[After London by Richard Jefferies]@TWC D-Link book
After London

CHAPTER II
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WILD ANIMALS When the ancients departed, great numbers of their cattle perished.

It was not so much the want of food as the inability to endure exposure that caused their death; a few winters are related to have so reduced them that they died by hundreds, many mangled by dogs.

The hardiest that remained became perfectly wild, and the wood cattle are now more difficult to approach than deer.
There are two kinds, the white and the black.

The white (sometimes dun) are believed to be the survivors of the domestic roan-and-white, for the cattle in our enclosures at the present day are of that colour.

The black are smaller, and are doubtless little changed from their state in the olden times, except that they are wild.


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