THE ENGLISH THOROUGHBRED HORSE.
In a letter to the Times, published on the 9th February, Admiral Rous thus speaks of the English horse: — "It is capable of proof that our thoroughbred stock (that is, stock bred for racing) is as good as ever, and must be improving every other breed. The Anglo-Arab is by actual deeds the best in every part of the world. The charger, the hunter, the carriage-hors3, and even the cab-horse, all must and do succumb to their respective vocations when brought into contention with the modern English thoroughbred horse, and not until a breed can be found to go further and faster under a heavier weight will any clap-trap depriye him of the benefit of this proof of jhis actual superiority. Our stallions and mares are " bought up by our foreign neighbors at any cost. In allj their racing establishments English trainers, stud grooms,, jockeys, even stable lads are universally employed on exactly the same system as our own. We see their most important and successful breeders setting at defiance the rules of their own country and bringing their best produce Here to run for our early two-year-old races, instead of holding us so cheap as to give us reciprocity in return for the numerous rich stakes we freely and cheerfully allow them to carry aTJray.. They shut us out from their races altogether. Therefore whence this howl to undo the work of two centuries, in which time we have transformed the Arab horse of 14 hands into magnificent animals which, in point of speed, stability, endurance, and power of carrying weight, command t}ie admiration of the civilised world ? And this miracle has been performed by private enterprise, without the assistance of Government or Ihe public purse."
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Bibliographic details
Grey River Argus, Volume XV, Issue 1853, 14 July 1874, Page 3
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291THE ENGLISH THOROUGHBRED HORSE. Grey River Argus, Volume XV, Issue 1853, 14 July 1874, Page 3
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