386 



HUNTING. 



HOU 

 merly paid for, 190; bujnng 

 from dealers, 193 ; sympathy 

 of, with his rider, 211 ; his 

 instinct of danger ahead, 216 ; 

 different ways of putting at 

 fences, 219 ; how to be treated 

 by his rider after hunting, 

 224 ; first introduction of the 

 custom of second horses, 231 

 Hounds, Beckford on, and hunts- 

 men, 84 ; term of working life 

 of, 131 ; breeding and rearing 

 of, 131 ; prejudices on the sub- 

 ject of colour, 132 ; dieting, 

 134 ; distemper in, 137 ; life of, 

 in the kennels during the hunt- 

 ing season, 138 ; rounding 

 the ears of, 141 ; securing obe- 

 dience in, ib. ; Somerville's 

 description of a perfect animal, 

 ib. ; the Badminton Potentate, 

 143 ; expenses of a pack, 144 ; 

 to be allowed to eat their fox, 

 150 ; how they should be dealt 

 with by whippers-in, 152 ; 

 singing of, in kennel, 160 ; for 

 otter hunting, 321 ; alpha- 

 betical lists of names of, 362. 

 See also Beagles ; Foxhounds ; 

 Harriers ; and Staghounds 

 Hunting vainly decried, 2 ; 

 literature of, 3 ; restricted in 

 favour of the upper classes by 

 the Danes, 8 ; passion of the 

 Norman kings for, 9 ; de- 

 nounced by John of Salisbury, 

 ib. ; caused suffering to the 

 lower classes, 1 1 ; practice of, by 

 the clergy, ib. ; early participa- 

 tion of ladies in, 12; privileges 

 granted to the citizens of 

 London, 17 ; list of animals 

 formerly appropriate for, 22 ; 



KEN 

 first regular employment ol 

 foxhounds in, 28 ; practised 

 in the metropolitan suburbs, 

 29 ; our ancestors' early hours 

 for beginning, ib.; time of, for 

 the stag, 41 ; value of book- 

 lore in, 119; extravagant ex- 

 penditure not a necessity of, 

 121 ; servants, their duties, 

 145 ; horses for, 174 ; in rela 

 tion to riding, 199 ; rarely 

 attended with casualties to 

 ladies, 217 ; from home, only 

 capable of affording its true 

 pleasures, 276 ; from London, 

 281 ; glossary, 368 ; biblio- 

 graphy, 372. See also Fox- 

 hunting ; Hare-hunting ; and 

 Stag-hunting 



Hunts, lists of, in the United 

 Kingdom, 331 



H untsman, instructions for, when 

 drawing, 146 ; use of the horn 

 by, 147 ; what to do when the 

 fox is afoot, 148 ; advantage 

 of a fine voice to, 155 



Huntsman, kennel, duties of a, 

 158 



Ireland, wild stag hunting in, 

 33 ; hunting breed of horses 

 in, 175 ; lists of hounds in, 

 stag, 333 ; fox, 346 ; harrier, 

 354 ; beagle, 356 



Job hunters, 293 



John, King, import of horses by, 



171 

 John of Salisbury, denunciation 



of the chase by, 9 



Kennels, conversion of out- 

 buildings into, 120, 128; must 



