102 ■ MEMOIR OF 



good-fellowship and sport must have reigned 

 supreme. 



3; Mr. Thomas Bulteel, the " spruce little 

 cousin " of Mr. J. C. Bulteel, a ligUt-weight and 

 a bold rider, whom, when hounds were running 

 hard, no timber could stop, no fence dismay. 



4. Mr. Paul Ourry Treby, of Goodamoor, 

 the well-known " fox-hunter, rough and ready," 

 a classic scholar, and a rare specimen of a 

 high-minded English gentleman. 



5. Mr. Salusbury Trelawny, afterwards Sir 

 William S. Trelawny, a lineal descendant of 

 Jonathan Trelawny, Bishop of Bristol, who, 

 with six other prelates, was sent to the Tower 

 by King James the Second ; an act that gave 

 rise to the patriotic song still sung by Cornish- 

 men with unabated enthusiasm, a verse of 

 which runs thus : 



"And have they fixed the where and when? 

 And shall Trelawny die ? 

 Then twenty thousand Cornishmen 

 Shall know the reason why ! " 



Of Sir William and a hound of his, called 

 Whirligig, Mr. Arthur Harris, of Hayne, records 

 the following interesting anecdote : — 



" According to tradition Whirligig was an 

 extraordinary hound in every way, and it is said 

 that he could kill a fox single-handed. Certain 

 it is that both the hound and his master per- 

 formed feats that old men still love to chronicle. 



