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A mandarin's servant on horseback

A mandarin's servant on horseback.jpg Blacksmith shoeing horseThumbnailsBlacksmith shoeing horseThumbnailsBlacksmith shoeing horseThumbnailsBlacksmith shoeing horseThumbnailsBlacksmith shoeing horseThumbnailsBlacksmith shoeing horseThumbnails
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The annexed is a portrait of a true Tartar horse, which seems to be pretty much of the same breed as those of the Cossacks. The Chinese horses are precisely of the same kind. In fact, no pains whatever appear to be taken either for improving the breed, or by attention to their food, cleanliness, or regular exercise, to increase the size, strength, or spirit of the animal. A currycomb, or any substitute for it, is unknown in China. Indeed horses are not much in use. Wherever the nature of the country admits of canals or navigable rivers, travelling and conveyance of every kind are principally performed on the water.

Author
The Project Gutenberg EBook of Picturesque Representations of the Dress and Manners of the Chinese, by William Alexander Published 1814
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