"FEESHEE" PEASE AND "JUDY" CAEE-ELLISON 157 



W. E. Pease, 



E. W. Fox, 



J. S. Carr-Ellison, 

 and no Master could have been supported more keenly than I was. 

 G. A. Miller and W. E. Pease used to run, if we had a straight 

 thing, in deadly competition, the former being faster on grass and 

 the latter on the plough. Their after careers show what thorough 

 sportsmen they one and all were. 



Among keen followers of the hounds were — H. Budgett, A. M. 

 AUgood, F. Whitbread, M. 0. Smith, C. D. Miller, E. G. Lawrence, 

 E. E. Cousins, J. B. Seely, and many others. 



Before closing I must recognise the way in which we were 

 "supported by landowners and farmers. I used to arrange my Meets 

 at the Saturday Market, and no pack ever had less difficulty with 

 the owners and occupiers of land, and I still have in mind many 

 kindnesses and hearty welcomes accorded to the T.F.B. and their 

 followers. 



When I went down I handed the pack over to J. S. Carr-Ellison 

 with all the records of the hunt. 



Which records, as I have said, J. S. Carr-Ellison copied out, 

 arranged, and preserved, and many of them are incorporated in the 

 present volume. Here, by the way, is Carr-Ellison's tribute to the 

 times of his predecessor : — 



"As I think I have mentioned elsewhere, when I went up to 

 Trinity in October 1886, Arthur Francis Pease (" Fresher " Pease) was 

 Master, and his Whips were H. H. Clay (Jesus), W. E. Pease (Trinity), 

 and G. A. Miller (Trinity), and capital sport Pease showed, and his 

 Whips were all keen and good runners. Clay, I remember, was not 

 so fleet, but very good at skirting work, and viewing a beaten hare 

 at a critical time, and he thoroughly understood the game. I was 

 made an Extra Whip in the Lent Term of 1888, and was a very 

 proud man when Pease told me I could get my green coat and cap, 

 and a prouder man still when I was offered the Mastership for the 

 succeeding season." 



