“Who-whoop! they have him, they're round
him, how
They worry and tear when he's down!
'Twas a stout hill fox when they found him, now
’Tis a hundred tatters of brown!”
—Whyte-Melville.
IT was an infinite satisfaction, and it
had begun to be my boast, that we seldom had a blank day. Often did
we draw a good big tract of country in the spring months, when
vixens were below ground and dog foxes were lying out in the open,
without finding, and often when things were looking hopeless, a fox
would discover himself in the most unlikely and unusual spot and
provide a good hunt or a fast gallop as the case might be. And even
if we had only a short scurry with an “interesting” vixen, whom we
speedily put to ground and as speedily left, or if we slowly
followed the short turnings of an anxious and crafty old dog fox,
till, under cover of night and failing scent, he beat us, there was
always some fun to enjoy and some amusing incident on which to look
back. Though it was in the first days that the most droll
occurrences happened and the most novel situations arose.
One day, an alert-looking little man was seen to dismount and hold
open the gate from a turnip-field to allow a somewhat strung out
line of riders to filter through, with the intention of shutting it
when the last had passed. A voice from one of the field well in the
rearguard was heard to call out to him— “Go on, go on, don’t wait
for me.”
“I think I’ll wait and shut the gate.”
“Oh, nevah mind waiting for me.”
Still the obdurate person stood at the gate.
“We nevah shut gates when hounds are out,” as he approached.
“Well, sir,” said the gatekeeper, “as the turnips are mine, and
these sheep coming to us are mine, and I believe the gate is half
mine and half the Yerl o’ Whum’s, I think I’ll wait back and shut it
after I get you through, so bustle up, please.”
One morning, during a fast gallop over an estate where the fences
were well looked after, where jumping places of stout larch rails
were put up in what wire there was, and where gaps were few and
instantly repaired when they existed, an amusing dialogue took
place. We crossed the march or boundary fence, consisting of a
fairly high bank with a rail on the top, and as horses were rather
blown, most of us were glad to have it at a spot where the fencers
were at work renewing the rail, of which they had taken down a rood
or two. In the afternoon the homeward way lay back over the same
line of country. The foreman fencer, the village joiner, was just
about to fix up the last bar, and one of the field seeing this, rode
up in advance.
“Hi, Sandy, let’s through there before you nail it up.” No reply
from Sandy except a roar to a young apprentice to watch what he was
doing, and a little more vicious wielding of the hammer.
“Sandy, man, pull that down.”
Then Sandy’s opportunity came.
“Pull this doon,” said he, without removing his pipe; “I’ll dae
naething o’ the kind; we’ve juist bin sent oot here ti pit it up.”
But I once drew blank for Tom Telfer, and of this Joanna was
frequently pleased to remind me.
It was in this wise. Tom was staying in the house preparatory to
making a very early start by train to hunt next day. I got up in the
darkness, and had not proceeded far with my dressing, and was in
very scant attire, when I thought I would see if my whip was
stirring. So, groping along the passage, at the farther end of which
were two doors, I opened the right-hand one, struck a match, and
walked across to the dressing-table to light the candles, saying,
“Time to get up, Tom.” Then suddenly a feminine voice from the
pillows said quite calmly and with appalling distinctness, “Hulloa,
Master, whatever do you want in my room?” Looking round, I beheld a
frizzled-up head, which I only half recognised, and in my agitation
shouted, “Where the devil is Tom Telfer?” To which the young lady
chillingly replied, “Well, you didn’t expect to find him here, did
you?” I could only gasp and stare helplessly in the direction of the
small crib in the corner of the room, and my dilemma was the worse
when the match burned my fingers, and being hastily dropped, left me
in black darkness.
There was one part of the country which was getting short of foxes,
and which we had drawn blank on two successive days’ hunting, and
here it was that we had two odd and unexpected hunts on one day.
It was with many misgivings that I proceeded thither in response to
the urgent request of the shooting tenant for a third time round. As
we passed the door of the keeper’s house, that worthy imparted the
startling information that “the Talladale dogues had bin rinnin’
yammerin’ aboot sin grey daylicht.” This was the description given
of a small trencher-fed pack that occasionally made incursions into
our territory on days when we were at the other side, so mischievous
persons said.
But there was nothing for it than to go on, which we did at the very
moment when a tired and draggled-looking fox crossed the avenue in
front of us, of course taking hounds along with him, and with a
burst of music that fairly made the tree-tops tremble. They chased
him through the rhododendron bushes and once round the garden, and
caught him behind the house by the river-side. In the midst of the
struggling mass were two couple of strange hounds all peat-stained
and travel-soiled, and with long unrounded ears; and after the
trophies were saved and the fox was eaten, a heated youth on a
panting pony arrived shouting excitedly, “Where’s my fox?” and was
not overpleased when it was explained to him that his fox had been
accidentally killed and devoured.
Two futile hours were spent in drawing every bit of holding on this
and the adjoining estate all blank, when Tom Telfer’s hawk eye
caught sight of two horsemen on the sky-line apparently coming in.
Holding hounds together, and waiting and watching, we were not long
in making out the white form of a light-coloured hound in the
distance
coming towards us, and making fair progress on the line alone. Our
Talladale friends were at work again, and we heard their shouts
faintly in the distance as they cheered on the rest of the baying
pack. To our undisguised delight we viewed the fox, a rakish-looking
hill customer, coming inwards, and we saw him actually pass up wind
of us and about a quarter of a mile off. Hounds, if they did not
view him also, knew he was there, and were soon screaming in the
wake of the astonished animal. He took them at a great pace about
three miles straight, and was killed on the steps of the Parish
Church Manse. So, for the second time on one and the same day, we
ran and killed a fox found by another pack, and on this latter
occasion we saved the carcase for the neighbouring Master, who, soon
coming up with his lot, had the satisfaction of seeing it eaten by
the combined packs.
Far from anticipating a blank day, we felt the full assurance of
coming sport, as we started one morning early in the year with the
low temperature of 38°, a minimum of 28° during the night, and a
light east wind and a rising barometer. For we had received gracious
permission to hunt an enviable portion of the Duke’s country, well
stocked with stout running foxes, and consisting of sound old
pastures strongly fenced, and good moorland of unlimited extent,
over which we had recollections of many good gallops with his
Grace’s famous pack.
“I like the feel of things to-day,” Billy had said, sniffing the air
as we left the stableyard; and, "like the look o' things,” he added,
as we came into sight of about thirty as' keen sportsmen as one
would wish to join, assembled at the place of meet— a number
augmented to about sixty as we moved off to draw Tofts Dene. Hounds
had dashed out of kennel that morning and behaved as if they already
felt a scent, and now showed indications of wishing to be put into a
small strip of plantation on the way to the Dene; and barely waiting
for Tom Telfer to slip on to a cross ride or for the wave of my arm,
they hurled into it and instantly threw their tongues. I saw Tom’s
cap go up, and as I got nearer him, noticed the remains of the
strangled scream that was half choking him as he galloped forward
with set teeth, spurring all he knew and cracking his whip, as he
raced for a point where he wished to head the fox off from going
back into our own country. This he succeeded in accomplishing, so
much to his own satisfaction that his “gone away” holloa was
unnecessarily loud and prolonged, and his excitement led him to whip
out his horn and blow till his breath was spent.
Tom claimed an intimate acquaintance with every fox in the
country-side, and he was wont at times to declare he knew them all
by head mark.
“That’s the beggar the Duke’s chivied on Thursday when they had to
be stopped in the darkness at four o’clock, and he’s stiff as a
board, and stale as cold porridge,” he yelled, as I got alongside of
him. Then reading disapproval in my eye, he added, “Nothing like
giving him a ‘gliff’ to go away with; makes him scoot along; nothing
like bursting him up at the start.”
But Tom was not invariably right in his recognition of foxes, for
five minutes later we saw hounds coursing a wretched creature along
the river’s bank and pull him down in mid-stream as he was trying to
cross a shallow, making for a rough scaur in which there were caves
large enough to hold a whole pack. When I waded in, half-way up to
the tops of my boots, I found a poor beast, unsound on both
forelegs—one being snare-marked, and the other carrying a wire that
was cutting in to the bone—yet fat as a seal withal, and quite
incapable of standing up before hounds, so Tom had to confess
himself mistaken.
Before this fox was well broken up we heard a far-off holloa from
the top of the Dene, and as we moved off to it, information was
conveyed by signal and otherwise that a fox had gone away, and we
learned that he had a good six or seven minutes’ start.
Hounds, who were keen enough to begin with, were now desperately
eager; but we held them together till we got round above the Dene,
where they felt for and soon found the line, and went off with a
good cry and at a fair pace.
A bunch of so-called “knowing ones,” mostly from neighbouring hunts,
had ridden cunning for a start, and had the advantage of being above
us and on the right side of the stream, and seemed likely to hustle
hounds before they had properly established a scent and settled down
to run it. But the line was over a nicely fenced country that
required a little doing, and one hedge and rail with a ditch to us
took toll of two or three impetuous spirits and steadied the rash
ones, so that after fifteen glorious minutes we were on good terms
with the hounds, and on the best with each other and our horses, and
I was able to see which hounds were cutting out the work.
Tom Telfer and Billy Kerr and two hard-riding farmers, brothers, on
young horses, were prominent in front, and close in our wake
thundered and crashed a score or more of the best and boldest of
Border sportsmen. The pace was kept for another twenty minutes or
so, over larger enclosures with fewer fences and an occasional gate
to open, which was usually done by the brothers alternately; though
Tom, and a hill-man on a grey pony, seemed to be going out of their
way to jump stone walls.
There was no perceptible change of scent, though hounds were
slightly more packed than at first, and were pointing towards a hill
rising straight in front of us and standing outside the range of
higher hills behind it. As they got on to the base of it, we could
hear there were few, if any, silent throats among them, and we
realised that they had been going faster than was apparent, and we
felt we might have to take from our horses all that they had to give
us.
I watched the pack swarming up the slope straight for the summit,
too steep for horses to climb. Which way round ? Will the fox sink
the wind, or will he keep on up wind? Having had a good start, and
having had time and opportunity to make his point, and not being
unduly pressed, he will likely do the latter. This was the answer to
the question mentally-put, and was acted upon. Six or eight of us
turned round the right shoulder, while nearly all the rest of the
field in sight swung to the left.
It was a period of great suspense that we went through, losing sight
of the pack altogether for five or ten minutes at least, and it
seemed twice as long and I was beginning to sicken when I saw,
barely half a mile in front of us, some sheep on a hillside run
together, and shortly afterwards hounds moving up wind right-handed
and rather across us, not so packed as before, yet not strung out,
and all hunting closely.
We were now completely in the hill county, with not a cover or earth
for miles round, and as the cool air rushed into my lungs I could
not resist the temptation to cheer on the hounds, an effort which
was emulated by half-a-dozen of the leading riders.
The next obstacle, on a rather steep slope, was a wall which we
jumped. Tom Telfer, first at it, had pushed off the cope with his
foot without getting down. Then came another which was lower and on
sound ground, and which we had without waste of time.
Here hounds checked for some minutes but cast themselves well
forward, and hit it off just as we got up to them, and raced away,
turning backwards and running very fast through a nick between two
hills and out of sight again. Only those who have hunted in a hill
country can realise how suddenly and completely hounds will
disappear. Here were we not three hundred yards behind them when
they went over the crest, and when we reached it, though we could
see all round for two miles apparently, not a hound could we pick
up; they seemed to have vanished out of sight and hearing into
space. A shepherd on a hilltop above us with his cap on his stick
gave us the direction, and we pushed on. Some grouse, coming down
wind with the speed of an express train, confirmed the shepherd, and
soon we saw far below us once more the flying pack, sweeping along
like a flock of pigeons before a tempest.
The line was now more or less parallel to the outward one, and about
three-quarters of a mile from that, and it was not without very hard
riding that we got in touch with hounds, who had gone very fast away
from us over the hill. By the time we got into enclosed country
again our numbers were reduced, and horses had had nearly enough-The
two young farmers who had consistently led most of the way were
there, one with a lathered horse and a mud-stained back, and Billy
Kerr had vanished altogether.
’Twas here that I saw the last of Tom Telfer for a while. With legs
and arms working, he rode at an awkward double with a strong hedge
on the farther side. His horse jumped on to the bank rather free,
and got too close under the second fence, and though he made a big
effort to clear it, he blundered through the top of it on to his
nose, and Tom temporarily disappeared from the chase.
One of the brothers, in jumping a low drop wall into a plough, found
his horse get his fore-legs so deep into the ground that he was
unable to get them out in time before his hind-quarters followed,
and he was pushed on to his head and balanced there for a while
before rolling over and lying still as if dead. But man and horse
were up and going later on. The Irish mare had chanced a piece of
timber and rapped her shins badly, and needed some persuasion to
keep going.
We had some very pretty hunting here; hounds were desperately keen
and unmistakably near their fox, but scent was not so good, and one
after another would carry it for a short while, then fall back and
allow a slower hunter to take it on and follow the short turns the
fox was making. It was an anxious time as they almost walked over a
bare fallow and on to the public road but not across it. After a
short cast round in front, one hound, old Welfare, feathered and
spoke on the road going along for about a hundred yards, then
through the hedge and up a ditch on the inside for a short distance
till she too gave up. For five or ten minutes every hound tried his
best, all being very busy moving round with nose on the ground and
stern high, but to no purpose. The field kept coming up, and several
dismounted, got down, and loosened the girths of their steaming
horses, believing all was over.
We were on some flat haugh lands, close to the river bounding our
country, which was in full flood, and I was about to try down the
river bank, when I saw old Rambler deliberately walk into the stream
and push off to swim across the torrent. He was carried down a long
way, and had some difficulty in getting out. Barely waiting to shake
himself dry, the true old fellow worked along for a few yards, then
his stern began to go till it fairly lashed his ribs, and he
proclaimed his find with an electrifying roar. Never was a note of
music sweeter or more welcome, never did a huntsman tingle more,
never did hounds respond quicker as they dashed into the boiling
stream. Immediately half-a-dozen eager souls had plunged in, with
the water curling up to the saddle flaps, and were struggling across
the swollen river. Fortunately the foothold was good, and all got
across but one, who got mid-way over, when his faint-hearted horse
turned and took him back, while right and left the remainder
galloped for the bridges.
Hounds were taking
the line steadily across the furrows of a ploughed field, not making
fast progress, but all in it; then wavering on the next field, an
old grass one, until half-way across, they ran on at an improved
pace. The next fence stopped two of us, and the Irish mare blundered
badly, and I made the unpleasant discovery that she had had enough.
Tom Telfer appeared on a second horse, which seemed as much
distressed as his first one, and pointed towards a gate at which
stood a boy waving hurriedly and holding a fresh horse. Who should
this turn out to be but Ben with my good old friend “Royal”—a friend
indeed, cleverly arriving at the most opportune moment. I blessed
the boy profusely, and scrambled up with a feeling of exultation as
the gallant old horse stretched himself out and flicked over a
couple of fences as if they were brush hurdles. Tom Telfer and
another were scrambling through a rough hedge as the old fellow had
it faultlessly higher up.
Getting alongside of hounds, I saw Rambler, Pirate, Marmion,
Woodman, and Regent running mute and with their hackles up, and as
they crashed through the next hedge and turned sharp at right angles
down behind it, I viewed, to my intense delight, the fox a short way
in front, going very slowly with trailing brush and humped-up back.
Hounds, too, got a view of him, and what a thrill they gave one as
they opened their throats and threw their tongues with all their
might, as they hurled themselves at him and pulled him down in the
open, as he wheeled round to face them.
“Whoo-oo-oo-oop. Worry-worry-worry—whoo-oop," from half-a-dozen
excited throats. “Well done, hounds" “What a good do, Master, eh?”
from Tom Telfer. “Leave it, hounds—dead, dead—leave it."
“Well done, lads.” “One, two, three, five, seven a half, nine, ten a
half, eleven, twelve a half, fifteen a half; only one hound short;
what a fizzer, what a cracker!” “How the devils drove ahead when
they turned in!” “See me take that toss in B's farm?"
“Thought we were going to lose him at Eckford.” “What a rare fine
cast of Rambler’s."
“Brush to Mrs. Edgerston, I s’pose; only girl up. Would like that
fine sharp-pointed muzzle myself. Just give me a moment to whang off
all the pads; there will be bids for every one of them, by gum. Now
then, tear him and eat him, boys. Whoo-oop —whoop. Too-too-too-t-oo-too—whoo-oop.
Here’s Billy Kerr coming up, and without his hat too, by gum.”
“How far did you say?”
“Don’t know; but it’s seven miles on the map, I know, from where we
turned in, and we had been going for forty-five minutes before
that.”
“Here comes the Provost. Must try him for a drink. He generally
carries a big glass bottle. My throat’s like a lime-kiln. Eh,
Provost?”
“Let’s have one more whoo-oo-oop!” |