I have taken to art therapy to cope with the trauma |
When
Oedipus was forced off the road on his way to Delphi, by a horse-drawn carriage,
the self-important king it was conveying tried to beat the pedestrian Oedipus with a
horsewhip. King Laius ended up dead. I noticed that my Mounted Magnifico was
fingering his whip. The dog whimpered. I now knew—really knew—how Oedipus had
felt.
PEDESTRIANS BEWARE |
I
wondered whether the man, who was older than me, could logistically be my father
if I had secretly been adopted. He uttered a command in a cut-glass accent: ‘COME CLOSER AND YOU CAN STEP ASIDE WHERE THE NETTLES AREN'T QUITE AS TALL!’ I was
expected to walk straight into the face of large animal I had never met, which
might rear, kick, or bite at any moment, and plunge into a wall of stinging nettles
six foot high. ‘Can’t horses walk backwards?’ I mumbled.
Equestrian
Toff gestured behind him. He was followed by a miniature of himself, a boy of
about 12 sneering down at me from a glossy skewbald pony. Could he be my son?
Had I once had a supercilious boy-child I have forgotten about? The thought
made me surrender. I retreated with the dog into the nettles. I am still
suffering from the stings.
Laius was the one who ended up in the nettles |
My
previous equine confrontation was with a police horse charging at me outside
Parliament during the demonstration against the privatization of university
teaching in 2010. But this Oedipal Face Off occurred near my home. I like horses: it’s the
riders I have problems with.
The moneyed people who ride horses round here have
a sense of total entitlement. If they want to ride two abreast, and walk at two
miles per hour, then you miss the train you are driving to get to earn a living. What is worse, they smirk
and wave at you as if to say ‘Isn’t it GREAT that we have enough money to keep
these GORGEOUS horses and you are so LUCKY to be delayed by such a CHARMING
SPECTACLE?’ Before they return to their
lovely mansions, their equids use the public highway as a toilet. It gets stuck
in your car wheel hubs.
'blame my rider' (pic cropped by S. Poynder) |
I
was brought up in a Midlands city. I agreed to live in the countryside out of
love. I yearn to return to the wide, horse-free tarmacadam boulevards of my urban
Nottingham youth.
And I STILL don’t know whether horses can be made to walk
backwards, or whether the Horrid Horseman was my dad.
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