il4 THH ST LEGKR, 1835. 



Mr Goldeu's br. c. by Lottery, out of Morg'iana, by Muley. — J. Marson - . S 

 Mr Greville's ch. f. Preserve, by Emilius, out of Mustard, by Merlin. — Nat 4 

 Mr Bowes's ch. c. Mundig-, by Catton, out of Emma (P. Conolly) ; Mr T. Johnson's 

 ch. c. Jupiter, by Lang-ar, out of Proserpine, by Rhadamanthus (J. Holmes) ; INIr Pow- 

 lett's b c. by Lang-ar, out of Giovanni's dam, by Don Juan (J. Day) ; Mr Houldsworth's 

 ch. c. Turban, by Sultan, out of Tiara (S. Darling-) ; Mr J. H. Peel's b. c. Trim, by 

 Edmund, out of Mary, by Friday (Chappie) ; Lord Orford's b. c. Ascot, by Reveller, 

 out of Ang-eliea, by Rubens (J. Robinson) ; and Mr Heseltine's ch. f. Mamsel Otz, sister 

 to Bubastes, by Blacklock (T. Nicholson) ; also started, but were not placed. 



The month immediately preceding the race, had changed 

 the aspects of some of the ";Cracks," and some material 

 fluctuations occurred in the betting: — Hornsea, Mundig, 

 Coriolanus, Ainderby, Glaucus, &c., were tried together, 

 and Hornsea won in a canter, while the winner of the Derby 

 was beaten easily by Coriolanus ; moreover, as Glaucus 

 had been out with Preserve at Goodwood, and Preserve was 

 known to be better than Ascot, the powers of almost every 

 horse in the race were thus got at, with the exception of 

 those of the Queen of Trumps, and of her nothing was 

 known beyond the certain well ascertained fact that she 

 won the Oaks in a canter ! Hornsea, therefore, came into 

 force, and Mundig went back, Ascot coughed, Jupiter 

 jumped up. Preserve maintained her ground, and the Queen 

 became first favourite, the odds at starting were : — 



6 to 4 agst the Queen, 2 to 1 ag-st Hornsea, 8 to 1 agst Preserve, 10 to 1 ag-st Jupiter, 

 12 to 1 agst Ascot, 30 to 1 agst Brother to Hope (t.), 40 to 1 ag-st any other. Mundig- 

 not mentioned. 



There was no false start; Jupiter was first off, and led 

 till near the gravel road, where the horses had settled into 

 their places, and Powlett's colt took the lead at a good pace; 

 in the front rank were Jupiter, Mamsel Otz, Turban, Pre- 

 serve, and Ascot, the Queen lying immediately behind them, 

 with Trim and Brother to Hope, and, lastly, Hornsea and 

 Mundig; the black cap and jacket being throughout sadly 

 conspicuous (at the wrong end), to the discomfiture of those 

 who had risked their money on the strength of the Derby 

 running; the pace mended at the hill, and poor Mamsel 

 Otz was feign to give up the ghost; at the Red-house 



