Scientific American Supplement, No. 803, May 23, 1891

Cover Scientific American Supplement, No. 803, May 23, 1891
Scientific American Supplement, No. 803, May 23, 1891
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The brach of the south scarcely differsfrom the preceding except in color. Its coat has a white groundcovered with pale orange blotches and spots of the same color. The St. Germain brach is finer bred, and appears to be a pointer introducedinto France in the time of Charles X. It has a very fine skin, veryfine hair of a white and orange color. The Bourbon brach has thecharacters of the old French brach, with a white coat marked here andthere with large brown blotches, and the white ground spott...ed with thesame color; but what particularly characterizes this dog is that it isborn with a stumpy tail, as if three-quarters of it had been choppedoff. The Dupuy brach is slender and has a narrow muzzle, as if it hadsome harrier blood in its veins. It is white, with large dark maroonblotches. The Auvergne brach resembles the southern brach, but has awhite and black coat spotted with black upon white. The pointer, orEnglish brach (Fig. 3), descends from the old Spanish brach, but hasbeen improved and rendered lighter and much swifter of foot by theintroduction of the blood of the foxhound into its veins, according tothe English cynegetic authors themselves.

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