198 MOVEMENT 



foot reaches the ground till the same foot completes 

 another step. 



These images, when enlarged (Figs. 133 and 134), 

 gain in clearness what they lose in detail. This is one 

 of the disadvantages of this method of reproduction 

 which is required in typography, but in impressions 



Fig. 133.— Horse walking (enlarged). 



with thick ink the enlarged images still retain the 

 detail.* Only three characteristic photographs of a 

 galloping horse are represented in one series, and 

 these correspond to the three beats of the movement, 

 namely, the first, second, and third. The transitions 

 and the changes of foot produce very elegant attitudes 



* We propose, in V Atlas de Physiologie artidique, to give a few 

 series of photographs of the horse in its various paces. 



