...—A lady's little dog, intelligent, sprightly,robust, of compact appearance, reminding one of a cob,and captivating the attention by a quasi-human expression...
Mrs. Leslie Williams 「A Manual of Toy Dogs」
...Whatever animals are to be excluded, may be marked onthe shoulder with Venetian red and hog’s lard, conveniently applied witha brush or cob...
Robert Jennings 「Sheep, Swine, and Poultry」
...Heeither becomes morose, ill-tempered, hardto manage and dangerous, or he degeneratesinto a fat, lazy, short-winded cob, "only fitfor a baby or an octogenarian...
Sir Walter Gilbey 「Small Horses in Warfare」
...Jack picked out another, which made for the denser part, where the trees were thick, and in his excitement he gave his cob the rein, and away they went at racing pace...
George Manville Fenn 「Off to the Wilds」
...Dick was excited with the chase, so was the cob, which stretched out more and more greyhound fashion as it raced along...
George Manville Fenn 「Off to the Wilds」
...Mount Aloysius bore north 9° west,distant about ten miles; here I saw it was quite an isolated range, as,at its eastern and western extremities, open spaces could be seenbetween it and any other hills.
Native encampment.Fires alight.Hogarth's Wells.Mount Marie and Mount Jeanie.Pointed ranges to the west.Chop a passage.Traces of volcanic action.Highly magnetic hills.The Leipoa ocellata.Tapping pits.Glen Osborne.Cotton-bush flats.Frowning bastion walls.Fort Mueller.A strong running stream.Natives' smokes.Gosse returning.Limestone formation.Native pheasants' nests.Egg-carrying.Mount Squires.The Mus conditor's nest.Difficulty with the horses.A small creek and native well.Steer for the west.Night work.Very desolate places.A circular storm.The Shoeing Camp.A bare hill.The Cups.Fresh looking creek.Brine and bitter water.The desert pea.Jimmy and the natives.Natives prowling at night.Searching for water.Horses suffering from thirst.Horseflesh.The Cob.The camp on fire.Men and horses choking for water.Abandon the place.Displeasing view.Native signs.Another cup.Thermometer 106°.Return to the Cob.Old dry well.A junction from the east.Green rushes.Another waterless camp.Return to the Shoeing Camp.Intense cold.Biting dogs' noses.A nasal organ.Boiling an egg.Tietkens and Gibson return unsuccessful.Another attempt west.Country burnt by natives.
We had now been travelling along the northern foot of the moresoutherly of the two lines of hills which separated, at the west end ofthe Champ de Mars; and on reaching the Bell Rock, this southern lineceased, while the northern one still ran on, though at diminishedelevation, and we now travelled towards two hills standing togetherabout west-north-west....
Ernest Giles 「Australia Twice Traversed, The Romance of Exploration」
...Terrible Billy tasted much better than the cob we had killed at Elder'sCreek...
Ernest Giles 「Australia Twice Traversed, The Romance of Exploration」
...I rode inadvance, on my best horse Chester, a fine, well-set chestnut cob, ahorse I was very fond of, as he had proved himself so good...
Ernest Giles 「Australia Twice Traversed, The Romance of Exploration」
...By this accident two hundred and eighty bushels of Indian corn in cob, and a few bushels of wheaten meal, were totally lost...
David Collins 「An Account of the English Colony in New South Wales, Vol. 1」
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