The animal would try to escape, to kick, to get away from the blows, and run around in a circle about its rope, as though it had been inclosed in a circus ring. The men working in the fields would shout to him, jokingly: “Hey, Zidore, remember me to Coco.” He would not answer but on the way he would break off a switch, and, as soon as he had moved the old horse, he would let it begin grazing then, treacherously sneaking up behind it, he would slash its legs. The rascal, angrier every morning, would start, with his dragging step, across the wheat fields. When summer came he had to move the animal about in the pasture. Hatred grew in his confused, childlike mind, the hatred of a stingy, mean, fierce, brutal and cowardly peasant. And often, in spite of the orders of Maitre Lucas, he would economize on the nag's food, only giving him half measure. Since the horse could no longer work, it seemed to him unjust that he should be fed he revolted at the idea of wasting oats, oats which were so expensive, on this paralyzed old plug. For a long time he had been unable to understand why Coco should be kept, indignant at seeing things wasted on this useless beast. He seemed only half-witted, and stuttered as though ideas were unable to form in his thick, brute-like mind. He was a thin, long-legged, dirty child, with thick, coarse, bristly red hair. The boy would fume, feeling an unholy desire to revenge himself on the horse. In the village he was called Coco-Zidore. The farmhands, noticing the young rascal's anger against Coco, were amused and would continually talk of the horse to Zidore, in order to exasperate him. When Zidore took the animal to pasture, he had to pull on the rope with all his might, because it walked so slowly and the youth, bent over and out of breath, would swear at it, exasperated at having to care for this old nag. His coat, which was no longer curried, looked like white hair, and his long eyelashes gave to his eyes a sad expression. The animal, almost crippled, lifted with difficulty his legs, large at the knees and swollen above the hoofs. A young scamp about fifteen years old, Isidore Duval by name, and called, for convenience, Zidore, took care of this pensioner, gave him his measure of oats and fodder in winter, and in summer was supposed to change his pasturing place four times a day, so that he might have plenty of fresh grass. A very old white horse, which the mistress wished to keep until its natural death, because she had brought it up and had always used it, and also because it recalled many happy memories, was housed, through sheer kindness of heart, at the end of the stable. Maitre Lucas, a tall man who was getting stout, would go round three times a day, overseeing everything and thinking of everything. The beasts-horses, cows, pigs and sheep-were fat, well fed and clean. Every day, at noon, fifteen persons, masters, farmhands and the women folks, seated themselves around the long kitchen table where the soup was brought in steaming in a large, blue-flowered bowl. Thanks for the good care taken, the manure heaps were as little offensive as such things can be the watch-dogs lived in kennels, and countless poultry paraded through the tall grass. The immense court, surrounded by five rows of magnificent trees, which sheltered the delicate apple trees from the harsh wind of the plain, inclosed in its confines long brick buildings used for storing fodder and grain, beautiful stables built of hard stone and made to accommodate thirty horses, and a red brick residence which looked like a little chateau. The peasants doubtless attached to this word, “Manor,” a meaning of wealth and of splendor, for this farm was undoubtedly the largest, richest and the best managed in the whole neighborhood. AS MOSCAS DE DEUS: Throughout the whole countryside the Lucas farm, was known as “the Manor.” No one knew why.
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