sábado, 11 de outubro de 2014

A bold bad rider must not be merely brave, he must be fool-hardy

A bold bad rider must not be merely brave, he must be fool-hardy

A bold bad rider must not be merely brave, he must be fool-hardy



A bold bad rider must not be merely brave; he must be fool-hardy; for he is perpetually in as much danger as a blind man among precipices.

In riding, as in most other things, danger is for the timid and the unskilful. The skilful rider, when apparently courting danger in the field, deserves no more credit for courage than for sitting in an arm-chair, and the unskilful no more the imputation of timidity for backwardness than if without practice he declined to perform on the tight-rope. Depend upon it, the bold bad rider is the hero.


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