GEORGE IV. AND WILLIAM IV. 133 



day (for she broke her near fore-leg in running 

 for the Oaks), and the Derby in 1837 with the 

 extreme outsider and cripple, Phosphorus, both 

 by Lamplighter (among the runners for which 

 Derby was a horse called Pegasus, that was 

 ridden, not by a professional jockey, but by 

 one Mr. Bartley, an amateur, a son of Crispin, 

 being a bootmaker by trade) ; the Marquis of 

 Exeter won the One Thousand and the Oaks with 

 the 'Hying' Galata in 1832 ; Mr. C. Greville (the 

 celebrated Clerk of the Council, and cousin to 

 the still more celebrated Lord George Bentinck) 

 won the One Thousand with Preserve in 1835, 

 and had som.etimes 'represented' George IV. on 

 the turf; Mr, Cookes won the One Thousand 

 with Tarantella in 1833, and supplied the 

 Germans with the horse Incubus (by Phantom) 

 and the mare Barcarolle (by .Stumps), both bred 

 from Katherine, dam of Taurus (himself imported 

 into Germany) ; and Mr. Houldsworth (owner of 

 Filho da Puta at the time of the match with Sir 

 Joshua in 18 16) won the One Thousand in 1836 

 with Destinj^ 



There were also Lord Lowther (second Earl 

 of Lonsdale in 1844, ^^^ President of the 



