Boy Woodburn eBook

Alfred Ollivant (writer)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 334 pages of information about Boy Woodburn.

Boy Woodburn eBook

Alfred Ollivant (writer)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 334 pages of information about Boy Woodburn.

“Pretty bad, isn’t she?” he said gravely.

“Go and tell mother, please,” replied the girl, still on her knees.  “And send one of the lads with a rug and a wheelbarrow.”

The young man walked away down the hillside, leading the two ponies.

Left alone, Boy brushed away the flies that had settled in black clouds on the mare’s face.  The foal repeated its ungainly efforts, whimpering in a deep and muffled voice, like the wind in a cave.  The urge of hunger was on it, and it did not understand why it was not satisfied.  Boy went to it, and thrust her thumbs into its soft and toothless mouth.  The foal, entirely unafraid, sucked with quivering tail and such power that the girl thought her thumbs would be drawn off.  The old mare whinnied, jealous, perhaps, of her usurped function.

In another moment Mrs. Woodburn’s tall and stately form came through the gate and laboured up the hill.  She was wearing a white apron and carried a sheet in her hand.

Soon she stood beside her daughter, breathing deeply, and looking down upon the mare.

“Bad job, Boy,” she said.

“Have you brought a thermometer?” asked the girl.

Mrs. Woodburn nodded, and inserted the instrument under the old mare’s elbow, laying an experienced hand on her muzzle.

“If she’d make an effort,” she said in her slow way.  “But she can’t be bothered.  That’s Black Death.”

Silver, looking ridiculously elegant in his shirt-sleeves and spotless breeches, came up the hill toward them, trundling a dingy stable barrow.  Behind him trotted a lad, trailing a rug.

“We must just let her bide,” said Mrs. Woodburn.  “Lay that sheet over her, George, to keep the flies off, and get a handful of sweet hay and put it under her nose to peck at it.  You’ve brought the barrow, Mr. Silver.  Thank you.”

“Can you lift the foal in?” asked Boy.

“I guess,” answered the young man, stripping up sleeves in which the gold links shone.

“Oh! your poor clothes!” cried Mrs. Woodburn.  “Whatever would your mother say?  Put on my apron, do.”

The young man obeyed, gravely and without a touch of self-consciousness, binding the apron about his waist; and to Boy at least he appeared, so clad, something quite other than ludicrous.

“Can you manage it, d’you think?” she asked in her serious way.

“I guess,” answered the young man.

He blew elaborately on his hands, made belief to lick them, and bowed his back to the lifting.  There were no weak spots in that young body.  It was good all through.

Strong as he was tender, he gathered the little creature.  A moment it sprawled helplessly in his arms, all legs and head.  Then he bundled it into the barrow.

The old mare whinnied.

“Put the rug over her head so she can’t see,” said Mrs. Woodburn.

The foal stood a moment in the barrow, then it collapsed, lying like a calf with a woolly tail, its long legs projecting over the side.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Boy Woodburn from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.