INDEX. 



407 



Swing bars to gigs rendered useless, ii. 

 168. 



Tailors, patronising, ii. 6. 



versus grooms as dragoons, ii. 



53. 



Tampering with trainers or jockeys 

 disgraceful, i. 17. 



Teams, the three, ii. 62. 



, the two, an anecdote, i. 248. 



Tempers, men's and ladies', observa- 

 tions on, i. 392. 



of young horses should not be 



improperly roused, i. 196. 



Time, matches against, i. 51. 



, trials against, ii. 86. 



Trick horses not so valuable as good 

 ring horses, ii. 326. 



Tobacco pipe legs, ii. 54. 



Toilet, a short one allowed pug, ii. 366. 



" To ladies' eyes around, boys," ii, 64. 



Tom Smart, i. 262. 



Tom Smart's boats, ii. 40. 



Tom Smith on a slow one, ii. 386. 



Tommy Lye, ii. 42. 



Tongue, Mr., and his drags, ii. 34. 



, his choker, ii. 34. 



Tradesmen, honour of, i. 263. 



will not be interfered with 



by gentlemen, i. 213. 

 who charge 



exorbitantly 

 pay servants in proportion, i. 203. 

 Trainer, a precious one, ii. 98. 

 , a sensitive one, ii. 21. 



and riding boy, anecdote, i. 



126. 



Trainers and jockies resist great temp- 

 tations, ii. 116. 



cannot be expected to lose 



their money for employers, ii. 122. 



, their dislike of second-rate 



horses, i. 124. 



, general remarks on, ii. 101. 



have not time to do all that 



might be done to ascertain a race- 

 horse's best combined qualities, ii. 

 85. 



's house, ii. 17. 



, it is within the bounds of pos- 

 sibility they may err sometimes, ii, 

 355. 



-, many have characteristic- habits 



by which they treat all horses, ii. 96. 

 , remarks on, i. 121. 



, their mystification, ii. 345. 



Training does not always improve the 



style of going of the race-horse, ii. 



108. 



Training hunters, short treatise on, ii. 



361. 

 hunters unknown in former 



days, ii. 362. 



indispensable to horses in 



fast countries, ii. 364. 

 men, a few remarks on, ii. 



357. 



355. 



private, and Coronation, ii. 



race-horses, a few remarks 

 on, ii. 342. 



stables, the general routine 



of, not sufficient in all cases, ii. 95. 

 stables, public ones, ii. 94. 



Travelling, its former delights, ii. 299. 



, its pleasures gone, ii. 297. 



-, young horses, i. 211. 



Trial, but little allowed of a horse in a 



fair, i. 115. 

 Trials, owners learn little by seeing 



them, ii. 123. 



, supposed ones, ii. 92. 



Tricks in money-making, various, ii. 



342. 

 Trot a more natural pace than the 



canter, ii. 135. 

 Trotters best to breed as hacks, ii. 1 89. 



rise to relieve themselves, i. 80. 



Trotting an artificial pace, ii. 188. 



. — down hills, ii. 151. 



horses inaccurately drawn by 



the old masters, ii. 289. 

 Trouble disliked by persons of fashion, 



i. 203. 

 Troy, the horse of, ii. 61. 

 Trying a horse in single harness, i. 1 58. 

 Turf, the, going over and going under 



ii. 99. 

 , the, losing its patrons, i. 8. 



Uncle handling the tool, ii. 150. 



Uncle Thomas, ii. 149. 



Unfair fences in steeple races, i. 150. 



Van Amburgh's lions, ii. 203. 



Vaughan, Dick, i. 75. 



Vice in harness, mistakes about, ii. 256. 



Vice, less objectionable in the race- 

 horse than in others, ii. 1 92. 



Vicious horses rarely hurt children, ii. 

 198. 



Vis avis in a carriage, ii. 161. 



Vivian would jump when tired, i. 148. 



Wall jumper, a, anecdote of, i. 232. 

 Ward, Mr., as an artist, remarks on, ii. 



291. 



