</p>
-
-<p>“They are a rough-looking set,” replied I,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-glancing at some thirty horses, not one of
-which would fetch ten pounds, and all in a
-high state of perspiration, with their riders
-puffing cigars and smelling of all kinds of
-horrible mixtures. I felt quite ill, and a little
-more would have turned my stomach.</p>
-
-<p>“If any of these gentlemen,” remarked
-Trimbush, sneezing, “of high rank and
-particular smell, get down wind of us to-day,
-we shall not be able to hunt a yard.”</p>
-
-<p>“What a dreadful thing it is,” returned I,
-“that men should make themselves so
-offensive. I don’t suppose they have any
-noses, have they?”</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t you see they have?” replied my
-companion.</p>
-
-<p>“But it doesn’t follow that they are any
-use,” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“Well!” added Trimbush, “as far as
-that goes I don’t think they are, although I
-have heard of some men capable of smelling a
-rat.”</p>
-
-<p>A few of the gentlemen who regularly
-joined us now came up on their hacks, and
-instantly afterwards their clothed and hooded
-hunters, being led up and down by neatly
-dressed and light-weight grooms, were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
-stripped and mounted by their respective
-owners. The contrast was strangely striking
-between these and the “roughs,” and,
-perhaps, caused my admiration to be greater
-as I regarded each climbing into the pigskin.</p>
-
-<p>Our master, as was his wont, and which
-should be that of every one entitled to the
-dignity of a M. F. H., made his appearance to
-the minute of the hour fixed, and, lifting his
-hat, saluted the field generally, while he gave
-his hand, and exchanged warmer salutations
-with his friends and associates.</p>
-
-<p>Our first draw was Pickton brake, a large
-furze cover about a mile and a half from the
-meet, and there we trotted with the gratifying
-expectation of a sure find.</p>
-
-<p>“Mind what I say,” remarked Trimbush,
-“if you don’t keep your eyes and ears backward
-as well as forward to-day, you will
-have a dozen horses go over ye and not a bone
-left in your skin unbroken. Be quick as
-lightning, and if you flash over the scent,
-never mind; don’t throw up and check if
-there’s a chance of being ridden over. I
-never do. It’s not our fault if they won’t
-give us room.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll take care of myself,” replied I.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Upon nearing the cover the office was
-given, and into it we dashed, and shortly
-afterwards the whimperings in various parts
-proved that there was more than one fox in
-it. I hit upon a drag and opened loudly,
-when Trimbush reproved me, after poking
-his nose where I had mine, saying, “Not so
-noisy, not so noisy. Let’s have a distinction
-between opening on a drag, and a good hearty
-challenge when he’s found.”</p>
-
-<p>An old favourite line hunter, called
-Rasselas, now threw his tongue.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it,” said Trimbush, flying to the
-cry, and taking it up, his roar thundered
-through the brake.</p>
-
-<p>“Have at him!” hallooed Will Sykes.
-“Have at him, hoik. Hoik, hoik together!”</p>
-
-<p>It was evident that a brace was on foot, and
-the Squire, looking more serious than usual,
-desired that the field might move away from
-one side of the cover and be quiet, otherwise
-there was a probability of a chop taking place.</p>
-
-<p>About a minute afterwards, out came a
-fine, lengthy dog-fox.</p>
-
-<p>“Tally-ho!” shrieked a muffin on a hired
-knacker, and back the fox dived into the
-brake again.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“It is most strange, sir,” said the Squire,
-riding up to the side of the offender, “that
-you should give yourself the trouble of
-hallooing, I pay three servants to do that
-work, and, although I am extremely obliged
-for your voluntary assistance, I shall feel
-much more indebted, as will many of the
-gentlemen present, if, for the rest of the day,
-you’ll hold your tongue.”</p>
-
-<p>I never saw a muffin so browned in the
-whole course of my life. If he had been
-sworn at and called a parcel of hard names&mdash;which
-always recoil upon the utterers of them&mdash;he
-might have been made more angry; but
-nothing could be more effective than the rate
-from the cutting, gentlemanlike tone and
-manner which accompanied it.</p>
-
-<p>In consequence of being scared with this
-halloo, the fox showed the greatest disinclination
-to break a second time, and the day being
-very warm, and the cover strong, we began
-to feel as if a spider had been spinning cobwebs
-in our throats.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s choking work this,” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied Trimbush. “There’s no
-wind here. Let’s press him as hard as we
-can; for he feels it as well as us, recollect.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>We now rattled him up to the top of the
-cover, and, crossing a ride, Will Sykes
-viewed him, and giving us a ringing view-halloo,
-convinced us we were on our hunted
-fox.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a leash a-foot, sir,” said the
-huntsman, as the Squire now came to his
-assistance.</p>
-
-<p>“Then get them as near to him as you
-can,” replied the Squire, “and prevent them
-getting on the other lines.”</p>
-
-<p>Ned Adams now viewed the fox in a broad
-open ride, and hallooed, “Tally-ho!”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind,” said Trimbush, as I was
-about leaving the scent to fly to the halloo.
-“Ned Adams, like yourself,” continued he,
-“is young and cannot be depended upon.
-Keep your nose down; we are quite close
-enough to carry him over the other lines of
-scent without changing.”</p>
-
-<p>Immediately afterwards I heard the Squire
-ask in a loud, angry voice, “Why did you
-halloo?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because I viewed the hunted fox, sir,”
-replied Ned, touching his cap deferentially.</p>
-
-<p>“Where?”</p>
-
-<p>“At the bottom of the ride, sir.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“And you standing at the top,” returned
-the Squire, “when you must hear that the
-body is well settled to him, halloo them away.
-What could be your object?”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought the stragglers&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Would rather fly to their tongues than to
-your foolish halloo,” interrupted the Squire,
-“or you ought to have thought so.”</p>
-
-<p>“You see,” added Trimbush, “I was
-right. But all young ’uns think they know
-everything, and the study and experience of
-the oldsters go for nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>We had now given him such a dusting that
-he could hang no longer, and Tom, holding up
-his hat at the farthest end of the brake up
-wind, quietly announced that he had gone
-away.</p>
-
-<p>Following Will, crashing through the
-furze, I heard Tom say to him, “He’s just
-crossed the road,” pointing with his whip to
-the exact spot.</p>
-
-<p>We flew in a body to it, and, taking up the
-scent, away we went.</p>
-
-<p>“Get on,” said Trimbush, “and we may,
-perhaps, shake off the rabble and have a run.
-It’s our only chance.”</p>
-
-<p>We carried a fine head across the first field<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-of some thirty acres of grass, and crossing
-two wide ditches&mdash;which would be called
-brooks in some counties&mdash;we began to hope
-that these would prove of essential service in
-stopping the mob. A blind bullfinch, too,
-increased our sanguine hopes on this head,
-and we began to flatter ourselves that a good
-day’s sport was in store, when we had to
-throw up and check.</p>
-
-<p>“That ploughman’s headed him,” said
-Trimbush, making a cast to the right, “and
-he’s down wind as sure as I’m a foxhound.”</p>
-
-<p>He was right, and hitting it off, with an
-improving scent, we down with our sterns
-and raced along at our best pace. A large
-flock of sheep was before us, and, notwithstanding
-they ran some distance, we managed
-to carry it through the stained ground, with a
-little careful picking, without much loss of
-time. I saw Will Sykes in doubt as to
-whether he should not cast us forward; but
-thinking, perhaps, of the sensible rule of
-“letting us alone,” and as we did not throw
-up, he, luckily for himself, kept his horn
-quiet. Had he twanged it he would have had
-the Squire about his ears.</p>
-
-<p>As the ground was good and we had a turn<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-of wind in our favour, we set to work and
-soon recovered the little time lost through the
-sheep. There was now every probability of
-having a glorious day’s sport. The field had
-been thinned materially at the burst, and
-those with us were not near enough to do any
-harm.</p>
-
-<p>“It will be short and fast to-day,” said
-Trimbush, exultingly.</p>
-
-<p>The scent was now a burning one, and we
-all bristled for blood. Across three deep
-fallows we carried it in great force into and
-across a green lane, flanked by two tall quicks,
-when suddenly the leading hounds threw up.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter?” inquired several,
-throwing up their heads.</p>
-
-<p>“Find out,” briefly replied Trimbush,
-doing his best to accomplish the deed himself.</p>
-
-<p>In a few seconds the lane became full of
-horses; for it is wonderful how courageous
-men are in spinning along the roads. Some
-came screaming up and cracking their whips,
-and instead of sticking to our work we began
-flying about in every direction.</p>
-
-<p>The Squire scolded, Will roared, Tom lost
-his patience, and Ned Adams thundered out
-“Hold har-r-r-d!” until black in the face.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
-<img src="images/illus4.jpg" width="600" height="400" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“HOLD HAR-R-R-D!”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>At this juncture, a fellow with his hat
-hanging by the string, his long lank hair
-streaming in the wind, coat tails sticking well
-out, and his horse’s head close to his chest,
-came tearing up the lane. Bang he went
-against me, rolling me over and over like a
-football. I thought my back was broken, and
-sung out with pain and fright most lustily.</p>
-
-<p>“William,” said the Squire, sternly.
-“Take the hounds home.”</p>
-
-<p>Will touched his cap, and the order was
-obeyed.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Oh! what avails the largest gifts of heaven</div>
-<div class="verse">When drooping health and spirits go amiss?</div>
-<div class="verse">How tasteless then whatever can be given;</div>
-<div class="verse">Health is the vital principle of bliss.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Lick that stain off your flank,” said
-Trimbush, pointing to the dirt on my side.</p>
-
-<p>“Why should I be so particular?” replied
-I, obeying his instructions, “we don’t go
-out to-day.”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” rejoined he; “but the Squire’s
-coming to inspect us, and, I suppose, you’d
-like to appear nice and comely in <em>his</em> eyes.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean by that?” I asked,
-applying my tongue more diligently to the
-completion of my toilet.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll see in a few minutes,” added
-Trimbush, “and if everything isn’t in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
-gingerly order, I’ll bet a week’s meal and
-broth, those will hear of it who are responsible
-for their neglect.”</p>
-
-<p>The greatest neatness and cleanliness were
-always observed in our kennel; but I noticed
-old Mark had put a polish on his shoes, and a
-white neckerchief was tied, with much skill
-displayed in the bow, round his throat. Will
-Sykes, too, Tom Holt, and Ned Adams, upon
-entering the court, exhibited more care than
-usual in their dress on non-hunting days.</p>
-
-<p>The huntsman, glancing round and seeing
-all was unobjectionable as far as his hope and
-belief went, pulled a watch out of his fob,
-and observed that “the Squire will be here in
-seven minutes three-eighths.”</p>
-
-<p>“Can you time him to a second?” said
-Mark smiling.</p>
-
-<p>“Ay,” replied Will, “it doesn’t require a
-gauge to do that with his rules.”</p>
-
-<p>As a distant clock was striking, the bell
-rung at the kennel door.</p>
-
-<p>“I said so,” remarked the huntsman, and
-upon opening it he lifted his hat, and in
-walked our worthy master.</p>
-
-<p>“Now for my frock,” said he, and one as
-white as snow was brought by old Mark, who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-was sensitively jealous of the privilege of
-assisting the Squire to make his kennel toilet.</p>
-
-<p>When attired he proceeded to the boiling-house,
-examined the boiling flesh, coppers,
-and everything belonging to that department.
-Then turning into the feeding-room, he
-looked at the troughs and expressed himself
-satisfied with the perfect order that all
-things were in belonging to this.</p>
-
-<p>In going to the lodging rooms, Will Sykes
-said, “How would you like to have them
-drawn, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“Each hound singly,” replied the Squire,
-“and the entry first.”</p>
-
-<p>It was some little time before it came to my
-turn; but when my name was called out I
-sprang, and as soon as I made my appearance,
-the Squire took a piece of biscuit from his
-pocket and throwing it to me, said “Here
-Ringwood, beauty,” and caressed me kindly.</p>
-
-<p>One or two of my young companions
-evinced some temper and jealousy at this, and
-growled deeply with up-reared hackles.</p>
-
-<p>“Come, come,” hallooed Tom, correctingly,
-and a crack from his thong soon silenced the
-grumblers.</p>
-
-<p>“His nose is hot,” observed the Squire,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
-touching my nostrils, and standing a few feet
-back followed up the remark by saying,
-“What is that redness on his flank?”</p>
-
-<p>“A little heat, I think, sir,” replied the
-huntsman, making a more careful examination
-of me.</p>
-
-<p>“Then cool him,” was the reply, “and let
-him stay at home to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>I was very sorry to hear this order given;
-for although I felt far from being in health,
-I was anything but disposed to be placed on
-the hospital list.</p>
-
-<p>Being passed forward to the others,
-Vanquisher was summoned, and the Squire
-noticing him limp, said, “What is the matter
-with that hound? He’s lame.”</p>
-
-<p>“He has cut his near fore-foot a little,”
-replied Will.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me see,” rejoined our master, and
-upon lifting it up, said, “He has sprung a
-claw, and <em>you</em> ought to have known it.”</p>
-
-<p>The huntsman’s face became a little flushed,
-and he looked as if he felt the rebuke keenly.</p>
-
-<p>There was no further remark of censure
-after this, and when the entire presentation
-had been gone through with, the Squire took
-his departure, expressing himself perfectly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
-satisfied and content with the general
-arrangements of the establishment.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not going out to-morrow,” said I to
-Trimbush, with my spirits down to zero.</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind,” replied my friend; adding,
-by way of consolation, that he would give me
-a good account of the day’s sport.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” rejoined I, “but that’s a poor
-makeshift for the disappointment of not
-joining in it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, well!” added he, hastily. “We
-can’t have everything as we could wish, and
-must make the best of crooked matters when
-they occur. I dare say,” continued Trimbush,
-“that the blow you received the other day,
-with the fright, may have put you out of
-sorts.”</p>
-
-<p>“Probably,” said I, “and I wish the
-fellow&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Pish, pish!” interrupted my companion.
-“You might as well wish him good as wish
-him evil. We have no more power in the one
-case than in the other, and it’s old womanish
-to snap your teeth when you can’t bite.”</p>
-
-<p>“I heard a man say, when we were out
-last,” said I, resolved to take advantage of
-Trimbush’s present loquacious humour; for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-the old hound spent most of his time in a sort
-of dreaming, winking, blinking state in the
-kennel, and was excessively out of temper if
-disturbed, “I heard a man say when we
-were out last,” repeated I, “that he liked to
-see a flying hound, and would hang every line-hunter
-that was ever bred.”</p>
-
-<p>“He must have known a great deal about
-fox-hunting,” replied Trimbush, with a
-sarcastic grin, “a very great deal indeed. I
-should like to have his name and address.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course he was wrong,” observed I,
-with a slight touch of the interrogative in the
-remark.</p>
-
-<p>“Wrong?” repeated Trimbush. “Ha,
-ha, ha! It makes my old sides ache again.
-What would the flying, flashy devils do when
-the scent fails at head if it was not for the
-line-hunters? By a line-hunter, I don’t mean
-one of those old pottering fools who stick
-their noses to the ground as if they intended
-them to take root there; but a hound, that
-when he has stopped long enough to satisfy
-himself that he is on the line, holds forward,
-and occasionally feels for the scent. That is
-what I call a <em>killing</em> line-hunter, and is a
-guide and pilot for the pack. Often will you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-see the flyers with their heads up and sterns
-down, and no more notion of stooping than a
-flock of stray pigeons, flash a field or two
-over the scent, and then back they turn and
-follow the line-hunter in his cast, and the
-moment he touches it, at him they dash, catch
-it up, and away they race again. But who
-gets all the praise?” continued the old
-hound, “Why, those who did none of the
-work.”</p>
-
-<p>“The Squire would give the applause to
-whom it was due, though,” replied I.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, yes, yes,” rejoined my companion,
-“and so would every true sportsman; but
-where there is one who understands fox-hunting
-as a <em>science</em>, there are five hundred who
-know no more about it than un-hatched tom
-tits. There are foxes and circumstances,”
-continued he, “that will beat the best huntsman
-that ever cheered a hound or blew a horn;
-but in nine cases out of ten the cause lies in
-not paying attention to the line-hunters.
-Hang every line-hunter that was ever bred!
-Ha, ha, ha!” and the old hound’s laugh of
-derision rung through the courts and lodging-houses
-far and wide.</p>
-
-<p>“I am very glad you told me this,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-returned I; “for I began to think, from what
-I heard, there was nothing so likely to insure
-the praise of the field as having one’s head in
-the air and flying like a bird.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nor is there,” added Trimbush. “But
-who cares for the praise of a set of fools?
-I’d rather have one ‘Yo&mdash;o’ from our
-master, or a ‘Hark to Trimbush, have at
-him, hark,’ from Will Sykes, than all the
-yells and whoops from the greatest mob that
-ever met by a cover-side.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s true,” said I. “There’s no
-pleasure to be had from their cheer.”</p>
-
-<p>“Only last season,” continued my friend,
-“some fellow who was dressed as if he knew
-better, absolutely cheered a second-season
-hound babbling the moment he was in cover.
-‘Softly, softly,’ hallooed Will, cracking his
-whip. ‘Why, it’s a challenge,’ said the
-gentleman in pink. ‘Yes, sir,’ replied Will,
-‘such a challenge that will cause him to have
-a hempen cord put round his throat to-morrow
-morning. We’ve put up with his noise long
-enough, and longer than the Squire would
-have done had I obeyed his orders strictly.’”</p>
-
-<p>“And was he hung!” inquired I, feeling
-a cold shiver run through my veins.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied Trimbush. “He was led
-out of the court the next day, with a rope
-round his neck, to suffer for his repeated
-offence. It made us very sad to see him taken
-away; but no caution or punishment could
-break him of the habit, and his example was
-a shocking one for the young entry.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll take great care not to acquire such
-an one,” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“Several made the same remark,” replied
-Trimbush, “and some, who were rather
-prone to indulge in kicking up a row for
-nothing, made serious resolutions to avoid
-doing so for the future, when the fate of the
-babbler was witnessed.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was necessary, I suppose, for the
-discipline of the pack?” rejoined I.</p>
-
-<p>“Ay,” added the old hound, “if it were
-not for strict discipline we should be as
-ungovernable, wild, and useless as a lot of
-untamed tigers. Indeed,” continued he,
-“I’m not certain that the tigers couldn’t be
-turned to greater advantage.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.</h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Cold grew the foggy morn: the day was brief:</div>
-<div class="verse">Loose on the cherry hung the crimson leaf:</div>
-<div class="verse">The dew dwelt ever on the herb, the woods</div>
-<div class="verse">Roared with strong blasts, with mighty showers the floods.</div>
-<div class="verse">All green was vanished, save the pine and yew,</div>
-<div class="verse">That still displayed their melancholy hue,</div>
-<div class="verse">Save the green holly with its berries red,</div>
-<div class="verse">And the green moss that o’er the gravel spread.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It was the last day of November, and,
-consequently, the concluding one of the first
-month of regular hunting, that I was left at
-home in consequence of indisposition. The
-huntsman had given me the night before a
-dose of something which tasted horribly
-bitter, and I tried to reject taking it; but,
-from my position between his knees, and his
-ramming a bullock’s horn half down my
-throat, I was obliged to swallow the nauseous
-mixture against my will. Between the effects<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-of this, and the mortification of being
-deprived of the pleasure of a day’s hunting,
-my spirits became sadly depressed, and I
-could do nothing but creep about the court
-whining, and feeling as miserable a dog as
-any on four feet.</p>
-
-<p>The day was very windy, and the light
-clouds, looking like fleecy wool, scudded
-before the gale, charged with rain; but
-with the exception of a few drops which
-occasionally fell, there was nothing as yet but
-the threatening of the flooding storm.</p>
-
-<p>Sighing, moaning, whistling, screaming&mdash;now
-in fitful gusts, then in one solid sweep,
-mighty nature’s breath snaps the tree top and
-rends up the gnarled roots of a century’s
-growth. On, on, he goes. Bough, branch,
-twig, and leaf&mdash;clinging like affection to the
-dead&mdash;he whirls and scatters in his stormy
-path, and with mad delight flings destruction
-in his wake. O-ho for the wind. Away,
-o’er heath and waste, and through dark and
-deep woods, and by lone churchyards,
-humming through ivy-twined belfries, and
-jarring rickety casements, shaking old hinges,
-and ripping up thatched eaves and roofs, he
-holds his course, like a fiery unchecked steed.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-O-ho for the wind. Breasting the wave, he
-drives the surge high, and higher yet. Rolling
-mountains, topped with white and hissing
-foam, duck from cresting clouds to the wide
-chasms below. O-ho for the wind&mdash;death to
-others is fun to him. A ship! Boldly she
-braves his mighty thrust. Again. With one
-fell swoop, and, quivering, down to the depths
-she sinks. O-ho for the wind.</p>
-
-<p>It was late in the day, and darkness began
-to drop around before there were any
-symptoms of my companions’ return. At
-length I heard the welcome clink of the
-horses’ feet along the gravel road leading to
-the kennel, and shortly afterwards old Mark
-threw open the door, and in they trotted.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said I, as Trimbush entered
-“what sport?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” replied he, “none at all. Such a
-wind as this,” continued he, “is as bad as a
-blind fog or a hard frost; for the result is just
-the same. We can do nothing with a fox
-while it lasts.”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t think of that,” rejoined I, “or
-I should not have been so envious of ye all
-day.”</p>
-
-<p>“Might as well have been at home,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-returned the old hound, in a grumbling
-humour.</p>
-
-<p>“You found?” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course we did,” he replied. “We
-never get a blank day. They are too staunch
-and true preservers in <em>our</em> country for that to
-take place.”</p>
-
-<p>My companion was now called to take his
-turn in the warm bath, which Mark had
-prepared, and after his body and limbs were
-well laved, he was ordered into the lodging-room,
-where there was plenty of clean straw
-to roll in.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s nothing like this,” said Trimbush,
-rubbing his back, with all his feet in
-the air. “There’s nothing like this,”
-repeated he, “after a cold, wretched day.
-It warms one’s blood, prevents rheumatism,
-and is a real blessed preventative to many
-disorders. I like my bath as well as my
-meal.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are no bad judge,” replied I,
-laughing.</p>
-
-<p>“I should say not,” returned he. “I
-should say that I was anything but a bad
-judge between what’s good for us and what is
-not.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>After all had been washed, and each had
-enjoyed a good tumble among the straw,
-Mark summoned them to the feeding-room,
-where a bountiful meal was ready for their
-sharpened appetites. When this was finished&mdash;and
-it did not occupy many minutes&mdash;they
-were conducted to another lodging-house, so
-that there might be no damp or chill remaining
-from the wet straw in the one used as the
-<em>drying</em> apartment. Nothing could be more
-perfect than all the arrangements made for
-our health and comfort, and yet, in themselves,
-they consisted of little more than a
-simple method of doing that well, which
-would have occupied quite as much time and
-trouble in the end to do badly.</p>
-
-<p>“There,” remarked Trimbush, with his
-ribs sticking out as if they were well lined
-within, “now I feel comfortable, and at
-peace with all the world.”</p>
-
-<p>“Except the foxes in it,” replied I.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” rejoined he, “I have no enmity
-towards them. It’s the combined joy of
-finding, running, and beating them, and the
-pleasure of&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Eating them,” added I.</p>
-
-<p>“Well?” continued he, as if weighing the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-sentence, “I suppose we may say that, too;
-but I am rather doubtful about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“About what?” inquired I.</p>
-
-<p>“About the eating part of the business,”
-replied he. “It’s true that we break up a fox,
-and swallow him as if we loved his carcase
-better than any other kind of flesh. But, in
-my opinion, it is more from the excitement we
-are worked into than from any desirable
-flavour he possesses. A fox is too near
-ourselves for him to be considered proper
-food for our stomachs. It’s approaching
-particularly close to dog eating dog.”</p>
-
-<p>“But that you did once,” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” responded Trimbush, carelessly,
-“I know I did, and might again, under
-similar circumstances. It only shows,” he
-continued, “what we will do when in a rage
-or in an excited state. There is nothing with
-life, from an elephant to a cockroach, but we
-would have a shy at.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you don’t believe that we really love
-the varmint as a dainty morsel?” rejoined I.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” returned he, “I think not. Fancy,
-for instance, your killing and eating the poor
-little vixen chained just outside the kennel
-door.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Ugh!” said I, disgusted at the thought.</p>
-
-<p>“Does not that prove what I say?” asked
-my companion. “We pass her continually in
-going out and coming in, and yet not one of
-us ever thinks of making a meal of her. But
-if the fox was our <em>natural</em> food, we couldn’t
-help doing so, and the first opportunity that
-presented itself she would be digested
-victuals.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, perhaps, the fear of getting a good
-drubbing may operate as a check to the
-inclinations of others,” observed I.</p>
-
-<p>“If that were the case,” replied he, “how
-is it that the hounds, which occasionally come
-home by themselves hungry, never make the
-slightest attempt to injure her? Nothing
-would be easier than to kill and eat the
-fox without the smallest risk of being
-discovered.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s great force in your argument,” I
-remarked.</p>
-
-<p>“I flatter myself that there generally is,”
-returned the egotistical old hound. “Now,
-look at a cat with a bird,” he resumed, “the
-cases are very different. Whether the bird is
-wild or not&mdash;let it be on the tree or in a cage&mdash;she
-will be equally disposed to make it her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-prey. Birds, like mice, are her natural food;
-and she, therefore, takes them without any
-other motive than to please her palate; but
-foxes, not being ours, we require the ardour
-of the chase to make them agreeable to <em>our</em>
-tastes.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you think would be the effect if
-we were not allowed to break the fox up?”
-inquired I.</p>
-
-<p>“That we should be just as eager to find,
-run and pull him down,” replied he. “You
-hear sometimes of men talking about hounds
-wanting blood. It’s all nonsense. We may
-want to <em>kill</em>; but hounds never flag from want
-of <em>blood</em>. All highly bred dogs like <em>us</em> love
-sport, and we hunt for the enjoyment of it;
-not for our bellies. But men are such selfish
-beasts, and think so much about eating that
-they can’t give us credit for being more
-disinterested than themselves.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are very severe on our masters,”
-rejoined I.</p>
-
-<p>“Not more so than they deserve,” returned
-Trimbush. “Not one in a thousand of ’em
-thinks for himself; but just repeats that
-which he’s told, and so they go on babble,
-babble, babble, with about as much meaning<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-and sense as a flock of cackling geese. It’s a
-strange thing, too,” continued he, “that
-what they see in one case, forms no precedent
-or guide to their addlepated brains in another.
-I don’t mean to compare pointers, or setters,
-or greyhounds with <em>us</em>, of course; but they
-never get blood, and yet they take as much
-pleasure in their work, and are as eager to
-find game, as if every bird shot over them
-was plucked, roasted, and served up in rich
-gravy, on silver, for their suppers. Now, it
-is quite clear that they don’t hunt for blood,
-and, therefore, why should we? It is true
-that we look for it at the finish from habit,
-and because we are cheered even to take it,
-and I never feel wilder than when Tom and
-Ted are <i>who-whooping</i> over us; but, to say
-that we absolutely require <em>blood</em>, is all
-nonsense.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the more we kill, the greater kill-devils
-we become,” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s true,” added my companion. “As
-in everything else, the supreme gratification
-lies in securing the object sought to be gained,
-and the running into our fox is ours. The
-same rule would apply to our killing but
-seldom, and consequently being generally<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
-disappointed, as to pointers and setters
-having very few birds shot over them. Continued
-mortification would render all much
-less ardent for the work, in consequence of the
-dearth of the great <em>climax</em> to sport; not from
-the covetous, greedy, piggish, grovelling
-want of the material to lick our chops.”</p>
-
-<p>Finding Trimbush getting warm upon the
-subject, I thought it better not to provoke the
-discussion further, and made no reply. The
-old hound, however, continued to abuse
-mankind in general, for some minutes, for
-entertaining such a low estimate of our
-motives in the chase, and wound up his
-observations by saying, “It’s not to be
-wondered at; for true sportsmen are born,
-like poets&mdash;chaps with as much music in their
-souls as we have in our tongues&mdash;now and
-then; but fools come into the world every
-second.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.</h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“For with a sigh, a blast of all his breath,</div>
-<div class="verse">That viewless thing, called life, did from him steal.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>We were trotting leisurely to cover, one
-morning, when I remarked that Trimbush
-was more serious and silent than usual.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you thinking about?” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve got our work cut out to-day,”
-replied he, “and I was just turning a few
-matters over in my brain, to untie some of the
-knots and difficulties which always beset us
-when we draw Berry brake.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is that our first draw?” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” returned my companion, “and a
-sure find. For the last four seasons we have
-challenged the same fox, and, as he lives, I
-need not say that he has, hitherto, beaten us.”</p>
-
-<p>“But how?” I asked. “He must be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-something extraordinary to beat ye four whole
-seasons.”</p>
-
-<p>“He is,” added Trimbush: “but he must
-be more than <em>that</em>, even to live till sun-down
-to-day.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me all about him,” said I, “and
-what your plans are; for I see your mind is
-made up for mischief.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, in the first place, then, I should tell
-you,” replied my friend, “that Berry brake
-is the strongest cover I ever was in. It cuts
-our chests and sterns, and makes our heads
-swell terribly, to get through at any pace.
-The scent, too, is very good in it, and from
-having given Old Charley some good dusting,
-he will not hang a moment now. This, in so
-far as the strength of the cover is concerned,
-is all the better for us; but he is so wary that
-he bolts at the slightest noise, and has taken
-to his pads long before Tom has been even able
-to occupy his station at the upper part of the
-cover. Whatever his tactics may be, however,
-he invariably breaks away fresh, and
-with a good start, and being as strong a fox
-as ever stood before hounds, he has managed
-to outrun and beat us up to this time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is he a big one?” I inquired.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I have viewed many a one in my day,”
-replied Trimbush; “but never did I put eyes
-upon such a wolf-like looking animal. He’s
-as black as thunder, and as long as a rope-walk.
-You can’t mistake the devil’s own, as
-Will Sykes christened him, if you chance to
-view him; but we have not done so for the
-last six times of hunting him.”</p>
-
-<p>“View or no view,” rejoined I, “we’ll
-stick to him.”</p>
-
-<p>“For a month, if we can but hunt, yard by
-yard, inch by inch,” said the old hound, with
-fixed determination expressed in his proudly
-erected head and lashing stern.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve got some manœuvre or artful
-dodge in store for him, I know,” I remarked.</p>
-
-<p>“I have,” responded my companion, “and
-you shall not only hear what it is, but shall
-join in the scheme. As I told you a short
-time since, most foxes hang in cover as long
-as they dare or can. It is their nature to
-screen themselves as much as possible, and
-they face the open only when compelled and
-pressed. A fox that has been often hunted,
-however, is of course more shy than one who
-has not, and the devil’s own, having
-invariably met with a precious rattling whenever<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
-he attempted to thread the covers, never
-hangs fire now, but sweeps straight through
-them. In order to be on good terms with him,
-therefore, we must act in the same manner,
-and to lose no precious second of time,
-remember, that the moment we reach a cover,
-the chances are a hundred to one that he is
-already through. If not, we shall instantly
-know that the pull is in our favour by his
-hanging, for, if it was not for the general
-rule of foxes hanging in covers, they would
-serve us, in nineteen cases out of twenty, as
-the devil’s own does, and run us clean out of
-all scent.”</p>
-
-<p>“Being so crafty,” returned I, “I’m
-surprised that they don’t depend more upon
-that which would save them, <em>their speed</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>“The reason is this,” added Trimbush.
-“Although much faster than we are, and
-with power of equal endurance, they cannot
-bear the heat of the day as well as we can.
-It should be recollected also, that we have
-rested the night before, and commence our
-work with empty bellies in the morning; but
-the fox has been on the pad foraging for food
-when we were asleep, and, perhaps, is gorged
-at the moment we unkennel him. He, therefore,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-feels himself in no condition for racing,
-and tries all his cunning to elude us in
-preference to facing the open. I don’t
-know,” continued he, “how the devil’s own
-regulates his meals; but I fancy he must sup
-early, and go to bed long before cock-crow.”</p>
-
-<p>At this moment Will Sykes glanced round,
-and hallooed, “Give them more room, Ned,
-and let them empty themselves.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ay, ay,” replied Ned, checking his horse
-to leave greater space between himself and the
-huntsman.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s right,” observed Trimbush.
-“There should always be plenty of room
-between the second whip and the huntsman,
-so that we may not be hurried when we want
-to stop.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you intend,” said I, resuming the
-subject, “then you intend&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“To fly straight to the farthest end, or
-opposite side of every cover he points for,”
-interrupted he, “and especially the moment
-we are thrown into Berry brake, in order to
-be on good terms with him at the burst. It’s
-our only chance,” continued the old hound,
-“and if he beats us to-day, with the ground
-in the order that it is, and this mild velvety<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-wind, hang me if I shall have any hope of
-breaking up the devil’s own.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you made known your plan to any
-of the others?” I inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied my companion, “two
-couple and a half of the right sort stand in
-with us, and it will go hard but we’ll give a
-better account of him than he has met with
-yet.”</p>
-
-<p>We had not to travel far to the meet, and
-soon after Trimbush ceased speaking we came
-in sight of it. The Squire had just trotted
-up on his hack, and was dismounting at the
-moment of our arrival.</p>
-
-<p>“Well!” said he, addressing Will
-Sykes, “is the devil’s own to beat us again
-to-day?”</p>
-
-<p>“He may, sir,” replied the huntsman,
-giving a cursory glance at us, as if to direct
-his master’s attention to the draft; “but if
-he does, I shall think Tom’s suspicions are
-right.”</p>
-
-<p>“And what are they?” asked the Squire.</p>
-
-<p>“That he bears a charmed life,” replied
-Will, “and no hounds ever bred could run
-into him.”</p>
-
-<p>Our master laughed heartily at this, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-said, “We must try to break the charm.”</p>
-
-<p>I felt all on fire as the cover appeared, and
-could scarcely refrain from dashing after
-Tom when he trotted off to take his station.
-Trimbush, seeing my impatience, said,
-“Gently, my lad, gently. There’s nothing
-like spirit; but wait for orders, and never
-yield to the impulse of committing a breach
-of discipline.”</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding this reasoning, however, I
-could see that he had enough to do to keep a
-check upon his own inclination to break away.
-But our impatience was not kept long upon
-the stretch. Will was as anxious to begin as
-we were, and no sooner had the whips taken
-their places than he threw us into cover, but
-without the slightest noise being made. There
-was not so much even as the crack of a thong.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s right,” said Trimbush, going
-like a bullet through the furze, “although I
-should not wonder but he’s gone.”</p>
-
-<p>The hounds, instructed by Trimbush, and
-agreeing to adopt his proceedings, were
-Dashwood, Hector, Loyalty, Wildboy, and
-Rubicon, all old friends of his. We went
-together in a body full swing, more as if we
-were flying to a view halloo than drawing a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-cover, and just when about the thick of it, a
-whimper from Chancellor announced that the
-devil’s own was afoot.</p>
-
-<p>“Tally-ho!” now rung from Tom Holt’s
-throat.</p>
-
-<p>“Shoot to the right,” said Trimbush, leading,
-and in a few strides we were outside the
-thick, almost impenetrable gorse.</p>
-
-<p>“Tally-ho, tally-ho!” again hallooed Tom.</p>
-
-<p>“Come along,” said the old hound, “we
-are close to his brush this time at any rate.”</p>
-
-<p>Racing to where the whipper-in stood with
-his cap in the air, we picked up the scent and
-found it sweeter than fresh-pulled flowers.</p>
-
-<p>Settling to him, and with a bunch of our
-companions, who likewise made play to the
-halloo as we did, away we rattled at the pace
-which only a burning scent and hounds
-bristling for a kill can show.</p>
-
-<p>For an hour-and-a-half we burst him along,
-and not one fox in a thousand could have
-stood before us for such a time and over such
-a country, in which there was not so much as
-a spinny to hide him; but he kept on at just
-the same rate, and a halloo, every now and
-then, told us that he was only just a-head.
-Several of us were tailed off, and some never<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-reached the main body at all. The burst was
-so quick, that the field, too, couldn’t get well
-away with us, and the consequence was that
-nearly all the horses were run to a stand-still
-before getting their second wind.</p>
-
-<p>“I begin to think,” said Trimbush, still
-the leader of the chosen few, “that his point’s
-Gretwith rock, and if so, there’s not a bush to
-hold him for fifteen miles as straight as the
-crow flies.”</p>
-
-<p>“He can’t last the distance,” replied
-Rubicon. “We shall run him from scent to
-view in less than another mile.”</p>
-
-<p>“So I think,” rejoined Wildboy. “His
-red rag’s hanging from his jaws worse than
-mine, I know, and that feels like dried
-chalk.”</p>
-
-<p>“We shall come to soil presently,”
-returned Loyalty. “There’s the Loam stream
-not far a-head.”</p>
-
-<p>“Egad!” added Dashwood, “but I wish
-it was in my next stride. I’m blistered with
-thirst.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shouldn’t be surprised,” said Trimbush,
-“to find him try an artful move at the
-Loam. Be careful, my hearts, and don’t
-flash forward on the opposite bank. Feel for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-it as you go, and make good inch by inch,
-rather than be in doubt. We shall save time
-by the trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus schooled, we took especial care, upon
-refreshing ourselves in the Loam, to follow
-the instructions given, and our first cast was
-along the verge down stream, which, also,
-chanced to be down wind.</p>
-
-<p>“This is his line,” said Trimbush,
-evidently puzzled, “and yet&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Let us try up wind,” interrupted Dashwood,
-“he may have headed, as he’s a sinking
-one.”</p>
-
-<p>“You flatter yourself,” returned the old
-hound; “he has as much life in him as will
-serve to test your pluck and powers for an
-hour to come.”</p>
-
-<p>“But he may have headed back,” observed
-Wildboy.</p>
-
-<p>“He <em>may</em>,” quietly added Trimbush;
-“but make your work good as ye go. I
-think,” continued he, “that we have cast to
-the right, which was the probable line, far
-enough. Now let us try the left.”</p>
-
-<p>Will Sykes, Ned Adams, and the Squire,
-now came in sight; but their horses could not
-be spurred out of a trot. Their heads were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-between their knees, and their tails shook as
-if they must drop off.</p>
-
-<p>“How beautifully they work,” I heard the
-Squire say as he threw himself from the
-saddle. “Let them alone; pray let them
-alone.”</p>
-
-<p>We had now made the cast as far to the
-left as we had done to the right, and yet we
-could not hit him off.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure he’s headed back,” said Wildboy,
-confidently.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll try,” replied Trimbush; “but I
-doubt it.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s now quite clear,” said the Squire,
-as we failed to touch the scent in our track,
-“that the hounds can make nothing of it.
-They have had a fair trial; now let me see
-what you can do, William.”</p>
-
-<p>Will threw his strong, keen eye forward,
-and his ears were pricked for any halloo or
-indication of the line of the fox; but nothing
-appeared to enlighten him. He then out with
-his horn, and was about making a wider and
-more forward cast than we had made down
-wind, when Trimbush sprang into the stream,
-and swam to a small patch of sedge and grass,
-not a great deal bigger than a man’s hat, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-apparently scarcely large enough to hold a
-rat, when bang the fox sprang from the
-middle and away he raced, whisking the
-water from his brush like a maid trundling
-her mop. We rushed at him in a body, but
-might as well have attempted to get to the
-head of a stroke of soaped lightning.</p>
-
-<p>“A trick worthy of the devil’s own,” said
-Trimbush, laughing, “but I proved a match
-for him this time.”</p>
-
-<p>“How was it that we could not carry the
-scent down stream?” inquired I, as the
-devil’s own became lost to view over the brow
-of a short but steep hill.</p>
-
-<p>“Because,” replied my companion, “he
-reached the water some seconds before ourselves,
-and swimming so far <em>down the stream</em>,
-he gained the little bank of mud, where he
-squatted, with all the scent <em>washed away from
-him</em>. We could, therefore, carry it no
-further than where he took water, and as he
-did not break from it, the reason is obvious
-for our being unable to act otherwise than we
-did.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t think how you came to suspect
-that he had laid up there,” remarked I.</p>
-
-<p>“I never knew a fox to do so before,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-returned the old hound. “Soil is about the
-only dodge a stag has to try his cunning at;
-but a fox rarely hangs in or about water. I,
-however,” continued he, “was prepared for
-any trick with the devil’s own, and my
-anticipation of a deep one proved correct.”</p>
-
-<p>We now came to a more enclosed country,
-and the fences greatly added to our momentarily
-increasing distress. The hounds
-dropped off one by one, and some, attempting
-to jump the steep and wide ditches, fell into
-them, and there laid, not having strength
-enough to crawl out again.</p>
-
-<p>It was fearful work, and how I managed to
-stagger forward is a mystery to me to this
-day. Trimbush did his best to cheer us on,
-and continually reminded us “that a kill was
-certain if we only stuck to him a <em>little
-longer</em>.” But this “little longer” appeared
-to be a very indefinite period.</p>
-
-<p>The winter day was waning fast. Objects
-at a short distance began to loom through the
-thickening shades, and the sun’s last rays had
-scarcely left a faint tinge of his glory in the
-west. Still the chase went on. There was no
-check, let, or stop. On, on, we flew: the
-pursuing and pursued.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“He dies, by the Lord!” cried Trimbush,
-in perfect ecstacy, as we flashed a few yards
-over the scent, and then, turning, hit it off
-short to the right. “He dies, he dies!”
-cried he, throwing up his head, and waking a
-loud echo from his deep-toned tongue.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean?” inquired I, reeling
-with weakness, and certain that my remaining
-strength was all but spent.</p>
-
-<p>“His point was Gretwith rock, as I
-thought long since,” replied the old hound;
-“but he can’t live the distance. He has now
-turned short to run up wind, which proves
-him to be a sinking one, and if he reaches
-Quaffam wood it is as much as he can do.”</p>
-
-<p>Seeing that Trimbush was serious, this
-sage opinion lent fresh aid to our flagging
-energies, and the skeleton of his force, comprising
-only Dashwood, Wildboy, and myself,
-answered his cheer by redoubling our efforts to
-run into the devil’s own.</p>
-
-<p>The wood which Trimbush spoke of now
-appeared at the bottom of a deep valley, and
-into the underbush we dashed, confident that
-the fox must hang, and also in the hope that
-he would not live to leave it. I had no sooner,
-however, entered the cover than, losing the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
-cool refreshing wind at my nostrils, I fell
-to the ground, faint and breathless; but
-every effort proved fruitless; and crouching
-behind the trunk of a large tree, I was
-obliged to remain stationary sorely against
-my will.</p>
-
-<p>For a few minutes I heard my companions
-driving the devil’s own to the furthest end of
-the cover from where I laid, and then, as their
-cry approached, I knew they had headed him
-towards me. Putting my head close to the
-ground, I saw the fox creeping along with his
-back up, scarcely able to crawl. His tongue
-was drooping from his jaws, and his brush
-dragged along as if there was not strength
-enough in him even to lift that. Every now
-and then he stopped and turned his head,
-and, not perceiving me, continued to near the
-spot where I laid. Close and closer he came,
-and, at length, coming within springing
-distance, I made an effort which surprised
-myself, and fastened my teeth right across the
-middle of his loins before he had a chance of
-knowing from what quarter he was attacked.
-Catching me by the ear, however, he gave me
-a dying grip which made me remember the
-length of his teeth and the strength of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-jaws for some time to come, and he had not
-unlocked them, before Trimbush, Dashwood,
-and Loyalty came to my assistance, and
-quickly put an end to the struggle.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll break him up presently,” gasped
-Trimbush. “Let’s get a sob or two of wind
-first,” and forming a circle round the lifeless
-carcase of the devil’s own, we lay stretched
-upon the ground, panting and beaten to a
-crawl.</p>
-
-<p>At this moment something crashing through
-the brushwood was heard, and soon afterwards
-a labouring man came running up, and
-seizing the fox, lifted him above his head, and
-“who-whooped” most lustily. He then
-drew a great clasped knife from a sheath, and
-cut off the head, brush, and pads of the devil’s
-own.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah!” said he, “I heard ye, and thought
-there was something up more than common.
-I can guess all about it. You’ve beaten every
-one o’ the field, and tailed off all the rest o’
-the pack.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re right enough, old fellow,”
-observed Trimbush, “and I wish you could
-understand me as well as I can you. But what
-the deuce are ye about with the fox?”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The astonishment of Trimbush was caused
-by seeing the man deliberately proceeding to
-skin the fox, as he might the body of a dead
-cat or rabbit.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll soon whip off your jacket,” said the
-man, “and then they can eat ye nice and
-comfortably. Such a skin as this,” continued
-he, “must be terribly tough, I know.”</p>
-
-<p>“What a considerate Christian!”
-exclaimed Loyalty. “Old Mark could
-scarcely be more thoughtful.”</p>
-
-<p>“Besides,” resumed the labourer, finishing
-his job, “such a skin as this is worth half-a-crown,
-and it had much better go into my
-pocket than down your bellies.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ho, ho!” ejaculated Trimbush.
-“That’s the secret of your attention, is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Who-whoop!” hallooed the man.
-“Who-whoop!” and throwing the dismembered
-carcase to us, we tore it into pieces and
-demolished, with more than ordinary relish,
-the devil’s own.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, what am I to do with ye?”
-observed the rustic, scratching the back part
-of his head.</p>
-
-<p>“Take us to the nearest best quarters,”
-said Trimbush; “give us a good supper,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-plenty of straw, and lead us home in the
-morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a long distance,” soliloquized the
-man; “but I shall get well paid for my
-trouble, I know. It can’t be done to-night,
-howsomever; and so I’ll get farmer Oatfield
-to give grub and lodgings, and journey home
-with ye to-morrow myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“A capital move,” said Trimbush, “and
-a sentiment after my own heart. Come
-along.”</p>
-
-<p>Most willingly we followed our conductor
-from the cover, and after proceeding about a
-mile, we came to one of those nests of
-comforts, a good farm-house. As we entered
-the yard, two rough and shaggy shepherd’s
-dogs ran barking towards us; but upon coming
-closer, they wagged their short stumpy tails
-by way of a welcome, and soon afterwards we
-had a famous supper of warm milk and meal,
-supplied to us by the hospitable Mr. Oatfield,
-who heard with infinite glee the rustic’s
-account of the way in which he discovered us;
-and then, by his orders, some bundles of fresh
-straw were shaken out, upon which we
-stretched ourselves, with that pleasure which
-only the wearied feel.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.</h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“The gorse is yellow on the heath,</div>
-<div class="verse">The banks with speed-well flowers are gay,</div>
-<div class="verse">The oaks are budding, and beneath</div>
-<div class="verse">The hawthorn soon will bear the wreath,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">The silver wreath of May.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“I hate to see those violets a-peeping on
-the banks,” said old Mark to the huntsman,
-one morning, “and always did.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why so?” asked Will.</p>
-
-<p>“Because they are a sure sign that hunting
-is drawing to a close,” replied our feeder.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, yes,” rejoined Will Sykes. “True
-enough. When the speed-well flowers begin
-to show,” continued he, “we may be certain
-that the season’s almost at an end.”</p>
-
-<p>“Shall we kill a May fox?” inquired<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-Mark, for he always coupled the <em>we</em> in all
-relating to us and our doings.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” replied Will. “The season’s too
-forward, and the Squire said yesterday he
-would only hunt twice more.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s bad news,” observed Trimbush.
-“However,” said he, “the noses on the
-kennel-door show that we have given a good
-account of our foxes.”</p>
-
-<p>“The devil’s own is not there,” replied I.
-“How is that?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” rejoined the old hound. “His
-head was sent to be mounted as a cup, I heard
-Tom tell Ned Adams, and it is always to be
-placed in the middle of the table at the hunt-dinner.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m glad of that,” returned I.</p>
-
-<p>“No doubt you are,” added Trimbush,
-“and so am I. It will be a lasting record of a
-run that, if equalled, was never beaten.”</p>
-
-<p>“What was the time, do you suppose?”
-inquired I.</p>
-
-<p>“Not a minute less than five hours,”
-responded my companion.</p>
-
-<p>“How proud the Squire and all of them
-were upon our return!” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” rejoined the old hound. “I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
-thought we should be killed by that which
-seldom forms the ground of coroners’ inquests&mdash;excessive
-kindness.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well!” exclaimed I, “since we have
-but two days remaining, we must endeavour
-to wind up the season with a good finish.”</p>
-
-<p>“To be sure,” returned Trimbush; “a
-brace more of noses must be added to the
-account, at least.”</p>
-
-<p>“How tired I shall be of kennel life
-throughout the long, hot summer,” said I,
-with a whine at the thought.</p>
-
-<p>“It is rather monotonous, I must say,”
-replied my companion.</p>
-
-<p>“And then to be continually shut up,”
-rejoined I.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! but you’ll not be,” added he. “We
-are taken out always at daybreak, when the
-air and ground are nice and cool, and have a
-gentle trot for some eight or ten miles. Then
-a certain number, from three to four couple,
-are allowed, in turns, to remain at large all
-day about the kennel, or where we like, so
-long as we don’t get into mischief.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s very kind and considerate,” said
-I, “and contributes greatly to our happiness.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“And health, you might have added,” continued
-Trimbush. “Nothing is so bad as
-close confinement for us, and, indeed, for all
-kinds of sporting dogs. The more liberty we
-have, the better for our condition, spirit, and
-general good. Trencher-fed hounds,” said
-he, “are remarkable for the superiority they
-possess over their kennelled brethren, and the
-only cause is from the freedom they enjoy.”</p>
-
-<p>“What a pity it is,” said I, “that we
-can’t make our rulers comprehend us as well
-as we understand them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Their heads are so thick,” replied Trimbush,
-contemptuously. “A great many are
-solid, like stones, all the way through, I’m
-sure.”</p>
-
-<p>“Some act as if they were,” rejoined I.</p>
-
-<p>“Act?” sneered the old hound. “Upon
-my soul I can’t think what nineteen out of
-twenty were born for. Certainly not for
-fox-hunting; that’s quite evident.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a good thing,” I remarked, “that
-our master is not one of the stone-heads.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” returned he, “we are fortunate in
-that respect, and in most others. Will and
-Mark are as famous hound servants as ever
-entered a kennel, and, as a good huntsman<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-makes good hounds, so does a good master
-make good servants.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a wonderful deal in the management,”
-I observed.</p>
-
-<p>“Everything,” replied Trimbush. “And,
-unless a master of foxhounds is a thorough-going
-sportsman, and is acquainted with
-all the apparently trifling details of his
-establishment, you may depend upon it that
-he’s very much out of his place.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your information concerning our liberty
-during the summer months,” said I, “has
-reconciled me somewhat to the mortification
-of closing the season.”</p>
-
-<p>“We need not examine farther,” resumed
-Trimbush, “than the effect produced upon
-birds, when caged, to learn the advantages of
-freedom. The plumage of a wild bird is close,
-smooth, and bright; while that of one in close
-confinement is dull and rough. There is
-strength and energy in the one, too, which is
-never seen in the other.”</p>
-
-<p>“The feather often shows which way the
-wind blows,” remarked I.</p>
-
-<p>“As well as the national banner of England
-floating in the breeze,” returned the old
-hound.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I have heard,” I remarked, after a
-pause, “with the greatest pleasure, all that
-you have said regarding us, and I do not
-think anything has been advanced without
-sufficient reason being given. But what
-would you say may be deemed a general rule
-for a huntsman to observe?”</p>
-
-<p>“In the field?” asked Trimbush.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied I.</p>
-
-<p>“Study the wind,” returned he, “let
-hounds alone, and keep his eyes on the line-hunters.
-On these important points,” he
-continued, “depends all the success in
-hunting. But when I say let hounds alone,
-I mean that they are to stand still just long
-enough for them to be sure that the scent is not
-at the point they are trying. We then go
-cheerfully to try another; but there is nothing
-so prejudicial as an imperfect, hasty cast.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing can be more obvious,” I replied;
-“and I wish, with all my heart, that such a
-golden rule could be indelibly carved in the
-memory of every one whom fate may decree
-to blow a horn to hounds.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ay,” rejoined Trimbush, “if abided by,
-there would be but little cause for grumbling
-about want of sport. We can generally do<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-far better without assistance than with it, and
-the more we receive, the more helpless and
-artificial we become. I believe I told ye so a
-short time since, and it is the case, not only
-with us, but with everybody, two-footed and
-four, to look for support from those resources,
-which, through times of difficulties, save
-labour and exertion, rather than put our own
-shoulders to the collar. This is but natural,
-and the blame rests more with those who are
-unwise enough to forget that we all have our
-duty to perform, and in doing that of others
-they commit as great an error as in neglecting
-their own; because, if not idle themselves,
-they are the positive cause of neglect and
-idleness in their fellows.”</p>
-
-<p>“Upon my honour,” returned I, “you
-talk like a philosopher.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then a philosopher speaks but the simple
-truth,” added my companion, “in very
-simple language.”</p>
-
-<p>“You never hear,” said I, diving again
-more particularly into our subject, “of men
-admitting that they had anything to do with
-losing a fox, although they invariably claim a
-large share in the honour of killing him.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have noticed that, have you?”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-responded the old hound, laughing. “No; it
-is always <em>they</em> lost him, but <em>we</em> killed him.
-Ha, ha, ha!”</p>
-
-<p>“It ought to be just reversed,” rejoined I.</p>
-
-<p>“There would be much greater truth in the
-assertion, when generally applied,” returned
-Trimbush. “A fox is frequently lost through
-them, and rare, indeed, is the occurrence when
-any act on their part may be regarded as one
-of assistance in killing him.”</p>
-
-<p>“I begin to have a great contempt for the
-ignorance of human beings,” observed I.</p>
-
-<p>“All of us do at the end of our first
-season,” replied my friend. “We discover,
-by that time, what a set of know-nothings
-men are, and, if worthy to be retained in the
-pack, take no notice whatever of their cheers
-or rates; but merely avoid their horses’ feet,
-and get away from them as far and as fast as
-we can.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.</h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“When early primroses appear,</div>
-<div class="verse">And vales are decked with daffodils,</div>
-<div class="verse">I hail the new reviving year,</div>
-<div class="verse">And soothing hope my bosom fills.</div>
-<div class="verse">The lambkin bleating on the plain,</div>
-<div class="verse">The swallow seen with gladdened eye,</div>
-<div class="verse">The welcome cuckoo’s merry strain,</div>
-<div class="verse">Proclaim the joyful summer nigh.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It was the second week in April, and the
-last day of the season, that we jogged slowly
-along the road to the meet. The season had
-been unusually forward, and the air was
-fragrant with the early violets and primroses,
-decking the roadside banks. There was a
-haze rolling along the valleys, and the boughs
-and branches of the trees, now unfolding their
-luxuriant and freshest green, were glittering
-with myriads of dew-drops, flashing in the
-light of the young spring morn.</p>
-
-<p>Punctuality being the standing order with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
-our Squire, Will often consulted his watch to
-regulate our pace, so that we should be at the
-fixture exactly at the time named; and as we
-approached Duvale village, the church clock
-was striking the hour of ten. Turning on to
-a patch of green, where a few geese and a
-lonely dejected-looking donkey cropped the
-meagre herbage, and a host of round-faced
-chubby children played, and madly screamed
-with joy to see us arrive, we formed a group
-around Will’s horse in eager expectation of
-the Squire’s coming. The hum of the last
-stroke had scarcely ceased, when the sharp
-pit-a-pat of a horse’s feet was heard, and
-immediately afterwards the Squire came
-cantering up, accompanied by three or four
-of his friends.</p>
-
-<p>I was glad to see that the field comprised
-those only who hunted regularly with us, and,
-although many of them were generally too
-anxious to get forward, and thought of little
-more than showing well in the first flight, yet
-there was no fear of much unsportsman-like
-conduct on their part.</p>
-
-<p>Without the loss of a minute we trotted off
-to our first draw, a long and narrow belt of
-fir trees, with thick brushwood at the bottom,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-which proved a blank. We then drew a line
-of small spinnies, and in one of them, at the
-furthest end up wind, I saw two or three old
-hounds flourish their sterns at one spot, and
-before I could reach it, a first-seasoned one,
-like myself, called Boaster, threw his tongue.</p>
-
-<p>“Gently, Boaster,” hallooed Will, giving
-an admonitory crack of the whip. “Gently,
-Boaster.”</p>
-
-<p>Upon pushing my nose among the group, I
-inhaled a slight scent of <em>the</em> animal; but it
-was very faint.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a stale drag,” said Trimbush, “and
-he may be twenty miles away by this time.
-Who opened on it?” asked he.</p>
-
-<p>“Boaster,” replied I, fearing that he
-might think me guilty of the puppy-like
-deed.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I tell you this, youngster,” rejoined
-the old hound, “if you’re so free with
-your tongue, you’ll have reason to wish, some
-day, that it had been cut out at your birth.”</p>
-
-<p>“But it was the right scent,” expostulated
-Boaster; “and how could I tell if it was stale
-or not?”</p>
-
-<p>“Then your nose is not worth a damn,”
-returned Trimbush, passionately. “At any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-rate,” continued he, “you might have a little
-decent modesty, and not take precedency of
-<em>us</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>Trimbush placed a very strong emphasis
-upon the “us,” and Boaster, ashamed and
-abashed, drooped his stern, and, for the
-remainder of the day, did not again attempt
-playing first fiddle.</p>
-
-<p>We were now taken about two miles, and
-thrown into a large rambling cover, composed
-of patches of gorse, bramble, and nutwood.</p>
-
-<p>“I saw some fresh billets just now, sir,”
-said Ned Adams to the Squire.</p>
-
-<p>“Where?”</p>
-
-<p>“Just under that ash, and on the edge of
-the gap, sir,” replied the second whip.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” rejoined his master.</p>
-
-<p>I was close to Dashwood and Trimbush,
-when both stopped suddenly, and simultaneously
-throwing up their heads, both gave
-long bell-like notes, which rung and echoed
-far and near.</p>
-
-<p>“Hark to Trimbush!” cried Will Sykes;
-“hark to Dashwood, hark, hark!” and then,
-as I and others picked up the grateful scent,
-and threw our tongues cheerfully, he hallooed,
-“Hark together, hark!”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Now we closed; now we went full swing.
-Up went Tom Holt’s cap.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a vixen, sir,” I heard him say.</p>
-
-<p>“Stop them, then,” replied our master,
-“and let her go. We can’t spare a bitch fox
-now.”</p>
-
-<p>Out we crashed; but Tom charged at our
-heads, cracking his awful double thong, and
-being well mounted, the most daring of us
-knew that it was hopeless to endeavour to get
-away with her. Boaster was the only one who
-made a lame attempt, and he instantly got a
-cut across the loins, which sent him flying
-back into cover howling most piteously.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a hard case,” said Trimbush,
-doggedly, “to be whipped off in this
-fashion, and I don’t think it’s fair. When
-too late to kill vixens,” continued he,
-with little apparent inclination to draw the
-cover again, “why not give up hunting
-altogether?”</p>
-
-<p>“You would be the last to carry out that
-principle, I’m sure,” observed Rubicon.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know that,” rejoined the old
-hound. “It’s very tantalizing and dispiriting
-to be stopped the moment a fox, which we
-have taken the trouble and pains to find,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
-breaks away. We meet with enough
-disappointments which can’t be avoided,
-throughout a season, without having such as
-these thrust upon us.”</p>
-
-<p>“But we are continually so stopped in cub-hunting,”
-returned Rubicon.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s quite a different matter,” said
-Trimbush. “There are then two or three
-brace of ’em afoot, perhaps, and they get
-headed back as well as ourselves. We can
-always reckon, too, upon plenty of sport at
-that time; but at the end of a season, when
-foxes are thin, it&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>At this moment I winded the glorious scent
-again, and, throwing my tongue, bang a great
-dark-coloured fox went across a ride. Trimbush
-cut short his harangue, and, forgetting
-the cause of his anger, flew to my side, and
-away we rattled.</p>
-
-<p>“Have at him!” hallooed Will. “Have
-at him, darlings! Yoiks, have at him!”</p>
-
-<p>Up went Tom Holt’s cap again.</p>
-
-<p>“All right, sir,” I heard him say. “As
-fine a dog-fox as ever was seen.”</p>
-
-<p>Through the furze we dashed, and out
-burst more than two-thirds of us close to his
-brush.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><i>Twang, twang, twang, twang</i>, went Will’s
-horn.</p>
-
-<p>“For’ard, for’ard!” hallooed Ned Adams:
-“get to him hounds, get to him! For’ard!
-for’<em>ard</em>!”</p>
-
-<p>For fifteen minutes we flew along at our
-best pace, over a country, without even a bush
-strong enough to hold him. The scent being
-breast high, we cut out some of the sharpest
-work for the best and boldest to ride to us.</p>
-
-<p>“His point’s the main earth at the Curby
-brake,” said Trimbush; “but old ‘fox-fix’
-has been there with his spade and pickaxe,
-I’ll be bound.”</p>
-
-<p>The cover spoken of by my companion was
-quickly gained, and on the slope of a steep
-bank, thickly twined with the stubborn roots
-of some neighbouring oaks, we ran straight
-to the mouth of a closed earth.</p>
-
-<p>“Ha, ha!” laughed Trimbush, “I said
-so. If he had poked his nose underground
-here, they might have dug for a week to no
-purpose.”</p>
-
-<p>We now carried it through the brake, and,
-sinking some rising ground, entered Bushford
-Woodlands. Here the small enclosures and
-thick fences began to tell both upon us and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-field, and instead of carrying a head in one
-close and compact body, many began to tail
-and string in the rear. As near as I can guess
-we had ran ten miles from the find without
-the check of a moment, when we threw up at
-a gate leading into a road. We flew over it,
-and saw an old woman with a red cloak on,
-screaming most lustily; but whether from
-fright or joy I could not discover.</p>
-
-<p>To the left we went, but not making it out,
-turned short to the right, when Will blowing
-a “come-to-me,” off we swept to the
-summons.</p>
-
-<p>“I saw it, sir,” I heard the woman
-shriek; “I saw it, sir, as plain as the nose on
-your face, jump over the gate and then jump
-back again. And it’s put me all in such a
-twitter that&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>A <em>twang, twang</em>, from the horn, drowned
-the conclusion of the old woman’s delivery,
-and, trying back, we were quickly on his line
-again, and making play at topping speed.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought,” observed Trimbush, “that
-the old woman had headed him; but it doesn’t
-do for us to try back until we have made our
-casts good, right and left. It is quite correct
-for a huntsman to do so if he learns from any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
-cause that the fox has been headed; but
-we should not speculate upon chances or
-accidents.”</p>
-
-<p>We now carried it over some deep fallows,
-and, being very dry and flying, we had to
-pick through with great care. It was
-remarkable to see the difference between the
-old steady hounds and the young and eager
-ones in these difficulties. With their noses on
-the ground, the pilots of the pack felt for the
-scent, here and there and held it forward with
-patience and perseverance, while the too
-ardent and flashy ones dashed in all
-directions, with as much notion of the line of
-the fox, as that of the rook flying over their
-heads. After picking through the ploughs we
-were enabled to up with our heads again,
-cluster, and go full swing over some small
-grass fields to a village road, where unfortunately,
-some dung had been recently carted,
-and the horrid smell made me feel ready to
-vomit. Trimbush felt along the road a considerable
-distance, as it was down wind,
-before he was satisfied that this was not his
-line, and then turning up, made about as wide
-a cast, but to no purpose.</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder,” said the old hound, both vexed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-and puzzled, “if he has been headed back?”</p>
-
-<p>Rubicon, who must have had a remarkably
-strong stomach, now jumped upon the steaming,
-reeking, stinking heap, and, plunging
-his nose under a loose portion at the top, drew
-out the fox by a hind leg. In an instant we
-flew to his assistance, and for the first and
-last time in my life, I helped to kill a fox on
-a dung heap.</p>
-
-<p>“Well!” said our master, wiping his bald
-head, and looking as pleased as at any period
-that I ever saw him, “we wind up the season
-with a glorious finish. We were too far
-behind to see,” he continued; “but of course
-they must have viewed him into the manure.”</p>
-
-<p>“No doubt, sir,” replied Will, “or he
-would most likely have beaten us.”</p>
-
-<p>“It only shows,” rejoined the Squire, “to
-what improbable shifts a sinking fox will have
-resort. How often men’s brains are racked to
-discover the why and wherefore that a fox
-<em>could</em> have beaten their judgment and experience,
-when, perhaps, he may be close to their
-elbows without the smallest blame to be
-attached to either hounds or them for his
-escape.”</p>
-
-<p>“Or merit to his craft and cunning, you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-might have added,” said Trimbush. “For
-when a fox sinks, not only his physical
-strength is expended, but his mental powers
-die with it. He is in such a mortal fright,
-that he cannot think; but like a blown chicken,
-pokes his head into the first hiding place
-which presents itself.”</p>
-
-<p>As we were trotting quietly homewards,
-as proud as peacocks, I saw Trimbush tip
-Rubicon over the nose with his stern, and drew
-him from the body on one side of the road.</p>
-
-<p>“Be candid,” said he, in a half whisper.
-“How was it that you made the fox out in
-that beastly manure?”</p>
-
-<p>“I winded him,” rejoined Rubicon, with
-a sly grin.</p>
-
-<p>“Pshaw!” replied the old hound. “It
-was impossible.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, well!” interrupted Rubicon, “I
-admit it. The fact is I jumped on the heap
-for a very different purpose, and as I did so,
-I felt something move under my feet. A
-thought struck me&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“As it did me,” interrupted Trimbush,
-“before commencing your explanation. We
-owe the kill to chance.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Now the hill, the hedge, are green,</div>
-<div class="verse">Now the warbler’s throat’s in tune,</div>
-<div class="verse">Blithsome is the verdant scene,</div>
-<div class="verse">Brightened by the beams of noon.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It was a sultry summer’s day, and Trimbush
-and myself were luxuriating under the
-wide-spreading and deep shade of a walnut
-tree growing near the kennel. Five or six of
-our companions, on the free list, like ourselves,
-were lounging about in the coolest
-spots, and their only occasional signs of life,
-as they laid upon the ground, consisted in
-brushing the buzzing flies from their nostrils
-and hides, and, now and then, making a snap
-at their enemies. Wearied, at length, with
-my own laziness, I made an effort to draw<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
-Trimbush into conversation, by asking him
-the cause of kennel lameness.</p>
-
-<p>The old hound rolled on his side, and giving
-a wide yawn, stretched out his legs as far as
-possible, with his stern stiffly turned over his
-back.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s comfortable,” said he, “very.
-And so you wish to learn the cause of one of
-the greatest afflictions that can visit us?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” rejoined I, “it is my wish to
-know everything concerning our interests.
-For if mankind be the proper study for man,
-so must hounds and hunting be the proper
-study for me.”</p>
-
-<p>“A sensible remark,” returned my companion;
-“and as you are always ready to
-listen, there can be no doubt but that you’ll
-attain proficiency.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m greatly obliged for your encouragement,”
-added I.</p>
-
-<p>“I remember two seasons ago,” said Trimbush,
-“hearing Tom Holt read aloud from
-<i>The Sporting Magazine</i> a remarkably sensible
-article on the subject you wish to be informed
-about, and it made so deep an impression that
-I can now repeat it nearly word for word.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m all attention,” I replied.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>My friend cleared his throat, and then
-commenced.</p>
-
-<p>“Peculiar conditions of the atmosphere
-have generally the effect of some disorders,
-which attack men and animals to so great an
-extent as to be denominated the prevailing
-diseases of the time&mdash;such as cholera, typhus
-fever, influenza, and many others. These
-results are not always contemporary with the
-weather, which in reality produces them.
-Indeed, they most frequently make their
-appearance some little time after a change of
-temperature has taken place, by which certain
-influences have been established, which become
-the sources of disorder in the functions of
-animal economy. Such disorders as those
-which are peculiar to any particular districts
-cannot fail to receive an impulse from such a
-season as the one we have lately experienced.
-Kennel lameness ranks among the number as
-likely to be one over which these powers may
-be expected to have a very considerable
-control. Much has been said and much has
-been written on the subject, and many
-possibilities have been suggested, and
-remedies proposed, which have so little reason
-for their basis, that it appears extraordinary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
-how they could ever have entered the brain of
-reasonable and thinking men: but before
-going into a detail, I will introduce a few
-remarks on endemic diseases, for the purpose
-of more clearly establishing the point, ‘that
-certain situations produce the complaint, and
-will for ever be the cause of its continuance so
-long as those situations are preserved’; and
-also that certain modes of treatment are the
-causes of its prevailing in some instances
-with a greater degree of inveteracy. Indeed
-I have no hesitation in declaring, that bad
-management will, even on healthy sites,
-produce a modified degree of rheumatism,
-which assumes the name of kennel lameness.</p>
-
-<p>“There are certain diseases which afflict
-the human body, and which are found to rage
-in particular localities, termed endemic.
-They are attributable to some peculiarities of
-the soil, the air, the food, and in some
-instances of the habits of the inhabitants.
-Poverty, want of cleanliness, and, the consequence
-of poverty, bad and insufficient food
-and raiment, may be enumerated among the
-most conspicuous causes. A removal of them
-will naturally be followed by the disappearance
-of the endemic. So with hounds: if a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-slight degree of rheumatism exists, produced
-by irregular treatment, alter the treatment,
-and if those already affected do not recover,
-the list of invalids will not be augmented by
-its appearance in fresh subjects. Some may
-oppose me on this point, by observing, if bad
-management produces the complaint in a
-slight degree, may it not do so in a greater?
-To this I answer distinctly, No; inasmuch as
-in some kennels the disorder has never been
-known to emanate, but that unsound hounds
-brought from other kennels have recovered:
-besides which, there are many kennels in
-which the disorder rages where the hounds are
-treated precisely upon the same system as in
-establishments which are perfectly free from
-it.</p>
-
-<p>“It is well known to what an extent
-various diseases, such as cutaneous complaints
-and scurvy, have identified themselves
-with peculiar situations, more especially after
-certain seasons. Medical practitioners are of
-opinion, that, for the thoroughly comprehending
-the nature and the cure of endemical
-diseases, an accurate study of topography is
-essentially necessary. The inhabitants of
-countries or places where diseases prevail<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-endemically are very often exempted from
-other serious indispositions; and the natives
-of a country or district frequently become
-inured by habit to influences which at once
-manifest their power over newly-imported
-strangers, especially in tropical regions. In
-countries inhabited by different races of men,
-the same circumstances do not always produce
-the same effects upon different varieties. The
-water of the Seine produces disorder in the
-Londoner, to which the Parisian, who is
-accustomed to it, is exempt. The treatment
-also of similar diseases often requires to be
-very different in consequence of the locality
-where it appears, and also the constitution
-and habits of the patient.</p>
-
-<p>“The miasmata, or particles which
-emanate from the surface of the earth,
-produce marked effects upon the human
-constitution in those places where they
-prevail. The districts where they are most
-conspicuous are the marshes, fens and
-swamps in Lincolnshire, Cambridgeshire, and
-Essex: intermitting fevers and agues are
-the consequence. Although marshy districts
-are pre-eminently capable of engendering
-miasmata, they are not exclusively so: the result<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-of numerous observations proves that the
-circumstances essential to this phenomenon
-are the presence of water, or moisture, and the
-influence of solar heat: when the quantity of
-water is great at any particular time, the
-effects do not manifest themselves until it
-subsides. Many circumstances are supposed
-to influence the development of the effects of
-these exhalations. It is also asserted, that it
-has sometimes been carried to considerable
-distances, to situations naturally healthy, by
-currents of air. This is a consideration of
-vast importance in forming an opinion upon
-the fact of kennel lameness being indigenous
-to certain situations, and shows most clearly
-how little benefit can be anticipated in those
-cases where the malady is severe, by the
-interposition of impervious concretes, asphaltum,
-and such like preparations.</p>
-
-<p>“It has been asserted that attacks of
-paralysis have been mistaken for kennel lameness.
-How such mistakes can have originated
-with any persons conversant with the
-characteristics of the latter malady, it is
-difficult to conceive, unless that term is
-intended to comprehend all disorders in which
-lameness is apparent. If so, ere long, we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-shall have hounds, when lamed by thorns or
-bruises, included in the list. Kennel lameness,
-properly so termed, is intended to
-convey the idea of a malady whose distinctive
-symptoms are so identically similar to
-rheumatism, that there appears scarcely any
-visible reason why it should be distinguished
-by any other term; but as it has now acquired
-a standing in the huntsman’s nomenclature,
-it would be presumption to attempt to displace
-it: nevertheless, the term rheumatism would
-be quite as applicable and more universally
-comprehended. Before a physiologist pronounces
-to what class a disorder belongs, and
-before a physician attempts to prescribe a
-remedy for its cure, it is requisite to
-investigate the symptoms which exist. Now
-the symptoms of paralysis and rheumatism
-are so distinctly at variance, that it is utterly
-impossible to fall under a mistake. Paralysis
-is a nervous affection, in which the nerves,
-acting on the muscles, interrupt their motion,
-relaxing their tone and fibre, and very
-frequently distorting some particular limb.
-Rheumatism is a rigid or contracted state of
-the muscles, attended with a slight inflammatory
-condition of the tissue which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-covers the muscles, having the effect,
-when the animal has been some time at
-rest, of creating a certain degree of
-adhesion. Thus a hound badly affected
-with kennel lameness, on first being taken
-out, is so stiff and sore as scarcely to be able
-to move&mdash;a state in which I have seen so
-many, that the remembrance is accompanied
-with feelings of commiseration and pity that
-would prompt me to any trouble or exertion
-that would produce the effect of subduing the
-complaint. When hounds thus disordered
-have been in motion a short time, so as to
-increase the circulation of the blood, the
-extreme rigidity or stiffness goes off to a
-certain extent, dependent upon the violence of
-the attack. But paralytic affections would
-not be attended with any such results:
-exercise would rather tend to increase than
-to improve the capabilities of action.</p>
-
-<p>“I have very little doubt but the severe
-work which staghounds occasionally undergo,
-and the numerous changes of temperature
-which they have to contend against, are
-causes for the aggravation of this malady. A
-foxhound generally has some preparatory
-exercise, besides the exertion of going to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
-covert, which latter is equivalent to the staghound
-going to the place of meeting. The
-former has to draw for and to find his fox, in
-which effort his powers are more gradually
-brought into play, and the circulation of his
-blood is more rationally increased; but the
-staghound is laid on to the scent of his game
-without any preparatory excitement of the
-system, when he immediately goes to work,
-straining every nerve in his ardour for the
-chase, and very frequently maintains those
-efforts during the period of several hours;
-and frequently, when in an evident state
-of exhaustion, a time when immersion is
-dangerous, he plunges into rivers, canals, or
-lakes&mdash;places which stags have such inordinate
-propensities for when severely pressed.</p>
-
-<p>“The high and stimulating food, which is
-no doubt found necessary to maintain condition
-during a long chase, is another cause
-for symptoms of kennel lameness making
-their appearance with staghounds. The
-circumstance of the canine species not throwing
-off perspirable matter through the pores
-of the skin, appears to be a very powerful
-reason why they are so susceptible of
-rheumatic affections, and more especially that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-it should assume a chronic character when
-once introduced into the system. It is asserted
-that the dog perspires through the tongue;
-admitting that as a fact, it is to a very
-trifling extent, and not equivalent to the vast
-effusion of violent perspiration which must
-ensue from the laborious exertions of the
-chase, providing a hound generates an
-equivalent proportion according to his bulk
-that either a man or a horse does under similar
-efforts; besides which, making its escape from
-one part only, the general relief to the animal
-cannot be equivalent to that which is
-experienced by those animals who have outlets
-in the immediate proximity of almost every
-muscle. It is very evident that a great portion
-of the extraneous fluid, which in some animals
-flies off in perspiration, is by the hound voided
-in urine. The vast quantity which he passes
-is a proof of this, and it is a reason why
-medicines acting upon the urinary functions
-should be resorted to, in cases of kennel lameness,
-as a palliative.</p>
-
-<p>“Seeing the announcement some months
-ago that ‘our right trusty and well-beloved
-friend’ and faithful correspondent, <span class="smcap">Ringwood</span>,
-had forwarded his opinions and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
-suggestions on the subject of Kennel Lameness,
-and appreciating most highly his
-experience on sporting subjects, I was buoyed
-up with the hope that his discoveries would
-have thrown some new light on the case;
-but was much disappointed at reading his
-recommendations to try the effect of fires in
-the lodging-rooms. Knowing them to have
-been tried by Sir B. Graham, Mr. Boycott,
-also in the kennels occupied by Mr. Nicol, I
-believe also by Lord Kintore, with prejudicial
-consequences, it only remains to intimate that
-the practice is incompatible. Moreover, the
-diuretic tendency which it produces, in
-encouraging hounds to perform their evacuations
-in the lodging-rooms, instead of in the
-yards, is a reason why the adoption of fires,
-however secured, in kennels, cannot be carried
-out consistently with the usual discipline and
-necessary observance of cleanliness. One of
-the most positive cases in proof, that on some
-occasions kennel lameness proceeds entirely
-from the unhealthy situation of their habitation,
-is that of Mr. Foljambe. With the
-utmost attention to kennel management, a
-long series of years passed with nothing but
-disappointment and vexation to crown the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
-most liberal and judicious experiments.
-Nothing that human skill could suggest or
-accomplish was left untried, until at length
-it was determined to remove the hounds to a
-kennel at another part of the country, where,
-under precisely the same management, they
-are sound and well.</p>
-
-<p>“In conversation with a friend a short time
-since, a M. F. H., he made the remark, that
-if I could make the discovery of a cure for
-this disorder, I should be entitled to honors
-and distinctions too superfluous to mention.
-My reply was simply this: ‘A remedy has
-been discovered, not by myself, for I desire no
-merit which I am not entitled to, but it is
-clearly proved that removal to a healthy site
-will effect all that is desired.’ The removal
-must not, however, be undertaken without
-mature consideration, in order to ascertain
-if the proposed new situation is perfectly free
-from the causes which produce the disorder.
-Clay soils may be denominated the most
-eligible; light sandy soils and light soils on
-chalk, are the worst. Any attempt to cure
-the complaint on a situation which so
-evidently engenders it, is like trying to heal a
-wound while the substance which created it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-remains within. Removal on the first
-discovery that the kennel is so located as to
-be injurious will most assuredly be found the
-most satisfactory, and, in the end, the most
-economical determination.”</p>
-
-<p>I managed to keep myself from a most
-seductive doze during my companion’s somewhat
-prosy delivery; but scarcely had he
-finished, than I was in the land of dreams,
-and toying with</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“The children of an idle brain,</div>
-<div class="verse">Begot of nothing but vain fantasy.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“We still have slept together,</div>
-<div class="verse">Rose at an instant, learn’d, play’d, eat together;</div>
-<div class="verse">And wheresoe’er we went, like Juno’s swans,</div>
-<div class="verse">Still we went coupled, and inseparable.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It was late in August, and the weather so
-sultry, that we scarcely knew how to bear with
-the intense heat. Some did nothing but lap
-the water, always running in a clear fine
-stream, from the fountain in the court, and
-assuaged their thirst by continual sipping.
-Others drank deeply, but seldom; and all,
-more or less, evinced the feverish suffering
-they endured.</p>
-
-<p>I was lying in a shady corner of the court
-one day about noontide, when I happened to
-notice a hound of the name of Gameboy go
-two or three times towards the fountain, and
-then turn from it with a slight shudder.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Rising from the ground, I went towards
-him and said, “What’s the matter?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” replied he, “but I feel
-very strange. I’m dreadfully thirsty, and yet
-cannot go near the water.”</p>
-
-<p>I now perceived that his eyes looked dull
-and leaden, and his body shook, as if every
-nerve and sinew were shattered and unstrung.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps you have eaten something that
-has disagreed with you,” returned I.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” added he; “I picked up a bone in
-our walk this morning, but that couldn’t
-injure me.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that wound on your shoulder,”
-I asked.</p>
-
-<p>“A mere scratch,” said he, “I got from a
-cur three days ago. He flew at me while
-passing a cottage garden, and just touched
-me on the skin.”</p>
-
-<p>This intelligence struck me with the most
-inexpressible uneasiness, and I went to Trimbush,
-who was asleep, and waking him,
-repeated all I had seen and heard.</p>
-
-<p>In a moment the old hound jumped from his
-posture of indolence, and approaching Gameboy,
-regarded him minutely.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you unwell?” said he.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied Gameboy; “I never felt so
-queer before.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you thirsty?”</p>
-
-<p>“Awfully so,” he rejoined, “and yet
-cannot drink.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why?” asked Trimbush.</p>
-
-<p>Gameboy gave an involuntary shudder, and
-said, “The sight, and even the noise of water,
-is more painful than I can describe.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let me see you make an effort to go near
-it,” responded my companion. “Perseverance
-may overcome this, seemingly, nervous affection.”</p>
-
-<p>In accordance with the desire, poor Gameboy
-turned his head towards the fountain,
-and endeavoured to approach it; but had
-scarcely taken a stride in the direction, when
-a spasm appeared to seize him, and with a
-howl he rushed cowering to the farthest
-corner of the court.</p>
-
-<p>The attention of the rest of the hounds was
-attracted by this, and several were trotting
-towards him to learn the cause, when Trimbush
-interposed by saying, “Stay&mdash;<em>he’s
-mad</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>As if each had received a shock of electricity,
-the whole stood still and mute,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-regarding in silent horror their miserable
-companion. It is impossible to convey the
-effect produced upon the communication made
-thus briefly by Trimbush. Every one seemed
-not to know what to do or say, until Gameboy,
-with a white thick foam dropping from his
-jaw, sprung upon his feet and rushed towards
-them. A wild bull would not have scattered
-us more completely. Frenzied with fear, we
-flew from the maddened wretch, who rushed
-staggering at everything in his way, and
-snapping his jaws with that fury which the
-mad can only show.</p>
-
-<p>“Get from him,” said Trimbush, in a
-thick husky voice, and exhibiting the greatest
-terror. “Pray get from him. It’s death if
-he touches ye.”</p>
-
-<p>The noise in the kennel now became furious.
-All were stricken with fright, and the howling
-and cries were most appalling.</p>
-
-<p>It could scarcely have continued more than
-a minute, however, when the stentorian
-voices of Will Sykes and Ned Adams were
-heard, calling for “quiet,” accompanied by
-the cracks of a heavy thong.</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks be to the saints!” exclaimed
-Trimbush, “assistance is at hand.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Immediately afterwards both entered the
-court, and the huntsman glancing round, said
-reproachfully, “What’s all this about, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>At this juncture, Mark the feeder made his
-appearance, and his eye instantly fell upon
-Gameboy. I never shall forget the old man’s
-countenance, the moment he saw the hound.
-A ghastly paleness came over it, and he
-looked almost stunned with the sight.</p>
-
-<p>“Great heaven!” ejaculated he, holding
-up both his hands. “Great heaven, Will,
-there’s madness among ’em!”</p>
-
-<p>“What!” said the huntsman, his question
-sounding like a sharp expression of pain.</p>
-
-<p>“Madness,” repeated Mark, “as sure as
-we live.”</p>
-
-<p>With staring eyes, the huntsman and
-second whip examined Gameboy at a short
-distance and, after a slight pause, the
-former exclaimed, “’Tis true! Run, Ned,
-and bring the Squire.”</p>
-
-<p>“Get in, get in,” hallooed Mark, and
-closing the lodging-room door, we were safe
-from the attacks of the wretched Gameboy,
-who was now left alone in the court.</p>
-
-<p>“Take care,” said Will, retreating towards
-the door, “he’s in a most rabid state.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I wonder where it will end,” returned
-Mark, joining the huntsman’s side by the
-door.</p>
-
-<p>“Who can tell?” rejoined Will, bitterly.
-“We may lose half of ’em, perhaps.”</p>
-
-<p>“I noticed that he looked rather heavy
-about the eyes, for a day or two,” added the
-feeder, “but I accounted for it through the
-heat.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was only yesterday,” said Will, “that
-I gave him a dose of black brimstone and
-lard, seeing that he was feverish.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was a mercy no accident occurred to
-ye,” responded Mark. “A mere scratch
-from a tooth would have&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s this?” interrupted a well-known
-voice, and there stood our master, breathless
-and exhausted with the speed he had used in
-attending the summons to the fearful scene.</p>
-
-<p>“Gameboy, sir,” replied Will, pointing to
-the convulsive and agonized hound, “is mad
-beyond a doubt.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are there any more with such symptoms?”
-hurriedly asked the squire, scrutinizing the
-object of their painful attention and interest.</p>
-
-<p>“We have not had time for a careful
-examination, sir,” returned the huntsman;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-“but I saw none as we hastily separated
-them.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have acted well,” said the Squire,
-“and we must continue the same prompt
-and sound judgment. Shoot that hound
-instantly.”</p>
-
-<p>No sooner was the order given than Mark
-produced a long, single-barrelled flint gun,
-with which he was in the habit of slaughtering
-rats about the precincts of the kennel, and
-handed it to Will.</p>
-
-<p>“Do it for me,” whispered he, with a
-quivering lip. “I feel quite sick.”</p>
-
-<p>Our feeder hesitated for a second or two;
-but after a short struggle with a corresponding
-reluctance to become the executioner, he
-brought the piece to his shoulder, and drove
-the charge crashing through Gameboy’s brain.
-Without a perceptible throe of anguish, poor
-Gameboy fell lifeless upon the flags, and so
-ended, to us, this terrible tragedy.</p>
-
-<p>“Before endeavouring to learn the cause of
-the disease in him,” said the Squire, “draft
-each hound singly, and let us see whether any
-have been bitten by him, or if the least cause
-of fear exists that more must be destroyed.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope not, sir,” returned Will, with a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-strangely inarticulate voice. “What shall
-we do if&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s useless to talk of what we <em>shall</em> do,”
-interrupted his master irritably, “until we
-learn what we <em>can</em> do. Draft the hounds.”</p>
-
-<p>One by one was called from the lodging-room
-by name, and after minutely examining
-the eyes, nose and mouth, every hackle was
-rubbed back to see if the slightest recent
-abrasion of the skin had been made. At
-length it came to my turn, and unfortunately
-a scratch made by myself, while brushing a
-flea from my neck in the morning, was found
-just under my left ear.</p>
-
-<p>“Reload your gun,” said the Squire.</p>
-
-<p>A trembling seized me at these words, so
-that I could scarcely stand, and a film spread
-itself across my eyes, which nearly blinded me.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, sir,” exclaimed Will Sykes, “don’t
-have him shot yet. It does not look to me
-like a bite.”</p>
-
-<p>“But it does to me,” replied his master.
-“What think you, Mark?”</p>
-
-<p>The old man divided the hackles with his
-thumb and finger, and after a careful
-examination pronounced an opinion coinciding
-with that of the huntsman.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I know that the hound is a great
-favourite with both of ye,” said the Squire,
-“and with good reasons. But remember, if
-from any false feeling of kindness we spare
-one infected, the entire pack may be lost.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t do it, sir,” returned Mark.
-“I wouldn’t do it, sir,” repeated he, “if he
-was my own child, and I thought him bitten.
-The intended kindness would be right down
-cruelty.”</p>
-
-<p>“Still,” added our master, shaking his
-head, “I entertain great doubt as to the
-policy of hesitating to take the safer course.
-However, let him be shut up by himself and
-watched incessantly; and in the event of the
-most trifling but certain symptom appearing,
-wait for no instructions from me, but shoot
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>I was now taken from the court and
-subjected to solitary confinement for six
-weeks; but as Tom Holt explained the cause
-of poor Gameboy’s malady, from having seen
-him attacked by the cur, and all the rest being
-found free from the smallest likelihood of
-inoculation, I was permitted to join my
-companions again soon after cub-hunting
-commenced. During my involuntary retreat,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
-Mark paid me the greatest attention, and,
-that I might not be low-spirited for want of
-company, would often sit upon my bench and
-chat to me, and croon snatches of old ballads
-to himself. He took me long walks, too, when
-his work was done, and altogether the time
-was spent much more agreeably than might be
-imagined in the gloom of solitude.</p>
-
-<p>Hearty was the welcome upon my
-re-appearance in the court, and each of my
-friends expressed his warm delight at seeing
-me again; although a stranger to our ways and
-customs might deem the reception somewhat
-churlish, and of the growling mood. However,
-we do not ‘use our tongues for the
-concealment of our thoughts,’ and if devoid of
-the polish of refined manners, we at least
-possess an equal proportion of their honesty.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV.</h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Slow pass’d the night, and now with silver ray,</div>
-<div class="verse">The star of morning ushers in the day;</div>
-<div class="verse">The shadows fly before the roseate hours,</div>
-<div class="verse">And the chill dew hangs glittering on the flowers;</div>
-<div class="verse">The pruning-hook or humble spade to wield,</div>
-<div class="verse">The cheerful labourer hastens to the field.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Trifles, light as air,” observed Trimbush,
-“are frequently of the most momentous
-importance. Who could have thought, now,”
-continued he, “that brushing a flea from
-your neck would have subjected ye to upwards
-of six weeks confinement from all society?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah!” exclaimed I, “if I could have had
-any anticipation of such a result, he might
-have sucked my blood till now.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I was in a terrible fright,” rejoined my
-friend, “that they were going to stop its
-circulation at once.”</p>
-
-<p>“It would have been one of the most
-unjustifiable murders ever committed,” returned
-I.</p>
-
-<p>“That may be all very true,” added my
-companion; “but what compensation would
-the act of injustice have been to you?”</p>
-
-<p>“None,” replied I.</p>
-
-<p>“There have been innumerable such-like
-mistakes committed,” said Trimbush, “and
-never discovered. Fortunately for you, the
-suspected had the benefit of the doubt.”</p>
-
-<p>“I consider that the Squire was far too
-hasty in his decision regarding myself,”
-responded I.</p>
-
-<p>“The convicted always think so,” rejoined
-the old hound. “However,” continued he,
-“I quite agree in the same opinion. There
-was sufficient cause for fearful apprehension,
-and it was impossible to calculate the amount
-of the calamity. But I do not think that any
-kind of fear should be allowed to exaggerate
-an injury. To observe sedulous care in
-preventing its extension is most wise and
-prudent. At the same time, if a hasty panic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
-overrules the cooler judgment, the engendered
-evil may on evil’s head accumulate ten-fold.
-Our master was decidedly wrong in contemplating
-having you destroyed with such slight
-evidence of questionable inoculation; but he
-was quite right in ordering you to be drafted
-from the rest. The one was an unweighed,
-ill-judged impulse&mdash;the other, a wise precaution.”</p>
-
-<p>“A distinction, with a material difference,”
-I observed.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied he, “beyond the shadow of
-a doubt. I once heard,” resumed my friend,
-“of a M. F. H. having his entire pack
-destroyed, in consequence of a couple-and-a-half
-showing symptoms of hydrophobia&mdash;or,
-as we should say, in more intelligible
-language, a dread of water. Nothing could be
-more wanton or unjustifiable, and as well
-might an entire community of human beings
-be doomed to perish in consequence of one or
-more of its members becoming insane, as fifty
-or sixty couple of hounds, from the same
-cause.”</p>
-
-<p>“Were there any other doubtful cases
-besides myself?” I inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” replied Trimbush. “All were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
-turned over with the greatest scrutiny; but
-nothing suspicious appearing, we were
-allowed to remain as we were, with a great
-additional watch being kept over us. In fact,
-Mark, or Will Sykes, was always close by
-for a long time after Gameboy’s death; and
-if a hound growled even in his dream, one or
-the other was at hand in a moment. I never
-saw greater vigilance; and I can’t help
-thinking that the two kept an eye open for
-weeks in their sleep.”</p>
-
-<p>The tramp of three horses approaching the
-kennel door put an end to this, our first
-conversation since the fatal occurrence of
-Gameboy’s death.</p>
-
-<p>“Let ’em out, Mark,” said a well-known
-voice, and as the feeder threw back the door,
-we scrambled from the court, and ran and
-jumped in sportive circles about the horses.
-Although in the highest state of excitement,
-every tongue was mute, and a slight crack
-from Tom Holt’s whip put a considerable
-check to the rather violent gambols of a few of
-the youngest. It was not quite daylight as
-we trotted along between three and four miles;
-and as we entered a gate at the end of a
-by-lane, who should be standing with his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
-reins over his arm, and leaning carelessly
-against the side of his horse, but our “up-with-the-lark”
-and excellent master.</p>
-
-<p>“You are behind your time, William,”
-said he, throwing himself into his saddle.</p>
-
-<p>“Begging your pardon, sir,” replied the
-huntsman, tugging at the curb chain securing
-his thick watch in a very deep fob, “I think
-not.”</p>
-
-<p>“By seven minutes,” rejoined his master.</p>
-
-<p>“Quite right, sir,” added Will, looking at
-his apoplectic time-keeper. “Seven minutes
-have given me the slip.”</p>
-
-<p>“No matter,” returned the Squire; “we
-have scarcely light enough as it is.”</p>
-
-<p>The narrow zig-zag lane led on to a large
-open grass field, on the borders of which was
-one of the best and strongest covers in our
-country.</p>
-
-<p>“Who has examined this cover?” asked
-the Squire.</p>
-
-<p>“Tom Holt, sir,” replied the huntsman.</p>
-
-<p>“Where did you find most billets?”</p>
-
-<p>“In the field beyond this, sir,” replied the
-whipper-in, with a touch of his cap.</p>
-
-<p>“Very good,” rejoined his master. “Then
-take them there, William,” continued he,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
-“and let the puppies see the old hounds feel
-for the scent.”</p>
-
-<p>No sooner were we in the field spoken of by
-Tom Holt, than, stooping my nose to the
-ground, I inhaled that scent, which, from
-the first, sent my blood tingling through my
-whole body. Several began to hustle, push,
-and fling themselves about, and one, named
-Harbinger, threw his tongue.</p>
-
-<p>“So-oftly, Harbinger, so-oftly,” said
-Will. “You’re as noisy as ever, I see.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s incorrigible,” replied the Squire.
-“Put him away.”</p>
-
-<p>“We shall cure him after a few more
-trials, sir, I hope,” rejoined the huntsman,
-who could never bear to have one of us
-destroyed.</p>
-
-<p>“He should have been cured before this,”
-rejoined his master, “and if not removed, he
-will render others as bad as himself. I hate
-a noisy hound,” continued he, “and I’m
-certain no drilling will stop Harbinger from
-riot and babbling. There is no vice so contagious
-and injurious as the one he possesses
-and persists in; and to use further forbearance
-in retaining him in the pack would be
-most unwise. You know, last season, that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-after being flogged three times in one day for
-riot at hare, he repeated the fault whenever
-he had the chance and thought the whips
-could not get at him.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s to go, then, sir?” said Will.</p>
-
-<p>“The sooner the better,” replied the
-Squire. “I wish to have my hounds so
-perfect, that if any one of them speaks in
-cover, you may be certain that it’s a fox, and
-know that he may be cheered without fear of
-a mistake. Unless this be the case, what
-pleasure can there be to me, as their master,
-or satisfaction to you, as their huntsman?”</p>
-
-<p>Will gave no answer, and to account for the
-obstinate Harbinger’s fate, all I can say is,
-that he was led from the kennel the following
-day, with a coil of rope round his neck.</p>
-
-<p>We now carried the drag into the cover,
-and Trimbush and myself acknowledged the
-scent. Will gave us a cheer that startled
-many a pigeon from her roost, and Tom Holt
-and Ned Adams spurred right and left, with
-orders to head short back every fox that made
-his appearance. We got up to our cub, and
-drove him through the cover at a slashing
-rate. The morning being warm, and the
-scent good, there was no breathing time, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-the pace soon began to tell upon the family of
-foxes, which we were now racing in divided
-lots.</p>
-
-<p>“How many of them are there?” inquired
-the Squire.</p>
-
-<p>“Not less than two brace and a half, sir,”
-replied the huntsman.</p>
-
-<p>“Very good,” rejoined his master. “Let
-the vixen go if she will.”</p>
-
-<p>He then galloped towards Tom Holt, and
-just as he was about cracking his whip, a
-signal from the Squire stopped him.</p>
-
-<p>“Come from this corner,” said he, “and
-let the old one go, and as soon as these hounds
-come out with the scent, stop them, and take
-them to William.”</p>
-
-<p>Scarcely were the instructions given, when
-the vixen took advantage of the opportunity,
-and broke away at her best pace. The lot
-settled to her were stopped, and taken to the
-huntsman at the top of a ride, in about the
-middle of the cover.</p>
-
-<p>Being joined in one body, we now pressed
-our cub most severely; and I viewed him cross
-two or three rides with his red rag out, in a
-truly sinking condition.</p>
-
-<p>“This cub is very much distressed, sir,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-observed the huntsman, “and if they don’t
-get one of the others up, for they have all
-dropped but this, they’ll soon run into him.”</p>
-
-<p>I now heard a succession of cracks from a
-thong, which I knew to be Ned Adams’s.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s headed a fox back,” said Trimbush,
-exultingly, “but it isn’t our hunted one.
-He’s out&mdash;come along.”</p>
-
-<p>A bunch of us swept from the side of the
-cover, and with heads up, dashed across a
-field, before Will was aware that we had got
-away.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re out, by heaven!” exclaimed the
-huntsman. “Where can Ned be?”</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” returned the Squire. “They
-broke from the side, and no one’s to blame.”</p>
-
-<p>We carried the scent through the first hedge
-into a summerland, and threw up. Will,
-coming up, took hold of us rather hastily, and
-cast us down wind.</p>
-
-<p>“Gently, William, gently,” said his
-master, reprovingly. “You appear to have
-forgotten the golden rule of letting them
-alone.”</p>
-
-<p>We felt down wind for some distance, but
-not making it out, turned up, and as we were
-passing the spot where we had jumped<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
-through the hedge, a thought struck me that
-the cub might be skulking in the ditch on the
-other side. Popping my nose down, I dropped
-into it, and finding instantly that I was right,
-I rushed through the brambles, and just as he
-was about to spring out, I caught him across
-a tender part, and with one pinch he was as
-dead as a salt herring.</p>
-
-<p>“Who-whoop!” hallooed the Squire.
-“Who-whoop, my beauty!”</p>
-
-<p>To the envy of most of my companions, I
-received great praise for this kill from our
-master, who seemed not to know how to make
-enough of me on our road home.</p>
-
-<p>“Yo-o, Ringwood!” cried he, throwing
-me a bit of biscuit from his pocket. “Yo-o,
-Ringwood, darling,” and then turning to
-Will, said, “What a mercy such a hound as
-that was not destroyed through my haste!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ay, sir,” returned the huntsman, with a
-knowing shake of the head. “If we have as
-good, we’ve none better.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks to my instructions,” growled
-Trimbush.</p>
-
-<p>“Come, come,” said I, “don’t be jealous
-of the little praise I’m getting. You receive
-your share.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Jealous?” repeated my companion, with
-a proud lash of his stern, “I flatter myself
-that I can afford to be <em>generous</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>Seeing, however, that he was a little
-annoyed at the attention I received, I said
-nothing more, but jogged in silence by the side
-of the Squire’s horse.</p>
-
-<p>“By the way,” said our master, addressing
-Will, “in speaking of haste, let this
-morning be another lesson to you not to take
-your hounds off their noses with a sinking
-fox. More are lost by that than by any
-other mistake committed. There was every
-probability of your leaving your fox behind in
-the ditch, and then you would have said that
-he had headed back to cover. A fresh one
-would have been got up, and the error
-remained undiscovered. Countless foxes,
-booked safe to die, are changed in this
-manner, and escape from no other reason than
-from taking hounds off their noses. Remember
-this, William.”</p>
-
-<p>The huntsman touched his cap, and the
-conversation dropped.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“For aught I see they are as sick that</div>
-<div class="verse">Surfeit with too much, as they that starve with</div>
-<div class="verse">Nothing.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>We had just finished our breakfast one
-morning, and were lying about the court to
-assist digestion, when I chanced to remark
-that I considered the flesh not quite so nicely
-cooked as usual.</p>
-
-<p>“Your palate must be out of order,”
-returned Trimbush. “Mark is as good a
-boiler as ever heated a copper.”</p>
-
-<p>“Still the material might have been
-tough,” said I, “and consequently required
-longer boiling.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think not,” rejoined my friend, with a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
-smack of his lips. “My taste may be
-depended upon in such important matters.”</p>
-
-<p>“A great deal of one’s comfort depends
-upon the cook,” I observed.</p>
-
-<p>“Beyond conception,” emphatically replied
-the old hound. “In addition to
-which,” he continued, “we can’t perform
-our duties unless properly kept. The meal
-must be good and old, the flesh well but not
-over-boiled, and the broth rich and sweet to
-enable us to kill foxes handsomely. Our
-strength, speed, and wind, depend upon the
-feeding.”</p>
-
-<p>“No doubt about it,” coincided I.</p>
-
-<p>“I remember,” resumed my friend,
-“hearing a scientific opinion given on this
-important subject to us from a thorough-going
-sportsman of the name of Cecil. In a
-few words I think more was never spoken.”</p>
-
-<p>“If not too much trouble,” said I, “it
-would gratify me to hear it repeated.”</p>
-
-<p>“A pleased and patient listener,” returned
-Trimbush, “invariably renders me a willing
-speaker.” And after settling himself in a
-position of the greatest ease, he commenced
-the following philosophical dissertation on
-catering for foxhounds:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“It is a circumstance very universally
-remarked by masters of hounds, huntsmen,
-and others who are in the habit of making
-observations in the field, that hounds have
-appeared sooner blown when running on
-moist days during this season than usual.
-The cause has evidently arisen from the
-peculiar mildness of the weather. Whenever
-the atmosphere is damp and warm, it contains
-a less quantity of oxygen than when it is dry,
-clear, and bracing, and the effect on the
-respiratory organs of all animals when
-brought into active exertion is very apparent.
-Hounds have been observed to lap water when
-going to covert more freely on some occasions
-than others, which is also a symptom of the
-effect of the atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p>“Liebig’s very clever work may be consulted
-to advantage, to ascertain how and
-why certain causes and effects in the animal
-economy are produced; but as many persons
-who may be interested on the subject have not
-an opportunity of procuring it, I will
-introduce a few abbreviated extracts, which
-are most particularly connected with the
-effects of food and the peculiar conditions of
-the atmosphere.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Liebig says, ‘Two animals, which in
-equal times take up by means of the lungs
-and skin<a name="FNanchor_2" id="FNanchor_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> unequal quantities of oxygen,
-consume quantities of the same nourishment
-which are unequal in the same ratio.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a name="Footnote_2" id="Footnote_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> As hounds do not perspire through the skin, I
-apprehend they do not consume oxygen through
-that medium: hence a reason why the efforts of
-the lungs are so laborious when protracted exertions
-call them into increased action.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“‘The consumption of oxygen in equal
-times may be expressed by the number of
-respirations: it is clear that in the same
-individual the quantity of nourishment
-required must vary with the force and
-number of the respirations.</p>
-
-<p>“‘A child, in whom the organs of respiration
-are naturally very active, requires food
-oftener than an adult, and bears hunger less
-easily. A bird deprived of food dies on the
-third day, while a serpent, with its sluggish
-respiration, can live without food three
-months or longer.</p>
-
-<p>“‘The number of respirations is less in a
-state of rest than during exercise or work.
-The quantity of food necessary in both
-conditions must vary in the same ratio.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“‘The quantity of oxygen inspired is also
-affected by the temperature and density of
-the atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p>“‘It is no difficult matter in warm
-climates to study moderation in eating, and
-men can bear hunger for a long time under the
-Equator, but cold and hunger united very
-soon exhaust the body.’</p>
-
-<p>“Liebig also states, ‘That the quantity of
-food is regulated by the number of respirations,
-by the temperature of the air, and by
-the amount of heat given off to the surrounding
-medium.’</p>
-
-<p>“From the foregoing remarks, it will be
-seen how great an influence food has upon
-animals called upon to exert such violent
-labour as foxhounds are. The comparisons
-of the duration of life, when deprived of
-food, between the bird and the serpent, I
-apprehend, relates to birds whose nature it
-is to feed upon grain only, because the
-carnivorous birds live much longer without
-food, their respiration being slower: and I
-infer by this that the power of endurance in
-hounds, and their perfection of wind and
-condition, are regulated by feeding them with
-a due proportion of flesh, which, prepared by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
-being boiled, is converted at once into blood.</p>
-
-<p>“All animals partaking of a mixed diet,
-partly of grain, will be greatly influenced in
-their respiratory organs by the proportions
-which are given to them and the state of the
-atmosphere. The quality of the blood being
-regulated by the quantity and the quality of
-food consumed, its capability of passing
-through the lungs is governed. When an
-animal has partaken largely of food which
-renders the blood of that character as to cause
-the consumption of a great quantity of oxygen
-in its passage through the lungs, and the
-atmosphere is deficient of that important gas&mdash;which
-is always the case in close damp
-weather, such as is occasionally experienced
-during the winter&mdash;it follows, as a matter of
-course, that hounds, and all such animals,
-will quickly evince symptoms of distress, or,
-familiarly speaking, will become blown, as the
-causes which produce that effect predominate.</p>
-
-<p>“In hot climates man consumes very little,
-if any, animal food; in cold ones, scarcely
-anything else: and the Esquimaux will partake
-of blubber, animal oils, or fat&mdash;a food
-nauseating and disgusting to the people of
-another climate.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“With these facts it becomes apparent
-how the quantity and quality of food require
-to be regulated by circumstances, especially
-on the day before hunting.</p>
-
-<p>“There are few, if any, masters of hounds
-or huntsmen who are not aware of the
-necessity of giving small proportions of flesh
-during the warm weather at the commencement
-of the season, and again in the spring,
-when such a condition of the atmosphere
-generally prevails as that which we so
-universally experience during the months of
-November, December, and January. Without
-a certain proportion of flesh, it is well
-known that hounds cannot work; that is to
-say, they cannot go through the fatigues of a
-quick burst or a protracted chase; at the same
-time, too large a quantity will render them
-gross and plethoric, consequently incapable of
-exertion.</p>
-
-<p>“As the quality of the food depends in a
-very great degree upon the manner in which
-it is prepared, that becomes a subject worthy
-of considerable attention. It is a practice in
-many kennels to boil the flesh to a most
-unnecessary and prejudicial extent, but it is a
-custom which cannot be too strongly objected<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
-to. Flesh over-boiled is divested of its
-nutritive properties in a very great degree.
-It may be remarked by some, those who are
-advocates for excessive boiling, that if the
-nutritive properties are extracted from the
-flesh, they are contained in the broth, and <em>that</em>
-broth being given to the hounds, the nutritious
-principles are still preserved&mdash;an argument
-which I can by no means agree to.</p>
-
-<p>“Like man, the hound is found to thrive
-best upon food composed of flesh and grain
-combined, consequently a comparison between
-the two may with propriety be introduced.
-When a man undergoes the ordeal of training
-for an athletic engagement, the animal food
-which he partakes of is only subject to the
-process of cooking in a moderate degree;
-overdone meat is studiously avoided. To the
-valetudinarian broth is prescribed as affording
-light nourishment with a moderate
-expenditure of the powers of digestion, but
-is never called in aid to form a principal
-portion of the aliment for the human subject
-at a time when great exertion is required. It
-is always found that broth creates thirst with
-us, and there is no doubt it has the same
-effect on the hound when given to a great extent,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
-more especially when made very strong.</p>
-
-<p>“I must observe, that I am by no means
-about to recommend the disuse of broth in the
-kennel; but I wish to point out the propriety
-of giving it in moderate quantities, and of
-depending upon the flesh which is given for
-containing the bulk of nourishment, and
-giving it in that state when it contains the
-greatest quantity. It is an impression with
-some huntsmen, that by boiling the flesh to
-an excessive degree, the bad qualities are
-extracted&mdash;that is to say, if the horse had any
-disease about him, that the humours would be
-extracted from the flesh; but then it must be
-remembered that they would be contained in
-the broth, in which state they would be quite
-as injurious, or perhaps more so.</p>
-
-<p>“At the time when an animal is performing
-great exertion, it is essentially requisite that
-his stomach should contain but a small
-quantity of food, but that food should be of a
-nutritious character and easy of digestion.
-The practice that I would recommend, and it
-is one borne out by the reasons already
-assigned, as well as by experiment, is, not to
-give hounds any broth at all in their food
-<em>on the day before</em> hunting.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“The pudding must be reduced with pure
-water which has been boiled, and the usual
-allowance, or perhaps, on some occasions, a
-trifling addition to the accustomed portion of
-flesh must of course be given; by this method
-of feeding, hounds will most assuredly do
-their work far better than when a quantity
-of broth with very little or no flesh is given;
-a custom adopted in some kennels with very
-bad results. From such treatment, hounds
-will be observed light of muscle, big in their
-bodies, and incapable of running up at the
-conclusion of a severe day. By adopting the
-recommendation of substituting water which
-has been boiled, for broth, on the day before
-hunting, it will be found that hounds will not
-evince an equal degree of thirst by constantly
-lapping on their road to cover, nor will they
-be so soon blown in chase.”</p>
-
-<p>“There,” ejaculated Trimbush, upon the
-completion of his task, “that’s what I call
-giving the ‘why’s’ for all the ‘wherefores.’”</p>
-
-<p>Clever and philosophical as I deemed this
-delivery to be, I had become somewhat
-wearied with it, and in order to divert my
-companion from steeping his senses in forgetfulness,
-which his blinking eyelids bore<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
-evidence was fast approaching, I asked him
-if he had ever turned his attention to the
-poetry as well as to the practical details of
-hunting.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean?” inquired Trimbush,
-with a sleepy stare of surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“Simply, whether you have made the
-attempt of earning for yourself that fame,”
-replied I, “which I intend gaining for
-myself?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m quite in the dark,” rejoined my
-companion, testily.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then,” returned I, “to be more
-explicit, I mean to let my tongue appear <em>in
-print</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>“In print!” exclaimed Trimbush, husky
-with surprise. “How?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah,” added I, quoting an early reply to
-one of my interrogatories, “there are many
-things as clear to our vision as the sunshine
-at noon, and yet their causes are hid in
-impenetrable darkness.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, well!” added my friend, “I
-don’t wish to appear inquisitive, but if you
-should mix me up in your&mdash;your&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t say book,” remarked I. “It
-sounds so gent-like.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Anything you please,” said Trimbush.
-“But as I was about saying,” continued he,
-“if you should come out so powerfully strong,
-perhaps you’d make room for a little slice of
-an attempt at a song upon our worthy master&mdash;God
-bless him!”</p>
-
-<p>“Of your composing?” inquired I.</p>
-
-<p>Trimbush coughed, licked his paws,
-examined the tip of his stern, as if a flea was
-taking a liberty in that quarter, but gave no
-answer.</p>
-
-<p>I repeated the question.</p>
-
-<p>“As you <em>will</em> have it,” he rejoined,
-pettishly, “then it <em>is</em> my composition.”</p>
-
-<p>“I feel assured that you need not be
-ashamed of it,” returned I. “Pray let me
-hear the effusion.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll not laugh?” said he, inquiringly.</p>
-
-<p>“Not if the intent be serious,” I replied.</p>
-
-<p>“In that case,” rejoined Trimbush, “here
-goes!” and in a subdued, melodious voice, he
-commenced his original song of</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<p class="center">THE OLD HUNTING SQUIRE.</p>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">I’ll sing you a sporting song that was made by a sporting pate,</div>
-<div class="verse">Of a fine old hunting Squire, who has a fine estate,</div>
-<div class="verse">And who keeps his hounds and hunters at a liberal old rate,</div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-<div class="verse">And plenty gives to the poor and old who enter at his gate;</div>
-<div class="verse">Like a fine old hunting Squire, one of the present day.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">His custom is, when at the Meet, to welcome great and small,</div>
-<div class="verse">And a hearty greeting gives he to friends and neighbours all;</div>
-<div class="verse">’Tis here the laugh and joke and jest right merrily go round,</div>
-<div class="verse">“But hark, my boys! pray, cease your noise; for now sly Reynard’s found!”</div>
-<div class="verse">Cries our fine old hunting Squire, one of the present day.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Although threescore and ten his years, he boldly takes the lead,</div>
-<div class="verse">And flies the gate, the brook, and wall, and sweeps along the mead;</div>
-<div class="verse">He never swerves nor cranes&mdash;not he; his true heart’s in the sport.</div>
-<div class="verse">Oh! our fine old hunting Squire is one of the right sort!</div>
-<div class="verse">A fine old hunting Squire, one of the present day.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">From scent to view they run him now, in vain fleet Reynard flies,</div>
-<div class="verse">The ringing pack have doomed his death&mdash;he struggles, but he dies!</div>
-<div class="verse">And at the finish who was there? Why he who at the burst</div>
-<div class="verse">Led the boldest and the best, in the foremost flight was first&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Our fine old hunting Squire, one of the present day.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>“A beautiful chaunt!” ejaculated I,
-pleased with the sporting rhyme, “and one
-which shall have place in ‘The Life of a Foxhound.’”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Having doubtlessly made every note of
-value which could be drawn from his experience,
-Ringwood’s memoir here ends from
-want of material, and the earnest disposition
-on the part of his biographer of wishing to
-prove neither monotonous nor wearisome. It
-was deemed by that wise hound that a history
-or tale, when told, should, like a fox, when
-killed, be broken up and finished. To this,
-therefore, we will give an appropriate one in
-a ringing</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Who-whoop!</span></p>
-
-<hr class="r15" />
-
-<p class="center larger">THE END.</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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