What was the Squire Gordon gives to vicar?
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Squire Gordon is very pleased with his new horse, a gentle and intelligent creature. The horse is also very handsome so that he is given the name of "Black Beauty" by Mrs. Gordon. Black Beauty is put into a stable with a twelve-year-old gray pony named Merrylegs and a tall chestnut mare named Ginger.
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Answer:
Squire Gordon sells Merrylegs to the Vicar on the condition that the Vicar never sells Merrylegs.
Explanation:
- Black Beauty is a novel by Anna Sewell that was published in 1877.
- The story is told in the first person as autobiographical reminiscences, narrated by the eponymous horse named Black Beauty, beginning with his carefree days as a foal on an English farm with his mother to his hard life in London taxis to his happy retirement in the country.
- On his way he encounters many difficulties and tells many stories of cruelty and kindness.
- Each short chapter narrates an incident in Black Beauty's life, containing a lesson or moral typically related to kindness, sympathy and understanding of horses, with Sewell's detailed observations and extensive descriptions of horse behavior giving the novel a high degree of confer truthfulness.
- The book describes the conditions among horse-drawn cab drivers in London, including the financial difficulties caused by high license fees and low statutory fares.
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