| PART 2
Chapter 21
 (continued)"The horse is here belonging to Mak...Mak...I never can say the
 name," said the Englishman, over his shoulder, pointing his big
 finger and dirty nail towards Gladiator's stall. "Mahotin?  Yes, he's my most serious rival," said Vronsky. "If you were riding him," said the Englishman, "I'd bet on you." "Frou-Frou's more nervous; he's stronger," said Vronsky, smiling
 at the compliment to his riding. "In a steeplechase it all depends on riding and on pluck," said
 the Englishman. Of pluck--that is, energy and courage--Vronsky did not merely
 feel that he had enough; what was of far more importance, he was
 firmly convinced that no one in the world could have more of this
 "pluck" than he had. "Don't you think I want more thinning down?" "Oh, no," answered the Englishman.  "Please, don't speak loud.
 The mare's fidgety," he added, nodding towards the horse-box,
 before which they were standing, and from which came the sound of
 restless stamping in the straw. He opened the door, and Vronsky went into the horse-box, dimly
 lighted by one little window.  In the horse-box stood a dark bay
 mare, with a muzzle on, picking at the fresh straw with her
 hoofs.  Looking round him in the twilight of the horse-box,
 Vronsky unconsciously took in once more in a comprehensive glance
 all the points of his favorite mare.  Frou-Frou was a beast of
 medium size, not altogether free from reproach, from a
 breeder's point of view.  She was small-boned all over; though
 her chest was extremely prominent in front, it was narrow.  Her
 hind-quarters were a little drooping, and in her fore-legs, and
 still more in her hind-legs, there was a noticeable curvature.
 The muscles of both hind- and fore-legs were not very thick; but
 across her shoulders the mare was exceptionally broad, a
 peculiarity specially striking now that she was lean from
 training.  The bones of her legs below the knees looked no
 thicker than a finger from in front, but were extraordinarily
 thick seen from the side.  She looked altogether, except across
 the shoulders, as it were, pinched in at the sides and pressed
 out in depth.  But she had in the highest degree the quality that
 makes all defects forgotten: that quality was blood, the blood
 that tells, as the English expression has it.  The muscles stood
 up sharply under the network of sinews, covered with this
 delicate, mobile skin, soft as satin, and they were hard a bone.
 Her clean-cut head with prominent, bright, spirited eyes,
 broadened out at the open nostrils, that showed the red blood in
 the cartilage within.  About all her figure, and especially her
 head, there was a certain expression of energy, and, at the same
 time, of softness.  She was one of those creatures which seem
 only not to speak because the mechanism of their mouth does not
 allow them to. |