TWINS.—This is one of 128 studies in “The Beauty of Horses”, published by Max Parrish. In an introductory essay, Lieut.-Colonel C. E. G. Hope notes that horses have different meanings for different people, a difference illustrated by Dr. Johnson, who saw the horse as a creature “dangerous at both ends” and by Chesterton’s view of the horse as an animal whose “very name” has been given to “the highest mood and moment of man.” The pictures in this book should please everyone.
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Bibliographic details
Press, Volume XCVIII, Issue 29070, 5 December 1959, Page 3
Word Count
82TWINS.—This is one of 128 studies in “The Beauty of Horses”, published by Max Parrish. In an introductory essay, Lieut.-Colonel C. E. G. Hope notes that horses have different meanings for different people, a difference illustrated by Dr. Johnson, who saw the horse as a creature “dangerous at both ends” and by Chesterton’s view of the horse as an animal whose “very name” has been given to “the highest mood and moment of man.” The pictures in this book should please everyone. Press, Volume XCVIII, Issue 29070, 5 December 1959, Page 3
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