[A Lady of Quality by Frances Hodgson Burnett]@TWC D-Link book
A Lady of Quality

CHAPTER XIV--Containing the history of the breaking of the horse Devil,
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When she rode the beast in Hyde Park, her first battles with him were the town talk; and there were those who bribed her footmen to inform them beforehand, when my lady was to take out Devil, that they might know in time to be in the Park to see her.

Fops and hunting-men laid wagers as to whether her ladyship would kill the horse or be killed by him, and followed her training of the creature with an excitement and delight quite wild.
"Well may the beast's name be Devil," said more than one looker-on; "for he is not so much horse as demon.

And when he plunges and rears and shows his teeth, there is a look in his eye which flames like her own, and 'tis as if a male and female demon fought together, for surely such a woman never lived before.

She will not let him conquer her, God knows; and it would seem that he was swearing in horse fashion that she should not conquer him." When he was first bought and brought home, Mistress Anne turned ashy at the sight of him, and in her heart of hearts grieved bitterly that it had so fallen out that his Grace of Osmonde had been called away from town by high and important matters; for she knew full well, that if he had been in the neighbourhood, he would have said some discreet and tender word of warning to which her ladyship would have listened, though she would have treated with disdain the caution of any other man or woman.

When she herself ventured to speak, Clorinda looked only stern.
"I have ridden only ill-tempered beasts all my life, and that for the mere pleasure of subduing them," she said.


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