POINTS. 



391 



parade the streets of London before the brewers' drays, are not remark- 

 able for a power of draught, for a capability of endurance, or for any 

 length of existence. 



A BULL NECK. 



The ewe-necked horse is one in which every appearance of crest is 

 absent. Such a form may possess length ; but it is generally wanting 

 both in depth and in substance. Animals of this formation are generally 

 active, but weakly : other parts are too often characterized by a narrow- 

 ness of build, which materially detracts from a capability for endurance 



THE EWE NECK. 



The appearance is, moreover, mean ; this is usually rendered more con- 

 spicuous by a thinness and a shortness of mane. The shape of the 



