The Kellys and the O'Kellys eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 696 pages of information about The Kellys and the O'Kellys.

The Kellys and the O'Kellys eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 696 pages of information about The Kellys and the O'Kellys.

“I’m afraid you’re putting him on too forward.”

“Too forrard, is it, my lord? not a bit.  He’s a hoss as naturally don’t pick up flesh; though he feeds free, too.  He’s this moment all wind and bottom, though, as one may say, he’s got no training.  He’s niver been sthretched yet.  Faith it’s thrue I’m telling you, my lord.”

“I know Scott doesn’t like getting horses, early in the season, that are too fine—­too much drawn up; he thinks they lose power by it, and so they do;—­it’s the distance that kills them, at the Derby.  It’s so hard to get a young horse to stay the distance.”

“That’s thrue, shure enough, my lord; and there isn’t a gentleman this side the wather, anyway, undherstands thim things betther than your lordship.”

“Well, Grady, let’s have a look at the young chieftain:  he’s all right about the lungs, anyway.”

“And feet too, my lord; niver saw a set of claner feet with plates on:  and legs too!  If you were to canter him down the road, I don’t think he’d feel it; not that I’d like to thry, though.”

“Why, he’s not yet had much to try them.”

“Faix, he has, my lord:  didn’t he win the Autumn Produce Stakes?”

“The only thing he ever ran for.”

“Ah, but I tell you, as your lordship knows very well—­no one betther—­that it’s a ticklish thing to bring a two year old to the post, in anything like condition—­with any running in him at all, and not hurt his legs.”

“But I think he’s all right—­eh, Grady?”

“Right?—­your lordship knows he’s right.  I wish he may be made righter at John Scott’s, that’s all.  But that’s unpossible.”

“Of course, Grady, you think he might be trained here, as well as at the other side of the water?”

“No, I don’t, my lord:  quite different.  I’ve none of thim ideas at all, and never had, thank God.  I knows what we can do, and I knows what they can do:—­breed a hoss in Ireland, train him in the North of England, and run him in the South; and he’ll do your work for you, and win your money, steady and shure.”

“And why not run in the North, too?”

“They’re too ’cute, my lord:  they like to pick up the crumbs themselves—­small blame to thim in that matther.  No; a bright Irish nag, with lots of heart, like Brien Boru, is the hoss to stand on for the Derby; where all run fair and fair alike, the best wins;—­but I won’t say but he’ll be the betther for a little polishing at Johnny Scott’s.”

“Besides, Grady, no horse could run immediately after a sea voyage.  Do you remember what a show we made of Peter Simple at Kilrue?”

“To be shure I does, my lord:  besides, they’ve proper gallops there, which we haven’t—­and they’ve betther manes of measuring horses:—­why, they can measure a horse to half a pound, and tell his rale pace on a two-mile course, to a couple of seconds.—­Take the sheets off, Larry, and let his lordship run his hand over him.  He’s as bright as a star, isn’t he?”

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The Kellys and the O'Kellys from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.