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John Thorburn
Bibliography

Hildebrand
Country Life, 1930, illustrated by “The Wag”
Reprinted by Collins in 1949, illustrated by Peter Beigel
and in 1966 in
The Vanguard Book of Horses and Riding

Three’s Company
Country Life, 1932, “with drawings by Arnrid Johnson”

“The Wag” might have been Charles Walter Simpson, 1885 - 1971
John Thorburn’s Hildbrand was one of the most notable experiments in pony books.  It is a book in which real life is triumphantly ignored. Its equine hero, Hildebrand, is a piebald horse who “had ceased to be a willing co-operator”.

Hildebrand is christened by his new owners, and one of his equine fairy godmothers unwisely gives Hildebrand the ability to talk:  like Saki’s Tobermory, Hildebrand has a gift for saying that which ought to be left unsaid.  He insults the last fairy godmother to give him a gift: Sal Volatile the Night Mare, a “terribly common” horse who drops her aitches. This does not go down well.
“Starts with ‘an aitch’ does it?” she shouted.  “I’ll give you haitches!”  I’ll give you so many haitches that from now hon heverything you heat shall ‘ave to start with a        
Hildebrand himself is a tactless and feisty horse, meaning his relations with his human and equine friends are fraught.  Hildebrand is absolutely the last horse one can imagine patiently teaching a small child to ride.  He is far more likely to strand it on an island, or leave it agog as he shares a hen supper with his fox friends Hengist and Horsa.  Hildebrand, although a creature of fantasy, is not the stuff of which pony mad children’s dreams are made.
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Illustrations from Hildebrand, first edn
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Above - first edition
Left - Collins printing
illus Peter Biegel