AND SCHOOL A HORSE. 85 



with either leg, as may be required, 

 without hesitation or blundering, the 

 rider will turn him from a circle to the 

 right or the left, to one on the other 

 hand, aj^plying, quickly but without 

 violence, the hand as fche fore-feet finish 

 the first part, the leg as the hind-feet 

 finish the last part of the gallop in the 

 •old direction. 



When this has been accompKshed 

 without destroying or interfering with 

 the cadences of the gait, it will be a 

 mere matter of practice to make the 

 changes at any finished step in the 

 direct hne. 



To Stop in the Gallop. 



While it is only in the gallop in 

 equilibrium that the horse can be 



