“[The voice,] which soundeth sharply and cheerfully, crying via, how, hey, and such like, adding a spirit and liveliness to the horse and lending a great help to all his motions.” Markham, p. 20
“... which being delivered smoothly and lovingly, as crying holla, so boy, there boy there, and such like, gives the Horse both cheerfulness of Spirit and a knowledge that he hath done well.” Markham p. 22
“[or which] being delivered sharply and roughly, as ha villain, carridro, diablo, and such like threatenings, terrifieth the Horse and maketh him afraid to disobey.” Markham p. 21Note to self: I shall be calling Taran "diablo" from here on out when he does something naughty, instead of "you little sh!t" or some other colorful modern term.
Also if you're like me, you find it difficult not to talk to your horse during tests. I often tell Taran "good boy!" under my breath down by A, where I'm sure I can't be heard by the judge - because I've gotten that awful -2 for "use of voice" on my test. Grrr.
“… and cherish him, laieng your hand upon his necke, and uttering some courteous voice.” Bedingfield p. 71But why can't we use our voice in the test? I think that the reason may have actually originated as far back as the mid 1500s, or even earlier. Consider this little gem from Bedingfield's 1584 English translation of an Italian book written in 1560:
“And albeit the helps of the voice and spurre ought to be used at the beginning, when the horse learneth… both the one and the other may afterwards be discontinued. For… it is not seemelie thing in the presence of lookers on, to use so manie artificiall motions and affectatations…” Bedingfield p. 50
Cesare Fiaschi riding before an audience, 1564.
“…this help of the voice may not be used much, if you ride in presence of the Prince, or other great persons; chieflie when the horse is redie: for at such times and in such places it were unseemelie to open your mouth, and utter voices of diverse sounds and meaning.” Bedingfield p. 61
Obviously a dressage judge is not a prince, but the purpose of riding before each is the same - to show off your horse to the best of his ability. So if riders were not supposed to use their voice while riding for an audience almost 500 years ago, it is not surprising that we have this tradition in modern sport dressage.
Kinda cool, huh?
Bedingfield, Thomas. The Art of Riding. London, 1584.
Markham, Gervase. The Compleat Horseman. London, 1593.
Very cool :0)
ReplyDeleteTotally going to start using diablo and villain when my pony is being naughty! My biggest problem is that my mare responds to me saying "canter" when asking her to canter. That has been a bit tough for us now that we are showing canter tests.
ReplyDeleteAh yes, voice cues are hard to cut out!
DeleteI wish we could use our voice! After all, it is the most gentle of aids! But it's dressage and tradition is not going anywhere soon. And like you, I often whisper to my horse. Or I will hum quietly when I need him to whoa a little bit. Pretty sure I have mistakenly clucked in the ring a few times but got away with it. lol
ReplyDeleteYeah I'm constantly saying "good boy!" under my breath in tests. Haven't tried humming though!
Deleteoh my those quotes are amazing!! Very cool.
ReplyDeleteGlad you enjoyed them!
DeleteI wish could terrifieth the horse and maketh him afraid fo disobey.
ReplyDeleteThat doesn't work on mine.
i was just thinking that
DeleteHa meeee too. That would help me immensely with that naughty pony lol
DeleteYeah, yelling at mine doesn't do anything either. Le sigh.
Delete^that right there... haha.
ReplyDeleteThis was a super interesting read; thanks for writing about it! I am always talking to my horse while riding, so yeah, it does feel weird to have to shut up in front of the judge! I'm sure one day I'm going to forget I'm not allowed to speak... :S
ReplyDeletebonita of A Riding Habit
Oh, you can, just not where the judge can hear you or see your lips moving!
DeleteActually - during a driven dressage test you can use your voice ;)
ReplyDeleteOh cool, I didn't know that!
DeleteOh man I talk so much when I ride, it's like a run-on monologue!
ReplyDeleteIf I competed I'd be in serious trouble 😅
Talking helps me remember to breathe, so I'm with you!
Deletethis is REALLY interesting, i never thought about WHY i wasn't allowed to talk (or cluck, or smooch...) just lamented the fact that I couldn't.
ReplyDeletei like when i have to do all my canter transitions down at A, then they cant hear me :D
Yeah, you gotta sneak in those little helps down at the far end of the arena for sure!
DeleteI totally talk under my breath to my horse all the time even at shows. Usually when I'm not facing the judge so they can't see my mouth moving lol... But yea. The judges might not be princes any more but I can definitely understand why it's still verboten. The talking does help and therefore totally counts as an artificial aid!
ReplyDeleteYeah, too bad because it is the gentlest of aids!
DeleteAdd "Ha Villain" to the list of show names I distressingly missed out on when registering Bobby. Damn it.
ReplyDeleteThat would have been epic!
DeleteHa Villain! New name for all my naughty ponikins. I love these posts!
ReplyDeleteAnd it's so much more family friendly than some of the modern four-letter alternatives. :D
DeleteHolla is now going to be my new form of praise. God help me if someone hears me say that lol
ReplyDeleteHahaha I want video!
DeleteVillain and Diablo.... Poor Kacey... ;-)
ReplyDeleteAww, Kacey NEVER deserves being called those things, I'm sure of it!
Delete