1887] Horniess Ruminants, 1093 
English gentleman” wrote his account. It would be farther 
a a north, in a region where the “neat were horn- 
so many mark R FERRA was bare of wood, etc. Where could 
Pit Buckon : RES be found applying to any other district 
through this = ich was applicable Dr. Johnson’s (who pas 
ttee might be r ae) not very correct remark of Scotland: “ A 
~ been an, oN e i as a horse in Venice,” and which has 
Who wrote of th y: succeeding Sassanach visitors, as the “ Druid,” 
_ Was great in ‘d $ PR disthigh that in 1820 “ Zimberless Buchan 
coig oriasi meaning, possibly, to perpetrate a witti- 
-any rate: his SONEA of the country and the cattle in it, At 
-nian re observations would have been made in the Caledo- 
: gion, 
sid 2 R Cow again—In a book, “The Modern Husband- 
: » Written by W. Ellis in 1750, is the following passage: 
s the dun breed 
and their being 
polled, ér without horns. These are of the Scotch kind, will 
i i j hers of the 
fave brought th 
] hae “ty emselves under by 0 
ty l that they knew before to be unlucky. 
a 
aes North of Scotland—Captain Burt, in 
vel “orth of Scotland to his Friend in London, 
í 2 $ 1l., letter xXx., says, — 
Cas have several times seen them driving great numbers of 
“ttle along the sides of the Mountains at 2 great distance, but 
his “ Letters from 
' published 1754, 
