Anne was standing on some high steps,
putting up clean curtains in her mistress’s
room; and Minnie stood watching her, and wondering
how soon she would be done, so she could tell about
the lambs. At last she said,-
“Anne, if I stand up in a chair,
I could hold the nails and give them to you.”
“That’s true for you,
miss,” answered the girl; “and it’s
a much better way than kapeing them in my mouth.”
“And you can talk better,”
urged Minnie, with a roguish look.
Anne laughed outright. “Ah,
it’s the story ye’re after, I see; and
sure ye’re welcome to all I can tell you.
“You know my mother was English,
and my father Irish. I was born in the great
city o’ Dublin; but after my father died, which
was long enough before I could tell my right hand
from my left, I went with my mother to her home in
England. Of coorse, I knew nothing of that except
by hearsay, which is no evidence at all; but well
I can remember, when I was old enough, I was sent
out on my grandfather’s farm, to mind the sheep;
I had a dog, Rover, to go with me, and a little crook,
because I was a shepherdess, you know; and I used
to carry dinner enough in my pail for Rover too, for
he had to work hard, poor fellow!
“I liked it very well at first,
for the lambs looked so pretty, skipping around the
dams; and the air was so fresh and bright; but I was
a very little girl; so I soon grew tired, and left
all the care of the sheep to Rover. He flew from
one end of the field to the other, chasing them away
from the hill where they used to wander and get lost.
“When I saw the lambs drinking
their mother’s milk, I thought it must be very
nice; and so I lay down on the grass, and drank some
too; and I liked it so well that I used to drink every
day, until grandfather found it out, and forbid me,
because the lambs would not have enough.
“By and by I grew up to be a
big girl, and then, what with tending the sick sheep,
and bringing up the cossets, I had plenty to do.
Grandfather had five hundred ewes. He was a rich
man, and every body thought well of him. When
the lambs began to come, there were some of the ewes
that would not own them.”
“I know about that, Anne,” said Minnie;
“mamma told me.”
“Well, when there are two, this
is often the case; or sometimes the shepherd finds
the mother has not milk enough for two, even if she
would like them. Did your mamma tell you that
some kinds of sheep are much better nurses than others?”
“No, I think she did not know
that. She says she don’t know much about
sheep.”
“Very likely, as she was not
brought up with them. There is a kind called
Mérinos, which are very bad nurses. Grandfather
wouldn’t have them on that account, though they
have very fine wool, which sells for a good price.
Out of a hundred lambs, they wouldn’t bring up
more than half.
“They are poor, tender little
things, any way. Well, I mind the time when there
was a great storm, and grandfather had to be up all
night, housing the poor craturs; for the lambs were
coming fast. A little past midnight, mother called
me, and there we sat till morning, before a blazing
fire, warming up one and another, as he brought them
in. I sat down on a cricket, and took two or
three in my lap at once, and hugged them up to my
bosom. When they began to twitch, and we found
they must die, we put them on the great hearth rug,
and took more. Sometimes they’d just lie
down and go to sleep, and when we had time to look
at them, they’d be stiff and cold; and then
again they would cry out like a baby. It used
to make my heart ache to hear them.”
Anne had now finished her work, and
came down from the steps.
“I don’t think I should
like to be a shepherdess,” said Minnie, sighing.
“O, yes, you’d like it
mightily. Such a time as that only comes once
in a great many years. And then, when it’s
warm summer weather, and the lambs frisk and frolic
about their mothers in the field, and you just sit
down and play on the accordéon, while the dog
keeps the flock in order,-O, there’s
no work so pleasant or so healthy as that!”
When Mr. Lee returned from the city,
Minnie was ready with her questions about sheep.
“I want to know all I can about them,”
she exclaimed.
“There are few stories that
can be told about sheep,” he answered, cheerfully;
“for it must be confessed that they are far inferior
to the horse, dog, and many other animals, in intelligence
and sagacity. The sheep has few marked traits,
except its meekness, and its natural affection for
its young. Still, when I remember that the lamb
was selected before all other animals for sacrifice,
and as a type of Him who is called ‘the Lamb
of God,’ and who is to take away the sins of
the world, I feel a deep interest in its welfare.
“The sheep, too, is one of the
most useful animals, its fleece or wool being used
as a covering to man, and its flesh for food.
It was only yesterday I read the well-established
fact that, from one pound of sheep’s wool a
thread was spun so fine that it reached to the almost
incredible distance of ninety-five miles, while one
of ordinary fineness reached twenty-six miles.
This covering grows so thick in winter that it enables
them to bear cold which would be fatal to other animals.
They appear to know, too, when a storm is approaching,
and take refuge under a sheltering hill or some projecting
cliff.
“One very curious thing is,
that they can live under the snow for a long time.
Mr. Sullivan, who is a shepherd, you know, told me
a circumstance which occurred in his own experience.
“There was every appearance
of a storm, and he, with his men, drove the sheep
early into the fold. In the morning, on counting
them, he found there were seven valuable ewes missing.
It had snowed all night, and was still snowing, when
he started out in search of them. But nowhere
could they be found. The storm continued four
days, and the snow had reached a depth very uncommon;
but day after day the search was renewed. At last,
however, it was given up; when one day a woodcutter,
in going over a stone wall which lay almost entirely
concealed, fell through the snow, and found himself
in the midst of the lost sheep. Their breath had
rendered the crust, which was firm enough to bear his
weight in other places, so thin here that it would
not sustain him. They seemed lively and well,
having found enough dead grass under the snow to sustain
life.
“There is an instance very similar
to this in one of my books, which I will find and
read to you.”
“In the winter of 1800, a sheep
was buried in the snow near Kendal, and remained there
thirty-three days and nights, without the possibility
of moving, and yet survived.
“In the same winter, a sheep
near Caldbeck, in Cumberland, was buried thirty-eight
days; when found, it had eaten the wool completely
off both its shoulders, and was reduced to a skeleton;
but with great care it recovered.”
“Mr. James Hogg, the Ettrick
Shepherd, gives a most interesting account of eight
hundred ewes that were buried in the snow. Some
of them he and his fellow-servants succeeded in getting
out the first day; but the second there were but few
of them to be seen, except the horns of some stragglers.
The men went about, boring with long poles, but with
little success, until their dog found out their difficulty,
and flying to a spot, began to scrape away the snow.
From this time, by his keen scent, he marked faster
than they could get them out, and by his skill saved
two hundred, though some were buried in a mountain
of snow fifty feet deep. They were all alive,
and most of them recovered their strength.”