“That’s a real funny story,”
exclaimed Minnie, her eyes sparkling with mirth, “only
I can’t help pitying that poor man.”
“I can recall another, though
a sadder incident,” continued Mr. Sullivan,
“illustrating the same quality.”
“In 1808, an accident happened
in England to some sheep belonging to Mr. Cooper,
of Huilston Hall, who had intrusted them to the care
of a boy for that day, in the absence of the shepherd,
who was assisting in getting in the harvest.
“About the middle of the day,
the sheep broke from their pasture, when the thoughtless
boy drove them back in great haste over a narrow and
deep ditch. The leading sheep fell in, and the
remainder, passing over them, smothered twenty-five
sheep and forty lambs, the whole being worth near
four hundred dollars.
“In the same book, there is
also an account of a flock near Guildford, consisting
of more than eight hundred sheep, in one pasture.
A dog one day jumped the hedge, and so frightened
them that one of them jumped into an adjoining field,
which was on a great descent, when the rest of the
flock followed each other over the gap of the hedge
so fast that one hundred and twenty-three of them
were killed.”
“There is one quality or characteristic
of the sheep which will interest you, Minnie,”
said her father, “and that is their love of home.
Perhaps Mr. Sullivan will tell you some stories about
that.”
“I should be very glad to hear
them, and about the little lambs.”
“A great deal can be said upon
that,” returned the shepherd, cheerfully.
“So strong is their attachment to the place where
they have been bred, that I have heard of their returning
to the Highlands of Scotland from a distance of three
hundred miles. When a few sheep accidentally get
away from their acquaintance in the flock, they always
return home with great eagerness and perseverance.
“The most singular instance
that I know of is that of a black ewe, that returned
from a farm in the head of Glen Lyon to her home in
Tweeddale, and accomplished the journey in nine days.
She was soon missed by her owner, and a shepherd was
despatched in pursuit of her, who followed her all
the way to Crieff, where he turned and gave her up.
He got intelligence of her all the way, and every
one told him that she absolutely persisted in travelling
on-she would not be turned, regarding neither
sheep nor shepherd by the way.
“Her poor little lamb was often
far behind, and she had constantly to urge it on by
impatient bleating. She unluckily reached Stirling
on the morning of a great annual fair, about the end
of May, and judging it imprudent to venture through
the crowd with her lamb, she halted on the north side
of the town the whole day, where she was seen by hundreds,
lying close by the roadside.
“But the next morning, a little
before the break of day, when all was still, she was
seen stealing quietly through the town, in apparent
terror of the dogs that were prowling about the street.
The last time she was seen on the road was at a toll
bar near St. Ninian’s; the man stopped her,
thinking she was a strayed animal, and that some one
would claim her. She tried several times to break
through by force, when he opened the gate for travellers;
but he always prevented her, and at length she turned
patiently back. She found some means of eluding
him, however; for she reached home on a Sabbath morning
early in June, having left the farm at Glen Lyon either
on Thursday afternoon or Friday morning, a week and
two days before.
“I suppose her former owner
thought she had earned a right to remain on her native
farm, for he paid the Highland farmer the price of
her, and she remained with him till she at length
died of old age, in her seventeenth year.”
At this moment, company was announced,
who remained till evening, so that poor little Minnie,
after waiting a long time for her stories, was obliged
to go to bed without them.
“Never mind, dear,” whispered
her father, noticing her look of disappointment; “I
have a book with beautiful anecdotes of sheep and
lambs, which I will read to you when I come home to-morrow
night.”
In the morning, Mr. Sullivan found
time to pay Nannie a visit, and pronounced her in
a thriving condition. He recommended Mr. Lee to
have her wool sheared off, as it was so long as to
make her uncomfortable during the heat of summer.
Nannie was now a year old, and was
a fine, large lamb, with her speckled face looking
very bright and intelligent, and, as the gentleman
said, did credit to the care of her shepherdess.
Soon after breakfast, Mr. Lee and
his visitor went to the library on business, and Minnie
did not see them again until just as they were getting
into the carriage to drive away. She waited with
some impatience for her father to return, and wished
she knew what book her father referred to as having
the stories in it, so that she might have it ready
for him.
Her mother, finding that she was restless
and discontented, advised her to apply herself to
her letters, which she was beginning to learn.
If the truth must be told, the little
girl was not fond of study; but when her mother reminded
her that most children of her age could read and spell
with ease, and that, if she was diligent, she herself
would soon be able to read stories, and not be dependent
on any one else, she thought it would be a good thing
to learn. For half an hour, she forgot her desire
for her father’s return in finding A’s
and E’s in books to match letters on her cards.
Evening came at last, and Mr. Lee
with it. He looked very smiling, and told his
wife his sister was in the city, and was coming in
a few weeks to visit them. The moment he saw
Minnie’s expectant face, he told her he would
be ready in five minutes to attend to her, and then
invited Mrs. Lee to accompany them to the library,
to hear some stories from the Shepherd’s Calendar,
and other books.
In a few moments, Minnie was seated
on her father’s lap, her whole countenance beaming
with pleased anticipation.