Related article: on account of the length of the
stages which they are frequently
driven is a disgrace to Stromectol Price the humane
character of the British nation
and requires the interference of
the Legislature. No stage should
be allowed to exceed twelve miles
in length," an opinion with which
most people will agree.
No man who is reckless when
he has other people*s lives in his
hands can be called a good coach-
man; yet from a list now before me
two pages could be filled with a
mere catalogue of capsizes due
exclusively to racing and careless-
ness within a period of alx>ut three
years, and of course there were
many more accidents of which
nothing was heard. The Rocking-
ham and Union coaches running
to London were always coming to
grief, yet the proprietors seldom
changed their coachmen, probably
because they were of opinion that
they might engage a still worse
man.
Of course when a man was
driving every day for a lifetime he
could scarcely help becoming pro-
ficient ; yet some men then as at
present could never advance be-
yond a certain point. From all
that one can find out there appear
to have been a number of mediocre
slovenly workmen driving coaches.
It was no uncommon thing to find
a man who had a rather stale
team buckle his reins to the rail
of his box to save him the trouble
of holding them, and so long as
there was no traffic the horses
went along with an occasional
reminder from the whip. The
names of the really fine coachmen
which have come down to us are
but a fraction of the men who
were at work, and the number of
collisions and accidents which
took place were something pheno-
menal. In the ranks of coach-
men, as among artists, doctors,
lawyers, equestrians, cricketers,
and so forth, comparatively few
rose to eminence ; the rank and
file appeared to have pottered
^long, just driving well enough to
earn their living.
W. C. A. B.
I90I.] 347
The Lament of an Old Hound.
They've left me in kennel for many a morning,
Just lately, when drawing the pack for the day,
They surely can't think that I'm out of the running,
Who've gone twice a week from September to May.
Why, it seems only yesterday I can remember,
The Squire's eldest son led me out of the ** Show,"
There were plenty of good 'uns to puzzle the judges,
But 'twas I who was chosen — the rest had to go !
After that came a time of enjoyment and sorrow,
With an endless amount of both patience Stromectol 3 Mg and care.
Shall I ever forget the delight and the rapture,
Or the painful results of our chase of a hare ?
But truly a short span of life is vouchsafed us,
Tliere soon comes an end of the pleasures we've found,
Very quickly our youth and maturity leave us,
And the puppy grows into the eighth-season hound.
Yes, that's what I've come to, I doubt it no longer,
Yet it's hard to be parted from comrades I've led ;
No more shall I rattle a fox through a covert,
I'm only now fit to be knocked on the head.
Yes, old age has come on me, no use to resist it,
I can't blind my eyes to the reason I'm ** passed,"
*' It's the pace that kills hounds " too, as well as their masters^
And I'm left far behind when they're racing on fast 1
Don't think that I'm grumbling, or wish for aught better,
Though short's been my time where my lot has been cast,
I've never been branded a ** babbler " or " skirter,"
And when my day comes I'll die game at the last.
So farewell to those glorious mornings of autumn,
When puppies were " entered " and foxes dispersed ;
Good-bye to the business-like days of October,
When at length they allowed us a ten minutes* " burst " I
Good-bye to the opening meet in November,
Good-bye to the crowds that collect for the fun ;
There are faces among them that crowd on my mem'ry,
Who are always in front at the end of a run.
No more shall I hear the glad horn of the huntsman
Proclaiming a fox gone away from the wood,
No more shall I strain to be first at the finish,
(Ah, lately they've beaten me, strive how I would!)
No more I'll be with them as homeward returning
They jog along merrily mile after mile,
I'm left with the cripples in idleness mournful,
With past recollections long hours to beguile.
So once more farewell, for my hunting is over,
Go straight to the last then what'er may betide ;
Be sure that's the best of advice I can give you,
Though I'm only now fit to be cast on one side I
348
(Mat
Cricket — ^' Bar One/'
In my last article, in February, I
said that I would write no more
about cricket in Baily '* bar one/'
in which I would try and suggest
a remedy for the chaos which
now exists. Now this is the ** bar
one/' and positively the very last.
It seems to me that it might be
possible to have some place or
places where the "tyro" of to-
day might learn what the present
generation are to a great extent
ignorant of, and what his grand-
fathers learnt and practised-^
namely, (i) to defend their wicket
entirely with the bat, (2) to study
and practise absolutely fair bowling,
and (3) to throw, catch and cover
the ball on open ground without
any boundary except perhaps the
front of the pavilion, or a roped
tent. I learnt all these things as
a boy working hard for a place in
an eleven, as all boys did before
pads were heard of, and after pads
were introduced it was thought
very low to try and use them to
save the wicket ; but in my days
the l.b.w. was always reckoned
by the line from bowler's hand to
wicket. The words from it to
the wicket existed in the old
Hambledon rules; certainly in
1842 the words were, a ball which
was pitched ''straight to the
wicket and would have hit it, "
and I think some time in the late
'sixties or early 'seventies the
words ** from it " were restored —
vide ** Lilly white on Bowling,"
1842, dedicated to M.C.C., and
the books of the M.C.C. as regards
changes in the law.
Practically until 1878, when
the Australians first came over,
the bowler had the benefit of his
leg break, much against the
wishes of the Australians. I feel
quite easy in my mind that the
veterans of the old school will die
hard in defence of fair play and
chivalrous cricket, when the storm
bursts. In the meantime cannot
a school be formed amongst
cricketers in or near London, or
any large town, where youngsters
can come and learn the game, and
practise regularly at all points at