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5 revisions | Whit at Apr 08, 2020 08:47 PM | |
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142LIFE IN THE SADDLE. SOMETHING ABOUT THE WAY PEOPLE RIDE. Horseback Exercise Almost a Thing of the Past in the East and North, While It is Still Very Common in the South and West. QUITE ENGLISH, YOU KNOW. WESTERN STYLE. "It's English to ride," however, and so all swelldom in the cities rides. Hunt clubs are organized, and tame foxes are chased with bounds and horses. An eastern fox hunt isn't at all like a similar diversion in less commercial and less materially wealthy regions, though. There's never more than one fox, and it's a foregone conclusion that he will be caught; that is, providing he can be got to run; for the foxes that are chased in the east are pampered animals that are kept and fed for months previous to the "meet." IN THE PARK. The great fad among eastern swells who ride nowadays is the English method. It involves the rising in the saddle of the rider at every step of the horse. And if the rider can "show daylight" between himself and the horse he is considered "quite English." Whether the "English" rider is as graceful as his western brother is a question. And the anglomaniacs of New York and Boston have noted with alarm that just as they have learned to spring upon their toes at just the proper moment the Prince of Wales and his royal mother, and of course all the toadies of England, have fallen to admiring the western style of riding close to the horse practiced by Buffalo Bill and his Wild West troupe. But we shouldn't cavil at horseback riding, no matter why the rider rides, for it's a glorious exercise, and there's no prettier picture in the world than a young gallant and his "faire ladye" out riding "in the park," that is, if they know how to ride. | 142LIFE IN THE SADDLE. SOMETHING ABOUT THE WAY PEOPLE RIDE. Horseback Exercise Almost a Thing of the Past in the East and North, While It is Still Very Common in the South and West. QUITE ENGLISH, YOU KNOW. WESTERN STYLE. "It's English to ride," however, and so all [swelldom?] in the cities rides. Hunt clubs are organized, and tame foxes are chased with bounds and horses. An eastern fox hunt isn't at all like a similar diversion in less commercial and less materially wealthy regions, though. There's never more than one fox, and it's a foregone conclusion that he will be caught; that is, providing he can be got to run; for the foxes that are chased in the east are pampered animals that are kept and fed for months previous to the "meet." IN THE PARK. The great fad among eastern swells who ride nowadays is the English method. It involves the rising in the saddle of the rider at every step of the horse. And if the rider can "show daylight" between himself and the horse he is considered "quite English." Whether the "English" rider is as graceful as his western brother is a question. And the anglomaniacs of New York and Boston have noted with alarm that just as they have learned to spring upon their toes at just the proper moment the Prince of Wales and his royal mother, and of course all the toadies of England, have fallen to admiring the western style of riding close to the horse practiced by Buffalo Bill and his Wild West troupe. But we shouldn't cavil at horseback riding, no matter why the rider rides, for it's a glorious exercise, and there's no prettier picture in the world than a young gallant and his "faire [ladye?]" out riding "in the park," that is, if they know how to ride. |
