FOURTH PERIOD: VICTORIA 167 



confederated for awhile upon the turf with the 

 Earl of Durham of his day); Lord Enfield (George 

 Stevens Byng, a Lord of the Treasury, and after- 

 wards second Earl of Strafford) ; the (second) 

 Marquis of Exeter (owner of Stockwell) ; the 

 (fourteenth) Earl of Derby (the ' Rupert of de- 

 bate,' owner of Camzou and Toxophilite) ; Mr. W. 

 Day (jockey, trainer, and author) ; and Mr. Stan- 

 hope Hawke (the Hon., brother of Lord Hawke, 

 of a great Yorkshire ' all-round ' sporting family, 

 to which the celebrated Admiral Hawke belonged). 

 Add to them the (fifth) Earl of Glasgow (who, 

 as already said, began his career upon the turf 

 as Viscount Kelburne, and was known to his 

 intimates by the name of ' Peter ') ; Mr. Joseph 

 Dawson (a famous trainer, owner of the ' roar- 

 ing ' Prince Charlie, the horse that was known 

 as ' the King of the T.Y.C.') ; Mr. Henry Clare 

 Vyner (died 1882, elder brother of the better- 

 known racing celebrity Mr. R. C. Vyner, who 

 purchased Fairfield, which had belonged to the 

 successful bookmaker and ardent sportsman 

 John Jackson, called 'Jock o' Fairfield'); the 

 short-lived Lord Dupplin (eldest son of the 

 eleventh Earl of Kinnoul) ; the (fourth) short- 



