Hard-Shell Horse, A
Sturdy John and little May,
On the sandy beach at play,
Spend a sunny summer day
Fearless John has caught a steed.
And an odd one ‘tis, indeed,
With its ten good legs for speed!
Harnessed to a little cart
By a deal of boyish art,
Off It goes with sudden start;
Sideway sprawling, backward crawling,
Geeing, hawing, nipping, clawing,
Now upsetting, and now getting
All its ten legs badly tangled
In the harness, this new-fangled,
Shell-back horse makes lively fun
For its trainers; but we guess
For itself ‘tis something less.
So thinks little May, for one.
Laughing till her eyes are wet,
She remembers mercy yet.
“Now,” she says, “John we’ll unharness
Crabbie. There’s no horse so fine!
In this rocky pool his barn is.
Where on good sea-kale to dine
With a bowl of ocean brine,
Let him eat and drink and play
With he wee ones!”
And away,
Eyes aslant to left and right,
Sidelong, headlong, out of sight
Claw-foot tumbles, glad as they!
- Title
- Hard-Shell Horse, A
- Alternative Title
- Sturdy John and little May
- Creator
-
George Shepard Burleigh
- Bibliographic Citation
- George S. Burleigh Papers, 1825-1902. John Hay Library, Brown University. Large Scrapbook 247
- Date
- tbd
- Subject
- Children
- Animals - Crab
- Bodies of Water
- note
- The illustration included is by Alexander H. Seaverns (1856-1932). He worked mostly in Massachusetts, first in Springfield then in Nantucket. His most famous work is of an elderly Quakeress in her living room with her cat.





