“I was a sporting dog,”
he said, bitterly, “for the first three years
of my life. I belonged to a man who keeps a livery
stable here in Fairport, and he used to hire me out
shooting parties.
“I was a favorite with all the
gentlemen. I was crazy with delight when I saw
the guns brought out, and would jump up and bite at
them. I loved to chase birds and rabbits, and
even now when the pigeons come near me, I tremble
all over and have to turn away lest I should seize
them. I used often to be in the woods from morning
till night. I liked to have a hard search after
a bird after it had been shot, and to be praised for
bringing it out without biting or injuring it.
“I never got lost, for I am
one of those dogs that can always tell where human
beings are. I did not smell them. I would
be too far away for that, but if my master was standing
in some place and I took a long round through the
woods, I knew exactly where he was, and could make
a short cut back to him without returning in my tracks.
“But I must tell you about my
trouble. One Saturday afternoon a party of young
men came to get me. They had a dog with them,
a cocker spaniel called Bob, but they wanted another.
For some reason or other, my master was very unwilling
to have me go. However, he at last consented,
and they put me in the back of the wagon with Bob
and the lunch baskets, and we drove off into the country.
This Bob was a happy, merry-looking dog, and as we
went along, he told me of the fine time we should have
next day. The young men would shoot a little,
then they would get out their baskets and have something
to eat and drink, and would play cards and go to sleep
under the trees, and we would be able to help ourselves
to legs and wings of chickens, and anything we liked
from the baskets.
“I did not like this at all.
I was used to working hard through the week, and I
liked to spend my Sundays quietly at home. However,
I said nothing.
“That night we slept at a country
hotel, and drove the next morning to the banks of
a small lake where the young men were told there would
be plenty of wild ducks. They were in no hurry
to begin their sport. They sat down in the sun
on some flat rocks at the water’s edge, and said
they would have something to drink before setting to
work. They got out some of the bottles from the
wagon, and began to take long drinks from them.
Then they got quarrelsome and mischievous and seemed
to forget all about their shooting. One of them
proposed to have some fun with the dogs. They
tied us both to a tree, and throwing a stick in the
water, told us to get it. Of course we struggled
and tried to get free, and chafed our necks with the
rope.
“After a time one of them began
to swear at me, and say that he believed I was gun-shy.
He staggered to the wagon and got out his fowling piece,
and said he was going to try me.
“He loaded it, went to a little
distance, and was going to fire, when the young man
who owned Bob said he wasn’t going to have his
dog’s legs shot off, and coming up he unfastened
him and took him away. You can imagine my feelings,
as I stood there tied to the tree, with that stranger
pointing his gun directly at me. He fired close
to me, a number of times over my head and under my
body. The earth was cut up all around me.
I was terribly frightened, and howled and begged to
be freed.
“The other young men, who were
sitting laughing at me, thought it such good fun that
they got their guns, too. I never wish to spend
such a terrible hour again. I was sure they would
kill me. I dare say they would have done so,
for they were all quite drunk by this time, if something
had not happened.
“Poor Bob, who was almost as
frightened as I was, and who lay shivering under the
wagon, was killed by a shot by his own master, whose
hand was the most unsteady of all. He gave one
loud howl, kicked convulsively, then turned over on
his side and lay quite still. It sobered them
all. They ran up to him, but he was quite dead.
They sat for a while quite silent, then they threw
the rest of the bottles into the lake, dug a shallow
grave for Bob, and putting me in the wagon drove slowly
back to town. They were not bad young men.
I don’t think they meant to hurt me, or to kill
Bob. It was the nasty stuff in the bottles that
took away their reason.
“I was never the same dog again.
I was quite deaf in my right ear, and though I strove
against it, I was so terribly afraid of even the sight
of a gun that I would run and hide myself whenever
one was shown to me. My master was very angry
with those young men, and it seemed as if he could
not bear the sight of me. One day he took me very
kindly and brought me here, and asked Mr. Morris if
he did not want a good-natured dog to play with the
children.
“I have a happy home here and
I love the Morris boys; but I often wish that I could
keep from putting my tail between my legs and running
home every time I hear the sound of a gun.”
“Never mind that, Jim,”
I said. “You should not fret over a thing
for which you are not to blame. I am sure you
must be glad for one reason that you have left your
old life.”
“What is that?” he said.
“On account of the birds.
You know Miss Laura thinks it is wrong to kill the
pretty creatures that fly about the woods.”
“So it is,” he said, “unless
one kills them at once. I have often felt angry
with men for only half killing a bird. I hated
to pick up the little warm body, and see the bright
eye looking so reproachfully at me, and feel the flutter
of life. We animals, or rather the most of us,
kill mercifully. It is only human beings who
butcher their prey, and seem, some of them, to rejoice
in their agony. I used to be eager to kill birds
and rabbits, but I did not want to keep them before
me long after they were dead. I often stop in
the street and look up at fine ladies’ bonnets,
and wonder how they can wear little dead birds in such
dreadful positions. Some of them have their heads
twisted under their wings and over their shoulders,
and looking toward their tails, and their eyes are
so horrible that I wish I could take those ladies into
the woods and let them see how easy and pretty a live
bird is, and how unlike the stuffed creatures they
wear. Have you ever had a good run in the woods,
Joe?”
“No, never,” I said.
“Some day I will take you, and
now it is late and I must go to bed. Are you
going to sleep in the kennel with me, or in the stable?”
“I think I will sleep with you,
Jim. Dogs like company, you know, as well as
human beings.” I curled up in the straw
beside him and soon we were fast asleep.
I have known a good many dogs, but
I don’t think I ever saw such a good one as
Jim. He was gentle and kind, and so sensitive
that a hard word hurt him more than a blow. He
was a great pet with Mrs. Morris, and as he had been
so well trained, he was able to make himself very useful
to her.
When she went shopping, he often carried
a parcel in his mouth for her. He would never
drop it nor leave it anywhere. One day, she dropped
her purse without knowing it, and Jim picked it up,
and brought it home in his mouth. She did not
notice him, for he always walked behind her. When
she got to her own door, she missed the purse, and
turning around saw it in Jim’s mouth.
Another day, a lady gave Jack Morris
a canary cage as a present for Carl. He was bringing
it home, when one of the little seed boxes fell out.
Jim picked it up and carried it a long way, before
Jack discovered it.