INDEX. 



399 



Establishments, large, conduct of ser- 

 vants in, i. 203. 



Exertion, moderate, improves colts, ii. 

 228. 



Expenses of dealers in getting horses, i. 

 211. 



Experiment as to the effect of weight, 

 ii. 77. 



Fair, scenes in, i. 97. 



Fairs, a gentleman going to buy horses 



at, i. 213. 

 , little trial of a horse allowed at, 



i. 215. 

 , different appearance &c. of horses 



in or out of, i. 215. 

 Fashion, persons of, robbed from their 



inertness, i. 203. 

 Fast horses necessary for harness, i. 



159. 



Fasting hunters, remarks on, ii. 372. 

 Fat, a few hints on, ii. 99. 

 Fear in horses, the first thing to be 



done away with, ii. 197. 

 Fences, blind ones dangerous, i. 180. 



, riding at, i. 42. 



Fencing, teaching a horse, i. 180. 

 Field to field horses, ii. 67. 

 Filho du Purta, descendant of, i. 175. 

 Finishing, the great thing as to win- 

 ning races, ii. 37. 

 Fops not fox-hunters, i. 165. 

 Foreigners, their ideas of equipages, i. 



187. 



Fores, Mr., a sportsman at heart, ii. 27O. 

 Formerdays, and Flatterwell, Mrs., 



i. 35. 

 Fox-hounds and race-horses, expense 



of, i. 21. 



at dinner, i. 144. 



, master of, the right sort, 



i. 33. 

 Fox-hunters, their general character, 



ii. 296. 

 Frenchman, a, falling down stairs, i. 



315. 

 Frenchman's opinion of a good run, 



ii. 367. 



French officer, rough kindness to, ii. 74. 

 Friend, getting one to purchase a 



horse, i. 206. 

 Fright, its lasting effects on horses, 



ii. 209. 



Fun, but not fox-hunting, 5. 157. 

 Furriner, the, in Dublin, i. 307. 



Galloping in harness necessary and 

 judicious, i. 78. 



Galloping in harness relieves horses, 

 i. 79. 



Gamblers will bet, if not on race- 

 horses, i. 18. 



Geldings clear in their wind, i. 149. 



Gentleman, a, in a hayloft, i. 204. 



Gentleman Jock, wasting, i. 134. 



, necessary ingredients to 



make, i. 426. 



Gentleman's gentleman, anecdote of, 

 i. 443. 



Gentlemen as stage coachmen, i. 189. 



commencing dealing, i. 101. 



breeding, expensive mode 



of getting horses, i. 207. 



, chances against their suit- 

 ing themselves at a fair, i. 214. 



dealing in horses, repre- 



hensible, i. 190. 



differently defined by dif- 

 ferent persons, i. 424. 



, gentlemen jocks, &e., i. 



419. 431. 448. 



going to fairs to buy horses, 



i. 213. 



, if good judges, need not 



lose by their horses, i. 246. 



-- lose honourable feelings by 



dealing, i. 102. 



, purchasing of, dangerous, 



i. 190. 



of fortune, breeding horses, 



commendable, i. 249. 



riding with jockies not 



degrading, i. 439. 



seldom served as trades- 



men, i. 189. 

 's attention to delicacy of 



complexion carried to an extremity, 



ii. 142. 

 George the Fourth phaetons, hunting 



in, i. 162. 



George, old, an anecdote, i. 401. 

 German post-boy, anecdote of, i. 25. 

 Gig-horse, trying one, i. 158. 

 Gigs and phaetons travelling together, 



ii. 145. 



Gilbert, General, a jockey, i. 133. 

 Gilpin, the painter, remarks on, ii. 



285. 

 Grass improper as general food for 



racing or hunting colts, ii. 212. 

 Goodness of parents not perpetuated 



in the stock, i. 209. 

 Grass, its effects on the constitution, ii. 



214. 



Greyhound and rabbit speed, i. 146. 

 Greyhounds not ridden, ii. 87. 



