<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX.</SPAN></h2>
<p>In speaking of Bobby, Dr. Fred said he thought dime
novels and lack of guidance on her mother's part was
what had done the mischief; then, remembering how
he had plead with her to give up Garret, he would harden
again and add: "But she spurned my love, scorned my advice
and entreaties, has made her bed, and now she must lie
in it."</p>
<p>"Nay," but Master would urge, "she is so young, her
mother encouraged the match, and then the reading matter
you speak of finding in her room, was enough to turn any
young, undisciplined head. You ought to forgive her, and
seek her out the same as you would have done ten years ago,
had she run away and got lost in the woods."</p>
<p>But Dr. Fred refused.</p>
<p>Quietly Master did his best to find her, but not a clew
could he get, and a new turn was given to the thoughts of
the household by the sudden death of Carm. "Crushed between
two cars," the message said, and that was all until a
tightly sealed casket came.</p>
<p>"Better not open it," was the advice accompanying.</p>
<p>Master and another physician did open it, though, but
neither father nor mother were allowed to see the remains.
Master came out to the barn with a face white and drawn,
and, resting his arm on my neck and his head on them, he
sobbed like a grieved child.</p>
<p>"Oh, Dandy, this is worse than all, worse than all! I
wonder if he'll see his mother?"</p>
<p>"Much comfort children bring, judging from my own experience,"
groaned Dr. Fred at another time. "What a failure
life is, anyhow!"</p>
<p>And I thought, "Yes, it is to men like you, who are trying
to steer themselves through the world, and living for self
instead of humanity. My master's life is not a failure."</p>
<p>A sorry day it was for brute creation when barb wire was
introduced into general use on farms.</p>
<p>They put it around our pasture the first we knew of it.
One bright morning John, Jean, Tim and Ball—a span of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</SPAN></span>
young horses—and myself were turned in, and, feeling the
joyous freedom of unrestrained liberty (and, let me tell you,
the oldest, most patient horse in the world feels worried and
irritated by gearing, at times), away we went for a race, the
young ones especially, rearing, kicking and plunging gaily.</p>
<p>Suddenly there was a crash, a frightened neigh of pain, a
series of groans, and poor jolly Tim recoiled from his violent
contact with the fence, blood pouring down his chest and
forelegs.</p>
<p>Help soon arrived, and Tim was led away a very different
looking animal from what he was when he entered.</p>
<p>Master washed out the wounds as well as he could, and
applied a lotion made of one ounce calendula to three of soft
water. He gave aconite to keep down his fever, and afterward
cinchona as a tonic, and in time Tim was about as
jolly as ever, though much more cautious.</p>
<p>The next thing that happened was Jean cutting herself on
the hip, or rather, just in front of it, where the hip and abdomen
join.</p>
<p>Master treated her as he had Tim, only he stitched the
jagged edges of the wound together. It was in a place
where it could not be kept covered successfully, and flies
were bad; besides Jean continually reached back and worried
it with her nose. For this they tied her short; then he
made a lotion and a very few parts carbolic acid, just how
many I do not know, but he tested its strength by touching
a little to one edge of the sore. The acid, he said, would
cleanse it and keep the flies out.</p>
<p>She got well, but an unsightly scar remained. Another
horse laid his shoulder open, and for some reason it would
not heal, and he died of blood poison in spite of all they
could do.</p>
<p>I fancied that by being careful I was going to escape being
impaled on the wretched barbs; but one day, when Mrs.
Wallace was driving me, she became frightened at some
loose horses, and jerked me into a wire fence by the roadside.</p>
<p>Well, one needs to be cut on a barb wire once to fully appreciate
what it means. So many, many sad cases come to
one's notice of horses and other domestic animals that are<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</SPAN></span>
dragging out a miserable existence owing to the introduction
of this "new invention." Sometimes it seems that everything
is to the end of making man's life easier and that of
the dumb brutes harder.</p>
<p>Master had all the barb-wire removed from this place long
ago, supplying its place either with board, woven wire or
lawn wire fences.</p>
<p>But bad as barb-wire is, it is nothing to the fad for the
over-draw check-rein that is shortening the lives of horses
everywhere, to say nothing of the torture they endure while
they do live.</p>
<p>Why people use it I cannot imagine, for anyone with half
an eye knows that it ruins the looks of a horse.</p>
<p>Master says that he, for one, will never presume to improve
on the works of the Creator, who is far more artistic
than man, and understands the science of beauty perfectly.</p>
<p>Many horses have told me, in tones from which all hope
seemed gone, of the long hours of inexpressible torture they
endure. They say, and I hear it told that the most eminent
veterinary physicians in the world say the same, that the
check-rein injures a horse from his head to his tail, from his
shoulder to his hoof; it brings on disease and deformity. If
a horse's neck has not naturally a fine curve, the rein is not
going to remedy the matter. Forced curves are not elegant,
and the most of the animals I have seen wearing it look
like ganders when pursuing somebody.</p>
<p>Master said it was terrible to witness the mute agony of
horses harnessed to fine carriages and sleighs, that he saw
while East; and the worst of it is, they generally belong to
people who call themselves Christians. Sabbath after Sabbath
men and women kneel in the churches and pray for
mercy, while their helpless servants stand without, suffering
the extreme of torture. There is no mercy for them.</p>
<p>People go about trying to do good, with never a thought
of the agony within reach of their hand that they might relieve.</p>
<p>Strange that intelligent, human beings should imagine
for a moment that the continual champing of bits, twitching
of the lips, and tossing of the head of an over-checked horse
should mean "high life;" don't they know that they are the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</SPAN></span>
only protests that they can make against the cruel torture
that they are enduring; the signs of pain; the mute entreaties
for mercy?</p>
<p>Master says that if some people have it measured to them
as they measure unto the helpless, there is a dreadful day
coming; and he believes that many a man will make his bed
in hell because of his treatment of God's defenseless creatures
here.</p>
<p>Some young men, caught in a rain storm, came into our
barn for shelter one day, and I am going to give a little of
their conversation for the benefit of other sportsmen. These
had been out hunting.</p>
<p>"Hi, Billy, but didn't that rabbit cut some antics after I
got a pop at him?"</p>
<p>"Yes; why, he didn't seem to know nothin', jest come up
'nd looked a fellow right in the face with the blood all
tricklin' down. He died game."</p>
<p>"You bet! Makes me think of one some of us caught in
a trap once. One of its legs was broken, so we cut its
throat and let go of it. Would you believe the pesky thing
lived nigh on half an hour, hopping about on three legs all
the time. It was fun to watch it perform!"</p>
<p>"Beats all how long some things hang on, anyhow. I
shot a robin one day, jest fer fun. She fell right under a
little tree, 'nd two days after I happened to be passing, and
there she lay a-gaspin' yet, 'nd with life enough to flutter a
mite when she saw me, 'nd give sort of a warnin' chirp.
Lookin' up, I spied a nest 'nd four dead birds in it. I
'lowed then she was the mother 'nd the little ones had
starved. I wrung the old one's neck, thinking I might as
well finish the job."</p>
<p>"I've shot squirrels 'nd such things lots of times, 'nd
when I couldn't find 'em easy, I'd go off, 'nd days after
find 'em still alive, but too weak to get away."</p>
<p>"Well, it's fun to hunt when game is plenty, but this has
been a mighty poor day."</p>
<p>"I like fishin' better."</p>
<p>"Say, ain't that Cramer a big fool? I went fishin' with
him one day and will you b'lieve he would not string a fish
till he'd killed it by running his knife through its spine at
the back of its neck? Says a fish that dies ain't fit to eat,
'nd then it is inhuman to let anything die by inches.
Cranky, ain't he?"</p>
<p>"I should say? Well, I ain't so particular; it's the fun<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</SPAN></span>
of the thing I'm after. I don't care two cents for fish to
eat."</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Three years passed, and not one word from Bobby, and
her name was seldom mentioned.</p>
<p>Life at the farm was quiet and uneventful. The doctors
made their rounds of calls, Mrs. Wallace drove Jean or me
out occasionally, and Burr carried on the work.</p>
<p>But at last there came a letter to Master which made him
look grave and troubled. Often I saw him reading it, or
perhaps he got others, but anyway pondering over a closely
written page with a white, anxious face.</p>
<p>Dr. Fred, coming quietly into the barn one morning,
caught him.</p>
<p>"What's up?"</p>
<p>A moment Master hesitated, then made answer:</p>
<p>"A letter from Bobby."</p>
<p>Fred paled and staggered a step.</p>
<p>"From Bobby!" he echoed, then paused.</p>
<p>"Yes, I have wondered whether any good could come of
telling you; but now that it has come about, I will. I have
been sending her money for three months past. Garret
misuses her, I think, but she never says so; only 'I am
heartsick and homesick, uncle, besides being laid up with
neuralgia. Paul is not doing well just now, and Freddie
(named Frederick Richard for you and dear papa).'"</p>
<p>Master had read these last lines from the letter, but here
Dr. Fred burst out: "Where is my baby; my sweet Bobby?
So she says 'dear papa,' and calls the boy Fred! Bring her
home to my lonely heart and empty arms, Dick, and I'll bless
you forever."</p>
<p>Of course, I don't know how it all came about, but one
morning, some weeks after, Master led me out and set a tiny
boy on my back. The little fellow laughed and prattled in
an almost unknown tongue. When I got a look at him I
saw that he was the picture of Bobby when she was of his
age.</p>
<p>Presently a white-faced woman, looking as one might
imagine Bobby's ghost would, came out, and, throwing her
arms about my neck, wept violently.</p>
<p>"Dandy, dear old Dandy!" she said. For awhile she, her
mother and the boy drove out often with me, but suddenly
they stopped, and in a few days there was another one of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</SPAN></span>
those strange, sad processions where horses wear black
plumes. I have seen many such, but this one—with Master
looking unutterably sad—reminded me of that other one so
long ago.</p>
<p>"Strange that all I love must die!" moaned Dr. Fred;
and looking in Master's eyes I saw a look that seemed to
say, "I might echo the same," but he only bore this trouble
as he had all the others, smiling when his heart was sorest;
brave when almost despairing; thinking of others before
himself—this was Master.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>And so the years have passed along, and I am, as I stated
at first, an old horse, but, thanks to a kind master, I am
neither broken down nor dispirited.</p>
<p>My teeth are quite bad, but that matters little so long as
I am abundantly fed on ground feed; I am growing a little
stiff in the legs, but my stall has an earth floor, kept scrupulously
clean and dry and my bedding is fresh and abundant.</p>
<p>My eyesight is excellent, from having always stood in
well-lighted barns and never having been pounded or otherwise
injured about the head. My hearing is also perfect
and my lungs good. My feet have been well cared for
excepting in the case mentioned. In short I believe I am
healthier now at thirty-one than are most horses of eighteen.
I repeat what I have said before, in substance, a good
master makes a good horse, inside and out.</p>
<p>If I might gain the ear of man for an hour, I could surely
convince him that inhumanity is the poorest kind of business
imaginable; that it is unprofitable for the life that now
is and for the one that is to come; but as I can only stand
here and tell my simple story, I will trust that some good
angel will waft it far and wide, and that Master's God will
impress the little lessons I fain would teach upon the hearts
of all readers.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</SPAN></span></p>
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