"See that old hound,
How busily he works, but dares not trust
His doubtful sense, draw yet a wider ring;
Hark now again the chorus fills”
—SOMERVILE.
MANY of our best gallops and finest hunts have taken place on
by-days or days snatched unexpectedly in the middle of a frost, when
it had given sufficiently to be safe for horses’ legs and hounds’
feet, and very often on the day before it settled down again with
more than its former severity. And after a carefully kept record of
the weather conditions in relation to scent, I can only learn this,
that we’ve had an unfailing good scent just before the oncoming of a
hard frost, and generally on a light east wind day with a rising but
not too high barometer. Upon the month depends a good deal; and
perhaps during February, when the ground is drying not too fast,
more straight-out fast gallops occur than in any other; but scent
may be good in any month provided the weather is not too unsettled
and changeable.
The most notable of days snatched from the arms of the frost was
that on which “the grey fox of Ruberslaw” gave such a fast and
straight chase, over an unusual line, if not a very long one.
It was on the 25th January, the beginning of the period when good
hunts are expected, and a good scent is assured. Hounds had found in
the rocks, and luckily were above the fox when he ran down west of
the seedlings by West Lees and crossed the river above the keeper’s
house, hounds following slowly till they crossed. The Bedrule
shepherd viewed and holloaed him there; and after that hounds drove
hard every yard of the way. They ran up Fulton Hill to west of
Bedrule pond, down the old toll strip, across Swinnie to west of
Gilliestongues and crossed Bairnkin strip and Bairnkin road in and
out, east of the entry, up the Kersheugh and Ford strip to the Flat,
without a waver and with a full cry all the time, down to
Scraesburgh Moss, then sharp right-handed past the Ford cottages to
Mossburnford Bank, where the cry ceased suddenly. Hounds came
pouring down to the Ford and started to drink and bathe, and George
Dod, who had joined in, began to whoop from the bank, and I saw him
lift the fox over the fence out of the wood. He had found him
crouching as if in life—in fact, at first he thought he was still
alive—with old Marmion lying facing him and growling savagely. He
was the finest specimen of a fox I ever saw; in his prime, probably
second or third season—long, lean, and limber, with the pointed
muzzle of the Cheviot foxes, grey back and magnificent brush. It
almost seemed a shame to tear him; and by the time we were ready for
it, he was so stiff that when we propped him up on his legs he stood
there, and after brush and mask were removed, hounds took a long
time to break him up. Though only five miles from point of finding
to point of killing, this was a very fast and hard gallop for
horses; only Tom Telfer and I were in it; and the features of it
were the pace and line, this last being right across the usual
country at right angles to the valleys, right across the Rule, right
across the Black Burn, and right across the Jed, never swerving or
turning up or down the watercourses.
Another day snatched out of the frost’s fingers was Monday, 9th
December. We had been stopped on the Saturday. Sunday was soft, a
little frost on Sunday night, but all gone by mid-day on Monday,
when I sallied up the water blowing the horn as I went. This only
produced two followers, Miss Douglas and Frank Turnbull. We found a
fox in Birkenside, and hounds drove out at the west end ; and when
we got to Dolphinston we heard and saw them racing beyond Earlsheugh
towards the Belling. For forty minutes they hustled him round by
Wood-house, Belling, and Old Jeddart in two big figures of eight,
and then killed him in the garden of the latter place. On my coming
up I found two couple of hounds only had got in before the gate was
shut, and the rest were clamouring and springing at the high fence.
As I came in sight I saw an excited farm youth seize the fox, whip
out his knife, and with his left hand whack off the brush, bone and
all, and flourishing it above his head he yelled like one demented;
then, horrible to relate, the fox at his feet gave a last expiring
gasp.
After the worthy farmer had refreshed us, and as we were riding
away, I looked back and saw a tall figure in white night-clothes and
cap look from an upper window and draw back behind a curtain. To
Miss Douglas I said, “Did you see that? Was it a ghost?”
“Well, it must be old Mrs. Shaw; only she’s bedridden and not
allowed to move, being at the point of death.”
The poor lady’s death actually occurred a few days after; and
meeting her husband later on, I apologised for the disturbance we
had created, and expressed a hope that the unusual commotion and
excitement had not hastened the end.
“Oh, it disna signify, sir,” was his reply; “she was lying and
forbidden to rise; but she wad ha’ dee’d ony wey!”
On one of these by-days we had the longest and latest ride home I
had had up till then. After running hard all day and putting two
foxes to ground in unassailable strongholds in the Newton-Denholm
country, late in the afternoon we moved away towards Cavers to
collect the three couples of hounds short. We came on them running a
fairly good line outside the big Dene, and of course our pack of
eleven couple joined in and went away westwards. This was nearer
four than three o’clock, and we could not keep with them owing to
the bad riding. There were snow-wreaths at the back of all the
fences, with some hard spots, and many of the gates were still
blocked. We crossed the Hawick and Newcastle road at High Tofts, and
on by Kirkton Hill, Adderstonlee, Adderstonshiels, and Cogsmill,
then by Berryfell to Stobs Bank, where we completely lost hounds. My
horse was utterly done, reduced to a walk, and Billy and Jack were
not much better. They had gone on, and I was wandering slowly up the
road by the riverside. My horse was so exhausted that I had to put
him into the stable, when a chilled drink and some old bog hay
revived him a little. Some boys came to say they thought the fox was
“ holed ” in the bank about a mile higher up the river. I went on
and found two young hounds marking in a half-hearted way at the
opening of a stone conduit which I knew and feared, because we had
never been able to bolt from it. The terrier came up and showed us
that there could be no access as, a few yards from the mouth, the
roof had fallen in and was blocking it. I kept blowing at intervals,
this bringing in two or three couples, all of which were panting and
had the appearance of having been recently in chase. By this time it
was quite dark, and I was on the point of returning to get my horse,
when I heard a faint cry in the distance. This gradually came nearer
and nearer, till I realised that hounds were running down the wooded
bank of the river and very near their fox. Enjoining the boys to
keep perfectly quiet, we held our breath and listened to the
approaching chorus. Something glided past on the loose stones above
me, followed by the dash of a couple of hounds close behind it;
those we were endeavouring to hold broke away and darted after them,
then there was a splashing in the river, and a “skirling” as of cats
fighting, a hound which had been nipped calling out, then a rush of
more hounds almost to my very feet as they flung themselves into the
stream and grabbed and tore savagely at the body of the fox that had
carried them so far from kennels, and baffled them so completely for
a while. It was now 7.15, and, though Jack and Billy turned up very
soon, swelling with pride at the part they had played in keeping
hounds together, their horses had to be made comfortable before we
could start for home. From the keeper’s wife we got some real
oatcakes or girdle cakes and half a tumblerful of whisky and water
before setting out on a fourteen or fifteen mile jog home—twelve and
a half miles on the map— and it was fully three hours later before
we sighted the stable lantern.
“I see ye’ve killed him, sir,” said Tom.
“How can you tell in this light, Tom?”
“Well, sir, from the way some o’ the hounds is swaggerin’, an’ I
think I saw old Rambler carrying the nose as he went past.”
Curious finishes to outstanding hunts sometimes take place, and once
or twice we were like losing our fox altogether, after having killed
him fairly.
On one of the Harwood days we ran a fox out by Wauchope to Cribb’s
hole, by the Flush to Dyke-raw, and in very fast to Tythehouse,
where I viewed him one field before hounds, crawling in front of
them. When we got up to them at the mill cauld we found hounds were
walking round on the tips of their toes, some bloody, some scraping
at the apron of the cauld, all with their hackles up and signs of
battle, one tuft of fox fur but no fox. Now what to do? Could we put
the fox into the count, no one having seen him killed or having
handled him? Whipping off some of the boards to let the terrier in
disclosed nothing; and only after half-an-hour’s fishing and groping
with hay forks and rakes in the deep pool below was the body fished
out, and hounds, which had been taken away, were brought back to eat
it. Jack the whip’s elation was so marked that Billy sought and
obtained an explanation of it. He had laid odds that before the end
of the month (February) we should have killed fifteen brace, and
this made it, though it was only the nineteenth day of the month.
This part of the
country was well stocked with stout straight-running foxes, so when
it was possible to put in an extra day, I was tempted to do it.
On a day following very closely on the last, a likely-looking
beggar, as Tom Telfer described him, found himself in the heather
outside Lurgiescleuch, and made for the heights, the hounds soon
streaming in a long string after him, and very soon running out of
sight. The terrier, and one or two tailed-off hounds, were our
guides by Wauchope Common, Hemlaw, Fanna Rig, Note-o’-the-Gate, to
Singden, where, in a blown-down plantation of spruce trees, we found
hounds hard at work. We obtained the comforting news that the
Liddesdale hounds had been through it that morning, so there could
only be our fox in it. Very soon after we viewed him steal away on
the backward journey, a five and half mile straight point. But this
time he kept more to the south, down the bank of the stream, and by
Wauchope House they were pressing him closely. On by the Forking and
Hawkshaw March they drove with an enlivening chorus, making the
whole valley resound, past Hobkirk between the church and the river,
then crossing the latter just below the village. Surely he is doomed
now! But it was not till an hour later that I took off his brush and
threw him to the pack. Twas this way. After he had lain down in a
ploughed field and hounds overrun him, Pirate and Dexter pushed him
up and he made a spurt for the river. Two hounds rushed at him and
simultaneously pinned him on the top of a high bank and rolled down
into the deep pool, below a sort of fall, where they throttled him
and then left him. We could not discover him in the failing light
till the pool got smoothed and was free from hounds swimming in it,
and until the discoloured water had cleared. Then we got sight of
him in about eight or nine feet of water poised on the point of his
nose and two fore pads, his brush stretched stiffly out behind him,
about six feet below the surface. The pool was enclosed by a
shelving bank of gravel which sloped suddenly down into at least
twelve feet of depth, and as the fox was, so to speak, suspended
exactly in the centre of the pool, he could not be reached from the
side with paling bars, and to attempt him from below only meant
pushing him into deeper water. My bribe to the assembled boys to
strip and dive for him was not responded to, so in the end I waded
the “powney” in as far as she would go, and with a crooked wire
hooked him; but for some time it looked as if hounds were going to
lose the satisfaction of tearing and eating their fox.
Another very satisfactory by-day was a Monday after a very hard
Saturday, which had lamed half the pack. I had not the most remote
notion of going out—in fact, had fixed on having a day with the
Duke’s; but from my dressing-room window at 8.15 I saw a brace of
foxes walk down a furrow in the plough on the opposite side of the
glen and lie down together in a hollow. I saw they could be
approached from above by making a big detour; this I did on the pony
with only Jack as follower and eight couple of selected sound
hounds. It took half-an-hour to get round, and being directed by
signal from the bath-room window of the house, I trotted quickly
down along the very furrow in which the unsuspecting pair were
lying, and the hounds were on the top of them before they knew it.
They diverged right and left, the vixen going straight down into the
glen, and the dog, to his credit be it said, taking straight across
the plough, drawing six couple away from his mate. These six couple
hunted him well, sticking closely to him round the Dunion and
Bedrule Hill, bringing him back to the glen, where they continued to
press him for another half-hour, and being reinforced by all the
loose terriers belonging to the establishment, they hunted him from
one hiding-place to another until they killed him, about two hours
after he had first been viewed. Few of those friends whom I met in
the Duke’s field about midday, to whom I related my story, seemed to
think I was not romancing.
Pleasant as were these by-days, often providing the most unexpected
sport and satisfactory finishes, they were seldom so enjoyable as
the regular hunting days. Many of the one-horse followers used to go
home after a morning’s hunt, leaving a few keen spirits to have
another try for him. Tom Telfer, Frank Turnbull, Dick Davidson,
George Heriot, Tom Smith, poor Archie Rutherfurd, Robert Laing,
George Davidson, and others, never left so long as there was light
to draw; and being all good horsemen and anxious to go one better
than the other, the pace of these afternoon hunts was never slow,
and some prodigious deeds of valour were performed.
Not so often did we kill our fox on these occasions, but nearly
always hounds ran hard and pressed their fox, very often putting him
to ground at too late an hour to admit of bolting or digging. |