One of my fondest books as a child was Doctor at Timberline, by Charles Fox Gardiner. Gardiner was a doctor early in the settlement of western Colorado in the nineteenth century. Each chapter of the book is a self-contained story of his experiences tending to the ailments of mostly men in mining towns, ranches, and lonely cabins high in the Rockies. The book was a gift from my father, who spent his teenage years before the war in Mintern, Colorado, where his father owned and ran a saloon. I passed it along to my son, who enjoyed it, too.
The book has been lost for some time. A pity, since I would love to read it out loud to my grandchildren. There is only one story that I remember distinctly. It involved taming a temperamental horse. A good horse was very valuable property in the that era as long as it was, shall we say, docile. This horse was not. The doctor needed the horse and, instead of trying to sell it, he decided to break its spirit.
The doctor was not a horse trainer or bronco buster, so he decided on a plan to teach the horse who was boss. The first thing he did was separate the horse from his other horses into a small corral, where the horse could not see others of his kind. He did not let the horse out of this small corral. Then he cut the its water and feed ration so drastically that the horse almost starved. The doctor slowly increased the horse’s ration, eventually leading it out of its solitary confinement to graze and to rejoin the remuda.
Needless to say, the doctor broke the horse’s rebellious spirit, and it became completely willing to do whatever the doctor demanded.