“It is a bit.”
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In the meantime, here is a horse-drawn carriage:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhWbX5PeR8ILp3bqPnWxIak-ZuIWbUvbO2SvQeuxd9HhFD7nsUyNWGdw4n0XxFrf24yn6Bij3xtP0hEK2SDpXfwru-cYXabSc4XYXV3cNHSPcF4wjBX3rA_8tkLIxYk0fOgb6vHL8Irgwk/s400/img665.jpg)
(The horse couldn’t get the crayon between his hooves.)
By way of contrast, here is a picture of a carriage drawn by a man:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhsAO81YCR8v4-gq3u5c6ELIjWv5YuS1BJrbVa7EVDbLxnWI3Ux91BecAFi5mDI2GWeekb9a1aIk44vOinDxd66-a8zisORLJ4JIlK9QibQeoIDuBoeYIPdIwCcdPbVQCTVDi5s3kQcZgo/s400/TWO_PROSTITUTES_HEADING_OUT_FOR_A_WHILE_in_OLD_JAPAN.123201048_std.jpg)
All of which goes to show that there is a clear difference between a draughtsperson and a drafthorse.
(And that's not even to mention Warhorse, the moving story of a horse conscripted into the Army.)