24 RADNOR REMINISCENCES 



Three foxes were on foot. The first, from Kirk's Wood, 

 crossed the Goshen Road into Mr. Cuyler's, and hounds, 

 being put to their noses, carried him over into Mr. Charl- 

 ton Yarnall's, where scent failed completely. 



The second was viewed away from Bill Evans's Wood, 

 when hounds pushed him over the meadows with a hold- 

 ing scent, on up the hill on the White Horse Farm to Cath- 

 cart's Rocks, where they marked him under. 



The third was a home-loving beast, for, after making 

 three complete turns from end to end of the Malvern 

 Barrens, hounds finally pushed him out the lower side, 

 going at a good clip to Evans's Wood, swinging right- 

 handed to Fairy Hill, out the north end and across the 

 Bryn Clovis Dairy Farm, when hounds pushed him back 

 to the Barrens and to earth in just an hour. 



Besides the two Masters, Horace B. Hare and Samuel 

 Kirk, there were: Fred and Mrs. Sturges; Ben Chew; Alex- 

 ander Wheeler; Alex. Brown; John Converse; Dave and 

 Mrs. Sharp; Mrs. Howard Henry; John Fell; Ned and 

 Mrs. Blabon; Ben Holland; Clyde John; Henry and Mrs. 

 Collins; Frank Lloyd; and Alex. Grange. 



Tuesday, 2yd December, 1913 

 Although Goshen School is our farthest up-country meet, 

 it ranks next in popularity with White Horse; but, as luck 

 will have it, it nearly always is cold as blazes, or rains, or 

 something, when hounds meet there, to make a long, long 

 hack home seem just that much longer. 



But, instead of that, let's think of the delights of riding 

 home with some charming girl, who is just as wet and 

 cold as you are, but who does n't seem to mind it; and, as 

 Sabretache in "The Tatler" says: "But what if your nose 

 is all scratched, your thumb sprained and your knees all 



