. Dog and dogs. Dogs. Chapter XXII Shakespeare's Dogs Mastiff, greyhound, mungril grim. Hound or spaniel, brache or lym. Or bobtail tike, or trundle-taiL King Lear III, 6. N Shakespeare's day there were no dog shows. Dogs were kept for sport and for utiHty, except that there were some pets among the nobility. In Othello we are told that Desdemona kept a lap dog: "He'll be as full of quarrel and offence as my young mistress' ; All our present day favorites were lacking: Chow, Pom, Japanese and Chinese varieties, foxhound, harrier, otter hound, pointer. In Macbeth () we find add


. Dog and dogs. Dogs. Chapter XXII Shakespeare's Dogs Mastiff, greyhound, mungril grim. Hound or spaniel, brache or lym. Or bobtail tike, or trundle-taiL King Lear III, 6. N Shakespeare's day there were no dog shows. Dogs were kept for sport and for utiHty, except that there were some pets among the nobility. In Othello we are told that Desdemona kept a lap dog: "He'll be as full of quarrel and offence as my young mistress' ; All our present day favorites were lacking: Chow, Pom, Japanese and Chinese varieties, foxhound, harrier, otter hound, pointer. In Macbeth () we find additions: As hounds and greyhounds, mungrils, spaniels, curs, Choughs, water-rugs, and deini-zvolves, are cleped All by the name of dogs. 251. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Harry, Joseph Edward, 1863-. New York : J. H. Sears & company, inc.


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