July 2002 - First editorial - Maurice Druon
Summary of category " "Editorial"
Posted Sun, 09/10/2011 - 20:28
      Editorial  July 2002      
The first editorial written by Maurice Druon of the Academie Française
As much as my servant, my horse is my friend. I expect him to serve me; but my pleasure in riding him is only complete if we share an understanding, confidence, and mutual friendship.
While one might have thought that the horse, replaced by machines for transporting and hauling, would have disappeared from our world, young people today are more and more attracted to riding. For this we should rejoice, for the benefits they draw from it and will draw in future. It is worth noting that this is the only sport where man has as his partner a representative of the animal world. And I do mean partner, not adversary. In this way riding is a physical and mental connection with nature and a marvelous school of character.
I only  consider my horse well trained when he desires to please me.  This  definition will perhaps seem strange to some. But my experience as  an  old horseman allows me to insist that a horse, if he has been  properly  schooled and is loved, repays in kind the one that rides him  and seeks  to please him.
Dogs are not alone in loving man and  wanting to assist him; the horse  does so as well, in a way that is  different and less apparent and that  must be discerned and encouraged.
I  maintain that a horse can want to present himself in a lovely frame,   take pleasure in hacking out, develop a passion for jumping; and I have   even known horses that acquired a sense for the hunt and that actually   hunted with you. But this collaboration, this understanding, this   cooperation—so satisfying—is obtained neither through fear nor   constraint. The essential word for training is lightness.
The  horse’s mouth is delicate and sensitive flesh. Held with a rough  hand  it will become hardened, while with a light hand it will respond  to the  softest direction. The quality of a rider is not measured by the  length  of his spurs but by the silent dialog established between the  man’s leg  and his horse’s side. And the horse himself will become  light.
Lightness has never meant weakness or slackness.
Lightness requires intelligence, vigilance, elegance.
Lightness  is the centuries-old hallmark of the French School and is  what lies  behind its achievements and its glory. Lightness is not only  important  in dressage competition and the superb performances of the  Cadre Noir.  It is important at all levels of riding, and as riding  increases in  popularity, it is important for training the instructors  for the growing  number of riding academies.
I could therefore not  be more pleased that an association, under the  direction of horsemen of  the highest prestige, has been created with  the goal of preserving and  promoting this great and beneficent  tradition.
And I consider it an honor to have been invited to pronounce over the cradle of Allege-Ideal these few words of christening.
 
Summary of category " "Editorial"



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