Denis was a pig, a very special sort
of pig, a pig of German origin, and perhaps the only
animal of his species in whose favour a special dispensation
was made by the Board of Agriculture. He originally
belonged to the German light cruiser Dresden,
and, after the destruction of that vessel at Juan
Fernandez by the Kent, Glasgow, and
Orama, was seen swimming about in the water
close to the Glasgow. A blue-jacket promptly
jumped overboard and rescued him from a watery grave,
and Denis, instead of being converted into pork or
sausages, became a prisoner of war and a pet.
He did not seem the least dismayed by his change
of nationality, and, being an adaptable creature of
robust constitution, throve on a miscellaneous and
indiscriminate diet of ships’ provisions, eked
out by tobacco, cigarette ends, and coal. Moreover,
within a month, so history relates, he was quite accustomed
to sleeping in a hammock, where he snored exactly
like a human being.
But the regulations as to the importation
of animals into Great Britain are necessarily stringent,
and on the Glasgow’s arrival in home
waters there were complications as to the disposal
of Denis. He could not be landed in the ordinary
way, but eventually, after some correspondence, the
Board of Agriculture solved the momentous question
by giving special permission for him to be put ashore
at Whale Island, the naval gunnery school in Portsmouth
harbour. There, so far as I know, he still remains
as a naturalised Briton.
But a pig is by no means the strangest
animal which has made its home on board a man-of-war.
In a small gunboat in China some years ago the ship’s
company acquired a so-called tame alligator.
Algernon, as they christened him, came on board as
a youngster a few weeks old and about four feet long,
and soon developed a habit of appearing when the decks
were being scrubbed in the mornings, when he revelled
in having the hose played upon him and in having his
scaly back well scrubbed with a hard broom.
He devoured a tame rabbit and two cats, but the crux
came when he taught himself a trick of waiting until
some unsuspecting person had his back turned, of making
a sudden rush at his victim and capsizing him with
a well-placed whisk of his horny tail, and then running
in with a good-humoured smile and a ferocious snapping
and gnashing of his yellow teeth. It was all
very funny, but so many innocent persons were wrought
almost to the verge of nervous prostration by Algernon’s
ideas of sport, that at last the fiat went forth that
he must die. He was shot at dawn, and, less lucky
than Denis, reached England in a stuffed and rather
moth-eaten condition.
Goats are comparatively common as
pets in the Navy, but the goat of all the goats was
a white creature rejoicing in the unromantic name of
William who lived on board a cruiser. His staple
articles of food seemed to consist of tobacco, cigarettes,
stray rope-yarns, bristles of brooms, and odds and
ends of old canvas, while he was not averse to licking
the galvanised compound off the newly painted quarter-deck
stanchions whenever an opportunity of doing so presented
itself. He was a healthy goat of voracious appetite.
His gastric juices would have dissolved a marline-spike,
and he even made short work of the greater portion
of a pair of ammunition boots belonging to the Sergeant-Major
of Royal Marines, and devoured with every symptom of
relish a sheaf of official and highly important documents
lying on the writing-table in the navigator’s
cabin.
William, in spite of his varied diet,
always looked well-nourished and in the rudest of
health, and on Sundays was wont to appear at divisions
with his hair and beard parted in the middle, wearing
an elaborate brass collar, and with gilded horns and
hooves. He had charming manners, and even condescended
to drink an occasional glass of sherry in the wardroom
on guest nights. Of his ultimate fate I have
no knowledge, but, with the very miscellaneous contents
of his interior, he would have provided a most interesting
subject for a post-mortem examination.
Several ships have had bears as pets,
but one in particular, which was the mascot of a cruiser
on the Mediterranean station, was a bear with a pronounced
sense of humour. On one occasion it so happened
that the vessel to which he belonged was lying alongside
the mole at Gibraltar, while another cruiser, fresh
from England, was made fast just astern of her.
It was Sunday afternoon, and all hands and the cook,
except those on duty, followed the usual custom of
the Service by selecting sunny spots on deck and then
composing themselves to peaceful slumber. At
about 2.30 p.m. Master Bruin, freeing himself
from his chain, landed, ambled along the jetty, and
approached the newly arrived vessel on a tour of investigation.
The sentry, not liking the look of the animal, found
something important to do at the other end of his beat,
while the bear proceeding on board unmolested, frightened
nearly out of his wits a burly petty officer doing
duty as quartermaster, and then followed up his moral
victory by chasing him round and round the upper deck.
The petty officer, a well covered man, nearly dropped
from heat and exhaustion, but just managed to barricade
himself in the galley before being overtaken and fondly
hugged. The sleepers, meanwhile, hearing unusual
sounds of revelry, woke up to see a wild-looking animal
seeking another victim, and thinking that Bostock’s
menagerie had broken loose, rose from their couches
and stampeded for the mess-deck.
The bear then waddled aft in search
of further recreation, and seeing the curtained doorway
of one of the upper deck cabins, promptly elbowed
his way in. Inside was an officer fast asleep
on the bunk, who, hearing the sound of heavy breathing,
opened his eyes to see the shaggy bulk of his huge
visitor interposed between him and the doorway.
For a moment he was non-plussed, and, keeping quite
still, endeavoured to mesmerise the animal by looking
him full in the eyes. But the ferocious look
on the bear’s face, a pair of fierce twinkling
eyes, an open mouth with its rows of sharp teeth,
and a long red tongue dripping with saliva, warned
him that mere mesmerism would be useless if he were
to avoid a tussle. There was only one other exit
besides the door, so without further ado he sprang
for ... the open scuttle. He wormed his way
successfully through the small orifice with some loss
of dignity and greatly to the detriment of his Sunday
trousers, flopped gracefully into the water with a
splash, and, swimming to the gangway, clambered back
on board again. Then, rushing to his cabin, he
slammed the door and imprisoned his unwelcome visitor
inside.
Next, seeking out the sentry, he desired
him to eject the intruder. But the marine, a
wise man, firmly but politely intimated that he had
joined his corps to fight the King’s enemies,
not bears of unknown origin and ferocious aspect,
and added that the only conditions on which he would
undertake the job was with the assistance of his rifle,
a fixed bayonet, and some ball ammunition. The
bear, meanwhile, locked in the cabin, was thoroughly
enjoying himself in clawing and tearing to ribbons
everything within reach, and by the time his breathless
keeper from the other ship arrived upon the scene
to conduct his charge home in disgrace, the cabin
was in a state of utter desolation. A bull in
a china shop is nothing to an unwieldy brute of a
bear in a small apartment measuring ten feet by eight.
All’s well that ends well, but the officer’s
best trousers were completely ruined, and he himself
never heard the end of his Sabbath afternoon adventure.
The bear received six strokes with a cane for his
share in the proceedings.
The last escapade of his that I heard
of was when he hugged and removed most of the clothes
from a low class Spanish workman from the dockyard
at Gibraltar. The man had baited him, eventually
releasing the terrified, half-naked wretch, and chasing
him at full speed for nearly half a mile. A
crowd of excited, laughing blue-jackets went in pursuit
of the bear, but the faster they ran, the faster went
the animal and his quarry. Bruin enjoyed it
hugely. Not so the Spanish workman.
Dogs and cats are as common in the
Navy as they are elsewhere, and it is surprising how
soon they become accustomed to naval routine.
The cats never go ashore unless their ship happens
to be lying alongside a dockyard wall, when they usually
desert en bloc and attach themselves to some
other ship, a fresh detachment coming on board in their
stead. The dogs are more faithful, and their
wisdom becomes positively uncanny, for always at the
routine times for boats going ashore they will be
found waiting ready at the top of the gangway.
“Ginger” was an Irish
terrier of plebeian origin belonging to a battleship.
He invariably landed in the postman’s boat at
6.45 a.m., and once ashore went off on his own business.
Nobody ever took the trouble to discover what he
did, but punctually at eight o’clock he used
to reappear at the landing place and return to the
ship in the boat which took off the married officers.
On one occasion, however, he was badly sold, for
though the postman landed at the usual time, the ship
sailed at 7.30 to carry out target practice.
Half an hour later, therefore, there was no boat for
Ginger, and his ship was a mere speck on the horizon;
but nothing daunted, the wise hound proceeded to the
Sailors’ Home and spent the day there.
He was discovered the same afternoon when the ship
returned into harbour, and his admirers always averred
that his temporary absence was the result of a carefully
thought out plan to avoid the sounds of gunfire, which
he detested.
There must be many officers and men
in the Navy who remember “North Corner Bob,”
another red-haired Irish terrier, who used to frequent
the landing place at North Corner in Portsmouth dockyard.
He was not a large dog, as terriers go, but was a
ferocious creature of wild and bedraggled appearance,
who seemed to regard North Corner as his own especial
domain. He fought every other animal who dared
to venture near the place, and many a naval dog bore
the marks of Bob’s teeth to his dying day.
He even boarded strange ships lying
alongside and carried on his campaign of frightfulness
there. In fact he terrorised all the dogs in
Portsmouth dockyard, including two spaniels belonging
to the Admiral Superintendent. But an officer
in a certain ship whose wire-haired terrier Cuthbert
had been badly beaten by Bob some days before, conceived
a brilliant idea for having his revenge. Early
one morning, at Bob’s usual time for passing
by the ship on his way to North Corner, Cuthbert,
wearing a brand new muzzle, was taking his morning
constitutional on deck. Bob, punctual to the
minute, came trotting by in his usual don’t-care-a-damn-for-anyone
manner, but the sight of Cuthbert putting on an equal
amount of side on board his own ship was too much
for him, and rushing up the brow connecting the ship
with the shore he came on board licking his lips in
joyful anticipation and the lust of battle shining
in his eye.
Cuthbert, a naturally good-natured
dog, hurried forward to meet him, but Bob, spurning
his friendly advances, circled round on tip-toe, with
his teeth bared and hair bristling. Cuthbert,
seeing that a fight was inevitable, adopted similar
tactics, and for some moments the two animals padded
softly round and round nosing each other and preparing
to spring in to the attack. Then, quite suddenly
and for no apparent reason, there came a shrill yelp
of pain from Bob, and before anyone realised what
had happened his tail went down, he rushed madly over
the gangway, and shot along the jetty like a flash
of greased lightning.
“What the devil’s the
matter with him?” queried the officer of the
watch, staring in amazement after the rapidly disappearing
figure of the well-known fighter.
“Matter!” spluttered
Cuthbert’s owner, weak with laughter.
“Lord! I’ve never seen anything
like it! Did you see the way he skipped?”
“Did I not!” answered
the O.O.W., laughing himself. “But what
on earth made him streak off like that?”
“Come here, Cuthbert,” said his master.
The dog came forward, wagging his tail, and had his
muzzle removed.
“D’you see that?”
asked his owner, pointing to the end of it. ‘That’
was a long and very sharp-pointed pin firmly soldered
to the business end of Cuthbert’s headgear.
North Corner Bob never visited that particular ship
again.