When the ancients departed, great
numbers of their cattle perished. It was not
so much the want of food as the inability to endure
exposure that caused their death; a few winters are
related to have so reduced them that they died by
hundreds, many mangled by dogs. The hardiest that
remained became perfectly wild, and the wood cattle
are now more difficult to approach than deer.
There are two kinds, the white and
the black. The white (sometimes dun) are believed
to be the survivors of the domestic roan-and-white,
for the cattle in our enclosures at the present day
are of that colour. The black are smaller, and
are doubtless little changed from their state in the
olden times, except that they are wild. These
latter are timid, unless accompanied by a calf, and
are rarely known to turn upon their pursuers.
But the white are fierce at all times; they will not,
indeed, attack man, but will scarcely run from him,
and it is not always safe to cross their haunts.
The bulls are savage beyond measure
at certain seasons of the year. If they see men
at a distance, they retire; if they come unexpectedly
face to face, they attack. This characteristic
enables those who travel through districts known to
be haunted by white cattle to provide against an encounter,
for, by occasionally blowing a horn, the herd that
may be in the vicinity is dispersed. There are
not often more than twenty in a herd. The hides
of the dun are highly prized, both for their intrinsic
value, and as proofs of skill and courage, so much
so that you shall hardly buy a skin for all the money
you may offer; and the horns are likewise trophies.
The white or dun bull is the monarch of our forests.
Four kinds of wild pigs are found.
The most numerous, or at least the most often seen,
as it lies about our enclosures, is the common thorn-hog.
It is the largest of the wild pigs, long-bodied and
flat-sided, in colour much the hue of the mud in which
it wallows. To the agriculturist it is the greatest
pest, destroying or damaging all kinds of crops, and
routing up the gardens. It is with difficulty
kept out by palisading, for if there be a weak place
in the wooden framework, the strong snout of the animal
is sure to undermine and work a passage through.
As there are always so many of these
pigs round about inhabited places and cultivated fields,
constant care is required, for they instantly discover
an opening. From their habit of haunting the thickets
and bush which come up to the verge of the enclosures,
they have obtained the name of thorn-hogs. Some
reach an immense size, and they are very prolific,
so that it is impossible to destroy them. The
boars are fierce at a particular season, but never
attack unless provoked to do so. But when driven
to bay they are the most dangerous of the boars, on
account of their vast size and weight. They are
of a sluggish disposition, and will not rise from
their lairs unless forced to do so.
The next kind is the white hog, which
has much the same habits as the former, except that
it is usually found in moist places, near lakes and
rivers, and is often called the marsh-pig. The
third kind is perfectly black, much smaller in size,
and very active, affording by far the best sport,
and also the best food when killed. As they are
found on the hills where the ground is somewhat more
open, horses can follow freely, and the chase becomes
exciting. By some it is called the hill-hog, from
the locality it frequents. The small tusks of
the black boar are used for many ornamental purposes.
These three species are considered
to be the descendants of the various domestic pigs
of the ancients, but the fourth, or grey, is thought
to be the true wild boar. It is seldom seen,
but is most common in the south-western forests, where,
from the quantity of fern, it is called the fern-pig.
This kind is believed to represent the true wild boar,
which was extinct, or merged in the domestic hog among
the ancients, except in that neighbourhood where the
strain remained.
With wild times, the wild habits have
returned, and the grey boar is at once the most difficult
of access, and the most ready to encounter either
dogs or men. Although the first, or thorn-hog,
does the most damage to the agriculturist because
of its numbers, and its habit of haunting the neighbourhood
of enclosures, the others are equally injurious if
they chance to enter the cultivated fields.
The three principal kinds of wild
sheep are the horned, the thyme, and the meadow.
The thyme sheep are the smallest, and haunt the highest
hills in the south, where, feeding on the sweet herbage
of the ridges, their flesh is said to acquire a flavour
of wild thyme. They move in small flocks of not
more than thirty, and are the most difficult to approach,
being far more wary than deer, so continuously are
they hunted by the wood-dogs. The horned are
larger, and move in greater numbers; as many as two
hundred are sometimes seen together.
They are found on the lower slopes
and plains, and in the woods. The meadow sheep
have long shaggy wool, which is made into various articles
of clothing, but they are not numerous. They haunt
river sides, and the shores of lakes and ponds.
None of these are easily got at, on account of the
wood-dogs; but the rams of the horned kind are reputed
to sometimes turn upon the pursuing pack, and butt
them to death. In the extremity of their terror
whole flocks of wild sheep have been driven over precipices
and into quagmires and torrents.
Besides these, there are several other
species whose haunt is local. On the islands,
especially, different kinds are found. The wood-dogs
will occasionally, in calm weather, swim out to an
island and kill every sheep upon it.
From the horses that were in use among
the ancients the two wild species now found are known
to have descended, a fact confirmed by their evident
resemblance to the horses we still retain. The
largest wild horse is almost black, or inclined to
a dark colour, somewhat less in size than our present
waggon horses, but of the same heavy make. It
is, however, much swifter, on account of having enjoyed
liberty for so long. It is called the bush-horse,
being generally distributed among thickets and meadow-like
lands adjoining water.
The other species is called the hill-pony,
from its habitat, the hills, and is rather less in
size than our riding-horse. This latter is short
and thick-set, so much so as not to be easily ridden
by short persons without high stirrups. Neither
of these wild horses are numerous, but neither are
they uncommon. They keep entirely separate from
each other. As many as thirty mares are sometimes
seen together, but there are districts where the traveller
will not observe one for weeks.
Tradition says that in the olden times
there were horses of a slender build whose speed outstripped
the wind, but of the breed of these famous racers
not one is left. Whether they were too delicate
to withstand exposure, or whether the wild dogs hunted
them down is uncertain, but they are quite gone.
Did but one exist, how eagerly it would be sought
out, for in these days it would be worth its weight
in gold, unless, indeed, as some affirm, such speed
only endured for a mile or two.
It is not necessary, having written
thus far of the animals, that anything be said of
the birds of the woods, which every one knows were
not always wild, and which can, indeed, be compared
with such poultry as are kept in our enclosures.
Such are the bush-hens, the wood-turkeys, the galenae,
the peacocks, the white duck and the white goose, all
of which, though now wild as the hawk, are well known
to have been once tame.
There were deer, red and fallow, in
numerous parks and chases of very old time, and these,
having got loose, and having such immense tracts to
roam over unmolested, went on increasing till now they
are beyond computation, and I have myself seen a thousand
head together. Within these forty years, as I
learn, the roe-deer, too, have come down from the
extreme north, so that there are now three sorts in
the woods. Before them the pine-marten came from
the same direction, and, though they are not yet common,
it is believed they are increasing. For the first
few years after the change took place there seemed
a danger lest the foreign wild beasts that had been
confined as curiosities in menageries should multiply
and remain in the woods. But this did not happen.
Some few lions, tigers, bears, and
other animals did indeed escape, together with many
less furious creatures, and it is related that they
roamed about the fields for a long time. They
were seldom met with, having such an extent of country
to wander over, and after a while entirely disappeared.
If any progeny were born, the winter frosts must have
destroyed it, and the same fate awaited the monstrous
serpents which had been collected for exhibition.
Only one such animal now exists which is known to
owe its origin to those which escaped from the dens
of the ancients. It is the beaver, whose dams
are now occasionally found upon the streams by those
who traverse the woods. Some of the aquatic birds,
too, which frequent the lakes, are thought to have
been originally derived from those which were formerly
kept as curiosities.
In the castle yard at Longtover may
still be seen the bones of an elephant which was found
dying in the woods near that spot.