liiii!=l=l =MEM MEE ; r CBS iikf PEW 'Bilt9ro own xini.-No; 129.. Evitorlicv :: tErAlns , TI IE BOOM *AM Zingllsh ()Wisteria 167, - Xliedll....Letter, train lehnirlewliteadei , , , , The Tiondon correspondent - a the N. Y. Tribune sli*e :- . 2 ' . ' -..., -.r. i ,- ' , l . . . Limy° in o rojna.zionee:VlA3rxed _to the • in- % iciest tiikenin - - match. by _ Mr, Charles Iteadef l'lti 'fr fiat' !Visits' to -the crevi- t h e . fulliarized him w th - their - habits and co - fidi; tifi , hrgd , boWateliedlthe:#o,4o,/reetilY franithn i uthpire'S beat: 'I _fished him to put down his impressions, And lie'tintillygaliride liberty to MC the few notes he sent ale, on condition, that they sliouldhet'aPpear to have 'been vol unteered., nor be treated aks naying_been_first_ -- writteniiicirtablkc'tatkitAlli.4 wish Inuit horny excuselncluding Ids letier , in • my ~ own, in -stead-0f giviugit a piikli id Limur by itself. Mr. JiAesde writes ':' - ~,1 f ' •.. 'l- ("I' ' ' Cr "it couldhardlydie; believed in .tref-itrinfed States to what,anestent ,I„- an , o„xfard .•man, siii i rathize with your 'gallant - felkivirtul Butl_ Is you my observations. „. The Harvard - boat. goes down a little by-. the head. ills she faced', the ,Ilde, con:Ling to'. start, the .r nearlyrarrover her. " The-crew—were- not in -nigh—condition, generally.. T ha v e lop_g seen tlib, with, regret. But it is att on which they ; wereltotichy, and ./ could not approach it without offence. _Proolit : -toil on ..Goring'or neektb,,loo4 3 14 110,,,, especially of Shuroons,/and ng. en Cr Ai Nnilli OL Aprightlineis that resultii from high condition. They were,_however, hard in muscle -Aar4; tbanrthe ;Oxford crenoi:c. Vet-' Sinn:run* 04 diarrhoea on the day and for forty-eight hours " In the race,..Oxford did mot wait for-them as they sometimes ;do for_tlarnbridge but pulled all they knew from the first. A' little above Hammersmith Bridge they were,, gis tressed, but got second wind afterward.v -" Their beautiful finish, ;as ,showain prac tice, disappeared in the race, i and; little re mained of their form but their' true time, the quielkadva,nca of the arm, and the kearecateh at first of the stroke,which have won them the day so often. Harvard *pulled the hand somer stroke of the two, X. 11—In prattising, just the reverse. "The ridiculous theory of the London prow — is - answered by this, that Harvard kept the mune form in practice and in the struggie.ox ford did not. "These remarks are at your service. I think I you may rely upon their accuracy. As to the dip forward of boat,' naropitdon was shared to the full by a distinguished oarsman, with whom 'compared 'notes, with' Gm - Craft - and her behavior in sight. I's „ "Yours, very sincerely, "Clflikrz l 4, ‘ 4 ,." 04 , 12 ". "Losamtv,"Augest W." I am nonethe less glad to, have this brief ;comment from 31r. Beade, with his have to print, ii because cia several peints his`opinion.; LS hostile to mine. Itwould not-freewill° ma to' discuss a letter written in Miele a spirit, nor need. I say anything about - th& weight of his judgment in rowing matters. The author, of the g boa tie g chapters. Inc V.Hard cia - aw is sure to be listened to with deference, intd"What , lie , urges on one or two clntrorerted points will be dread: bv. • Harvard 'Mew with L •peen/far , pleasnie; tfiough X don'tknow say , lfar-I yard men only. Poi the.Purposetef 'this race, every Amerman, is. , a Harvard man.;-since, spite, of their modeSV l disehtimer,they were and will always "be thought - an' American Four; ofiVrboin Americans have every to be Proud. • ' I- ; ; ;• Th 43 British • Tetk.wraph recounts- that, clear