
Shortly after Charlie arrived in Paris, he took a side trip to Normandy to go boar hunting with the Duke of Westminster. At the train station, a reporter asked him about the hunt: "I shall enjoy [it] but I shouldn't like to shoot anything. I am too soft-hearted."
This would be the first time Charlie had been on a horse in years and he was concerned about whether or not he could stay on the animal and what he would do if he were actually confronted with a boar. These were the thoughts that kept him awake the night before the hunt.


Adding to his worries was the fact that he didn't bring the proper clothing and had to borrow a jacket & gloves from the Duke, who was twice his size. ("The duke's gloves were so large I found I could close my fist inside without disturbing the fingers.")
The Duke was informed that boar tracks had been found so the hunting party drove forty miles to the location. They had to wait another hour in the cold for the horses and dogs to arrive. The first horse that was presented to Charlie “reared up on her hind legs, cavorted and pranced around, then sidled towards me as though desiring to sweep me off the road. But I was too quick for her. I was behind one of the cars in a jiffy.” Charlie was brought another, more well-behaved horse.
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Illustration from "A Comedian Sees The World," A Woman's Home Companion, 1933 |
He returned to the Duke's chateau where his valet, Kono, was waiting for him. After dinner, they left for Paris where Charlie was eager to take a Turkish bath. "It was four in the morning before I emerged from the manipulations of a masseur," recalled Charlie.
For days, he could not sit or stand without groaning and had to eat his meals standing up at the fireplace. He decided then and there that he would confine his future participation in sports to "tiddledy winks."

Sources:
A Comedian Sees The World, November 1933
Charlie Chaplin: King Of Tragedy by Gerith von Ulm
The Daily News, Perth, May 5th, 1931