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Major Long Talks to His Horse

Innumerable buffalo have the temerity to appear at a distance just as he is solving the problem of the design of a steam carriage. Link them together! he shouts to his horse. The post Major Long Talks to His Horse appeared first on Guernica.
Source image: Eugène Delacroix, "Head of a Horse, after the Parthenon," 1825. Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Major Long looks forward to mountains. Mountains he understands: rock, and streams that spring from snow, gentian and bellflowers atop green boulders at right angles, summits here and there, and tree-edged pools. This, he mutters to his horse, disappoints him.

Hand to brow, arm outstretched, pointer finger pointing, he feels his horse lift a leg in impatience. The horse is thirsty. Like himself and the other twenty riders, the horse wants to get on to water, dip its head into a stream and have it course down its impossibly long neck, its organs unshriveling. Yes, well, the view is not promising: first and foremost, no trees. If you need premonitions for your bodings, that lack says no to bodies of water, to underground seepage, to moisture anywhere that would attract a seed.

However, the grass here grows as high as your withers and not two days ago, the Pawnee had at least eight thousand ponies standing by. Then

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