26 Ha7'k Away, 



Club ; whilst amongst the members, numbering 

 somewhere about fifty in all, the following are 

 staunch supporters of this fashionable pastime. The 

 Marquis of Worcester, who follows closely in the 

 footsteps of his father, being equally good on the 

 bench as he is with the horn ; Lord Arthur Somer- 

 set, a first-class coachman ; the Marquis of Water- 

 ford, who, though he does not go the pace like the 

 Marquis of olden times, is an equally good coach- 

 man as that celebrated performer, even if he is a 

 little more steady and subdued ; Count Miinster, 

 who sets an example to all foreigners of distinction 

 by the style in which he coaches his magnificent 

 team of chesnuts ; Lord Macduff, who handles the 

 ribbons in good form; Lord Cole, an artist of the 

 first water, who coaches his team right well ; Lord 

 Abingdon, Lord Poltimore, the Earl of Bective, Lord 

 Charles Beresford, the Marquis of Blandford, the 

 Earl of Craven, Viscount Helmsley, Lord Muncaster, 

 Lord Tredegar, Sir George Wombwell, Mr. Henry 

 Chaplin, Captain J. Anstruther Thompson, the well- 

 known welter weight and most popular M. F. H. ; 

 Colonel Tyrwhitt, one of the most able judges that 

 ever sat on the bench — of a four-in-hand; Colonel 

 Dickson, Sir Henry Tufton. Sir John Lister Kaye, 

 Colonel Ewart, Sir Henry Meysey-Thompson, who is 

 to be seen in the first flight of those hailing from 

 Melton during the hunting season ; Colonel Owen 

 Williams, whose turn-out is always of the first 

 order; Colonel Chaplin, Captain Percival, Sir T. 

 Peyton, Captain Whitmore, Mr. A. Hope, Sir Law- 

 rence Palk, Mr. W. E. Oakley, the Hon. L. Agar- 

 Ellis, Colonel Stracey Clitheroe, well known " down 



