THE SPORTING WORLD. 17 



their devoting the short time they have for recreation 

 to any thing bordering on Field Sports; habit be- 

 comes second nature, they have their agremens, 

 the Marquis of Waterford can have no more, and 

 though there is as wide a difference in the amuse- 

 ments and pursuits of the two, as we may 

 infer there is in the men, each is satisfied. So in 

 language now obsolete, we may say, "all right." 

 The great error of persons is, each finds 

 fault with what the other does if the act of the 

 one differs from that of the other; nothing can 

 be so preposterous. The Noble Marquis is quite 

 in place at a meet of his fox hounds, and 

 doubly so if the meet happens to be near the 

 hospitable portals of Curraghmore. The City 

 Man quite in place at the Cock in Fleet Street, 

 sipping his grog, talking o-ver the scarceness of 

 money, or, let us be particular in technicalities, 

 the "tightness" of the money market, or the 

 few or large imports, as the case may be, of 

 Russian Tallow; the absurdity would be in the 



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