HUNTING IeoPARD. 
or, in fa6l, if it were either; BufFon calls it, 
" the Leopard or Jaguar." He adds — " The 
drawing was sent to us by the deceased Mr, 
Coliinson, without either name or history. 
As we are ignorant, whether it be a native 
of the Old or New Continent, and as it dif- 
fers from the Ounce and Leopard by the form 
of it's spots, and still more from the Jaguar 
and Ocelot, we could not determine to which 
©f these animals it may be referred. It ap- 
pears, however, to have a greater relation to 
the Jaguar, than to the Leopard." 
That the reader may form an adequate judg- 
iiient, we shall add, to this short acount of 
what BuiFon has called the Jaguar or Leopard, 
Kis entire description of the Guepard. 
In his history of the Margray, or Cayenne 
Cat, BufFon says — " There is still another 
animal of this genus, which the furriers call 
Guepard. We have seen several skins of it, 
which resembled those of the Lynx in the 
length of the hair : but, as the ears are not 
terminated by pencils, tlie Guepard is not a. 
Lynx. Neither is it a Panther, or a Leopard ; 
for 
