|  | Its been a couple years now since Mary Williams passed away at the age of
79 on Dec 3, 1990.  I've intended to update this note to share an essay 
Mary Williams authored.   Mary Williams was known throughout the area for her 
ability as an artist and her devotion to teaching people to ride horses.  This
essay was read in memoriam at her service in the Peterborough Unitarian Church:
Horses have  always  been  an integral part of my life.  In winter, we lived
with my grandfather in New Haven, Conn., from when I was about 5 until I was
15 and went away to school.  I used to go to drive with my grandfather's old
coachman  after  school  nearly  every  day  when  he exercised the carriage
horses,  which  weren't  used very much anymore, but only kept on account of
Taylor, the coachman, who had been with my grandfather since he was 14.  
The horses  stayed  until he could no longer care for them.  I remember when
he  died.   He  was in his 80's.  He told me all about how he'd been a slave
and  belonged  to  a  southern Colonel in the Civil War.  He was 12 years old
when  the  Colonel  was  wounded  somewhere in New York state and taken to a
hospital  in  Vermont.  Taylor went with him and hid under the hospital bed,
scared  to  death.  The Colonel died and Taylor ran away.  It was so cold in
Vermont  he ran south.  He ended in New Haven at a livery stable, because as
he told me, horses were all in the world he knew.
Soon, my  grandfather  needed a stable boy, and Taylor came to work for him.
He  thought  the  world of my grandfather.  I spent hours in the stable, and
driving with him, and learned a great deal not only about horses, but life in
general.   For instance, one time when we were out driving in East Rock Park
we  past  a  couple  in  close  embrace.  I was about 9 years old and I well
remember  Taylor saying to me, "Now if I'de been them, I'd have gone further
into the bushes." When later I quoted this to my mother at supper I wondered
why  she  laughed  so much.  Later I found out she had expected Taylor would
moralize a bit, but he was honest and direct.  
I was  given my first horse on my 8th birthday and I have owned at least one
ever  since.  My first horse was perfect! I had an old McClellan saddle, and
the  next  four years revolved around my little horse, Tippy.  She shared my
moods,   gave   me   mobility,   and  taught  me  self  reliance  and
independence.  With a friend who also had a horse, we roamed the countryside
for   hours  on  end  pretending  we  were  everything  from  highwaymen  to
princesses,  exploring,  adventuring  and  learning.   My father rode with me 
on weekends and we had many exciting times including one time  his  horse  
went  over  backward and broke my father's leg 10 miles at least  from  home.
Then one fall night, Tippy died of pneumonia.  My world shattered.
I had  been  swimming  her in Long Island Sound where we lived in summer and
she  must  have  gotten  chilled.   It  was my fault and it took a long time
before I could even mention her name.  Once one of my brothers mentioned the
Mare's  Tail  clouds  in  the  sky and I dissolved in tears.  My first close
experience with tragedy, and I grew up another step.
My next  horse  came  almost  immedidately, a little standardbred mare named
Wendy,  who  had  a  few  bad  habits,  like rearing.  She began to teach me
patience,  courage  and  determination.   She  broke  my arm one day when she
bucked me off.  
When my  friend  and  I weren't riding we were "playing horse." We each had a
barn  full  of  the  most  beautiful,  lively  horses imaginable.  We "rode"
together  all  over  the  streets  of New Haven, whinnying at each other and
startled pedestrians, shying at baby carriages, bicycles and old ladies, and
severely reprimanding our "horses!" When I went away to school in Virginia I
discovered  that  one  did  not always walk up and down hills the way we had
been  taught.   One galloped over fields and fences, rode 10 miles to a hunt
meet  before  the  meet  began, sometimes ending the day 20 miles from
home, and then the long hack back to school.  
In other  words,  I  learned foxhunting! There were few if any trailers, and
none  available  for  school  girls!  I  learned  what it is to be tired and
hungry, healthily tired, but  the  horse  comes  first;  self discipline.
School days are always full of ups and downs.  My horse, Charmer, a 3/4 bred
hunter  at  this time, was my anchor.  I can't count the times I have turned
the world right side up again with my horse.  The day I was married I got up
at  daybreak  and went for a long ride alone with Charmer and my dogs Peter,
and  his  son  Brutus.   Charmer and Brutus came as my dowry.  The day after
papa died, though it was December, I saddled Star and rode to the top of the
hill alone with Star.
There the  storm  clouds that bleak December morning suddenly opened up, and
the rising sun lit the edges of the black clouds.  I patted Star, and I knew
I  could  make  it.   With Greyfriar's help, I'm still going.  My riding was
somewhat  curtailed  by  the arrivals and presence of 9 children, however, I
continued  to  ride until I could no longer fit in the saddle with each one.
You sat on horses before you could walk.  (You were on skis before you could
stand  up!)  You  all  rode  and learned much the same things I had learned.
Long  before  you drove a car you rode off into the distance - independence,
self-reliance.
I usually  tried  to  find  the  general  direction  you  took  after having
riderless  horses  gallop  home at least twice.  You played equally exciting
games  in  the  woods.   You  entered  your  first  small  4-H  horse shows.
Gradually  you  learned  the  responsibility of care and feeding and mucking
out!
Regularity and dependability, and to some of you I'm sure, as it still is to
me,  the barn is the place to go to soothe a hurt or think out a frustrating
problem.   I've "written" many letters that never got mailed while shoveling
out  a  stall  and felt better for it.  Over the years we seemed to get more
deeply  involved  with  horses  until now they are a way of life for me, and
some of you children.  
There are  as  many  facets  to  horses and riding as there are to a diamond.
There  is  the  simple  love  of the animal; the desire to ride off into the
woods  to  be  alone; the sociability of a trail ride; the thrill of a horse
race;  the  exciting  danger of a tough cross country course.  And above all
else  the  beauty and the art expressed in the complete harmony of horse and
rider.  This for me, is what life is all about.
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