structive fieldmice, 208, 209.
Fuller on Norfolk rabbits, 223.
Fuseli on Northcote's picture of Balaam and the Ass, 281.
Future state of animals, Toplady on, 312.
Gainsborough and Fowler the tailor, 2, 3;
his wife and their dogs, 100, 101;
pigs, countryman on, 252;
kept an ass, 277.
Garrick and the horse, 259.
Gell, Sir William, his dog, 101.
General's cow at Plymouth, 308.
George III. at Winchester, meets Garrick, 259.
George IV. visited at Windsor by "Happy Jerry," 32.
Gilpin's, Bernard, horses stolen and recovered, 260.
Gilpin's, Rev. Mr, love of the picturesque, 308.
Gilray's caricature of Fox and Burke as dogs, 724.
Gimcrack, the widow, her letter to Mr Bickerstaff on her husband's peculiarities, 6-8.
Giraffe, anecdotes of, 291-295.
_Glirine_ animals, 195, 212.
Goats, anecdotes of, 299, 300.
Goethe on stag-trench at Frankfort, 294;
on Roos's etchings of sheep, 296.
Good enough for a pig, 251.
Gordon, Duchess of, and the wolf-dog, 102, 103.
Gorilla and its story, 9-22.
Graham, Rev. W., on dogs in the East, 85.
Grange, the, near Edinburgh, 30.
Gray compares poet-laureate to a rat-catcher, 204, 205.
Gray. Dr, gets large specimen of gorilla, 17.
Greenland seal, 181.
Grotta del Cane, the poor dog at, 111, 112.
Guilford, Lord Keeper, and the rhinoceros, 230.
Guinea pig, Dr Chalmers, 223, 224.
Gunn, Mr, on tiger-wolf, 192, 193.
Haff-fish, the Shetland name for seal, 179.
Hairs or hares, 220.
Hall, Robert, and the dog, 106.
Hamilton, Sir Wm., his definition of man, 1, 2.
Hanover rats, 202, 203.
Happy Jerry, the rib-nosed mandrill, 31, 32.
Hardwicke's lady, sow, 253.
Hares, Mrs Browning on Cowper's, 212;
petted by Cowper the poet, 213-219.
Hastings and the refractory donkey, 279.
Heard, the herald, on the horse of George III., 261
Hedgehogs, 48.
Hill, Rev. Rowland, prayed for his horse, 261, 262.
Holcroft on race-horses, 263-265.
Hood's dog Dash, 110.
Hook and the litter of pigs, 253.
Hooker's sea-bear in Regent's Park, 175.
Hospital for old cows and horses, 309.
Horse, 256;
that carried stones to build Bell-Rock lighthouse, 257.
Horse exercises, a saying of Rowland Hill's, 263.
Horsemanship of Johnson the Irishman, 257, 258.
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