Authors: P. J. O'Rourke
The hunt was moving. Horses were trotting over the far hill. The two hounds did their best in the music department. There was a spate of elderly, excited driving as hunt followers hurried to find a better view. We parked by a tributary of the River Exe. The stag either did or didn't go into a strip of woods along the bank. The hounds weren't sure. The followers weren't sure. Possibly the stag came out of the woods. Possibly he didn't. The hunters went into the woods and came out. This sounds as interesting as cricket. And to the onlookers it was. The crowd had grown to forty or more and now included children in small tweeds and small Barbour coats and a man selling tea and sandwiches from a van. They all watched intently, the tea vendor included. There was a tense murmuring, as from a golf gallery.
The staghounds and stag hunters trotted through a farmyard, and I followed on foot. Some local farmers are not hospitable to the traffic through their propertyânot hospitable, specifically, to the traffic of me. I was trying to take notes and make haste and avoid deep puddles and horse droppings, and I wasn't wearing a necktie. “Is he all right?” I heard a farmer ask.
“He thought you were an âanti,'” the retired grocer explained later. “They come around bothering the hunts.”
According to a brochure from the League Against Cruel Sports, “The League . . . has collected an enormous amount
of evidence of the cruelty of hunting. Years of undercover work and hunt monitoring has enabled [members of Parliament] to see the real face of hunting.”
Beyond the farm, on the Exmoor upland, the real face of hunting was soaking wet. The scenery was an alluring frustration: heather-covered bosomy hill mounds rising above dark nests of woods. A green girlfriend of a landscape. But somebody else's girlfriend, greeting the hunt with cold drizzle and sharp wind.
This buoyed everyone's spirits. The British manner of cheerfully not complaining can't be maintained when there's nothing to cheerfully not complain about. Forty horses ran across the moor. Stag hunting is not as show-offy as fox-hunting. There's no jumping of ditches, hedges, and gates. Exmoor is wet through like a bath sponge; no use ditching it for drainage. The hedges are as high as tennis backboards and grow from stone heaps piled up since Roman times. And the farmers leave the gates open because some things are more important than keeping sheep in. I witnessed none of the hat-losing, horse-flipping spectacles seen in engravings on the walls of steak houses. And to be truthful, my entire knowledge of hunting on horseback has been gained by staring at such decor between courses. What sort of engravings will steak houses hang on the paneling 100 years hence? Pictures of people in Pilates classes?
The excitement in stag hunting comes from the treacherous footing on the soaked, peat-slick moors and from the great length of the stag chase and the great speed of the stag's run. It can also be dangerous just sitting on a horse. A young woman fell off while the hunt was gathered by the riverbank. A medical evacuation helicopter was called. The hunt was uninterrupted.
The Exmoor stag hunters distribute a brochure, in Q&A form, arguing that stag hunting is not particularly inhumane. “Hunters” might well be substituted for “deer.”
Q. But deer must be terrified by stag hunting!
A. . . . Deer pay no more heed . . . than a grazing wildebeest (so often seen on TV) does to a pride of lions lunching off a mate nearby.
I had been offered a tame mount on which to follow the hunt.
“How tame?” I asked.
“Very tame.”
“There was,” I said, “a man who used to come through my neighborhood in the 1950s with a pony and a camera . . .”
“Not that tame.”
But I was inspired, watching the hunters dash around on the moor. The horses were beautiful, as tall as those that pull wagons in beer commercials but as gracefully made as what I'd lost fifty dollars on in last year's Kentucky Derby. I vowed to learn to rideâas soon as they got the middle part of horses to be lower to the ground and had the saddles made by BarcaLounger.
Wind, rain, and temperature grew worse. The hunt descended into a precipitous dell where I'd have thought the riders would have to walk their mounts. They didn't. But I couldn't even walk myself. I returned to where the hunt followers were gathered by the side of a road. The followers were disturbed. A pale and agitated young couple were walking down the road. Surely these were “antis.” They were dressed head to toe in black.
But the boy and the girl were just lost backpackers who'd made the mistake of going out into nature for fun. The entertainments of nature are of a sterner kind. They were wet and miserable. The hunters were not, or didn't feel that they were. But the stag and every trace of it had vanished, and the hunters decided to “pack it in, to spare the horses.”
Michael, Adrian, and I headed back to Michael's farm in his horse van, a bit disappointed. And then through the van windows came that music I'd been told about: the full cry of a pack. It is a bouillabaisse of a noise, with something in it of happy kids on a playground, honking geese headed for your decoys, and the
wheee
of a deep-sea fishing reel when you've hooked something huge. This particular music was being sung soprano. A beagle pack, thirty-some strong, was bounding across a pasture. We got out and hurried in the direction of the chase. Beagling is like foxhunting or stag hunting except that the quarry is hare, and it's done without benefit of horses. Beaglers follow the packâat a very brisk paceâon foot. Hunting hares with beagles is banned by the Hunting Act. But rabbits can still be hunted. “Because they're considered pests,” Michael said. “Because of lot of Labour voters hunt rabbits,” Adrian said. Also, for some reason, “the hunting of a hare which has been shot,” is permitted.
The pack arced away from us across a broad field. Just as it did, the hare that the beagles weren't supposed to be hunting came at the three of us with a speed hardly credible in a land animal. If it had been less nimble (and bigger) it would have bowled us over. The dogs seemed to have lost the scent.
“The hare went that way!” Michael shouted to the master of the beagle hounds.
“The
shot
hare!” Adrian shouted.
“You mean the âbush rabbit'!” the master shouted back. Interesting to wonder how many of the MPs voting for the Hunting Act would know a rabbit from a hare if it turned up in their Easter basket. Maybe on a menu.
We spent an hour with the beagles. They no more got a bush rabbit than Michael and Adrian had got a stag, but the clambering and clamor of the beagles were a joy. I'm a strong advocate for animal rights. I am an animal. I belong to Animal NATOâus, dogs, horses (cats are France). And I belong to Animal WTO. We export feed to sheep, cows, pigs, and chickens, and, to maintain the balance of trade, we eat them.
The Thompsons gave a dinner that night. Their house was of
Middlemarch
era but with fewer old bores writing the
Key to All Mythologies,
and more stag heads on the walls. The main course was pork roast from a farm pig, rather than venison from the Exmoor stag (which in any case would have needed to hang for a week). Miscellaneous small terriers sat on guests' laps.
The consensus of the party was that the hunting ban had to do less with loving animals than with bullying people. This was not a class struggle, I was told. The working class was all for hunting, said one guest. And she was a Labour peer. Nor was it, she said (she herself proved the point) a Labour-Tory conflict. Instead, all agreed, a certain kind of today's urban elite was getting its own back at what they saw as a traditional elite that had no use, as Michael Thompson put it, for people “with shaved heads and five earrings and their husbands just as bad.” But, all agreed again, hunts aren't as posh as they used to beâand they never were.
There's truth to this, judging from the foxhunting prose laureate R. S. Surtees, who had his h-dropping London shopkeeper Jorrocks hunting with passion in the 1830s. Anthony Trollope wrote, “Surely no man has labored at it as I have done, or hunted under such drawbacks as to distances, money, and natural disadvantages. I am very heavy, very blind. . . . Nor have I ever been in truth a good horseman. . . . But it has been for more than thirty years a duty to me to ride to hounds.”
The word “duty” must seem strange to people not involved in field sports, to today's urban elites who don't see the look on the dog's face when the laptop instead of the gun cabinet is opened during bird season. Of course it's tempting to think that the word “duty” always seems strange to modern urban elites.
Still, in a way, the bullies are understandable. There's a certain satisfaction in taking something away from people perceived as having been too certain and self-confident for too long, people who've dominated society but whose dominance is slipping away. Network news anchors come to mind.
Then again, the bullies aren't understandable. Adrian used to be the master of foxhounds for a hunt in northern England. At the annual hunt ball antis protested outside. “With balaclavas pulled down like the IRA,” said Adrian. “One told me, âWe'll smash up your car tonight, Adrian.' They knew me by name. They didn't smash my car. They broke every window in my house. I found my dog and her litter of pups covered in shards of glass.”
Several of the other guests hunted foxes as well as stags. This was Thursday night. There was a big fox hunt on Saturday, and Sunday was Easter. Conversation turned to how to get Easter shopping done. Shopping on Good Friday was
a bit inappropriate, wasn't it? (There are no atheists in fox hunts.)
The fox hunts were doing all right since the hunting ban. They'd taken up “drag hunting.” Someone rides ahead pulling cloth soaked in fox scent behind him. The hounds and the hunters follow his course. And if an actual fox pops up along the way . . . well, who can blame the dogs? Ninety-one foxes were killed on the first day of the hunting ban. But what will the country pub of the future be named? “The Something That Smells Like a Fox and Hounds”?
Did the antis have, I asked, any moral point? Yes, a great pointâof moral vanity. God didn't make the world good enough for them. Cheese was served. Port was passed. Adrian quoted Surtees: “It's the sport of kings, the image of war without its guilt, and only five-and-twenty percent its danger.”
In a nearly identical cultivated, sonorous voice Michael Hobday, spokesman for the League Against Cruel Sports, answered my questions a week later in London. The League Against Cruel Sports was founded in 1924, with antecedents dating to Hogarth's
The Four Stages of Cruelty
. Here are a few of the League's past presidents: Edith Sitwell, Lord Grey de Ruthyn, the Rt. Hon. Earl of Listowel, the Reverend Lord Soper. And a brochure published by the League shows how long and deep is the controversy in Britain about man and his relationship with the animals that are his friends, his relatives, and his dinner. In 1822 Britain passed a law against improper treatment of cattle, the first animal-welfare legislation in history. In 1835 Britain outlawed dogfighting, cockfighting, and bull, bear, and badger baiting. In 1929 the Labour Party adopted a platform plank
opposing blood sports (although it held four parliamentary majorities before it fulfilled that campaign promise). “There's a long history of criticism of hunting,” Mr. Hobday said. “The people who established the League Against Cruel Sports had a background in the humanitarian movementâanimal suffering, welfare of children, prohibition.”
I didn't ask if the humanitarian movement had trouble prioritizing. I did ask, “Why the focus on hunting rather than, say, factory farming, with its animal penitentiaries?”
“The reasons are twofold,” Mr. Hobday said. “Firstly, foxhunting is an emotive issue. The sight of the blood and gore tugs at the heartstrings. It makes powerful television. Secondly,” Mr. Hobday said, “hunting is done for entertainment. It's a sport.”
I asked why the law permitted hunting rabbits but not hares.
“The League's view is that cruelty to any animal in the name of sport is wrong. Parliament's view was to make a distinction between activities that were ânecessary' and activities that were undertaken for sport. The Countryside Alliance has a vested interest in pointing out loopholes.”
The Countryside Alliance is the principal British pro-hunting group. Apparently both the League and the Alliance enjoy majority support among the British public. According to a 1997 Gallup poll for
The Daily Telegraph,
80 percent of Britons disapproved of hunting foxes with hounds. According to a 2004 ICM poll for
The Sunday Telegraph,
70 percent of Britons believed the police should not enforce the hunting ban.
I wanted to know why hunting (that is, chasing animals with dogs) was banned but shooting (pointing or flushing animals with dogs) wasn't.
“With shooting,” Mr. Hobday said, “there are clear steps that people can take to minimize suffering.”
Being a better shot was the only one I could think of, and I've been trying for forty years to no avail.
“Using a pack of dogs,” Mr. Hobday continued, “with the best will in the world you can't do much about the cruelty. And in practical terms it's impossible to have legislation that covers everything.”
I asked if class conflict was involved in the hunting ban.
“From our perspective,” Mr. Hobday said, “there's no class element at all. Hare coursing is banned, though it's working class.” (Hare coursing is letting greyhounds chase hares in a fieldâa sort of libertarian dog racing without the bother of a track,) “In the minds of ordinary people,” Mr. Hobday said, hunting is “not an issue of class but an issue of behavior. Hunters are seen to behave in a very arrogant fashionâhunts going through smallholdings and gardens. Hunters are very poor about apologizing. There's an attitude of entitlement by hunters: âIt's our land and we have the right.'”