A philosophical and practical treatise on horses, and on the moral duties of man towards the brute creation, Nide 1C. Whittingham, Dean Stree, Fetter Lane, 1802 |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 5 kokonaismäärästä 77
Sivu 16
... never get better than the old books , and the old customs . " Running Horfes . " For the ordering of your running Horse , let him have no more meat than to fuffice nature , drink once in twenty - four hours ; and dreffing every day once ...
... never get better than the old books , and the old customs . " Running Horfes . " For the ordering of your running Horse , let him have no more meat than to fuffice nature , drink once in twenty - four hours ; and dreffing every day once ...
Sivu 26
... never yet had an opportunity of seeing . An edition of his chief work , The Farrier's Guide , he published in the year 1750 , revifed by him for the laft time , and enlarged to two volumes . His books are written in a plain , unaffected ...
... never yet had an opportunity of seeing . An edition of his chief work , The Farrier's Guide , he published in the year 1750 , revifed by him for the laft time , and enlarged to two volumes . His books are written in a plain , unaffected ...
Sivu 41
... never been so practically understood in France as in England ; at leaft within the present century , their writers of this period have been , I conceive , inferior to ours in effentials . La Foffe , Bourgelat , and St. Bel , had a great ...
... never been so practically understood in France as in England ; at leaft within the present century , their writers of this period have been , I conceive , inferior to ours in effentials . La Foffe , Bourgelat , and St. Bel , had a great ...
Sivu 55
... never be brought to take fuch things as are proper to carry off their ill effects , THEY OUGHT THEREFORE NOT TO BE GIVEN IN ANY CASE . " Gibson's Farrier's New Guide , 5th edition , 1727 , page 146.— “ I need not ac- quaint any one ...
... never be brought to take fuch things as are proper to carry off their ill effects , THEY OUGHT THEREFORE NOT TO BE GIVEN IN ANY CASE . " Gibson's Farrier's New Guide , 5th edition , 1727 , page 146.— “ I need not ac- quaint any one ...
Sivu 56
... never to be over liberal of his purging ingredients , even in those cases where purging is intended , efpecially with folutions of coarfe aloes , which I have observed to work and gripe Horses to a very great degree , even so as to ...
... never to be over liberal of his purging ingredients , even in those cases where purging is intended , efpecially with folutions of coarfe aloes , which I have observed to work and gripe Horses to a very great degree , even so as to ...
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
againſt alfo almoſt alſo animal becauſe beſt Bracken bred breed buſineſs cafe cart-horſes caſe cattle cauſe confequence confiderable courſe cuſtom deſcription diſcover diſeaſe drachms Engliſh eſtabliſhed faddle fafe faid fame farrier feems feen feet fervice fhall fhoe fhort fhould fhoulder fide fince finews fingle firſt fize fole fome fometimes fomewhat foot fpecies frog ftand ftill fubject fuch fuffer fufficient fuperior fuppofe fure fyftem Gibſon heels himſelf Horfes horſe horſe's human inftance intereft juſt juſtice labour laſt leaſt lefs legs mare meaſure miles moft moſt muft muſt myſelf nature neceffary neceffity never obfervation occafion perfons poffefs poffible practice preſent purchaſe purge purpoſe race reaſon reſpect ride rience ſcarce ſeems ſeen ſeveral ſhall ſhoeing ſmall ſome ſpeak ſpeed ſporting ſtand ſtate ſtill ſtyle ſuch SUFFOLK PUNCHES ſuppoſe ſyſtem Taplin thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe tion trot trotter ufual unleſs uſe uſually utmoſt veterinary weight writers
Suositut otteet
Sivu i - For that which befalleth the sons of men befalleth beasts; even one thing befalleth them: as the one dieth, so dieth the other; yea, they have all one breath; so that a man hath no preeminence above a beast: for all is vanity. All go unto one place; all are of the dust, and all turn to dust again.
Sivu 255 - But beware that in difmounting, you bend not your right knee, left the horfe fliould be touched by the fpur. Grafp the reins with your hand, putting your little finger between them. Your hand muft be perpendicular, your thumb uppermoft upon the bridle. " Suffer him not to finger the reins (the groom, in holding the horfe) but only to meddle with that part of the headftall, which...
Sivu 266 - If he has been lately from grafs, or draw-yard, or has been kept within, upon the faving plan of abridging his food in proportion to his work (a favourite meafure with fome people) he will receive damage from a long journey, however good he may be in nature : in fuch cafe, from thirty, to five-and-forty miles, is a fufficient day's work.
Sivu 259 - ... next ftage, fall into a flow trot, bend their necks, foam at the mouth, refufe to bear an ounce upon the bit, and keep perpetually upon the curvet, as if they longed to be upon the parade. Whenever this happens, the beft way of concluding...
Sivu 248 - The modern feat on horfe-back, and it feems to have owed its eftablifhmeut to reafon, confirmed by experience, is, to fet naturally and eafily upright upon your faddle, as you would in your chair ; your knees about as much bent, and turned inward, your toes fomewhat out, and upward, your leg falling nearly ftraight, and...
Sivu 258 - There is a circumfpection to be adopted advantageoufly by the tinfkilful, which will, at firft, give them the femblance, afterwards the reality, of good riding. The method of taking a rein in each hand, occafionally (much in ufe of late years) gives the rider great command over the mouth, neck, and fore-quarters of a horfe.
Sivu 18 - He had read Dee's prefaces before, The Devil and Euclid, o'er and o'er.
Sivu 241 - I have already given divers hints on this part of the fubject, and once more repeat my advice of teaching the colt a good canter. If it fhould be held proper to learn him to leap the bar...
Sivu 109 - ... be fmall and fine ; noftrils capacious ; lips thin ; mouth of fufficient depth, and the tongue not too large ; the jaw-bones wide at top, where they join the neck ; the head not abruptly affixed to the extremity of the neck, but with a moderate curve and tapering of the latter. The NECK muft be of moderate, not too great length, nor too thick and grofs on the upper part, nor too large and deep, but rifing from the withers or forehand, and afterwards declining and tapering at the extremity, it...
Sivu 121 - The grand fource of the unmerited and fuperfluous mifery of beafts, exifts, in my opinion, in a defect in the conftitution of all communities. No human government, I believe, has ever recognized the jus animalium, which...