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Authors: Anthony Trollope

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On the farther side of the field, beyond the brook, there was a
little spinny, and for half a minute the hounds came to a check. ‘Give 'em time, sir, give 'em time,' said Morgan to Frank, speaking in full good-humour, with no touch of Monday's savagery. ‘Wind him, Bolton; Beaver's got it. Very good thing, my lady, isn't it? Now, Carstairs, if you're going to 'unt the fox, you'd better 'unt him.' Carstairs was the horsey man – and one with whom Morgan very often quarrelled. ‘That's it, my hearties' and Morgan was across a broken wall in a moment, after the leading hounds. ‘Are we to go on?' said Lizzie, who feared much that Lucinda would get ahead of her. There was a matter of three dozen horsemen up now, and, as far as Lizzie saw, the whole thing might have to be done again. In hunting, to have ridden is the pleasure; – and not simply to have ridden well, but to have ridden better than others. ‘I call it very awkward ground,' said Mrs Carbuncle, coming up. ‘It can't be compared to the Baron's country.' ‘Stone walls four feet and a half high, and well built, are awkward,' said the noble master.

But the hounds were away again, and Lizzie had got across the gap before Lucinda, who, indeed, made way for her hostess with a haughty politeness which was not lost upon Lizzie. Lizzie could not stop to beg pardon, but she would remember to do it in her prettiest way on their journey home. They were now on a track of open country, and the pace was quicker even than before. The same three men were still leading, Morgan, Greystock, and Carstairs. Carstairs had slightly the best of it; and of course Morgan swore afterwards that he was among the hounds the whole run. ‘The scent was that good, there wasn't no putting of ‘em off; – no thanks to him,' said Morgan. ‘I 'ate to see 'em galloping, galloping, galloping, with no more eye to the 'ounds than a pig. Any idiot can gallop, if he's got it under him.' All which only signified that Jack Morgan didn't like to see any of his field before him. There was need, indeed, now for galloping, and it may be doubted whether Morgan himself was not doing his best. There were about five or six in the second flight, and among these Lord George and Lizzie were well placed. But Lucinda had pressed again ahead. ‘Miss Roanoke had better have a care, or she'll blow her horse,' Lord George said. Lizzie didn't mind what happened to Miss
Roanoke's horse, so that it could be made to go a little slower and fall behind. But Lucinda still pressed on, and her animal went with a longer stride than Lizzie's horse.

They now crossed a road, descending a hill, and were again in a close country. A few low hedges seemed as nothing to Lizzie. She could see her cousin gallop over them ahead of her, as though they were nothing and her own horse, as he came to them, seemed to do exactly the same. On a sudden they found themselves abreast with the huntsman. ‘There's a biggish brook below there, my lord,' said he. Lizzie was charmed to hear it. Hitherto she had jumped all the big things so easily, that it was a pleasure to hear of them. ‘How are we to manage it?' asked Lord George. ‘It is rideable, my lord but there's a place about half a mile down. Let's see how'll they head. Drat it, my lord, they've turned up, and we must have it or go back to the road.' Morgan hurried on, showing that he meant to ‘have' it, as did also Lucinda. ‘shall we go to the road?' said Lord George. ‘No, no!' said Lizzie. Lord George looked at her and at her horse, and then galloped after the huntsman and Lucinda. The horsey man, with the well-bred screw, was first over the brook. The little animal could take almost any amount of water, and his rider knew the spot. ‘He'll do it like a bird' he had said to Greystock, and Greystock had followed him. Mr Mac-Farlane's hired horse did do it like a bird. I know him, sir,' said Carstairs. ‘Mr Nappie gave £ 250 for him down in Northamptonshire last February; – bought him of Mr Percival. You know, Mr Percival, sir?' Frank knew neither Mr Percival nor Mr Nappie, and at this moment cared nothing for either of them. To him, at this moment, Mr MacFarlane, of Buchanan Street, Glasgow, was the best friend he ever had.

Morgan, knowing well the horse he rode, dropped him into the brook, floundered and half swam through the mud and water, and scrambled out safely on the other side. ‘He wouldn't have jumped it with me, if I'd asked him ever so,' he said afterwards. Lucinda rode at it, straight as an arrow, but her brute came to a dead balk, and, but that she sat well, would have thrown her into the stream. Lord George let Lizzie take the leap before he took it, knowing that if there were misfortune, he might so best render help. To Lizzie
it seemed as though the river were the blackest, and the deepest, and the broadest that ever ran. For a moment her heart quailed; – but it was but for a moment. She shut her eyes, and gave the little horse his head. For a moment she thought that she was in the water. Her horse was almost upright on the bank, with his hind-feet down among the broken ground, and she was clinging to his neck. But she was light, and the beast made good his footing, and then she knew that she had done it. In that moment of the scramble her heart had been so near her mouth that she was almost choked. When she looked round, Lord George was already by her side. ‘You hardly gave him powder enough,'
2
he said, ‘but still he did it beautifully. Good heavens! Miss Roanoke is in the river.' Lizzie looked back, and there, in truth, was Lucinda struggling with her horse in the water. They paused a moment, and then there were three or four men assisting her. ‘Come on,' said Lord George; –'there are plenty to take her out, and we couldn't get to her if we stayed.'

‘I ought to stop,' said Lizzie.

‘You couldn't get back if you gave your eyes for it,' said Lord George. ‘She's all right.' So instigated, Lizzie followed her leader up the hill, and in a minute was close upon Morgan's heels.

The worst of doing a big thing out hunting is the fact that in nine cases out of ten they who don't do it are as well off as they who do. If there were any penalty for riding round, or any mark given to those who had ridden straight – so that justice might in some sort be done – it would perhaps be better. When you have nearly broken your neck to get to hounds, or made your horse exert himself beyond his proper power, and then find yourself, within three minutes, overtaking the hindmost ruck of horsemen on a road because of some iniquitous turn that the fox has taken, the feeling is not pleasant. And some man who has not ridden at all, who never did ride at all, will ask you where you have been; and his smile will give you the lie in your teeth if you make any attempt to explain the facts. Let it be sufficient for you at such a moment to feel that you are not ashamed of yourself. Self-respect will support a man even in such misery as this.

The fox on this occasion, having crossed the river, had not left
its bank, but had turned from his course up the stream, so that the leading spirits who had followed the hounds over the water came upon a crowd of riders on the road in a space something short of a mile. Mrs Carbuncle, among others, was there, and had heard of Lucinda's mishap. She said a word to Lord George in anger, and Lord George answered her. ‘We were over the river before it happened, and if we had given our eyes we couldn't have got to her. Don't you make a fool of yourself!' The last words were spoken in a whisper, but Lizzie's sharp ears caught them.

‘I was obliged to do what I was told,' said Lizzie apologetically.

‘It will be all right, dear Lady Eustace. Sir Griffin is with her. I am so glad you are going so well.'

They were off again now, and the stupid fox absolutely went back across the river. But, whether on one side or on the other, his struggle for life was now in vain. Two years of happy, free existence amidst the wilds of Craigattan had been allowed him. Twice previously had he been ‘found' and the kindly storm or not less beneficent brightness of the sun had enabled him to baffle his pursuers. Now there had come one glorious day, and the common lot of mortals must be his. A little spurt there was, back towards his own home – just enough to give something of selectness to the few who saw him fall – and then he fell. Among the few were Frank, and Lord George, and our Lizzie. Morgan was there, of course, and one of his whips. Of Ayrshire folk, perhaps five or six, and among them our friend, Carstairs. They had run him down close to the outbuildings of a farmyard, and they broke him up in the home paddock.

‘What do you think of hunting?' said Frank to his cousin.

‘It's divine!'

‘My cousin went pretty well, I think' he said to Lord George.

‘Like a celestial bird of Paradise. No one ever went better; – or I believe so well. You've been carried rather nicely yourself.'

‘Indeed I have' said Frank, patting his still palpitating horse, ‘and he's not to say tired now.'

‘You've taken it pretty well out of him, sir,' said Carstairs. ‘There was a little bit of a hill that told when we got over the brook. I know'd you'd find he'd jump a bit.'

‘I wonder whether he's to be bought?' asked Frank in his enthusiasm.

‘I don't know the horse that isn't,' said Mr Carstairs – ‘so long as you don't stand at the figure.'

They were collected on the farm road, and now, as they were speaking, there was a commotion among the horses. A man, driving a little buggy, was forcing his way along the road, and there was the sound of voices, as though the man in the buggy were angry. And he was very angry. Frank, who was on foot by his horse's head, could see that the man was dressed for hunting, with a bright red coat and a flat hat, and that he was driving the pony with a hunting-whip. The man was talking as he approached, but what he said did not much matter to Frank. It did not much matter to Frank till his new friend, Mr Carstairs, whispered a word in his ear. ‘It's Nappie, by gum!' Then there crept across Frank's mind an idea that there might be trouble coming.

‘There he is,' said Nappie, bringing his pony to a dead stop with a chuck, and jumping out of the buggy. ‘I say – you, sir; you've stole my 'orse!' Frank said not a word, but stood his ground with his hand on the nag's bridle. ‘You've stole my 'orse; you've stole him off the rail. And you've been a-riding him all day. Yes, you 'ave. Did ever anybody see the like of this? Why, the poor beast can't a'most stand!'

‘I got him from Mr MacFarlane.'

‘MacFarlane be blowed! You didn't do nothing of the kind. You stole him off the rail at Stewarton. Yes, you did; – and him booked to Kilmarnock. Where's a police? Who's to stand the like o' this? I say, my lord – just look at this.' A crowd had now been formed round poor Frank, and the master had come up. Mr Nappie was a Huddersfield man, who had come to Glasgow in the course of the last winter, and whose popularity in the hunting-field was not as yet quite so great as it perhaps might have been.

‘There's been a mistake, I suppose,' said the master.

‘Mistake, my lord! Take a man's 'orse off the rail at Stewarton, and him booked to Kilmarnock, and ride him to a standstill! It's no mistake at all. It's 'orse-nobbling; that's what it is. Is there any
police here, sir?' This he said, turning round to a farmer. The farmer didn't deign any reply. ‘Perhaps you'll tell me your name, sir? if you've got a name. No gen'leman ever took a gen'leman's 'orse off the rail like that.'

‘Oh, Frank, do come away,' said Lizzie, who was standing by.

‘We shall be all right in two minutes,' said Frank.

‘No, we shan't,' said Mr Nappie – ‘nor yet in two hours. I've asked what's your name?'

‘My name is – Greystock.'

‘Greystockings,' said Mr Nappie more angrily than ever. ‘I don't believe in no such name. Where do you live?' Then somebody whispered a word to him. ‘Member of Parliament – is he? I don't care a —. A member of Parliament isn't to steal my 'orse off the rail, and him booked to Kilmarnock. Now, my lord, what'd you do if you was served like that?' This was another appeal to the noble master.

‘I should express a hope that my horse had carried the gentleman as he liked to be carried' said the master.

‘And he has, – carried me remarkably well,' said Frank: – whereupon there was a loud laugh among the crowd.

‘I wish he'd broken the infernal neck of you, you scoundrel, you – that's what I do!' said Mr Nappie. ‘There was my man, and my 'orse, and myself all booked from Glasgow to Kilmarnock; and when I got there what did the guard say to me? – why, just that a man in a black coat had taken my horse off at Stewarton; and now I've been driving all about the country in that gig for three hours!' When Mr Nappie had got so far as this in his explanation he was almost in tears. ‘I'll make 'im pay, that I will. Take your hand off my horse's bridle, sir. Is there any gentleman here as would like to give two hundred and eighty guineas for a horse, and then have him rid to a standstill by a fellow like that down from London. If you're in Parliament, why don't you stick to Parliament? I don't suppose he's worth fifty pound at this moment.'

Frank had all the while been endeavouring to explain the accident; how he had ordered a horse from Mr MacFarlane, and the rest of it – as the reader will understand; but quite in vain. Mr Nappie
in his wrath would not hear a word. But now that he spoke about money, Frank thought that he saw an opening. ‘Mr Nappie,' he said, ‘I'll buy the horse for the price you gave for him.'

‘I'll see you –; extremely well – first,' said Mr Nappie.

The horse had now been surrendered to Mr Nappie, and Frank suggested that he might as well return to Kilmarnock in the gig, and pay for the hire of it. But Mr Nappie would not allow him to set a foot upon the gig. ‘It's my gig for the day,' said he, ‘and you don't touch it. You shall foot it all the way back to Kilmarnock, Mr Greystockings.' But Mr Nappie, in making his threat, forgot that there were gentlemen there with second horses. Frank was soon mounted on one belonging to Lord George, and Lord George's servant, at the corner of the farmyard, got into the buggy, and was driven back to Kilmarnock by the man who had accompanied poor Mr Nappie in their morning's hunt on wheels after the hounds.

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