102 



THE TEINITY FOOT BEAGLES 



is of interest. It shows, as Mr. Haines says, how much hunting was 

 done then. 



Letter 



CAMBRIDGE, 1879-1882 

 To the Editor of Bailey's Magazine. 



SiE — Although I have, of course, had no chance of really com- 

 paring the four years 1879-82 with other like periods of either 

 university, I firmly believe that we had more hunting men up then 



The Embyru :M.F.H. 



In this case Mr. M. C. Albriglit, a latter-day member of T.F.B.C., and now Master of the first pack 



I ever hunted with— the South Herefordshire. Drawn by "A 1 " in T.F.B.C. Boolt. 



who afterwards graduated with the degree of M.F.H. than was the 

 case during any other four years since. Now let us just run through 

 the list of Masters of Foxhounds (and it is indeed a remarkable one) 

 as follows: Lord Yarborough, Sir Watkin Wynn, Messrs. W. H. 

 Wharton, Butt Miller, Lycett Green, E. E. Barclay, Eeverend E. A. 

 Milne, and Eowland Hunt. 



I may have left out one or perhaps two more : Messrs. E. 

 Meysey-Thompson, Frank Mildmay, H. C. Bentley, and Cecil Tennant 

 are names of the period too. 



I do certainly think that those four years held a record as far 

 as hunting men went. I little thought when I left in 1882, that ten 



