The gentleman began:-
“The marked characteristic of
the sheep is that of natural affection, of which it
possesses a great share. At the present time,
there is in Regent’s Park a poor sheep, with
very bad foot rot. Crawling along the pasture
on its knees, it with difficulty contrives to procure
for itself subsistence; and the pain which it suffers
when compelled to get on its feet is evidently very
great. At a little distance from the sufferer
was another sheep, which, after close observation,
I found was always the same. As I pursued my
regular morning walk through the Park, I commonly
sought out the friends, and, after two or three days,
they seemed to be aware that no harm was intended
them, and they suffered me to come near enough to
observe their signals, and fully to satisfy myself
that it was always the same faithful adherent by whom
the cripple was solaced and watched.
“When a sheep becomes blind,
it is rarely abandoned to itself in this hapless and
helpless state. Some one of the flock attaches
himself to it, and by bleating calls it back from
the precipice, and the lake, and the pool, and every
kind of danger to which it is exposed.”
“Isn’t that good of them?”
cried Minnie, eagerly. “I like those sheep.”
“There was once a gentleman
living in Inverness,” Mr. Lee went on, “who
was passing through a lonely and unfrequented district,
when he observed a sheep bleating most piteously,
and hurrying along the road to meet him; on his approaching
nearer, the animal redoubled its cries, and looking
earnestly in his face, seemed to implore some favor
or assistance.
“Touched with a sight so unusual,
he alighted, and leaving his gig, he followed the
sheep in the direction whence it had come. There,
in a solitary place, the ewe stopped, and the traveller
found a lamb, completely wedged in between two large
stones, almost exhausted, but still continuing to
struggle very feebly.
“The kind gentleman instantly
extricated the little sufferer, and placed it safely
on the neighboring greensward, while the delighted
mother poured out her thanks in a long-continued and
grateful, if not a musical, strain.
“An interesting provision of
nature with regard to these animals is, that the more
inhospitable the land on which they feed, the greater
will be their kindness and affection to their young.
“‘I once herded,’
says the Ettrick Shepherd, ’two years on a wild
and bare farm, called Willenslee, on the border of
Mid Lothian; and of all the sheep I ever saw, these
were the kindest and most affectionate to their lambs.
I was often deeply affected at scenes which I witnessed.
We had one very hard winter, so that our sheep grew
lean in the spring, and disease came among them, and
carried off a number. Often have I seen these
poor victims, when fallen to rise no more, even when
unable to lift their heads from the ground, holding
up the leg to invite the starving lamb to the miserable
pittance that the udder still could supply. I
had never seen aught more painfully affecting.
“’It is well known that
it is a custom with shepherds, when a lamb dies, if
the mother have a sufficiency of milk, to bring her
from the hill, and put another lamb to her. This
is done by putting the skin of the dead lamb upon
the living one; the ewe immediately acknowledges the
relationship, and after the skin has warmed on it,
so as to give it something of the smell of her own
lamb, and when it has suckled her two or three times,
she accepts it, and nourishes it as her own ever after.
Whether it is from joy at this apparent réanimation
of her young one, or because a little doubt remains
in her mind, which she would fain dispel, I can not
decide; but, for a number of days, she shows far more
fondness, by bleating and caressing, over this one,
than she formerly did over the one that was really
her own.
“’While at Willenslee,
I never needed to drive home a sheep by force, with
dogs, or in any other way than the following:
I found every ewe, of course, hanging her head over
her dead lamb; and having a piece of twine with me
for the purpose, I tied that to the lamb’s neck
or foot, and, trailing it along, the ewe followed
me into any house, or fold, or wherever I chose to
lead her. Any of them would have followed me in
that way for miles, with her nose close on the lamb,
which she never quitted for a moment, except to chase
my dog, which she would not suffer to walk near me.
“’Out of curiosity, I
often led them in to the side of the kitchen fire,
by this means into the midst of servants and dogs;
but the more that dangers multiplied around the ewe,
the closer she clung to her dead offspring, and thought
of nothing whatever but protecting it. One of
the two years while I remained on this farm, a severe
blast of snow came on by night, about the latter end
of April, which destroyed several scores of our lambs;
and as we had not enough of twins and odd lambs for
the mothers that had lost theirs, of course we selected
the best ewes, and put lambs to them. I found
one fine ewe standing over a dead lamb in the head
of the Hope, and asked my master to put a lamb to her,
but he did not. I watched her, and faithfully
did she stand to her charge; so faithfully, that I
think the like was never equalled by any of the woolly
race. I visited her morning and evening, and for
the first eight days never found her above two or
three yards from the lamb; and always, as I went my
rounds, she eyed me long ere I came near her, and kept
trampling with her feet, and whistling through her
nose, to frighten away the dog. He got a regular
chase, twice a day, as I passed by.
“’The weather grew fine
and warm, and the dead lamb soon decayed; but still
this affectionate and desolate creature kept hanging
over the poor remains, with an attachment that seemed
to be nourished by hopelessness. It often drew
tears from my eyes, to see her hanging with such fondness
over a few bones, mixed with a small portion of wool.
“’For the first fortnight,
she never quitted the spot, and for another week she
visited it every morning and evening, uttering a few
kindly and heart-piercing bleats each time, till at
length every remnant of her offspring vanished, mixing
with the soil, or wafted away by the winds of heaven.’”
“There, Minnie, I think you
have heard enough for to-night,” said Mr. Lee,
gayly, as he heard his little daughter sigh repeatedly.
“O, father, I can’t help
being so sorry for the poor sheep!”
“You had better read her something
more cheerful, or she’ll be thinking of that
all night,” responded Mrs. Lee, laughing at the
child’s dolorous tone.
“Yes, father, please read one more.”
“Well, then, here is something that will please
you.”
“A drover, being on his way
to Smithfield market with a flock of sheep, one of
them became so sore-footed and lame that it could travel
no farther. The man, wishing to get on, took
up the distressed animal, and dropped it over the
paling of an enclosure belonging to Mr. O’Kelly,
and where the celebrated race-horse Dungannon was
then grazing, and pursued his journey, intending to
call for the sheep on his return, believing, after
a little rest, it would quickly recover. This
was the case; but, in the mean time, a strong attachment
grew up between the two inhabitants of the paddock.
The horse would playfully nibble the neck of the sheep,
and, without hurting it, would lift it into the manger
of a neighboring shed belonging to the field, as much
as to say, ’Though you are not able to reach
it, I will help you to the banquet.’ Besides
this, the horse would, on all occasions, protect his
new friend, and would suffer no one to interfere with
him.
“When the drover returned, the
two friends had become so attached, that it seemed
cruel to part them; and Mrs. O’Kelly, having
learned the circumstances, bought the sheep, and left
the friends in peaceable possession of the paddock
and its adjoining shelter.”