LOCKED CASK REESE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Received^ . BIOLOGY Accessions No.2-.?G&.£. ______ Shelf No.- ._ LIBRARY 0 B 8 Sf KIR • 'MAldldA'L'lA, .'RATIO &WINDUS PICCADILLY THE NATURALIST'S LIBRARY. EDITED BY SIR WILLIAM JARDINE, BART. F.R.S.E., F.L.S., ETC. ETC. VOL. XX. Mammalia. HORSES. BY LIEUT.-COL. CHARLES HAMILTON SMITH, K.H. AND K.W., F.R. AND L.S., PRESIDENT OF THE DEVON ETC. ETC. CHATTO & WINDUS, PICCADILLY. V_x "^ \r\ BIOLOGY LIBRARY G PAbA MEMOIR OP GESNER . . . .17 NATURAL HISTORY OP THE EQUID^E. — Introduction . bb Breeds of Horses noticed by the Ancients . . 106 Medo- Persian Horse, ancient maned Dun Stock, from Bas-reliefs of the Che-el-minar Plate A. fig. 1. — Egyptian Horse, Ancient Bay Stock, from Thebes, Plate A. fig. 2 83, 109 Skeleton of the Horse, Plate I. External Muscles of the Horse, Plate II. The Wild Horse . . . .146 The Tarpan Wild Horse, primaeval Bay Stock, from a Drawing sent from Russia, Plate III. . . 160 Feral Horses of America . . . .173 THE EQUHXE IN GENERAL . . . .186 The Horse. Equus caballus . . . .192 The Domestic Horse. Equus caballus domesticus . 192 Races and Breeds of Domestic Horses . . 208 The Arabian Race. Plate VIII. . . .210 The Barb of Morocco .... 224 The Shrubat-ur-reech, grey, of the Morocco Desert, from the print published in Italy, Plate XI. . 227 The Bornou White Race of Africa, drawn from life by Col. Hamilton Smith, Plate X. , . 228 The Dongola white-footed Black, from the Lithograph published in Italy. It represents the horse which carried a Mameluke chief from the Upper Nile across the Desert to Tunis ! Plate X.* 229 CONTENTS. PAGE The Turkish Race . . . .231 Tiie Persian . . . . . 233 The Toorkee Races . . . . .238 East Indian Races (see Advertisement, p. viii.) . 241 The Paramero of Peru, from a beautiful Model done in Peru. Plate XII. . . . . 248 The English Breeds of Horses . . .250 The English Race-horse. Eclipse, from the print, drawn to scale by Sainbel. Plate IX. . . 253 The Villous Horse, primaeval White Stock, drawn from life by Col. Hamilton Smith. Plate IV. . . 262 Marengo Arab, once the property of the Emperor Bo- naparte, white breed of the Bay Stock, from the print. Plate VIII. . . . . 263 Crisp-haired Horse, probable original Stock of the Black Horse, drawn from life by Col. Hamilton Smith. Plate V. ... .266 The English Draught Horse, Black Race, from life, by Col. Hamilton Smith. Plate XIII. . . 269 Decussated Horse, Eelback Dun of the Ukraine, drawn from life by Col. Hamilton Smith. Plate VI. . 274 Head of Hungarian Horse, with slit septum naris, from a drawing by Zoffani. Plate XXXI. . . 278 Shetland Pony, from life, by Mr. Stewart. Plate XV. 283 The Saran Race ..... 287 The Tangum, or Tangan, Piebald primaeval Stock of Tibet, domesticated race of Sikim, Lower Tibet ; drawing sent from India. Plate VII. . . 288 The Koomrah (by mistake named Lalisio), Equus hip- pagrus, from life, -by Col. Hamilton Smith. PI. XVI. 2.94 The Asinine Group . . . . .298 The Yo-to-tze (by mistake named Hippagrus), Asinus cquuleus, from life, by Col. Ham. Smith. PI. XVII. 304 The Onager, Asinus onager , from life, by Col. Hamil- ton Smith. Plate XVIII. .... 307 The Wild Ass of Persia, Asinus kamar, from Sir R. Kerr Porter. Plate XIX. 313 CONTENTS. PAGE The Domestic Ass. A sinus domesticus . . 314 "I I e Djiggetai (by mistake engraved Quagga Male), 4st*uaAeniionus, from the print, An. Litltoyraph., of Fred. Cuvier. Plate XX. . . .317 The Hippotigrine Group of Zebras . . . 320 The Zebra Male, from life, by Col. Hamilton Smith. Plate XXI. ..... 321 The Angola Dauw, Hippotigris antiquorum, by Mr. Stewart. Plate XXII. . 327 Dauw Mare and Colt, Hippotiyri* BurcJielli, by Mr. Stewart. Plate XXIII. . .329 The Quagga, Hippotigris quacha, from life, by Col. Ha- milton Smith. Plate XXIV. . . . 330 The Isabella Quagga, Hippotigris isaleliinus^ from spe- cimen in the British Museum, by Col. Hamilton Smith. Plate XXV. .... 332 The Mules ...... 334 Brood Mare and third Foal, with marks of Quagga, . from the paintings by Agasse, in Surgeons' College, London. Plate XIV. . . . 342 Filley, bearing ditto, from ditto. Plate XXVI. . 342 Colt, bearing ditto, from ditto. Plate XXVII. . 342 Hybrid first Foal of Brood Mare and Quagga, from ditto. Plate XXIX. . . . 642 Hybrid Ass and Zebra, from drawing by Mr. Stewart. Plate XXVIH. . . . . . a* 3 The Hinny, from a drawing made at Paris, by Col. Hamilton Smith. Plate XXX. . . .346 PORTRAIT OF GES?" *.v . . . . 2 Vignette Title-page ... . . 3 In all Thirty-five Plates in this Volume. LIST OF PLATES. PLATE PAGB A. MedoPersian and Egyptian Horses, from ancient Bas-reliefs . . . .83, 109 1. Skeleton of the Horse. 2. External Muscles of the Horse. 3. The Tarpan Wild Horse, primaeval Bay Stock . 160 4. The Villous Horse, primaeval White Stock . 262 5. Crisp-haired Horse, probable original Black Stock 266 6. Decussated Horse, Eelback Dun of the Ukraine . 274 7. The Tangum Piebald, primaeval Stock of Tibet . 288 8. Marengo Arab, once the property of the Emperor Bonaparte, white breed of the Bay Stock . 262 9. Eclipse. The English Race-horse . .253 10. The Bornou White Race of Africa . . * 228 1 0.* The Dongola Race . • . 229 11. The Shrubat-ur-reech . . . .227 12. The Paramero of Peru . . . .248 1 3. The English Draught Horse, Black Race . 269 14. Brood Mare and third Foal, with marks of Quagga 342 15. Shetland Pony . . . . .283 1 6. The Koomrah. Equus hippagrus . . 294 17. The Yo-to-tze'. Asinus equuleus . . 304 18. The Onager. Asinus onager . . . 307 19. The Wild Ass of Persia. Asinus hamar . . 313 20. The Djiggetai. Asinus hemionus . . .317 21. The Male Zebra . . . . .321 22. The Angola Dauw. Hippotigris antiquorum . 327 23. Dauw Mare and Colt. Hippotigris Burchelli . 329 24. The Quagga. Hippotigris quacha . . 330 25. The Isabella Quagga. Hippotigris isabellinus . 332 26. Filley, bearing marks of Quagga . . . 342 27. Colt, third issue of Brood Mare, and second by a Black Arab ..... 342 28. Hybrid Ass and Zebra . . . .343 29. Hybrid first Foal of Brood Mare and Quagga . 342 30. The Hinny ..... 346 31. Head of Hungarian Horse, with slit septum naris 278 PORTRAIT OF GESNER .... Vignette Title-page . . * . . 3 ' In all Thirty-five Plates in this Volume. MEMOIR OF GESNER. MEMOIR OF GESNER. Ix several of the biographical memoirs accompany- ing former volumes of this Work, we have, given a record of the labours, and attempted to appreciate the merits, of some of the most eminent naturalists who flourished in the sixteenth century. Such of them belonging to that early period as deserve to be held in remembrance, are comparatively few in number ; but these few are entitled to our warmest gratitude. It was by their means that Natural History was enabled to emerge from the obscurity in which it was sunk, in common with every other department of knowledge, during the long intellec- tual night of the dark ages. The generations who may be described as having " eyes but who saw not, ears but heard not, and understandings but un- derstood not," had given place to others in which the senses and faculties were beginning to be con- verted to their proper use. Individuals appeared in various countries making observations for them- selves, collecting and appropriating the knowledge which had been transmitted by the sages of Greece 18 MEMOIR OF GESNER. and Rome, and, in short, accomplishing, though in a smaller degree, for natural history, what Dante, Petrarch, and others, had previously done for lite- rature. Among the small band of congenial spirits by whom this result was brought about, there is none more meritorious than Conrad Gesner. Indeed, when we consider his high scholarship, indefatigable industry, general knowledge of natural history, and the influence which his works have had on the pro- gress of knowledge, it may perhaps be doing him injustice not to assign him the first place. We should not at least hesitate to do so, were we to trust implicitly to the eulogiums that have been passed on him by his admirers, for he has been affirmed to be the greatest naturalist the world had seen since Aristotle, the discoverer of the only true principles of a botanical arrangement in the flower and fruit, to which the very existence of botany as a science is owing, — as the German Pliny, a pro- digy of diligence, learning, and penetration. Even the more philosophical and discerning judgment of Cuvier allows him a high degree of merit, which will, we think, be fully borne out by the character of his works hereafter to be examined. CONRAD GESNER was born at Zurich on the 26th March. 1516. His parents were in very humble circumstances; his father, Ours Gesner, being a worker in hides, and his mother, Barbara Friccia, of a very poor though respectable family. Having MEMOIR OF GESNER. 19 a numerous offspring besides Conrad, his parents could do little to encourage the love for reading and learning which he showed at an early period. But his maternal uncle, John Friccius, who was a minis- ter, did every thing in his power to promote the talents which he could not fail to discover in his young relative ; and it was to this individual that Conrad was indebted for the rudiments of his edu- cation. Besides instructing him in the elements of literature, his uncle inspired him with a love for the study of plants, from which the transition be- came easy to other branches of natural history. He had a garden well supplied with plants, in- cluding many of the rarest kinds then known, the care of which was in a great measure entrusted to young Gesner, who even at this early period, ac- quired some reputation in his immediate neighbour- hood as an herbalist. But before his progress had been considerable, this valuable friend was removed by death, and Gesner's prospects assumed a very unpromising aspect. He was taken for a while, however, into the family of John James Ammianus, a professor of polite literature, who gratuitously superintended his studies, and showed him many acts of kindness otherwise for a period of three years. Shortly after the death of his uncle, his father, who was engaged in the civil wars of Switzerland, was killed in the battle of Zug (the same in which the famous reformer Zwingli us perished); and thus deprived of any assistance that might be expected from that quarter, he was thrown entirely on his 20 MEMOIR OF GESNER. own resources. He was at this time about fifteen years of age. He proved for a time, however, so unfortunate in obtaining the means of prosecuting his studies, that he was reduced to great extremities ; and he is even said, by one of his biographers, to have repaired to Strasburg and engaged himself as a servant. * The same authority on which this statement is made informs us, that his master soon discovered his strong inclination for study, and was so indulgent as to afford him every opportunity of doing so, consistently with the duties of his station. The knowledge he now acquired, added to his previous attainments, rendered his scholarship highly respec- table, and he was employed for a time by Capiton, a distinguished scholar of the day, to assist him in his literary labours. With the means acquired in these various ways, and aided by a contribution from the prebendaries of Zurich, who manifested considerable interest in the welfare of their towns- man, he was enabled to repair to Bourges and com- mence the study of medicine, a profession which both expediency and inclination led him to adopt. Subsequently to this, and when he was about eighteen years of age, he visited Paris, where he remained for a considerable time, devoting himself entirely to the acquisition of different branches of learning, and completing his acquaintance with the * This circumstance is not mentioned by Schmiedel, one of Gesner's ablest biographers, and may therefore be considered as questionable. MEMOIR OF GESNER. 2J ancient languages of Greece and Rome, in which he attained more than usual proficiency. During his residence in the French capital his circumstances were often much straitened, and he was frequently relieved on these occasions by a young Bernoin of noble family, named Steiger, with whom he had contracted a friendship. But all his resources were ultimately exhausted, and he was obliged to return to Strasburg, in the hope that his friends in that city would be able to obtain for him some employ- ment either as a private or public teacher. Here, however, his stay was very short, for we find that, in 1536, he returned to his native place, and opened a school for teaching the languages and philosophy, He was now about twenty years of age, and although his professional studies were far from being completed, and his situation in life unsatisfactory and precarious, he thought proper to marry ; and notwithstanding the remonstrances of his friends on the imprudence of such a step, under the circum- stances, he never appears to have had the least reason to regret having taken it, but in every respect the contrary. We are not informed what success attended him in his. capacity as an instructor of youth, but while so employed he conciliated the good will of the magistrates of Zurich, who, appreciating his learn- ing and abilities, sought to obtain him the means of turning them to better account. Through their in- fluence and support, he was enabled to repair to Basle for the purpose of resuming his medical 22 MEMOIR OF GESNER. studies, which had suffered a considerable interrup- tion. His residence there, however, was but short, not upwards of a year, for the senate of Berne had founded an academy at Lausanne, and prevailed on him to become one of the teachers. Here he conti- nued for about three years, employed, most of that time, in teaching Greek. His worldly circum- stances being by this time greatly improved, he was enabled to reside for about a year at Mont- pellier, then the seat of a celebrated school of me- dicine, and the resort of learned men from all parts of Europe. Here he formed a friendship with Ron- delet, professor of medicine at Montpellier, and one of the ablest naturalists of his age, whose excellent work, De piscilus marinis,* illustrated with wood- cuts of great merit, has rendered his name known and honoured even in the present day. It was, in all probability, owing to his intercourse with this naturalist, and others then residing at Montpellier, that his predilection for the study of Nature was fully confirmed, and the resolution, which he ap- pears- to have formed at a very early period of his life, of illustrating it by his writings, first carried into effect. * Gulielmi Rondeletii Libri de piscibus marinis, in quibus verae Piscium effigies expressse sunt. Lugduni, 1554, 1 vol. fol. The figures are rudely engraved, as might be expected from the state of the art at that period, but the outlines are in general accurate, and highly characteristic of the species. We will not say this much, however, for the Bishop-fish, and some others, which afford curious instances of the credulity of $he age. MEMOIR OF GESNER. 23 After many vicissitudes, the most important of which have already been alluded to, he obtained his degree of doctor of medicine at Basle in 1540, being then in his twenty-fourth year. * He shortly after- wards settled as a medical practitioner in Zurich, and his success was such that he was enabled to devote a portion both of his time and money to the prosecution of the studies which he had so much at heart. He even had it in his power to make excur- sions, at intervals, through various parts of Switzer- land, Savoy, &c. in search of plants and other natural objects; and, in 1545, he paid a visit to Venice, where he became acquainted with many individuals who were In a condition to promote his views, and where he had an opportunity of consulting many rare books and manuscripts, whence he derived valuable materials for his numerous works both on literature and natural history. While there, he de- voted much of his time to the examination of the fishes of the Mediterranean, writing descriptions of them, and getting drawings made by the best artists he could obtain. From this period the life of Gesner was of a pretty uniform tenor, and affords not very many incidents of sufficient interest to be deserving of minute record. Every moment of his time was * It is worth while to mention the subject of Gesner's Thesis, as an example of the questions then discussed on such occasions : — I. An cerebrum sit principium sensus et motus, an eor ? II. An qui crescunt, plurimum habeant calidi in- nati ? III. An qualitates fonnse sint elementorum ? 24 MEMOIR OF GESNER. employed on the numerous works he had on hand, and scarcely a year elapsed in which he did not lay several before the public. The most important of these will be afterwards alluded to ; the mere enu- meration of their titles would occupy a large space ; many of them, moreover, were only of temporary value, and a particular account of these could not be of much interest in the present day. The cele- brity which Gesner had now acquired, both as a scholar and naturalist, caused his correspondence to be courted by most of the learned of Europe ; and we find him in communication with nearly all those whose names have come down to us as pro- moters of learning and science. His botanical gar- den included many of the rarest and most curious plants then known ; and the numerous specimens of natural objects sent to him for examination, formed the basis of a general museum. Much of his time was spent in the most zealous exertions to collect materials for his history of animals and • plants ; his reading was interrupted only for the purpose (to use the words of one of his biographers), " domi et foris videndo, subinde sciscitando a qui- busvis doctis, indoctis, civibus, peregrinis, ventori- bus, piscatoribus, aucupibus, pastoribus, et omni hominum genere," in order that his works on these subjects might be more perfect than any that pre-* ceded them. In the midst of his multifarious occupations con- nected with literature and natural history, he con- tinued his practice as a physician ; and, indeed, it MEMOIR OF GESNER. 25 was from this source that his income was princi- pally derived. In 1554 the magistrates of Zurich appointed him chief physician (agx/argo^), and pub- lic professor of philosophy and natural history, an honour which he justly merited, and which he seems to have valued highly. He had scarcely at- tained this more influential sphere of action, than he exerted himself to turn it to the public good ; and he succeeded in establishing an association of medical men to watch over the public health. By these means, a college of medicine and surgery was ultimately established ; and Gesner may thus be regarded, as the founder of an establishment which has been of great service to the city of Zurich up to the present day. His natural history expeditions into various parts of Switzerland, Germany, &c., were frequent, and he had an additional motive for undertaking them besides his love of collecting, for his constitution was naturally feeble, and he had still further im- paired it by ardent study. Among other excur- sions of less note, we find, that in the year 1555, he visited Lucerne and the places adjacent, in com- pany with two brother physicians, and a draftsman named John Thoma. He was received with dis- tinguished honours by the magistrates of that place, — honours such as were wont to be paid only to those invested with offices of public authority. He asked permission, as was then the custom, to ascend Mont Pilate (mons fractus), and a public officer was appointed to conduct him, and guard him from 26 MEMOIR OF GESNER. danger ; for the well-known superstition regarding the vicinity of this mountain, was at that time in full force. He ascended on the 21st of August, passing the .night in a hay-loft. He carefully examined everything in which he felt interested, and a few days after his return home, published an account of the mountain, along with his curious treatise, " De Lunariis." * It has just been stated that Gesner was of a deli- cate constitution, and this circumstance had a- con- siderable influence on his proceedings during several of the latter years of his life. While a youth, he was threatened with general dropsy, and although the immediate effects of this malady were overcome, it seems to have produced a permanent debility, which peculiarly exposed him to the inroads of other disorders. In 1565 we find him complaining, in a letter to a friend, of an affection of the brain, wThich he says lasted nearly nine years. In 1 559 he was afflicted with calculus, and used all the remedies then in vogue, against that excruciating disease. He like- wise tried to find relief by travelling, as he was wont to do on like occasions. Some of his friends at the court of Ferdinand, Emperor of Germany, thought that his visit to that country on this occasion, afforded a good opportunity of introduc- ing him to that monarch, to whom his celebrity as * Conr. Gesneri, de raris et admirandis herbis, quas sive quod noctu luceant, sive alias ob causas, Lunarige nominantur, &c. Ejusdem descriptio mentis fracti, sive mentis Pilati, juxta Lucernam in Helvetia. Tigurini, 4to. (without the year). MEMOIR OF GESXER. 27 a scholar and naturalist were well known. His reception was highly flattering, and led the way to several important favours, which he afterwards received from the hands of the emperor. On this journey, Gesner likewise visited Ulm, and ulti- mately repaired to the warm baths of Baden, that he might try their effect on his health. These proved more beneficial than he anticipated, and he returned to Zurich greatly invigorated both in body and mind. The following year he was much occupied in forming a new botanic garden, to facilitate the study of plants, • which now engaged a large share of his attention, as he designed to publish a general his- tory of vegetables. Shortly after his appointment to the professorship of natural history, he had em- ployed his increased means in building a museum, of such extent, that it contained fifteen windows. These windows (we translate the description of his biographer, Schmiedel), he ornamented in a manner as unusual, as it was agreeable ; on each of them he painted most elegantly on the glass, arranged according to their classes, different species of marine, river, and lacustrine fishes. His shelves contained an immense quantity of metals, stones, gems, and other natural productions, which he had either ob- tained as presents from his friends, or purchased. The most liberal of the contributors to his museum was his friend Kentmann, who, among other objects, presented him with a collection of fossil fishes, and a great many different kinds of metals. Amidst 26 MEMOIR OF GESNER. these riches of nature, he was often wont to spend his time, seeking tranquillity of mind from the con- templation of them, and refreshing himself after the numerous toils and vexations of life, from which the best are not exempted.* As a necessary adjunct to this museum, he now enlarged and enriched his ' o botanic garden, stimulated thereto by having wit- nessed the superiority of that of Didymus Obrecht at Strasburg. He obtained rare plants from most parts of Europe, in particular from France, Italy, Britain, Germany, and Poland, and it contained many of the most curious kinds found in his own country, which is of such great interest in this re- spect, as well as in most other of its natural features. Towards the close of 1560, his health again gave way; he was afflicted with severe pain in the limbs, and almost entirely lost the use of his right leg. Having tried various remedies, without de- riving much benefit, he again repaired to Baden, and the baths so far restored him, that he was able, in the beginning of 1561, to visit many different parts, both of Germany and Switzerland. He tra- versed the Rhetian Alps, ascended Mount Braulius, and penetrated into several of the most retired parts of the country. Part of the Venetian territory was likewise included in this extended expedition, the chief object of which was the improvement of his health, one, however, quite compatible with the study of botany, which he prosecuted with unwea- * Schmieders Vita Conradi Gesneri, p. xxiii. MEMOIR OF GESNER. 29 ried zeal. The advantage he derived from the warm springs of Baden, seems to have likewise turned his attention to various mineral springs in Switzerland, with a view to ascertain their medicinal properties. The water of some of these he used as a bath, and others, of a chalybeate nature, were taken internally. These various restoratives, in connexion with his long travel, bodily exercise, and the agreeable society of friends, of whom he had many scattered over the whole country, so improved his health, that we find him writing, on his return, to one of his friends, that he was now stronger than he had been for many years. Among other fruits of this expedition, his herbarium, garden, and museum, received large accessions. He now enjoyed a respite for some time from his various maladies, and we accordingly find him im- mersed in a multitude of literary undertakings, in- cluding several publications on botany. It was probably, in a great measure, in consequence of the too great exertions thereby entailed, that he was so soon again compelled (in the month of August 1562) to seek relief from the waters of Baden, whither he repaired, for the third time, in company with his wife, whose health had been all along as precarious as his own. By using the waters in a manner somewhat different from his former practice, he speedily became convalescent, and in order to fol- low up this favourable change, as he had been accustomed to do on former occasions, by long con- tinued exercise in the open air, he invited his friend 30 MEMOIR OF GESNER. John Bauhine, the well-known botanist, to accom- pany him back to Zurich on foot, that they might have a better opportunity of conversing by the way on the eubject of their common study. This arrange- ment, however, could not be effected, and Gesner returned alone. It was soon after this that he wrote a long letter to the English botanist, Turner, in which he gave a particular account of all his writings up to that date. Although Gesner at no time neglected any of the great branches of natural history, but used every exertion to improve his various works, which may be said to embrace them all ; yet, during the two or three last years of his life, botany was his prin- cipal study. One of the great objects of his ambi- tion was, as has been already intimated, to produce a history of plants, and foreseeing, doubtless, that his life was not destined to be a long one, he re- doubled his exertions to attain the purpose he had so much at heart. This formed his chief occupa- tion in 1563. He had plants in a living state brought to him from all parts of the country ; Bauhine sent him many dried specimens ; and even when his health was most precarious, he was in the habit of swimming in the lake of Zurich and others in that neighbourhood, for the purpose of collecting aquatic species. The utmost exertions were at the same time made to have these plants drawn and en- graved, which was done entirely at his own expense. The number, qualities, and ultimate destiny of the engravings thus accumulated, we shall afterwards MEMOIR OF GESNER. 31 have occasion to allude to. This, and numerous other avocations, both of a literary and profes- sional nature, were interrupted by a recurrence of his old complaints, which occasioned a fourth visit to Baden, the only quarter to which he was now accustomed to look for relief, nor were his expec- tations disappointed even on this extreme occasion. Knowing the favourable opinion which the Em- peror Ferdinand entertained of his services to science and literature, Gesner felt desirous of obtaining some- public expression of his regard, not only as an en- couragement to others -to follow his example, but as an honorary distinction to his family. This was no sooner intimated by his friends, Alexander, Amorfort, and Craton, physicians to the court, than the wish was immediately complied with; and letters patent were issued granting armorial bearings to Gesner and his family, with a statement of the cir- cumstances for which this honour was conferred. Without attempting to describe the shield in the technical language of heraldry, it may suffice to say, that the devices were all emblematical of the sub- jects which Gesner had illustrated by his writings. Each of the four quarters was occupied by an ani- mal— an eagle with expanded wings, a lion ram- pant, a basilisk, and a crowned dolphin ; the crest, a swan sitting on a crown of laurel, with three stars on its breast, and a like number on each of its ex- panded wings. As Gesner was childless, he obtained permission that the same arms should be borne by his uncle, Andrew Gesner, an old man of eighty. 32 MEMOIR OF GESNER. as well as his offspring, who were very numerous. This honour was accompanied by another mark of the Emperor's esteem, which our naturalist valued highly, namely, a present of some fragments of hezoir stone, which was then very rare, and held in high estimation. Subsequently to this he again visited Baden, and for the last time. On his return he was greatly distressed by the death of his mother, to whom he was very warmly attached : this event took place in April 1564. Soon after, the plague, which had for some time raged in Basle, made its appearance in Zurich; and Gesner, both on account of his pro- fessional experience and scientific skill, was looked to more than any other individual for some means of checking its ravages. He was not slow in de- voting himself to the inquiry ; and the result of his investigations soon appeared in a work on the nature of the contagion and the best means of cure. He was fully sensible of the risk he incurred by visiting so many patients, and had a strong presentiment that he was himself to be a victim. In a dream, which made a great impression on him, he thought that he was bitten by a serpent ; this he interpreted to denote the attack of the disease ; and he wrote to several of his friends to intimate that he was now preparing himself for another world. For the pre- sent, however, it pleased Providence to spare him. The severity of the disease gradually abated, and Gesner was enabled to resume his former occupa- tions, and for a considerable time to labour at his MEMOIR OF OESNER. 33 favourite work on plants, and likewise another on the nature of stones and fossils. Although the pestilence had abated, it had never entirely left Zurich and its neighbourhood, and v about the middle of July, 1565, it again broke out in that city with greater virulence than before. Gesner witnessed its approach with tran- quillity ; but his presentiment again returned, and he endeavoured to make preparation for the great change which he believed to be near. He was seized with the disorder on the 9th of Decem- ber, when it had a second time greatly moderated, and he had again almost overcome his apprehen- sions. A large pestilential carbuncle made its ap- pearance under his right arm, but it was accom- panied with no pain in the head, fever, or other bad symptom. His strength was so little reduced, that he continued to walk about his apartment, only reclining occasionally on a couch. But he had seen many die with precisely the same symp- toms, and from the first he indulged no expecta- tions of recovery. He therefore called together his friends, and delivered to them his will, in which he made some provision for his wife and nephews, and appointed his only surviving sister his heiress. His library and manuscripts were en- trusted to Caspar Wolf, formerly his pupil, and latterly his colleague, with injunctions that his writings should be carefully perused and arranged, and such of them published as were likelv tc b* serviceable. 34 MEMOIR OF GESNER. These matters arranged, his whole thoughts were turned to futurity, and he conversed calmly with Henry Bellinger and John Simler (two clergymen with whom he had lived on terms of the most inti- mate friendship), using words of hope and resig- nation. The fifth day after the commencement of his disorder, his medical attendants saw that death was near ; but he thought himself better, and de- clined having any one to sit by his bed-side during the night. About eleven o'clock, however, of the same night, he became conscious that his strength could hold out very little longer against the violence of the disease ; and calling his attendants, he re- quested that they would carry him into his museum, where he had caused a bed to be prepared for him the day before. It was in this place, the scene of many a laborious study, and among the objects which he had collected with such indefatigable zeal, that he breathed his last, in the arms of his wife, on the 13th December, 1565, not having quite com- pleted his fiftieth year. The whole city was thrown into mourning by Gesner's death, and his funeral, which took place on the following day, was attended by a large con- course of people of all ranks. He was interred in the cloister of the great church of Zurich, near the tomb of his intimate friend Frisius, who died the preceding year. His funeral oration was pronounced by Simler, who afterwards became his biographer. Mcin^ verses, both Greek and Latin, were written in his praise ; and among the authors of these we MEMOIR OF GESNER. 35 find Theodore Bcza, and many others of scarcely inferior name. It may be inferred, from what has been alre?cy said regarding the frailty of Gesner's constitution, that there was little likelihood of his attaining an advanced age, even if he had escaped the contagion which carried him off. The delicacy of his health was indicated by a pallid and almost emaciated countenance, the general expression of which was, however, highly agreeable, and indicative of great sensibility. His forehead was broad, high, and pro- minent, marked with numerous deep wrinkles, the result of severe study and profound thought. His nose was long and elevated, without being aquiline ; his lips thin ; mouth expressive and agreeable. His beard was copious, long and dense, slightly curled or undulating, " lenitatis ingenii indicium esse potest," says his biographer Schmiedel, on whose authority we wish the statement to rest. Various portraits exist, corresponding to this description; that prefixed to this memoir is taken from one which we regard as the most characteristic. The voluminous works of Gesner may be di- vided into three classes ; first, those on literary subjects; secondly, those relating to medicine and the materia medica ; and, thirdly, those on natural history. As it is most appropriate to the purpose we have at present in view to consider Gesner as a natu- ralist, we do not propose to enter, in this place, into a very minute detail of his numerous productions 36 MEMOIR OF GESNER. on the two former of these subjects ; but some account of them is necessary to enable us to form an idea of the extent of his acquirements, his extra- ordinary powers of application, and the wonderful fertility of his genius. Shortly after obtaining his degree, he published numerous translations of Greek treatises, on various subjects of literature and criti- cism, an edition of Martial, &c., besides editing several works for his friends. Of the latter we may mention that of his friend Moibau, of whose work on Dioscorides he superintended the publication, in order that the friends of the author might obtain the emoluments : that of Valerius Cordus, " De Historia Plantarum," a zealous naturalist, who died at Rome at the early age of twenty-nine ; and lastly, the " Lexicon Bei Herbariae Trilinque" of his friend Kyber, who was carried off by the plague at Strasburg at an equally early age. But his most important work in this department was his Billio- theca UniversaliS) the object of which was not only to give the titles of all the works then known, in Hebrew, Greek, and Latin, whether actually exist- ing or lost, but to afford some knowledge of their contents, a specimen of their style, and a critical estimate of the merits of the respective authors. The idea was an excellent one, and has, as is well known, been often acted upon since. It is said to have suggested to Haller the plan of his Bib- liotheca Britannica, and Biblioth. Anatomica. The first part of the work was published at Zurich in 1545. This contained the names of the authors MEMOIR OF GESNER. 37 arranged alphabetically. The second part, which he called the Pandects, appeared in 1 548, divided into nineteen books, and arranged according to the nature of the subjects : the twentieth book was to oe devoted to medical subjects, but was never rinished, as the author was unable to satisfy himself as to its completeness and accuracy; the twenty-first embraced theological authors and did not appear till about a year after the rest.* Many editions of Greek and Latin authors, with notes and commen- taries, were published by Gesner, as well as several Dictionaries, amended and enlarged, such as the Latin Lexicon Ambr. Calepini, Greek Dictionary of Favorini, &c. He likewise published many por- tions of Greek manuscripts which he had copied during his travels in Italy and Venice, such as the Aphorisms of Abbas Maximus, Institutions of Theo- philus, the Oration of Tatianus Assyrius, translating several of them into Latin, and adding explanatory notes ; besides many other treatises relating to an- cient literature. One of the most curious and in- genious of his productions on literary subjects was published in 1555, under the name of Mithridates, or an inquiry " De differentiis linguarum," an inves- tigation for which his extensive acquaintance botli with ancient and contemporaneous languages ad- mirably qualified him. He originated many views in this work which have been more fully developed * An abridgment of the Bib. Universalis, with the addition of a good deal of new matter, by Simler and J. J. Fries, was published at Zurich in 1583, 1 vol. foL 38 MEMOIR OF GESNER. since by authors who have neglected to mention the source from which they derived them. Medical men have often expressed their regret that the portion of the Bib. Universalis relating to the literature of the healing art was never com- pleted; the materials which Gesner had amassed Were certainly extensive (he expressly affirms so in a letter to one of his friends), and their publication would have been desirable, even although they fell short of his own wishes. This desideratum, how- ever, was to a certain extent supplied by the publi- cation, in 1555, of a large volume entitled, " De* Chirurgia Scriptores optimi quique veteres et recen- tiores, plerique in^Germania ante hac non editi, nunc a Conr. Gesnero in unum conjunct! volumen," to which various treatises on medical subjects are appended. Many small treatises on medical sub- jects emanated at different times from his prolific pen. He published more than one edition of Ga- len; that of the date 1562 was enriched with pro- legomena, an elaborate life of Galen, and a very full list of the authors who had in any way illus- trated his doctrines. With a view to induce medical men to co-operate with each other, and communi- cate their discoveries for the general good, he pub- lished, in 1552, what he called " Thesaurus de remediis secretis," &c. This at first appeared under the fictitious name of Euonymus ; but it came into great request, and was afterwards laid before the public in an enlarged and amended form, with the name of the author attached. " Libelli tres medi- MEMOIR OF GESNER. 39 cinales ; unus de sanitate tuenda ; alter contra luxus conviviorum; tertius contra notas astrologicas Ephe- meridum in secandis venis ;" were printed at Zurich in 1556. He was likewise the author, or editor, of several other small works and treatises on subjects similar to those mentioned, but we cannot here afford space for a full list of them. A little work, " De lacte," treating of milk and its various pre- parations, which appeared in 1543, may, from the mode in which the subject is treated, be regarded as a contribution to medical dietetics. We shall now proceed to give some account of his principal works on Natural History, and shall first mention his " Historia Animalium," for that is the work with which Gesner's name is usually associated, and on which his reputation principally depends. It is certainly a singular mass of matter, original and compiled, displaying a degree of erudi- tion, research, and industry, which might well lead us, as has been remarked, to believe, that instead of being the work of a physician, who raised and maintained himself by his practice, and who was cut off in the midst of a most active and useful life, it was the labour of a recluse, shut up for an age in his study, and never diverted from his object by any other cares. He had conceived the design of such an undertaking at an early period of his life, but it is not probable, when we consider his other avoca- tions, that much of it was executed till a few years before its appearance. The numerous friends in various parts of Europe whom his reputation for 40 MEMOIR OP GESNER. learning had procured him, encouraged his design by transmitting specimens, and remarks on the ani- mals of their respective countries. * The jour- neys also which he had an opportunity of making, afforded him a rich harvest of materials, of which he did not fail to avail himself to the uttermost. Still it is surprising how he could accomplish so much, in the comparatively limited time which he could devote to the task. The work in question is divided into five hooks, generally bound up, as he himself recommended, in three folio volumes. The first part, printed at Zu- rich in 1551, treats of viviparous quadrupeds; the second, published in 1554, of oviparous quadrupeds ; the third, of the date 1 555, of birds ; and the fourth, 1556, of fishes and other aquatic animals. The fifth part was a posthumous publication, drawn up from Gesner's manuscripts by James Carron, a phy- sician of Frankfort. It is said to be rarer than the others; it treats of serpents, and has usually ap- pended to it a treatise on the scorpion, published from our author's papers under the superintendence of Caspar Wolf. The two latter treatises did not appear till 1587, that is, twenty-two years after the author's decease. Besides this, the original edition, it may be pro- * In the list of contributors, to whom he expresses his obli- gations, we find the names of Gulielmus Turnerus, Anglus ; Jo. Caius, medicus Londini clarissimus ; Jo. Fauconerus, An- glus ; Jo. Parkhurstus, Anglus, theologus et poeta elegantissi- mus ; and Theodorus Beza. MEMOIR OP QESNER. 41 per to mention that a number of others subsequently appeared, some in Latin, others in German, and one or two in French. Several of these, we believe all, are more or less abridged and altered in the arrange- ment ; some of them are designed to be mere vehi- cles for the woodcuts, with the addition of a portion of the original text in explanation of the figures. It is these later and less regular editions which are most commonly met with in libraries. The animals are simply arranged in the alpha- betical order of their Latin names ; and the account of each is divided into eight heads or chapters, referring to the following particulars : 1st, the names in different languages, ancient and modern ; 2d, de- scription of parts external and (occasionally) inter- nal, and varieties of the species ; 3d, various actions and passions, whether natural or contrary to nature ; 4th, affections of the mind, manners, and instincts, £c. ; 5th, various uses to man, besides food and remedies; 6th, uses as food; 7th, diseases; 8th, philology, or references made to them by authors, whether in prose or verse, the epithets they have applied, &c. The general arrangement, if such it can be called, differs but little from that of Aristotle, the grand division being into land and water animals. As an example of his mode of subdividing a primary group into what he calls orders, we shall give a digest of his arrangement of quadrupeds : — 42 MEMOIR OP GESNER. Quadrupedes aut sunt viviparae, aut oviparge ; illas in sex ordines distribuimus. Continet igitur Quadrupedum vivipararum mansuetarum ORDO 1. bestias mansuetas, quae armenta vel greges consti- tuunt ; cornutae omnes et bisulcae sunt, et ruminant, non utrinque dentatae ; ut boves, oves, caprae. ' 2. ex mansuetis jumenta quae sine cornibus et solipeda sunt ; ut equum, sues, canes, et felem domesticam. Ferarum vero Quadrupedum vivipararum qua omnes utrinque dentata swit, ORDO 1. complectitur feras corautas ; ut boves, capras, cer- vum, elephantum, * &c. 2. non cornutas majores : quce hominem aut alia ani- malia unguibus et dentibus laedant, multifidse omnes praeter aprum bisulcum ; ut sunt ursus, leo, tigris, &c. • 3. ejusdem naturae reliquas mediae magnitudinis minus- que noxias ; ut sunt castor, lutra, vulpes, &c. • — — 4. minimas et murium fere generis ; quorum ea quae per arbores aut parietes repere et scandere possunt ; ut sunt cuniculus, mus, glis, talpa, &c. Animaliam Quadrupedum ovipararum ORDO 1. et ultimus, complectitur chamaeleontem, testudinem terrestrem, lacertarumque et ranarum terrestrium genera. Nam crocodilum, ranas et lacertas aquatiles, aquatilium libro subjunximus. f At the period when Gesner wrote, any thing- approaching to accurate views of classification or arrangement could not be expected; indeed the importance of the subject was never thought of. But the above subdivisions are altogether arbitrary and useless; nay, with our present notions on the * He regards the tusks of the elephant as horns, f Icones Animalium, &c. ed. sec. Tigur. 1560, p. 8. MEMOIR OF GESNER. 43 subject, they cannot be regarded as otherwise than ludicrous. Animals are referred to different orders according to the accident of their being domesti- cated or wild ; and size is assumed as determining ordinal differences. Thus the lion and tiger are placed in one order, while their near relatives the panther and other smaller spotted felines, are re- ferred to another, magnitudinis ratione, as he him- self expresses it. Perhaps his division of fishes is preferable; but after having afforded one example of this kind, it is unnecessary to dwell on the subject. His description and history of the animals them- selves cannot in general be spoken of otherwise than in terms of high commendation, particularly of those kinds which fell under his own observation, the ani- mals of Switzerland, for example. We have at full length all that has been previously written respect- ing them, combined with much original information. Take the general history of hawks for an example, in the commencement of his volume on birds. With- out attempting to discriminate many of the closely allied kinds, — an object which can scarcely be said to be satisfactorily accomplished even in the present day, — he enters into the generalities of the family with considerable knowledge of their habits and general history ; giving instructions for rearing them and training them for the chace, for curing their disorders, &c. All this, it is true, is mixed up with a great deal of quaint information and obsolete erudition; but when these are subtracted, not a 44 MEMOIR OF GESNER. little sound natural history remains. As a good specimen of his manner, we may refer to the ac- count of the eagle, which extends to nearly thirty closely printed folio pages. Much curious informa- tion might be extracted from his volumes regarding many species of almost every order, as, for example, the account of the speaking nightingales ; but space cannot be afforded in this place for such a selection. We may translate, however, his short account of the white ox of Scotland (what is now usually called the Hamilton breed of cattle), which is curi- ous in several respects. He names it the Bison allus Scoticus, and gives a figure of the animal, which, however, is not so well executed as many of the others. " The Caledonian forest of Scot- land produces very white oxen, having a mane like that of a lion, but in other respects very similar to the domesticated kinds. They are so fierce, un- tameable, and eager to avoid human society, that when they feel that any plant, tree, or shrub has been touched by the hands of man, they continue to flee from it for many days. When taken by any stra- tagem (which is very difficult ), they die soon after for grief. But when they are aware that they are pursued by any one, they rush upon him with great fury and drive him to the earth. They fear neither dogs, hunting -spears, nor any kind of weapon. Their flesh is very agreeable to the taste, and parti- cularly in request by the nobility, although it is cartilaginous. Although they were wont to occur throughout all the forest, they are now found in MEMOIR OF GESNER. 45 only one part of it, which is called Cummernald ; the rest having been destroyed for food. This race of oxen," adds Gesner to the above account, which is partly from another author, " seems properly to be called the white Scottish or Caledonian bison, because it is maned like a lion, as Oppian writes of the bison." We must now allude to what forms not the least remarkable or interesting feature in this great work, namely, the woodcuts with which it is so copiously replenished. The great majority of the animals de- scribed are represented by wood-engravings, many of them on a large scale, those of the horse, camel, and swan, for example, nearly filling a folio page, and there are many others of equal magnitude. The number, it is obvious, must therefore be very great, almost every page presenting one or two, and the majority several. By far the greater num- ber of them are well executed, so much so in- deed, that several can be pointed out which would bear comparison with modern specimens of the art. The outlines, in general, are accurately drawn, and although the workmanship is occasionally rather coarse, the figures are, in most cases, not only perfectly recognisable, but even form faithful and cha- racteristic delineations. It is a matter of surprise that artists could then be found capable of representing such objects so well, and that Gesner could incur the expense, for he must have had what may be almost called a little manufactory under his charge ; and we are told that the artists resided in his own 46 MEMOIR OF GESNER. house. We find him thus modestly speaking of these figures in one of his prefaces : " With regard to the Icones, I acknowledge that they are not all yery well drawn ; this, however, is not my fault ; but. this is not the occasion to speak on that matter. Most of them are very fair and tolerahle, especially those of quadrupeds, which may be esteemed the best. None of them are fictitious, as some suspect ; or if any of them be, they were not approved by me, but pointed out and censured, such as the rein- deer of Olaus and a few others among quadrupeds, some among the water animals, certain salaman- ders, &c. If I have not delineated such as these myself (that is to say, superintended the engraving) from the life, I have mentioned the authors from whom I received them, or the books from which they are copied," &c. The latter remark leads us to say a few words respecting the numerous monsters scattered through- out Gesner's work, which at first sight, and on superficial observation, are apt to make us distrust his authority altogether as a veracious author, and indeed tend to throw an air of ridicule over the whole. A careful perusal of his text, however, will soon convince us that no author of early date has been more solicitous to guard his readers against mistaking what is imaginary for what is real, — for placing that which has been merely supposed to exist, on the same level with what has fallen under the evidence of the senses. The most remarkable^ of these ideal figures are, a marine lion, covered with MEMOIR OP GESNER. 47 scales, and having the face of a man ; the monk and bishop fish, strongly resembling the parties from whom they derive their names, but with the visage somewhat distorted, and the figure slightly pisci- form; a marine Pan or Satyr; several monstrous cetaceous animals, with snouts like a hog, and al- most capable of swallowing a moderate sized ship ; the monoceros or unicorn; two wild men of the woods ; the hydra with seven heads like those of a human being, &c. None of these monsters origi- nated with Gesner; they are in every instance adopted from other authors, who produce a kind of hearsay evidence to justify their descriptions. In a general work like Gesner's, their entire exclusion would have been scarcely warrantable ; he does all that can be expected of him ; intimates his suspi- cion of their authenticity, and cites the authority on which they rest. "With regard to the seven-headed dragon, the most absurd of the whole, he distinctly states that it is to be regarded as equally fabulous with Castor and Pollux, or any other fancies of the heathen mythology ; and with this belief it would have been better to have excluded it ; but he wished to gratify his readers by the representation of a spe- cimen said to have been brought from Turkey to Venice, and which appears to have been so skilfully manufactured as to deceive for a time even the most incredulous. As to many of the sea-monsters, par- ticularly the huge cetacea and snakes, we are not yet in a condition to say that they do not exist ; on the contrary, there is every reason, arising from 48 MEMOIR OF GESNER. tradition and the incidental reports of voyagers, to believe that there are such creatures, of extraordi- nary size and aspect, although opportunities have not occurred of examining them with sufficient care to hring them within the established categories of natural history. The existence of sea-snakes, of enormous volume, has been proved beyond question. But it may be asked, why figure and describe such inhabitants of the " bottom of the monstrous world/' until their forms and history can be more accurately ascertained ? The answer of Gesner, which we give in his own words, is judicious and satisfactory. — " Falsas etiam vel prorsus vel aliqua ex parte ima- gines, illarum rerum, quarum veras adhuc nemo dederit, exhibere, modo nominato authore et null a dissimulatione id fiat, non est inutile : sed occasio ad inquirendas ab aliquibus, aut communicandas ab eis qui jam habent, veras." One of the objects for which this great work of Gesner's may yet be consulted with advantage, is the ascertainment of the names of animals in many different languages. A slight glance at his syno- nyms often reveals the meaning of a common and familiar name, and the transitions through which it has passed before assuming its present form. The name marmot (to take a simple example) does not convey any obvious meaning ; but a very brief synonomy renders it obvious ; mus montanus, Lat. ; marmontana, or contracted, marmota, ItaL ; mur- montain, French, or adopted from the Italian, mar- mote; whence the English name, a literal transla- MEMOIR OF GESNER. 49 tion of mountain-mouse. Most of the English names of animals were communicated to Gesner by the famous botanist, Dr. Turner. * This work, the most famous of Gesner's produc- tions, continued for a considerable period to be the principal authority on zoological subjects. Much of it was copied by Aldrovandus, in his voluminous compilations ; Jonson did little more than abridge it ; and it has formed the basis of works of much more recent date. As it was designed to be a general work on ani- mals, it necessarily formed part of the author's plan to include insects, and with this view he had col- lected a good many materials, but of these his early death prevented him making any use. His manu- scripts and wood-engravings on the subject fell into the hands of Dr. Penny, an Englishman, who was at that time travelling in Switzerland, and had be- come intimate with Gesner. It is conjectured by Pulteney that Penny was present at Gesner's death ; and, being a zealous botanist, that he assisted Wolf in arranging the plants of his deceased friend. How- ever this may be, it is well known that Penny studied insects with great care, t and must have * Prefixed to the third volume of the Frankfort edition of Gesner's Hist. Anim., 1620, we find a letter from Dr. Turner relating to English fishes. It consists of three pages, briefly describing more than fifty species ; and seems to be intended to give information respecting English names, which Turner fiad carefully noted, and often added the provincial appella- tions. Pultemey^s SketcJies of. Botany, vol. i. f As a proof of this, and as an example of the subjects which 50 MEMOIR OF GESNER. highly valued such an acquisition as the manu- scripts and drawings of so distinguished a zoologist. The use he made of them is well known. They formed a portion of the work on insects published in England in J634, under the title of " Insec- torum sive minim orum Animalium Theatrum olim ab Edoardo Wottono, Conrado Gesnero, Thomaque Pennio, inchoatum ; tandem Tho. Movfeti, Londi- natis opera sumptibusque maxime concinnatum, auctum, perfectum, et ad vivum expressis iconibus supra quingentis illustratum." Schmiedel supposes that it is chiefly the figures of butterflies that were obtained from Gesner. These are, in most cases, recognisable, but they cannot be compared to the icons of plants. Although Gesner was unable to complete the then interested entomologists, the following extract from a let- ter written by Penny to Camerarius is worth quotation. " Te exoro, si quid certi de insectis sequentibus habeas, ut me, cum otium nactus fueris, certiorem per litteras facias: TtvS-gn^&v Aristotelis quid sit lubenter scirem ; et an in nostris regionibus reperiatur ? Eof6@ovZ.ios vero an sit Humlen Germanorum intel- ligerem? HgKt Arabians chiefly subsist on camels' milk. If Cyrus be Kaikaus and reigned in Bactria, it might be inferred that in Western Asia the first charioteers came through the Arian desert to the lower Euphrates ; but it is most likely their route lay between the Caspian and the Caucasus into Armenia ; though it is more probable .that the bay stock of horses spread by the Sulimani range and Helmond to Southern Asia, Ye- men, and Egypt. 96 INTRODUCTION. venturous warriors who came from the north and offered their services to the nearest sovereign. From that time, however, a mounted cavalry became con- spicuous in all the Aramean regions, and they are often represented in sculpture of a later period, in various parts of Persia. The people of Israel, we have seen, though shep- herbs of kindred origin with the Edomite Arabs, had no horses in Goshen, and continued without studs till the Mosaic prohibition was disregarded by Solomon, who established a force of chariots of war, and, it is supposed, of mounted cavalry. It was then the kingdom extended in glory and in surface far beyond its ancient boundary. With the mer- cantile spirit of eastern princes, he monopolized a trade in horses, importing them in strings from Egypt, and out of all lands ; * he sold teams and chariots to the Phoenicians, who, as they did not possess land armies or extensive territories, evi- dently bought horses for luxury, and still more for exportation, t The Tyrians, at another time, ob- tained theirs from Armenia, and, no doubt, both * 2 Chronicles, ix. 28, and 2 Kings, x. 28. •f- The sacred historian gives the prices both of horse and chariot : a horse from Egypt cost 150 shekels of silver, or about £17 sterling ; a chariot, most likely in part of cast metal, was worth 600 shekels, or £ 68 8s. sterling. This trade was evi- dently carried on by the gross or string, as the price was not for different values of single horses ; and it proves that even then in Egypt they required particular care and were expen- sive in rearing, and that in Syria they were either scarce or of inferior value. See 1 Kings, x. 29. INTRODUCTION. 97 carried them to their African colonies, to Crete, Sicily, Spain, and Greece. Thus it may have been that, in their allegorical poems, Helenic fabulists represented Neptune striking the earth with his trident, and, producing the horse, distributed the species to gods and heroes. Similar opinions are held in modern times by the Circassians, who deem the Shalokh steeds, the noblest of Kabarda horses, to be sprung from the sea ; probably because the parent stock was imported by water. Recent authors have endeavoured to maintain, with still less appearance of reason even than Buf- fon's opinion concerning the original location of tht domestic horse, that Arabia had no horses in the early ages, nor during the Roman empire, and scarcely any at the date of the hejira. In support of this opinion we are told, that, in the second cen- tury, horses were sent a present to the reigning princes of that country; that in the fourth, two hundred Cappadocian steeds were again forwarded by the Roman emperor to the same region ; and in the seventh, when Mohammed in person attacked the Koreish, that he had but two of these animals in his army ; finally, that not a single horse was captured by him in his sanguinary and victorious campaign. * Without disputing the facts, we may nevertheless refer to what has already been said in the foregoing pages, to show the condition of the * See the Horse, " Library of Useful Knowledge," 8vo. 1831 ; a book we have consulted with great interest, and invaluable in many particulars: its humane tendency is above all praise. 98 INTRODUCTION. question as it regards the immediate neighbours of Arabia, and next offer a few facts which we think completely refute the argument. Although Mecca and Medina, and the Edomite camel-riding clans of the west coast and Wady Moosa, may not have possessed many horses, the admission in no way disproves that abundance of them were in the hands of the Bedoueen tribes, and in Yemen. They are then already described riding naked like the Numidians, without saddle or bridle, and guiding their horses with a rod or with a single thong. The first conflicts of the prophet, with his own tribe and others, were anere mob quarrels of townsmen and camel herds. Even at this day, the Edomite Arabs, residing along the upper part of the Red Sea, exclusively use ca- mels or walk : their country is too barren to sup- port more than sheep and goats ; and the people talk of the riding Arabs, and their splendid horses, with wonder, envy, and delight. * But the Be- doueens, the true wandering Arab ibn Aral, for many centuries the neighbours of Canaanites, Baby- lonians, Syrians, Persians, and Parthians, robbers by profession, could not possibly be without them. Already, before the fall of Jerusalem, Hebrews of the tribes of Manasseh and Gad, stray remnants of the captivity, had taken refuge in the desert, and exercised a nomad system of warfare under a suc- cession of their own princes. They fought great battles, they captured Mithridates and two brethren, Asinous and Anileus, and defeated a Parthian army, * See Laborde, " Journey through Arabia Petrea." INTRODUCTION. 99 commanded by Artaban in person, entirely com- posed of cavalry. When, in revenge, the Jews were massacred in Iran, they were not exterminated: whole families sought refuge among the Eastern Bedoueens and Southern Arabs of Yemen, where they were re- ceived as Matnoub ; and several centuries later, their wrongs not forgotten, they joined heartily in the Islam cause, and avenged the memory of their ancestors in the memorable battle of Kadesiah, where the Parthian dominion was laid prostrate.* In proof that they had horses at the commence- ment of the Roman empire, we appeal to Hirtius (de Bell. Alex.\ where Caesar is recorded to have sent to an Arabian, Regulus, there styled Malchus, that is, Melek, for a reinforcement of cavalry ; i later, but still before the hejira, we hear of a war of forty years' duration, between the tribes of Abs and Dobian, which arose out of a dispute on account of a race between two horses named Dahes and Ghabra : next, when we look to the tenor of the * Matnoub are strangers to whom is conceded the privilege of pitching their tents on the same line with the hospitable tribe. It is conjectured that these adopted families gradually merged in the Arab tribes, and were the chief cause of the numerous Hebrew names we find given to individuals, — such as lesa, Haroun, Musa, Daoud, Suleiman, Jussuf, Ibrahim, &e. It is natural that their fine intellects should give them influ- ence, Islam a new impulse, and with the tenacity of tribal reminiscence, revenge was an additional stimulus. t Laborde shows the Nabatheans to have had cavalry, de- riving their horses from the Scenite Arabs. The Nubian Arab tribes are still headed bv their Melcks. 100 INTRODUCTION. poems once suspended in the Kaaba, all reported to have dated before the era of Mohammed, we find in Amriolkais, Amru, and Antar, animated and technical descriptions of the horse, splendid pictures of cavalry battles, and notices, which attest that the nation had their noble breeds from their ances- tors. They are written with all the feeling of con- noisseurs habituated for ages to excellent horses, and show a thorough knowledge of what constitutes their best qualities. Finally, if the Arabs had been without horses, had not possessed them in abun- dance, and of the best quality, at the time of their uniting under the sway of the Koran, no enthu- siasm could have suddenly transformed mere herds- men into the best and most daring cavalry of their era, or enabled them in a few campaigns to crush the enormous mounted armies of the Sassanian Par- thians and the disciplined science of Eastern Rome ; none but a people long in possession of numerous and well trained chargers could have given wings to the sword of Islam, and in sixty years planted its victorious banners on the Pyrenees and on the banks of the Ganges. Nevertheless, in these researches, no proofs of an indigenous wild race of horses can be traced, nor, as already mentioned, does the nature of the region and of the vicinity offer the requisite conditions for maintaining them. It is to care in breeding and crossing imported races of animals, to attention in selecting the finest forms, that Arabia owes the celebrity of its studs. Evidently Egypt, Persia, INTRODUCTION. 101 and Armenia first supplied the nomad tribes with the means of producing their magnificent races, and the comforts of the domestic tent, the constant pre- sence of human kindness, the experience of interest, the proportions of a scanty but nutritive food, the abstemiousness in drink, and the dry sunny climate, were necessary to the full development of the excel- lent qualities they possess : hence, Arab chiefs may have desired and willingly received horses as pre- sents from renowned breeds of Egypt, or from the warlike races of Upper Asia. Presents of horses in the East have always been interchanged or given, but that fact is no argument that the receivers were in want of them ; itjmljr shows Arabia and Lower Asia to have been, as it still is, without horses in such droves as are seen in the north, and that the great variety of colours in the Arab breeds arises from the introduction of foreign animals. With the nations of Central and still more of Northern Asia, the case formerly was very different, and in some measure is still so. Attention and selection in breeding is only casual, where immense herds of horses occupy pastures of interminable surface; where, from the absence of human interposition, they retain the instincts of independence: under such circumstances, the resident proprietors, little valuing individual animals, care only for the aggre- gate numbers ; the whole people are mounted, and do nearly all their domestic work in the saddle ; they cross rivers by holding their horses' tails, or fastening them to rafts or boats, convey themselves 102 INTRODUCTION. and families to the opposite shores, sometimes seve- ral miles distant. Of all the races of man, they alone eat their flesh, drink the milk of mares, and know how to convert it into curmi^ an intoxicating beverage ; they marry on horseback, their councils meet on horseback, and declarations of war, treaties of peace or alliance, are dated from the stirrup of the sovereign. * The nations of High Asia were inventors of the bridle, of the true saddle, of the stirrup, t and pro- bably of the horse-shoe. With many of them, a horse, a mare, and a colt were fixed nominal stand- ards of value, such as the cow was once among the Celtae. In a general view, equestrian habits be- come more and more decided as we advance towards the East. In Europe, the Poles continued to elect their kings on horseback to our own times. At pre- sent, no nation of the west can oppose an equal force of cavalry to the Russian ; in the earlier cam- paigns of Suwarrow, the Russian could not cope with the Turkish ; a century ago, the Turks were inferior to the Persian horse; and these were re- peatedly overwhelmed by Usbeks, Afghauns, and Toorkees, who, descending from North-eastern Tah- tary, came from the Jaxartes down the valley of the Oxus, each in turn propelled by riding armies * Not a few of these habits are, however, already in vogue among the Abipones and Pawnees, the new Tahtars of Ame- rica, both in the north and south. t Stirrup, or Rikiob, first mentioned by Avicenna. Of horse- shoes we shall speak hereafter. INTRODUCTION. 103 from the same quarter. Tahtar tribes repeatedly swarmed westwards from the age of Attila to the o thirteenth century, when they still penetrated to the Nile and as far as Silesia ; and twice within the middle ages, Tahtar hordes invaded and subduec1 China. To such a people, the present of a few horses may appear an expression of consideration or of value, on account of the rarity of their breed, but a mere troop of horses, as such, cannot be deemed of consequence to the smallest khan, in a region where, according to Marco Paolo, the Chagan pos- sessed more than ten thousand head of white horses alone. When, therefore, we endeavour to fix the original habitation of the domestic horse, considered as a single species, and we recal to mind the statements already made respecting the remains of these ani- mals found in the soil, the regions where they are still observed in a wild state, as will be shown in the sequel more at large, and compare the facts with the foregoing reflections, it seems to be clearly demonstrated that the aboriginal region, where the wild horse was first most generally subdued, should be sought in High Asia, about the fortieth degree of latitude, the table lands whence riding and cha- rioteer nomads have incessantly issued, penetrating to the east, the south, and the west, from periods evidently anterior to historical record, almost to our own times ; that from Central Asia, northward and westward, and including, to the south, Bactria, the valley of the Oxus, Northern Aria, Chorasmia, and 104 INTRODUCTION. probably the whole of Europe, constitute the great primitive habitation of the horse. Far to the north the species has no congener, but soon the Jiemionua is known to be its companion ; and further south, the wild ass extends eastward across the Indus to the Bramaputra and west into Africa, far up the banks of the Bahar-el-Abiad and Atbara. * Other congeners there are on this side the equator, but they are not sufficiently known, nor is their precise location determined. These reflections are in harmony with the earliest appearance of horses in the south-west of Asia ; they admit a succession of immigrations, and in some degree point out the routes followed by colo- nies and conquerors possessed of horses; and in conjunction with other remarks, for which we refer to our description of wild horses, the conclusion appears to be further substantiated by an evidence, which is generally regarded as the most ancient written record in existence, namely, the book of Job, — where the author, in a description of the horse, unsurpassed in sublimity by any profane writer, notices the flowing mane, or as our versions express it, u a mane clothed in thunder." An allu- sion to the mane of a horse, in bold and figurative language, indicates the character of this fine orna- ment to be conspicuous; but on reference to the pictured forms of ancient Egyptian war-horses, or to the high bred chargers of Arabia and Southern * Voyage on the Bahr Abiad, or White Nile, by M. Adolphe Lir.aut. Geogr. Joum. INTRODUCTION. 105 Asia, it is but little applicable ; nor do we find it long or flowing in wild horses ; those, however, of Northern Asia and Eastern Europe, that belong to a particular race, possess it in all the glory of poeti- cal exuberance. In the inspired vision of the writer, we fancy he descried one of those Scythian tribes, belted haik wearers from the regions of Caspian Caucasus, — riders, not charioteers, — who had pene- trated to the region of the hippopotamus and croco- dile* as conquerors or as hirelings, for such the north has ever produced for the service of the south of Asia. These remarks, we trust, will not be considered entirely irrelevant, for, without them, the natural history of the Equine family would contain little more than technical distinctions and enumerations of species, races, and breeds, without touching upon topics of high interest to the biblical reader, the philologist, and the historian. All of them deserve to be treated more at large, but we hope to have done sufficient to excite attention and lead others better qualified than ourselves to researches in the directions here pointed out. We shall now proceed to give a succinct review of the races of renown mentioned by the poets and historians of antiquity, and mark in their descriptions the uniformity of * Hippopotamus, elephant, or rhinoceros. The geographi- cal position of the writer of the book of Job, as well as his era, remains inexplicable ; although there exists a tomb ascribed to Ayoub, perhaps of the Mevelevi Dervish of that name, near Birs Nimrod, 106 INTRODUCTION. colours and characters recorded of the primitive breeds, to create a belief that the nations who first subdued their horses derived each their own race from the wild stock in their vicinity, and therefore that varieties at least in colour occupied different regions ; such as the pied in the central mountains of Middle Asia, the dark bay southwards of the banks of the Jyhoun or Jaxartes, the dun more westward — as far as the Caspian, the white on the north shore of the Euxine, and the sooty and black in Europe. We shall find among these, races al- ways clouded of two. colours, others constantly marked with a black streak along the spine, often cross-barred on the joints, with dark or black extre- mities; and again, another, where circular spots, commonly clearer than the ground colour, occur, — whether they be bay, blackish ashy, or grey : the durability of these distinctions, not obliterated even in Our time, during more than three thousand years of perpetual crossings of breeds, affords another and a strong argument in favour of an aboriginal difference of species in the single form of the do- mestic horse. BREEDS OP HORSES NOTICED BY THE ANCIENTS. From what has been said of the apparent distri- bution of the primeval forms of Equus Cdballus, we may consider the variety first known to the nations of historical antiquity, was that which from geogra- phical position would be the first to spread among INTRODUCTI N. 10? them ; this was the bay stock, which, coming from the eastern borders of the Caspian, probably the property of the shepherd kings, reached the Nile and became an object of enlightened attention with the government, from the moment the invaders were expelled. The proof of a systematic care in breed- ing may be presumed, from a similarly coloured race being predominant in Asia Minor, Assyria, and Armenia, but inferior in stature and beauty, and with thick unsightly manes, as will appear when we come to the Grecian horses. In Egypt, on the government farms, they were evidently improved in elegance, as may be gathered from the outline pic- tures in the temples and tombs, where they are figured equal in size to the present Arabian, but shorter in the back, with rather slender arched necks, straight chafFrons, large eyes, small pointed ears, a small body, clean limbs, and the tail well set on, not abundantly furnished with hair, and in the oldest representations the mane hogged ; an in- dication of recent subjugation : where these outlines are filled with colour, the animals are painted red, either bay or chesnut, and sometimes left white. * A race of this stock was in possession of the Ca- naanites perhaps before, but most certainly after, the defeated shepherds, flying from the Cyrbonian lake, retired to the Hauran, east of the Upper Jor- dan,— for then commenced that breed which is still of the first value, though now considered Arabian. * I have been told of one instance where a pair of chariot horses are spotted ; but not knowing the locality, they may belong to a later date. 108 INTRODUCTION. From this locality it is likely the robher remains of Dan and Manasseh, in subsequent ages, first drew their horses, and they may have been the means to spread them in Yemen. The bay stock is likewise seen in Egyptian pic- tures, brought as tribute ; and on some occasions, ID representations of battles, it is mounted by riders of Upper Asia, equally advanced in the arts of civiliza- tion. The Lydian breed, so valued for stature and the strength to carry heavy-armed riders, in the time of Croesus, is to this day principally brown ; but the Arian horses, probably allied to the Masacian, the breed of Susiana, now, and possibly at an early pe- riod, in the hands of an Arabian people, are not described. Those of the breeding station at Aspan Farjan, near Darab, in Persia Proper, are equally unknown. We may refer with some confidence to the bay Scenite race of Arabia, the Apamean studs of Syria, where, according to Strabo, three hundred stallions and thirty thousand mares were maintained for the service of the government ; but the Babylonian of Herodotus, who assigns eight hundred stallions and sixteen thousand mares to that stud, may have been of different origin. In Egypt, the system of atten- tion to the breeding of horses relaxed, and gradu- ally fell into disuse, when reduced to a province. The Persians and Romans, from reasons of state, would prefer building temples to rearing horses. The breed of Syene, on the Upper Nile, is like- wise praised, but not so much as the Calambrian bays of Lybia, where there is still a valuable race : A. It) l'fr.\-itin Hi > r.\-f . nmn,;l Dim Stuck. •/'//•/ .V of i 'in- fi iniiinr. L'. .i','t/t/f>/i*ttl ///'/: w .//./•/>/' /.':til they can form a troop of young mares of their own ; their heads are seldom observed to be down for any length of time ; they utter now and then a kind of snort, with a low neigh, somewhat like a horse expecting its oats, but yet distinguishable by the voice from any domestic species, excepting the woolly Kalmuck breed : they have a remarkably piercing- sight; the point of a Cossack spear, at a great dis- tance on the horizon, seen behind a bush, being sufficient to make a whole troop halt ; but this is L J62 THE WILD HORSE. not a token of alarm, it soon resumes its march, till some young stallion on the skirts hegins to hlow with his nostrils, moves his ears in all directions with rapidity, and trots or scampers forward to reconnoitre, bearing the head very high and the tail out : if his curiosity is satisfied, he stops and begins to graze ; but if he takes alarm, he flings up his croup, turns round, and with a peculiarly shrill neighing, warns the herd, which immediately turns round and gallops off at an amazing rate, with the stallions in the rear, stopping and looking back repeatedly, while the mares and foals disappear as if by enchantment, because with unerring tact they select the first swell of ground or ravine to conceal them until they reappear at a great distance, gene- rally in a direction to preserve the lee side of the apprehended danger. Although bears and wolves occasionally prowl after a herd, they will not ven- ture to attack it, for the sultan- stallion will instantly meet the enemy, and, rising on his haunches, strike him down with the fore feet; and should he be worsted, which is seldom the case, another stallion becomes the champion : and in the case of a troop of wolves, the herd forms a close mass', with the foals within, and the stallions charge in a body, which no troop of wolves will venture to encounter. Carnivora, therefore, must be contented with aged -or injured stragglers. " The sultan -stallion* is not, however, suffered * The sultan-stallion of a great herd was anciently an object of research for the chiefs of armies, who endeavoured to catch THE WILD HORSE. 163 to retain the chief authority for more than one sea- son, without opposition from others, rising in the confidence of youthful strength, to try hy battle whe- ther the leadership should not be confided to them, and the defeated party is driven from the herd in exile. u These animals are found in the greatest purity on the Karakoum, south of the lake of Aral, and the Syrdaria, near Kusneh, and on the hanks of the river Tom, in the territory of the Kalkas, the Mon- golian deserts, and the solitudes of the Gobi : within the Russian frontier, there are, however, some adul- terated herds in the vicinity of the fixed settlements, distinguishable by the variety of their colours and a selection of residence less remote from human habi- tations. " Real Tarpans are not larger than ordinary mules, their colour invariably tan, Isabella, or mouse, being all shades of the same livery, and only vary- ing in depth by the growth or decrease of a whitish surcoat, longer than the hair, increasing from mid- summer and shedding in May: during the cold season it is long, heavy, and soft, lying so close as to feel like a bear's fur, and then is entirely griz- zled; in summer much falls away, leaving only a certain quantity on the back and loins : the head is small, the forehead greatly arched, the ears far back, either long or short, the eyes small and ma- them with the comcmnd (the antique lazzo), and then made them their chargers. The breed of Raksh, say the poets, was long traced in the herds of Masenderan. 164 THE WILD HORS-Ei lignant, the chin and muzzle beset with bristles, the neck rather thin, crested with a thick rugged mane, which, like the tail, is black, as also the pasterns, which are long : the hoofs are narrow, high, and rather pointed; the tail, descending only to the hocks, is furnished with coarse and rather curly or wavy hairs close up to the crupper; the croup as high as the withers : the voice of the Tarpan is loud, and shriller than that of a domestic horse ; and their action, standing, and general appearance, re- sembles somewhat that of vicious mules/' * The feral horses, we were told, form likewise in herds, but have no regular order of proceeding : they take to flight more indiscriminately, and were simply called Muzin. They may be known by their disorderly mode of feeding, their desire to en- tice domestic mares to join them, by their colours being browner, sometimes having white legs, and being often silvery grey : their heads are larger and the neck shorter ; but their winter coat is nearly as heavy as that of the wild, and there is always a certain number of expelled Tarpan stallions among them ; but they are more in search of cover and of * Such is the general evidence, chiefly obtained from the orderly before mentioned ; a man who was a perfect model of an independent trooper of the desert ; who had spent ten or twelve years on the frontier of China, and, I understand, \vas often seen at Paris attending his Tahtar chief at the theatres, in 1814. My interpreter was an officer in the Don Cossack regiment of Colonel Bigaloff, whose French was not super- abundant. From the Mongolic troopers I obtained little in- formation ; they were stupid or unwilling. THE WILD HORSE. 165 watery places, the wild herds being less in want of drink and more unwilling to encounter water, being even said not to be able to swim ; while the Muzin will cross considerable rivers. During winter, both resort to elevated ground where the winds have swept away the snow, or dig with their fore feet and break the ice to get at their food. Their olfactory sense, though not delicate in dis- tinguishing enemies at great distances, is remarkable for judging the nature of swamps, which they often traverse, particularly to the south of Lake Aral : when thus entangled at fault, their scent indicates the passable places, and the snorting of the first that finds one is immediately observed and followed by the others. * The genuine wild species is migratory, proceed- ing northward in summer to a considerable dis- tance, and returning early in autumn. The mixed races wander rather in the direction of the pas- tures than to a point of the compass ; nearer Europe, they haunt the vicinity of cultivation, and attack the hay-stacks which the farmers make at a dis- tance in the open country. Though in many respects they have similar manners, they want the instinct of the wild : upon being taken young, after severe resistance, they submit to slavery. The Tarpans always die of ennui in a short time, if they do not break their own necks in resisting the will of man : t * I have seen South American horses extricate themselves in the same manner. f This assertion, as in other cases, is not consistent with 166 THE WILD HORSE. they are, moreover, said to attack and destroy do- mestic horses : they rise on their haunches in fight- ing, and bite furiously ; while the mixed races, though ready to bite, are more willing to strike out with their hind feet, and neither have ever been remarked lying down. In these particulars, the younger Gmelin, who likewise travelled in Eastern Russia, corroborates our account, and he does not appear to have come to the same conclusions as Forster or Pallas; we may therefore infer, from what is here stated; that the foal observed by the last mentioned author, when he was on the Samara, opposite Sorotschinska, caught at Toskair Krepost, was of the mixed race, or not sufficiently grown to furnish a satisfactory representation. We made further inquiries respecting the resi- dence of the piebald race of ancient history, in High Asia, and found that a variety of this kind was deemed distinct from the Russian horses, and occasionally seen among the Tahtar and Ural do- mestic breeds, but differing from the Chinese and wild race " beyond the southern mountains," * in having their feet very generally dark, while the others have invariably white limbs. Those within the frontier were said to be a breed belonging to the facts observed, if care be taken in the process of domestication ; it must be understood to mean that the wild horse resists, till death, the unceremonious forcible system of subjugation prac- tised by the natives. * I understood by that appellation, that the Cossack spoke relatively to his own position being north of the central chains of Asia. THE WILD HORSE. 167 black Kalmucks, and we saw a few in the Russian irregular troops that may have been of this Kal- muck stock ; but the real piebald animal is known by the names of Tangum and Tannian, from the Tangustan mountains of Bootan, although it is spread further along the north side of the Hima- laya range beyond Thibet. Father Georgi alludes to Tangums, when speaking of the wild horses, vari- ously coloured, which he saw on the banks of the Montza in his route to Lasha. D'Hobsonville was informed they were found on the borders of Thibet, and described not to be above ten or eleven hands high, tolerably well proportioned, active, fiery, with the hair between four and five inches long, coloured in regular corresponding spots. The domesticated are also in general piebald, thirteen hands high, deep chested, short bodied, with strong full quarters, robust limbs, and altogether remarkable for sym- metry, strength, and compactness ; it is a true mountain animal, very sure footed, very active, and bold. We have already noticed the earlier history of this form of horse down to the eighth century : in the seventh, the Arabian hero Zohara, a prisoner in the Persian camp, escaped .upon a piebald horse, and was greatly instrumental in the Islam victory of Kadesia. The clouded horses of Turan are mentioned by Firdausi : other poets incidentally name them, and Mickhoud the Persian historian relates of the eighth Abasside Caliph, Motassem, " that he raised a mound at the time he was build- 168 THE WILD HORSE. ing Samarah by means of 130,000 pied horses of his army, each conveying a sack of earth to the spot. It was on this mound, called Tel-al-Mekhali, or the hill of sacks, that his son and successor Wathek built the famous tower." They are again mentioned in the Tahtar army under Peta Khan, when in 1241 he broke through Russia and Poland and defeated and slew Duke Henry II. of Silesia at "Wahlstadt. They continue at present to exist in small breeds in Moldavia, Wallachia, Poland, and .Pomerania, but are now only used to mount trumpeters and the bands of Hussar regiments, excepting in Italy, where the Borghese breed of pied horses is still in repute. It is reared near Rome, in the sandy pine district about ancient Ardea, the classical site of the exploits of Turnus and J^neas, and proves the dura- bility of the markings of this form of horse, since Virgil clearly alludes to it in the same locality : — " Turnus, : Improvisus adest : maculis quern Thracius albis Portat equus, " jEN. ix. 48. and the same breed was in the poet's mind when he describes the Trojan game as it was performed by the Roman youth : — ; quern Thracius albis Portat equus bicolor maculis ; vestigia primi Alba pedis, frontemque ostentans arduus albam. jEN. v. 565. The great Roman poet shows, in other writings, as well as in the local legendary part of the ^Eneid, a THE WILD HORSE. 169 profound knowledge of the Latin traditions ; and if their race of horses had been of late introduction, his judgment would have rejected making it the distinguishing character of the Ardean and Yolscian horse. Since it has continued unimpaired from the beginning of the Roman empire to the present time, there is no reason to reject the belief that it was of sufficient antiquity to belong to the stock of centaur origin, and a companion of the Thraco-Pelasgian colonists, among whom Mares was the first eques- trian in Italy. Raphael, we have seen, displays his extensive in- formation when one of these horses is introduced in his Vatican fresco of Attila, and both Titian and Guido have immortalized them in their pictures of Aurora. * It is the most southern of all the original wild forms, and probably also the most ancient that invaded China; for on the square and perforated coins of a very ancient dynasty, the figure of a horse bearing the Tangum form is the distinguish- ing token, either of the family or of the value. It is less spirited and smaller in the southern pro- vinces of the empire, and there used for an ambling pony, as may be seen in Chinese paper-hangings, where the cultivation of rice-grounds and the super- intendence of tea-plantations is represented. On our Indian frontier it is the parent stock of the * They are noticed by the troubadour poets, and Guillaume de la Ferte, 1221, is figured with a pied horse, in stained glass, at Notre Dame de Chartre's. 170 THE WILD HORSE. Ghoonts reared in the vicinity of Kalunga; and further westward, where it is probably more mixed, the mountain ponies of the Himalayas are more grey and the spots often small; but in courage, activity, and sure- footedn ess they are admirable. The common neglected class of Afghaunistan and the Indian peninsula, usually called Yaboos, attest by their not uncommon piebald livery that they are in a great proportion descended from the Parthian breed; and in the original battle-pictures of the wars of Aurungzebe, engraved about a century ago from Indian originals, we can trace the piebald horse among the chargers of the principal figures. We have been informed that, in the late wars, whole russoolahs, or corps of Pindarees, have been seen mounted upon this race. There are still other wild horses of Asia, such as the white woolly animal of the Kara Koom and the high table land of Pamere, * whence the Kir- guise and Kalmucks appear to have drawn one of their principal races. It is about fourteen hands high, with a large head, small eyes and ears, a thick * Pamere, with the Surikol lake in the centre, twelve days' journey across, gives birth to the Jaxartes, the Oxus, and to a branch of the Indus : from the table land all the mountains m sight appear as under the feet ; there are no trees, but rich pasturage, never long covered by snow, because of the violent drift winds. The wild and domestic horses, and nearly all the mammiferse, are clothed in long shaggy white furs. Kara Koom, comparatively low, is still higher than Hindo Koosh and the plateau of Ladakh, 17,000 feet above the sea, where Dr. Gerrard met great droves of wild horses. THE WILD HORSE. 1J1 muzzle, a short thin neck, joining the head at a considerable angle; the mane is short and ragged, the tail not very abundant, the shoulder low and rather vertical, the limbs long, and the hoofs wide ; all the proportions hidden and deformed by a heavy bear-like fur, particularly under the jaws, where there is a considerable beard, not long, but extend- ing to the gullet : the colour is grisly white, some- what darker in summer, and the hair on the outside shining and hard, within soft and downy. The Kiang, which Mr. Moorcroft saw in great numbers in the elevated deserts of Khoten, and described as different from the Ghoor Khur of Sinde, is in form more like an antelope, having a brilliant eye and great vivacity of movement, which the name Kiang (rushing) sufficiently explains. This animal stands about fourteen hands high, with a round muscular form, is probably again the wild stock of the Tan- gum ; but the Yo-to-tze, which we regard to be our A sinus equuleus, intermediate between the horse and hem i onus, like the former in shape and the latter in colour, is allied but not identical with the onager. These short notices show how defective our habits of superficial examination are, since no less than three species may be concealed under the name of Ghoor Khur, and as many in the more general term of wild horses. Turning to Africa and excluding from the pre- sent consideration the zebra group, we find the an- cients were still more liable to confound the real Equine animals, and depending upon reports of the ] 72 THE WILD HORSE. natives to include in their description of horses, spe- cies that can be only referred to ruminants. Con- fusion, thus created, was increased by Albertus Magnus, who finding in Oppian a true account of the onager and another of the hippagrus or equi- ferus of the Latin writers, coupled the two last names with the description of the first, and was followed by succeeding naturalists, excepting by Johnston, who finding the poet's hippagrus a brown bisulcate hornless animal of Ethiopia, caused a figure to be engraved from the description, according to which it is represented also with tusks and a mane extending the whole length of the spine. It is not easy to account for the refusal of Linnean compilers to place this supposed species by the side of Molina's Equus bisulcuts, the Huemel of Patagonia, for both appear to be real species placed in a wrong order. The hippagrus, when reported to be solidungu- lated, may be our E. hippagrus ; and when stated to be bisulcate, is not a horse but a ruminant, probably the same which Mr. Ruppel noticed by the name of Boura of Koldagi, and perhaps the Boryes of Herodotus, * as well as the Pegasus of Pliny, t * Boura of Koldagi, Ruppel. " A ruminant the size of an ass ; both sexes hornless, covered with dark brown bristly hair and having a long black mane on the neck, the legs brown- black ; the animal is fleet, and resides on the hills." Mr. Ruppel saw the skin of one at Cairo, and conjectures that it is an undescribed species of Ovis. It may be also the Feshtall, but that fish, slightly modified, will admit of other explana- tions. See Herodotus, lib. iv. f See Griffith's Cuvier, Ruminantia. FERAL HORSES. 173 "We shall see in the description of the koomrah how much the love of the marvellous may mislead the ignorant natives, and through them naturalists bet- ter informed than Oppian. The wild horses seen by Leo, Marmol, Struys, Bruce, and produced by the Emperor Gordian, may indeed be partly of feral origin, and the rest the species above noticed, or the wild ass, which is fonnd along the White Nile as far as it has been discovered ; but no other wild Equus is described in Africa on this side of the equator. FERAL HORSES OF AMERICA. Having endeavoured to show the real existence of wild horses on the soil where the unsubdued species must have roamed in freedom, and where at no time the enterprise of man can have entirely extir- pated them ; since it could not, even if the present races were feral, prevent their again multiplying and resuming the characters of aboriginal independence, is in itself, we think, sufficient proof to establish the argument : we may therefore, after admitting a partial intermixture of the domestic species with the wild in Asia, take a view of those of Ameiica, where they were found in such prodigious numbers, shortly after the first settlements of the Spaniards, that it required the united testimony of the abori- ginals, and the evidence of the terror they at first excited, to establish the absolute credibility of their having been imported. In their appearance, more- 174 FERAL HORSES. over, they bore, and still bear, evident tokens of Spanish origin ; and in their manners, proofs that they were not wild, but only restored to freedom, or what we have called feral. In genial climates, with abundant herbage and few dangerous enemies to encounter, it was natural that animals of such power and intelligence should increase most rapidly ; and hence no surprise was expressed at finding them in abundance in St. Domingo and Cuba, within a century after they had been first imported. Cortez carried them to Mexico, * and Pizzaro to Peru ; the Portuguese to Brazil, and soon after the plains of the Pampas began to swarm with their numbers, t If it be true that at first only six were turned loose, there can be no doubt that many others from both sides of the southern part of the continent became free, and collectively that they acquired habits of self-preservation only in part like the real wild races of Asia; the time is not perhaps far distant, when they will be gradually again absorbed by domesti- cation, excepting those which will retreat towards the two poles ; and as the species is not restricted * Bernal diaz del Castillo. + Dr. Rengger notes the first horses in Paraguay to have been imported from Spain and the Canaries in 1537, and shows the error of Funes (En Saya de la Historia civil del Paraguay), who pretends that in the exploratory voyage of Irala, in 1 550, six hundred were conveyed to the country, since Azara found in the archives of Asuntion a document proving that Irala, in the year 1551, actually bought a Spanish horse for 15,000 florins. " Naturgeschichte der Sauegethiere von Paraguay •* 1 voL 8vo. FERAL HORSES. 175 by the rigour of climate, but solely by tbe extent of available food, tbe wilds of Patagonia and the lati- tudes of the northern deserts will continue to main- tain them in freedom, and render them migratory like the deer and the bison of the same climate. Of the South American feral horses, none that we ourselves have possessed or seen, living, depicted, or described, had assumed the aspect or original colours of the wild species of Asia ; they all bore the stamp of the domesticated races of Old Spain, with more or less modification; and though the herds roaming in freedom are mostly of a similar livery, there are amongst them individuals of every shade and mixture of colours that exi^t in Europe ; black, as far as our personal observations went, being rarest; modifications of grey perhaps the most abundant in the mountainous regions towards the Gulf of Mexico, and shades of bay in the Pam- pas. * Azara, the best qualified naturalist to express an opinion on this particular subject, estimates the proportion of bays (bay-brown) to be about ninety to ten zains, that is, entirely dark-coloured, without any white; black, there is not one in two thou- sand; pied and greys occur sometimes, but they are invariably individuals escaped or left from do- mestic conditions. * Jet black, though very rare, * On the colours of Spanish horses, see " Escuella de a "Caballo," a translation from La Gueriniere, but with addi- tions by Don Baltazar de Trursun, 2 vols. 8vo. Madrid, 178G. f There is a race of starred skewbalds in Patagonia, an evi- 176 FERAL HORSES. is a true colour among the feral races ; and he re- gards the bay, the dark, and the jet black as three typical liveries of the original wild animal, and in- fers that the first pair of horses was of one of these colours ; he then remarks that the black decreases or is liable to be effaced, next, the dark zain^ and therefore that bay-brown is the primitive colour. The statement of this able observer is nearly the same as our own, but we explain the effects in a different manner, in the conclusions already drawn ; namely, that the Spanish horse in general is of the bay stock imported by Phoenicians, Carthaginians, and other African tribes, including the Arab Mus- sulrnen ; the black, a residue of the Yandalic im- portation, and thence most anciently the Andalus, that is, Vandal breed of the Moors ; the zaln pro- bably an original race, or a residue of Roman intro- duction, which with the greys belonged to the mountains, and is now in the New World chiefly confined to mountainous regions ; hence the black being the fewest, must necessarily be absorbed un- less other causes intervene. We have seen the Tarpans of Asia forming herds composed of minor families, but headed by a sul- tan-stallion, who guides the march and fights the battles of his subjects ; we know these instincts to be weaker in the mixed and feral troops of. Asia, and find it still less evolved in America. Having in the West a greater abundance of food, they con- dent approximation to white, just as real pied horses are chancx occurrences in England. FERAL HORSES. 177 gregate in thousands, where the influence of a leader cannot act in a similar manner, or the stallions effect more than keeping some of their immediate family together, while of the larger felinae, the ja- guar and the puma only are dangerous to horses; both being tree-climbing carnivora, they seldom roam far from the woods or venture on the plains, where the thunder of horses' hoofs is sufficiently terrific to frighten bolder animals ; and with regard to the red wolf, our Chrysocyon julatus, he is soli- tary, and usually satisfied with much smaller prey ; hence, being more disturbed by man, and less obliged to watch predaceous animals, their instincts are less matured, their eyesight less piercing, and though by the qualities of their olfactory powers they can make the nicest distinctions, their nostrils do not detect the jaguar at a small distance. The im- pulses of fear they receive are always caused by the first stallion that happens to be impressed with dan- ger : if a carnivorous animal is detected, they crowd together, and then the stallions rush forward to trample him to death; but the mares strike out with the heels, and although they are more timid, do not evince the same fear at the sight of man ; the males alone being chosen by him for service, and subject to the hardest usage ; they yet approach travellers, call to their captive brethren toiling un- der the weight of riders, then toss their heads, and, looking askance, canter away with their heads and tails raised ; while the mares, unconscious of dan- ger, look on with surprise at the jaded look of the M 178 FERAL ttORSES. passing strangers, and their foals run innocently up and start back with sudden apprehension. * The males having but little cause for exercising their intellectual faculties, and being often captured, se- verely ridden, and then again restored to liberty, their wild instinct is more confused than fully de- veloped, and a tendency to obedience and domesti- cation remains impressed on their tempers. There is, nevertheless, one trait in the character of the South American horses not now observed in Asia, though, probably, were the conditions similar, a similar effect might be expected : t we allude to a disposition of becoming frantic from thirst in the heated plains where water is rare, and then with the impetuosity of madness, when chance or instinct has at length conducted them to a pool or a river, rushing forward to the brink, trampling each other under foot, others sticking in the clay, and many forced into the water ; causing a destruction of their numbers exceeding belief. Thousands of skeletons are said to blanch the borders of some localities where they resort. Where, by the absence of a sufficient antagonist power in a due proportion of great carnivora, it is perhaps justly remarked by the author of the treatise on the Horse, that " this * See Captain Head's graphical description in his Journey across the Pampas. + In Mr. Buckingham's Travels there is a case of a caravan of men, horses, mules, and asses, under the influence of severe thirst, suddenly coming upon a river in the dark, and over- throwing each other, as each pushed his predecessor before him into the stream. FERAL HORSES. 1J9 is one of the means by which the too rapid increase of this quadruped is by the ordinance of Nature there prevented." North America likewise contains herds of feral horses ; they are in form stout cobs, mostly bay, though there are herds where black predominates ; they have considerable speed, arid are very sure- footed. The herds belong exclusively to the prairie, avoiding mountains and woods. They wrere for- merly abundant in the Floridas, arid still range through the open districts to California and the plains of the Columbia, but are not described with equal detail. In numbers they herd together per- haps still more considerable. In the description furnished by a recent traveller, the Hon. C. A. Murray, * we are furnished with a picture of what he denominates a Stampede, or pas- sage of these animals, surpassing in graphic spirit every account of wild horses upon record. u About an hour," he writes, " after the usual time to secure the horses for the night, an indistinct sound arose, like the muttering of distant thunder; as it ap- proached, it became mixed with the howling of all the dogs in the encampment, and with the shouts and yells of the Indians ; in coming nearer, it rose high above all these accompaniments, and resembled the lashing of a heavy surf upon a beach ; on and on it rolled towards us, and partly from my own hearing, partly from the hurried words and actions of the tenants of our lodge, I gathered it must be * Travels in North America, 2 vols. J80 FERAL HORSES. the fierce and uncontrolable gallop of thousands of panic-stricken horses : as this living torrent drew nigh, I sprang to the front of the tent, seized my favourite riding-mare, and in addition to the hohbles which confined her, twisted the long larlett round her fore legs, then led her immediately in front of the fire, hoping that the excited and maddened flood of horses would divide and pass on each side of it. As the galloping mass drew nigh, our horses began to snort, prick up their ears, then to tremble ; and when it burst upon us, they became completely un- governable from terror; all broke loose and joined their affrighted companions, except my mare, which struggled with the fury of a wild beast, and I only retained her by using all my strength, and at last throwing her on her side. On went the maddened troop, trampling, in their headlong speed, over skins, dried meat, &c., and throwing down some of the smaller tents. They were soon lost in the darkness of the night and in the wilds of the prairie, and nothing more was heard of them, save the distant yelping of the curs, who continued their ineffectual pursuit." These wild animals have produced the same effect upon the native savages which their similars have done in the south. In the latter por- tion of America, the Gosquis, Araucas, and Pata- gonian Indians have become riding tribes, as well as the Pawnees, Camanchees, and Ricarras in the former; all are nomad hordes of riders, only re- strained by the presence of European colonists from becoming the conquerors of their fellow red men. FERAL HORSES. 181 They have already acquired equestrian habits, as dexterous lancers and throwers of the lazzo and lolas. Numerous superstitions exist among them which show a long familiarity with horses, and an opinion of the Ricarras, that the souls of horses will rise in judgment against unmerciful riders, does them honour. This ready departure from their an- tique habits, from the circumstance of horses being casually introduced to their observation, shows what must have occurred in the Old "World among the primitive barbarous nations who had wild horses within their reach. As soon as one tribe could show the example of a successful experiment in the sub- jugation of the animal, others necessarily must have undertaken the same task ; and those tribes that first accomplished it, immediately made the new instrument of power applicable to invade the others and commence the era of conquests. An indigenous possession of horses exhibits the further similarity in manners which result from it, for in both continents the Tahtar and the Patagonian feed upon the flesh, both do most of their common daily business on horseback, and, after death, both are laid in a tomb with the stuffed skins of their favourite animals set up around it. There remains one more form of feral or wild horse to notice, namely, that wtich is of question- able origin, and found independent on the island of Celebes. East of the Bramapootra, and south of the tropic, through all Indo- China, Malaya, and the great islands, horses are dwindled to very small 182 FERAL HORSES. ponies ; collectively they may be called Sarans, and although by some travellers they are considered indigenous, the antique navigation of the seas sur- rounding the Australian islands, in ships of suffi- cient burthen to convey horses, and the variety of colours we observe in the different breeds, seem to attest, that if Solipedes, along with the tiger and rhinoceros, were located upon them by the hand of Nature, domesticated races have mixed with them from very early times. We prefer to conjecture that they were imported from opposite directions by the favour of each monsoon, and that the Chi- nese stock spread by Formosa or Haynan, Lu9on, the Philippine group, to the north-east coast of Borneo and Celebes, where the people, less civilized, permitted them to run feral, while the others of higher race came through Sumatra and Java, spread- ing eastward as far as Timor. Such is the result of a general review of the question relating to wild horses, and we believe the conclusions may be legitimately drawn : that of the existing herds in a state of nature in High Asia, some are not feral, but really wild ; that there was a period when Equidae of distinct forms, or closely approximating species, or races widely different, wandered in a wild state in separate regions, the residue of an anterior animal distribution, perhaps upon the great mountain line of Central Asia, where plateaux or table lands exceeding Armenian Ararat in elevation are still occupied by wild horses ; that of these some races still extant never have been en- FERAL HORSES. 183 tirely subdued, such, for example, as the Tarpans before noticed, the Kirguise and Pamere woolly white race, and the wild horses of Poland and Prussia before described ; that from their similarity or antecedent unity, they were constituted so as to be fusible into a common, single, specific, but very variable stock for the purposes of man, under whose fostering care a more perfect animal was bred from their mixture, than any of the preceding singly taken. These inferences appear to be supported by the ductility of all the secondary characters of wild and domestic horses, which, if they are not ad- mitted to constitute in some cases specific differences, where are we to find those that are sufficient to dis- tinguish a wild from a domestic species? Since most wild animals, and certainly all Equidse, are placable in nonage ; else, why is the hemionus do- mesticated at Lucknow not considered feral ? Why is the onager or wild ass not claimed as a domestic animal merely escaped from bondage ? And with regard to different though osculating species, why should the conclusions be unsatisfactory in horses, when in goats, sheep, wolves, dogs, and other spe- cies, we are forced to accede to them ? How object to fusion, when species more remote, as in the case of the quagga and mare, leave such lasting impres- sions; and on the other hand, when we find the white and the black hide of horses bearing inde- lible coloured fur, which crossing unceasingly only masks but does not obliterate ? When we see the dun coloured form even now always middle-sized 184 FERAL HORSES. and along with an asinine streak on the back, in the purer breeds also marked with cross bars on the joints, sometimes on the shoulder : the light limbed races provided naturally with ewe necks, and the heavy with the cervical vertebrae more straight or arched : the raw-boned, large, broad- footed variety located in its own damp and wooded plains, and the small hardy cylindrical-footed ponies invariably belonging to rocky mountains : all these characters may be trivial, they may be called acci- dental, or the results of the usual explanations, food and climate, yet several evidently lie deeper in the nature of animal organization. Their aggre- gate importance is supported by the history of the ancient races, and appears adequate to confirm the presumption we contend for and have already drawn, when we compared the aboriginal races of the northern hemisphere with the striped group of the southern, both having probably an aberrant spe- cies on each side. We mean not, however, to infer that all large horses belong to low regions, or all the small to rocky sites ; numerous circumstances no doubt have disturbed the conditions of existence, and climate, food, and the fostering care of man, have had their legitimate influence. Albinism, though it affects horses like other animals, must not be confounded with natural greys, where round dappled marks show a particular tendency unconnected with a defi- ciency of colouring matter in the hair, and melanism is not perceptibly accidental. The main facts are FERAL HORSES. 185 not the less unimpaired, the bay, the dun, the dappled, the pied, and the black, still continue to form great races under the care of man ; and even the asinine marks, in token of some ancient direct adulteration, return when in the least excited, and show their spinal ray, their bars on the joints, and in some cases a cross on the shoulder ; all confirm- ing the probability that high-bred and frequently crossed races of the horse are the most artificial, and in the form we now have them, were never really wild. THE EQUIDJE IN GENERAL. IN the structure of the whole family, we find, among fossil remains, only slight differences in size and relative proportions ; and the teeth, from those of a large horse (which are exceedingly rare) vary, to some, with the crown ohviously narrower than in the domestic races. Turning to the existing spe- cies, all have similar viscera, the same form of stomach, not adapted for rumination; they have, with perhaps one exception, the same number and structure of teeth; that is, six incisors hoth above and below, one cuspidate on each side in both jaws, six molars above and the same number below on each side, making forty teeth in all. In the fe- males the cuspidates are not commonly observed. One species (the hemionus) is reported to have only thirty-four teeth, and another (the female dauw) may be furnished with a kind of udder and four mammae. * The whole family is distinguished from all other mammalia by the bones at the extremity * Capt. Harris's Sporting Expedition in South Africa. THE EQUIOE IN GENERAL. 187 of the feet being lodged in a single round hoof; they have all more or less mane on the neck ; the whole of their structure is remarkably strong and well ba- lanced, being in height at the shoulder and croup about equal to the length from the breast to the but- tock, and the head and neck comparatively lighter in proportion than in animals that bear horns; hence, above all other quadrupeds, the horse is the most sym- metrical for his stature ; the fleetest, the strongest, and the most enduring; for, considering that his speed is always reckoned with the additional weight of a rider, that velocity which gives near a mile in a minute, and four miles in about six minutes and a half, * has been calculated to be at the rate of eighty-two feet and a half per second ; exceeding what a vigorous stag or the fleetest greyhound can achieve unencumbered by any extraneous weight. Such speed, with the powers of endurance, is surely superior to every other quadruped; for while we know what effect the difference of one or two pounds weight produces on the velocity of the pace of racers, horses will carry heavy riders and keep up with a running ostrich, overtake a stag, and toil at a gal- lop in the withering sun of the desert, over sixty or eighty miles without drawing bit. It is to the elasticity and form of structure, to the inclination of the shoulder, the width of the trunk giving play to the lungs, the breadth of the quarters, the vigour of the fore-arm, the consolidation of the feet into one hoof, and the lightness of the head and neck, * Achieved by " Flying Childers." 188 THE EQUIDJE IN GENERAL. that we must chiefly refer these powers. In the wild ass, where we also find very great speed, a vertical shoulder and low withers prevent additional weight being carried in a similar manner and with equal convenience. Equidas are essentially grazing animals, all are tempted by thistles, thorny shrubs, and brooms, but none of them digest their food so completely as not to leave the power of vegetation to many seeds, especially of gramineous plants and tritica that have passed through the stomach and are lodged in their dung ; while their fondness for brambles, and their active energy, tends to spread them over barren plains, where they are thus made agents for intro- ducing new plants, and gradually increasing the vegetation, prepare whole regions to support both vegetable and animal life in a multiplicity of forms previously impossible. * They are gregarious : in common with ruminants they see well in the dark, have the pupil rather elongated, the eyes being placed far apart so as to enable them when the jiead is down to view objects with facility before and behind them, as well as sideways : the length of head and neck is nearly equal to their height, giving the power of cropping the herbage by means of their flexible lips and well-set nipping teeth, to accomplish which they are nevertheless obliged to throw one of the fore-legs forward and the other * In this manner the Pampas, towards the Straits of Magel- lan, are altering for the better, according to the observation of Air. Bartlett. THE EQUIDJE IN GENERAL. 189 to the rear, while at the same time they straighten the line of the back : the ears are very moveable, independent of each other, conveying sound with facility from all directions : their sense of smell is very delicate: they sleep little; in a wild state seldom or never lie down, and consequently have an individual security as well as the collective protec- tion of their gregarious habits ; most, however, pre- fer mountainous and rocky regions, and with trifling exception all keep out of cover. True horses resist the severest temperature, and can live in the coldest climates that will allow them to find food; and races or forms of them bear heat with nearly equal facility ; but in the two extremes somewhat of op- posite effects take place; for while in the north wild horses are not diminished in stature, the do- mestic become very small ; and in the south, the domestic rise above the common standard, while the so called wild are not more than ten hands at the shoulders. Notwithstanding the density of hide, the asinine section finds heat and barren regions genial, and cold insupportable beyond a certain lati- tude. The striped group likewise bears heat best, but is confined to a comparative small area. There is a great disparity of intelligence between all the wild species and the domestic horse, whose acts often display faculties nearly as elevated as those of a dog ; memory almost as tenacious, and a power of abstraction and comparison, a degree of benevolence, and a generosity of disposition, which, notwith- standing our common ruthless mode of educating 190 THE EQUIDJE IN GENERAL. them, often pierces through when least expected. Qualities of so elevated an order appear to be neces- sarily connected with greater irritability of nerve, and this sensitiveness is manifested in horses more than in other Equidae, their skins suffering so much from the stings of flies, that Nature, in order to en- able them to have leisure to feed and repose, has furnished their neck with a long mane, and the tail forms a sweeping brush which reaches every part of the body where the head cannot attain : they have moreover a quivering muscular action of the skin which impedes the tormenting power of insects, and both these means of defence are in proportion to the irritability of the species and to their degree of docility; for in the ass these are scarcely any, and in the dauw we may expect from the presence of them that placability is every way attainable. The period of copulation, the time of gestation, the number of offspring, the years of growth, the conditions of dentition, and the duration of life, are in all nearly alike, or differ only from local causes ; nodie appear to suffer convulsions from dentition; all are in disposition gay, sociable, and emulous; even the ass has the instinct of trying his speed against competitors : the voice of all is sonorous, loud, but, excepting in the horse, exceedingly dis- agreeable. In animals whose typical species is so well known, extended generalities are not necessary ; and among the more particular questions, considering the most important to belong to the veterinary science, to THE EQUIDJE IN GENERAL. 191 economical or to sporting pursuits, more than to natural history, we shall, with a few exceptions, noticed particularly in our remarks on the domestic horse, refrain from details which already abound in other publications avowedly written for the purpose, and treating the questions at full length ; we can- not, however, refrain from offering to the reader two plates of the horse, one representing the skeleton of the animal, and the other the appearance of the ex- ternal muscles ; the former an example of the solid elegance of the frame, upon which the tendons and muscles act like levers ; the other a great surface of the muscles themselves, in their beautiful disposi- tion for effecting the manifold purposes they are destined to perform. To have numbered and named the many parts, would have led us into the veteri- nary science, foreign to our more immediate purpose, and to the extent we would here give details, readily found in every Encyclopaedia and Hippiatric trea- tises, explanations must have proved unsatisfactory to the reader. For reasons already offered in the introductory pages of this volume, we divide the Linnaean genus Equus into three sections, whereof the first contains the Horses properly so called, the second the Asi- nine group as it was separated by Mr. Gray, with the exception of the South African striped species, which have characters sufficiently distinct to form a third. 192 THE HORSE. Equus caballus, Linn. IN this section we -place the true horses, wild and domesticated, whether or not they be sprung from several varieties, forms, or species, or constituted only one, ab initio. They are distinguished by the mane being pendant and the tail furnished with long hair up to the root; the head is long; the ears short and pointed ; the withers somewhat elevated ; the shoulder oblique ; they have callosities on the fore-arms and hind-canons ; the hoof round ; colours of the hair uniform, or clouded, or with a tendency to dappling ; the voice consists in neighing ; intel- lectual instinct naturally more developed than in the other species, though no doubt much perfected by long domestication. The wild have been al- ready described. We now proceed to THE DOMESTIC HORSE. Equus caballus domesticus. IN the domestic horse we behold an animal equally strong and beautiful, endowed with great docility and no less fire ; with size and endurance joined to sobriety, speed, and patience ; clean, companionable, THE DOMESTIC HORSE. 193 emulous, even generous; forbearing, yet impetu- ous ; with faculties susceptible of very considerable education, and perceptions which catch the spirit of man's intentions, lending his powers with the utmost readiness, and restraining them with as ready a compliance : saddled or in harness, labouring will- ingly; enjoying the sports of the field and exulting in the tumult of battle; used by mankind in the most laudable and necessary operations, and often the unconscious instrument of the most sanguinary passions : applauded, cherished, then neglected, and ultimately abandoned to the authority of bipeds, who often show little superiority of reason and much less of temper. One, who, like ourselves, has re- peatedly owed life to the exertions of his horse, in meeting a hostile shock, in swimming across streams, and in passing on the edge of elevated precipices, will feel with us, when contemplating the qualities of this most valuable animal, emotions of gratitude and affection, which others may not so readily ap- preciate. Mohammed, in his pretended inspiration, speak- ing of horses, makes the Almighty create them from a condensation of the south-west wind, which is a repetition of the Lusitanian fable ; but when he re- presents the Deity saying, " Thou shalt be for man a source of happiness and wealth ; thy back shall be a seat of honour, and thy belly of riches : every grain of barley given to thee shall purchase indulgence for the sinner !" he knew what people he addressed. * * This is clearly the language of a keen judge of tbo foaling* 194 THE DOMESTIC HORSE. All domestic horses, as now constituted, we con- sider as cross breeds from ancient forms, of which we know at present only a few characteristics : all to a certain extent are improved breeds, though some have lost stature and others spirit ; in most countries, nevertheless, they are adapted to the general wishes and wants of the communities. Varying from race to race, from individual to in- dividual, there is no absolute standard of beauty in a practical view, although there may be a maxi- mum of ideal beauty for the painter and sculptor, physically unattainable, and probably undesirable ; therefore, general qualities of health, age, sound- ness, structure, and temper, being admitted, the horse should be considered in relation to the par- ticular purposes it is bred for, and the social condi- tion and predominant desires of each nation. In Spain, the animal differs in outward appearance from an English race -horse; it is more curvilinear in outline, because this form is most graceful and adapted to cadenced steps and elegant curvettings ; in England, its frame is more rectangular, best adap- ted for impelling the mass with velocity forward : the beauty of the first is not that of the second ; and while courtly notions of display were predo- minant on the continent, the Spanish horse was, and still is, considered the handsomer animal ; though of his nation, and a further proof, if proof were wanting, that he had to deal with men in full possession of horses highly valued ; — and true enough, horses have been the source of ho- nours, and are a source of wealth to the Arabs. THE DOMESTIC HORSE. 195 the endurance and speed of the English horse, after generations of disparagement, is at length, though unwillingly, admitted; and to obtain horses simi- larly constituted is an evident desire of many, who with amusing circumlocutions endeavour to stave off the unpalatable truth of their undeniable superiority. Comparing the blood-horse with the magnificent cart-horses of England, we find even greater difference in their respective beauties, and yet neither the racer nor the last mentioned pos- sess the characters best suited for a war-horse, nor for the road and other mixed purposes ; hence beauty in horses is a relative term, and must de- pend upon modifications adapted for particular pur- poses. A horse of the usual standard is now considered to attain the height of fifteen or fifteen hands and a half. In the east of Europe they range usually from below fourteen to fifteen hands. The gestation of mares lasts about eleven months, though some- times the time is less by thirty-five days, and at others extended to forty-one or forty-two days be- yond it ; and foals are bora usually in April and May. They see and have the use of their limbs shortly after birth, they are then short-bodied and short-necked animals, and very high on the legs ; they are frolicsome and sport about the mother, scratching their own ears with the hind-legs, and astonishing the stallion, if perchance he can ap- proach, for the gambols of the colt set him on his mettle, his crest rises, his tail is flung up, he snorts 196 THE DOMESTIC HORSE. and gallops about in exceeding wonderment, and with marked signs of pleasure. The foal at birth is usually already furnished with the first and second molars cut through the gum, and in little more than a week shows the two middle nippers or incisor teeth in both jaws, and after five weeks more the two next and also a third grinder : about the eighth month the third pair of incisors above and below are cut, and then the front of the mouth is full. The enamel on these teeth is hard and thick, forming forward a swelling above the edge which remains sharp, and within or behind the edge the surface is depressed and becomes dark, which constitutes the mark or THE DOMESTIC HORSE. 197 evidence whereby the age of a colt or horse is de- termined. At the end of a year the fourth grinder appears above and below, and the fifth at the end of the second year, and then the first dentition is Complete. When three years old, the central nip- pers in both jaws make room for a larger pair in each, and are the first of the permanent set; six months after, a second pair extrude the former on each side of the first permanent ; and at four and a half the last set will be supplied, all distinctly bearing the mark : at five this mark begins to be effaced by the wearing of the two first pair, and the tushes or cuspidate teeth are exposed, leaving a 198 THE DOMESTIC HORSE. space between the nippers, and approaching nearer to the grinders ; at six years old the central nippers are without a mark, or nearly so : at seven, in the next pair, it likewise disappears ; and at eight, all the cutting teeth have lost their black stain and o hollow. * A full grown horse, notwithstanding the different purposes he may be intended for, is required to possess some general qualifications in order to be valuable : the head should be middle sized, well set on, with the branches of the lower jaw sufficiently separated to give the head liberty of action; the eyes large and rather prominent; the ear small, erect, lively ; the nostrils open, not fleshy ; the neck long, with little curve along the gullet, but arched on the crest ; full below, slender near the head ; the withers somewhat high, and the shoulder slanting backwards, but more vertical in proportion as the animal is destined for draught ; the chest should be capacious, deeper in horses for speed, rounder for others ; the arm muscular, the canon bones forward, flat and short ; the loins broad and the quarters long ; the thigh muscular, the calcis high, and the whole hock well bent under the horse. It is in the * These are the marks for estimating the age of the horse till the animal is deemed old ; and it may be proper to add, that there are further tokens taken from the tushes, &c. The age of a horse is always calculated from the first of May, and there is considerable difference in the marks between stabled horses, crib-biters, and animals usually at grass. For an ad- mirable account of these questions, we refer to the history of " The Horse," before quoted. THE DOMESTIC HORSE. 199 structure of the bones of the hind quarters that the principal characteristics of high bred horses are de- tected, and the straight horizontal line of the croup gives those attached to the pelvis greater length, and consequently greater angles ; whence the power of throwing the weight forward is chiefly derived. This explains the cause of the velocity of English thorough bred horses being so superior to those whose croups are round and the tail set on low. From the different colours of the original stocks, horses are clothed in a greater diversity of liveries than any other animals, cattle and dogs not ex- cepted; they are a natural consequence of inter- minable crossings of the five great stirpes already mentioned, producing combinations which have caused French and Spanish writers to enumerate above sixty: the piebald and dappled find only their counterparts in the forms and shades of colour in some species of seals, and it is there also we find the light blue greys with brown spots, of which we have examples in the New Forest and in Spain : yet excepting the five primitive, all the rest have a tendency to return to them, and sometimes it would seem capriciously to resume the bay, dun, grey, or black. We have seen the Romans believing in the superior advantages of certain coloured horses in hunting each particular kind of game, over others differing in that particular. The Arabs probably had superstitious notions of the same kind, for Mohammed has shown himself a dupe to these 200 THE DOMESTIC HORSE. prejudices, and confirmed them among his be- lievers, by asserting u that prosperity is with sorrel horses," that certain white marks on the head are advantageous, and others, on the legs, signs of ill luck. Although in Europe we are by no means in want of mysteries in the stable, the proverb, that " Every good horse is of a good colour," is luckily well established ; but there was a time, and that even not long since, when similar absurdities were believed and gravely set down by learned writers. The life of horses extends naturally from twenty- five to thirty years; cases have occurred of indivi- duals attaining the age of more than forty ; and in countries where they are not tasked by constant over exertion, the period of existence is usually between nineteen and twenty-one. But in England the destruction of these noble animals is excessive : the value of time with a commercial people, incessantly urged into activity both mental and corporeal, has demanded rapidity of communication, and spread an universal taste for going fast ; the fine roads have permitted horses to be subjected to more than they can draw ; betting, racing, and hunting are pursued by persons whose animals are not constructed for such exertions, and violent usage in grooms, stable- boys, and farm-servants is so common, that few reach the age of fifteen years, and all are truly old at ten. Were statistics directed to the relative length of life of horses between Germany, Belgium, and England, the comparison would show an enor- mous difference against us, and the mischief can be THE DOMESTIC HORSE. 201 only partially remedied by an effective society for preventing cruelty to animals ; such as we find em- bodied in the skill of our civil engineers, who have given a regulated velocity to iron surpassing the powers of the whip, and railroads and steam-ships, will effect more for the relief of horses than all the remonstrances of humanity. In the structure of the horse, mares are always comparatively lower at the withers than geldings or stallions ; these last have the neck much fuller than either of the above, their spirit is also much more noisy, and their disposition, when they meet at liberty, exceedingly pugnacious : they are even dan- gerous when ridden ; so that where they are com- monly used for the saddle, as, for instance, in India, two horsemen cannot venture to ride side by side without constant attention, and always at some distance asunder. A striking example of the fierce- ness of stallions occurred, we are informed, during the last war, when the Marquess de la Romana made his celebrated march towards the Baltic, where, by the celerity of the movement, he distanced the pursuing enemies and embarked his corps in transports ; the cavalry, mounted on stallions, as is usual in Spain, was obliged to abandon their horses on the beach, where they had just arrived after ex- cessive forced marches, yet no sooner were the horses sensible that they were out of human controul, than rushing together in wild troops, they galloped head- long up and down, and then attacked each other with such fury, that it was believed a great number 202 THE DOMESTIC HORSE. were killed, and nearly all were rendered useless. The case was very different with the English troop- horses (all geldings) when Sir John Moore's corps embarked after the battle of Corunna : orders having been issued to shoot them, they witnessing their companions fall one after another, stood trembling with fear, and by their piteous looks seemed to implore mercy from men who had been their riders ; till the duty imposed upon the dragoons entrusted with the execution of the order be- came unbearable, and the men turned away from the task with scalding tears : hence the French obtained a considerable number unhurt, and among them several belonging to officers, who, rather than destroy, had left their faithful chargers with billets attached, recommending them to the kindness of the enemy.* It is asserted that horses with a broad after-head and the ears far asunder are naturally bolder than those whose head is narrow above the fore-lock ; some are certainly more daring by nature than others, and judicious training in most cases makes them sufficiently stanch. Some, habituated to war, will drop their head, pick at grass in the midst of fire, smoke, and the roar of cannon; others never entirely cast off their natural timidity. We have witnessed them groaning, or endeavouring to lie down when they found escape impossible, at the * The King's German Hussars alone brought off their horses, in consequence of being ordered to march by Vigo, where they had time to embark the whole unmolested. THE DOMESTIC HORSE. 203 fearful sound of shot, shrapnel-shells, and rockets ; and it is most painful to witness their look of ter- ror in battle, and groans upon being wounded. Yet many of the terrified animals, when let loose at a charge, dash forward in a kind of desperation that makes it difficult to hold them in hand; and we recollect at a charge, in 1794, when the light dra- goon troop-horse was larger than at present, and the French were wretchedly mounted, a party of British bursting through a hostile squadron as they would have passed through a fence of rushes. Horses have a very good memory ; in the darkest nights they will find their way homeward, if they have but once passed ov«er the same road. They remember kind treatment, as was manifest in a charger that had been two years our own; this animal had been left with the army, and was brought back and sold in London : about three years after, we chanced to travel up to town, and at a relay, getting out of the mail, the off- wheel horse attracted our attention, and upon going near to examine it with more care, we found the animal recognizing its former master, and testifying satisfaction by rubbing its head against our clothes, and making every moment a little stamp with the fore-feet, till the coachman asked if the horse was not an ac- quaintance. We remember a beautiful and most powerful charger belonging to a friend, then a cap- tain in the 14th dragoons, bought by him in Ireland at a comparative low price, on account of an im- petuous viciousness, which had cost the life of one 204 THE DOMESTIC HORSE. or two grooms : the captain * was a kind of Cen- taur rider, not to be flung by the most violent ef- forts, and of a temper for gentleness that would effect a cure, if vice were curable : after some very dangerous combats with his horse, the animal was subdued, and it became so attached, that his master could walk any where with him following like a dog, and even ladies mount him with perfect safety. He rode him during several campaigns in Spain, and on one occasion where, in action, horse and rider came headlong to the ground, the animal making an effort to spring up, placed his fore-foot on the captain's breast, but immediately withdrawing it, rose without hurting him, or moving, until he was remounted. When we saw him he was already old, but his gentleness remained perfectly unaltered ; yet his powers were such, that we witnessed his leaping across a hollow road from bank to bank, a cartway being beneath, and leaping back without apparent effort. We all know to what extent horses may be edu- cated to perform a variety of tricks, appear dead, simulate fear or rage. There is an instance on re- cord of a rider breaking his leg in a fall, with the limb entangled in the stirrup, and his horse assisting him in getting it out. We see them constantly walk of themselves to their places in the relays of coaches. Their love of a \vell known home is equally established, there being cases where they * Major Anderson. We know not if this gallant and amiable man is still alive. THE DOMESTIC HORSE. 205 have swam broad and rapid rivers to return to it. The Arabs all insist upon the truth, that their horses or mares, when sleeping abroad in the open desert, will wake them on the approach of an enemy or of a beast of prey : their gentleness may be witnessed in the Bedoueen tent, where mare, foal, and children all sleep and play together, without the least fear of accident. The mutual attachment known to subsist between the Northern Germans and their horses, may' be ascribed in a great measure to the structure of the farm-houses, where the heads of cattle and horses are turned towards the threshing-floor, at the top of which the family usually resides, and has the kitchen hearth ; the animals being able to see all that passes, are more familiarized, and comprehend the doings of human beings better ; and these, by being constantly in the presence of the domestic animals, have their eyes upon them, and learn to treat them more with a feeling of companions, than that of brutes, fit only to cudgel and to command with curses. In submission to a master, the horse is affected by kind treatment almost as much as the dog and elephant ; for although habitually his actions show timidity, they are more an effect of good temper than fear, for where severity is unreasonably exer- cised, obedience readily granted to kind treatment becomes doubtful, and sooner or later breaks out in vicious resentment and opposition : a horse knows his own strength, and Oppression has its limits. In emulation to surpass a rival, no more convincing 206 THE DOMESTIC HORSE. instance can be cited than in the case of a race- horse finding his competitor begin to head him in the course, seizing him by the fore-leg with such firm teeth, that both jockeys were obliged to dis- mount to part them.* . But the confidence of a horse in a firm rider and his own courage is great, as was conspicuously evinced in the case of an Arab possessed by the late Gen. Sir Robert R. Gillespie, who being present on the race-course of Calcutta, during one of the great Hindu festivals, when several hundred thousand people may be assembled to witness all kinds of shows, was suddenly alarmed by the shrieks of the crowd, and informed that a tiger had escaped from his keepers ; the colonel immediately called for his horse, and grasping a boar-spear, which was in the hands of one among the crowd, rode to attack this formidable enemy : the tiger probably was amazed at finding himself in the middle of such a number of shrieking beings, flying from him in all directions, but the moment he perceived Sir Robert, he crouched with the attitude of preparing to spring at him, and that instant the gallant soldier passed his horse in a leap over the tiger's back, and struck the spear through his spine. The horse was a small grey, afterwards sent home by him a present to the Prince Regent. When Sir Robert fell at the storming of * This was a horse of Mr. Quin's, in 1753. Forester, ano- ther racer, caught his antagonist by the jaw to hold him back. Surely such animals should not be gored or cut with the whip to do their utmost. THE DOMESTIC HORSE. 207 Kalunga, his favourite black charger bred at the Cape of Good Hope, and carried by him to India, was at the sale of his effects competed for by several officers of his division, and finally knocked down to the privates of the 8th dragoons, who contributed their prize-money to the amount of £ 500 sterling, to retain this commemoration of their late com- mander. Thus the charger was always led at the head of the regiment on a march, and at the station of Cawnpore was usually indulged with taking his ancient post at the colour-stand, where the salute of passing squadrons was given at drill and on reviews. When the regiment was ordered home, the funds of the privates running low, he was bought for the same sum by a relative of ours, who provided funds and a paddock for him, where he might end his days in comfort ; but when the corps had marched, and the sound of trumpet had departed, he refused to eat, and on the first opportunity, being led out to exercise, he broke from his groom, and galloping to his ancient station on the parade, after neighing aloud, dropped down and died. All these intellectual and moral qualities vary in horses as much as the physical ; for spirit and daring is not more universal than timidity and cowardice ; memory, prudence, aptitude in some, heedlessness, stupidity, and obstinacy in others. These distinctions are not always individual, but commonly generical, and propagated with the other character of races and breeds, enter in the composi- tion of the original forms of each stock ; and it will 208 DOMESTIC HORSES. be found in treating of them, that the most beauti- ful and noble is also the most gentle and most educated. Anecdotes replete with interest might be com- piled on the subject of the horse, sufficient to fill volumes, but they are more the theme of sporting works than fit for Natural History, where they are only proper as examples to illustrate facts. We shall now proceed to give a summary of the principal breeds of horses, such as they are known at present to be established in different parts of the world, entering occasionally into details, where the race under consideration demands more particular notice. RACES AND BREEDS OF DOMESTIC HORSES. FROM the tenor of the foregoing pages, it is a natu- ral consequence to treat of the races of horses in accordance with the views therein expressed ; con- sequently, while we keep their original stock as a guiding mark, we shall endeavour to class them according as they are known, or appear to belong to one or the other of their more primitive forms : the bay, the grey, the dun, the sooty or black, and the piebald. Although, through constant inter- mixture and the lapse of ages, it might be expected there would be no sufficient traces to mark them out, we shall find, with due allowance for the effect of such powerful agents, that they are still in gene- THE BAY STOCK. 209 ral sufficiently distinct, even in countries where great races of different origin exist, as is quite ob- vious in Great Britain, where we have at least three that still retain their pristine characteristics. Some there will he found of unascertainable origin, but wrhen they are likewise considered in the geo- graphical spaces they occupy, and with relation to the nations that have traversed them, or still reside within their limits, we shall at least have approxi- mating data for our purpose. Beginning with the most ancient domesticated race of Western Asia and Egypt, we find THE BAY STOCK, which, celebrated in early antiquity, and then unno- ticed for some ages, recovered its pristine celebrity from the date of the hegira, and with the Islam conquests spread again towards the east till it reached the Bramaputra; came westward through Barbary to Spain ; is now established in England ; in South and ^North America ; and is fast rising into importance in Australia. Like the Caucassian race of man, it is the variety of horse which gradually either obliterates all the others or assumes an indis- putable pre-eminence, for from that source the most beautiful and the best horses in existence are de- rived. Although the stock is reared into its superior characteristics by education and human interven- tion, it seems more naturally confined in pre-emi- nence within the twentieth and thirty-sixth degrees 210 THE ARABIAN RACE. of northern latitude, and from tjie fifth to the sixtieth of east longitude, where the thermometer is seldom below 50 in the night, or 80 in the day, though often as high as 120 of Fahrenheit. Tin's stock has a black or slate-coloured hide, darkest in the white or grey varieties ; the ears are small, the forehead broad and flat, the limbs always light, and the mane and tail not superabundant. Its ancient history we have already sufficiently noticed to the period of the Arabian conquest*, and now have to enter more par- ticularly on a few details on the present condition of THE ARABIAN RACE. PLATE VIII. It is the most artificial, the first of high-bred horses, and the parent of the noblest breeds in every part of the world : a race of great intermixture, but for ages in the care of attentive and skilful breeders, and under the influence of circumstances favourable to the attainment of the greatest perfection. Al- though the bay colour, of all others, seems the most inclined to pass into albinism, yet there are traces that the white or rather grey race was early and largely mixed with it ; for it is in those two that the dappled or pommeled marks peculiar to horses are alone perceptible ; and admitting the high irri- tability of their intellectual instincts, which clearly affect the markings upon horses, it does not appear that real changes of colour can be ascribed to a dif- o ferent cause than what results from inter-union with THE ARABIAN RACE. 211 different and other forms or races. * In this view the Arabian blood is much mixed, for we find reck- oned in the colours of the race: ahmar, or clear bay ; adJiem, brown bay ; ashekwar, sorrel ; aliad, white; azrek, pure grey; raklha, mottle grey; akdar, blue grey; udhem, black brown; ulmar muruk, dark chestnut ; and Mohammed himself mentions aswad^ or black, which, however, is not recognised, nor ashebad, light chestnut, as real Ara- bian colours. Green, indeed, occurs in the national writers, which seems to denote what we call sallow, but it does not appear that there is any breed of the kind, or it is an occasional kadeschi. It is evi- dent the whole of the true Arabian horses are refer- rible to the bay and the grey, with perhaps a slight addition of a Toorkee black race. The perfection of the bay blood is no doubt due to the Arabs, and particularly to the period when their princes, in the career of conquest, became more enlightened, sagacious, and wealthy than they could have been while they were the mere tenants of their tents. Even now, when for some centuries they have con- tinued to breed, nearly without exception, from their own perfected studs, they produce horses un- equalled in form, with fine bone, firm horny legs, limbs small yet hard, muscle sinewy and elastic, and all the parts free from vascular superabundance and unnecessary weight ; though the breast may be deemed narrow, the barrel expands, the head, small * Albinism would produce white, or flea-bitten, or sorrel horses, but does not afford the round dapples and black legs. 212 THE ARABIAN RACE. and square, is admirably placed, the eyes large and brilliant, the ears small and pointed, and the tail well set on ; even the prominence of the blood-ves- sels beneath the skin attest high breeding; and although the Arab is rather small and English horses are decidedly fleeter, none are more graceful, more enduring, or fitter for war and privation. It may be doubted whether these noble races are not now in a state of gradual decline in their native country, but all have been and still are subjected to the same vigilant system of care and to the condi- tions of life inseparable from the climate and barren soil of the regions where they flourish ; they have been educated in the society of man, used to artifi- cial food not intended for them by nature, such as camels' milk and bruised dates ; inured to sobriety, even in the quantity of water ; but watched, pro- tected, and caressed by a people imperatively called upon to consider them as the only source of riches, the chief agent of national glory, the principal com- panion in daily enjoyments, and the sole instrument of independence. Hence the most hardy breeds are precisely those of the wandering tribes, and also the most docile, because, while the mares have young foals, they partake of the comforts of the tent, and horses are always treated with affection ; excepting when the first great trial of their capabilities is made ; then, indeed, the treatment the young ani- mal suffers is more severe than any horse is liable to in Europe : for, being led out, as yet totally un- conscious of a rider, the owner springs on its back THE ARABIAN RACE. and starts off at a gallop, pushed to the highest speed, across plains and rocks, for fifty or sixty miles without drawing bit ; then, before dismount- ing, he plunges into deep water with his horse, and, on returning to land, offers it food ; judgment of its qualities depending upon the animal immedi- ately beginning to eat. This treatment is more particularly inflicted upon fillies, because the Be- douin rides for his own use only mares, who are in truth more patient and durable than stallions, and never betray the marauder by neighing ; whereas, if stallions are present, this certainly occurs, and therefore these are kept for breeding, sold at high prices, or used by grandees and chiefs who reside in fixed habitations and towns. Habitually in company with mankind, all the Arabian breeds become exceedingly gentle and in- telligent ; a look or a gesture is sufficient to make them stop, take up with their teeth the rider's jereed or any other object he may have dropped, stand by him if he has fallen off their backs, come to his call, and fight resolutely in his defence ; even if he be sleeping, they will rouse him in cases of danger. Kindness and forbearance towards animals is inculcated by the Koran and practised by all Mussulmen, to the shame of Christians, who often do not think this a part of human duty ; and as a Moor well known in London sneeringly remarked to ourselves, " It is not in your Book !" As the Arabian blood is now extended, we must take in some measure the whole of South-western 214 THE ARABIAN RACE. Asia and the northern half of Africa, as within its limits, and refer to the local reports of the com- parative qualities of the principal breeds, as they are estimated to depend upon native countries. In this view, the Nejed claims the noblest ; Hedjas, the handsomest ; Yemen, the most durable ; Syria, the richest in colour; Mesopotamia, the gentlest; Egypt, the swiftest; Barbary, the most prolific; and Persia and Koordistan, the most warlike. We have here at least the general claim of this ex- tended geographical range for Arabian horses main- tained as it was more anciently, when they were called Persian or Egyptian. There is apparently some confusion in the accounts of travellers in the collective denomination of Ko- hayl and Kochlani given to horses by the Arabs, the last mentioned being only a slight mutation of one of the many names of the Kulan, wild ass, or rather the Ghurkhar, shows probably the origin of the mistake about wild horses being found in Ara- bia, and also the probability that the two animals just mentioned are not considered to be identical by the Arabs. The term Kohayl, or Kohelga, embraces col- lectively the races denominated Attechi, not much valued, and said to be occasionally feral ; next the Kadeschi, or horses of improved blood; and last, the Kochlani, whose genealogy, is kept with rigor- ous care ; their descent from high-bred studs being capable of proof for many generations, and claiming, in oriental grandiloquence, a lineal ancestry to the THE ARABIAN RACE. 215 time of King Solomon, and even older. There are, however, different opinions expressed by native writers on this head : one asserts the highest breed proceeds from the stallion Zad-el-rakeb and the mare Sherdat Shekban, both the property of Muthaym ibn Oshaim, chief of the primitive Arabian tribe of Yemen : others that Mashour, stallion of Okrar, chief of the Beni Obeide, was sire of the noblest breeds ; while the more pious Arabs claim the five most renowned races for lineal descendants of Rhab- da, Noorna, Waya, Sabha, and Hesma, the five favourite mares of their prophet. There can be no doubt that Mohammed, although no connoisseur, was well mounted ; and it would not have been a token of great fanaticism in his followers to value descendants from his stud.* It is likely, therefore, that some truth may be attached to the claim ; but at present the five recognised great races are deno- minated Tauweyce, JVlonakye, Kohayl, Saklawye, and Gulfe or Julfa : the names of studs derived from the two first mentioned we have not found detailed, but the third or Kohayl reckon among others of renown the Aguz, Kerda, Sheikha, Dubbah ibn Kurysha, Kumeyseh, and Abu Moaraff: the Sak- lawye have the Jedran, Abriyeh, and Nemh el fcubh; and the Julfa has the Estemblath. There * Had he been one of a riding tribe, the world would have heard of a mystical mare ; but being a camel-driver, he only dreamed of the Borak, that mysterious camel which carried him up to the third heaven, and the object of profound discus- sions ainona; the Ulema, as to whether it was red or white. 216 THE ARABIAN RACE. are, besides, breeds of inferior consideration, such as the Henaydi, Abu Arkab, Abayan, Sheraki, Shueyman, Hadaba, Wedna, Medhemeh, Khabitha, Omeriah, and Sadathukan. Indeed, an old Arabic MS. enumerates one hundred and thirty-six breeds of Arabia, three Persian, nine Turkoman, and seven Koordish ; and mentions the Safened race to have been presented by the Queen of Sheba to Solomon, which is at least a proof that it is of very ancient estimation. * But it is evident, from the somewhat conflicting claims of superiority concerning the seve- ral breeds, that European statements depend upon authorities varying according to the tribe or the part of the country where they have been obtained, or purchased horses; we have, as such, the first Arabian of the Monaki breed sent to England by Mr. Usgate, British cousul at Acre, who in 1722 produced with the animal an affidavit of pedigree regularly attested before the Kadi. M. Rosetti claims the very first rank for the Saklawye race, distinguished for very long necks and brilliant eyes. Count Rzewusky vaunts the Kohlan as the first breed, which seems merely to assert that thorough bred horses are the best; for by Kochlani others * D'Herbelot notices Kamel el Sanateym, a treatise on far- riery, wherein are found mentioned several of the above remarks. For most of the details concerning Eastern horses, it will be observed that we are indebted to Malcolm, Elphin stone, Frazer, Burns, Connolly, Moorcroft, and the two Gerrards ; for other particulars, to relatives and friends who have long resided in India. THE ARABIAN RACE. 217 understand the first class of horses collectively, in- cluding many breeds : the Count, however, pur- chased three animals of this class, and vouches for the wonderful properties ascribed to them : temper, faithfulness, sagacity, courage, fierceness, &c. ; he affects even to believe that they know when they are sold, not granting implicit obedience until they have been duly transferred with the presentation of bread and salt to a new master. There are among those studs many whose pedigrees ascend through numerous generations of the noblest blood, perfectly well attested ; and some even, it is asserted, to a period of four hundred years. In the market there are, however, only stallions; mares they justly re- gard as of greater importance in breeding than is thought in Europe, and therefore it is held so un- lawful to part with any, that very rarely they can be obtained by purchase. It is even considered a crime to sell one under any circumstances ; and in proof of the resolute opposition to the practice, wre were assured of a case that lately occurred in Cal- cutta, where some Arabian dealers had sold their horses, and in consequence of a heavy bribe one was induced to part with his mare. Some weeks after, when the dealers had already gone homeward, the senior of the party was observed to have returned to the city, a distance of several hundred miles ; he lurked about for some days ; subsequently it was discovered that he had inquired for the stables where the mare was kept : — she was found poisoned, and he had disappeared 1 218 THE ARABIAN RACE. Towards the end of the last century, full-grown unblemished stallions of the several breeds stood somewhat in the following ratio of value: — The Oel-Nagdi, reared in the vicinity of Bussora, beau- tiful, docile, and swift, either dark bay or dapple grey, and remarkable for attachment to their owners, stood foremost in estimation, and were valued at eight thousand piastres : a mare sold at Acre for the enormous sum of fifteen thousand piastres. The Guelfe, originally from Yemen, patient, in- defatigable, and gentle, were held to be most valu- able, selling at four thousand piastres. The Saklawye, bred in the Eastern desert, with more speed and hardier constitutions, were of the same price. * The Oel-Mefki of the Damascus district, stately and superb in aspect, but less durable, were esti- mated at three thousand piastres, and chiefly used by the Turkish grandees. The Oel-Sabi resemble the last mentioned, but are not so highly valued, their price ranging be- tween twelve hundred and two thousand piastres. The Od-Tredi are very handsome, but with less courage, more inclined to restiveness, and hence might be obtained for nine hundred or a thousand piastres. The Monakl and Shaduhi of Yemen, belonging to the Mohammedad tribe, are still in very high * I believe the renowned Darley Arab was a Saklawye : he was purchased at Aleppo by Mr. Barley's brother, from an Arab tribe near Palmyra. THE ARABIAN RACE. 219 estimation. The Roswallas likewise possess most numerous herds of beautiful horses, and the powerful tribe of Benilam are now in possession of the Ghi- lan pastures, as well as of those in Shuster, where the ancient studs of Nisa and Susa were reared for the Persian kings. Mr. Bruce adds the Moualis, south of Palmyra and Damascus, where the studs are of similar ancient renown. The Kochlani, or superior breed, appear to be reared more generally in the deserts than in the more fixed abodes of the Arabian nation ; it being evident elsewhere also, that horses acquire the most valued qualities by living in dry wildernesses and on scanty vegetation : every where the present Asi- atic races are traceable to these nurseries, and the Arabs have extended their selection of this kind of residence far beyond their own frontiers. At this moment, their Negeddy breed of Sannaa, which we take to be a part of the Najd of Arabia Felix, is in part stationed to the east of the Indus, in the well known desert of that region. Prince P. Muskau differs in many particulars with the foregoing statement, and it may be ob- served every writer on the subject of Arabian horses seems to generalize the information he has obtained in a particular quarter as applicable to the whole ; the Prince believes that to the first rank belongs two races : The real Nedschdis; that is to say, those bred in the province of that name, from whence all the noblest blood has been derived; it forms five 220 THE ARABIAN RACE. breeds : — 1st, Sada-Tokan ; 2d, Touesse-al-Hamie ; 3d, Shouahi-em-Anhoub ; 4th, Hamdanye-Symra ; 5th, Souat-hije-aedem-Sachra ; the first of these names records that of the mare, the second gives the proprietors. The second is the race of Kaehel (we take to be the same as the Koheyl and Kaylan already men- tioned) ; of this the Prince knows only four studs : — 1st, Kaehel-el-Adschroass ; 2d, Kaehel-Moussou- me ; 3d, Kaehel-Moussalsal ; 4th, Kaehel- Wednam ; all chiefly found on the desert between Bassora and Bagdad. He states that a Nedschi presented to Abbas Pacha was above eighteen years old, and yet valued at £400 sterling; and moreover, that he could find no traces of the genealogies of blood- horses pretended to be preserved by the Arabs, but that they are fabricated in towns, if the purchaser demands them. " The Arab of the desert is content to know the dam and sire of the colt, and to rely on the care that every one takes of the purity of race." Of the Emir Bechir's stud he speaks with contempt, though we can hardly believe the old man of the mountain could have given cause for it to one so profoundly read in men and horses. Although the Arabian steed may not be acknow- ledged by amateurs of exceeding fast going, as per- fect in form, no race is possessed of a more beautiful head, for above the eyes it is squarer and below the nose is plane and more tapering than any other f the muzzle being fine, short, and adorned with wide and delicate nostrils; the eyes are very prominent, THE ARABIAN RACE. 221 large, and brilliant ; the ears small, pointed, move- able; the jaws and cheeks adorned with minute swelling veins; the head is well set on the neck, which arches gracefully and is bedecked with a fine but rather deficient mane ; the withers are high ; the shoulders inclining and beautifully adjusted ; the chest and body perhaps not sufficiently ample, but yet spreading out behind the arms to give room for action to the lungs and heart, which are in pro- portion larger than in any other kind of horse ; the limbs are remarkably fine, sinewy, and firmly jointed ; the legs flat and clean, with pasterns rather long and flexible, so that with an oblique position they appear to the heavier European not quite so strong as is desirable ; but considering that in sta- ture these horses do not often exceed fourteen hand* and three-quarters, it is evident from the length of time they will carry a rider at great speed, and under great restriction of food, and the number of years they endure, that for their climate at least they are fully competent to accomplish all that is desirable, and even execute tasks which are not al- ways believed of them. The quarters of an Arab are deep, the muscles of the fore-arm and thigh pro- minent ; the tail set on high, with a middling pro- portion of sweeping hair ; the skin on all parts of the body thin, presenting veins above the surface ; and the hoofs, rather high, are hard and tough. From the broad forehead and space between the ears, judges assert their greater courage and intelli- gence, which, aided by education and kind treat- 222 THE ARABIAN RACE. ment, they certainly possess beyond all other horses : and in temper and docility, none can be compared to them. For sobriety, these horses are equally notorious ; the Arab of the desert allowing his mare only two meals in twenty -four hours : she is kept fastened near the entrance of the tent, ready saddled for mounting in a moment, or turned out to ramble around it, confident in her training, that on the first call she will gallop up to be bridled. She re- ceives only a scanty supply of water at night, and five or six pounds of barley or beans with a little chopped straw, and then she lies down contented in the midst of her master's family; often with children sleeping on her neck, or lying between her feet; no danger to any being apprehended or experienced : in the morning, if not immediately wanted, another feed, and on some occasions a few dates and camels' milk are given, particularly where water is very scarce and there is no green herbage whatever, or during an expedition which admits of little or no respite. Camels' milk is almost the only nutriment of foals, who for that purpose are seen trotting free by the side of the camels, and every now and then thrusting their noses to get hold of the nurse's udder ; being treated by them with the same fondness as if they were their own young. Hence there is friendship instead of enmity be- tween the two species of animals, and the facts al- luded to by Herodotus and Xenophon, Aristotle and Pliny, respecting the repugnance of one for the THE ARABIAN RACE. 223 other, show that in the age of Cyrus and the Per- sian invasions of Greece, the Arabs had not yet established their own breeds according to the system which the nature of the soil rendered unavoidable. The Bedoueen mares, under this mode of training, will travel fifty miles without stopping ;fand they have been known to go one hundred and twenty miles on emergencies, with hardly a respite, and no food. In the newspapers, there was lately an ac- count of a bet against time, won by an Arab horse, at Bangalore, in the presidency of Madras, running four hundred miles in the space of four consecutive days. This exploit occurred on the 27th July, J840. This power is further evinced in the relation of Mr. Frazer, * who states that Aga Bahram's Arab horse went from Shirauz to Teheraun, 522 miles, in six days, remained three to rest, went back in five days, remained nine at Shirauz, and returned again to Teheraun in seven days. The same officer related that he once rode another horse of his from Tehe- raun to Koom, twenty-four fursuks, or about eighty- four miles, starting at dawn in the morning, near the vernal equinox, and arriving two hours before sunset ; that is, in about ten hours : " but Aga Bahrain," observes the author, " had always the best horses in Persia." When, therefore, we take together all the qualities of the Arabian horse, and compare them with other races, we may find some of greater single powers, but none endowed with so * Frazer *s Tartar Journeys. 224 THE BARB OF MOROCCO. many to endear, to admire, or to use ; and this opinion we are warranted in passing, since neither Asia nor Europe can boast of a breed in all or in some respects superior or equal, that is not mainly indebted to the Arabian blood for the estimation it has obtained. But it is doubtful whether the great qualities of these animals are not now rapidly on the decline, the wants and expectations of the people evidently taking a new direction. Numerous anecdotes might be here inserted re- lating to these horses, but as they occur mostly in books deservedly popular, we would repeat only what is familiar to most readers. Of the bay stock, but already distinguished before the Arab was extolled, is THE BARB OF MOROCCO. Ancient and renowned, but nevertheless greatly improved since the conquests of the Moslem, and therefore in every respect the nearest ally in blood, and superior in some qualities. The climate and soil of that empire might indeed sustain an enor- mous number of horses such as the best among them are ; but that under a government, where pro- perty is insecure, there is not sufficient inducement for breeders to bestow the same unremitting atten- tion upon them for a succession of generations, as among the free Arabs, and hence the Moors do not produce pedigrees of horses equally valued with tnose from the East. In the Barbary states, the THE BARB OF MOROCCO. J25 bay stock race, with its accompanying greys, once the only colours of horses, is now found to contain a proportion of black, with full manes and tails ; at- testing a northern infusion of more recent date than the Roman empire, and, it may be surmised, intro- duced by the Yandal conquerors of Africa. There are golden or light chestnuts, which likewise consti- tute a proportion of the ancient northern breeds, and were much used by the Alans. Barbary horses, particularly from Morocco, Fez, and the interior of Tripoli, are reported to be re- markably fine and graceful in their action, but somewhat lower than Arab, seldom being more than fourteen hands and one inch high, with flat shoulders, round chest, joints inclined to be long, and the head particularly beautiful. They are claimed by some as superior to the Arab in form, but inferior in spirit, speed, and countenance. A French traveller describes them to be in wretched condition, neglected, and not to be compared with them. Recent authors state the Godolphin Arabian to have been a Barb ; but in a manuscript note, we find this celebrated horse claimed as one of the Guelfe blood of Yemen, which his form of head, neck, and mane seemed to confirm : thus, although in England several thorough-bred mares and stal- lions have been imported from the Barbary coast, there was no account containing much personal ob- servation respecting them in their own country, until Mr. Washington, a lieutenant in the royal navy, communicated a paper to the Geographical 226 THE BARB OF MOROCCO. Society, relative to a tour through Morocco, and the unfortunate Mr. Davidson's papers gave more satis- factory intelligence on the subject. The first men- tioned gentleman often observed in Barbary, horses that were of great beauty, with more power than the Andalusian, having a long striding walk, not slipping in the quarters, and galloping with great surety of foot over rough ground, while hunting wild boar and gazelle. According to him, they stand from fourteen to fifteen hands in height, are of every colour, but the black and chestnut are con- sidered the best bred : their full flowing manes are never docked, though in youth it is a practice to shave the tail, probably to obtain a more abundant growth of hair ; hence two feet and a half of mane, and a tail sweeping the ground, is not rare. The Moors do not ride mares, nor mount horses under four years old. On a journey, the Barb starts unfed and without water ; at the end of his day's work, he is picqueted, unbridled, never unsaddled ; he then receives as much water as he will drink, then barley and broken straw is thrown before him as far as he can stretch his neck ; hence he rarely or never lies down, nor gets sleep, and yet he is high spirited. Broken wind is rare, but tender feet and shaken in the shoulder from the abuse of the bit and sudden stop- ping in a gallop, are not unfrequent. In the interior of Morocco, a good horse may be obtained for a hundred Spanish dollars, or about £20 sterling, but not readily, and to export one requires an ordei THE SHRUBAT-UR-REECH. 227 from government. In the province of Ducaila, the breed is of high reputation. Some years ago we were informed by a Moorish gentleman that the Emperor had made a cross breed with his finest mares and a giant black stallion sent from England, we think the horse above eighteen hands high which was exhibited in London, and that he had succeeded in rearing several splendid black horses from it, which were the wonder of his countrymen. Here we have an actual instance of introducing a cross of the black race with the Arab stock, already partially mixed at a former period with the same blood, and the black so called Ara- bian horses in England are very likely real Barbs. On the sandy plains, south of Atlas, are THE SHRUBAT-UR-REECH, PLATE XI. or drinkers of the wind, reared by the Mograbins of the West ; they are brown or grey, rather low, shaped like greyhounds, destitute of flesh, or, as Mr. Davidson terms it, like a bag of bones; but their spirit is high and endurance of fatigue prodi- gious. On an occasion where the chief of a tribe, where he sojourned, was robbed of a favourite and fleet animal of this race, the camp went out in pur- suit eight hours after the theft; at night, though the animal was not yet recovered, it was already ascertained that the Daman pursuers had headed his track and would secure him before morning. The messenger who returned with the intelligence 228 THE BOHNOTT RACE. had ridden sixty miles in the withering heat of the desert, without drawing bit. These horses, accord- ing to Marmol, are not mounted till they are seven years old, and until then are allowed to follow the she-camels, whose udders they suck for a long time. From the information which Mr. Davidson received when he viewed one at the imperial stables of Mo- rocco, and afterwards while he had daily opportunity of seeing them in their own region, it appears they are fed only once in three days., when they receive a large jar of camels' milk as their only food ; but it is known that they have sometimes a handful of crushed dates : yet with such scanty sustenance, by nature not intended for horses, they retain a vigour which their real food would not bestow upon them, and hunt the ostrich with unceasing speed. THE BORNOU RACE, PLATE X. found more towards the centre of Northern Africa, is extolled by Mr. Tully as possessed of the quali- ties of the Arabian and the beauty of the Barb. An individual of this, or perhaps of the Dongola race, which we have seen and sketched, was full fifteen hands high, and in proportion short of body ; the head was not set on gracefully, nor the eyes suffi- ciently large ; his back was carped, with flat quar- ters and flanks ; the tail set on rather low, but the shoulder fine, the upper arm the most robust possi- ble, and the limbs and feet beautiful. He came to England from the Gambia* was greyish white in THE DONGOLA RACE. 229 colour, with black limbs, and so vicious that the owner at length broke his neck, at the risk of losing his own life. THE DONGOLA RACE. PLATE X.* Nubia possesses horses, considered by Mr. Bruce as far superior to the Arab, though not of African origin, but introduced at the time of the Moham- medan conquest, and pretended to be descended from the five horses ridden by the prophet, his companions Abubekr, Omar, Atman, and Ali, on the night of the hegira, when they fled together from Mecca! But among them, perhaps Atman must have been some believer of Turkoman or of Genseric's blood, since the cast of horses in Dongola is often black, of a stature rising above sixteen hands, with ample manes and tails. They are found at Alfaia, Gerri, and Dongola, where the sandy desert produces scarcely any pasturage, and that only consisting in roots more than leaf. With forms already noticed in the Bornou breed, and differing in proportion from the Arab, they are nevertheless remarkably handsome, tall, powerful, and active; very supple, capable of great fatigue, docile, and attached to their masters. Mr. Bruce estimated the weight carried by the charger of the Prince, when he and his horse were accoutred in full ar- mour, at no less than three hundred pounds. Those of Alfaia and Gerri are not so large as the Dongo- lese ; their usual colours are bay* black, and white. 230 THE DONGOLA RACE. not grey, and never dappled. Stallions only are ridden, and they are fed with dourra (Holcus durra, Lin.), which is very nutritious, and with roots well washed and dried before they are offered as fodder. They feed and drink saddled and bridled, with a kind of snaffle, and they are secured by means of a cotton rope attached to the fore-foot. Mr. Hoskins the most recent traveller who de- scribes this race, says that the black are the finest : they have all white legs, sometimes the white ex- tends over the thighs, and occasionally over the belly ; they are not light, slender horses, but more remarkable for their strength; but they have all rather upright pasterns. They are now rare even in Ethiopia, where they fetch from £ 50 to £ 150 ster- ling. From these details it might be surmised that they descend from the Tahtar Katschentzi race we shall notice in the sequel. From their speed, size, and durability, they constitute excellent war horses : one of them was sold at Cairo, in 1816, for a sum equivalent to £1000 sterling; several have since been imported into Europe, where they do not ap- pear to have obtained great consideration, because they are not so fleet as Arabs, and consequently unable to compete writh English racers, but they might be used to great advantage in forming a superior breed of cavalry horses by crossing with three-part bred mares. * In Abyssinia the horses are of the Arabian stock, * The specimen figured, Plate X.*, represents one that car- ried Osman, a Mameluke, from the Nile across the desert to Tunis ; a feat perhaps never before accomplished. THE TURKISH RACE. 231 but seldom of any real value, a fact the more re- markable, as pasturage is abundant and very fine, and the pure air of mountain regions breeds, in all parts of the northern hemisphere, small horses at least of great vigour ; but the bay stock is no where a mountain race. The Bedoueens, as far as the deserts of Ludamar, on the borders of Kaarta, are remarkably well mounted ; and good horses of the bay race are found among the Soolimas and Begharmis. Even further on towards the equator, those of the Moors fre- quenting the gum-forests towards the Gambia, and of the Foulahs, and in Cashna on the north of the Niger, they are obtained from Fez and Bornou ; but from the Guinea coast they become more and more weak, unsafe, and untractable ; nor does it appear that the Portuguese colony of Angola, to the south of the line, is possessed of any worth recording. At the Cape of Good Hope, the horses are of a mixed breed of the black Dutch and Arabian Ka- deschi ; they are not larger than the Arab, but show also that the northern black offer an improving mixture, for the best Cape horses are generally of that colour. Sir Robert R. Gillespie's favourite charger, already mentioned, was of this race. Turning to the north and east of Arabia, we first meet with THE TURKISH RACE of horses, proceeding from the old Armenian and Western Asiatic brown, but now principally com- 232 THE TURKISH RACE. posed of Aral) blood, belongs chiefly to Natolia, and only in part to Roumelia in Europe. The Turks cannot be said strictly to possess permanent breeds of horses, with distinct names of established cele- brity; they are purchased, or more generally the result of individual amateurship and caprice in wealthy persons. They derive their blood almost wholly from some imported Arabian, and are much in the care of Arab grooms ; hence they possess all the gentleness and acquirements of the parent race, all and even more beauty, but want their vigour and durability. They have, from the ancient Tur- koman blood, a tendency to Roman-nosed chaffrons and ewe necks, but the head is finely set on ; they are delicate, have very tender and irritable skins, making it necessary to use the brush and sponge alone in cleaning them ; but also they are docile and graceful like gazelles. We made a sketch of one that had been sent a present by the Sultan, which walked and moved with inimitable elegance, had a head and swan-like neck, slender limbs, springing pasterns, and high hoofs, fit only to carry a lady, but, notwithstanding, possessed of fire and speed whenever the rider pleased. Turkish horses have contributed materially in the improvement of the older English breed. Queen Elizabeth had one purchased for her by Sir Thomas Gresham, and the Byerly and Lister Turks are well known to all who interest themselves in the pedi- grees of our best blood-horses. The rest of Turkish horses are neglected remains THE PERSIAN. 233 of the more ancient breeds, — Tahtar, Hungarian, "Wallachian, and lowest class of Arabians. They are fed at sunrise and sunset, and watered at the same time, contrary to the Persian mode, who do not let them drink till an hour after. THE PERSIAN. If we were to judge from ancient sculptures, the Persian horses of antiquity were as heavy as the present Flemish cart-horses ; for mail-clad riders and horse armour rendered bone necessary. In the great wars of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, the superiority of the Persian horse over the Turkish was still chiefly owing to their greater bone enabling them to bear armour on man and beast, while the Turks had no other defence than a shield ; but at present the form of the animal is much altered. Like the Turkish, it consists, in their mutually bor- dering provinces, of pure Arabians, already men- tioned ; but, further east, is more intermixed with the residue of the ancient breeds and later Turko- man importations. Persian horses seldom exceed fourteen hands and a half, have the neck slender, often a little ewe-like, the ears handsome, the chest narrow, the legs fine, the hoofs hard, and the croup well turned. The nobler studs have the head some- what larger, but nearly as beautiful as the Arabian ; the frame is more developed, and their spirit is war- like. From the speed of chuppers, or express mes- sengers, we know their endurance of fatigue. Major 234 THE PERSIAN. Keppel mentions one of these riding expresses, who passed him between Kermanshaw and Hamadan, one hundred and twenty miles distant from each other, in a stony mountainous country, who per- formed that route on one horse (and of course a common horse) in little more than twenty-four hours, and next morning went on upon the same for Teheran, two hundred miles further, expecting to reach it on the second day. Indeed chuppers, unlike Turkish Tahtars, seldom change horses ; they go on at a steady ambling pace of four or five miles an hour, and some have gone from Teheran to Bushire, seven hundred miles, in ten days. These instances are sufficient to prove the en- during power of the Persian horses, even of inferior studs, and the adventurous riding of the native sportsmen, as acknowledged by British gentle- men well acquainted with fox-hunting, evidently proves their sure-footedness, in the daring way the riders gallop down the steepest and most rug- ged hills. They are usually fed and watered an hour after sunrise, and again at sunset, when they are rubbed down and brushed ; their barley or rice, and chopped straw or chaff, is put in a nose-bag hung from their heads, if they are at the picquet ; but in the stable it is placed into a lozenge-shaped hole made in the mud- wall for that purpose, but higher than European mangers, and thence the ani- mal draws it at his leisure. Hay is unknown in the East : horse-litter, in Persia, consists of the dung reduced to powder and daily dried in the sun. THE PERSIAN. 235 They wear nummuds, or clothes, for winter and summer, which reach from head to tail, and are secured by surcingles. In the day-time they are kept under the shade of trees or awnings, and at night placed in court-yards, with their heads secured to double ropes from the halters, and the heels of the hind feet strapped to cords of twisted hair, which are fastened to rings and pegs driven in the ground behind them ; a cus- tom likewise in vogue in India, and known in the time of Xenophon. These precautions are necessary to prevent their fighting ; for this purpose stable- boys and grooms constantly sleep near them, and notwithstanding all the care they can take, some occasionally get loose, and then an uproar and battle ensues before they can be separated, such as is not to be remedied without damage to the horses and danger to the men, The pugnacity of stallions, indeed, extends to all occasions where opportunity is given them, and in feuds of different tribes, no skirmish takes place between the riders without their horses taking part and endeavouring to paw and bite each other with consummate fury. The Persian nobility have horse races, consti- tuting more properly trials. of bottom than speed; for the distance they are made to run is not less than about twenty-four miles, and to effect this with tolerable speed the animals are put in training, particularly by sweating them down to mere skele- tons, and making them go over the ground repeat- edly before the day of trial. In breaking horses for 236 THE PERSIAN. the saddle, their walk is first taught to be made into long strides, and the next qualification consists in darting off at full gallop, and the best in the practice who possess likewise speed are emphatically called laad-pee, or wind-heeled. Among the more noted are The Kauserooni breed, obtained by crossing the Arab and Ttirkonicnn races, and may be the same as the Koordy. It is from this the best roadsters are derived, combining the speed of the one with the strength of the other, but not in an equal degree. The Erscheck breed, from the vicinity of Ardebil, is in repute for beauty ; and those of Shirvan, Ka- rabag, and Mokan, where there are good pastures, are extolled. The sovereigns of the Sefi dynasty likewise maintained brood mares on the Tzikziki hills, between Sultanieh and Casvin. The Ishepatan breed is now principally within the Russian frontier, and numbered in the table of brandmarks furnished by Pallas, where he notices no less than fifty-six Circassian and Abassian breeds of great Kabarda, among which that of Skalokh, in possession of the Tau Sultan family, is of the highest reputation. All of these are of breeding studs be- longing to the nobles, each having a peculiar mark branded on the buttock or shoulder, with scrupulous attention to authenticity ; a misapplication thereof being considered the same as a forgery. We have seen, among the Cossack officers, very handsome chestnuts of Circassian race, in size equal to English horses, but they appeared to be less THE PERSIAN. 237 firmly jointed ; and this deficiency seems to be general, since, in a noted trial of speed and endur- ance between Sharper and Mina, two first-rate English blood-horses, and the best bred animals picked for the purpose among the Don, the Black Sea, and the Ural Cossacks, which occurred in 1825 ; they were to run to the cruel distance of forty-seven miles, and although both the English had gone out of the course uphill for above two miles, yet Sharper was winner by eight minutes, running the whole dis- tance in two hours and forty-eight minutes, carry- ing three stone more than his best opponent, leaving him to be Avarped in without a saddle, and having only a child on the back, with two horsemen hold- ing him up on both sides, and other men dragging at his head with a rope ! The horses of the vicinity of Caucasus, both to the north and south, are, however, more particularly of the ancient dappled and grey stock, now gradu- ally merging into the bay, but still numerous ; in some pastures predominant, and both in Persia and India, on gala days, often beautified by having their manes, tails, and sometimes parts of the body, stained with a crimson or an orange dye. There is also, on the coast of the Persian Gulf, the Musjeed breed of white horses, naturally speckled with deep brown or black, known early in the middle ages, and then considered as the most eligible of all parade horses. * White horses are likewise arti- * We think the name of Tazi is given to them by ancient Indian writers, but do not know where it is so defined. The 23C THE TOORKEE RACES. ficially stained with small spots of black, orange, cr even crimson ; their name may have some connexion with the use they are principally put to, namely, to be ridden in parade to the mosque, &c. THE TOORKEE RACES, also named Turkoman and Toorkoman, so far as they are mainly indebted for beauty and speed to the Arabian stock, should be separated from the original unimproved breeds of the nation which extends to the north of the Syr-deriah or Jaxartes and the Sea of Aral ; these waters forming a line of separation from west to east to the Kiptchak moun- tains. On the south of this line we find horses strong and bony, larger than the Persian, standing fifteen or sixteen hands high, capable of immense fatigue and privation. Some are said to have tra- velled nine hundred miles in eleven consecutive days. They cannot, however, be compared in beauty with the southern breeds; their heads are always much larger, they have ewe-necks, a small barrel, and long legs, yet even on the spot a thorough bred specimen will sell for <£ 300 sterling, which is an enormous price, considering the country.* The ancients spoke of these horses as inhabitants of the isles in the Red Sea, — probably Bahrein, &c. on the east coast of Arabia, and near the Persian Gulf, sometimes called the Ery- thrasan Sea. * Captain Frazer (Journey to Khorasan) says " they are deficient in compactness ; their bodies are long in proportion THE TOORKEE RACES. 239 natives of course pretend that they are descended from Rustum's wonderful charger Ruksh, though there is better evidence of the introduction in the country of the first class of Arabian stallions by Timur and Nadir Shah ; and the constant inter- course with Arabia is still kept up by pilgrimage and caravans. These horses bear the marks of de- scent from the ancient grey stock, crossed with the bay, in their grey and chestnut coats and general make, and the presence of a third in the Karalulo race of black horses, of ancient reputation for speed, and not uncommonly found in oriental illuminated books. * The A shoo breed is mentioned in the legends of India, but the most renowned we believe to be, at present, The Tekeh^ being the tallest, most hardy, and warlike, and therefore preferred to the Arab, the best being worth four hundred tomauns each. The Gorgum breed is reared in the desert east of Asterabad, having the defective appearance of the blood, but standing sixteen hands high, and remark- to their bulk ; they are not well ribbed up, are long on the Ifcg.i, deficient in muscle, falling off below the knee, narrow- chested, long- necked ; head large, uncouth, and seldom well put on. Such was the impression," &c. But if these defects were real, the horses could have neither durability nor speed. * See the Gottingen MSS. of the Shah-Nameh, and a book of fables in Turkish, Brit. Mus. They always carry heroes and chiefs. It was on one of these Selim, flying from his father Bajazet, escaped to Varna. They have usually white feet and a white star on the forehead. 240 THE TOORKEE RACES. ably sinewy; but both Arab mares and stall' ons lire now introduced among them, particularly on me fixed studs and permanent residences, where their figure improves ; still those of the desert retain pre- eminence for use. Their long journeys are always performed in a lengthened stride or a jog-trot. The Toorkmunee of the Lower Oxus are large and spirited, much valued in Bokhara, where they are put into condition about Nirk Merdaun, west of Caubul, and then sold ; fetching from £20 to £100 sterling. The Ohuprastee (swift) and Karooghle (wap) horses are two Turkoman breeds of the vicinity of Shurukhs, to the northward between Mushed and Herat. The Aghubolaki on the Oxus, seems to be a fancy breed, being most remarkable for a dimple or a whorl on some part of the neck or body, which among Asiatics is always an object of wonder, and still more of good or evil omen. This fancy was known to the ancients, and is still in some repute among Spaniards, who call a line of feathering in the hair of the neck, below the root of the mane, Espada Romano, ; that in the flank is called Daga, and when double, it is Espada Condago. But what is here principally in view is a depression or suture, without scar, in the neck or shoulder, not uncom- mon among Turkish and Barbary horses ; the for- mer in particular, considering this mark as of good omen, pretending that it is a spear- wound received in by a war-horse and perpetuated in his breed. EAST INDIAN RACES. 241 The Karabeer Usbec breed, from the neighbour- hood of Samarkand and Shur-Subhs, is in the highest estimation, and The KatagJian breed of Bunduz is hardy though under- sized, but considered far superior to the Kir- guise, by which we apprehend the white and black woolly-haired races are to be understood. The Meros, small sized horses, we take to be the same as the Toorkee or Usbekee, bred about Balkh in Bokhara; they are strong, hardy, and subdi- vided into three breeds, and are sold for prices vary- ing from £ 5 to £20 sterling. But these pony forms, commonly called Yaloos^ do not strictly belong to the bay stock, but to the small mountair races we shall revert to in the sequel. We now pas> on to the east side of the Indus, where, until the Mahommedan conquest, the Persian, Arabian, or bay type was rarely or never seen, where it has never thriven, even under Moslem masters, and is now only risen to a proper standard of height, and improved to an equality with the better class of horses of Western Asia, since the Hon. East India Company has established breeding studs for mount- ing its numerous and formidable native cavalry. EAST INDIAN RACES. Beyond the Indus we still find the bay stock of Western Asia, but not the horse of the people, and only perceptible because it was introduced by con- oiirrors is still perpetually imported, and for several Q 242 EAST INDIAN RACES. ages attempts have been made to nationalize breeds of it. One of these is The Dunnee breed of the Punjaub, reared between the Indus and Hydaspes or Jelum, not sufficiently superintended in the choice of stallions, yet much superior to the common horses of the country. The Toorkee, bred from Turkoman and Persian races, is beautiful in form, graceful, and even good- tempered. The animal has great spirit, and exerts himself so vigorously, that to a beholder it appears he is much excited, while the rider feels by his bridle his perfect coolness and obedience. * Toorkee and Kaqthi horses, when they have been taught an easy lengthened amble, are called Tamekdar or Kadom- bas, and from their durability are much valued. The Iranee, of Persian origin, is a strong, well- jointed, and quartered animal, but with loose ears and deficient in spirit. The present Tazzee of Bengal are not of the an- cient race ; they grow to sixteen hands high, but are in general a hand or more below that standard, having Roman noses, narrow foreheads, much white of the eyes visible, ill-shaped ears, thin necks, lank bodies, cat hams, and mostly very vicious. The Jungle Tazzee is a mixed breed, of a fine stature, bold and commanding appearance, and ex- cellent racers. Their spirit requires good riders to mount them. The form of the head is longer than the Arab, but not so delicate ; the neck is rather * Captain Williamson describes them as broad, short, lieavy> and phlegmatic. EAST INDIAN RACES. 243 stiff, and their eyes betray the viciousness of dispo- sition, which not uncommonly requires the rider, while mounting, to have his horse blindfolded. They are of all colours, but mostly bays, some roans an& white, and a few betray their Tangum intermixture by being piebald : the tail and mane are long, not abundant ; the ears generally laid back ; but they bear vast fatigue, as was proved in our wars with the Mahrattas and Pindarrees chiefly mounted upon them. The Serissahs of North Bahar, though of the Tazzee breed, are valued, and so abundant, that up- wards of twenty thousand are sold at the annual fairs. The Maginnee, bred by Tazzee horse and Persian mares, have beauty, speed, spirit, and endurance. The Takan of India, remarkable for strong backs and well made, are natural amblers. The Kolaree breed, of a good height, with a long curved chaffron, is devoid of vigour ; but the Mah- rattas possess a middle-sized horse, of Arab or Persian origin, in considerable abundance, and very fit for service. The Cutch breed, remarkable for the structure of the withers, which drop three or four inches so suddenly, that there appears to be a part of the vertical ridge of the spine taken away. Saddles must be made on purpose for them ; and although this defect is unsightly and must weaken the ini- mals, they are nevertheless much valued by the natives and in the Mekran. 244 EAST INDIAN RACES. The Cattywarr breed is of superior blood and at least equal beauty with the Cutch, having gentle dispositions ; and the rare dun-coloured breed, with black stripes like a tiger, is particularly valued, and competes with true Arabians. But the mode of feeding horses, among the na- tives, shows a system of quacking which does not trust to what nature has prescribed; they are, it seems, often fed at night on boiled peas, no doubt gram, which is a kind of vetch, with sugar and butter ; others employ lentiles, or small beans, boiled with a sheep's head, or wheaten flour with molasses, adding from time to time messals, or balls composed of pepper, curcumi, garlick, coriander ; even arrack, opium, bang, or hemp-seed, mixed with molasses ! — Such a system, with the exception of gram, we understand, is totally rejected in the Hon. Com- pany's studs in Bahar, where at first the horses reared were rather under-sized and afterwards wanted bone ; but by attention and perseverance in the selec- tion of brood-mares and stallions, a splendid race of Indian horses is at last obtained, and fast increasing. Formerly, our cavalry in India was chiefly mounted on the Jungle Tazzee race, and on purchases ob- tained from the fairs in Thibet, at Hurdvvar, and other places, but the practice is fast decreasing, and the stud at Hissar is no\v, we are told, unrivalled.* * The Cozakee is regularly imported, and therefore not an Indian breed; and the Kaqthi comes from Thibet. The Ghoonts, Pickarrows, and Bhooteah mountain ponies do not belong to the bay stock. DOMESTIC HORSES. 245 Of the bay stock there is also now forming the New Holland breed, entirely of Arab blood; one gentleman being in possession of a stud of three hundred thorough bred horses, each on an average valued at £100 sterling. On the west of Turkey we have the noble breeds of Transylvania, in stature rising to fifteen hands and more ; with slender bodies, fine heads, high withers, the tail set on level with the back, and the limbs fine, — evidently a race of Turkish origin, and very like the Spanish. Colours bay or grey ; mane and tail long and silky. The Moldavian, nearly of the same stature, but less elegantly made, the head being larger, the tail set on lower, but still a noble race, with more of the ancient blood, and in colour bay or chestnut. These characters prove an aflmity with The Greek horse, of similar stature, but still coarser head and jowl, scraggy neck, and rather knotty joints, but possessed of enduring qualities and temper. This breed belongs more particularly to Eastern Greece, and is in general chestnut ; there are bays and greys, but very few black. More westward in Europe, the bay stock, as we have already mentioned, was early carried to seve- ral places on the coast of the Mediterranean, to Sicily, and in particular to Spain, where, if it was deteriorated by the Goths during their dominion, more than pristine nobility was restored to it by the Saracen invasion, which brought directly both Arabian and Barbary blood in great abundance to 246 DOMESTIC HORSES. the peninsula. We have noticed the earlier history of the Alfaeres, Andalus, and Ginetas, and may add, that the period of their decay commenced with the expulsion of the Moors, increased during the Bourbon dynasty, and what was left of good horses after the barbarous order of Bonaparte's marshal to disable and blind the right eye of every serviceable horse in Andalusia, has perished, it seems, in the present civil war. Yet Spain may still restore, or, as soon as public tranquillity will permit, no doubt, will revive her pristine race of noble horses ; some, we trust, have escaped the general ruin, enough to justify an account of them in this place, and serve for comparison with the South American, entirely derived from the Andalusian blood. The Spanish race is subject to have the lower jaw heavy, the head rather large, and the noso Roman; the ears, often fixed low, are somewhat long ; the neck fleshy, with superabundant mane ; the shoulders and breast broad and full ; the croup mule- like ; the body round, and the joints long ; but notwithstanding small defects, the Andalusian horses are flexible, graceful, and active, forming ex- cellent manege or riding-school steeds, and very good chargers. They vary in colour, but bays pre- dominate, and next, black and greys. Of colours, the Morcillo, or black without a white mark, or with only a star on the forehead, are esteemed of the highest breed and strongest bone, even to a proverb.* * " A mulberry black horse is what every one should wish for, though few can possess." DOMESTIC HORSES. 247 The Isabella variety is, we believe, always albino, or with a roseate skin. The Andalusian owe their latest reputation chiefly to the Xeres breed of the Chartreuse, somewhat smaller, more delicate, with rather long pasterns, but exceedingly graceful, and not fully prepared for the saddle till six or seven years old. The other Anda- lusian, Grenada, and Estremadura races, are larger, more robust, sooner reared, and therefore more pro- fitable and more abundant. There is also a breed of Murcia, which, like those of the Pyrenees, is small, and belongs to a different stock. Sardinia possesses three races of horses, of which one is noble and now almost entirely composed of descendants of Spanish blood, introduced by Don Alvarez de Madrigal about 1565: the principal breed belongs to the crown at Paulo-latino ; there is a second the property of the house of Benevente, and a third to that of Mauca. They are handsome, fourteen hands and a half high, naturally disposed to amble, sure-footed, and capable of going a hun- dred and twenty Italian miles in thirty hours. There are horse-races at Sassari ; the aim, however, seems to be not speed, but secure flexibility, in going fast through a winding course, and passing into a narrow gate at an acute angle. The South American horses are marked with most if not all the characters of their Andalusian progenitors ; they have their grace and good temper, and surpass them in speed, surety of foot, and bot- tom. Individuals taken on the Pampas have been 248 DOMESTIC HORSES. known to carry a heavy man one hundred miles without drawing hit ; but some account having al- ready heen given of them, and recent travellers having repeatedly described the mode of subduing and management of horses by the Gauchos, we shall point out only two or three breeds. Well known in Peru is The Parameros (see Plate XII.), so called from the word paramos (mountains), because they gallop down steep precipices and leap across ravines with equal rapidity and safety. A second, named Aiguilillas, are not less vigorous and active, and prized for a most rapid mode of moving, resembling an amble, but so fast that, according to Don Juan de Ulloa, the best gallop cannot keep up with it. In the hills and mountain regions of the northern states of South America, we have found the grey of the Asturian stock very prevalent, and among them rufous greys with soft somewhat curled hair ; those we have seen were powerful, square-built, and sure- footed cobs, remarkably serviceable in precipitous mountain regions. In Paraguay, however, the Spanish horse blood is sadly degenerated, and there are no feral herds, in consequence of an Mppobosca or an cestrus attacking the umbilical region of young foals, producing ulcers which invariably destroy the animal, unless huma care interposes. To this care the natives solely coi fine the protection they give horses, and neglecte in this manner, they are become heavy inelegar animals, with a deformity among them we do nc DOMESTIC HORSES. 249 find noticed in any other country, namely, the fre- quent occurrence of full-grown carcases with very short distorted legs. The Mexican are known to be derived chiefly from Andalusian progenitors, and so are the race of Seminole horses, in the Creek or Muscogulge tongue named Echoclucco, or big deer, according to Bartram. They are a beautiful and sprightly race, of small stature, and delicately formed, like roebucks, with handsome heads, the nose being slightly aquiline : this peculiarity is likewise observed in the race of the Chactaics, which is larger and less lively, the former having been introduced by the first Spanish settlers in East Florida, the latter coming from New Spain. In the Floridas there are breeding quarters called stamps^ where the animals, reared almost wholly in a state of independence, acquire nevertheless an affection for mankind by being occasionally enticed into his presence by means of handfuls of salt being offered, a dainty so much relished, that the older mares gallop up to the giver at the first sight of him, and the fillies and colts, after a little coyness, are easily reconciled to his presence. In Jamaica we find a breed of blood-horses of the Arab stock, derived from the English. There are several studs reared in what are there called breeding pens, in the western parishes of the island. They appeared to us in general lighter and smaller than thorough-bred English horses, but certainly the pro- duce of a noble race, elegant in form, fleet ou the 250 THE EiNGLlSH BREEDS. race-course, and equally serviceable for the saddle and light carriages. From the same sources are derived the blood- horses of the United States, reared more particularly in Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Kentucky. Some of the best horses ever bred in England, such as Shark and Tallyho, have contributed to give a high character to the breeds of Virginia and the Jerseys. The Conestoga breed of Pennsylvania, and those of the middle states, long in the leg and light in carcase, often rise to seventeen hands at the shoulder, and make splendid gig-horses, while those of less stature are most sought for riding. Towards the north the English race is mixed with the Ca- nadian, originally from Normandy, and judicious breeding between them has produced remarkable fast trotters. THE ENGLISH BREEDS OF HORSES. We are now come to the unrivalled breeds of Great Britain, — the first in form, in strength, in speed, and in stature, and the highest in value, of any period in the history of the world. As our immedate object is, however, to complete the view of the bay stock, we shall confine ourselves, for the moment, more immediately to what is termed the blood-horse, and resume what remains to be said of its history from the time of James I., who patronized horse-racing and first reduced the pursuit to a regular system. In his time, Turkish and Barbary horses had been • THE ENGLISH BREEDS. 251 repeatedly introduced to form a breed with English mares, without as yet any acknowledged advantage ; he carried his views farther, and ventured to huy, at the enormous price of five hundred pounds, an Arab horse, from a merchant of the name of Mark- ham. But theAninds of the nobility and gentry were still so strongly imbued with the old predilection for what were then termed great horses, that is, large and bony chargers for heavy-armed knights, that his intentions were thwarted, chiefly by the celebrated duke of Newcastle, who was thoroughly enamoured of the Pignatelli * school of horseman- ship, and wrote two works, which have remained text-books on the continent, even down to the late French revolution. He judged the Arab horse to be a little bony animal of ordinary shape, and it hav- ing been trained and found not to be fleet, he set it down as good for nothing, and by his rank and deserved reputation for knowledge, checked the pro- gress of improvement for a great number of years, t King James, however, was not discouraged ; he bought a second horse that came from some part of the north coast of Africa, of Mr. Place, who was afterwards stud-master of Oliver Cromwell. This horse was the celebrated, so called, White Turk, * Pignatelli was the person who, in the reign of Henry VIII., first introduced at Naples the modern system of riding, or manege. + Buffon and Sonnini, with equal self-satisfaction and perti- nacity, have inflicted a similar consequence upon their own country. 252 THE ENGLISH BREEDS. whose name is still constantly found at the head of many of the best pedigrees. Soon after, Villiers first duke of Buckingham introduced the Helmsley Turk, and Lord Fairfax added the Morocco Barb. From this time great horses, notwithstanding they were still cried up, began visibly to diminish. Races were now established by Charles I. at Newmarket and Hyde Park ; and during the civil war, Cromwell, who had trained himself the best regiment of horse then perhaps in existence, had no doubt discovered that mere bone and stature was no match against speed and bottom. From the time of the Protectorate, the question was decided ; for, at the Restoration, Charles II. sent his master of the horse to the Levant to purchase mares and stallions : Barbs and Turkish horses were more repeatedly imported, and, in time, stallions of every breed of the East were implanted on the British stock. This was the case more particularly from the period when Mr. Darley, in the reign of Queen Anne, produced his celebrated Arabian, and after much opposition, succeeded in engrafting that race upon the English ; and then finished the organization of a system, which, under judicious management, has given speed, strength, and beauty, not only to the nobler class of horses, but gradually extended these advan- tages through every breed of importance in the kingdom. At present, thorough-bred horses are more numerous than ever, and Arabians may be found in every county. ,AE ENGLISH RACE-HORSE. PLATE IX. To what blood the British race-horse is chiefly indebted for his supremacy, is a question that has been repeatedly agitated. Turk, Barb, Arab, and Persian, the Spanish jennet, and the best formed animals of the domestic, originally Flemish black breed, German and Norman horses, are all directly or remotely connected with it ; but the meaner and less generous families are allied only at a more ancient date, and even the Spanish for many gene- rations has been discarded, although some horses of great speed are mentioned to have been of thi? blood so late as the latter half of the last century, * and others with a pedigree stained with vulgar: blood have occasionally acquired considerable repu- tation ; t yet both the race-horse and the hunter, \vhen stud-books are consulted, where the pedigrees are recorded, clearly descend from Turkish and Barb parentage more exclusively in the beginning, and from the Arab at a subsequent period. Thus, to the Byerly Turk we owe the Herod blood, whence Highflyer descended ; to the Godolphin Barb the Matchem, considered as the stoutest, or what is termed as the most honest filiation ; to the Darley Arabian, the sire of Flying Childers, is due the * Shotten-herring, Conqueror, Butter, and Peacock, accord- ing to Sonnini, were of Spanish blood, t Such as Sampson and Bay Malton. 254 THE ENGLISH RACE-HORSE. Eclipse progeny ; and to the Wellesley, pronounced to be of Persian origin, the only real advantage obtained by a foreign cross of late years. * The names of these progenitors, mixed with those of many others, sufficiently prove this general truth ; for among them we may reckon, besides the above, the Helmsley Turk, Lister Turk, Darcy white Turk, Hutton's bay Turk ; Morocco Barb, Thoulouse Barb, Curwen Barb, Torrans Barb, Hutton's grey Barb, Cole's Barb; the Markham Arabian, Leeds Ara- bian, Darley Arabian, and a great number of others less renowned. Of the powers of English racers we have already seen the effect, when tried against the best Russian horses ; the same result was shown in India, where, a few years ago, Recruit, an Eng- lish racer of moderate reputation, easily beat Pyra- mus, the best Arabian in Bengal. The Devonshire, or Flying Childers, we have also named; he ran over the course at Newmarket (three miles, six furlongs, and ninety-three yards) in six minutes and forty seconds, and the Beacon course (four miles, one furlong, and one hundred and thirty- eight yards) in seven minutes and thirty seconds. In 1772, a mile was ran by Firetail in one minute and four seconds. In October 1741, at the Curragh meeting, in Ireland, Mr. "VVilde engaged to ride one hundred and twenty-seven miles in nine hours ; * We have little doubt that the Wellesley was a Persian of the ancient white stock, mixed with the highest blood of Tur- koman race, and probably with a cross of the Arabian, as the make of the head evinced. THE ENGLISH RACE-HORSE. 255 he performed it in six hours and twenty-one mi- nutes, riding ten horses, and allowing for mounting and dismounting and a moment for refreshment : lie rode for six hours at the rate of twenty miles an hour. Mr. Thornton, in 1 745, rode from Stilton to London, back, and again to London, making two hundred and fifteen miles, in eleven hours, on the turnpike and uneven ground. Mr. Shafto, in 1762, with ten horses, and five of them ridden twice, accomplished fifty miles and a quarter in one hour and forty-nine minutes. In 1763, he won a second match, which was to provide a person to ride one hundred miles a day, on any one horse each day, for twenty-nine days together, and to have any number of horses, not exceeding twenty-nine : he accomplished the task on fourteen horses-; and on one day he rode one hundred and sixty miles, on account of the tiring of his first horse. Mr. Hull's Quibbler, however, afforded the most extraordinary instance on record of the stoutness as well as speed of the race-horse, when, in December 1786, he ran twenty- three miles round the flat at Newmarket in fifty-seven minutes and ten seconds. Prince Piickler Muskau admits the undeniable superiority of the English 'horse over the Arab. He had practical opportunity of judging both, as racers and as jumpers over lofty fences ; but he would place high born persons on Arabs alone,* and leave the English blood-horse to jockeys, wisely * Turkish bashaws and Persian chiefs being notoriously high-born. 256 THE ENGLISH RACE-HORSE. abstaining from the question of chargers in war9 and overlooking the fact, that in England, where valuable Arabs abound, they are not as such pre- ferred by riders over the thorough-bred blood-horses of the land. Now, by the term blood is understood the qualities produced in a horse by a superiority of muscular substance, lightness, and compactness of form, united with a justly proportioned shape ; or a physical structure of tendon, bone, and lungs, proper to afford the full effects of the mechanical means of speed, when set in motion by high iner- vation. When these conditions of the problem are fully carried out by a judicious and persevering course of breeding and education, there will be beauty of form, and the blood will be adapted to such purposes, within the compass of the laws of nature, as were aimed at, provided recourse has been had from the beginning to select the finest models for the purpose. Such has been the practice in England for more than a century, and it is to strict adherence to these laws the British turf can show troops of blood-horses unrivalled in the world, equal in beauty to the noblest Arab, and superior to them in stature and power : they alone have power to excite the modern muse in a strain that Pindar would not have disowned, as we here show, in a frag- ment describing the Doncaster St. Leger race : — " Again — the thrilling signal sound — And off at once, with one long bound, Into the speed of thought they leap, Like a proud ship rushing to the deep. \ THE ENGLISH RACE-HORSE. 257 A start ! a start ! they're off, by heaven, Like a single norse, though twenty-seven And 'mid the flush of silks we scan A Yorkshire jacket in the van : Hurrah, the bold bay mare ! A hundred yards have glided by And they settle to the race, More keen becomes each straining eye, More terrible the pace. Unbroken yet, o'er the gravel road, Like madd'ning waves, the troop has flow'd, But the speed begins to teU • And Yorkshire sees, with eye of fear, The Southron stealing from the rear, Aye ! mark his action well ! Behind he is, but what repose ! How steadily and clean he goes ! What latent speed his limbs disclose ! What power in every stride he shows ? They see, they feel, from man to man, The shivering thrill of terror ran, And every soul instinctive knew It lay between the mighty two. These now are nothing, time and space Lie in the rushing of the race ; As with keen shouts of hope and fear They watch it in its wild career. * Who leads ? Who fails ? How goes it now ?' One shooting spark of life intense, One throb of refluent suspense, And a far rainbow- colour 'd light Trembles again upon the sight. Look to yon turn ! Already there ! Gleams the pink and black of the fiery mare. 258 THE ENGLISH RACE-HORSE. Now — now — the second horse is pass 'd, And the keen rider of the mare, With haggard looks and feverish care, Hangs forward on the speechless air, By steady stillness nursing in The remnant of her speed to win. One other bound — one more — 'tis done ; Right up to her the horse has run, And head to head, and stride for stride, Newmarket's hope and Yorkshire's pride, Like horses harness'd side by side, Are struggling to the goal. Ride ! gallant son of Ebor, ride ! For the dear honour of the North, Stretch every bursting sinew forth, Put out thy inmost soul, — And with knee, and thigh, and tighten'd rein, Lift in the mare by might and main." DONCASTER ST. LEGER, by Sir Francis Doyle. In shape, the race-horse, if we except his supe- rior stature, is very like the noblest Arab; with similar eyes, ears, and head gracefully set on the neck, long oblique shoulders, high withers, power- ful quarters, hocks well placed under their weight, vigorous arms and flat legs, short from the knee to the pasterns, these long and elastic ; the tail placed high, not superabundantly furnished with long hair, and the inane likewise rather thin and drooping: the colours of the blood-horse are bay, chestnut, brown, black, and grey, but never dun, Isabella, or roan ; the black itself being a residue of ancient foreign alloy, derived either from the old English, THE BAY STOCK. the Spanish, or Barbary breeds. Such is the blood- horse racer; and since cultivation is spread over nearly every part of Britain, hunting is pursued with increasing speed, and thorough-bred horses are become necessary for the sports of the field ; * but The Hunter being required to carry heavy weight, with varied pace, through deep ground, or across a broken and stony country, demands stoutness and stature as high as sixteen hands, with lofty shoul- ders ; he must be habituated to going higher, leap fearlessly fences and ditches, be light in hand, and have sound, hard, comparatively broad feet; he must possess many qualities which are not of first necessity in a racer, but belong equally to the war- horse, — for both are the companions of their masters, and on their good qualities life, safety, and success are often dependent. The hunter and the charger are not, however, in general thorough-bred, and the same may be said of the coach-horse, but all owe their beauty, power, and bottom, nearly without exception, to the quantity of high-bred blood they have in their pedigree. The Irish Blood-horse, chiefly reared in the coun- ties of Meath and Roscommon, is large, but con- sidered as inferior in beauty; and the rest are in general smaller than the English. The race, though rather ragged and angular, possesses immense power, fire, and courage ; and there have been some, such * Steeple hunting, that sport alike reckless of the life of man and horse, is now perhaps the main cause of breeding steeds of first-rate powers, as wt-11 as first-rate speed. 260 THE BAY STOCK. as Harkaway and others, that evinced first-rate speed. Irish horses exceed the English in leaping, not by stepping over lower obstacles or springing with a flight clear above a fence or lofty hedge, but by jumping gracefully, like deer, upon and then down a stone-wall or a bank, often considerably higher than their heads. The Queen's Bays, and the British light cavalry in general, are mounted on half-bred horses of the bay stock; and excepting in consequence of the mode of treatment at home, which renders them delicate in the vicissitudes of a campaign, they form the best chargers in the world. From half to three- quarters bred are also selected roadsters or the road- horse, the most difficult to meet with of any, and the hackney, which is a hunter on a reduced scale, or like our present Hussar horses. On the continent of Europe the introduction of high-bred horses from an Arabian stock is now also o the practice. France and Belgium imitate the Eng- lish system, with some exceptions, as a fashion : in Wurtemburg and Prussia it is a government affair, steadily pursued ; but none have yet produced first- rate horses for the turf, or visibly ameliorated the native races. In Russia, however, where Toorko- man, Persian, Arab, Abassian, and Circassian horses were easily procured, the progress of improvement is more manifest, and even the Kirguise nomad tribes now possess horses of great powers and speed, no doubt the produce of a similar parentage as with us, introduced from the south. If reliance can be THE BAY STOCK. 261 placed on newspaper report, we shall find the achievement of the horses at the races of Ouralisk, such as the fleetest and stoutest of English thorough- bred steeds will scarcely equal; for it is therein stated, that on the 29th September, 1838, a contest of speed took place between the Oural Cossacks and the Kirguise Kaisaks, over a course of eighteen versts, said to be equal to thirteen and a half Eng- lish miles ; the winners, for they were twins, on the course, ran neck and neck the whole distance, ar- rived at the winning-post in twenty-four minutes, thirty-five seconds, — and a Kirguise Kaisak black horse, ridden by the Sultan's son in person, went over the same distance in nineteen minutes ! * - — These achievements, we may remark, took place in the very centre of the principal region where, in our view, horses were first subdued, and where all the original stocks appear to have sojourned at one time or oth&r, in the first ages of our present zoolo- gical distribution. Of the old bay stock, we have seen at Munich the Life Guard Cuirassiers, mounted upon horses of Normandy selected by the Bavarian government, and taken in part of the indemnity paid by France in 1815—16 to the allied armies, and we never ob- served the royal guards of France so well mounted, * If we continue the present practice of wearing our noblest horses before they are fully arrived at maturity, it will be diffi- cult to prevent the reality of a degeneracy, which many sur- mise is already commenced. 262 THE WHITE OR GREY STOCK. nor with their horses in such good order, as these were in German hands. In the more northern regions of Asia and Europe, the bay primeval stirps, including the domestic races of both regions, and extending to the Rhine, are all more or less intermixed with the black, the grey, and the dun ; they bear more particularly the form and characteristics of the last mentioned, and there- fore we shall revert to these more anomalous races when we review the smaller unassignable breeds. THE WHITE OR GREY STOCK PLATES IV. AND VIII. is one, as before observed, which resided and still resides in part on the territory where we have noted it in the most ancient existing historical records. We have shown it on the plateau of Pamere, * on the steppes north of the Euxine, in ancient Armenia and Cilicia, and may add the country of the Argyppei, a nation, as the name im- ports, of riders on white horses, and as they were feeders on mulberries, may denote Kaubul or mo- dern Abassia, where there are still numerous herds and several high-bred studs of white and dappled grey horses, forming the majority of those men- * Touching the western border of the Kalkas, where the villous race is abundant. It is remarkable that the white horse of Vishnou should bear the name of Kalki. THE WHITE OR GREY STOCK. 263 tioned among the Persian bays of Circassia. The dapplings, of a purer white than the general colour, seem to be a typical character of the grey stirps, marking the quarters and the shoulder more parti- cularly, and in general obliterated by blackish on the limbs. With age the colour becomes more white, and the animal's skin is of a light slaty blue; but there is a tendency to become roseate in some cases, and oftener to ladre, or with smut- coloured stains, and in both cases producing albi- nism, or very pale cream, with the round dapples scarcely whiter, and then the eyes are often blue, and the region round them and on the nose flesh- coloured. The greys, however, are often without the light spots, and vary in shades to an inter- mediate neutraj, tending to blue ; but usually the mane and tail are more or less mixed with black. The grey stock is naturally of a higher stature than the bay, and possesses, with greater breadth and more solid limbs, the contour of form which painters and sculptors more particularly delight in. It mixed at all times best with the noble bay of Western Asia, and it may have added to its stature and bone, when the breeds of Cilicia and Armenia came down to Egypt. It may be questioned whe- ther the white and grey races of Northern Africa and the Date region are descended from a primeval invasion from Central Asia, or are merely whitish in consequence of a law which in those burning climates operates in a similar manner upon rumi- nants, such as several species of Bovidce and Ante- 264 THE WHITE OR GREY STOCK. lopidoe, whose black hides are protected by white coats of hair ; yet if this effect were to be solely ascribed to the climate, it would not account for the dappled greys which are not uncommon in Morocco ; all, however, are so intimately blended with the true Arab blood, that we have described them among the bay stock in our former pages. Tyhether from the nature of the food or the pre- sence of particular kinds of Hippobosca, or Tabanus^ or horse-flies, the grey races in the east of Europe are subject to boils which produce great irritation. By a natural instinct, all these animals tear them open with their teeth ; and it is common, when they feel their blood heated, to do the same thing, and produce an effusion ; hence it is usual to find their shoulders raw and bloody. Even the horses of different colours, if they belong in part to the grey stock, have the same propensity. It is most observed in the Hungarian and in the grey Circas- sian breeds, upon which the Russians have several regiments superbly mounted. The grey stock having at all times excited atten- tion from its colour, and been regarded as a fit distinction for divinities and princes, * it is no wonder that many breeds should have been carried * The solar gods, Apollo, Odin, Crishna, the Persian mo- narchs, &c. all had possession of or access to the original location of the white stock of horses, and are represented to have used them. They dwelt on the Tanais, or came from Farther Thrace, from Armenia, or their legends came from quarters where the white horse was found. THE WHITE OR GREY STOCK. 265 into distant regions. Thus a dappled grey race occupied the Pyrenean mountains, being perhaps the primeval companions of that Ouralian portion of the Basque tribes, which in their migration west- ward brought along that worship which it is well known contained a solar mystery, whereof some traces may still be found in the romances of the Graal Cyclus. * But whether the breed of the Lower Alps, and of the Camargue, near Aries, form connecting links, is beyond the reach of satisfactory investigation, although we find, again ascending northward, the Ardenne greys, where St. Hubert's shrine long supplanted the worship of Arduenna, a type of Ertha, and resembling the Indian Durga, whose white consecrated animals were in the Pagan era devoted, and in the Christian long held as pecu- liarly patronized by the saint. Further on, at the Saxon altars on the Weser, those white or cream- coloured steeds, still esteemed, were once sacrificed to Woden, and at another sent in tribute to the Danes; and in the isle of Riigen, Pommeranian greys or white horses were again sacred to another divinity, probably another Ertha. The distribution, therefore, of the grey breeds and races seems to have a connexion with the local worship of ancient tribes and with their movements westward at the most early period, and might be further indicated by other facts of the same nature as those already cited. It is true that in several cases the stature of * See rt Einleitung uber den Dichtungskreis des Heiligen Graals," in the Lohengrun of J. Gorres. 266 THE BLACK STOCK. the local greys, such as the Pyrenean and the Ar- denne, is low, or reduced to the pony form ; but still there is in their proportions an indication of a larger sized animal, which immediately developes when crossed with another race, or when removed to a new locality. Thus the splendid breeds of this stock, which our Norman and Plantagenet princes formed by means of crossing the Pyrenean and Gas- con Lyards, both in their continental possessions and in England, attest that with slight care the race immediately resumes its full development. Expe- rience has likewise shown, in all ages, how advan- tageously it was amalgamated with the bay in the East and with the black in the West, acquiring all the elegance of the former and all the colossal bulk of the latter, with half-bred intermediates ; of one of these our enormous grey breed of brewers' horses is a sufficient proof; of the other the ancient mous- quetaires gris in France and the Scots greys in England are likewise examples, without recurring to the Russian regiments mounted on Circassians. THE BLACK STOCK. PLATES V. AND XIV. is most generally spread over Europe, and was at one time, it appears, wild, both in the Alps and the forests of northern Gaul, living in marshy woods from the Jura to the Seine, and spreading to the Ardennes, the Vogesian range, the Black Forest at the sources of the Danube, the Thuringian and the THE BLACK STOCK. 26? Hartz, but chiefly in the valleys of the Rhine, Meuse, and Scheldt. * Many indications, partially noticed in a former page, tend to conclusions that this form of the horse, with the mysterious proper- ties assigned to it, was indigenous in the West ; but it must be admitted, that sooty races, more lightly made, extend over the Scandinavian penin- sula, and are scattered through Eastern Europe, till they reach Tahtary, where there are black breeds of great reputation. Tnjiese may be considered to have been mounted by some of the invaders of ancient Egypt, or to have been conveyed to the Nile as tribute, after the first conquest of Remses in Asia ; for we find there are black horses in the hieroglyphic paintings, which may indeed have been of the Don- gola breed, but that this was itself unquestionably of Asiatic origin, whether it came across the Red Sea or by the Nile to where we now find it, resembling the Karabulo and Katchenski races of Central Asia in form, and even in their white feet, as we have before noticed. Among the present races of Asia, we find the Bashkirs possess one of a slaty black colour, with tanned muzzle and inside of the limbs; the hair does not grow to the length of the white villous race, but undulates with an indication of curling. The individuals we saw had large thick heads, full necks, and heavy shoulders ; the withers were rather * The whole vegetable mould of the above geographical sur- face is more than any other supplied with horse-bones a..d heavy teeth, most applicable to the black stirps. 268 THE BLACK STOCK. low, the back hollow, the barrel small, the mane heavy, but the quarters and limbs remarkably firm and clean. They were clearly of the same race as the specimen described by Frederick Cuvier under the denomination of " cheval a poll frize" which came from the stables of the Emperor of Austria, having been plundered by the French at the cap- ture of Vienna. We saw the individual in Baron Cuvier's possession at the Jardin du Roi, where the groom said it was a cross between a Bashkir horse and a French black. None of those that fell under our notice exceeded in stature a large mule, but they had much greater breadth at the hips, and with their short ears and sunken eyes, really looked like a low caste of French horses, excepting the legs, pasterns, joints, and hoofs. We attach no great importance to the character of the hair, having ourselves possessed a powerful roan with a similar coat, which had been purchased from a drove of horses, said to have come from the mountains above the Magdalena in Columbia : but regarding the co- lour and structure, if the original type of the stirps should be sought in High Asia, it is to this race that we would refer it. * In the West, that type is unquestionably the large-boned heavy Flemish or Belgian breed, almost invariably black, without any mark of white ; with a large head, clumsy limbs, short pasterns, broad * Johnstonus de Quadrupedibus seems to have intended a figure of this stock in his tab. v., under the name of Equus tersutus* but it is not described. THE BLACK STOCK. 269 hoofs, an excessive thick mane, and the fetlock not only profusely clothed with long hair, but a fringe of the same passing up the back of the legs to the knee-joints. There are studs of a lighter form, still retaining the characters of the type, but suffi- ciently elegant to have served formerly, and we believe again latterly, for occasional remounts in our heavy cavalry regiments ; the head, however, is not so well qualified for the saddle as for draught, and it is from crossing the old English and Norman blood with Flemish mares that we have obtained our present splendid English Draught Horse. This class of horses, if it was not already imported in the Saxon era, was certainly introduced by the Flemish associates of William the Norman, who, in company with their Earl, obtained a large portion of the landed spoil at the conquest. Agricultural improvement, intro- duced from the same province at a subsequent period, no doubt increased the number of the large breed in England, so superior to the indigenous ponies : there are occasional indications of the fact in the Flemish archives during the Plantagenet dynasty. At present, in the west of England, the black breed of horses is far from improved ; but in the midland counties, the Lincoln and Staffordshire studs produce those broad-chested bulky animals so conspicuous in London, but slower even than the Flemish. The Clydesdale are of a similar origin, but in many cases preferable, because they have greater 270 THE BLACK STOCK. activity and more supple limbs; they are conse- quently not seldom used in private carriages. — Northampton, Suffolk, Norfolk, and Cleveland have all breeds more or less resulting from the black stock, though their blood is mixed with Norman and the indigenous older races. Among all these heavy horses, there are specimens according to their kind of very great beauty, and stallions may be found that have been valued at four hundred gui- neas, or nearly the same price as a first-rate Arabian, in the English market. * Exclusive of the bays and greys already men- tioned, all our heavy cavalry was and still continues to be mounted on black horses ; but without chang- ing the colour, they are now of higher blood, and the Life Guards in particular are from half to three- fourths of the Arab stock. To the unwieldy old form, a lighter and more compact kind of charger has been substituted ; and it is rather a curious cir- cumstance, that while we have been reducing the standard of our cavalry horses, abroad, and in parti- cular in Russia, the government is making efforts to increase the size of its own. While the late Grand Duke Constantine ruled in Poland, as we were informed by one of the chiefs, he raised the stature of all the Lancer horses. * M. Huzard, and after him Desmarets, assert that the great brewers1 horses of London are of the Boulogne race o* France ; but beyond the mere occasional experiments made by breeders, no French horses, excepting of Norman blood, has met with consideration in England for more than a century. THE BLA.CK STOCK. 271 On the continent, the noblest black breed in Europe is the Friesland or Dutch, commonly called Hart-dracer, or fast-trotter : they are from fourteen to sixteen hands high, with good necks and shoul- ders, full bodies, round prominent haunches, the tail attached rather low, and limbs sufficiently fine, fringed a considerable way up the tendon above the pasterns with longish hair : they have fire and temper, but generally want bottom, although we have formerly seen the Friesland Carabineers, and even the black Hussars of Eckeren, handsomely mounted upon them. Indeed, both the larger and smaller sized horses of this breed extended con- siderably into the Westphalian territories towards Holstein, and the Dutch, Hannoverian, and Hessian cavalry draw their remounts entirely from thence for the heavy, and from Holstein and Denmark for the light cavalry. Other studs are chiefly appro- priated for coach-hoisfiSy and are exported to France and Belgium. With slight variations in stature and form, the black stock extends into Germany, through Swabia, and by Alsatia, into Switzerland ; we find it again large and bony in Italy, about Bologna, Tuscany, and in the March of Ancona; here, however, the breed becomes more modified by alliance with the ancient Sicilian and the more recent Spanish horses introduced at Naples. In Lombardy, the Hunga- rian and Turkish races have likewise influenced the better class of horses, and the princes of the country have exerted themselves of late with the same laud- 272 THE BLACK STOCK. able views, excepting at Naples, where the noble breeds of ancient times, Saracen, Norman, Hunga- rian, and Spanish, have gradually sunken almost to a level with the rest, and furnishing now only a few handsome carriage-horses. In France, where for ages horses do not seem to have been an object of steady national attention, they are never sufficiently abundant to mount the regular force respectably; and although there are real good horses in the kingdom, the provinces in general are overrun with bidets or ponies, and double bidets, galloways comparatively worthless : the efforts of government, the formation of Haras, and the liberal exertions of enlightened individuals, seem to have kindled little more than a temporary fashion for the display of equestrian paraphernalia and the excitement of imitation races; while the once vaunted breed of Limousin is all but extinct,* and the more ancient Navarrese and Guienne steeds are now without a representative worthy of the name. Yet, for draught, there are, in Picardv, horses very like the breed of Flanders, and there are others of the stock in Brittany and Normandy ; but that of Auvergne is perhaps the most ill-shaped of the whole, though in many points resembling the Francomptois, which is extensively employed in the land-carriage trade. From these general cen- * We saw, some years ago, specimens of the restored race ; they were black, tolerably well-shaped, but not improved by foreign noble crosses ; their number was still confined within the royal Haras. THE BLACK STOCK. 2/3 sures Normandy and the environs of Paris may claim exemption, for, within a small circle at least, a real determination to obtain a race of high-bred horses seems to exist ; and that to some extent they will be worthy to compete with the efforts made elsewhere in Europe, is sufficiently evident from the prominent part taken in the question by the heir to the throne. The black stock, reproducing everywhere in Eu- rope horses of a large stature, extends, with little intermixture, down the Danube and through Cen- tral Germany, Silesia, Moravia, and Bohemia, to the north side of the Balkan in Turkey. The three great military monarchies mount their heavy cavalry almost entirely upon breeds of that origin. They occur again in Asia, for we have already mentioned the Karalulo race, so highly valued for speed and bottom among the Toorkomans and the Katschen- stzis of Eastern Tahtary, remarkable for a white or grey mane, tail, and feet, while the rest of the body is shining black. One or other of these, no doubt, produced the black horse which ran the course at the Ouralisk races in nineteen minutes. * In the mixture of the varieties, the black form may be found in a grey livery, but retains its own when fused into the bay, or at most becomes dark brown ; but while the typical indications remain, clear bay, dun, or mouse colours never occur. In the chestniu * There is, nevertheless, m Eastern Asia, a prevalent opinion that black horses come from the West ; from Fu-lang, which Father Jaubil translates, Europe- 274 THE DUX OR TAN STOCK. progeny, apparently brought to the south of Europe by the ancient Burgundians, the black characters are strongly marked, but this colour is anomalous wherever found ; it is one that has baffled our re- searches. It is seen to assume the shape of all the stirpes, and yet to be so fixed, that foals of a chest- nut dam by a black sire are most frequently without the least assimilation to the paternal colour, but wholly like the mother. THE DUN OR TAN STOCK PLATE VI. is in our view the fourth stirps, and perhaps even more distinct from the three already mentioned than the fifth or pied stem ; for, in the form and mark- ings there occur evident approximations to the Asi- nine group, never acquiring the lofty stature of the black or grey, but always lower and proportionably longer, with more slender limbs, clean joints, and smaller hoofs. The dun is typical of the generality of the real wild horses, still extant in Asia, and the semi-domesticated, both there and in Eastern Europe. Beside the general form, the smaller square head, great length of mane, tendency to black limbs, it is known by the black streak along the spine, some- times, though very rarely, crossed by a second of a fainter colour on the shoulders, and often marked by black streaks on the hocks and upper arms. * * Beside the animal figured, Plate VI., we have seen but two others similarly marked with a cross bar ; but my friend THE DUN OR TAN STOCK. 275 The common chestnut, through all Temperate Asia and Eastern Europe, when bearing withal the dappled spots of the grey, in token of a twofold intermixture, still often shows, in the dorsal line, the colour of the legs, the general structure, and form of the mane and tail, his tendency to absorp- tion into the more indelible type of the dun, whose stock, subdivided into many races, everywhere recur- ring, shows the livery under the names of eelback- dun, tanned, mouse-coloured, light bay, cerviiio, pelo de lolO) &c., but always distinctly bearing the spinal streak down to the tail, even when deeply mixed with the noblest blood or divergent into the chest- nut or Alezan livery, where alone stature is deve- loped, and where, in the solitary instance of the Burgundian ancient race, that colour clothes forms belonging to the heavy black and draught horse. From the mountains of Scotland to the plains of Eastern Tahtary, from Iceland and Norway to the sierras of Central Spain, notwithstanding the cease- less intermixture with breeds of other origin, or the further decrease of stature from climate or want of food, these various shades of dun and the dorsal streak often reappear upon individuals among droves apparently all bay, or all sooty, without an ostensible cause, to the exclusion of grey and dappled, which are always the result of direct intermixture. In manners and characteristic intelligence, this type displays peculiarities not found in the larger and acute observer, N. Gabriel, Esq., informs me that he has found several in England. 276 THE DUN OR TAN STOCK. forms of horse, and in part at least they may be fairly ascribed to a different cerebral organization. Unlike the other types, the dun alone invariably husbands its strength and resources, never wasting them by untimely impetuosity or uncalculating re- sistance ; ever provident in securing the moment to bite at food, or drink ; cautious, cunning, capable of concealing itself, of abstaining from noise, of stoop- ing and passing under bars or other obstacles with a crouching gait, which large horses cannot or will not perform ; these, and many other peculiarities of their wild educational instinct, are reflected again upon all the races of the type, however diversified by mixture, so long as the prevailing feature of their stature remains, as all antiquity attest, and modern times daily witness in domesticated ponies, and above all, in the high intelligence of those which have been trained for public exhibitions. Although varying from circumstances, the dun- coloured stirps is pre-eminently attached to rocky and woody locations, always in a state of natuiv seeking shelter in cover, or security among rocks- where either are accessible ; it feeds upon a greatei variety of plants than the others, and, contrary to them, residence in the open plains is rather an accessary condition than one of preference in theii" mode of existence. The dun, as before stated, was exclusively used by the ancient Median cavalry, and in chariots of war. It is still the principal stock of the wild races of Asia, and even of the Ukraine and Poland ; bun THE DUN OR TAN STOCK. 2/7 in a domesticated state, colour is so intermixed, that all the semi- wild breeds of Russia, Hungary, and Poland have a great proportion of their numberj bay, particularly since the Arabian conquests ren- dered this superior stirps more valued and accessible in the north. In their anomalous state, we shall now proceed U give a few details on the most remarkable of the smaller stock, wherever they may be found, and beginning with those of Northern Asia, we find, In China, exclusive of the pied horse, there is a race of mountain ponies, known by the name of Myautze, which gallop down declivities at an angle of forty-five degrees, dash through woods and broken rocky ground without losing their footing, and are therefore highly prized by the Chinese officers for service. There is~no-notice of the colour of their coats. We find also an ill-shaped sooty pony, with little spirit, and unfit for severe work; but the Tahtars possess, beside those already mentioned, brown, bay, and dun breeds of horses, full fourteen hands and a half high, with small square heads, long ewe necks, good manes and tails, and mule backs ; the barrel is of little girth, but they have clean and firm limbs, with small feet; and their sobriety, hardihood, and speed render them very valuable. Uniform chestnut and white breeds are scarcer ; these are reported to have the form of more western horses, with high hips, and in common with others above mentioned, as well as with the follow- ing, they have habits of lightness and sobriety. 278 THE DUN OR TAN STOCK. In Khoten the horses are likewise small but hardy, mostly geldings, reared by the Kalmuks; they are from thirteen and a half to fourteen hands high, and great droves are exported towards the south, as far as the plains of India. The Bhooteahs are very beautiful rather shaggy ponies, not unlike the Siberian, commonly grey, white, or spotted ; their strength, courage, prudence, and surety of footing, in the precipitous paths of the highest mountains, are highly extolled. Of the Pickarrow ponies, apparently held in esteem among the British residents in India, we have found no description. The Ydboos, or ponies of Afghaunistan, are the common travelling animals of the country, and though mixed with every race of the East, are of the original wild bay stock. Among them, as well as with the Hungarian horses, it was formerly the custom to slit the nos- trils, or rather, divide the septum, because that practice was said to facilitate breathing in violent galloping, and also to prevent the animals neigh- ing : the custom is not credited in the writings of several English authors, but although we have never seen an instance, we have at this moment before us a finished sketch of an Hungarian horse's head by the celebrated Zoffani, where the operation is fully displayed. "We here subjoin a reduced copy ; see Plate XXXI. The common Bashkir horse is short, compact, with a heavy head, broad- hipped, small-eyed, and THE DUN OR TAN STOCK. 279 nearly allied to the curly-haired hlack horse before mentioned : they do not exceed thirteen and a half hands and are bred wild, requiring all the skill and daring to subdue the colts, when captured, that is evinced by the South American Gauchos. There is no great difference in the horses of the Cossacks of the Don, the Oural, and of Siberia, ex- cept perhaps in size ; but in general they are rather low, raw-boned, meagre-looking animals, ragged in the extreme, and apparently unable to perform the work, bear the privations, and sustain the weight which they carry ; yet, taken all together, in good qualities, the Cossack races have resisted fatigue and all the incidents of war better than any other cavalry of the Russian empire, as was fully proved in the campaigns of 1812, 1813, and 1814; and recently, still mo?e~signally, in the terrible march towards Khiva- We have never known them en- tering a stable from necessity, but in the severest weather they are occasionally sheltered from the blast by the Cossacks raising a bank of snow in a circle, with a fire in the middle to warm themselves and their ever-saddled horses behind them. The Donski appeared to us in general of dark brown and sooty bay colours; so also, as might be ex- pected, the common breeds of Russia, descended from intermixtures of the original stirps, have in many cases undetermined, or what has Deen termed foul liveries. The fast trotters are a breed in common use for hackney carriages and winter sleighs : their move- 280 THE DUN OR TAN STOCK. ment consists in trotting with the fore-legs and cantering with the hinder, proceeding at this rate fifteen or sixteen miles an hour. There are some of them higher hred that will go the pace of twenty miles, but how long they can keep it up is not quite satisfactorily ascertained. These animals are rather long for their height, very well shaped, with a square head, and mane so exuberantly long, that their masters knot them up to keep them from trailing on the ground. * This long-maned race is extensively spread to- wards the south into Poland, the Ukraine, and Podolia, there being, in the Dresden Museum, a stuffed specimen, of which we made a drawing ; it had belonged to the last Saxon king of Poland, and had a mane which measured twenty-four English feet in length, and the tail thirty feet. A case of this kind must be taken, we think, as a result of what may be termed disease, united with extraordi- nary care in the grooming to foster the excessive pro- duction. It is to this stirps that the wild horses of Lithu- ania and Prussia, already described, unquestionably belonged ; and those of the great forest of Bialowitz have still in general the same characteristics of o livery and form. In Plate VI. we have figured one ridden by a Russian Lancer officer, who stated the animal to be of Ukraine race of the wild stock ; we found it chiefly remarkable foi the cross bar on the * Bay Bitshock was lately noticed at Moscow for speed, pretending to thirty miles an hour ! We suspect, thirty versts. THE DUN OR TAN STOCK. 281 shoulders, distinctly marked, its vicious aspect, and for the close resemblance it bore to the description of the wild in colour, though in form there was a greater similarity with the Samogitian horses, being rather long than high, though extremely vigorous. * This stirps, therefore, approximates the Hemionus, Djiggetai, and Yo-to-tze 'in livery and markings. The Samogitian horses are small, compact, hardy, rather short-legged ; the Polish, somewhat loftier, have more blood, and are occasionally dappled grey. But there are dappled bays and dun-coloured, as well as dark chestnuts among them. In the Tzeckler mountains of Transylvania, there is a smaller sized dun horse, nearly in a state of nature, probably the remains of a wild indigenous race ; but in the plains a considerable intermixture of Turkish and Arab blood is found, which spreads likewise into Hungary. The Hungarian and Moldavian common race is small, dry, angular, with large eyes, small mouth, plane chaffron, open nostrils, no great carcase, slender neck ; but broad-chested, with firm legs, hard hoofs, and the tail rather low. This race extends into Styria, Illyria, and Dalmatia, and is evidently a mixed descendant of the horses brought by the mounted tribes which invaded the Roman empire, partially improved by Turkish blood: we see this * Researches, subsequently made among the Russian ca- valry, procured only two other horses marked with the cross bar ; in both it was less distinct, though the animals appeared to be of the same race as the above. 282 THE DUN OR TAN STOCK. in the great variety of colours the horses possess, but where dun, chestnut, and hay are predomi- nant. They are in general hred almost wild, heing caught only for marking or for sale, when the art and energy required to suhdue them is very much of the same character as that of the Tahtars and Cossacks in Russia and the Gauchos in South America. In the Morea there is a race of unshorn small horses, driven down to Attica in herds for sale ; they have small heads and ears, thin jawrs and narrow foreheads, slender arched necks, but with broad deep chests, slender firm limbs, oblique pasterns, and longish hoofs, grey and firm. They are exceed- ingly wild and vicious, running at dogs, and fight- ing with their teeth and fore-feet ; but it is probable that with good management they might be made excellent light-cavalry horses. The bay and chestnut colours predominate, and it is likely that their origin remounts to the early ages of Greece. Sweden and Norway likewise have small breeds of the ancient stock in CEland about twelve hands high, handsome, docile, and intelligent, though bred in the woods. Those of Western Nordland have the head rather large, the eyes prominent, the ears small, the neck short and breast broad, the body rather long, full and well ribbed up, tail and mane abundant : the arm of this breed is remarkably powerful, and the fetlocks without long hair. Their colours are bay and brown to blackish. "We saw the Hussars of Morner, another Swedish Hussar, and THE DUN OR TAN STOCK. 283 a light-dragoon regiment, all respectably mounted on this kind of horse. Finland has a similar race, but still smaller, and the Norwegian, notwithstanding the opinion of Hor- rebow, may be safely regarded as the parent stock of the Iceland ponies, so renowned for enduring the excessive cold of an Arctic winter without the least protection of man. These resemble in almost all respects The Scottish or rather Shetland ponies, Plate XV.. some of which scarcely exceed in size the stature of a large dog, and have been actually carried in a gig. Yet there are among them many handsome shaggy little animals, with huge manes and abundance of tail; they are of all colours, but it is not difficult to perceive the original dun stock as forming the parent race. The Galloway, now no longer found in purity, was of the same character as the Swedish, though somewhat higher at the shoulder. In colour the breed was bay, with black extremities, mane, and tail ; but it has been suffered to disappear, though the name itself continues to be used for horses above the standard of ponies. In the north of England it is used for Welsh and New Forest horses, when they are about fourteen hands high. Many of these animals are of mixed breed, as is very perceptible by the head and body being often out of propor- tion, bulky for the length of the limbs ; but others, though shaggy, want not a certain degree of ele- gance, and are remarkable for speed as well as 284 THE DUN OR TAN STOCK. bottom. Thus, in 1754, one of these, belonging to a Mr. Corker, performed, without distress, one hun- dred miles a day, for three successive days, over the Newmarket course. Another Galloway, be- longing to a Mr. Swelan, executed, at Carlisle, the extraordinary feat of going one thousand miles in a thousand hours. Among the New Foresters, there is a breed of blue-greys, with large dark spots, The Dartmoor and Exmoor are now also much adulterated, since the moors have been parcelled out and partly divided by stone-walls. Formerly this breed of horses bore all the characters of true de- scendants of the ancient British ; it was, and even now is, wild, daring, cunning, and intelligent ; always ascending towards the Tors or rocky preci- pices for safety, and often escaping by leaping down high blocks, or jumping over the pursuers when they were thought to be at bay. It was one of this race that started from London for Exeter with the mail, and notwithstanding the repeated changes and hard driving, accomplished the whole distance, being one hundred and seventy-two miles, a quarter of an hour before the coach. Another, with a heavy rider, similarly outstripped the coach between Bristol and South Molton, a run of eighty- six miles. Of the Ardennes horses, and the Bidets and double Bidets of Brittany, some notice has been already taken, and the Asturian and other smaller horses of Spain were likewise mentioned ; but we may add to the foregoing two races, which may be THE DUN Oil TATi STOCK. 285 claimed by the Asiatic bay horac, or the wild Koomrah of Africa, for they have been u^iiirilated to both. The first is The Sardinian Wild Horse, found most abun- dantly in the territory of Bultei and of the Nurru. The best are found in the woods of Canai, in the island of St. Antiochio. According to Cetti, they resemble the wild horses of Africa described by Leo Africanus ; they are very small, rugged, and gene - rally bay, with asses' feet, long tails, and shor* manes. " Whoever is inclined, after making an oblation at the church of the patron saint of the island, may proceed to hunt them according to hta desire ; but the hides alone are worth having, for by nature the horses are so vicious, that no domesti- cation is possible ; they perish in their desperate resistance, or tire oiflr-tiie patience of the captor." They were well known to the ancients. * In Corsica, the mountain pony is nearly the same ; but the domestic horse, like that of Sardinia, is about twelve hands high, with rounded form, fiat head, and short neck, considerable girth of body, and small hoofs. Returning towards Southern Asia, we find in the East Indies the Tattoo, or native pony, shabby, ill- made, and neglected for ages; but gradually ac- quiring more of public attention since the bullock * These horses are most certainly wild, never having been reclaimed at any period, not being worth the trouble ; their unbroken freedom is as unquestionable as that of their com- panion the Mouflon. 286 THE DUN OR TAN STOCK. carriages or rutts have begun to be superseded by the kerracJwe, a four-wheeled vehicle on springs, now commonly serving at Calcutta for hackney- coaches. Tattoos are in general deep-bodied, with heavy heads, staring eyes, scraggy necks, fine limbs, cat-hammed, under thirteen hands high, bay or chestnut; sometimes grey, or even piebald, and remarkably enduring: they are obstinate, vicious, prone to fighting, but easily maintained. Seringapatam and vicinity produces a similar email breed and but little improved, although dur- ing the reigns of Hyder Ali and Tippoo considerable pains were taken to introduce a better standard, Indo-China, a land of great rivers, high moun- tain ranges, and endless forests, is not known to have an indigenous horse. From the Burrampooter east, and from the tropic south, horses are reduced to ponies. Already, in Cassay, Ava, and Pegu, they are seldom above thirteen hands high, but they are spirited, active, and well-shaped. Further east, in Lao, Siam, and Southern China, they are still smaller and of inferior beauty. In Siam and Cochin- China, although the diminutive ponies of the coun- try are ridden, there is no military cavalry. In the Malayan peninsula, the horse is not even yet natu- ralized. But the breeds of the great islands we are about to mention appear in a great measure to be allied to those of Indo-China and Yunan in China Proper, and are commonly designated by the name of THE SARAN RACE. Of this class we find, first, in Sumatra, the Achin and Batta breeds, spirited, but small, and better suited for draught than the saddle. It appears the natives call them Kudo,, and bring them down in numbers for sale, according to Mr. Marsden, who adds, that in the Batta country they are eaten for food. In Java the animal is somewhat larger, more a horse in form, but less gay, more shapeless, and more abstemious. Those of the plains are very distinct from the mountain breeds: the first is rather coarse, sluggish, andxTJises to the height of thirteen hands one inch; the second is small and hardy : the Kuningam breed of Cheribon is one of them, and is often very handsome ; both are more used for drawing than riding, and although four ponies on the roads of the country will travel at the rate of twelve or fifteen miles, a pair of English post-horses will do the work which requires three relays of the above mentioned four, and costs in maintenance only one- third. There is an inferior breed on the islands of Bali and Lombok. The Tamloro and Bima breeds of Sambawa enumerate among their studs the Gunong-api, be- longing to the Bima ; it is reckoned the handsomest of the Archipelago, and extensively exported. Be- yond Sambawa there are horses found on Flores Sandalwood Island and Timor, but no further to 288 THE TANGUM HORSE. the cast, being unknown in the Moluccas and New Guinea. Next to Java, it is most abundant in Celebes, where the best of all the Saran race are said to exist, and where alone it is found in a wild state. We find horses, again, in Borneo and at the Philippine Islands. The different breeds vary in colour according to their localities; at Achin the ponies are piebald, but this distinction gradually disappears : the Bat- tas are mostly mouse-colour : in Java they are bays and greys ; roan and mouse-coloured are esteemed, and the worst are black or chestnut : duns, bays, and greys form the majority of the Bima breed, and greys and bays almost exclusively constitute those of Celebes and the Philippines. In Mr. More's notices of the Indian Archipelago, from which the above account of the Saran race is almost entirely extracted, some considerations are affixed in proo? that the original breeds must have come from the main land of Asia : our own views, repeatedly re- ferred to in the foregoing pages, certainly coincide with his, and show by the marks of the races, from what quarter it is likely they were first imported. THE TANGUM, PIEBALD, OR SKEWBALD HORSE. Equus varius, Nobis. PLATE VII. This form of the domesticated horse, which we have repeatedly pointed out to notice, appears tc claim a distinct specific existence, in as much as the THE TANGUM HORSE 289 typical animal is found with its characteristic marks in a state perfectly wild, and it appears unmixed with wild horses of other shape or colours. We have hefore remarked that it was first observed by Father Georgi on the northern declivities of the Himalaya range ; it was again noticed from report by D'Hobsonville, who describes the wild animal as below ten hands in height, in the winter dress, covered with long hair, and marked symmetrically with spots. In Bell's Travels, the wild asses' skins, curiously marked with waved white and brown, of which he saw many in his route near the sources ol the Obi, skins which have puzzled succeeding natu- ralists, may indicate this animalT^Another account refers to the wild spotted horses about Nipchou i) Eastern Tahtary, being the size of asses, but more compact and handsome. Moorcroft, again, saw the species on the highest summits of Thibet, in their shining summer coats, and with their antelope forms, scouring along in numbers ; and a Monsieur de Tavernier seems to allude to them in a recent notice of his travels to the wall of China. The Kiang of Moorcroft, which he insists is not the Ghoor Khur, is evidently the same, as well a Dr. Gerrard's wild horse, mentioned in his observa- tions on the Skite valley. * u Horses," he says, " alone undergo the transition from the elevated pastures; but they lose the woolly covering that * Asiatic Researches, xviii. pi. 11, 247. We regret not to have had access to this work: it is probably also the Tangut Ksching T 290 THE TANGUM HORSE. invests the roots of their long hair." Comparing tnis animal with the domestic horse, he further re- marks, " both would^appear to have the same origin, yet the circumstance of their eluding every attempt to tame them when caught, and their uniform speckled colour of fawn and white, demonstrate them to be a distinct species." Our own correspondence with British officers, stationed in the higher parts of India, bears testimony to similar conclusion, do- mestication excepted, for the Kiang no doubt is amenable to the same laws as the rest of the genus, and indeed almost every other highly organized animal. Applicable to the present species, we be- lieve there is sufficient proof to view the great pro- portion of pied horses all over China, and even so far south as the Indian Archipelago ; and we con- tend, moreover, that to this form should be referred the steeds of the Centaurs, which we noticed as first penetrating westward, and were progenitors of the Thessalian. They are pointedly noticed in the Scrip- tures,* and again celebrated under the name of Par- thian, then, as ridden by the Tahtar conquerors of Saracen Persia ; they were extolled by the writers of the classic and the middle ages, sung by troubadours, figured in stained glass in the Indian illuminated battles of Aurungzebe, and immortalized by the pencils of Raffaelle, Titian, and Guido, who took their types of them from the Ardean, or, since called, Borghese breed ; which, however, has been latterly neglected, and we understand is now nearly * Zachariah, i. 8., and other authorities before noticed. THE TANGUM IIORSB 291 obliterated by newer forms of bay and black co- lours. * Although we possess a series of drawings of the pied form of horses derived from Indian, Tahtar, and European specimens, it is to be regretted that of the Kiang, in either his winter or summer garb, no trustworthy figure has reached us; we have therefore been compelled to offer a specimen of one of the domesticated breeds, known, it appears, in India, by the name of Tangum race, which came from Sikim in Lower Thibet. It appears to be taller than the " Tanghans" of the hills near Kat- mandoo. See Plate VII. \ There is some variety in the stature and livery of these horses, the wild in general being the smallest, and having the greatest number of squarish clouded spots ; while the domesticated, similarly white about the limbs and part of the back, are marked by such large clouds of bay, that two or three spread over the whole body, head, and neck. In general the head is included in the bay colour, and where it comes down over the shoulder and the thigh, that colour deepens into black ; there is also a proportion of black and white in the mane and tail, not unfre- quently a black edging on the ears, and the eyes * See the anterior part of this work, where the breeds of antiquity and the wild horses are described. Pierre Vidal, who attended Richard Cceur-de-lion, speaks of them in his Xovelle, 1208. Guill. de la Ferte, 1221, stained glass in Notre Dame de Chartres, has a pied charger. Raffaelle, in his picture of Attila, frescos of the Vatican ; and the two other painters in their Auroras. 292 THE TANGUM HORSE. are liable to be pale bluish or different : the horn of the hoofs is pale yellowish, with two or three slender, vertical, black streaks, and the frogs wider ; on the inner arm the callosities are large, but scarcely perceptible on the hind legs ; the hide itself is dull white or greyish, often spotted with a darker colour or ladre^ particularly on the inside of the thighs and nose. In form the Tangum stock is compact, rounded, somewhat fleshy, with rather large bone ; the head thick, though small ; the neck long, rigid, but little arched, somewhat full ; the mane rather erect, and tail not superabundant ; short hair run- ning down the ridge of the dock, and long hair at the sides, it is set on low; the shoulders are well placed but thick, the withers rather full, the barrel round, with flank well ribbed up, the quarter full. Few rise to fifteen hands in height, and most are little above twelve or thirteen ; but they stand on rigid pasterns, have hard hoofs, vigorous sinews, and move with unflinching security through the most dangerous mountain precipices : they bear privation and fatigue with unconquerable spirit, have good speed and wind, and are very tractable and docile. Although the Tangum blood mixes freely with the other stocks, its characteristic distinctions are sufficiently indelible ; as is proved by the foregoing description taken in India, being almost entirely correct when compared with the breeds of Europe ; although the last mentioned have been separated from the parent stock for many ages, and have been liable to unceasing crossings : personally we are only acquainted with the Prussian, Austrian, and THE TANGUM HORSE. 293 Borghese, and in these, particularly the Borghese, we have a remarkable proof of the permanency of its characters, since, as we have before mentioned, it was evidently of ancient standing in the time of Virgil, and nevertheless is not yet extinct. AVe have mentioned a cross breed among the black Kalmucks, one clouded with brown or sooty black, and with one or more limbs usually dark. There is another frequent among the Pindarrees, when it is a cross with the native Tattoos. We believe these to be the real Ghoonts found in the vicinity of Kalunga. There are in Spain horses of this kind, — Pio Ale- zan, Pio Castanno, and Pio Negro, — and from them may have sprung the skewbalds of Patagonia ; but these possibly descend from accidental causes, which we know operate sometimes in a similar manner on the livery of horses in England and elsewhere, but always with characters to be distinguished from the real Tangum stock. Finally, the skewbald breed of Achin in Sumatra, no doubt anciently brought across from the Malay peninsula, has likewise been mentioned. In Europe the race is now almost exclusively employed to mount trumpeters and military bands in Hussar regiments, and from their known aptitude and docility, as well as striking aspect, they are cherished for the exhibitions of equestrian perform- ances in the modern circus. * * There were, in 1815, some squadrons of Bavarian Hussars mounted on skewbalds. 294 THE KOOMRAH. Equus hippagrus, Nobis. PLATE XVI. THIS animal we regard as a distinct species of Equus, exclusively confined to the northern half of Africa, and, as far as it is yet known, nowhere abundant; from its somewhat equivocal structure, shyness, and mountain residence, though known to the ancients, a certain mystery has continued to hang around its history. In the writings of Hero- dotus, an undescribed animal, by him denominated Barges, we may suspect to be no other than the Bourra of Koldagi mentioned by Riippel, * and that they are the same as Oppian's Hippagrus. The two last mentioned animals being brown, horn- less, and maned, characters completely applicable to the Koomrah, and only partially observable in cloven-footed ruminants, which are confounded with this Equine species, both in the notices of the an- cients and the tales of the moderns. The Koomrah, in Northern Africa, is held to be a rare animal, a species of monster-mule between a mare and a bull, similar to the produce of the same kind known in Europe by the name of Hippotaurus, which was believed to be a possible creature down to the middle of the last century, when the real * We beg to refer the reader to what is said of tkis species in the article on wild horses. THE KOOMRAH. 295 Hinny, which we shall mention when we treat of mules, was pretended to be that monster. In truth, the Koomrah and Hinny are sufficiently similar to serve the purpose of an imposture, or of a wonder among the vulgar ; but the first is a wild animal, the second a scarce result of domestication. The name Koomrah may be a Mograbin adaptation of the Arab Ahmar, Koh-ahmar in Bereber, mountain horse, to the Negro term Koomri^ one denoting a wild Equine, the other a colour, white, as applicable to the snowy ridge south of the Niger named the Koomri mountains, where the animal is likewise found. Among the wonder-loving Arabs and Shelluhs, the Hippotaurine Koomrah is of course believed to be not unfrequently met with, not as a wild, but as a domestic animal ; occasionally a dwarf kind of Hinny is shown as such, and hence there are greys, which then answer the descriptions of some travel- lers and correspond with the meaning of the Negro word Koomri ; and as we are informed by a friend, there are others of a black colour, one of which he sawr, when it was on the way to Constantinople, a present from the sovereign of Morocco to the Grand Seignor. Of the wild and real Koomrah we have seen a living specimen in England, and the skin of ano- ther; the first came from Barbary, the second died on board a slave-ship on the passage from the coast of Guinea to the West Indies in 1798, the skin, legs, and head having been carefully preserved by 296 THE KOOMRAH. the master, who permitted a sketch and notes to be taken of it at Dominica. The Koomrah of the mountains is about ten or ten and a half hands high ; the head broad across the forehead and deep measured to the jowl, is small, short, and pointed at the muzzle, making the profile almost triangular; instead of a forelock be- tween the ears, down to the eyes the hair is long and woolly; the eyes are small, of a light hazel colour, and the ears large and wide ; the neck thin, forming an angle with the head, and clad with a scanty but long black mane ; the shoulder rather vertical and meagre, with withers low, but the croup high and broad ; the barrel large, thighs cat-ham- med, and the limbs clean, but asinine, with the hoofs elongated ; short pasterns, small callosities on the hind-legs, and the tail clothed with short fur for several inches before the long black hair begins. The animal is entirely of a reddish bay colour, with- out streak or mark on the spine, or any white about the limbs. We made our sketch at Portsmouth, and believe it refers to the same animal, which lived for many years, if we are rightly informed, in a pad- dock of the late Lord Grenville's. There was in the British Museum a stuffed specimen exactly corresponding in colour and size, but with a head (possibly in consequence of the taxidermist wanting the real skull) much longer and less in depth. The other specimen, which came from the mountains north of Accra in Guinea, was again entirely simi- lar. We were told that in voice it differed from THE KOOMRAH. 297 both horse and ass, and in temper, that which died on board ship, though very wild and shy at first, was by no means vicious, and fed on sea-biscuifc with willingness. It would appear that this species is not gregari- ous in Africa, but an inhabitant of mountain cover, and always desirous of the shelter of the woods ; it comes down to the wells and drinking-springs alone or in small families, and is there liable to be way- laid by men, the great felinse, and hyaenas; but there is no want of courage in its defence, biting fiercely ; and having a very delicate sense of smell, danger is avoided by the wariness of its actions and the readiness of its rapid retreat up the mountains. 298 See page 302. THE ASININE GROUP. ALTHOUGH there are no very prominent external differences, the eye of the most superficial observer is almost always sufficient to distinguish this se- condary and less elegant form of Equidse from the Caballine species already described. We have al- ready remarked on the conflicting opinions of natu- ralists, whether the two forms should be separated by generic names; and though we adopt the ar- rangement of Mr. Gray, it is because it is viewed by us as more advantageous in a natural system of classification to refer the species of minor groups to their common centres, than to insist on the necessity THE ASININE GROUP. 299 of creating genera for every trifling structural varia- tion that may be detected. There is an evident tendency in both, not only to approximations, but even to actual interchange of some prominent external distinctions. In the wild horses of Asia, a highly arched forehead and length- ened ears are often very observable. We have de- scribed and figured a specimen of the eelback dun stock, not only marked with the spinal dark streak and bars on the limbs, but actually with a cross on the shoulders : again, the first species of the present group will fre shown to have the head of a high-bred blood-horse and the cross on the shoulders like the onager, but totally different in relative proportions from the Persian wild ass, which is very commonly destitute of that mark. In a wild state, both groups are nearly of the same size. If there be more than one species domesticated in the first, so there are also in the second ; all, no doubt, can and have been subdued by man, and it might be suspected that there has been even an intermixture sufficient be- tween both, for the sympathetic action of transfer- ring the marks and the livery of one to the other, and in some cases perhaps to perpetuate them. Excepting some slight structural characteristics, the chief distinctions between the horse and asinine groups evidently lie in their instinctive aptitudes ; one being highly irritable and educational, with a social temperament, the other dull, intractable, soli- tary, seems to bear the unceasing impression of his servitude alone. Like a slave, the sensual appetites 300 THE ASININE GROUP. remain nevertheless in great vigour, and the males of the asinine group differ particularly from horses in their mode of fighting with the teeth instead of the feet ; for, in a wild state, it was observed by the ancients and confirmed by more recent information, that they destroy or disable each other, so that males are comparatively rare. For the same reason, in domestication, it is held dangerous to allow a male ass to pasture in the same field where there is a stallion. * The ass tribe has long ears, a short standing mane, and the tail furnished with only a tuft of hair at the end ; the hoofs form oval impressions, and sustain short rather rigid pasterns ; the limbs are clean and firm; the croup narrow, and often more elevated than the withers ; there are callosities on the ante- rior legs only, and the hide is more dense and callous than that of the horse ; yet none of the group can sustain the same degree of cold, although they ap- pear more insensible to intense heat, and are found wild in Africa as far south as the line. The typical colours of their livery are silvery grey and tawny, in a wild state never passing into black or complete white ; they have mostly a dark dorsal streak, less distinctly seen in the females, and sometimes en- tirely wanting in both sexes, while bars on the joints are not uncommon, and a cross line on the * Aristotle had observed that the more powerful males attack the weaker — " Tandiu ilium persequuntur donee asse- cali ore inter posteriora crura inserto testiculos ejus evel- lant." THE ASINIiNE GROUP. 301 shoulders is occasionally double. It is said of some in Africa that they never drink; they are known to be in their food still more sober than horses, and more easily satisfied with thistles and other thorny plants : in their habits they are cleanly, and fond of basking in the clean heated sand of the desert, where, though they want not courage, vigilance, and speed, they afford the common subsistence of the larger car- nivora; for, in the absence of man, the lion, hyaena, and lycaon, or marafeen, appear chiefly destined to maintain the balance ; and where wild EquidaB are found in the South, one or more of these are sure to be in their vicinity. In the ancient history of these animals, more than one species appear to be confounded, and even at present the differences between them are noi satisfactorily cleared up, if not altogether overlooked by travellers. In the earlier languages, zoological names of animals which have been recently acquired are commonly borrowed from others already fami- liarly known, or from some fancied similarity which after times seldom confirm ; thus the Romans applied the name of Lucanian bull to the first elephant they saw, and the South Sea islanders called the first horse landed on their shores a pig or a great dog: in Celebes, the horses now feral still bear, among other native names, that of buffalo. Adjectives, as names, are slow in acquiring a strictly defined mean- ing; a carrier may still designate a pigeon or an errand-man ; and thus the same epithet in Hebrew was long applicable alike to a horse, an ass, the He- 302 THE ASININE GROUP. mionus, and perhaps a dromedary ; hence, what has been translated an ass in Isaiah and Herodotus, or actually so named in Pliny, Strabo, and Arnobius, may in some cases, with good reason, be regarded as applicable only to the Hemionus. Thus, where asses are made to draw chariots for war and peace by the Caramanians, and even the Scythians; and again, in the painted sculptures of Egypt, where chariots occur drawn by short -eared animals, which nevertheless have the cross on the shoulders, asinine tails, and in stature equal the figures of horses, we must refer them, not to the small thick-headed Hamar of the desert or Ghoor of Persia, but to the Onager, or to the Hemionus, which we shall see is still domesticated in some parts of India.* It is no doubt to these larger and nobler animals that respect was paid in the earlier ages as types of abstract ideas. The Arabs had an asinine divinity named Yauk, and Tartak, one of the gods of the Avim, was most likely figured like an Onager; though it may be suspected that several of these animal forms were not personifications but attri- butes or companions of deities, similar to those we still find figured behind Indian idols. To the voice of the wild ass repeated allusion is made in the Scriptures, and that of the prophet crying in the wilderness, has reference to the impression which the solitary cry of the tenant of the desert creates en the mind of human wanderers when traversing his haunts. It is even doubtful whether the belief * See wood-cut at the head of this article. THE ASININE GROUP. 303 of the heathens, that the Jews worhipped an ass's head, or the blasphemous absurdity of the Onoel form holding a book, with the motto, " Deus Chris- tianorum Menechytes," was not more the delirious act of hieroglyphical emblematisers of that Gnostic sect which strove to unite Christianity with Pagan- ism, rather than the result of absolute malice ; cer- tain it is, that in the circles of Behemoth, figured by the Ophites, the last genius, or Eon ? is deno- minated Onoel and pictured with asinine forms. Evidently, when Mirvan II., the last Caliph of the Ommiad line, was distinguished by the title of Hvmar-el-Gezirah, or the wild ass of Mesopo- tamia, no disrespect was meant to his person ; nor in the memorable declaration of Jacob, where Issa- char is compared to a strong ass between two bur- thens, for it became an emblem and probably an ensign of his tribe. Similar ideas of respect were attached to the figures of asses on the shields of several Roman legions of the third century, repre- sented in Pancirolus ; to the Borak banner of the first Babylonian Caliphs, and to those borne on the ensigns of ancient Naples and Yicenza. It is to be regretted that travellers of talent and education have paid so little attention to minutiaa in their accounts of the wild species of the asinine form, and thereby confounded one with the other : such, among others, is the description of a wild ass from the Cape of Good Hope, seen by Bishop He- ber at Barrackpore, in the menagerie of the Gover- nor-general of India, led about almost choked with 304 THE YO-TO-TZE. its bridle. " It is extremely strong and bony, of beautiful form, has a fine eye and good counte- nance, and though not striped like a zebra, is beau- tifully clouded with different tints of ash and mouse-colour."* Is this a mistake as regards* the native couutry ? For the description appears to apply to a real Kiang of Central Asia, and there is no indigenous unstriped Equine animal in South Africa ; or if it refers to the Onager or Ahmar of the northern part, how did it escape so enlightened an observer that it was of the same species with the wild ass of Cutch, the Ghoor-Khurs of Persia, and Djiggetai of the Mongolese? THE YO-TO-TZE? Asinus equuleus, Nobis. PLATE XVII. WE have hesitated long whether the present animal should not be placed with horses, for the external appearance is so intermediate, and even the voice, as we were informed, so much a compound of neigh- ing and braying, that it may be most proper to con- sider its location with this group as only provisional. The specimen here figured was drawn by ourselves at the request of the late Sir Joseph Banks, who obtained from Earl Rivers information that there was an un described species of diminutive horse brought from the Chinese frontiers north-east of * Vol. i. p 39. THE YO-TO-TZE. 305 Calcutta, and was then to be seen in a livery stable near Park Lane. We give, with the sketch, the notes made at the time. " The animal was a male, by examining the teeth, not quite four years old, and was somewhat under three feet in height at the withers ; the head eleven inches and a half from the fore-top to the under part of the nostrils, with a straight profile, very small mouth, delicate nostrils, and deer-like aspect resem- bled that of a noble Arab ; excepting that the eyes displayed less fire and more cunning, and the nos- trils opened a little lower ; the ears were only four inches long, with the tips suddenly contracted and then again slightly dilated ; their insides white, the upper third black; the neck was ewe-like, with a coarse abundant mane, longer than in the ass, but still standing upright. Compared with its general size, the barrel was full, very closely ribbed up in the flank, but the withers, shoulder, croup, hams, and legs were asinine, with short rather vertical pasterns and round, more than oval soles of the hoofs ; the tail, not reaching the hocks by six inches, was scantily supplied with long hair nearly to its root, resembling that of a rat-tailed horse; there were warts on the inner arms, but none on the hind-legs ; all the limbs clean, yet very strong. It was entirely of a yellowish red clay colour, except- ing black tips of the ears, the mane, and long hair on the tail, a well defined line along the back extending down the middle of the tail, crossed by a broad bar of the same colour over the shoulders, 306 THE YO-TO-TZE. three or four cross streaks very distinctly marked over the knees and hocks, the cannon joints brown and the fetlock and pasterns down to the hoofs black, the hoofs and hide dark, the eyes brown." The groom informed us that its voice was a kind of horse neigh ; terminating with a roar like the lower tones of an ass's braying. There were on the back two white marks evidently the effects of a saddle, attempts having no doubt been made to ride it in India ; where the sons of grandees are very com monly placed on the backs of ponies, young stags, hinds, little oxen, and even sheep. There was an appearance of considerable docility in its manners, which induced the groom to throw his leg across its back and canter up the stable yard } the man was certainly much heavier than the beast he rode, but it took him along to the end, and then with a wild fling pitched him on a dunghill, and came back at a trot, stopping by us with perfect gentleness. We were here again told that it came from some part of Chinese Tahtary. Notwithstanding the striking difference of the head, tail, livery, stature, and voice, we doubted this individual being merely a variety of the Onager or Djiggetai, until we saw living specimens of these animals, when there appeared sufficient reason to regard the Equuleus as distinct and identical with the Yo-to-tze of China, provided that in that country not more than one species is included under the name. Should the wild ass of the Deccan in Cen- tral India, described by Colonel Sykes as not larger THE ONAGER. 30? than a mastiff, be of the same species, the fact would prove another instance of the uncertainty we are thrown into by naturalists asssuming that approxi- mate resemblances are sufficient to warrant the con- clusion of a community of species : travellers and sportsmen, amid the many other causes of indif- ference, are thereby induced to regard the question as settled, neglect detailed descriptions, and continue the duration of ignorance. THE ONAGER, KOULAN, OR WILD ASS. Asinus onager, Xobis. PLATE XVIII. THE concluding remark in the former paragraph is again verified in the accounts of the Onager and Hemionus, both of which are confounded by modern writers, and none of the late travellers who noticed wild Equidag, have given more than such slight re- ferences, that whether they indicate species of the horse or of the asinine group, whether the Koulan is the Ghoor Khur, the Asinus silvestris, the Ha- mar, or the Djiggetai, remains absolutely uncertain. Mr. Pennant describes from Pallas an animal under the name of Dshikketai, wild mule, and Equus he- mionus, and gives the figure of the Petersburgh Transactions, xix. 394, tab. 7> with a cross bar on the shoulder, which we consider was drawn from the Koulan. Shaw takes no notice of the Koulan ; yet 308 THE ONAGER. the Dictionnaire des Sciences Naturelles makes that animal identical with the wild ass, but then there is a species or race of wild asses of Persia without the cross on the shoulder of the males, and therefore wanting in the females : thus there would appear to bo no distinction between the two, hut that one is deficient in two of the usual number of teeth in EquidaB, and has a neighing voice, while the other invariably brays and has the same dentition as the ass : that the former seeks the plains and the latter the mountains. Thus the Djiggetai, Hemionus, Mu- lus Dauricus, Cappadocius, Kitscharah, and D'Jhen- gli-Kitscharah appears to be that species which is without a cross on the shoulder, or at least is but imperfectly marked with one and is provided with an evanescent spinal streak usually bordered by a white line; while the other is the wild ass or Kou- lan of the Kirguise, Bucharians, Kalmucks, and Northern Persians, the Ghoor-Khur of Afghaunis- tan and the banks of the Indus, and partially the Kuhr or Ghur of Western Persia, where it is con- founded with the Hamar or Ahmar, Djaar of tin Arabs and Mograbins, and Daja-Ischake of tht Turks : it is the Baja Mural of the Tahtars, wa* certainly known to the ancients by the name ol Oaygos, Onagrus, and was sometimes confoundec with the Hippagrus or Equiferus. We have there- fore restored to the species the name of Asinus onager. The Koulan is about twelve and a half hands high at the shoulder and thirteen and a half at the THE ONAGER. 309 croup ; the length from nose to tail exceeds seven feet; the head is large, the forehead arched, the nose sloping down to the lips and thick ; the ears pointed, nearly ten inches long, very erect, and moveable; the eyes small; the neck slender, fur- nished with an upright mane, and the tail, like that of the domestic animal, is two feet and a half long ; the body is comparatively small in girth, with the ridge of the back sharp, the thighs cat-hammed, and the limbs fine, with narrow hoofs, hard on the edges, and hollow in the sole ; the mane, line along the spine, cross on the shoulder, and tuft at the end of the tail dusky and dark brown: the general colour of the fur is a silvery grey, passing to white on the belly and limbs ; but the head, neck, shoul- der, flank, and haunches are pale Isabella or flax- colour: there are callosities on the inside of the arms; the cross bar is sometimes double on the shoulder, and commonly is wanting in the females, who are always smaller and more slightly made. The species inhabits the dry mountainous parts of Great Tahtary up to the forty-eighth degree of north latitude, but only in summer returning south- ward with the change of season, whole herds being seen in motion as far as the deserts of the Lower Indus, but spreading chiefly in the eastern provinces of Persia,* where their venison is highly prized, and * Migration from Tahtary to India and Persia is scarcely possible: there are no passes from Thibet across the Hima- layas; that which the Indus offers, if frequented by these animals, would long since have led the nations around to way- 310 THE ONAGER. the chase of them, from the time of Rustum to the present, has always been held the pastime of heroes and princes. It was in hunting the Gour or Guhr that Baharam Y. perished, and Olearius still speaks of a number of them being slain in his presence by the Shah and his court. The manners of this species are very similar to those of the wild horse and Djiggetai, like them forming herds under the guidance of a leader, and with similar distrust watching and escaping from the presence of danger; but the curiosity of the males is greater, for in their flight they stop and look round, resuming their speed to stop and look again ; perhaps, indeed, from want of wind to con- tinue a protracted pace without interruption. They are mountain animals, invariably seeking refuge among precipices, which they ascend with ease, looking down upon the pursuers when they have reached the summit and believe in their security. The Ghoor-Khur of Ladakh, according to Moor- croft, is white about the nose and under the neck, the belly, and legs ; the back is light bay, and the mane dun : they herd in droves, fly at a trot, stop, look back, and then fly off with wonderful speed and wildness, being never taken alive. The same lay them in their passage: over Hindukoh they could not come ; further west the Jaxartes and Oxus intervene, and the asinine group are not swimmers: the migration is probably only a few hundred miles either way, about Tomsk, and simi- larly on the south of the great chains down the Indus. The species or races of Africa and Western Asia do not migrate, excepting in following the herbage. THE ONAGER. 311 animal is common in Khoten and in the country of the Kalmucks ; everywhere observed to have the females numerous in proportion to the males, who are accused of that species of hostility, already mentioned, which destroys or greatly reduces their numbers. This species is noticed in the boot, of Job, and described with the same manners it still retains in Cutch, where Bishop Heber found it the size of a galloway, beautiful and admirably formed for fleetness and power, apparently very fond of horses, and by no means disliked by them, in which respect the asses of India differ from all others of which he had heard : the same fact had been told him of the wild ass of Rajpootana. " No attempt has been made to break the wild ass in for riding, nor did it appear that the natives ever thought of such." In another place this learned and excellent man remarks that the Cutch species has the cross stripe on the shoulder and differs in colours and heavier proportions from the wild ass of Kerr Porter, and suspects that it may not be the ass but the Onager (Hemionus) or wild mule, " a name which I have also seen written Angra/' These doubts of the Bishop's are certainly legitimate, as we also entertain them respecting some of the above men- tioned Ghoor-Khurs. The Ahmar or wild ass stock of Northern Africa, and probably the Djaar of Arabia, the theme of glowing imagery in the inspired language of the He- brew prophets, the object of curiosity in the Roman shows of wild beasts, whose colts under the name of 312 THE ONAGER. Lalisiones were extolled as delicious food for the tables of epicures, appears to be tbe same species, slightly differing in colour. * The species is said to have once been found in the Canary Islands ; it is mentioned by Leo and Marmol, occurs on the Nile, above the cataracts, and is abundant in the upland plains, between the table hills below Gous Regein and the Bahar-el-Abiad in Atbara.'r It is most likely that which we find figured among the paint- ings of ancient Egypt in the yoke of a chariot, and we have already represented ; agreeing in all respects excepting the ears, which may have been cropped at the time that its sexual character was likewise annihilated. "We have seen a pair of these animals brought from Cairo ; they were equal in size to an ordinary mule, neatly if not elegantly formed, white in colour, but silvery grey on the ridge of the back and nose, with the forehead, neck, and sides of a beautiful pale ash with a tinge of purple, the mane, tail, and cruciform streak black. Both the stocks of Eastern Asia and of Africa were confounded by the Romans, and generally by them named Onager : of one or both Yarro remarked that they were easily tamed, and the domestic ass * Pliny says those of Africa were esteemed the best for the table : — " Cum tener est Onager, solaque Lalisio matre Pascitur : hoc infans, sed breve nomen habet." MART. xiii. 97. *t* See Voyage on the Bahar-el-Abiad by Adolphe Linant, and Hoskins^s Travels in Ethiop:a. THE ONAGER. 313 never became wild again : Pliny states that the domestic breeds were always improved by cross- ing with wild animals. It is unquestionably from these also that the fine race of Egypt and Arabia is derived, for there is here again a suspicion that the low smaller domestic breeds of Asia are not of the same origin, but derived from The Hymar, or Hamar (Plate XIX.), probably the real Chamor of the Hebrews, and was first figured by Sir R. Kerr Porter. It is justly re- marked by Bishop Heber, that this animal differs from the great wild ass, Ghoor-Khur, or Djiggetai, being smaller, with proportionably a large ugly head, no streak or cross on the shoulders, and having a dirty bay livery ; it appears to be more solitary than the fojmer. The habits of stopping may be chiefly applicable to this animal, when pursued on the open plains of Mesopotamia and the provinces bordering the two rivers. It is no doubt the animal Xenophon particularly mentions to have been seen by him, like the Zebras of the south, in company with ostriches, when he traversed the same region. Though con- founded at present, it is probably one of the several designated in the Scriptures. * From this stock the small little valued domestic asses of Ispahan, per- * The Emperor Philip, after his campaigns in Mesopotamia and Armenia, exhibited only twenty Onagri in the shows of Rome, which, had the gregarious kind been within his reach, he would scarcely have deemed sufficient ; for being by birth an Arabian, he had every inducement to procure them. See Pomp. Laetus, 1. i. 314 THE DOMESTIC ASS. haps even as far as Beloochistan in India, may be chiefly derived ; though not unmixed, for towards the east, the cross on the shoulders is most frequently wanting. Whether the foregoing be of one original species or of several, certain it is, that both the African and Persian may be traced in the domesti- cated species, and that a small insignificant animal, as compared with the present Arabian ass, is already found figured among the earlier pictures of ancient Egypt.* THE DOMESTIC ASS.f A sinus domesticus. IT may be questioned whether both the wild ass and the Hemionus have not contributed towards the formation of the domestic breeds. Aristotle and Pliny assert the advantage of crossing the tame animal with the wild, and neither seem to have been aware that there were two species in their time still wandering free in Syria; indeed, Sir R. Kerr Porter's wild ass may be a deteriorated race of Hemionus, and have partly furnished the ru- fous small breeds, and the African the large bluish. The domestic ass, if not of this parentage, is then a mixed breed between the African and Persian, * At Beni- Hassan. + Borel^ Arabic ; Bourique, French ; Tasandunt of tho Shelluhs ; Pico in ancient Egypt. THE DOMESTIC ASS. 315 chiefly derived from the first mentioned, the marks on the shoulders and the common bluish ashy fur being taken as indications of the inference. All the races of the species are most distinguished by their profound degradation, heavy dull aspect, thick, slouching, long ears, and stiif walk. They are patient and laborious, slow and obstinate ; mankind thinking every where that no care or kindness is due to them in return for services ; no wonder they are both slow and vicious. It is a mistake to be- lieve in their unlimited resignation to indignity; when offended, they give warning by drawing back the lips and showing the teeth ; an insult is repelled by a kick, but a more grievous injury by biting ; and when roused by danger, asses will fight with skill and obstinacy. In distress they bray with an accent of despair; and we have personally wit- nessed, on an occasion of grievous torment inflicted upon one by inhuman schoolboys, the animal, after proclaiming his sufferings, attack and route his enemies with the energy of a lion. Though the species is libidinous, it is also sober, and of such strength, that no domestic animal, in proportion to its bulk, can carry a greater weight, or continue to labour longer without sustenance. The ass is em- phatically the poor man's horse in every country ; and if care were taken of the breed, and well se- lected animals imported from Arabia, perhaps from the province of Oman, or of those of the white breed of Zobeir near Bussorah, there is no doubt that in the sandy districts of Northern Australia, a very 316 THE DOMESTIC ASS. useful and handsome race might be reared, valu- able to the poorer settler, and instrumental in work- ing out the civilization of the natives. * It is singular that the wild ass of Tahtary should be able to resist a temperature of climate in winter more severe than that of Norway, where the do- mestic is with difficulty maintained ; and if they be the same species, that the African should be dif- ferent in manners, still more handsome in form, be the parent of the best domestic breeds, and deterio- rate gradually towards the east, till it ceases to be found even domesticated beyond the Bramaputra. Egypt, Barbary, then Spain, the south of France, and part of Italy, produce, with the exception of Arabia, the finest asses ; but in the last mentioned region there is the Zobeir Albino breed, apparently as ancient as the times of the kings of Judah, and still in equal request : it was the vehicle of princes in antiquity, and even now is reserved for the grave personages of Islam law and priesthood. If the Romans were not the importers of the first asses in Britain, it was most likely effected by the monks before they adopted the luxuries of feudal proprietors ; hence they are noticed in the time of King Ethelred, as quoted by Pennant ; t but they cannot have been naturalized, since, in the reign of Queen Elizabeth, if Holinshed may be credited, * A choice breed of asses, and of Arabian camels, appears to be an object well worthy the attention of the local govern- ments of Australia and New Zealand. f British Zoology, article Ass. THE DJIGGETAI. 317 tbere were none in England ; now, however, they are common in every part of the kingdom. Lin- naeus and Gmelin erroneously believed that the males alone were decussated, and Aldrovandus is mistaken when he asserts that the females do not bray. A more detailed description of this animal we think superfluous, and therefore proceed to men- tion the last species of the present group. THE DJIGGETAI. A sinus hemionus.* PLATE XX. THE Mongolese name of this animal, very variously spelt by European writers, signifies the eared^ be- cause, like the wild ass, it is provided with longer ears than the horse. In size the animal is little in- ferior to the wild horse, in general shape resembling a mule, in gracefulness of action a horse, and in the mixed colours of its livery and difference of fur in the cold and warm seasons so like the wild Kiang or spotted horse, that both -are confounded in some descriptions, and in others a similar confusion exists between it and the wild ass, as already observed in our notice of the Koulan. If the account we be- lieve derived from Pallas can be relied on, the Djiggetai wants two teeth, but we do not find in what place of either jaw. The head is long, flat in * Astabis or Hemippus of the ancients. 318 THE DJIGGETAI. front, narrow, the nostrils placed low down the muzzle, the neck slender, shoulder rather vertical, the withers higher than in the ass, the body and haunches like a mule's, the tail asinine, and the ears very erect : the fore-top, like in the Equus liippagrus, forms a tuft of downy hair ; the mane is erect, short, and dark ; from thence a line of similar colour ex- tends along the spine to the terminal tuft of the tail, and it is asserted to have occasionally an eva- nescent cross streak on the shoulder ; the fur of the coat, in winter rather long and hoary, is in summer smooth, with a variety of featherings or whorls in the direction of the hair ; silvery on the nose, and light Isabella, varying to bright bay, on the head, neck, flanks, and thighs, covering more surface in southern specimens than in those of the north, where silvery grey and white run along the ridge of the back and occupy^the belly, passing up the flank, behind the arm, and under the throat, while the same colour edges the quarters : the legs are white, with the usual callosities on the inner arms, and the hoofs asinine. The species extends to the north into Southern Siberia, spreads over the deserts of Gobi, frequents the salt marshes of Tahtary, is abundant in Thibet, in the Himalayas, and is not unknown in India, unless there is again a confusion between this and the Asinus equuleus. From the testimonies of Hero- dotus, it appears that his Hemionus, which we think is justly taken to be identical with the Djiggetai, was found at that time in Syria ; and Theophrastus, THE DJIGGETAI. 319 in Pliny, likewise assigns Cappadocia as its dwell- ing : we hear it is still abundant in Turkistan be • yond the Oxus, and all describe it as prodigiously fleet and cautious, yet possessed of the same curio- sity which decoys the wild ass. They live in small herds, or large families of females and young ani- mals, headed by a male. They neigh with a deeper and a louder voice than a horse, and are much hunted by the Mongoles and Tunguse for their flesh. The assertion of Pallas, and the common opinion concerning their indomitable nature, is founded in error; such a conclusion is in fact an assumption that all animals have been created on invariable conditions of existence, and that all their actions are simple results of a mechanical instinct, according with their organic structure and therefore without the exercise of any degree of intelligence ; for, as Frederick Cuvier justly observes, to what purpose would intelligence exist in beings who did not pos- sess faculties for distinguishing circumstances favour- able or hurtful to their existence? To a certain extent such beings do not exist among mammifera3 ; to find them, we must descend much lower in the scale of animal life : it is certainly not the case with the rhinoceros, the tiger, or the hya3na; nor is it applicable to the Hemionus, for the accounts of this animal serving in a domesticated state, as already mentioned in Isaiah and Herodotus, is con- firmed by the late M. Duvaucel, whose figure, here reproduced, is of a male individual, which it appears 320 THE HIPPOTIGRINE GROUP. was one of a breed he saw domesticated and la- bouring along with asses at Lucknow. * It differs o o from the fine specimen in the Zoological Gardens, in having the nose black and the proportions fuller, or such as domestication would render them. Horse. Ass. Dauw. Zebra. THE HIPPOTIGRINE GROUP, OR ZEBRAS. WE are now arrived at the third form .of Equidse, one completely separated from all the others by being geographically confined to South Africa, ex- tending little beyond the equator. Owing to this circumstance none of the species were known to the ancients, excepting, it appears, in one instance, where Xiphilinus, in his abridgment of Dion Cas- * Pharnaces, Satrap of Phrygia, brought nine of them to his government, whereof three were living in the time of Pharna- basus his son. — Aristotle. — Which shows that they were no longer wild in "Western Asia in the era of Alexander, though the ostrich still roamed in Mesopotamia. Aristotle seems to overlook his former assertion, or to confound two species. THE HIPPOTIGRINE GROUP. 321 sius, lib. Ixvii., relates that Caracalla caused to bfe exhibited in the circus, an elephant, a rhinoceros, a tiger, and a hippotigris. This circumstance ap- pears to us another indication of what we have shown in the history of Canidae ; we mean a certain and gradual diffusion of species over parts of the world where previously they did not exist, for the Romans, though possessed of less influence in Equa- torial Africa than the Egyptians during the ages when Meroe flourished, nevertheless obtained a spe- cimen of the Zebra, while no such animal appears painted in any known monument of earlier date in the valley of the Nile that has yet been discovered. The indication of Hippotigris is so apposite, that almost all travellers have made a similar comparison on observing any one of this group of animals, and on this account we have thought it the most befitting appellation for the group collectively taken. If the ancients were silent concerning the striped species, no wonder that the moderns were not better informed until the Portuguese established themselves on the coast of Congo and Angola ; here they encountered the Zebra, which seems to be the Negro mutation of the Abyssinian Zeuru of Lobo and the Galla Zeora, or Zecora, according to Ludolphus ; neither, how- ever, of these indicated species is the Zebra of the moderns, for the earliest descriptions, such as that of Pigafetta, applies to a Dauw, or a species with alternate stripes of black and brown upon a lighter general surface, which we shall describe more parti- cularly 322 THE HIPPOTIGRINE GROUP. There exist several engravings of striped Equidae in the older writers, Jonston, De Bry, Kolben, &c. : of these the uppermost in plate v. of Jonston alone is not drawn from fancy; it represents, like the others, a Dauw, but clearly from a skin : Kolben's, though absolutely worthless, is meant for that of the Cape Zebra. All might have been better known and figured at that time, since several authors had noticed the Galla and Congo Dauw ; one had actu- ally been sent from Cairo to the king of Naples, and Tillesius, Thievenot, and others assert that they had seen domesticated individuals. This group, in general, has the head of inter- mediate length between the Equine and Asinine ; the neck naturally fuller, more arched; the mane vertical, forming a standing crest : there is more girth, muscle, and compactness than in the fore- going ; the lower jaw more curved ; the ears wider, though lanceolated ; the shoulder more oblique, and the withers more elevated than in asses ; the hoofs higher, and as in the horse they are round and flat, in the ass oval and hollow, so in the species of Hip- potigris they are oval at the toe and square at the heel, by the spreading of the frog; which causes the limb to stand more vertically upon the pastern : the tail is always, but especially in youth, more se- taceous than in asses, and less than in horses. They are all partially or entirely marked with symmetri- cal stripes of black and white, or with fulvous intermediate passing downwards across the body and neck : all have the limbs white, with callosities THE HIPPOTIGRINE GROUP. 323 on the inner surface of the upper arm : they have sonorous but varied voices ; their dentition is Equine, but in one species it is said that there is some ano- maly in the mammae of the female. They see re- markably well both by day and by night, surpass the Equidae of the northern hemisphere in natural courage, are their equals in speed, and the species that are least adorned with stripes appear above the rest, and, next to true horses, formed for the use of man. They can be all tamed and ridden; their vicious disposition, though an impediment, being placable under judicious treatment; and there is little doubt that, in a few generations of domestica- tion, most, if not all, might be rendered serviceable, particularly in South Africa, where they find their coarse but natural food, and are exempt from the distempers which are there often so fatal to our present breeds. They are gregarious, but do not keep together in such numbers as the horses and asses of the northern hemisphere ; nor does it appear that they are under the guidance of a stallion leader, who exercises au- thority, and exposes himself in defence of the herd. Some prefer mountain localities, others the upland plains, and each species seems to affect the more exclusive society of some particular ruminants. The species amount at least to three, with others not as yet sufficiently examined to be permanently ad- mitted, but whether distinct or mere varieties the location of all in juxta-position, with at best the separation of a river or of a different mountain or 324 THE ZEBRA. plain, not rigidly maintained, offers a similar pic- ture of osculating forms as were pointed out in the earliest distribution of true horses; and if it he a question yet to he solved, whether most of these would not under the care of man similarly commix, and in time produce races more perfect than any of the wild, still the probabilities seem to be en- tirely on the affirmative side. THE ZEBRA. Hippotigris zebra. PLATE XXI. THE name of this animal is properly a result of the mistake made by the earlier travellers, who, finding at the Cape a striped Equine, concluded that it was of the same species with that already known by the equatorial term of Zebra. Mr. Burchell first pointed out the difference between the two, and proposed the restoration of the original name to the Congo animal, and to describe that of the Cape under the appellation of Equm montanus, because the species is properly an inhabitant of mountain districts. Naturalists, however, seem to have preferred be- stowing Mr. Burchell's own name on the species he had so clearly pointed out, and left the Zebra's attached to the animal, such as it had been fixed by LinnaBus. This decision may be so far fortunate, as we think it doubtful whether the Burehellian Dauw is really the same as the Congo species. THE ZEBRA. 325 Of all the banded Equidae, the Cape Zebra has the greatest external resemblance of form to the Hemionus, though the head is shorter and the neck fuller. In order to avoid confusion, it may be ne- cessary to point out the differences between the South African banded species somewhat more in detail than was necessary in the description of the horse and asinine groups. The Zebra, wilde paard and wilden esel of the Cape colonists, is about twelve hands high at the shoulder, and above double in extreme length. In shape the animal is light, symmetrical, the limbs slender, and hoof narrow, though rounded forward ; the head is light, the ears rather long, and much more open than in the ass ; the neck full, with the skin under the throat lax ; the tail asinine, about sixteen inches long, with a tuft of hair at the tip ; the ground colour of the coat is white, sometimes slightly tinged with yellow ; and what distinguishes the species from all others is, that, leaving only the belly and inside of the thighs and upper arms par- tially unpainted, it is cross-barred with black over the head, neck, body, and limbs to the hoofs, having regular distinct nearly undivided bands in the male, and in the female similar bands of a less intense, or rather brownish colour ; the region around the nos- trils is bay, darkening to black towards the mouth ; over the head there are numerous equidistant nar- row streaks running down the chaffron to the orbits, around them,- and again others forming curves on the cheeks ; from the ridge of the neck downwards 326 THE ZEBRA. there are almost always eight or nine bands, exclu- sive of two passing down the shoulder, opening below, where several others in the form of chevrons are interposed till they gradually become rings down to the hoofs ; on the sides there are six or seven descending to the edge of the belly, and crossing a streak from the mane along the spine, dichotomising above, and those on the flank running four or five into one as they descend ; on the croup, down to the tuft of the tail, are short cross bars; on the thigh there are four very broad cross bands, fol- lowed by others down the hocks and hind-legs; from the breast along the belly there is a single black streak ; the tips of the ears are black, with four or five smaller streaks beneath them ; and the mane, erect and bushy, is alternately banded black and white : to these characters Captain Harris adds " a bare spot a little above the knee in all four of the legs." The female has two inguinal mammae. The species is gregarious in mountainous regions, from the territory of the Cape eastward to beyond Mozambique, perhaps as far as the southern moun- tains of Abyssinia. Although vicious and fierce, the animal may be tamed, as was fully proved by the female that was long kept in the menagerie of Paris, which was ex- ceedingly gentle, and could be ridden with safety. 327 THE CONGO DAUW, OR ZEBRA OF PIGAFETTA. Hippotigris aniiquorum, Nobis. PLATE XXII. ALTHOUGH the animal we place under this name may be only a variety of the Cape Dauw, there are so many instances of pretended varieties becoming admitted species, that we think it preferable to separate the two ; the present species, even allowing for certain individual variations, differs from the other in being, like the Zebra, white with only a tinge of yellow : the ears are more open, with two black bars and white tips ; the mouth and nostrils black ; and the stripes, extending downwards to the knees and hocks, and even to the pastern joints, are fewer than in the Zebra of the Cape, more irregular, scattered, dichotomous, than in the Cape Dauw, and disposed in spots, with the slender brown in- termediate streaks often interrupted ; the tail is equine and white, frequently tinged with rufous or black at the end. In stature and form it is the most elegant of the whole group, and if the female had four mammae, as is affirmed to be the case in the Cape Dauw, we think the fact would not have escaped the notice of Dr. Smith when he secured the unborn foal, which we think belongs to the pre- sent species. If this be the case, the Congo Dauw extends from the Gareep along the west side of 328 THE CONGO DAUW. Africa to the Zezeere in Nigritia, for the description of Pigafetta is only applicable in every part to the animal we have here figured, and comparing it with the first Zebra, plate v. in Jonston, the identity will likewise immediately appear. It is likely to spread also from Congo eastwaxd to the Galla country, because we learn that there a species striped black and brown upon a white ground is likewise denominated Zcora, Zecont, and Zecuru, all mere mutations of the Negro Zebra. The Abyssinian and Galla chiefs adorn the necks of their horses with a wreath made of the mane of these animals, secured near the throat-band of the bridle ; one of these we have examined, and recog- nised the three colours, white, brown and black, which formed the bars. It may be this species, and not the Cape Zebra, which Mr. Hoskins, from tlae description of the Arabs, conjectures to exist in the desert of Ethiopia above the fifth cataract of the Nile, that is, in about the 18th degree north. The Congo species abounds particularly in the province of Bamba, and when first encountered by Europeans, was so little alarmed at the report ol fire-arms, that Battel relates his shooting several, while others stood by without endeavouring to escape. * Near the Gareep river they seem to be mixed with what we consider the Cape Dauw or * Purchase's Pilgrims, book 6, chap. i. sect. 2, p. 706, folio. London, 1617. ^ 2^ %N^ ' I:N ITY C4ilFOW^ THE DAUW. Hippotigns Burclielli. PLATE XXIII. MARE AND FOAL. Bontequagga of the Cape colonists. — Peechy of the Becluiarui and Matalibi. NOTWITHSTANDING that the merit of first noticing this species is due to the enterprising and scientific traveller whose name it bears, we doubt his ap- proving the practice of bestowing proper names on species in honour of persons, so long as more appro- priate may be selected, and believe he would him- self have preferred another, such as H. campestris, by which it is designated in our own series. The Dauw, like the former animal, is about thirteen hands and a half at the shoulder; the body is round, the legs robust, crest arched, black, and surmounted by a standing mane, five inches nigh, banded black and white; the ears smaller than in the former, less open, with only one black bar and white tip ; tail tufted to near the root, or semi-equine, white, and about thirty-six inches long ; region round the nostrils and mouth blackish ; head, neck, body, and croup light bay ; below and limbs white ; numerous black streaks forming ovals on the face, broader in chevrons of the same on the side of jaws, and vertical still wider down the neck, 330 THE QUAGGA. shoulders, body, and obliquely over the croup, they dichotomise and divide, but not so irregularly, nor descend so low as in the Congo species ; on the spine there is a black streak edged with white where the cross bars end, though in the former they pass on until they touch the ridge line; between the black there are regular brown lines relieving the pale bay. According to Captain Harris, the female has an udder of four mammas ; the hoofs of both species are black. The foal is marked like the parents, and differs from the adults only by its juvenile form. The Dauw inhabits the plains of South Africa north of the river Gareep in numerous herds, where they mix and accompany those of the ko-koon or Cato- llepas gorgon. Notwithstanding what is reported of the fleetness of these animals, it appears that they can be overtaken, and are actually speared by hunters when they are well mounted. THE QUAGGA OF THE CAPE COLONISTS. Hippotigris quacha. PLATE XXIV. THIS species, equal or superior in size to the former, is still more robust in structure, with more girth, wider across the hips, more like a true horse, the hoofs considerably broader than in the zebra, and the neck full, the ears rather small, twice barred THE QUAGGA. 331 with black, the head somewhat heavy, and the muzzle black ; the head, neck, and body are reddish brown ; the mane, edges of the dorsal streak, and the tail, as well as the colour of the under parts and limbs white, like the dauw; head and neck banded likewise in the same manner, but on the shoulder the bars become pale and on the side gradually indistinct, till they are totally lost on the croup, and there are no intermediate brown bands. The name of this species is derived from its voice, which is a kind of cry somewhat resem- bling the sounds qua-cha! It is unquestionably best calculated for domestication, both as regards strength and docility. The late Mr. Sheriff Parkins used to drive a pair of them in his phaeton about London, and we have ourselves been drawn by one in a gig, the animal showing as much temper and delicacy of mouth as any domestic horse. Quaggas are still found within the boundaries of the Cape of Good Hope, but on the open plains, south of the Vaal river, they occur in immense herds, associating with the gnu, Catoblepas gnu. It is this species that is reputed to be the boldest of all Equine animals, attacking hyaena and wild dog without hesitation, and therefore not unfrequently domesticated by the Dutch boors for the purpose of protecting their horses at night while both are turned out to grass. 332 THE ISABELLA QUAGGA. Hippotiyris isabeilinus. PLATE XXV. WE separated this animal from the foregoing, be- cause with characters most nearly allied to the last, such as the equine head, ears, body, croup, tail, and even shoulders, it still differs in size from all, being scarcely ten hands high, and still more in the colours and forms of the cross bands upon its livery. The specimen is in the British Museum, and our drawing of it was taken when it had been recently set up ; it struck us then as representing the zebre. or Ane isabelle of Le Vaillant, and found afterwards that Mr. Temminck, on seeing it, made the same observation.* At that time there was, however, an opinion that it was the skin of a colt whose dark streaks were not as yet apparent; but as we now * Monsieur Le Vaillant was a travelling naturalist in the employ of Mr. Temminck 's father, who held a high official situation in the Dutch East Incka Company's government at home. From the context of what Le Vaillant says about thi» animal, it is clear that he saw, but did not possess it. Buffon's figure of the young Quacha is copied from Allemand, of which we have seen an original drawing with black streaks, and there- fore is not like the Isabella. For these reasons we cannot assent to the opinion of Mr. Gray, nor agree with the writer of the article Horse in the Penny Cyclopaedia, vol. xii. p. 313. THE ISABELLA QUAGGA. 333 know that even in the foetus the black marks are very distinctly visible, the objection is not valid, and there are besides other indications which prove the skin to have belonged to an adult.* We there- fore shall describe the specimen under the above name, in order to attract the attention of natu- ralists, and leave to future information the final determination of its locality as a species or acci- dental variety. The Isabella Quagga is, as before remarked, much below the stature of the others, and in a stuffed form proportionally longer ; the specimen is a male, and, compared with the quagga, has a different coloured nose, ears, and mane, — all being white ; the general tone of the head, neck, body, and croup is yellowish buff, with brownish streaks on the face and cheeks, but more undefined, and not extending the usual length ; on the neck, shoulder, body, and croup there is a series of bands more numerous than in the dauw, some few are branched, but in- stead of a dark colour, while the specimen was recent, they were all pure white, and those on the croup particularly numerous and interwoven ,* the belly and limbs are white, but, as if to prove that these marks were not the result of albinism, the anterior pasterns and rings above the hoofs of the posterior feet were sooty black and the hoofs dark. These marks do not occur in any known species. * In the whole group there is a greater tendency to lose tho marks with age than to increase them. When we la«k saw tho specimen, the original colour was ny.vch changed. 334 THE MULES. The late Dr. Leach believed the skin to have come from the Gape, and it appeared that in his opinion the white markings were owing to nonage "We think it exceedingly probable that Le Vaillant had a sight of a similar animal and gave the above notice of it from its diminutive size, and, at a small distance, the seeming uniformity of its livery. THE MULES. As the space we have remaining is insufficient to enter at full length into the physiological views which offer themselves in the consideration of hybrid propagation, we must be content with a more abstracted notice, and endeavour to present to the reader some general notions of the progress made in this department of research since Buffon wrote his article on the mule, and Frederick Cuvier published remarks on the same subject in the " Me- nagerie du Mnsee d'Histoire Naturelle." Although naturalists establish, upon the myste- rious action of the reproduction of species and its accompanying phenomena, some most important maxims of the zoological science, and in particular point out the law which asserts the identity of species where consimilar individuals follow each ather in succession through a series of generations ; yet, when they draw conclusions from known ob- servations in order to generalise them over others, THE MULES. 335 where all the conditions of the problem are not proved to be similar, they exceed the proper limit* of inference, as we have already shown in the Natu- ral History of Dogs, and endeavoured again to point out in the foregoing pages. The laws affecting organic matter are modified by the Power that ordained them, and subjected to a multitude of exceptions, warning us at every moment to be cau- tions in the assignment of their bounds. Formerly, because science would not recognize the evidence of these modifications, it was endeavoured to escape from acknowledging the value of truth, by asserting that bats were birds and cetacea fishes, because they were not quadrupeds ; and when the objection was destroyed by adopting as a general term the word mammalia, many, habituated to received doctrines, maintained them to be at best on the utmost verge of possible adaptations of that class of beings ; but with a more intimate knowledge of American ani- mals, and still more after the discovery of the Marsupialia of New Holland, new phenomena in gestation and reproduction came to light. In the case of Opossums, they had often been denied or overlooked, and were held impossibilities, until sys- tematic research overthrew all doubt and transferred incredulity to the as yet unsettled questions relating to the Monotremes, whose wonderful history is con- spicuous in the Ornithorynchus or water-mole. Now, all these questions were and are accessible to direct proof by anatomical investigation; and if thf-y were so long contested more than examined, 336 THE MUfcES we must not expect assent t&. be readily granted to others not amenable to similar demonstration. Where we have as yet only a very small stock of experiments to guide us, where a multiplicity of distant and minor considerations must be weighed against each other, conclusions that appeared legiti- mate become questionable , and though the human mind often continues to uphold them with more tenacity than judgment, they are defended with less and less ardour, and finally are surrendered Hke all other unprofitable prejudices. We migv-; go on to show how little we are acquainted with the resources of Nature in the history of insects, in the laws affecting the life of those low orders of ex- istence which pass into vegetable and stony forms ; we might ask what is known of the microscopic and ephemeral beings which spring into vitality and perish within the few hours of a solar day, and are not again reproduced until a space of time is elapsed indefinite or exceeding three hundred fold the dura- tion of the appointed limits of animation ; we might point to surmised animals and their germs reposing in the depths of earth, slumbering perhaps in a night of ages, to be called at some future moment into their day of active being ! Finally, whon we every- where observe organic remains in evidence of an infinity of lost animal forms, of destroyed families and genera and species that once were quickened by the irritabilities of life, once fulfilled a design and accomplished the tasks assigned them, we surely, while the plastic power is nndeiiiable in uU THE MULES. 33/ its modifications, may with propriety refrain from denying the probability of those other flexibilities in the laws of propagation which we have here advo- cated, although the evidence as yet remains in some cases presumptive, and we only descry the workings of Almighty Beneficence darkly. With the limited knowledge we as yet possess, we are not justified assuming as law, without strik- ing exceptions, that sterility is a necessary result of the commixture of different species, and fertile off- spring an unerring proof of their identity. Frederick Cuvier, notwithstanding an evident disinclination to depart in opinion from the conclusions of the great and eloquent Buffon, is obliged to qualify his assent, and points out himself the disregard of his own con- clusions and the unsatisfactory state of opinion that noble writer and his followers are driven to when they attempt rigorously to uphold them. " In this science (zoology), as in all those depend- ing upon observation, the generalisation of facts," says F. Cuvier, * " is the surest guide to truth ; but the inductions to be drawn, in order to escape false conclusions, must rest upon facts strictly amenable to comparison. Nothing appears more natural, from an observation of the phenomena of the succession of individuals in an ascending or a descending line being similar to each other, than that they are of the same species; and this consideration, coupled * Frederick Cuvier's great work, Lithographed Mammals of the Menagerie of Paris. Folio, coloured. Articles Zebra and Mule. 333 THE MULES. with a certain repugnance which many animals manifest towards others very similar to themselves, induced Buffon to draw the above mentioned con- clusion. But he soon after could not help perceiv- ing, that we can only pursue our inquiries with certainty among a few domesticated species, some of them expatriated, or under various conditions of restraint, and that with all the others we depend entirely upon inference." He discovered that there were species, admitted to be distinct, which never- theless produced fertile offspring : this was the case in his later experiments with wolves and dogs, with goats and sheep, and he was not then aware that all these names include more than one species, which there is every reason to believe can mix and pro- duce fertile descendants, since several are already known to possess the faculty. It was in endea- vours to account for these exceptions that Buffon was driven to arbitrary restrictions and extensions of his rule ; and had he given due consideration to the fact, first published by himself, of the different number of mammae in different dogs, and known that the vertebrae of the back, the sacrum, and tail vary exceedingly in hogs, said by those who main- tain the rigorous maxim before quoted to be of the same species, he would most unquestionably have framed his view of the law with more circumspec- tion. As a general proposition, we do not mean to dis- pute that it is still the best and most trustworthy method for distinguishing species ; only the inferences THE MULES. 339 demand not to be made more absolute than is necessary, and should be limited in the application, to the true phenomena of each case, for these vary exceedingly upon the slightest discrepancies between osculating or nearly osculating animals, some hy- brids being sterile, others reproductive, though with an apparent decreasing power of fertility, and some where there is no observable check in progenitive- ness, or where it is soon obliterated. Such we conceive to be the true horses here described, the two species of camel, the goat and sheep, and most if not all the species of both ; we might add the domestic cats, including the blue or chartreux, ori- ginally belonging to a distinct feline group ; the Bengal cat described by Pennant, of a second, and the tortoiseshell cat, to all appearance sprung from a third group originally indigenous in South America, and still sufficiently aberrant to produce in the do- mestic commixture males with the greatest rarity, though the distinctive character is so strong that the females alone are competent to preserve it. Frederick Cuvier rejects the existence of mules where neither of the parents are domesticated, but we know wild mammalia under restraint are likewise in the pre- dicament as well as several species of birds in a state of liberty, such as Gallinacea and several Meru- lidas and Fringillidae. We question the reserve of all polygamous ruminants and of some pachyder- mata ; all those that expel a proportion of the males from the herd and that can find approximating species. From personal inquiry among those who, 340 THE MULES. like the ancients, reside in the presence of uncon- trouled animal nature, we have found that, like them, though they believe in heterogeneous inter- mixtures known to he untrue, they nevertheless infer them from others which have every appear- ance of reality; thus, we may instance the well authenticated fact of the- American bison, in the frenzy of defeat and expulsion, forcing his way to seek companions among domestic cows, whose do- mesticity in this case is an accident, not a cause : we may point out likewise, in the rut of Indian repudiated Axine bucks producing among the un- speckled Porcine the intermediate well known breed of spotted hog-deer, an instance where both species are wild. " In Natural History," Cuvier remarks, " we judge from the forces acting at present on the law.f of nature, and not from those of a different charac- ter which have ceased to operate, or are no longer within reach of observation." To render this maxim wholly admissible, it would be necessary to sub- stantiate the facts: undoubtedly the period when animals extended their habitation after primitive distribution is in a great measure past, excepting where the intervention of man continues to act ; yet it is not wholly so, nor is it proved that the earlier migrations of mammals were entirely without human intervention. If the feral horse, stretching without his instrumentality towards Tierra del Fuego and to California, is not wholly free from objection, the progress of the Bengal tiger to the reedy shores of THE MULES. 341 Lake Aral is at least believed to be recent and un- aided : nor is the influence of man the only remain- ing agent in the operation of modifications. We believe it at present perceptible in a species of goat known as the wild cegagrus, which is occasionally found in the Alps, the Pyrenees, the Caucasus, and the mountains of Bootan, in all appearing to be a prolific hybrid between the domestic goat, of what- ever origin or country it may be derived, and the local wild capra of the region, whether it be ibex, caucasica, or any other. Besides, if there be not already in South Africa, similarly to what we con- tend occurred in Asia, one or more modifications intermediate between the zebra and quagga, totally independent of the intervention of man, we may at least point out the probabilities of what might be effected by a well ordered system of cross breeding with the same species and their actual osculants, and what might be the results after repeatedly in- fusing the blood of one desirable form to modify and perfect another. There are as yet so few carefully conducted expe- riments of this class, and there is so evident an unwillingness in practical men to encounter new combinations where certain profit is not immedi- ately demonstrable, that the immense latent power of sympathy between the foetus and the mother of the more highly organised domestic animals is, among other subjects, well worthy investigation; since the influence exercised upon what is called natural education is not only acknowledged, but in 342 THE MULES. the reproduction of forms, marks, and colours, the evidence of anterior excitements are demonstrated in the case of the mare whose first foal having been a mule by a stallion quagga, continued after a lapse of five years to reproduce the markings of that ani- mal in three successive births, although the parent of this and the subsequent progeny was a black Arabian, and of course one of homogeneous species with herself: these facts, detailed in letters of the late Earl of Morton, and published in the first part of the Philosophical Transactions of the year 1821, have not yet received all the consideration they de- serve, and they prove that at least some important forces at present acting on the laws of nature are not beyond the sphere of observation. We here subjoin representations of the mare and hey successive off- spring, in Plates XXVL, XXVIL, and XXIX., * which represents the quagga mule, and Plate XIV. the brood mare and her last foal, still marked with the black stripes on the body ; the mare was seven- eighths of Arabian blood, and consequently her progeny by the Arab was nineteen-twentieths tho- rough-bred ; yet not only these hippotigrine marks remained, but the manes also were coarse and stand- ing, though in other respects the young horses were elegant and spirited animals. One more remark on this subject must not however be omitted, inasmuch as it seems to point out the fact of the quaggas * All the figures produced in these plates are reduced copies from the paintings, by Agasse, in Surgeon's College, London. THE MULES. 343 themselves being of remote hybrid descent ; because any disturbing action in the regular filiation of their progeny reproduced indications of a more decided system of variegated painting on the true horses and superadded cross bars on the joints, neither of which occur or are conspicuous in the quagga. Already, in the time of Buffon, the idea of pro- ducing mules from the striped species of Equidee had occurred. Lord Clive, in experiments to effect this purpose, had found it necessary to deceive a female zebra by painting a male ass with hippoti- grine stripes. No such precautions, it appears from Frederick Cuvier's remarks, were subsequently de- manded at the Menagerie du Roi at Paris; here the hybrid result was a powerful slate- coloured animal with but scanty marks of the zebra dam in his livery ; as often occurs in the first descent, when in the second they are much more conspicuous. In a second instance, we do not know, but the sire appears to have been zebra and the dam an ass ; for the structure indicates her form, and the more conspicuous striaa the parental livery. See Plate XXYIII. With regard to the quagga mule, Plate XXIX., we detect in the figure a more powerful animal, but its subsequent history is not known to us. Equine mules, though there are both ancient and modern attestations to the contrary, may be justly regarded as unable to continue their race: the Paris zebra mule likewise evinced an indifference, which, in the course of a long life and ample food, proved a simi- 344 THE MULES. lar state of organic inability ; but it is in forming cross breeds between positively osculating species, such as the South African, particularly the quagga and the two or three dauws, all homogeneous in most respects, that an improved Austral horse may be attainable, one that would be more durable, more serviceable, more easily kept, cheaper, and less liable to disease in the southern hemisphere than any of the races introduced from the north. In hybrids, it is true, deterioration may be at first in some measure expected, but after the second and third generation, with well selected animals of unadulterated blood, Nature recovers from the dis- turbing effects, and assuming characteristics of sta- bility without loss of a great part of the required qualities brought in by the mule hybrid, is again prepared for a further infusion of them by a fresh cross, until the desired point is obtained, and stature, form, colour, or marks are produced equal to the proposed intention in a number of individuals suffi- ciently large to prevent decrease or decay in the progenitive powers. These inferences rest upon the case of the hybrid wolves of Buffon continuing to breed among themselves, though they were under circumstances of restraint, neglected, and insuffi- ciently numerous or aided by recrossings from either side of their parentage ; causes in themselves suffi- cient to produce a gradual sterility. The common mule is the offspring of a male ass and a mare; familiar to every reader. This kind of animal was already abundant in Palestine at the THE MULES. 34 J time of the first kings of Israel, and is frequently mentioned in the Scriptures and in Persian history. In the district of Zobeir, or Old Bussorah, the an- cient habitation of Orchaenian magi, and not far from the west bank of the Lower Euphrates, there is still a race of white asses anciently renowned, as well as the breed of similarly coloured mules, reared with attention, and the most beautiful in form that are known. In antiquity, the sons of kings rode them, and old princes put them in the traces of their chariots. In the time of the caliphs of Bagdad, they sold for eighty or more pieces of gold, according to Abdulatif. They continued to be bought at high prices for the use of Moslem chiefs, of heads of the law, civil and religious. The common grey mule of Egypt and Baibary is a handsome, docile, and in general a large animal, much used by merchants, Jews, and Christian*, who, until very recently, were denied the privilege of riding horses. In Auvergne and the south of France and Spain, partially supplied from beyond the Pyrenees, the race is in general black, large, and robust. It is the fashion to shave their skins in summer, and their tails are often clipped in a suc- cession of tassels like a bell-rope. So late as the reign of Louis XIV. the medical men of Paris still rode mules. In Spain they continue to serve, be- cause they are sure-footed and cautious, in travers- ing mountain precipices and stony roads with a rider or with merchandise upon their backs, and have an easy pace. In Italy the dun-coloured breed 346 THE HINNY. of Volterra is in highest estimation for bulk and good qualities, and therefore it is eagerly bought up to draw the carriages of cardinals and Roman church dignitaries. It is in Italy alone, as before remarked, that we find a mule in complete panoply is mounted by a knight in armour. It is observed of hybrids in general, that males are much more abundant than females, and the fact is equally true in the mules between ass and mare, where the males are in the proportion of two or three to one female : another observation proves that the offspring always partake more of the character of the male parent than of the female ; thus, in the common mule, we perceive the ears to be long, the head, croup, and tail asinine; while in the hinny, or progeny of a stallion and female ass, the head, ears, body, and tail resemble the same organs in a horse ; but the mule in bulk and stature takes after the mare, and the hinny in like manner is low like the she -ass. THE HINNY. PLATE XXX. THIS animal, though rather more docile than the common mule, is of inferior utility, because less hardy and somewhat disproportioned in the bulk of the carcase in comparison with the legs, and there- fore more easily fatigued. Hinnies are now extremely rare in Europe, and even so uncommon in Barbary, that few have seen them, and when they occur arc {•" THE HINNY. 34? a cause of marvel, which the Oriental mode of thinking is sure to embellish. It was no doubt in Africa that the story arose, which was long credited in Europe, and seemed to have influence even upon Buffon, respecting a monstrous breed of hybrids be- tween a bull and female ass, or a male ass and cow : one author asserting that he had himself rode one in Piedmont, and others that they occurred in the valleys of the Pyrenees : the first mentioned variety, it was said, bore the name of Baf or Bof, and the second that of Bif. In France both were supposed to be known by the appellation of Jumar, a word clearly borrowed from one or other of the Arabic dialects, Ahmar or Hymar, already noticed. In Barbary, where this story is still believed, and per- sons assert they have seen individuals of the mon- ster form, we find, if they are all of the kind such as a black specimen already mentioned, that it is simply a hinny ; but the Western Arabs assert that these animals are wild, and produce in proof of it the species of horse we have described before under the name bestowed upon it by them, namely, the Koomrah; which having low withers, a bulky body, and the forehead covered with a woolly fur, has an equivocal appearance, perhaps sufficient to have raised suspicion of a bovine intermixture so early as to be the same animal which Herodotus without a description has denominated Boryes. In concluding this essay on the Natural History of Equidse, we beg to assure the reader, without claiming his implicit assent to the mode of viewing 348 CONCLUSION. we have fearlessly ventured to submit as the result of our convictions, that we arrived at them after researches originally made more amid the wild scenery of Nature than among books, and that we found them ever recurring where the maxims of our present physiology are incompetent to explain the phenomena which offer themselves; they do not claim to be demonstrations, but tentamina to excite attention, and to account for facts which otherwise are inexplicable. In the progress of science, in the accumulation of observation, we daily feel the neces- sity of abandoning dicta and maxims, which, after having been long trusted on authority, are gradually undermined, and finish by being surrendered. Thus, neither the depth of view, nor the elo- quence of Buffon, have been able to maintain many of his conclusions; they have failed to uphold his " Tableaux de la Nature," and his " Degenerations des Animaux" has not fared better. If, in the leading points we have discussed, we should not carry with us the consent of scientific men, the cause may be justly ascribed to our inability more than to the doctrines here advocated ; and in abstruse questions, such as those where systematic nomen- clature and physiology are insufficient, we believe, in order to come at sound probabilities, that we must study also the earth's surface, the phenomena of its revolutions, its geographical history, and, finally, apply an enlightened philological system to the whole. Though every way humble and inadequate to grapple with these desiderata with real strength, CONCLUSION. 349 such means as we possess have been made available, not to repeat a thrice told tale, but to offer views which close investigation into species appears to sanction, so far at least as those mammalia are con- cerned which were destined by Almighty Wisdom to be *}>«* so'acs and serrart 350 SYNOPSIS OF THE EQUIDJE. INCISORS - cuspidate , — r, or in the females of ' on — fi fi some species ^~ ; molars -^-^ = 38 or 40 ; mo- lars furrowed on each side with flat crowns and vermiform ridges of enamel ; void space between the cuspidate and molars ; upper lip very moveable ; eyes large, pupil elongated laterally; ears rather large, erect, very moveable; feet solidung ilar ; tail setose, or with a tuft at the end ; mammaa two, ingui- nal; stomach simple, membranaceous; intestines and caecum very large ; colour plain, dappled, or striped. THE EQUINE FORM. Equus caballus. Tail setose up to the root ; flowing mane ; raised withers ; round solid hoofs ; neighing voice ; mam- mas two. Eq. caballus domesticus... The Bay Wild Horse or Tarpan. The White villous Wild Horse. ... The Black ? The Eelback Dun decussated. Eq. varius The Tangum or Kiang. Eq. hippagrus The Koomrah of Africa. THE ASININE FORM. Tail with a tuft at tip ; forehead arched ; nostrils more forward ; withers low ; mane nigged, short, erect; ears long; back carped; hoof, soles oval; voice braying or dissonant ; mammaa two ; colour silvery greys ; back decussated. Asintts equuleus The Yo-to-tz£ A. onager The Wild Ass. A.hamar The Wild Ass of Persia. A. Jiemwnus The Djiggetai. THE HIPPOTIGRINE FORM. Tail asinine or equine ; withers slightly elevated ; ears long and wide ; mane erect, forming a standing crest ; hoof, soles anteriorly oval, posteriorly square ; colours white or clouded with rufous, but all more or less regularly and symmetrically striped; voice various ; mammae two or four. Hippotigris zebra The Zebra. H. antiquarian The Congo Dauw. H. Burchelli or campestris The Dauw. H. quacha The Quagga. H. isabellin us The Isabella Quagga. HYBRIDS. The Mule. The Hinny. The Quagga Mule. The Zebra Mule. 352 MEMORANDUM. SINCE the text was written, among many services rendered by Mr. Edward Blyth, whose merits as a naturalist are well known, the author has to thank him for an interesting notice of horse-teeth, found at the Big Bone Lick, the well known place where the remains of Mastodon abound, which proves the existence of Equidte in North America during a former Zoology; and, in that particular, invalidates the remarks in the text concerning their pristine absence. AND C0 PRINTERS, I72, ST. 3IBEET, E.G. 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