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Book of cats and dogs, and other friends, for little folks cover

Book of cats and dogs, and other friends, for little folks

Chapter 58: HOW THE PONY GOT SHOD.
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About This Book

Short, lesson-based chapters and nursery rhymes introduce young readers to common household animals through simple observations, anecdotes, and comparisons. Sections describe appearance, movement, senses, feeding, and useful traits, while short stories illustrate typical behaviors and relationships with people. The approach blends play and rhyme with guided attention to detail, encouraging children to observe, compare, and describe animals, to care for them kindly, and to develop early habits of systematic thinking about living creatures.

LESSON XXIV.

HOW THE PONY GOT SHOD.

1. “Billy” was a fine pony, brought from Shetland for a little boy to ride to and from school, as the distance was too great to walk. When Billy first came he was barefoot, and when he began his daily journeys he was shod for the first time.

2. The blacksmith who put on the shoes lived quite a long distance from Billy’s home, and the pony had never been over the road but on the day he went to be shod. A few weeks after, the blacksmith saw Billy, without halter or bridle, coming up the road toward the shop.

3. Thinking the pony had strayed away, the blacksmith turned him round, and threw stones at him to make him go back toward home.

4. The pony trotted off; but the blacksmith had only fairly got to work again, when he heard a noise, and, looking up, there stood Billy at the door.

5. This time, before driving him away, the blacksmith took a look at his feet, and found that Billy had lost a shoe. He at once made a new one, and put it on, and then waited to see what Billy would do.

6. The pony looked at the blacksmith for a moment, as if asking whether he was done; then he pawed, to see if the new shoe was all right, gave a neigh for a “thank you, sir,” and set off for home on a brisk trot. His master knew nothing about the matter until next day.