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Will Rogers Writing Style
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We both came from I was working in Ziegfeld’s famous Midnight
Frolic (the first of all Dopey belonged to the family. Our children learned to ride at two, and during his lifetime he never did a wrong thing to throw one off,
or do a wrong thing after they had fallen off. He couldn’t pick ‘em
up, but he would stand there and look at ‘em with a disgusted look for being so clumsy as to fall off. He never kicked or stepped on one of them in his life, and he was a young horse when I first got him from
Zack Miller. But he was always naturally gentle, and intelligent. I used to sit on him by the hour and try new
rope tricks, and he never batted an eye. Then I learned some trick riding, such
as vaulting, and drags, and all that. In fact he was the only one I could ever
do it on. Then in 1919 we went to One year I took Dopey in a Follies baggage car,
on the whole tour with the show, and kept him in the riding academies and practiced roping every day with him. Charley Aldrich, a cowboy, used to ride him, and run by for my fancy roping tricks; he has been missed
with a loop more times, and maybe caught more times than any horse living. In
a little picture called the “Roping Fool” where I did all my little fancy catches in slow motion, he was the pony
that run for them. He was coal black, and I had my ropes whitened and the catches
showed up fine. In a private tan bark ring we had in our old
Excerpted from article published |
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