Cauelarice or The English horse-man: containing all the art of horse-manship as much as is necessary for any man to vnderstand, whether hee be horse-breeder, horse-rider, horse-hunter, horse-runner, horse-ambler, horse-farrier, horse-keeper, coachman, smith, or sadler. Together, with a discouerie of the subtill trade or mistery of horse-coursers, & explanation of the excellency of horses vnderstanding: or how to teach the[m] to doe trickes like Banks his curtall: and that horses may bee made to draw dry-foot like a hound. Secrets before vnpublished, & now carefully set down for the profit of this whole nation.

All titles
  • Cauelarice or The English horse-man: containing all the art of horse-manship as much as is necessary for any man to vnderstand, whether hee be horse-breeder, horse-rider, horse-hunter, horse-runner, horse-ambler, horse-farrier, horse-keeper, coachman, smith, or sadler. Together, with a discouerie of the subtill trade or mistery of horse-coursers, & explanation of the excellency of horses vnderstanding: or how to teach the[m] to doe trickes like Banks his curtall: and that horses may bee made to draw dry-foot like a hound. Secrets before vnpublished, & now carefully set down for the profit of this whole nation.
  • Cavalarice Cavelarice, or The English horse-man English horse-man
People / Organizations
Imprint
London: printed [by Edward Allde and William Jaggard] for Ed: White, and are to bee solde at his shoppe nere the little north doore of Saint Paules-Church, at the signe of the Gunne, 1607
Publication year
1607-1607
ESTC No.
S126809
Grub Street ID
145684
Description
[16], 88, [4], 212, 233-264, [4], 67, 58-72, [4], 54, [4], 56, [4], 64, [4], 11, 10-81, [5], 20, 25-40 p. : ill. (woodcuts) ; 4⁰
Note
Printers' names from STC.

Signatures: [point. finger par.]? A-4H? A[par.]-L[par.]? ?A-E?.

In eight books, all but the first with separate dated title page and pagination.

Probably a reissue of STC 17334 with cancel title page.
Uncontrolled note
Not in STC. Title spelling is more allied with Maggs' transcription from a now untraced 1609 edition (cat. 792:277) than with either the [1607] or the 1617 editions