A LENTON BROOK DAY 53 



had to go where hounds went. Brilliant hunter 

 as Kedar, the son of Ishmael, undoubtedly was, he 

 had come along at a good fair pace in holding going, 

 and he could only get the right side of the brook 

 with a fall ; horse and rider, however, being quickly 

 up and going again, before those following on 

 could rob them of the lead. Mr. Edgar Lubbock, 

 riding a bang-tailed bay horse, was another who met 



Lord Willoughby de Eresby, M.P. 



the formidable obstacle with a smile on his face ; 

 and the last season he hunted with the Belvoir 

 held the record for having jumped the Lenton 

 Brook oftener than any other man living. Lord 

 Willoughby de Eresby, riding a dark brown horse 

 with a white face, and his brother on a grey, were 

 both successful in getting the right side, with the 

 select few in the same field with hounds. Soon the 

 mud of the brook was being stirred up by the horses 

 who halved it, including the mount of the second 

 whipper-in, Fred South, which was "clean done." A 



