"Scraps", No. 27: Two Dismounted Riders Drinking at an Alehouse Door
1823
4
Cecil Charles Windsor Aldin, 1870–1935
`Hold Back, Sir!'
1904
5
Hablot Knight Browne, 1815–1882
"Hark": Startled Horse and Alert Rider
undated
6
Hablot Knight Browne, 1815–1882
The Sporting Parson: "A Find- and Our Parson Just Follows a Little, to See How His Dear Brethren Behave Themselves"
undated
7
Hablot Knight Browne, 1815–1882
"You're Not Going to Follow, Belle, Are You?"
undated
8
Gilbert Joseph Holiday, 1879 –1937
'Join the Hickers Old Boy - You're Well Rid of the Brute'
undated
9
Thomas Weaver, 1774–1843
Coursing
1800
10
Peter DeWint, 1784–1849
A Meet in the grounds of Raby Castle
undated
11
Hablot Knight Browne, 1815–1882
"Stout Party. 'I Don't Much Like These 'ere Thoroughbreads - They've no Substance' "
undated
12
Hablot Knight Browne, 1815–1882
The Sporting Parson: "Why Hang - I Mean Bless Me! If They Haven't Run into Him in My Own Churchyard!"
undated
13
Sir George Hayter, 1792–1871
Netting Deer in Richmond Park
undated
14
Hablot Knight Browne, 1815–1882
The Sporting Parson: "The Sporting Parson at the Meet(ing) of His 'Dear Brethren' "
undated
15
Henry Thomas Alken, 1785–1851
"Scraps", No. 24: Hunting -Ttwo Riders, One Opening a Gate For Hounds
1823
16
Henry Thomas Alken, 1785–1851
"Sporting Notions:" 'Hav'nt You a Notion That Tthis is the Best Mode of Monveyance Over a brook? and I Think by the Look of the Fellow he Never Had Any Thing so Neat in His Thing-a-My Before'