‘Never comes to the meet,’ added a sixth.

‘Come on a cow today,’ observed another.

‘Always chopping and changing,’ added another; ‘he’ll come on a giraffe next.’

Having commenced his career with the F. H. H. so inauspiciously and yet escaped detection, Mr Sponge thought of letting Tom Washball enjoy the honours of his faux-pas, and of sneaking quietly home as soon as the hounds hit off the scent; but unluckily, just as they were crossing the lane, what should heave in sight, cantering along at his leisure, but the redoubtable Multum in Parvo, who, having got rid of Old Leather by bumping and thumping his leg against a gate-post, was enjoying a line of his own.

‘Whoay!’ cried Sponge, as he saw the horse quickening his pace to have a shy at the hounds as they crossed. ‘Who--o--a--y!’ roared he, brandishing his whip, and trying to turn the piebald round; but no, the brute wouldn’t answer the bit, and dreading lest, in addition to heading the fox, he should kill ‘the best hound in the pack,’ Mr Sponge threw himself off, regardless of the mud-bath in which he lit, and caught the runaway as he tried to dart past.

For--rard! -- for--rard! --for--rard!’ was again the cry, as the hounds hit off the scent; while the late pausing, panting sportsmen tackled vigorously with their steeds, and swept onward like the careering wind. Mr Sponge, albeit somewhat perplexed, had still sufficient presence of mind to see the necessity of immediate action; and though he had so lately contemplated beating a retreat, the unexpected appearance of Parvo altered the state of affairs.

‘Now or never,’ said he, looking first at the disappearing field, and then for the non-appearing Leather. ‘Hang it! I may as well see the run,’ added he; so hooking the piebald on to an old stone gate-post that stood in the ragged fence, and lengthening a stirrup-leather, he vaulted into the saddle, and began lengthening the other as he went.

It was one of Parvo’s going days; indeed, it was that that Old Leather and he had quarrelled about -- Parvo wanting to follow the hounds, while Leather wanted to wait for his master. And Parvo had the knack of going, as well as the occasional inclination. Although such a drayhorse-looking animal, he could throw the ground behind him amazingly; and the deep-holding clay in which he now found himself was admirably suited to his short powerful legs and enormous stride. The consequence was, that he was very soon up with the hindmost horsemen. These he soon passed, and was presently among those who ride hard when there is nothing to stop them. Such time as these sportsmen could now spare from looking out ahead was devoted to Sponge, whom they eyed with the utmost astonishment, as if he had dropped from the clouds.

A stranger -- a real out-and-out stranger -- had not visited their remote regions since the days of poor Nimrod. ‘Who could it be?’ But ‘the pace,’ as Nimrod used to say, ‘was too good to enquire.’ A little further on, and Sponge drew upon the great guns of the hunt -- the men who ride to hounds, and not after them; the same who had criticised him through the fence -- Mr Wake, Mr Fossick, Parson Blossomnose, Mr Fyle, Lord Scamperdale, Jack himself and others. Great was their astonishment at the apparition, and incoherent the observations they dropped as they galloped on.

‘It isn’t Wash, after all,’ whispered Fyle into Blossomnose’s ear, as they rode through a gate together.

‘No--o--o,’ replied the nose, eyeing Sponge intently.

‘What a coat!’ whispered one.

‘Jacket,’ replied the other.

‘Lost his brush,’ observed a third, winking at Sponge’s docked tail.


  By PanEris using Melati.

Previous chapter/page Back Home Email this Search Discuss Bookmark Next chapter/page
Copyright: All texts on Bibliomania are © Bibliomania.com Ltd, and may not be reproduced in any form without our written permission. See our FAQ for more details.