546 GOATS. 
Tue varieties of the Goat are almost numberless, and it will be impossible to engrave, or 
even to notice, more than one or two of the most prominent examples. One of the most valu- 
able of these varieties is the celebrated Casumrr Goav, whose soft silky hair furnishes 
material for the soft and costly fabrics which are so highly valued in all civilized lands. 
This animal is a native of Thibet and the neighboring locality, but the Cashmir shawls 
are not manufactured in the same land which supplies the material. The fur of the Cashmir 
Goat is of two sorts: a soft, woolly under coat of grayish hair, and a covering of long silken 
hairs that seem to defend the interior coat from the effects of winter. The woolly under coat 
is the substance from which the Cashmir shawls are woven, and in order to make a single 
shawl, a yard-and-a-half square, at least ten Goats are robbed of their natural covering. Beaun- 
ANGORA GOAT.—Capra hircus var. angorensis. 
tiful as are these fabrics, they would be sold at a very much lower price, but for the heavy and 
numerous taxes which are laid upon the material in all the stages of its manufacture, and after 
its completion upon the finished article. Indeed, the buyer of a Cashmir shaw] is forced to 
pay at least a thousand per cent. on his purchase. 
Attempts have been made to domesticate this valuable animal in Europe, but without 
real success. It will unite with the ANGoraA Goat and produce a mixed breed, from which 
may be procured very soft and fine wool, that is even longer and more plentiful than that of 
the pure Cashmir Goat. As a commercial speculation, however, the plan does not seem to 
have met with much success. 
There are at least forty acknowledged varieties of the Goat, among which may be men- 
tioned the BrerBuRA, or Ram Saaut, of India, a Goat which is remarkable for being destitute 
of beard and for the large dewlap which decorates the throat of the male. Its ears are very 
short, and its smooth fur is white, mingled with reddish-brown. The Syrrtan Goar is notable 
for the extreme length of its ears, which hang downwards, and when the animal raises its 
head nearly touch the shoulders. The SpanisH Goar is destitute of horns, and the MARK- 
HUR, Or SNAKE-EATING Goat, of India and Thibet, is celebrated for its large and exquisitely 
twisted horns, which are not dissimilar to those of the koodoo, only twisted in the opposite 
direction, 
