“Have you had it long?”
“Not long—and it nearly got stolen. …”
“But you got it back?”
“Yes! One of our own villagers had it.”
“Well, and did you have the law of him?”
“Why, naturally!”
“But why prosecute, if you got the plough back?”
“Why, you see, he’s a thief!”
“What then? The man will go to prison, and learn to steal worse!”
He looks at me seriously and attentively, evidently neither agreeing nor contradicting this, to him, new idea.
He has a fresh, healthy, intelligent face, with hair just appearing on his chin and upper lip, and with intelligent grey eyes.
He leaves the plough, evidently wishing to have a rest, and inclined for a talk. I take the plough-handles, and touch the perspiring, well-fed, full-grown mare. She presses her weight into her collar, and I take a few steps. But I do not manage the plough, the share jumps out of the furrow, and I stop the horse.
“No, you can’t do it.”
“I have only spoilt your furrow.”
“That doesn’t matter—I’ll put it right!”
He backs his horse, to plough the part I have missed, but does not go on ploughing.