But while he steered
he was, in his mind, handling two feet of partially untwisted wire-rope;
and the back upon which he beat was the back of his guru.
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Rudyard Kipling
The Day's Work
A Walking Delegate
ACCORDING to the custom of Vermont, Sunday afternoon is salting-time on
the farm, and, unless something very important happens, we attend to the
salting ourselves. Dave and Pete, the red oxen, are treated first; they
stay in the home meadow ready for work on Monday. Then come the cows, with
Pan, the calf, who should have been turned into veal long ago, but
survived on account of his manners; and lastly the horses, scattered
through the seventy acres of the Back Pasture.
You must go down by the brook that feeds the clicking, bubbling
water-ram; up through the sugar-bush, where the young maple undergrowth
closes round you like a shallow sea; next follow the faint line of an old
county-road running past two green hollows fringed with wild rose that
mark the cellars of two ruined houses; then by Lost Orchard, where nobody
ever comes except in cider-time; then across another brook, and so into
the Back Pasture. Half of it is pine and hemlock and Spruce, with sumach
and little juniper bushes, and the other half is grey rock and boulder and
moss, with green streaks of brake and swamp; but the horses like it well
enough—our own, and the others that are turned down there to feed at fifty
cents a week. Most people walk to the Back Pasture, and find it very rough
work; but one can get there in a buggy, if the horse knows what is
expected of him. The safest conveyance is our coupé. This began life as a
buckboard, and we bought it for five dollars from a sorrowful man who had
no other sort of possessions; and the seat came off one night when we were
turning a corner in a hurry. After that alteration it made a beautiful
salting-machine, if you held tight, because there was nothing to catch
your feet when you fell out, and the slats rattled tunes.
One Sunday afternoon we went out with the salt as usual. It was a
broiling hot day, and we could not find the horses anywhere till we let
Tedda Gabler, the bobtailed mare who throws up the dirt with her big
hooves exactly as a tedder throws hay, have her head. Clever as she is,
she tipped the coupé over in a hidden brook before she came out on a ledge
of rock where all the horses had gathered, and were switching flies. The
Deacon was the first to call to her. He is a very dark iron-grey
four-year-old, son of Grandee. He has been handled since he was two, was
driven in a light cart before he was three, and now ranks as an absolutely
steady lady’s horse—proof against steam-rollers, grade-crossings, and
street processions.
“Salt!” said the Deacon, joyfully. “You’re dreffle late, Tedda.”
“Any—any place to cramp the coupé?” Tedda panted. “It weighs turr’ble
this weather. I’d ’a’ come sooner, but they didn’t know what they
wanted—ner haow. Fell out twice, both of ’em. I don’t understand sech
foolishness.”
“You look consider’ble het up. ’Guess you’d better cramp her under them
pines, an’ cool off a piece.”
Tedda scrambled on the ledge, and cramped the coupé in the shade of a
tiny little wood of pines, while my companion and I lay down among the
brown, silky needles, and gasped. All the home horses were gathered round
us, enjoying their Sunday leisure.
There were Rod and Rick, the seniors on the farm. They were the regular
road-pair, bay with black points, full brothers, aged, sons of a
Hambletonian sire and a Morgan dam. There were Nip and Tuck, seal-browns,
rising six, brother and sister, Black Hawks by birth, perfectly matched,
just finishing their education, and as handsome a pair as man could wish
to find in a forty-mile drive. There was Muldoon, our ex-car-horse, bought
at a venture, and any colour you choose that is not white; and Tweezy, who
comes from Kentucky, with an affliction of his left hip, which makes him a
little uncertain how his hind legs are moving. He and Muldoon had been
hauling gravel all the week for our new road. The Deacon you know already.
Last of all, and eating something, was our faithful Marcus Aurelius
Antoninus, the black buggy-horse, who had seen us through every state of
weather and road, the horse who was always standing in harness before some
door or other—a philosopher with the appetite of a shark and the manners
of an archbishop. Tedda Gabler was a new “trade,” with a reputation for
vice which was really the result of bad driving. She had one working gait,
which she could hold till further notice; a Roman nose; a large, prominent
eye; a shaving-brush of a tail; and an irritable temper. She took her salt
through her bridle; but the others trotted up nuzzling and wickering for
theirs, till we emptied it on the clean rocks. They were all standing at
ease, on three legs for the most part, talking the ordinary gossip of the
Back Pasture—about the scarcity of water, and gaps in the fence, and how
the early windfalls tasted that season—when little Rick blew the last few
grains of his allowance into a crevice, and said:
“Hurry, boys! Might ha’ knowed that livery plug would be around.”
We heard a clatter of hooves, and there climbed up from the ravine
below a fifty-center transient—a wall-eyed, yellow frame-house of a horse,
sent up to board from a livery-stable in town, where they called him “The
Lamb,” and never let him out except at night and to strangers. My
companion, who knew and had broken most of the horses, looked at the
ragged hammer-head as it rose, and said quietly:
“Ni-ice beast.
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