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<h2> 08 Ginger's Story Continued </h2>
<p>The next time that Ginger and I were together in the paddock she told me
about her first place.</p>
<p>“After my breaking in,” she said, “I was bought by a dealer to match
another chestnut horse. For some weeks he drove us together, and then we
were sold to a fashionable gentleman, and were sent up to London. I had
been driven with a check-rein by the dealer, and I hated it worse than
anything else; but in this place we were reined far tighter, the coachman
and his master thinking we looked more stylish so. We were often driven
about in the park and other fashionable places. You who never had a
check-rein on don't know what it is, but I can tell you it is dreadful.</p>
<p>“I like to toss my head about and hold it as high as any horse; but fancy
now yourself, if you tossed your head up high and were obliged to hold it
there, and that for hours together, not able to move it at all, except
with a jerk still higher, your neck aching till you did not know how to
bear it. Besides that, to have two bits instead of one—and mine was
a sharp one, it hurt my tongue and my jaw, and the blood from my tongue
colored the froth that kept flying from my lips as I chafed and fretted at
the bits and rein. It was worst when we had to stand by the hour waiting
for our mistress at some grand party or entertainment, and if I fretted or
stamped with impatience the whip was laid on. It was enough to drive one
mad.”</p>
<p>“Did not your master take any thought for you?” I said.</p>
<p>“No,” said she, “he only cared to have a stylish turnout, as they call it;
I think he knew very little about horses; he left that to his coachman,
who told him I had an irritable temper! that I had not been well broken to
the check-rein, but I should soon get used to it; but he was not the man
to do it, for when I was in the stable, miserable and angry, instead of
being smoothed and quieted by kindness, I got only a surly word or a blow.
If he had been civil I would have tried to bear it. I was willing to work,
and ready to work hard too; but to be tormented for nothing but their
fancies angered me. What right had they to make me suffer like that?
Besides the soreness in my mouth, and the pain in my neck, it always made
my windpipe feel bad, and if I had stopped there long I know it would have
spoiled my breathing; but I grew more and more restless and irritable, I
could not help it; and I began to snap and kick when any one came to
harness me; for this the groom beat me, and one day, as they had just
buckled us into the carriage, and were straining my head up with that
rein, I began to plunge and kick with all my might. I soon broke a lot of
harness, and kicked myself clear; so that was an end of that place.</p>
<p>“After this I was sent to Tattersall's to be sold; of course I could not
be warranted free from vice, so nothing was said about that. My handsome
appearance and good paces soon brought a gentleman to bid for me, and I
was bought by another dealer; he tried me in all kinds of ways and with
different bits, and he soon found out what I could not bear. At last he
drove me quite without a check-rein, and then sold me as a perfectly quiet
horse to a gentleman in the country; he was a good master, and I was
getting on very well, but his old groom left him and a new one came. This
man was as hard-tempered and hard-handed as Samson; he always spoke in a
rough, impatient voice, and if I did not move in the stall the moment he
wanted me, he would hit me above the hocks with his stable broom or the
fork, whichever he might have in his hand. Everything he did was rough,
and I began to hate him; he wanted to make me afraid of him, but I was too
high-mettled for that, and one day when he had aggravated me more than
usual I bit him, which of course put him in a great rage, and he began to
hit me about the head with a riding whip. After that he never dared to
come into my stall again; either my heels or my teeth were ready for him,
and he knew it. I was quite quiet with my master, but of course he
listened to what the man said, and so I was sold again.</p>
<p>“The same dealer heard of me, and said he thought he knew one place where
I should do well. ''Twas a pity,' he said, 'that such a fine horse should
go to the bad, for want of a real good chance,' and the end of it was that
I came here not long before you did; but I had then made up my mind that
men were my natural enemies and that I must defend myself. Of course it is
very different here, but who knows how long it will last? I wish I could
think about things as you do; but I can't, after all I have gone through.”</p>
<p>“Well,” I said, “I think it would be a real shame if you were to bite or
kick John or James.”</p>
<p>“I don't mean to,” she said, “while they are good to me. I did bite James
once pretty sharp, but John said, 'Try her with kindness,' and instead of
punishing me as I expected, James came to me with his arm bound up, and
brought me a bran mash and stroked me; and I have never snapped at him
since, and I won't either.”</p>
<p>I was sorry for Ginger, but of course I knew very little then, and I
thought most likely she made the worst of it; however, I found that as the
weeks went on she grew much more gentle and cheerful, and had lost the
watchful, defiant look that she used to turn on any strange person who
came near her; and one day James said, “I do believe that mare is getting
fond of me, she quite whinnied after me this morning when I had been
rubbing her forehead.”</p>
<p>“Ay, ay, Jim, 'tis 'the Birtwick balls',” said John, “she'll be as good as
Black Beauty by and by; kindness is all the physic she wants, poor thing!”
Master noticed the change, too, and one day when he got out of the
carriage and came to speak to us, as he often did, he stroked her
beautiful neck. “Well, my pretty one, well, how do things go with you now?
You are a good bit happier than when you came to us, I think.”</p>
<p>She put her nose up to him in a friendly, trustful way, while he rubbed it
gently.</p>
<p>“We shall make a cure of her, John,” he said.</p>
<p>“Yes, sir, she's wonderfully improved; she's not the same creature that
she was; it's 'the Birtwick balls', sir,” said John, laughing.</p>
<p>This was a little joke of John's; he used to say that a regular course of
“the Birtwick horseballs” would cure almost any vicious horse; these
balls, he said, were made up of patience and gentleness, firmness and
petting, one pound of each to be mixed up with half a pint of common
sense, and given to the horse every day.</p>
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