I 



liionts in this inipoi taiit branch of Iieaiing : the whole 

 being attempted in such a manner as to prove easy 

 of attainment, yet fully adequate to its proposed 

 purposes. 



Testimonies hi Favour of this Work, 

 ** Mr. B had previously published the Ana- 

 tomy of tlie Horse, re-published in this Work, in 

 which he professes the parts treated of have been 

 n^Oit of them taken from his own dissections. So far 

 he hr.5 a fair claim of originality.''—" The drawings 

 api^ear extremely correct ; are executed in the most 

 handsome manner ; and the descriptive part is very 

 correct.'' — London Medical Revieiv. 



" The second division of the Work is occupied 

 with the Anatomy of the Horse, including the phy- 

 siology, or knowledge of functions. This part of 

 the Work is materially illustrated by engravings, the 

 execution of which has considerable merit." — "The 

 third division is_ allotted to the practical part of the^ 

 veterinary art, or a description of the diseases of the 

 horse, ox, sheep, and dog, with the most approved 

 modes of cure. From the length of the anatomical 

 part of the Work, the present part is, perhaps, more 

 compressed than might be wished. The classification 

 adopted by the author will materially assist the stu- 

 dent in this branch of medicine, who is too apt to be 

 misled by the barbarous and unmeaning j-irgon adopt- 

 ed, in general, in books of farriery." — Medical and 

 Chirurgical Review. 



" Mr. Blaine, we believe, is the first who has at- 

 tempted, in the English language, a systematic view 

 ©f the whole, founded upon scientific principles, in 



