Loud noises can make me jump, literally. I thought of that the other week when I saw this online footage of a couple of horses galloping through the London streets. They were with the famous Household Cavalry, whose horses are usually tightly disciplined. But these were near a construction site where they dropped a heavy load from a big height, and the noise was enough to spook them! (I’m glad I’m not a construction worker who has to deal with such noises.) By the time they were subdued, they’d damaged a bus and a taxi. I certainly would want to be in their way.
Some years back there was a fire at the stables near the Woodbine racetrack, and dozens of racehorses rushed out into the neighbourhood. Imagine looking out at your front lawn and seeing a scared horse there! I wouldn’t know how to calm one down. I guess I’d feed him an apple and a carrot and hope for the best. I’ve heard of horse whisperers, who have a natural sense of what a horse is feeling. What a great talent that must be…
I remember seeing the movie Missing… some 40 years ago. Directed by Costa-Gavras, it’s about Jack Lemmon investigating his son’s disappearance during the 1973 coup where the Chilean army overthrew a democratic communist government. (Lemmon was best known for comedy, but he gives a solid dramatic performance here.) One of its images was of a riderless horse running through the street during the coup. Such images address our deep-seated fears—what’s to prevent every horse from running away and going wherever he feels? I also think of the spooked horse in Picasso’s mural “Guernica.” That painting depicts the chaos that followed a fascist-terror bombing, but it isn’t chaotic itself: everything works together for the overall image.
Here’s a fortune cookie message: “You believe whatever people tell you.”
No comments:
Post a Comment