8o REMINISCENCES OF 



Trelawny, is joined by the friends of Four Burrow 

 Hunt in hunting the moor about Ivybridge for a 

 week. The gathering for 1872 has been celebrated 

 this week. The dinner was held at Mallet's London 

 Hotel. Ivybridge. The company included all the 

 most noted foxhunters of the two counties, and 

 they chose for their president Mr. W. Horndon, 

 who had on his right Mr. C. Trelawny, Captain 

 Anstruther Thomson (late Master of the Pytchley 

 Hunt) and Colonel Coryton ; and on the left Mr. 

 George Williams (Master of the Four Burrow Hunt) 

 and Mr. Edward Scobell. The vice-chair was filled 

 by Mr. W. F. Collier. . . . 



" The chairman gave ' Fox-hunting, and the health 

 of Mr. Trelawny '. Their worthy master had for 

 thirty years been the author of innumerable days 

 of pleasure and diversion to a vast number of people, 

 and secured to them all those advantages which 

 attached to the hunting-field. His name was held 

 in reverence all over the country, and although 

 they were remote from the aristocratic fox-hunting 

 districts, nowhere was the sport followed with more 

 enthusiasm. Towards their worthy master they all 

 had the warmest possible feelings. 



" Mr. Trelawny was received with the most 

 enthusiastic cheering, and said he really felt, as he 

 did always on these occasions, delighted and ex- 

 ceedingly obliged to them for the hearty, cheery 

 manner in which they were so kind as to drink his 

 health. It told him that never, with all the per- 

 plexities of his position, had he seriously hurt any 



