270 



AVERY S OWN FARRIER. 



selves or fellow men, should be sober, thinking men, and 



aware of the above fact, for their own benefit, as well as 



for the horse they drive. And then the horse would not 



often be under the necessity of calling out (if allowed to 



talk) as he is said to have done, by the expression found 



in the following lines: 



" Up the hill urge me not; 

 Down the hill trot me not; 

 On the plain spare me not-, 

 To the hostler trust me not.'* 



N'ame and Situation of the Parts of the Hoof of the Horse. 



[See page 30] 



