INDEX. 



395 



Anecioxes, Vol. II. — continued. 



Marshall's singular obstinacy as re- 

 garded the picture of Lord Dar- 

 lington and his fox-hounds, 288. 



IMarshall's picture of Mr. Baker's 

 horses, 289. 



Marshall's unique painter's tool, 289. 



The author's depredations on the 

 store-room, 293. 



A connoisseur giving public break- 

 fasts, 301. 



Red-hot balls, a lady's ideas about, 

 304. 



Chiliby, the savage horse, ridden at 

 Astley's by Miss Romanzini, 312. 



Author and the butcher's horse, 313. 



Astley's piebald mare, her extra- 

 ordinary sagacity, 314. 



The author's hunting expedition at 

 Dunkirk, 334—341. 



A London man of fashion and his 

 tenant, how to ensure health, 349. 



A farmer and his men fetching up 

 lost time, the fiirmer's ideas on, 

 351. 



Peter Harvey and his sauce, 354. 



Coronation did the trick, and some 

 knowing ones too, with home train- 

 ing, 355. 



The doctors, a true tale, .358. 



Highland piper and the Frenchman, 

 365. 



A Frenchman's opinion of a good 

 run, 367. 



A friend of the author's, his Leicester- 

 shire campaign, 371. 



A field of Irish hunters near Dun- 

 lavin, 381. 



The Mar Dyke, 382. 



Galloway clearing a canal lock, 383. 



A horse taking twenty three feet at 

 a gate, 383. 



A red deer taking the garden wall at 

 Cumberland Lodge, 384. 



Aiken, Mr., as an artist, remarks on, 



ii. 290. 

 Animal painting still in its infancy, 



ii. 294. 

 Animation, its effects, ii. 6S. 

 Anxiety of thousands during a race, 



ii. 281. 

 Arab horses and American bears, ii. 



215. 

 Ascott made use of, ii. 13. 

 Ashbourne steeple races, i. 148. j 



Assistance to horses, how it affects 



them, ii. 72. 



Astley's piebald mare, her sagacity, ii. 



314. 

 Attention to hunting unfashionable, 



i. 168. 

 Auction duties, appropriation of, i. 4 1 1. 

 Auctions at repositories, i. 403. 

 Author apologises for his irregularity 



in writing, i. 73. 

 censured for seeing prize-fights, 



i. 60. 

 his impartiality handicapped ; 



a killing weight put on it, i. 86. 



anecdote of, in driving, i. 89. 



and his groom; mulled port 



&c., i. 409. 



nearly done by Sminy, i. 385. 



out of his line, ii. ,38. 



Author's Lincolnshire brook jumper, 



i. 233. 

 sowmanship, i. 253. 



Bad debts constantly occur to dealers, 



i. 212. 

 Balls, red-hot, ideas about, ii. 304. 

 Bankrupts and plate glass, ii, 2. 

 Baron, Monsieur le, ii. 334. 

 Baronet, a, his opinion of a country, 



i. 162. 

 Barrington, George, anecdote of, i. 301. 

 Bars, leaping, i. 181. 

 Bath and Brighton road celebrated for 



coachmen, i. 189. 

 Battering rams exploded, ii. 41. 

 Battueing unworthy the name of sport, 



ii. 330. 

 Bay Middletons, why they cannot go 



on racing after a certain age, ii. 92, 

 Beacon Course (eighteen stone), i. 173. 

 Beardsworth, Mr., i. 14. 

 Bearing reins, a few words on, ii. 167. 

 Bedford, match against time, i. 53. 



Spring's evidence on,i. 55. 



Beggarman, stopped by pace, ii. 47. . 

 Belcher, anecdote of, i. 153. 

 Bellows, stopping to mend, ii. 48. 

 Betters, i'ew keep horses, i. 16. 

 Betting deeply, its fearful anxieties, ii. 



281. 

 - men an injury to the turf, i. 6. 



— — ^ men, and men who bei, distinct, 



i. 15. 



men promote rascality, i. 7. 



. on horses, not keeping them, 



ruinous, i. 1 1. 

 Big hoises against little ones, ii. 39. 

 Biting, horses seldom cured of it, ii.268. 

 Bit, the rearing, i. 102. 

 Bits, a coachman's attention to, i. B^G. 



