TRAINING, AND GENERAL MANAGEMENT. 13 



Ride it the following day without exhausting it again, 

 and see the result. No! I say that any system of 

 taming that is based upon exhaustion is not a good 

 one. The effects are only temporary not peruianent. 



About other methods which are much rougher 

 and that require a vast expanse of country unob- 

 tainable in Great Britain in which to practise them, it 

 is not necessary for me to dwell, as it would be of 

 no benefit to the horsemen of this country, and very 

 little to others. I will, in the following chapters, give 

 my views and explain my system in as practical a 

 manner as possible, although teaching it theoretically. 



THE BASIS AND PRINCIPLES OF THE 

 "GALVAYNE" SYSTEM FOR TAMING 

 AND TRAINING HORSES. 



I take as the basis of my system what I consider 

 to be an accurate knowledge of the natural laws and 

 instinct, by which the horse governs its own actions, 

 then, by a simple and correct method of training its 

 senses^ I succeed in getting a perfect animated machine, 

 for as such I look upon all horses. But in the 

 case of animated machines you get them of different 

 temperaments, which temperaments when mismanaged 

 are rapidly developed into vice. The animated 



