登陆注册
14823800000051

第51章

The horse played a part of no small importance in that country. He was the coin of the realin, a medium of exchange, a standard of value, an exponent of moral character. The man that travelled without a horse was on his way to the poorhouse. Uncle Eb or David Brower could tell a good horse by the sound of his footsteps, and they brought into St Lawrence County the haughty Morgans from Vermont. There was more pride in their high heads than in any of the good people. A Northern Yankee who was not carried away with a fine horse had excellent self-control. Politics and the steed were the only things that ever woke him to enthusiasm, and there a man was known as he traded. Uncle Eb used to say that one ought always to underestimate his horse 'a leetle fer the sake of a reputation'.

We needed another horse to help with the haying, and Bob Dean, a tricky trader, who had heard of it, drove in after supper one evening, and offered a rangy brown animal at a low figure. We looked him over, tried him up and down the road, and then David, with some shrewd suspicion, as I divined later, said I could do as I pleased. I bought the horse and led him proudly to the stable. Next morning an Irishman, the extra man for the haying, came in with a worried look to breakfast.

'That new horse has a chittern' kind of a coff,' he said.

'A cough?' said I.

''Tain't jist a coff, nayther,' he said, 'but a kind of toom!'

With the last word he obligingly imitated the sound of the cough.

It threw me into perspiration.

'Sounds bad,' said Uncle Eb, as he looked at me and snickered.

''Fraid Bill ain't much of a jockey,' said David, smaling.

'Got a grand appetite - that hoss has,' said Tip Taylor.

After breakfast Uncle Eb and I hitched him to the light buggy and touched him up for a short journey down the road. In five minutes he had begun to heave and whistle. I felt sure one could have heard him half a mile away. Uncle Eb stopped him and began to laugh.

'A whistler,' said he, 'sure's yer born. He ain't wuth a bag o' beans.

But don't ye never let on. When ye git licked ye musn't never fin' fault. If anybody asks ye 'bout him tell 'em he's all ye expected.'

We stood waiting a moment for the horse to recover himself. A team was nearing us.

'There's Bob Dean,' Uncle Eb whispered. 'The durn scalawag!

Don't ye say a word now.

'Good-mornin'!' said Dean, smiling as he pulled up beside us.

'Nice pleasant mornin'!' said Uncle Eb, as he cast a glance into the sky.

'What ye standin' here for?' Dean asked.

Uncle Eb expectorated thoughtfullyy.

'Jest a 1ookin' at the scenery,' said he. 'Purty country, right here!

AIwus liked it.'

'Nice lookin' hoss ye got there,' said Dean.

'Grand hoss!' said Uncle Eb, surveymg him proudly. 'Most reemarkable hoss.'

'Good stepper, too,' said Dean soberly.

'Splendid!' said Uncle Eb. 'Can go a mile without ketchin' his breath.'

'Thet so?' said Dean.

'Good deal like Lucy Purvis,' Unde Eb added. 'She can say the hull mul'plication table an' only breathe once. Ye can learn sumthin' from a hoss like thet. He's good as a deestric' school - thet hoss is.'

Yes, sir, thet hoss is all right,' said Dean, as he drove away.

'Righter'n I expected,' Uncle Eb shouted, and then he covered his mouth, shaking with suppressed laughter.

'Skunk!' he said, as we turned the animal and started to walk him home. 'Don't min' bein' beat, but I don't like t' hev a man rub it in on me. I'll git even with him mebbe.'

And he did. It came about in this way. We turned our new purchase into the pasture, and Uncle Eb and I drove away to Potsdam for a better nag. We examined all the horses in that part of the country. At last we chanced upon one that looked like the whistler, save that he had a white stocking on one hind foot 'Same age, too,' said Uncle Eb, as he looked into his mouth.

'Can pass anything on the road,' said his owner.

'Can he?' said Uncle Eb, who had no taste for slow going. 'Hitch him up an' le's see what he can do.'

He carried us faster than we had ever ridden before at a trot, and coming up behind another team the man pulled out, let the reins loose on his back, and whistled. If anyone had hit him with a log chain the horse could not have moved quicker. He took us by the other team like a flash, on the dead run and three in the buggy.

'He'll do all right,' said Uncle Eb, and paid for the horse.

It was long after dark when we started home, leading him behind, and near midnight when we arrived.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 其修远兮

    其修远兮

    浮生若梦,为欢几何……人生苦短,去日苦多……有人碌碌无为,随遇而安。有人不甘平凡,逆流而上。他说,哪怕是用自己的鲜血,也要为灰白的人生画上亮眼红色。前路漫漫,其修远兮……
  • 槿仙传

    槿仙传

    宫瑜琛,她原本是一个快快乐乐的小公主,但一只清风笛让她拥有起死回生之力,不料只因一把指天剑让她亡了国,看着亲人惨死让她一夜之间长大了。只是平静的生活在不平静了。夜宇宸,堂堂夜幽城主,为了救活他不惜牺牲自己,明明爱她,却大婚迎娶另一个女人,一次次的受伤,堕入魔道,再也回不了头。暮然回首,她的身后没有一个能守护她,爱护她的人。爱她的人因她而死,她爱的人一次次的伤害,难道她就要永生孤独?
  • 深渊归还的骑士

    深渊归还的骑士

    英雄的崛起,必然践踏着鲜血;当来自深渊的恶魔军团,踏上了渴望蹂躏的大地时,战火重燃、生命凋零......若是英雄、期望战乱,以热血扫荡苍穹,所以选择魔剑科恩维斯;若为骑士、祈望和平,以信念抚慰灵魂,故而拔起圣剑葛德哈纳;夹杂在野心与信仰之间,人们总是希望成为英雄,而盼望出现骑士...(这是一个手握魔剑的骑士故事)
  • 野花朵之红

    野花朵之红

    他们愚弄着现实,他们蔑视着天空,他们嘲讽着人生,他们霸占着自己!
  • 幻天御龙诀

    幻天御龙诀

    圣殿少年不学而有术外人眼中的纨绔子弟,最不被看好的一人,轻佻的面具下却难江海志,玲珑心,曲折的身世,千年的宿命羁绊,今生不想后悔,却都被命运玩弄于鼓掌之中,一张大网正撒下……
  • 狼性总裁可怜猫

    狼性总裁可怜猫

    他,一个魔鬼,却对猫情有独钟。他,商界奇才,却爱上平凡的她。他,在她的耳边说:你在我眼里不过我的猫的玩具。啪!!!她怒视他:你就是一个疯子,变态,魔鬼!……………………………………呵,你要为这一巴掌负责到底
  • 花季奇妙感情透视

    花季奇妙感情透视

    你也许会说,心理健康与否,只不过是个人的小事,和别人、和社会没有什么牵连,你说错了。比方说,如果一个人手脚不灵便,但心理健康,那么对于他的人格影响不大。因而,不论为了个人、家庭,还是为了民族的命运,我们每个人都应当保持心理健康。
  • 小生有个千事屋

    小生有个千事屋

    没有什么太远的想法,想着感觉挺有意思的想法就写来看看。
  • 重生之巨擘

    重生之巨擘

    草根郑朔,年过而立,一事无成!却在人生在得意之时,醉酒穿越!郑朔重生了,回到了1986年,自己人生中最困苦的时节。看郑朔如何利用自己对国内大势的先知先觉,一飞冲天,平步青云。本文以官场争斗和商场遨游为主线,没有通天的靠山,也没有坚固的基石,仅靠着一分良知实实在在为民办事、为国争利,聊尽身为国人之责。本文不架空,适度YY。本文纯属虚构,如有雷同纯属巧合。
  • 原是陌上花

    原是陌上花

    过期的爱情就如同过期的食物般,若是执意服用。轻者,呕吐,腹泻,头晕,四肢无力;甚至死亡。原来我们的爱情早已过期。——苏紫陌从今以后,你是我的。——诗逸好久不见……你还好吗?——原简要么不择手段将他抢过来,要么在心里将他杀死,再顺着你为他祭奠的眼泪一流,永远忘记他。——尚夏我与他真真实实爱过。——花令你别忘了,这么些年陪在他身边的人是我。即便只是作为你的影子。——许可