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The Little Gray PonyTHERE was once a man who owned a little gray pony. Every morning when the dewdrops were still hanging on the pink clover in the meadows, and the birds were singing their morning song, the man would jump on his pony and ride away, clippety, clippety, clap! The pony's four small hoofs played the jolliest tune on the smooth pike road, the pony's head was always high in the air, and the pony's two little ears were always pricked up; for he was a merry gray pony, and loved to go clippety, clippety, clap!
The man rode to town and to country, to church and to market,
up hill and down hill; and one day he heard something fall
with a clang on a stone in the road.
Looking back, he saw a horseshoe lying there.
And when he saw it, he cried
Then down he jumped, in a great hurry,
and looked at one of the pony's forefeet; but nothing was wrong.
He lifted the other forefoot, but the shoe was still there.
He examined one of the hindfeet,
and began to think that he was mistaken;
but when he looked at the last foot, he cried
Then he made haste to go to the blacksmith;
and when he saw the smith, he called out to
But the blacksmith answered and
The man was downcast when he heard this; but he left his little gray pony in the blacksmith's care, while he hurried here and there to buy the coal.
First of all he went to the store; and when he got there,
he
But the storekeeper answered and
Then the man went away sighing, and
By and by he met a farmer coming to town with a wagon
full of good things; and he
Then the farmer answered the man and
So the farmer drove away and left the man standing in the road,
sighing and
In the farmer's wagon, full of good things, he saw corn,
which made him think of the mill; so he hastened there,
and called to the dusty
The miller came to the door in surprise;
and when he heard what was needed, he
Then the man turned away sorrowfully and sat down
on a rock near the roadside, sighing and
After a while a very old woman came down the road,
driving a flock of geese to market; and when she came near the man,
she stopped to ask him his trouble.
He told her all about it; and when she had heard it all,
she laughed till her geese joined in with a cackle;
and she
Then the man sprang to his feet, and, thanking the old woman, he ran to the miner. Now the miner had been working many a long day down in the mine, under the ground, where it was so dark that he had to wear a lamp on the front of his cap to light him at his work! He had plenty of black coal ready and gave great lumps of it to the man, who took them in haste to the blacksmith. The blacksmith lighted his great red fire, and hammered out four fine new shoes, with a cling! and a clang! and fastened them on with a rap! and a tap! Then away rode the man on his little gray pony,—clippety, clippety, clap! |
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