THE DALMATIAN OR COACH DOG. 
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find that the countries which are the most productive of ferocious animals are most productive 
of ferocious men the Lion of Africa, the Tiger of India, the Grizzly Bear of America, the 
Polar Bear of the northern regions, being but lower types of the destructive humanity that 
prevails in those portions of the globe. 
As this subtle bond of similar affections is found to pervade the wild animals and the 
human inhabitants of the same country, it is but natural that when the man and the brute are 
drawn closer together by domestication, and the higher Being enabled to pour its influence 
upon the lower, the similarity in their character should be still more apparent. 
So we find that, whether in cats, Dogs, or horses, the animals which are most frequently 
made the companions of man, the disposition of the owner is reflected in the character of the 
beast. The large-hearted, kind-souled man will be surrounded with loving and gentle animals. 
His cat will sit and purr upon his shoulder fearless of repulse, his Dog will love and reverence 
his master with faithful worship, and his horse will follow him about the field in which it is 
freely grazing, and solicit the kind notice to which it is accustomed. On the other hand, the 
D AL MATIAN OE COACH DOG .— Canisfamiliaris. 
cross and snappish cat, the snarling Dog, and the crabbed-tempered horse are sure signs of 
corresponding qualities in the man that owns them, and will deter an observer of animal 
natures from placing his confidence in the man who could infuse such evil qualities into the 
creatures that surround him, and from whom they take their tone. 
As the Dog is possessed of a disposition which is more easily assimilated with that of man 
than is the case with most animals, the affinity between itself and its master is constantly 
brought before our notice. 
One man loves nothing so well as the largest Newfoundland or deerhound, while another 
is not satisfied unless his Dog be of the minutest proportions compatible with canine nature. 
One man places his faith in the terrier, another in the poodle ; one prefers the retriever, and 
another the spaniel. The man who pursues his sport at morning, in the face of the sun, is 
accompanied by the loud-tongued foxhound or beagle ; while the skulking nocturnal poacher 
is aided in his midnight thefts by the silent and crafty lurcher. 
But of all the Dogs that are associated with man, and of all the men that make compan- 
ionship with Dogs, the most repulsive, and most to be avoided by honest Dogs and men, are 
the bull-dog and his owner. 
I may be accused of delivering too severe a judgment on Dog and man. Those who have 
been led by duty, curiosity, or chance through the unsavory localities which are haunted by 
the members of the “ Fancy,” and have instinctively stepped aside from the fur-capped, 
beetle-browed, sleek -haired, suspicious ruffian, leading his sullen and scowling bull-dog at. his 
