446 A CONCLUSION. 



let us substitute races for such and such horses, 

 at such and such weights, jockeys or hired servants 

 excluded. This would be all tliat I conceive could be 

 meant or wanted; and, doing away with the term 

 gentleman-jock (which must ever be an equivocal one), 

 would admit any man not hired or professional, and, 

 what is much more desirable, would not admit disputes 

 about qualification, as the qualification in this case 

 would be clear and defined. 



Let us then hope to see gentlemen's gentlemen 

 turned into servants: gentlemen-jocks may be turned 

 to grass ; but as they are a kind of mongrel breed, 

 let them first undergo a little operation to prevent 

 their producing fresh stock. I think then, coachmen 

 having left ofi:' aping tlie gentlemen, we may say 



" ALL RIGHT." 



