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The Story of a Donkey

CHAPTER I 

Word Count: 1121    |    Released on: 17/11/2017

do not know that there was a market in our country-town every Tuesday. At this market veg

y for market out of her garden. Then she would get on the top of all this and beat me with a hard, knotty stick because my poor thin legs didn't carry her to market with all that load as fast as she liked. I trotted, I almost galloped, but that farmer's wife whipped me all the same. I used to get very angry at such cruelty and injusti

itched me to a post, and went away to get her dinner. I was dying of hunger and thirst, but nobody thought of offering me a single blade of grass or a drop of water. Whil

e guessed that I was the culprit. I won't repeat to you the mean things she said to me. When she was angry she used language which was enough to make me blush, donkey as I am. So after heaping me with abuse, of which I took no

of which were spread out the things I had brought to be sold in the market. I remained there a long while, and finding that no one paid any more attention

the way were astonish

that ass with the broke

prison," said the other,

heavy load upon his

one some mischief,"

put the little one upon

well as the little boy

d good will, came gently towards the country woman

rt!" said the man, helpin

become angry, disobedient, and obstinate only to revenge ourselves for the blows and injuries

ars back to their home; they stroked me, were very mu

me and I be5longed to them. I had already broken my mistress's nose, teeth,

lean over

clean over

ced was a spoiled child), I jumped to one side, and before the mother cou

s's little girl,

d; "how early he is! Jim, come

s something to be done for him! Why is he a

meadow. Suddenly I heard shrieks. I looked over the hedge, and

-whip, and I shall tie that donkey to a tr

but mind and don't kill him, for he co

not. I made a run and jumped clean over the hedge. Then I ran till I was out of sight and hearing in the depths of a beauti

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The Story of a Donkey
The Story of a Donkey
“The author of this book was the daughter of that Count Rostopchine who was governor of Moscow when it was burned in 1812, and Napoleon was obliged in consequence to make his disastrous retreat from that city. Born in 1799, Sophie de Rostopchine married, in 1821, the Count de Ségur, a son of one of the oldest and proudest families of France. She was a very accomplished and lovable person, and, as her writings attest, she was thoroughly in sympathy with the ways and feelings of children.”
1 Dedication2 PREFACE3 INTRODUCTION4 CHAPTER I5 CHAPTER II6 CHAPTER III7 CHAPTER IV8 CHAPTER V9 CHAPTER VI10 CHAPTER VII11 CHAPTER VIII12 CHAPTER IX13 CONCLUSION