Discussion Topic
Ginger's identity and behavior in Anna Sewell's Black Beauty
Summary:
Ginger in Anna Sewell's Black Beauty is characterized by her fiery spirit and rebellious behavior. Her identity is shaped by a history of harsh treatment and neglect, which makes her wary of humans and often temperamental. Despite her tough exterior, Ginger's experiences highlight the impact of cruelty and the need for compassion in the treatment of animals.
Who is Ginger in the novel Black Beauty?
Ginger, a pretty chestnut horse, is the stablemate of Black Beauty while he lives at Birtwick Park.
After Black Beauty grows to adulthood, he is sold to Squire Gordon in Birtwick Park. There he lives with Merrylegs, a "cheery, plucky, good-natured little fellow," and a couple other horses. Ginger and Beauty are with each other most of the time, so she and he get to know each other well. Ginger tells him that she was mistreated quite often; when she was first in contact with men, they handled her roughly.
As she continues her history, Ginger tells Beauty about having to wear the bearing rein, which forces the horse to keep its head high in a fashionable pose for pulling carriages. However, the bearing rein is unnatural and causes the horse severe pain in its neck. This mention of the bearing rein is one of the main reasons Anna Sewell
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Anna Sewell wrote her novel; she was strongly against this cruel device as well any cruelty to horses and other animals.
Ginger eventually settles down at the Gordons' place. But after Mrs. Gordon becomes ill and they move away, Beauty and the others are sold. Beauty does not see her for some years, but one day as he endures some hardship, he sees poor Ginger pulling an old cab. She is thin, her joints are swollen, and she looks pitiful. Later, Beauty sees a dead horse and he hopes it may be the end of suffering for Ginger.
Who is Ginger in Anna Sewell's Black Beauty and why does she behave as she does?
Ginger is a second horse belonging to Squire Gordon at
Birtwick Park. We first meet Ginger in Chapter 4, Part 1 of Anna Sewell's
Black Beauty. She is very angry that a young horse like Black Beauty
has been placed in her large loose box so that she must now stay in one of the
smaller stalls. She is also described as always having her ears down and as
having a very poor temper, since she is easily angered and
frequently bites. Ginger and Black Beauty are partnered together in the
carriage, so as the story progresses, both Black Beauty and the reader come to
understand the cause of her poor temper.
After his initial encounter with Ginger, Black Beauty comes to respect Ginger,
even to fall in love with her towards the middle of the story. The first time
he is partnered with her in the carriage, he notes that she is a very honest,
hard worker and reflects, "I never wish to have a better partner in double
harness" (Ch. 5, Pt. 1). One day while out in the paddock, conversing together,
Ginger explains that her own "bringing up and breaking in" were not as gentle
and nurturing as Black Beauty's, which accounts for her poor temper. Ginger
relays the following poor treatment she received as way of
explanation for her temper: (1) no one ever cared for her; (2) no one ever
spoke kindly to her; (3) boys used to wander into the field and throw stones at
the horses; (4) her trainer was a hard man with a "hard voice, a hard eye,
[and] a hard hand," who only sought to "make [Ginger] into a quiet, humble,
obedient piece of horseflesh"; and (5) her trainer tired her out and punished
her frequently (Ch. 7, Pt. 1). She further tells Black Beauty about all the
various masters she had been sold to. Her first master was
cruel, insisting on using a check-rein that pulls horses' heads up high and
punishing her frequently; her second master was kind, but she soon came under
the care of another cruel groom she had to endure until she was finally sold to
kind, gentle Squire Gordon and his kind, gentle grooms.