78 SEATS AND SADDLES. 



scent : then, when at fault, the entire ruck of the field 

 have an opportunity of coming up/' &c. &c. 



But what we have to do with is the seat, and not 

 the hunting itself, which has been alluded to merely 

 because the pace has evidently a good deal to do with 

 the form of the seat. For, in fact, men of fifty years 

 old and thereabout can scarcely fail to remember that 

 the length of our saddles has been increasing constantly 

 with the rapidity of the pace ; and although an increase 

 of the bearing surface of the saddle, as has been already 

 shown, is an admirable thing in itself, no great advan- 

 tage is derived, so far as the horse's back is concerned, 

 unless the rider be placed in the centre of the saddle. 

 But oiu- saddles have been lengthened chiefly for the 

 purpose of enabling us to get further away from the 

 stirrup, so as to use this as a point of support, not 

 against falling to the right or left, but to prevent one's 

 being pulled right over the horse's head in fast gallop- 

 ing and jumping ; and thus many riders whose object 

 really is to throw their weight somewhat forward, be- 

 cause this favours speed, actually come to sit almost on 

 the loins of their horses, where they seriously impede 

 the action of the propellers, and are then compelled to 

 throw their body forward in the most inconvenient and 

 unsightly manner.* No doubt if this system were not 

 found to answer the purpose more or less it would 

 scarcely be persevered in. "WTien, however, we find 

 some of the best authorities recommending, and many 

 of the best living riders practising, something very 



* Sir F. Head says, in 'The Horse and his Rider,' p. 33, '-'The 

 generalityof riders are buttooapt to sit on their horsesinthebent 

 attitude of the last paroxysm or exertion which helped them into 

 the saddle, called by Sir Bellingham Graham a wash-ball seat." 



