Hand-book of Horsemanship and the habits and diseases of the horse and other animals . TO EDUCATE AND PREVENT A HORSE FROM CRIBBING. 24 HAND-BOOK OF HOUSEMAN i:,, ;. TO MAKE A HOKSE TURN HIS BODY WHEN HE TURNS HIS HEAD. Tlie Necessity of Proper Management of Horses. Prudence in conforming to the laws of the horses nature and winning hisconfidence by kindness, though indispensable, is only as the caution whichguards against the force of a momentum. There is no ability to control,and there would be no need of subduing the horse by force, had there beenno law of his nature violated. Since


Hand-book of Horsemanship and the habits and diseases of the horse and other animals . TO EDUCATE AND PREVENT A HORSE FROM CRIBBING. 24 HAND-BOOK OF HOUSEMAN i:,, ;. TO MAKE A HOKSE TURN HIS BODY WHEN HE TURNS HIS HEAD. Tlie Necessity of Proper Management of Horses. Prudence in conforming to the laws of the horses nature and winning hisconfidence by kindness, though indispensable, is only as the caution whichguards against the force of a momentum. There is no ability to control,and there would be no need of subduing the horse by force, had there beenno law of his nature violated. Since effects must be the result of causes,every consequence requiring the genius of man to combat and control mustbe the result of his own imprudence or ignorance. Harshness, and theneglect of this necessary attention, while mainly the cause of mischief, leadus to infer that the absence of such causes, with corresponding regards formethods of kindness, is sufficient to win the bad horse to a forgetfulness ofhis power of resistance. The course of reasoning that teaches him mansinability to enforce absolute and unconditional submission under allcircumstances of res


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjecthorses, bookyear1885