| The Faithful Bull |
One time there was a bull and his name was not Ferdinand and
he cared nothing for flowers. He loved to fight and he fought with all the
other bulls of his own age or any age, and he was a champion.
His horns were as solid as wood and they were as sharply
pointed as the quill of a porcupine. They hurt him, at the base, when he fought
and he did not care at all. His neck muscles lifted in a great lump that is
called in Spanish the Morillo and this Morillo lifted like a great hill when he
was ready to fight. He was always ready to fight and his coat was black and
shining and his eyes were clear.
Anything made him want to fight and he would fight with
deadly seriousness exactly as some people eat or read or go to church. Each
time he fought he fought to kill and the other bulls were not afraid of him
because they came of good blood and were not afraid. But they had no wish to
provoke him. Nor did they wish to fight him.
He was not a bully nor was he wicked, but he liked to fight
as men might like to sing or to be the King or the President. He never thought
at all. Fighting was his obligation and his duty and his joy.
He fought on the stony, high ground. He fought under the
cork-oak trees and he fought in the good pasture by the river. He walked
fifteen miles each day from the river to the high, stony ground and he would
fight any bull that looked at him. Still, he was never angry.
That is not really true, for he was angry inside himself.
But he did not know why, because he could not think. He was very noble and he
loved to fight.
So what happened to him? The man who owned him, if anyone
can own such an animal, knew what a great bull he was and still he was worried
because this bull cost him so much money by fighting with other bulls. Each
bull was worth over one thousand dollars and after they had fought the great
bull they were worth less than two hundred dollars and sometimes less than
that.
So the man, who was a good man, decided that he would keep
the blood of the bull in all of his stock rather than send him to the ring to
be killed. So he selected him for breeding.
But this bull was a strange bull. When they first turned him
into the pasture with the breeding cows, he saw one who was young and beautiful
and slimmer and better muscled and shinier and lovelier than all the others.
So, since he could not fight, he fell in love with her and paid no attention to
any of the others. He only wanted to be with her, and the others meant nothing
to him at all.
The man who owned the bull ranch hoped that the bull would
change, learn, or be different than he was. But the bull was the same and he
loved whom he loved and no one else. He only wanted to be with her, and the
others meant nothing to him at all.
So the man sent him away with five other bulls to be killed
in the ring, and at least the bull could fight, even though he was faithful. He
fought wonderfully and everyone admired him and the man who killed him admired
him the most. But the fighting jacket of the man who killed him and who is
called the matador was wet by the end, and his mouth was very dry.
"Que toro más bravo," the matador said as he
handed his sword to his sword handler. He handed it with the hilt up and the
blade dripping with the blood from the heart of the brave bull who no longer
had any problems of any kind and was being dragged out of the ring by four
horses.
"Yes. He was the one the Marquee’s of Villa mayor had
to get rid of because he was faithful," the sword handler, who knew
everything, said.
"Perhaps we should all be faithful," the matador
said.
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