"Scraps", No. 27: Two Dismounted Riders Drinking at an Alehouse Door
1823
2
Henry Thomas Alken, 1785–1851, British
"Scraps", No. 24: Hunting -Ttwo Riders, One Opening a Gate For Hounds
1823
3
Henry Thomas Alken, 1785–1851, British
"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'
between 1831 and 1832
4
Gilbert Joseph Holiday, 1879 –1937, British
'Join the Hickers Old Boy - You're Well Rid of the Brute'
undated
5
Cecil Charles Windsor Aldin, 1870–1935, British
`Hold Back, Sir!'
1904
6
Hablot Knight Browne, 1815–1882, British
The Sporting Parson: "Why Hang - I Mean Bless Me! If They Haven't Run into Him in My Own Churchyard!"
undated
7
Sir George Hayter, 1792–1871, British
Netting Deer in Richmond Park
undated
8
Hablot Knight Browne, 1815–1882, British
"Stout Party. 'I Don't Much Like These 'ere Thoroughbreads - They've no Substance' "
undated
9
Hablot Knight Browne, 1815–1882, British
"Hark": Startled Horse and Alert Rider
undated
10
Hablot Knight Browne, 1815–1882, British
"You're Not Going to Follow, Belle, Are You?"
undated
11
Hablot Knight Browne, 1815–1882, British
The Sporting Parson: "The Sporting Parson at the Meet(ing) of His 'Dear Brethren' "
undated
12
Hablot Knight Browne, 1815–1882, British
The Sporting Parson: "A Find- and Our Parson Just Follows a Little, to See How His Dear Brethren Behave Themselves"