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The two wise cart-horses

The two wise cart-horses.jpg Anglo-Saxon soldiersThumbnailsThe right way to mount—facing toward his tailAnglo-Saxon soldiersThumbnailsThe right way to mount—facing toward his tailAnglo-Saxon soldiersThumbnailsThe right way to mount—facing toward his tailAnglo-Saxon soldiersThumbnailsThe right way to mount—facing toward his tailAnglo-Saxon soldiersThumbnailsThe right way to mount—facing toward his tailAnglo-Saxon soldiersThumbnailsThe right way to mount—facing toward his tailAnglo-Saxon soldiersThumbnailsThe right way to mount—facing toward his tail

Cart-horses, though heavy-looking animals, are more sagacious that their more gracefully formed relatives.

A cart-horse had been driven from a farmyard to the neighbouring brook early one morning during winter to drink. The water was frozen over, and the horse stamped away with his fore-feet, but was unable to break the ice. Finding this, he waited till a companion came down, when the two, standing side by side, and causing their hoofs to descend together, broke through the ice, and were thus enabled to obtain the water they required.