A treatise on the horse : its diseases, lameness, and improvement in which is laid down the proper method of shoeing the different kinds of feet : also, some new observations on the art and practice of farriery ; and on the nature and difference in the several breeds of speedy horses / by William Osmer.
- Osmer, William
- Date:
- 1830
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: A treatise on the horse : its diseases, lameness, and improvement in which is laid down the proper method of shoeing the different kinds of feet : also, some new observations on the art and practice of farriery ; and on the nature and difference in the several breeds of speedy horses / by William Osmer. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by The University of Glasgow Library. The original may be consulted at The University of Glasgow Library.
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No text description is available for this image![his terms, copying even his phraseology in many instances—but nearly all without due acknowledge- ment. Of about a dozen of these College-bred authors which have come under my notice, with some who were otherwise educated, scarcely two have escaped detection. From this censure, I see no reason for excluding the names of White, Coleman, Lawrence, Goodwin, Blaine,* to say nothing of the minors. One alone, and he anony- mously, recently paid the just tribute of respect to our author, by reprinting a portion of the third edition, in successive numbers of his useful periodi- cal publication (the Farrier and Naturalist) and thus brought Osmer's work under notice, in a manner that deserves our thanks. Another perio- dical writer, of some power and much intelligence, though no farrier, often pays homage to the talents of Osmer in his communications to the Sporting Magazines. The first mentioned gave the authors words throughout; the latter adopts his ideas, his opinions,, and generalities; nor * This gentleman's very able work I have glanced at but ca- sually ; not because the author was without a College certi- ficate [diploma !] but perhaps its great bulk. He is accused by John Lawrence of having copied from Osmer's Treatise, what he afterwards gave the world as a discovery of his own. So stated in White's Compendium, page 346, edit. 10th. Mr. Blaine is not alone: his poor accuser is wofuUy in the same predicament; and the Professor at Pancras eminently so.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21459344_0016.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)