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9780689717093

Album of Horses

by ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780689717093

  • ISBN10:

    0689717091

  • Edition: Reprint
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 1993-03-31
  • Publisher: Aladdin
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Summary

How did the Morgan horse get its name?What are the differences between a Belgian and a Clydesdale?Why are the Byerly Turk, Darley Arabian, and Godolphin Arabian so important?Find the answers to these and many other intriguing questions in Marguerite Henry'sAlbum of Horses. The award-winning author of the wonderful storiesMisty of Chincoteague, King of the Wind,andBrighty of the Grand Canyon, Marguerite Henry describes in vivid detail the hardworking Shire, the elegant Lipizzan, the spirited Mustang, and many more. Never before have facts about horses been more accessible, and with Wesley Dennis's classic illustrations highlighting every page, this unique collection is sure to be treasured by horse lovers of all ages.

Author Biography

Marguerite Henry is the author of the popular Horseshoe library, which includes such titles as Stormy, Misty's Foal, Brighty of the Grand Canyon, and King of the Wind.

Table of Contents

The Arab
6(4)
The Thoroughbred
10(4)
The Hunter
14(4)
The Polo Pony
18(4)
The Morgan
22(4)
The Standardbred
26(4)
The American Saddle Horse
30(4)
The Tennessee Walking Horse
34(4)
The Hackney
38(4)
The Percheron
42(4)
The Belgain
46(4)
The Clydesdale
50(4)
The Shire
54(4)
The Suffolk Punch
58(4)
The Lipizzan
62(4)
The Mustang
66(4)
The Appaloosa
70(4)
The Quarter Horse
74(4)
The Palomino
78(4)
The Shetland Pony
82(4)
The Welsh Mountain Pony
86(4)
The Chincoteague Pony
90(4)
The Burro or Donkey
94(4)
The Mule
98(4)
The Routine of Happiness
102(4)
No Sugar, Thank You!
106(4)
Author's Note 110

Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

Excerpts

The American Saddle Horse

THE LITTLE OLD MAN shuffled into the grandstand and looked around happily. Sometimes a fellow had to do things on the spur of the moment, like stopping off at the State Fair. Made him feel coltish. It had been a long time since he'd seen a good show for his money. A warm feeling came over him as he opened his program to the same page as the other folks had theirs. He could read the big type without his glasses. SADDLE HORSE DIVISION -- OPEN FIVE -- GATED CLASS. He wouldn't bother with the tiny flyspeck type. Didn't know horses or riders any more anyway.

The announcer's voice cut in. "Reverse your horses, please. We will now repeat all five gaits going clockwise of the ring. Trot your horses, please."

The old man let himself be lost in the ring. Bay horses, a gray, sorrel horses with flaxen tails, sorrels with dark tails. And then, flashing from behind, a blue-black stallion -- his coat shining like a beetle in the sun.

"Shades of Rex McDonald!" the old man gasped, his eyes fondling the animal as if some dream had suddenly taken form.

He sat bolt upright, his mind leaping across the years. He was a young man, watching a young horse. No! He was that horse. That blue-black bullet, prancing around the rings, all over Kentucky, all over Missouri. Walking, trotting, cantering, stepping, racking. He was grand champion of the world. He was Rex McDonald!

Eyes fixed on the black image, he fumbled for gold-rimmed glasses, found them, put them on. Now for a look at the entries' names. Number Seven -- Rex Midnight. "The blood is there; his blood!"

Bay horses, sorrel horses, horses with white markings. Colors blurred in the old eyes like raindrops coming together on a windowpane. How long had they been trotting down there in the ring? One minute? Five minutes? That girl on Number Seven. "Let 'im go, girl. Pick the snaffle to set his head. You're plucking a harpstring, girl. Be delicate fingered."

The announcer's voice was a quick patter in time to the trot. "It's an open class, ladies and gentlemen. Open to horses of all ages, open to all riders. "

Oldtimer's eyes were everywhere at once, comparing, judging. That sorrel with the flaxen tail. Mostly looks. He felt an elbow in his ribs, heard a young voice say, "Look at that black beauty pop his hocks! He's good fore and aft! "

Pride welled up in the old man. "'Course he's good. Got Rex McDonald's blood."

"Too bad he's slow, though."

"Slow? He ain't slow! See that sorrel trotting in front and hopping behind? That's what happens when you take 'em on too fast."

Along the rail grooms and owners were crying to the riders as they went by. "Set his head! Take him on! Gather him!"

The old man cried out, too. "Just let him tromp, girl! " But his voice was lost in the boom of the loudspeaker.

"Walk your horses. Let them walk, please."

Twice around the ring. All the horses going airy and bright.

Oldtimer caught snatches of talk around him.

"Only two amateurs riding, the man on the gray and the girl on the black."

"The black won all his junior contests last year."

"Sure he did, but the trainer showed him then. What can a spindling girl do in big competition?"

The old man bristled. "What can she do? She can let her horse do it, that's what." He ran gnarled fingers through his white thatch, remembering when Rex McDonald walked like this, bouncy-like. But his mind was on tiptoe, waiting. Any good Saddlebred could do the natural gaits. The test was yet to come.

"Canter your horses, please. The judge likes rhythm here, not speed, folks."

Impatiently the old man watched the rocking horses down there in the ring, traveling slowly, smooth as a waltz, never speeding up. He took a breath, waiting.

"Walk your horses again, please."

Twice around. All the horses brisk. No one wilting but the old man. He loosened his tie, stuffed it into his pocket, his eyes on the announcer's box.

"Now slow-gait your horses, please."

At last! Here it is! The difficult man-made gait, the gait that leads up to something. The slow motion, the inheld power. The blue-black lifting the left forefoot, holding it poised one split second. Lifting the left hind foot, holding it as if he spurned the earth beneath. Now the right fore high, now the right hind. Up, hesitate; up, hesitate. The girl on Number Seven is smiling. She can feel each beat of the gait. She knows it's right. It's the stepping pace.

The old man laughs out. "Look at that black devil with the angel on his back -- she can make him strut in front and squat behind! " He nudges the ribs next to him.

"Young fellow, see that creature walking uphill on a flat piece of ground? There he is, that blue-black Number Seven."

Suddenly the old man grows fearful. He wants yet dreads the next words. He tries to stay them, but they burst forth splitting the air like a bugle.

"Rack on!"

Bay horses, a gray, sorrel horses. The old man sweeps them all away. Sure. They know the rack is the steppin' pace set to full speed. They can do it. They're all five-gaiters, ain't they? But with the sweat gleaming black the rack seems not a gait at all. It is a kind of glory. He is scudding clouds instead of tanbark, sailing along, passing other horses as if they did not exist. Suddenly at the turn a sorrel cuts in, almost causing a collision. It's the sorrel ahead now, the black trailing.

But on the straightaway.... "By gum, look at Rex pass! He's racking a hole in the ground, leading the whole clang parade!"

The old man is tiring. "Rex can't keep it up forever, judge! Don't you know the strain of it? Tendons ain't pistons, judge. Don't you know it?"

And then, when he can stand it no longer, the loud voice comes to his rescue. "Walk your horses, please. Walk your horses."

A wave of relief washes over the old man. The riders too relax, and the girl gives a saucy flirt of her coattails. He shouts out to her, "Well done, Black Angel!" But he is not alone. The crowd is shouting, too, trying to fill in the eternity of moments while the judge slowly marks his card, slowly steps up to the announcer. "Ladies and gentlemen," the voice raps out," we now have the judge's decision.

The blue and the trophy go....

A lump rises in the old man's throat, but his lips cry the words in unison with the announcer: "-- to Number Seven!"

Spent and happy, the little old man puts on his tie, squares his hat on his head, and shuffles down out of the grandstand. What a show he's seen for his money!

That's how it is with Saddlebred horses. They are the world's greatest show horses. Beautiful outside and game inside. Today's Number Seven would lack that touch of greatness had it not been for Rex McDonald and others like him. There are others, you know. But don't let the little old man hear you say so. There's Denmark Number One, foundation sire of the breed. His was Thoroughbred blood and he transmitted his fire to Rex and to the blue-black, too.

The American Saddle Horse, with his refinement of gaits and his animation and beauty, does not belong just to his owner or trainer. He belongs to the show ring, where he can bring joy and thrills to thousands of "ringside riders." He is like a Caruso, like any great artist. He belongs to the wide world -- to you and to me and to the little old man crying his lungs out for Number Seven.

Copyright © 1993 by Marguerite Henry



Excerpted from Album of Horses by Marguerite Henry, Wesley Dennis
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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