The mammalia include not only man,
the head of creation, but, generally, those animals
which have the most numerous and perfect faculties,
the most delicate perceptions, the most varied powers,
and the highest degrees of intelligence. All
the species have a double heart; red, warm blood;
and a nervous system more fully developed than that
of any other animals. This class is divided into
nine orders, under each of which we shall notice some
of the more remarkable species.
ORDER I - BIMANA,
TWO-HANDED.
MAN.
Of this race there is one species,
yet divided into many nations, kingdoms, and tribes.
These are all grouped under five races: 1.
The Caucasian, or white race, including the
most highly civilized nations; 2. The Mongolian,
or yellow race, including the Tartars, Chinese, Japanese,
&c.; 3. The Malay, or brown race, including
the people of Malacca, and most of the Oceanic islands;
4. The American, or red race, including
the American Indians; and 5. The African,
or black race, including Negroes.
Philosophers have been a good deal
puzzled for a definition of man; yet it would seem
by no means difficult to point out characteristics
which distinguish him from all other animated beings.
He is not only the acknowledged lord and master of
the animal kingdom, but he is the only being that
knows God, yet the only one that worships stones, apes,
and idols; the only being that has the Bible, and
the only one that makes systematic warfare on his
own species. He is the only created being that
perceives the force of moral obligation, and the only
one that makes slaves of his fellow-beings; he is
the only creature that has reason, and yet the only
one that besots himself with intoxicating drugs and
drinks. Man is the only being that has tasted
of the tree of knowledge, and yet the only one that
appears, in all ages and countries, to be a fallen
being, one not fulfilling, here on the
earth, the purposes of his creation. Must we not,
from the analogy of the works of God, look to a future
state, to find the true end of human existence?
That we may not omit to give at least
one illustrative and characteristic anecdote, under
the head of “homo sapiens,” we copy
the following from the quaint pages of Carlyle:
“What, speaking in quite unofficial
language, is the net purport of war? To my own
knowledge, for example, there dwell and toil, in the
British village of Dumdrudge, usually, some five hundred
souls. From these, by certain ‘natural
enemies’ of the French, there are successively
selected, during the French war, say thirty able-bodied
men. Dumdrudge, at her own expense, has suckled
and nursed them; she has, not without difficulty and
sorrow, fed them up to manhood, and even trained them
to crafts so that one can weave, another
build, another hammer, and the weakest can stand under
thirty stone avoirdupois. Nevertheless, amid
much weeping and swearing, they are selected, all
dressed in red, and shipped away at the public charge
some 2000 miles, or, say, only to the south of Spain,
and fed there till wanted.
“And now to that same spot,
in the south of Spain, are thirty similar French artisans,
from a French Dumdrudge, in like manner wending; till,
at length, after infinite effort, the parties come
into actual juxtaposition, and thirty stand fronting
thirty, each with a gun in his hand. Straightway
the word ‘Fire’ is given, and they blow
the souls out of one another; and instead of sixty
brisk, useful craftsmen, the world has sixty dead
carcasses, which it must bury, and anon shed tears
for. Had these men any quarrel? Busy as
the devil is, not the smallest. They lived far
enough apart, were the entirest strangers; nay, in
so wide a universe, there was indeed unconsciously,
by commerce, some mutual helpfulness between them.
How then? Simpleton! their governors had fallen
out; and instead of shooting one another, had the cunning
to make these poor blockheads shoot.”
ORDER II - QUADRUMANA,
FOUR-HANDED ANIMALS.
This numerous order of animals is
divided into three families: 1. Apes,
which are destitute of tails; 2. Baboons, having
short tails; 3. Monkeys, having long tails.
The whole group are confined to warm countries, and
none but the latter kinds are met with in America.
They are not found in Europe, except at Gibraltar.
Here, among the rocks, are considerable numbers of
apes; and it has been conjectured that they come hither
from the African coast, by means of passages under
the Straits. This idea, however, is groundless.
No doubt these animals were once common in Europe;
but they have been gradually extirpated, except at
Gibraltar, where they have made a stand. Its rocks
and caverns seem to have proved as impregnable a garrison
to them as to the British.
APES.
The ORANG-OUTANG; a native
of Cochin China, Malacca, and the large adjacent islands.
It has a countenance more like that of man than any
other animal. It seldom walks erect, and seems
to make its home in the trees. It is covered
with reddish brown hair.
An Orang-Outang in Holland. This
was a female, brought to that country in 1776.
She generally walked on all fours, like other apes,
but could also walk nearly erect. When, however,
she assumed this posture, her feet were not usually
extended like those of a man, but the toes were curved
beneath, in such a manner that she rested chiefly
on the exterior sides of the feet. One morning
she escaped from her chain, and was seen to ascend
with wonderful agility the beams and oblique rafters
of the building. With some trouble she was retaken,
and very extraordinary muscular powers were, on this
occasion, remarked in the animal. The efforts
of four men were found necessary in order to secure
her. Two of them seized her by the legs, and a
third by the head, whilst the other fastened the collar
round her body.
During the time she was at liberty,
among other pranks, she had taken a bottle of Malaga
wine which she drank to the last drop, and then set
the bottle again in its place. She ate readily
of any kind of food which was presented to her; but
her chief sustenance was bread, roots, and fruit.
She was particularly fond of carrots, strawberries,
aromatic plants, and roots of parsley. She also
ate meat, boiled and roasted, as well as fish, and
was fond of eggs, the shells of which she broke with
her teeth, and then emptied by sucking out the contents.
If strawberries were presented to her on a plate,
she would pick them up, one by one, with a fork, and
put them into her mouth, holding, at the same time,
the plate in the other hand. Her usual drink was
water; but she also would drink very eagerly all sorts
of wine, and of Malaga, in particular, she was very
fond. While she was on shipboard, she ran freely
about the vessel, played with the sailors, and would
go, like them, into the kitchen for her mess.
When, at the approach of night, she was about to lie
down, she would prepare the bed on which she slept
by shaking well the hay, and putting it in proper order;
and, lastly, would cover herself up snugly in the
quilt.
One day, on noticing the padlock of
her chain opened with a key, and shut again, she seized
a little bit of stick, and, putting it into the keyhole,
turned it about in all directions, endeavoring to open
it. When this animal first arrived in Holland,
she was only two feet and a half high, and was almost
entirely free from hair on any part of her body, except
her back and arms; but, on the approach of winter,
she became thickly covered all over, and the hair
on her back was at least six inches long, of a chestnut
color, except the face and paws, which were somewhat
of a reddish bronze color. This interesting brute
died after having been seven months in Holland.
An Orang-Outang killed in Sumatra. This
specimen measured eight feet in height when suspended
for the purpose of being skinned. The form and
arrangement of his beard were beautiful; there was
a great deal of the human expression in his countenance,
and his piteous actions when wounded, and great tenacity
of life, rendered the scene tragical and affecting.
On the spot where he was killed, there were five or
six tall trees, which greatly prolonged the combat;
for so great were his strength and agility in bounding
from branch to branch, that his pursuers were unable
to take a determinate aim, until they had felled all
the trees but one. Even then he did not yield
himself to his antagonists till he had received five
balls, and been moreover thrust through with a spear.
One of the first balls appears to have penetrated
his lungs, for he was observed immediately to sling
himself by his feet from a branch, with his head downwards,
so as to allow the blood to flow from his mouth.
On receiving a wound, he always put his hand over
the injured part, and distressed his pursuers by the
human-like agony of his expression. When on the
ground, after being exhausted by his many wounds,
he lay as if dead, with his head resting on his folded
arms. It was at this moment that an officer attempted
to give him the coup-de-grace by pushing a
spear through his body, but he immediately jumped
on his feet, wrested the weapon from his antagonist,
and shivered it in pieces. This was his last
wound, and his last great exertion; yet he lived some
time afterwards, and drank, it is stated, great quantities
of water. Captain Cornfoot also observes, that
the animal had probably travelled some distance to
the place where he was killed, as his legs were covered
with mud up to the knees.
An Orang-Outang brought to England. Dr.
Clark Abel has given the following interesting account
of an orang-outang which he brought from Java to England:
“On board ship an attempt being made to secure
him by a chain tied to a strong staple, he instantly
unfastened it, and ran off with the chain dragging
behind; but finding himself embarrassed by its length,
he coiled it once or twice, and threw it over his shoulder.
This feat he often repeated; and when he found that
it would not remain on his shoulder, he took it into
his mouth. After several abortive attempts to
secure him more effectually, he was allowed to wander
freely about the ship, and soon became familiar with
the sailors, and surpassed them in agility. They
often chased him about the rigging, and gave him frequent
opportunities of displaying his adroitness in managing
an escape. On first starting, he would endeavor
to outstrip his pursuers by mere speed; but when much
pressed, eluded them by seizing a loose rope, and
swinging out of their reach. At other times,
he would patiently wait on the shrouds, or at the mast-head,
till his pursuers almost touched him, and then suddenly
lower himself to the deck by any rope that was near
him, or bound along the main-stay from one mast to
the other, swinging by his hands, and moving them one
over the other. The men would often shake the
ropes by which he clung with so much violence, as
to make me fear his falling; but I soon found that
the power of his muscles could not be easily overcome.
When in a playful humor, he would often swing within
arm’s length of his pursuer, and having struck
him with his hand, throw himself from him.
“Whilst in Java, he lodged in
a large tamarind-tree near my dwelling, and formed
a bed by intertwining the small branches, and covering
them with leaves. During the day, he would lie
with his head projecting beyond his nest, watching
whoever might pass under; and when he saw any one
with fruit, would descend to obtain a share of it.
He always retired for the night at sunset, or sooner
if he had been well fed, and rose with the sun, and
visited those from whom he habitually received food.
“Of some small monkeys on board
from Java, he took little notice whilst under the
observation of the persons of the ship. Once,
indeed, he openly attempted to throw a small cage,
containing three of them, overboard; because, probably,
he had seen them receive food, of which he could obtain
no part. But although he held so little intercourse
with them when under our inspection, I had reason to
suspect that he was less indifferent to their society
when free from our observation; and was one day summoned
to the top-gallant-yard of the mizzen-mast, to overlook
him playing with a young male monkey. Lying on
his back, partially covered with a sail, he for some
time contemplated, with great gravity, the gambols
of the monkey, which bounded over him; but at length
caught him by the tail, and tried to envelop him in
his covering. The monkey seemed to dislike his
confinement, and broke from him, but again renewed
its gambols, and although frequently caught, always
escaped. The intercourse, however, did not seem
to be that of equals, for the orang-outang never condescended
to romp with the monkey, as he did with the boys of
the ship. Yet the monkeys had evidently a great
predilection for his company; for whenever they broke
loose, they took their way to his resting-place, and
were often seen lurking about it, or creeping clandestinely
towards him. There appeared to be no gradation
in their intimacy, as they appeared as confidently
familiar with him when first observed, as at the close
of their acquaintance.
“This animal neither practises
the grimaces and antics of other monkeys, nor possesses
their perpetual proneness to mischief. Gravity,
approaching to melancholy, and mildness, were sometimes
strongly expressed in his countenance, and seemed
to be the characteristics of his disposition.
When he first came among strangers, he would sit for
hours with his hand upon his head, looking pensively
at all around him; and when much incommoded by their
examination, would hide himself beneath any covering
that was at hand. His mildness was evinced by
his forbearance under injuries, which were grievous
before he was excited to revenge; but he always avoided
those who often teased him. He soon became strongly
attached to those who kindly used him. By their
side he was fond of sitting; and getting as close
as possible to their persons, would take their hands
between his lips, and fly to them for protection.
From the boatswain of the Alceste, who shared his meals
with him, and was his chief favorite, although he sometimes
purloined the grog and the biscuit of his benefactor,
he learned to eat with a spoon; and might be often
seen sitting at his cabin door, enjoying his coffee,
quite unembarrassed by those who observed him, and
with a grotesque and sober air, that seemed a burlesque
on human nature.
“On board ship he commonly slept
at the masthead, after wrapping himself in a sail.
In making his bed, he used the greatest pains to remove
every thing out of his way that might render the surface
on which he intended to lie uneven; and, having satisfied
himself with this part of his arrangement, spread
out the sail, and, lying down upon it on his back,
drew it over his body. Sometimes I preoccupied
his bed, and teased him by refusing to give it up.
On these occasions he would endeavor to pull the sail
from under me, or to force me from it, and would not
rest till I had resigned it. If it were large
enough for both, he would quietly lie by my side.
“His food in Java was chiefly
fruit, especially mangostáns, of which he was
extremely fond. He also sucked eggs with voracity,
and often employed himself in seeking them. On
board ship his diet was of no definite kind.
He ate readily of all kinds of meat, and especially
raw meat; was very fond of bread, but always preferred
fruits, when he could obtain them.
“His beverage in Java was water;
on board ship, it was as diversified as his food.
He preferred coffee and tea, but would readily take
wine, and exemplified his attachment to spirits by
stealing the captain’s brandy bottle. Since
his arrival in London, he has preferred beer and milk
to any thing else, but drinks wine and other liquors.
“I have seen him exhibit violent
alarm on three occasions only, when he appeared to
seek for safety in gaining as high an elevation as
possible. On seeing eight large turtles brought
on board, whilst the Cæsar was off the Island of
Ascension, he climbed with all possible speed to a
higher part of the ship than he had ever before reached,
and, looking down upon them, projected his long lips
into the form of a hog’s snout, uttering, at
the same time, a sound which might be described as
between the croaking of a frog and the grunting of
a pig. After some time, he ventured to descend,
but with great caution, peeping continually at the
turtles, but could not be induced to approach within
many yards of them. He ran to the same height,
and uttered the same sounds, on seeing some men bathing
and splashing in the sea; and since his arrival in
England, has shown nearly the same degree of fear
at the sight of a live tortoise.”
This animal survived his transportation
to England from August, 1817, when he arrived, to
the 1st April, 1819; during which interval he was
in the custody of Mr. Cross, at Exeter ’Change,
as much caressed for the gentleness of his disposition
as he was noticed for his great rarity. There
was no need of personal confinement, and little of
restraint or coercion; to his keepers, especially,
and to those whom he knew by their frequent visits,
he displayed a decided partiality. During his
last illness, and at his death, his piteous appearance,
which seemed to bespeak his entreaties to those about
him for relief, did not fail to excite the feelings
of all who witnessed them an excitement
evidently heightened by the recollection of human suffering
under similar circumstances, which the sight of this
animal so strongly brought to mind.
The CHIMPANSE; a native
of Guinea and Congo, in Africa. Its frame is
more analogous to that of man than to that of any other
tribe, and it is the only one that can walk erect
with ease. It lives in troops, uses stones and
clubs as weapons, and was mistaken for a species of
wild man, by early voyagers along the African coast.
The Chimpanse on Board a Vessel. M.
De Grandpre, speaking of the Chimpanse, says that
“his sagacity is extraordinary; he generally
walks upon two legs, supporting himself with a stick.
The negro fears him, and not without reason, as he
sometimes treats him very roughly. He saw, on
board a vessel, a female chimpanse, which exhibited
wonderful proofs of intelligence. Among other
arts, she had learnt to heat the oven; she took great
care not to let any of the coals fall out, which might
have done mischief in the ship; and she was very accurate
in observing when the oven was heated to the proper
degree, of which she immediately apprized the baker,
who, relying with perfect confidence upon her information,
carried his dough to the oven as soon as the chimpanse
came to fetch him. This animal performed all the
business of a sailor, spliced ropes, handled the sails,
and assisted at unfurling them; and she was, in fact,
considered by the sailors as one of themselves.
“The vessel was bound for America;
but the poor animal did not live to see that country,
having fallen a victim to the brutality of the first
mate, who inflicted very cruel chastisement upon her,
which she had not deserved. She endured it with
the greatest patience, only holding out her hands
in a suppliant attitude, in order to break the force
of the blows she received. But from that moment
she steadily refused to take any food, and died on
the fifth day from grief and hunger. She was
lamented by every person on board, not insensible to
the feelings of humanity, who knew the circumstances
of her fate.”
The GIBBON; a native of
Sumatra, Bornéo, and Malacca. The arms are of
immense length, and the hands and feet are formed for
clinging to the limbs of trees, where it throws itself
from branch to branch with surprising agility.
The expression of the face is gentle, and rather melancholy.
There are many species, all of which utter loud cries.
The nimble Gibbon, at the Zoological
Gardens in London. “This specimen,”
says the editor of the Penny Magazine, “was a
female, and had been four years in captivity at Macao,
previous to her arrival in this country. On entering
the apartment in which she was to be kept, where a
large space, and a tree full of branches, were allotted
for her accommodation, she sprang upon the tree, and,
using her hands in alternate succession, she launched
herself from bough to bough with admirable grace and
address, sometimes to the distance of twelve or eighteen
feet. Her flight might be termed aerial, for she
seemed scarcely to touch the branches in her progress.
It was curious to witness how abruptly she would stop
in her most rapid flight. Suddenly as thought,
she would raise her body, and sit quietly gazing at
the astonished spectators of her gymnastics.
“She possessed great quickness
of eye; and apples, and other fruit, were often thrown
at her with great rapidity, but she always caught
them without an effort. On one occasion, a live
bird was set at liberty in her apartment. She
marked its flight, made a spring to a distant branch,
caught the bird with one hand, on her passage, and
attained the branch with her other hand. She
instantly bit off the head of the bird, picked off
its feathers, and threw it down, without attempting
to eat it.
“While exerting herself in feats
of agility, the gibbon ever and anon uttered her call-notes,
consisting of the syllables oo-ah, oo-ah,
in a succession of ascending and descending semitones,
during the execution of which, the lips and frame
vibrated. The tones were not unmusical, but deafening,
from their loudness.
“In disposition, this creature
was timid, being apparently afraid of men, but allowing
women to come near her, and stroke her fur, and pat
her hands and feet. Her eye was quick, and she
seemed to be perpetually on the watch, scrutinizing
every person who entered the room. After exercising
in the morning from three to four hours, she would,
if allowed, spend the rest of the day quietly on one
of the branches.”
THE BABOON.
This is a large and ferocious species
of ape, common in the south of Africa, and Asia.
Le Vaillant’s Baboon. This
celebrated traveller, while in Africa, had a dog-faced
baboon, whom he called Kees. He accompanied
his master in his wanderings, and of his way of life
we have the following sketches: “I made
him,” says Le Vaillant, “my taster.
Whenever we found fruits, or roots, with which my
Hottentots were unacquainted, we did not touch them
till Kees had tasted them. If he threw them away,
we concluded that they were either of a disagreeable
flavor, or of a pernicious quality, and left them
untasted. The ape possesses a peculiar property,
wherein he differs greatly from other animals, and
resembles man namely, that he is by nature
equally gluttonous and inquisitive. Without necessity,
and without appetite, he tastes every thing that falls
in his way, or that is given to him.
“But Kees had a still more valuable
quality: he was an excellent sentinel; for, whether
by day or night, he immediately sprang up on the slightest
appearance of danger. By his cry, and the symptoms
of fear which he exhibited, we were always apprized
of the approach of an enemy, even though the dogs
perceived nothing of it. The latter at length
learned to rely upon him with such confidence, that
they slept on in perfect tranquillity. I often
took Kees with me when I went a-hunting; and when
he saw me preparing for sport, he exhibited the most
lively demonstrations of joy. On the way, he would
climb into the trees, to look for gum, of which he
was very fond. Sometimes he discovered to me
honey, deposited in the clefts of rocks, or hollow
trees. But if he happened to have met with neither
honey nor gum, and his appetite had become sharp by
his running about, I always witnessed a very ludicrous
scene. In those cases, he looked for roots, which
he ate with great greediness, especially a particular
kind, which, to his cost, I also found to be very
well tasted and refreshing, and therefore insisted
upon sharing with him. But Kees was no fool.
As soon as he found such a root, and I was not near
enough to seize upon my share of it, he devoured it
in the greatest haste, keeping his eyes all the while
riveted on me. He accurately measured the distance
I had to pass before I could get to him, and I was
sure of coming too late. Sometimes, however,
when he had made a mistake in his calculation, and
I came upon him sooner than he expected, he endeavored
to hide the root in which case, I compelled
him, by a box on the ear, to give me up my share.
“When Kees happened to tire
on the road, he mounted upon the back of one of my
dogs, who was so obliging as to carry him whole hours.
One of them, that was larger and stronger than the
rest, hit upon a very ingenious artifice, to avoid
being pressed into this piece of service. As
soon as Kees leaped upon his back, he stood still,
and let the train pass, without moving from the spot.
Kees still persisted in his intention, till we were
almost out of his sight, when he found himself at
length compelled to dismount, upon which both the baboon
and dog exerted all their speed to overtake us.
The latter, however, gave him the start, and kept
a good look-out after him, that he might not serve
him in the same manner again. In fact, Kees enjoyed
a certain authority with all my dogs, for which he
perhaps was indebted to the superiority of his instinct.
He could not endure a competitor if any of the dogs
came too near him when he was eating, he gave him a
box on the ear, which compelled him immediately to
retire to a respectful distance.
“Like most other domestic animals,
Kees was addicted to stealing. He understood
admirably well how to loose the strings of a basket,
in order to take victuals out of it, especially milk,
of which he was very fond. My people chastised
him for these thefts; but that did not make him amend
his conduct. I myself sometimes whipped him; but
then he ran away, and did not return again to the
tent until it grew dark. Once, as I was about
to dine, and had put the beans, which I had boiled
for myself, upon a plate, I heard the voice of a bird
with which I was not acquainted. I left my dinner
standing, seized my gun, and ran out of the tent.
After the space of about a quarter of an hour, I returned,
with the bird in my hand; but, to my astonishment,
found not a single bean upon the plate. Kees
had stolen them all, and taken himself out of the
way.
“When he had committed any trespass
of this kind, he used always, about the time when
I drank tea, to return quietly, and seat himself in
his usual place, with every appearance of innocence,
as if nothing had happened; but this evening he did
not let himself be seen. And on the following
day also he was not seen by any of us; and, in consequence,
I began to grow seriously uneasy about him, and apprehensive
that he might be lost forever. But, on the third
day, one of my people, who had been to fetch water,
informed me that he had seen Kees in the neighborhood;
but that, as soon as the animal espied him, he had
concealed himself again. I immediately went out
and beat the whole neighborhood with my dogs.
All at once, I heard a cry like that which Kees used
to make when I returned from my shooting, and had not
taken him with me. I looked about, and at length
espied him, endeavoring to hide himself behind the
large branches of a tree. I now called to him
in a friendly tone of voice, and made motions to him
to come down to me. But he could not trust me,
and I was obliged to climb up the tree to fetch him.
He did not attempt to fly, and we returned together
to my quarters: here he expected to receive his
punishment; but I did nothing, as it would have been
of no use.
“When any eatables had been
pilfered at my quarters, the fault was always laid
first upon Kees; and rarely was the accusation unfounded.
For a time, the eggs, which a hen laid me, were constantly
stolen away, and I wished to ascertain whether I had
to attribute this loss also to him. For this
purpose I went one morning to watch him, and waited
till the hen announced, by her cackling, that she
had laid an egg. Kees was sitting upon my vehicle;
but, the moment he heard the hen’s voice, he
leaped down, and was running to fetch the egg.
When he saw me, he suddenly stopped, and affected
a careless posture, swaying himself backwards upon
his hind legs, and assuming a very innocent look; in
short, he employed all his art to deceive me with respect
to his design. His hypocritical manoeuvres only
confirmed my suspicions; and, in order, in my turn,
to deceive him, I pretended not to attend to him,
and turned my back to the bush where the hen was cackling,
upon which he immediately sprang to the place.
I ran after him, and came up to him at the moment
when he had broken the egg, and was swallowing it.
Having caught the thief in the fact, I gave him a good
beating upon the spot; but this severe chastisement
did not prevent his soon stealing fresh-laid eggs
again.
“As I was convinced that I should
never be able to break Kees off his natural vices,
and that, unless I chained him up every morning, I
should never get an egg, I endeavored to accomplish
my purpose in another manner: I trained one of
my dogs, as soon as the hen cackled, to run to the
nest, and bring me the egg, without breaking it.
In a few days, the dog had learned his lesson; but
Kees, as soon as he heard the hen cackle, ran with
him to the nest. A contest now took place between
them, who should have the egg: often the dog was
foiled, although he was the stronger of the two.
If he gained the victory, he ran joyfully to me with
the egg, and put it into my hand. Kees, nevertheless,
followed him, and did not cease to grumble and make
threatening grimaces at him, till he saw me take the
egg, as if he was comforted for the loss
of his booty by his adversary’s not retaining
it for himself. If Kees got hold of the egg,
he endeavored to run with it to a tree, where, having
devoured it, he threw down the shells upon his adversary,
as if to make game of him. In that case, the dog
returned, looking ashamed, from which I could conjecture
the unlucky adventure he had met with.
“Kees was always the first awake
in the morning, and, when it was the proper time,
he aroused the dogs, who were accustomed to his voice,
and, in general, obeyed, without hesitation, the slightest
motions by which he communicated his orders to them,
immediately taking their posts about the tent and
carriage, as he directed them.”
A droll Mimic. A
clergyman of some distinction, in England, had a tame
baboon, which became so fond of him, that, wherever
he went, it was always desirous of accompanying him.
Whenever, therefore, he had to perform the service
of his church, he was under the necessity of shutting
it up in his room.
Once, however, the animal escaped,
and followed his master to the church; and, silently
mounting the sounding-board above the pulpit, he lay
perfectly still till the sermon commenced. He
then crept to the edge, and, overlooking the preacher,
imitated his gestures in so grotesque a manner, that
the whole congregation was unavoidably made to laugh.
The minister, surprised and confounded
at this levity, severely rebuked his audience for
their conduct. The reproof failed of its intended
effect. The congregation still laughed, and the
preacher, in the warmth of his zeal, redoubled his
vociferation and action. This last the ape imitated
so exactly, that the congregation could no longer restrain
themselves, but burst into a long and loud roar of
laughter.
A friend of the preacher at length
stepped up to him, and pointed out the cause of this
apparently improper conduct; and such was the arch
demeanor of the animal, that it was with the utmost
difficulty that the parson himself could maintain
his gravity, while he ordered the sexton to take the
creature away.
MISCELLANEOUS ANECDOTES. Immense
troops of baboons inhabit the mountains in the neighborhood
of the Cape of Good Hope, whence they descend to the
plains, to devastate the gardens and orchards.
In their plundering excursions they are very cunning,
always placing sentinels, to prevent the main body
from being surprised. They break the fruit to
pieces, cram it into their cheek-pouches, and keep
it until hungry. Whenever the sentinel discovers
a man approaching, he sets up a loud yell, which makes
the whole troop retreat with the utmost precipitation.
They have been known to steal behind an unwary traveller
resting near their retreats, and carry off his food,
which they would eat at a little distance from him;
and with absurd grimaces and gestures, in ridicule,
offer it back; at the same time greedily devouring
it.
The following account is given by
Lade: “We traversed a great mountain in
the neighborhood of the Cape of Good Hope, and amused
ourselves with hunting large baboons, which are very
numerous in that place. I can neither describe
all the arts practised by these animals, nor the nimbleness
and impudence with which they returned, after being
pursued by us. Sometimes they allowed us to approach
so near that I was almost certain of seizing them.
But, when I made the attempt, they sprang, at a single
leap, ten paces from me, and mounted trees with equal
agility, from whence they looked at us with great
indifference, and seemed to derive pleasure from our
astonishment. Some of them were so large that,
if our interpreter had not assured us they were neither
ferocious nor dangerous, our number would not have
appeared sufficient to protect us from their attacks.
“As it could serve no purpose
to kill them, we did not use our guns. But the
captain levelled his piece at a very large one, that
had rested on the top of a tree, after having fatigued
us a long time in pursuing him; this kind of menace,
of which the animal, perhaps, recollected his having
sometimes seen the consequences, terrified him to such
a degree, that he fell down motionless at our feet,
and we had no difficulty in seizing him; but when
he recovered from his stupor, it required all our
dexterity and efforts to keep him. We tied his
paws together; but he bit so furiously, that we were
under the necessity of binding our handkerchiefs over
his head.”
The common baboon is very numerous
in Siam, where they frequently sally forth in astonishing
multitudes to attack the villages, during the time
the peasants are occupied in the rice harvest, and
plunder their habitations of whatever provisions they
can lay their paws on. Fruits, corn, and roots,
are their usual food, although they will also eat
flesh. When hunted, baboons often make very formidable
resistance to dogs their great strength
and long claws enabling them to make a stout defence;
and it is with difficulty a single dog can overcome
them, except when they are gorged with excessive eating,
in which they always indulge when they can.
Some years ago, Mr. Rutter, doing
duty at the castle of Cape Town, kept a tame baboon
for his amusement. One evening it broke its chain
unknown to him. In the night, climbing up into
the belfry, it began to play with, and ring the bell.
Immediately the whole place was in an uproar, some
great danger being apprehended. Many thought that
the castle was on fire; others, that an enemy had
entered the bay; and the soldiers began actually to
turn out, when it was discovered that the baboon had
occasioned the disturbance. On the following morning,
a court-martial was summoned, when Cape justice dictated,
that, “Whereas Master Rutter’s baboon
had unnecessarily put the castle into alarm, the master
should receive fifty lashes;” Mr. Rutter, however,
found means to evade the punishment.
The following circumstance is characteristic
of the imitative disposition of the baboon: The
army of Alexander the Great marched, in complete battle
array, into a country inhabited by great numbers of
these apes, and encamped there for the night.
The next morning, when the army was about to proceed
on its march, the soldiers saw, at some distance,
an enormous number of baboons, drawn up in rank and
file, like a small army, with such regularity that
the Macedonians, who could have no idea of such a
manoeuvre, imagined at first that it was the enemy,
prepared to receive them.
The ape-catchers of Africa, it is
said, take a vessel filled with water, and wash their
hands and face in a situation where they are sure
to be observed by the apes. After having done
so, the water is poured out, and its place supplied
by a solution of glue; they leave the spot, and the
apes then seldom fail to come down from their trees,
and wash themselves in the same manner as they have
seen the men do before them. The consequence
is, that they glue their eyelashes so fast together,
that they cannot open their eyes, or see to escape
from their enemy.
The ape is fond of spirituous liquors,
and these are also used for the purpose of entrapping
them. A person places, in their sight, a number
of vessels filled with ardent spirits, pretends to
drink, and retires. The apes, ever attentive
to the proceedings of man, descend, and imitate what
they have seen, become intoxicated, fall asleep, and
are thus rendered an easy conquest to their cunning
adversaries.
The people of India make the proneness
of apes to imitation useful; for, when they wish to
collect cocoa-nuts, and other fruits, they go to the
woods where these grow, which are generally frequented
by apes and monkeys, gather a few heaps, and withdraw.
As soon as they are gone, the apes fall to work, imitate
every thing they have seen done; and when they have
gathered together a considerable number of heaps, the
people approach, the apes fly to the trees, and the
harvest is conveyed home.
Apes and monkeys, in many parts of
India, are made objects of religious veneration, and
magnificent temples are erected to their honor.
In these countries, they propagate to an alarming
extent; they enter cities in immense troops, and even
venture into the houses. In some places, as in
the kingdom of Calicut, the natives find it necessary
to have their windows latticed, to prevent the ingress
of these intruders, who lay hands without scruple
upon every eatable within their reach. There
are three hospitals for monkeys in Amadabad, the capital
of Guzerat, where the sick and lame are fed and relieved
by medical attendants.
Bindrabund, a town of Agra, in India,
is in high estimation with the pious Hindoos, who
resort to it from the most remote parts of the empire,
on account of its being the favorite residence of the
god Krishna. The town is embosomed in groves
of trees, which, according to the account of Major
Thorn, are the residence of innumerable apes, whose
propensity to mischief is increased by the religious
respect paid to them, in honor of Hunaman, a divinity
of the Hindoo mythology, wherein he is characterized
under the form of an ape. In consequence of this
degrading superstition, such numbers of these animals
are supported by the voluntary contributions of pilgrims,
that no one dares to resist or molest them. Hence,
access to the town is often difficult; for, should
one of the apes take an antipathy against any unhappy
traveller, he is sure to be assailed by the whole community,
who follow him with all the missile weapons they can
collect, such as pieces of bamboo, stones, and dirt,
making at the same time a most hideous howling.
A striking instance of the audacity
of the ape, in attacking the human species, is related
by M. Mollien, in his Travels in Africa. A woman,
going with millet and milk to a vessel, from St. Louis,
which had been stopped before a village in the country
of Golam, was attacked by a troop of apes, from three
to four feet high; they first threw stones at her,
on which she began to run away; they then ran after
her, and, having caught her, they commenced beating
her with sticks, until she let go what she was carrying.
On returning to the village, she related her adventure
to the principal inhabitants, who mounted their horses,
and, followed by their dogs, went to the place which
served as a retreat to this troop of marauders.
They fired at them, killed ten, and wounded others,
which were brought to them by the dogs; but several
negroes were severely wounded in this encounter, either
by the stones hurled at them by the apes, or by their
bites; the females, especially, were most furious
in revenging the death of their young ones, which
they carried in their arms.
D’Obsonville, speaking of the
sacred haunts of apes in different parts of India,
says that, in the course of his travels through that
country, he occasionally went into the ancient temples,
in order to rest himself. He noticed always that
several of the apes, which abounded there, first observed
him attentively, then looked inquisitively at the
food which he was about to take, betraying, by their
features and gestures, the great desire which they
felt to partake of it with him. In order to amuse
himself upon such occasions, he was generally provided
with a quantity of dried peas; of these he first scattered
some on the side where the leader stood, for,
according to his account, the apes always obey some
particular one as their leader, upon which
the animal gradually approached nearer, and gathered
them eagerly up. He then held out a handful to
the animal; and, as they seldom meet a person who
harbors any hostile intentions against them, the creature
ventured slowly to approach, cautiously watching,
as it seemed, lest any trick might be played upon him.
At length, becoming bolder, he laid hold, with one
of his paws, of the thumb of the hand in which the
peas were held out to him, while, with the other,
he carried them to his mouth, keeping his eyes all
the while fixed upon those of M. d’Obsonville.
“If I happened to laugh,”
he observes, “or to move myself, the ape immediately
gave over eating, worked his lips, and made a kind
of growling noise, the meaning of which was rendered
very intelligible to me by his long, canine teeth,
which he occasionally exhibited. If I threw some
of the peas to a distance from him, he sometimes seemed
pleased to see other apes pick them up; though, at
other times, he grumbled at it, and attacked those
who approached too near to me. The noise which
he made, and the apprehensions he showed, though they
might, perhaps, proceed in some measure from his own
greediness, evidently proved, however, that he feared
I might take advantage of their weakness, and so make
them prisoners. I also observed, that those whom
he suffered to approach the nearest to me were always
the largest and strongest of the males; the young
and the females he obliged to keep at a considerable
distance from me.”
MONKEYS.
Of this numerous and frolicsome family,
there is a great variety in the hot regions of both
continents. In some portions of South America,
they enliven the landscape by their gambols, and make
the forests resound with their cries. They are
the smallest and most lively of the four-handed family,
and in all caravans, they are the favorites of young
observers.
The Fair Monkey. This
is one of the most beautiful of the tribe. Its
head is small and round: its face and hands are
of scarlet, so defined and vivid that it has more
the appearance of art than nature. Its body and
limbs are covered with long hairs of the purest white,
and of a shining and silvery brightness: the
tail is of a deep chestnut color, very glistening,
and considerably longer than the body. This animal
is somewhat larger than the striated monkey.
It is an inhabitant of South America, and is frequently
to be met with on the banks of the Amazon.
The following circumstance, exhibiting
the fickleness of the fair monkey, was communicated
to Mr. Bewick by Sir John Trevelyan. “Pug
was a gentleman of excellent humor, and adored by
the crew; and, to make him perfectly happy, as they
imagined, they procured him a wife. For some
weeks he was a devoted husband, and showed her every
attention and respect. He then grew cool, and
became jealous of any kind of civility shown her by
the master of the vessel, and began to use her with
much cruelty. His treatment made her wretched
and dull; though she bore the spleen of her husband
with that fortitude which is characteristic of the
female sex of the human species. Pug, however,
like the lords of creation, was up to deceit, and
practised pretended kindness to his spouse, to effect
a diabolical scheme, which he seemed to premeditate.
One morning, when the sea ran very high, he seduced
her aloft, and drew her observation to an object at
some distance from the yard-arm; her attention being
fixed, he all of a sudden applied his paw to her rear,
and canted her into the sea, where she fell a victim
to his cruelty. This seemed to afford him high
gratification, for he descended in great spirits.”
A Trick. In 1818,
a vessel that sailed between Whitehaven, in England,
and Jamaica, embarked on her homeward voyage, and,
among other passengers, carried Mrs. B., and an infant
five weeks old. One beautiful afternoon, the
captain perceived a distant sail; and, after he had
gratified his curiosity, he politely offered the glass
to the lady, that she might obtain a clear view of
the object. She had the baby in her arms, but
now she wrapped her shawl about it, and placed it
on a sofa, upon which she had been sitting.
Scarcely had she applied her eye to
the glass, when the helmsman exclaimed, “See
what the mischievous monkey has done!” The reader
may judge of the mother’s feelings, when, on
turning round, she beheld the animal in the act of
transporting her child apparently up to the top of
the mast. The monkey was a very large one, and
so strong and active, that, while it grasped the infant
firmly with one arm, it climbed the shrouds nimbly
by the other, totally unembarrassed by the weight of
its burden.
One look was enough for the terrified
mother; and had it not been for the assistance of
those around her, she would have fallen prostrate on
the deck, where she was soon afterwards stretched,
apparently a lifeless corpse. The sailors could
climb as well as the monkey, but the latter watched
their motions narrowly; and, as it ascended higher
up the mast the moment they attempted to put a foot
on the shroud, the captain became afraid that it would
drop the child, and endeavor to escape by leaping
from one mast to another.
In the mean time, the little innocent
was heard to cry; and though many thought it was suffering
pain, their fears on this point were speedily dissipated,
when they observed the monkey imitating exactly the
motions of a nurse, by dandling, soothing, and caressing,
its charge, and even endeavoring to hush it to sleep.
From the deck, the lady was conveyed
to the cabin, and gradually restored to her senses.
In the mean time, the captain ordered the men to conceal
themselves carefully below, and quietly took his own
station on the cabin stairs, where he could see all
that passed, without being seen. The plan happily
succeeded. The monkey, on perceiving that the
coast was clear, cautiously descended from his lofty
perch, and replaced the infant on the sofa, cold,
fretful, and perhaps frightened, but, in every other
respect, as free from harm as when he took it up.
The captain had now a most grateful office to perform;
the babe was restored to its mother’s arms,
amidst tears, and thanks, and blessings.
A Tragedy in the Woods. An
Englishman travelling in India tells the following
interesting, though painful, story:
“I was strolling through a wood,
with my gun on my shoulders, my thoughts all centred
in Europe, when I heard a curious noise in a tree
above me. I looked up, and found that the sounds
proceeded from a white monkey, who skipped from branch
to branch, chattering with delight at beholding a
‘fellow-creature,’ for so he decidedly
seemed to consider me. For a few moments I took
no notice of his antics, and walked quietly along,
till suddenly a large branch fell at my feet, narrowly
escaping my head. I again paused, and found that
the missile had been dropped by my talkative friend.
Without consideration, I instantly turned round and
fired at him.
“The report had scarcely sounded,
when I heard the most piercing, the most distressing
cry, that ever reached my ears. An agonized shriek,
like that of a young infant, burst from the little
creature that I had wounded. It was within thirty
paces of me. I could see the wretched animal,
already stained with blood, point to its wound, and
again hear its dreadful moan.
“The agony of a hare is harrowing,
and I have seen a young sportsman turn pale on hearing
it. The present cry was, however, more distressing.
I turned round, and endeavored to hurry away.
This, however, I found no easy task; for, as I moved
forward, the unhappy creature followed me, springing
as well as he could from bough to bough, uttering
a low, wailing moan, and pointing at the same time
to the spot whence the blood trickled. Then,
regarding me steadily and mournfully in the face,
it seemed to reproach me with my wanton cruelty.
Again I hastened on, but still it pursued me.
Never, in my life, did I feel so much for a dumb animal:
never did I so keenly repent an act of uncalled-for
barbarity.
“Determined not to allow the
poor monkey thus to linger in torture, and at once
to end the annoying scene, I suddenly came to a halt;
and, lowering my gun, which was only single-barrelled,
I was about to reload it for the purpose of despatching
the maimed creature, when, springing from a tree,
it ran up to within a dozen paces of me, and began
to cry so piteously, and roll itself in agony, occasionally
picking up earth, with which it attempted to stanch
the blood by stuffing it into the wound, that, in
spite of my resolution, when I fired, I was so nervous,
I almost missed my aim, inflicting another wound, which
broke the animal’s leg, but nothing more.
Again, its piercing shriek rang in my ears. Horrified
beyond endurance, I threw down my gun, and actually
fled.
“In about half an hour, I returned,
for the purpose of getting my gun, fully expecting
that the poor animal had left the spot. What,
then, was my surprise, to find a crowd of monkeys
surrounding the wretched sufferer, and busily employed
in tearing open its wounds! A shout drove them
all away, except the dying animal. I advanced.
The little creature was rolling in agony. I took
up my gun, which lay beside him, and fancied he cast
one look of supplication on me one prayer
to be relieved from his misery. I did not hesitate;
with one blow of the butt-end, I dashed out his brains.
Then turning round, I slowly returned to my quarters,
more profoundly dispirited than I had felt for many
months. Take my advice, reader; if you must
live in India, never shoot a monkey.”
Miscellaneous Anecdotes. We
are told of a king of Egypt who was so successful
in training monkeys to the art of dancing, that they
were long admired for the dexterity and gracefulness
of their movements. On one occasion, his majesty
had a ball, at which a vast number of these animals
“tripped it on the light, fantastic toe.”
A citizen, who enjoyed fun, threw a few handfuls of
walnuts into the ball-room, while these picturesque
animals were engaged in a high dance, upon which they
forgot all decorum, and sprang to the booty.
A monkey, which was kept on board
a British frigate, was the favorite of all on board
but the midshipmen. This animal knew well of a
large store of apples being in a locker in the wardroom,
which was kept constantly secure, in consequence of
his propensity for plundering it. He, however,
fell upon ways and means to secure his booty.
He procured a piece of wadding, swung himself from
the stern gallery by one hand, and, with this in the
other, broke a pane of glass in the wardroom window;
and, after carefully picking out all the broken pieces
of glass, made his entrance, where he gorged himself
so fully, that he was unable to effect his retreat
by the place where he entered. He was caught
in the fact, and soundly flogged.
A singular piece of ingenuity was
once practised by a monkey, in defending himself against
fire-arms. This animal belonged to Captain M ,
of the navy, who had also another small monkey, of
which he was very fond, from its lively playfulness.
The larger animal was often exceedingly troublesome,
and could not be driven from his cabin, without blazing
at him with a pistol loaded with powder and currant
jelly, a discharge which produced a painful
and alarming effect. The old monkey was at first
astounded at the sight of the weapon, which stung
him so sore, that he at last learned a mode of defence;
for, snatching up the little favorite, he used to
interpose him as a shield between the pistol and his
body.
In one of his excursions, Le Vaillant
killed a female monkey, which carried a young one
on her back. The latter continued to cling to
her dead parent till they reached their evening quarters;
and the assistance of a negro was even then required
to disengage it. No sooner, however, did it feel
itself alone, than it darted towards a wooden block,
on which was placed the wig of Le Vaillant’s
father. To this it clung most pertinaciously
by its fore paws; and such was the force of this deceptive
instinct, that it remained in the same position for
about three weeks, all this time evidently mistaking
the wig for its mother. It was fed, from time
to time, with goat’s milk; and, at length, emancipated
itself voluntarily, by quitting the fostering care
of the peruke. The confidence which it ere long
assumed, and the amusing familiarity of its manners,
soon rendered it a favorite with the family.
The unsuspecting naturalist had, however, introduced
a wolf in sheep’s clothing into his dwelling;
for, one morning, on entering his chamber, the door
of which had been imprudently left open, he beheld
his young favorite making a hearty breakfast on a collection
of insects which he had made. In the first transports
of his anger, he resolved to strangle the monkey in
his arms; but his rage immediately gave way to pity,
when he perceived that the crime of its voracity had
carried the punishment along with it. In eating
the beetles, it had swallowed several of the pins
on which they were transfixed. Its agony, consequently,
became great, and all his efforts were unable to preserve
its life.
ORDER III - CARNARIA,
BUTCHERING ANIMALS.
This order includes bats, hedgehogs,
bears, dogs, wolves, foxes, lions, weasels, &c.
BATS.
These creatures, partaking both of
the nature of quadrupeds and birds, have excited the
wonder of mankind in all ages. There is a great
variety of species, from the common bat of our climate
to the vampyre of South America, whose wings stretch
to the extent of two feet. These animals live
in caves and crevices during the day, and sally forth
at evening to catch their prey. For this reason,
there is a popular disgust of the whole tribe; yet
the species in our climate are a harmless race.
We cannot say as much of the larger kinds, which sometimes
darken the air, by their abundance, in hot climates.
One species, already mentioned, is a formidable animal.
Captain Stedman, in his “Narrative
of a Five Years’ Expedition against the revolted
Negroes of Surinam,” relates that, on awaking
about four o’clock one morning in his hammock,
he was extremely alarmed at finding himself weltering
in congealed blood, and without feeling any pain whatever.
“The mystery was,” says Captain Stedman,
“that I had been bitten by the vampyre, or spectre
of Guiana, which is also called the flying dog of
New Spain; and by the Spaniards, perrovolador.
This is no other than a bat of monstrous size, that
sucks the blood from men and cattle, while they are
fast asleep, even, sometimes, till they die; and,
as the manner in which they proceed is truly wonderful,
I shall endeavor to give a distinct account of it.
“Knowing, by instinct, that
the person they intend to attack is in a sound slumber,
they generally alight near the feet, where, while the
creature continues fanning with his enormous wings,
which keeps one cool, he bites a piece out of the
tip of the great toe, so very small, indeed, that
the head of a pin could scarcely be received into the
wound, which is, consequently, not painful; yet, through
this orifice, he continues to suck the blood, until
he is obliged to disgorge. He then begins again,
and thus continues sucking and disgorging until he
is scarcely able to fly, and the sufferer has often
been known to pass from time to eternity. Cattle
they generally bite in the ear, but always in places
where the blood flows spontaneously. Having applied
tobacco ashes as the best remedy, and washed the gore
from myself and hammock, I observed several small
heaps of congealed blood, all round the place where
I had lain, upon the ground; on examining which, the
surgeon judged that I had lost at least twelve or fourteen
ounces of blood.”
“Some years ago,” says
Mr. Waterton, in his “Wanderings in South America,”
“I went to the River Paumaron, with a Scotch
gentleman, by name Tarbet. We hung our hammocks
in the thatched loft of a planter’s house.
Next morning, I heard this gentleman muttering in his
hammock, and now and then letting fall an imprecation
or two, just about the time he ought to have been
saying his morning prayers. ’What is the
matter, sir?’ said I, softly; ‘is any thing
amiss?’ ’What’s the matter?’
answered he, surlily; ’why, the vampyres have
been sucking me to death.’ As soon as there
was light enough, I went to his hammock, and saw it
much stained with blood. ‘There,’
said he, thrusting his foot out of the hammock, ’see
how these infernal imps have been drawing my life’s
blood.’ On examining his foot, I found the
vampyre had tapped his great toe. There was a
wound somewhat less than that made by a leech.
The blood was still oozing from it. I conjectured
he might have lost from ten to twelve ounces of blood.
Whilst examining it, I think I put him into a worse
humor, by remarking that a European surgeon would
not have been so generous as to have blooded him without
making a charge. He looked up in my face, but
did not say a word. I saw he was of opinion that
I had better have spared this piece of ill-timed levity.”
HEDGEHOG.
This animal belongs exclusively to
the eastern continent, and is well known from the
thick and sharp prickles with which its back and sides
are covered, and the contractile power by which it
can draw its head and belly within the prickly covering
of its back, so as to give it the appearance of a
ball. It is found near hedges and thickets, from
the fruits and herbage of which it obtains its food.
It also feeds upon small animals, such as snails and
beetles.
The sagacity of the hedgehog is celebrated
in antiquity. We are informed by Plutarch, that
a citizen of Cyzicus thus acquired the reputation
of a good meteorologist: A hedgehog generally
has its burrow open in various points; and, when its
instinct warns it of an approaching change of the
wind, it stops up the aperture towards that quarter.
The citizen alluded to, becoming aware of this practice,
was able to predict to what point the wind would next
shift.
Though of a very timid disposition,
the hedgehog has been sometimes tamed. In the
year 1790, there was one in the possession of a Mr.
Sample, in Northumberland, which performed the duty
of a turnspit as well, in all respects, as the dog
of that denomination. It ran about the house
with the same familiarity as any other domestic animal.
In the London Sporting Magazine for
1821, there is an account of one, which, after having
been tamed in a garden, found its way to the scullery,
and there made regular search for the relics of the
dinner plates; having its retreat in the adjoining
cellar. It was fed after the manner itself had
selected. Milk was given in addition to the meat;
but it lost its relish for vegetables, and constantly
rejected them. It soon became as well domesticated
as the cat, and lived on a footing of intimacy with
it.
THE MOLE.
Of this animal there are several species;
they burrow in the earth, and form avenues from one
nest to another, like the crossing streets of a city.
Their eyes are small, and so buried in fur as to be
invisible, except on close inspection.
Mole-Catching. It
has been a common opinion that moles were destructive
to the crops; and in Europe, much pains have been taken
to destroy them. The mole-catcher in
general a quiet old man, who passes his winter in
making his traps, in the chimney-corner comes
forth, in the spring, with his implements of destruction.
His practised eye soon discovers the tracks of the
mole, from the mound which he throws up to some neighboring
bank, or from one mound to another. It is in this
track, or run, that he sets his trap, a few inches
below the surface of the ground. As the mole
passes through this little engine of his ruin, he
disturbs a peg which holds down a strong hazel rod
in a bent position. The moment the peg is moved,
the end of the rod which is held down flies up, and
with it comes up the poor mole, dragged out of the
earth which he has so ingeniously excavated, to be
gibbeted, without a chance of escape.
There was a Frenchman, of the name
of Le Court, who died a few years since, a
man of great knowledge and perseverance, and who did
not think it beneath him to devote his whole attention
to the observation of the mole. He established
a school for mole-catching; and taught many what he
had acquired by incessant perseverance the
art of tracing the mole to his hiding-place in the
ground, and cutting off his retreat. The skill
of this man once saved, as was supposed, a large and
fertile district of France from inundation by a canal,
whose banks the moles had undermined in every direction.
More recently, it has been doubted
whether moles are really so mischievous to the farmer
as has been supposed. It is said that they assist
in draining the land, and thus prevent the foot-rot
in sheep. Mr. Hogg, the Ettrick shepherd, says,
“If a hundred men and horses were employed on
a common-sized pasture-farm say from 1500
to 2000 acres in raising and draining manure
for a top-dressing to the land, they would not do
it so effectually, so equally, and so neatly, as the
natural number of moles on the farm would do for themselves.”
Moles are said to be very ferocious
animals; and, as an evidence of this, we are told
that a mole, a toad, and a viper, were enclosed in
a glass case; the mole despatched the other two, and
devoured a great part of both of them.
THE BEAR.
Of this animal there are many species;
among which, the white bear of the polar regions,
and the grisly bear of the eastern slope of the Rocky
Mountains, are the largest and most formidable.
The brown bear is common to both continents.
The most remarkable of the other species are the Bornean,
spectacled, large-lipped, Thibetian, and Malayan.
The BROWN or BLACK BEAR. Miscellaneous
Anecdotes. This species, like the rest
of the family, is a solitary animal; for he only remains
associated with his mate for a short period, and then
retires to his winter retreat, which is usually in
the hole of a rock, the cavity of a tree, or a pit
in the earth, which the animal frequently digs for
himself. He sometimes constructs a kind of hut,
composed of the branches of trees, which he lines
with moss. In these situations he continues,
for the most part, in a lethargic state, taking no
food, but subsisting entirely on the absorption of
the fat which he has accumulated in the course of
the summer.
The modes that are adopted, by the
inhabitants of different countries, for taking or
destroying bears, are various. Of these, the following
appear to be the most remarkable: In consequence
of the well-known partiality of these animals for
honey, the Russians sometimes fix to those trees where
bees are hived a heavy log of wood, at the end of a
long string. When the unwieldy creature climbs
up, to get at the hive, he finds himself interrupted
by the log; he pushes it aside, and attempts to pass
it; but, in returning, it hits him such a blow, that,
in a rage, he flings it from him with greater force,
which makes it return with increased violence; and
he sometimes continues this, till he is either killed,
or falls from the tree.
In Lapland, hunting the bear is often
undertaken by a single man, who, having discovered
the retreat of the animal, takes his dog along with
him, and advances towards the spot. The jaws are
tied round with a cord, to prevent his barking; and
the man holds the other end of this cord in his hand.
As soon as the dog smells the bear, he begins to show
signs of uneasiness, and, by dragging at the cord,
informs his master that the object of his pursuit
is at no great distance.
When the Laplander, by this means,
discovers on which side the bear is stationed, he
advances in such a direction that the wind may blow
from the bear to him, and not the contrary; for otherwise,
the animal would, by his scent, be aware of his approach,
though not able to see the enemy, being blinded by
sunshine. The olfactory organs of the bear are
exquisite. When the hunter has advanced to within
gunshot of the bear, he fires upon him; and this is
very easily accomplished in autumn, as he is then
more fearless, and is constantly prowling about for
berries of different kinds, on which he feeds at this
season of the year. Should the man chance to
miss his aim, the furious beast will directly turn
upon him in a rage, and the little Laplander is obliged
to take to his heels with all possible speed, leaving
his knapsack behind him on the spot. The bear,
coming up to this, seizes upon it, biting and tearing
it into a thousand pieces. While he is thus venting
his fury, the Laplander, who is generally a good marksman,
reloads his gun, and usually destroys him at the second
shot; if not, the bear in most cases runs away.
Bear-baiting was a favorite amusement
of our English ancestors. Sir Thomas Pope entertained
Queen Mary and the Princess Elizabeth, at Hatfield,
with a grand exhibition of a “bear-baiting, with
which their highnesses were right well content.”
Bear-baiting was part of the amusement of Elizabeth,
among “the princely pleasures of Kenilworth
Castle.” Rowland White, speaking of the
queen, then in her sixty-seventh year, says, “Her
majesty is very well. This day she appoints a
Frenchman to do feats upon a rope, in the Conduit Court.
To-morrow she has commanded the bears, the bull, and
the ape, to be bayted, in the tilt-yard. Upon
Wednesday, she will have solemn dauncing.”
The office of chief master of the bear was held under
the crown, with a salary of 16d. per diem.
Whenever the king chose to entertain himself or his
visitors with this sport, it was the duty of the master
to provide bears and dogs, and to superintend the baiting;
and he was invested with unlimited authority to issue
commissions, and to send his officers into every county
in England, who were empowered to seize and take away
any bears, bulls, or dogs, that they thought meet,
for his majesty’s service. The latest record,
by which this diversion was publicly authorized, is
a grant to Sir Saunders Duncombe, October 11, 1561,
“for the sole practice and profit of the fighting
and combating of wild and domestic beasts, within
the realm of England, for the space of fourteen years.”
Occasional exhibitions of this kind were continued
till about the middle of the eighteenth century.
We are told, in Johnston’s Sketches
of India, that “bears will often continue
on the road, in front of a palanquin, for a mile or
two, tumbling, and playing all sorts of antics, as
if they were taught to do so. I believe it is
their natural disposition; for they certainly are
the most amusing creatures imaginable, in a wild state.
It is no wonder they are led about with monkeys, to
amuse mankind. It is astonishing, as well as
ludicrous, to see them climb rocks, and tumble, or
rather roll, down precipices. If they are attacked
by a person on horseback, they stand erect on their
hind legs, showing a fine set of white teeth, and
make a crackling kind of noise. If the horse comes
near them, they try to catch him by the legs; and,
if they miss him, they tumble over and over several
times. They are easily speared by a person mounted
on horseback, that is bold enough to go near them.”
Bears ascend trees with great facility.
Of their fondness for climbing, we have the following
curious instance: In the end of June, 1825, a
tame bear took a notion of climbing up the scaffolding
placed round a brick stalk, erecting by Mr. G. Johnstone,
at St. Rollox. He began to ascend very steadily,
cautiously examining, as he went along, the various
joists, to see if they were secure. He at length,
to the infinite amusement and astonishment of the
workmen, reached the summit of the scaffolding, one
hundred and twenty feet high. Bruin had no sooner
attained the object of his wishes, than his physiognomy
exhibited great self-gratulation; and he looked about
him with much complacency, and inspected the building
operations going on. The workmen were much amused
with their novel visitor, and every mark of civility
and attention was shown him; which he very condescendingly
returned, by good-humoredly presenting them with a
shake of his paw. A lime bucket was now hoisted,
in order to lower him down; and the workmen, with
all due courtesy, were going to assist him into it;
but he declined their attentions, and preferred returning
in the manner he had gone up. He afterwards repeated
his adventurous visit.
“Bears,” says Mr. Lloyd,
“are not unfrequently domesticated in Wermeland.
I heard of one that was so tame, that his master, a
peasant, used occasionally to cause him to stand at
the back of his sledge when on a journey; but the
fellow kept so good a balance, that it was next to
impossible to upset him. When the vehicle went
on one side, bruin threw his weight the other way,
and vice versa. One day, however, the
peasant amused himself by driving over the very worst
ground he could find, with the intention, if possible,
of throwing the bear off his equilibrium, by which,
at last, the animal got so irritated, that he fetched
his master, who was in advance of him, a tremendous
thwack on the shoulders with his paw. This frightened
the man so much, that he caused the beast to be killed
immediately.”
Of the ferocity of the bear there
are many instances on record. A brown bear, which
was presented to his late majesty, George III., while
Prince of Wales, was kept in the Tower. By the
carelessness of the servant, the door of the den was
left open; and the keeper’s wife happening to
go across the court at the same time, the animal flew
out, seized the woman, threw her down, and fastened
upon her neck, which he bit; and without offering
any further violence, lay upon her, sucking the blood
out of the wound. Resistance was in vain, as it
only served to irritate the brute; and she must inevitably
have perished, had not her husband luckily discovered
her situation. By a sudden blow, he obliged the
bear to quit his hold, and retire to his den, which
he did with great reluctance, and not without making
a second attempt to come at the woman, who was almost
dead, through fear and loss of blood. It is somewhat
remarkable, that, whenever he happened to see her
afterwards, he growled, and made most violent struggles
to get at her. The prince, upon hearing of the
circumstance, ordered the bear to be killed.
But the bear is also capable of generous
attachment. Leopold, Duke of Lorraine, had a
bear called Marco, of the sagacity and sensibility
of which we have the following remarkable instance:
During the winter of 1709, a Savoyard boy, ready to
perish with cold in a barn, in which he had been put
by a good woman, with some more of his companions,
thought proper to enter Marco’s hut, without
reflecting on the danger which he ran in exposing
himself to the mercy of the animal which occupied it.
Marco, however, instead of doing any injury to the
child, took him between his paws, and warmed him by
pressing him to his breast, until next morning, when
he suffered him to depart, to ramble about the city.
The young Savoyard returned in the evening to the hut,
and was received with the same affection. For
several days he had no other retreat; and it added
not a little to his joy, to perceive that the bear
regularly reserved part of his food for him.
A number of days passed in this manner without the
servants’ knowing any thing of the circumstance.
At length, when one of them came to bring the bear
its supper, rather later than ordinary, he was astonished
to see the animal roll his eyes in a furious manner,
and seeming as if he wished him to make as little
noise as possible, for fear of awaking the child, whom
he clasped to his breast. The bear, though ravenous,
did not appear the least moved with the food which
was placed before him. The report of this extraordinary
circumstance was soon spread at court, and reached
the ears of Leopold, who, with part of his courtiers,
was desirous of being satisfied of the truth of Marco’s
generosity. Several of them passed the night
near his hut, and beheld, with astonishment, that the
bear never stirred as long as his guest showed an
inclination to sleep. At break of day, the child
awoke, was very much ashamed to find himself discovered,
and, fearing that he would be punished for his temerity,
begged pardon. The bear, however, caressed him,
and endeavored to prevail on him to eat what had been
brought to him the evening before, which he did at
the request of the spectators, who afterwards conducted
him to the prince. Having learned the whole history
of this singular alliance, and the time which it had
continued, Leopold ordered care to be taken of the
little Savoyard, who, doubtless, would have soon made
his fortune, had he not died a short time after.
Munster relates the following story
of a man being strangely relieved from a perilous
situation: A countryman in Muscovy, in seeking
for honey in the woods, mounted a stupendous tree,
which was hollow in the centre of its trunk; and,
discovering that it contained a large quantity of
comb, descended into the hollow, where he stuck fast
in the honey, which had been accumulated there to
a great depth; and every effort on his part to extricate
himself proved abortive. So remote was this tree,
that it was impossible his voice could be heard.
After remaining in this situation for two days, and
allaying his hunger with the honey, all hope of being
extricated was abandoned, and he gave himself up to
despair. At last a bear, who, like himself, had
come in search of honey, mounted the tree, and descended
the hollow cleft, “stern forward.”
The man was at first alarmed, but mustered courage
to seize the bear with all the firmness he could;
upon which the animal took fright, made a speedy retreat,
and dragged the peasant after it. When fairly
out of the recess, he quitted his hold, and the bear
made the best of its way to the ground, and escaped.
It would appear that, in the remote
regions of the United States, the common black bear
is occasionally found of a cinnamon color, and sometimes
even white. Tanner gives us the following account:
“Shortly after this, I killed an old she-bear,
which was perfectly white. She had four cubs;
one white, with red eyes and red nails, like herself;
one red, and two black. In size, and other respects,
she was the same as the common black bear; but she
had nothing black about her but the skin of her lips.
The fur of this kind is very fine, but not so highly
valued by the traders as the red. The old one
was very tame, and I shot her without difficulty;
two of the young ones I shot in the hole, and two
escaped into a tree.
“I had but just shot them when
there came along three men, attracted, probably, by
the sound of my gun. As these men were very hungry,
I took them home with me, fed them, and gave them
each a piece of meat, to carry home. Next day,
I chased another bear into a low poplar-tree; but
my gun being a poor one, I could not shoot him.
“A few days after, as I was
hunting, I started, at the same moment, an elk and
three young bears; the latter ran into a tree.
I shot at the young bears, and two of them fell.
As I thought one or both must only be wounded, I sprang
towards the root of the tree, but had scarcely reached
it when I saw the old she-bear coming in another direction.
She caught up the cub which had fallen near her, and,
raising it with her paws, while she stood on her hind
feet, holding it as a woman holds a child, she looked
at it for a moment, smelled the ball-hole, which was
in its belly, and perceiving it was dead, dashed it
down, and came directly towards me, gnashing her teeth,
and walking so erect that her head stood as high as
mine. All this was so sudden, that I scarce reloaded
my gun, having only time to raise it, and fire, as
she came within reach of the muzzle. I was now
made to feel the necessity of a lesson the Indians
had taught me, and which I very rarely neglected that
is, to think of nothing else before loading it again.”
Some years ago, a boy, of New Hampshire,
found a very young cub, near Lake Winnipeg, and carried
it home with him. It was fed and brought up about
the house of the boy’s father, and became as
tame as a dog.
Every day its youthful captor had
to go to school at some distance, and, by degrees,
the bear became his daily companion. At first,
the other scholars were shy of the creature’s
acquaintance; but, ere long, it became their regular
playfellow, and they delighted in sharing with it
the little store of provisions which they brought,
for their sustenance, in small bags. After two
years of civilization, however, the bear wandered
to the woods, and did not return. Search was made
for him, but in vain.
Four succeeding years passed away,
and, in the interval, changes had occurred in the
school alluded to. An old dame had succeeded to
the ancient master, and a new generation of pupils
had taken the place of the former ones. One very
cold, winter day, while the schoolmistress was busy
with her humble lessons, a boy chanced to leave the
door half way open, on his entrance, and, suddenly,
a large bear walked in.
The consternation of the old lady,
and her boys and girls, was unspeakable. Both
schoolmistress and pupils would fain have been abroad;
but the bear was in the path, and all that could be
done was to fly off, as far as possible, behind the
tables and benches. But the bear troubled nobody.
He walked quietly up to the fireplace, and warmed
himself, exhibiting much satisfaction in his countenance
during the process.
He remained thus about a quarter of
an hour, and then walked up to the wall where the
provender bags and baskets of the pupils were suspended.
Standing on his hind feet, he took hold of these successively,
put his paws into them, and made free with the bread,
fruit, and other eatables, therein contained.
He next tried the schoolmistress’s desk, where
some little provisions usually were; but finding it
firmly shut, he went up again to the fire, and, after
a few minutes’ stay before it, he walked out
by the way he came in.
As soon as the schoolmistress and
her pupils had courage to move, the alarm was given
to the neighbors. Several young men immediately
started after the bear, and, as its track was perfectly
visible upon the snow, they soon came up with it,
and killed it. Then it was that, by certain marks
upon its skin, some of the pursuers recognized, in
the poor bear, no enemy, but an old friend of their
own recent school days. Great regret was felt
at the loss of the creature. It was like killing
a human friend rather than a wild animal.
Landor furnishes us with the following
account: A man in Sweden set off one morning
to shoot the cock of the woods. This bird is so
extremely shy, that he may rarely be met with, except
in the pairing season, when, every morning, he renews
his song. He usually commences just before sunrise,
beginning in a loud strain, which gradually sinks into
a low key, until he is quite entranced with his own
melody; he then droops his wings to the earth, and
runs to the distance of several feet, calling, Cluck,
cluck, cluck! during which time, he is said to
be incapable of seeing, so wrapped up is he in his
own contemplations, and may be caught even with the
hand by those who are near enough, as the fit lasts
only a few moments. If unready, wait for the next
occasion; for, should he advance a step, except when
the bird is thus insensible, he will certainly be
overheard, and the victim escape.
The man I began to speak of, being,
early one morning, in pursuit of this bird, heard
his song at a short distance, and, as soon as the
clucking commenced, of course advanced as rapidly
as he could, and then remained motionless, till these
particular notes were again sounded. It was quite
dusk, the sun not having yet risen; but the song seemed
to come from an open space in the forest, from which
the sun was just emerging. He could not see many
yards before him, and only followed the direction
of the sound. It so happened that, from another
point, but at no great distance, a bear was advancing
on the bird, just in the manner of, and with the same
steps as the man.
The hunter, whilst standing motionless,
thought he perceived a dark object on one side of
him; but it did not much engage his attention; at
the usual note, he moved on toward the game, but was
surprised to see that the black object had also advanced
in an equal degree, and now stood on a line with him.
Still he was so eager after the bird, that he could
think of nothing else, and approached close to his
prey before he perceived that a large bear stood within
a few feet of him; in fact, just as they were about
to spring on the bird, they caught sight of one another,
and each thought proper to slink back. After having
retreated a short distance, the man began to think
it would be rather inglorious to yield the prize without
a struggle; and there being now more light, he returned
to the spot, when it appeared that the bear had also
taken the same resolution, and was actually advancing
over the same open space I have mentioned, growling,
and tearing up the grass with her feet. Though
the man had only shot in his gun, he fired without
hesitation, and immediately took to his heels and fled,
conceiving the bear to be close in his rear, and returned
not to pause till he gained his own habitation.
Having armed himself anew, and taken a companion with
him, he again repaired to the spot, where he found
the bear lying dead on the ground, some of the shots
having entered her heart.
The American black bear lives a solitary
life in forests and uncultivated deserts, and subsists
on fruits, and on the young shoots and roots of vegetables.
Of honey he is exceedingly fond, and, as he is a most
expert climber, he scales the loftiest trees in search
of it. Fish, too, he delights in, and is often
found in quest of them, on the borders of lakes and
on the sea-shore. When these resources fail, he
will attack small quadrupeds, and even animals of some
magnitude. As, indeed, is usual in such cases,
the love of flesh, in him, grows with the use of it.
As the fur is of some value, the Indians
are assiduous in the chase of the creature which produces
it. “About the end of December, from the
abundance of fruits they find in Louisiana and the
neighboring countries, the bears become so fat and
lazy that they can scarcely run. At this time
they are hunted by the Indians. The nature of
the chase is generally this: the bear chiefly
adopts, for his retreat, the hollow trunk of an old
cypress-tree, which he climbs, and then descends into
the cavity from above. The hunter, whose business
it is to watch him into this retreat, climbs a neighboring
tree, and seats himself opposite to the hole.
In one hand he holds his gun, and in the other a torch,
which he darts into the cavity. Frantic with rage
and terror, the bear makes a spring from his station;
but the hunter seizes the instant of his appearance,
and shoots him.
“The pursuit of the bear is
a matter of the first importance to some of the Indian
tribes, and is never undertaken without much ceremony.
A principal warrior gives a general invitation to
all the hunters. This is followed by a strict
fast of eight days, in which they totally abstain
from food, but during which the day is passed in continual
song. This is done to invoke the spirits of the
woods to direct the hunters to the places where there
are abundance of bears. They even cut the flesh
in divers parts of their bodies, to render the spirits
more propitious. They also address themselves
to the manes of the beasts slain in the preceding
chases, and implore these to direct them, in their
dreams, to an abundance of game. The chief of
the hunt now gives a great feast, at which no one
dares to appear without first bathing. At this
entertainment, contrary to their usual custom, they
eat with great moderation. The master of the
feast touches nothing, but is employed in relating
to the guests ancient tales of feasts in former chases;
and fresh invocations to the manes of the deceased
bears conclude the whole.
“They then sally forth, equipped
as if for war, and painted black. They proceed
on their way in a direct line, not allowing rivers,
marshes, or any other impediment, to stop their course,
and driving before them all the beasts they find.
When they arrive at the hunting-ground, they surround
as large a space as they can, and then contract their
circle, searching, at the same time, every hollow
tree, and every place capable of being the retreat
of a bear; and they continue the same practice till
the chase is expired.
“As soon as a bear is killed,
a hunter puts into his mouth a lighted pipe of tobacco,
and, blowing into it, fills the throat with the smoke,
conjuring the spirit of the animal not to resent what
they are about to do to its body, or to render their
future chases unsuccessful. As the beast makes
no reply, they cut out the string of the tongue, and
throw it into the fire. If it crackle and shrivel
up, which it is almost sure to do, they accept this
as a good omen; if not, they consider that the spirit
of the beast is not appeased, and that the chase of
the next year will be unfortunate.”
When our forefathers first settled
in America, bears were common in all parts of the
country along the Atlantic. Many adventures with
them took place, some of which are recorded in the
histories of the times. The following is said
to have occurred at a later period:
Some years since, when the western
part of New York was in a state of nature, and wolves
and bears were not afraid of being seen, some enterprising
pilgrim had erected, and put in operation, a sawmill,
on the banks of the Genesee. One day, as he was
sitting on the log, eating his bread and cheese, a
large, black bear came from the woods towards the
mill. The man, leaving his luncheon on the log,
made a spring, and seated himself on a beam above;
when the bear, mounting the log, sat down with his
rump towards the saw, which was in operation, and
commenced satisfying his appetite on the man’s
dinner. After a little while, the saw progressed
enough to interfere with the hair on bruin’s
back, and he hitched along a little, and kept on eating.
Again the saw came up, and scratched a little flesh.
The bear then whirled about, and, throwing his paws
around the saw, held on, till he was mangled through
and through, when he rolled off, fell through into
the flood, and bled to death.
The GRISLY BEAR. This creature,
which is peculiar to North America, is, perhaps, the
most formidable of the bruin family in magnitude and
ferocity. He averages twice the bulk of the black
bear, to which, however, he bears some resemblance
in his slightly elevated forehead, and narrow, flattened,
elongated muzzle. His canine teeth are of great
size and power. The feet are enormously large the
breadth of the fore foot exceeding nine inches, and
the length of the hind foot, exclusive of the talons,
being eleven inches and three quarters, and its breadth
seven inches. The talons sometimes measure more
than six inches. He is, accordingly, admirably
adapted for digging up the ground, but is unable to
climb trees, in which latter respect he differs wholly
from most other species. The color of his hair
varies to almost an indefinite extent, between all
the intermediate shades of a light gray and a black
brown; the latter tinge, however, being that which
predominates. It is always in some degree grizzled,
by intermixture of grayish hairs. The hair itself
is, in general, longer, finer, and more exuberant,
than that of the black bear.
The neighborhood of the Rocky Mountains
is one of the principal haunts of this animal.
There, amidst wooded plains, and tangled copses of
bough and underwood, he reigns as much the monarch
as the lion is of the sandy wastes of Africa.
Even the bison cannot withstand his attacks.
Such is his muscular strength, that he will drag the
ponderous carcass of the animal to a convenient spot,
where he digs a pit for its reception. The Indians
regard him with the utmost terror. His extreme
tenacity of life renders him still more dangerous;
for he can endure repeated wounds which would be instantaneously
mortal to other beasts, and, in that state, can rapidly
pursue his enemy; so that the hunter who fails to
shoot him through the brain is placed in a most perilous
situation.
One evening, the men in the hindmost
of one of Lewis and Clark’s canoes perceived
one of these bears lying in the open ground, about
three hundred paces from the river; and six of them,
who were all good hunters, went to attack him.
Concealing themselves by a small eminence, they were
able to approach within forty paces unperceived; four
of the hunters now fired, and each lodged a ball in
his body, two of which passed directly through the
lungs. The bear sprang up, and ran furiously,
with open mouth, upon them; two of the hunters, who
had reserved their fire, gave him two additional wounds,
and one, breaking his shoulder-blade, somewhat retarded
his motions. Before they could again load their
guns, he came so close on them, that they were obliged
to run towards the river, and before they had gained
it, the bear had almost overtaken them. Two men
jumped into the canoe; the other four separated, and,
concealing themselves among the willows, fired as fast
as they could load their pieces. Several times
the bear was struck, but each shot seemed only to
direct his fury towards the hunters; at last he pursued
them so closely that they threw aside their guns and
pouches, and jumped from a perpendicular bank, twenty
feet high, into the river. The bear sprang after
them, and was very near the hindmost man, when one
of the hunters on the shore shot him through the head,
and finally killed him. When they dragged him
on shore, they found that eight balls had passed through
his body in different directions.
Richardson relates the following story
of a grisly bear. A party of voyagers, who had
been employed all day in tracking a canoe up the Saskatchewan,
had seated themselves, in the twilight, by a fire,
and were busy in preparing their supper, when a large
grisly bear sprang over their canoe that was behind
them, and, seizing one of the party by the shoulder,
carried him off. The rest fled in terror, with
the exception of a man named Bourasso, who, grasping
his gun, followed the bear as it was retreating leisurely
with its prey. He called to his unfortunate comrade
that he was afraid of hitting him if he fired at the
bear; but the latter entreated him to fire immediately,
as the animal was squeezing him to death. On
this he took a deliberate aim, and discharged his
piece into the body of the bear, which instantly dropped
its prey to pursue Bourasso. He escaped with difficulty,
and the bear retreated to a thicket, where it is supposed
to have died. The man who was rescued had his
arm fractured, and was otherwise severely bitten by
the bear, but finally recovered.
The WHITE BEAR. The polar
bear is considerably larger than the brown or black
bear, and is covered with a long, thick fur, of a bright
white beneath and of a yellowish tinge above.
Besides the difference in external appearance, there
is a remarkable distinction between the brown and
the polar bears; for the former prefers, as his abode,
the wooded summits of alpine regions, feeding principally
on roots and vegetables; while the latter fixes his
residence on the sea-coast, or on an iceberg, and
seems to delight in the stormy and inhospitable precincts
of the arctic circle, where vegetation is scarcely
known to exist, feeding entirely on animal matter.
But it cannot be regarded as a predatory quadruped,
for it seems to prefer dead to living animal food,
its principal subsistence being the floating carcasses
of whales. It also preys upon seals, which it
catches with much keenness and certainty, as they
ascend to the surface of the ocean to breathe; and
sometimes fish are caught by them, when they enter
shoals or gulfs. They move with great dexterity
in the water, and capture their prey with apparent
ease. It is only when these bears quit their winter
quarters, and especially when the female has to protect
her young, that they manifest great ferocity.
While the Carcass, one of the ships
of Captain Phipps’s voyage of discovery to the
north pole, was locked in the ice, early one morning
the man at the mast-head gave notice that three bears
were making their way very fast over the Frozen Ocean,
and were directing their course towards the ship.
They had no doubt been invited by the scent of some
blubber of a sea-horse, which the crew had killed a
few days before, and which, having been set on fire,
was burning on the ice at the time of their approach.
They proved to be a she-bear and her two cubs; but
the cubs were nearly as large as the dam. They
ran eagerly to the fire, and drew out from the flames
part of the flesh of the sea-horse that remained unconsumed,
and ate it voraciously.
The crew of the ship threw great lumps
of the flesh they had still left upon the ice, which
the old bear fetched away singly, laying every piece
before the cubs as she brought it, and, dividing it,
gave each a share, reserving but a small portion to
herself. As she was fetching away the last piece,
they levelled their muskets at the cubs, and shot
them both dead, at the same time wounding the dam in
her retreat, but not mortally. It would have
drawn tears of pity from any but the most unfeeling,
to have marked the affectionate concern expressed by
this poor animal, in the dying moments of her expiring
young. Though she was sorely wounded, and could
but just crawl to the place where they lay, she carried
the lump of flesh she had just fetched away, as she
had done the others, tore it in pieces, and laid it
down before them. When she saw they refused to
eat, she laid her paws first upon the one, then upon
the other, and endeavored to raise them up, making,
at the same time, the most pitiable moans.
Finding she could not stir them, she
went off, and, when she had got to some distance,
looked back, and moaned; and that not availing to entice
them away, she returned, and, smelling round them,
began to lick their wounds. She went off a second
time, as before, and having crawled a few paces, looked
again behind her, and for some time stood moaning.
But still her cubs not rising to follow, she returned
to them anew, and, with signs of inexpressible fondness,
went round, pawing them successively. Finding,
at last, that they were cold and lifeless, she raised
her head towards the ship, and growled a curse upon
the destroyers, which they returned with a volley
of musket-balls. She fell between her cubs, and
died licking their wounds.
The polar bears are remarkably sagacious,
as the following instances may prove. Those in
Kamtschatka are said to have recourse to a singular
stratagem, in order to catch the bareins, which
are much too swift of foot for them. These animals
keep together in large herds; they frequent mostly
the low grounds, and love to browse at the base of
rocks and precipices. The bear hunts them by scent,
till he comes in sight, when he advances warily, keeping
above them, and concealing himself among the rocks,
as he makes his approach, till he gets immediately
over them, and near enough for his purpose. He
then begins to push down, with his paws, pieces of
rock among the herd below. This manoeuvre is
not followed by any attempt to pursue, until he finds
he has maimed one of the flock, upon which a course
immediately ensues, that proves successful, or otherwise,
according to the hurt the barein has received.
The captain of a Greenland whaler,
being anxious to procure a bear without injuring the
skin, made trial of a stratagem of laying the noose
of a rope in the snow, and placing a piece of kreng
within it. A bear, ranging the neighboring ice,
was soon enticed to the spot by the smell of burning
meat. He perceived the bait, approached, and seized
it in his mouth; but his foot, at the same time, by
a jerk of the rope, being entangled in the noose,
he pushed it off with his paw, and deliberately retired.
After having eaten the piece he had carried away with
him, he returned. The noose, with another piece
of kreng, having been replaced, he pushed the rope
aside, and again walked triumphantly off with the
bait. A third time the noose was laid; but, excited
to caution by the evident observations of the bear,
the sailors buried the rope beneath the snow, and
laid the bait in a deep hole dug in the centre.
The animal once more approached, and the sailors were
assured of their success. But bruin, more sagacious
than they expected, after snuffing about the place
for a few moments, scraped the snow away with his
paw, threw the rope aside, and again escaped unhurt
with his prize.
A Greenland bear, with two cubs under
her protection, was pursued across a field of ice
by a party of armed sailors. At first, she seemed
to urge the young ones to an increase of speed, by
running before them, turning round, and manifesting,
by a peculiar action and voice, her anxiety for their
progress; but, finding her pursuers gaining upon them,
she carried, or pushed, or pitched them alternately
forward, until she effected their escape. In
throwing them before her, the little creatures are
said to have placed themselves across her path to
receive the impulse, and, when projected some yards
in advance, they ran onwards, until she overtook them,
when they alternately adjusted themselves for another
throw.
In the month of June, 1812, a female
bear, with two cubs, approached near a whale ship,
and was shot. The cubs, not attempting to escape,
were taken alive. These animals, though at first
very unhappy, became, at length, in some measure reconciled
to their situation, and, being tolerably tame, were
allowed occasionally to go at large about the deck.
While the ship was moored to a floe, a few days after
they were taken, one of them, having a rope fastened
round his neck, was thrown overboard. It immediately
swam to the ice, got upon it, and attempted to escape.
Finding itself, however, detained by the rope, it endeavored
to disengage itself in the following ingenious way:
Near the edge of the floe was a crack in the ice,
of considerable length, but only eighteen inches or
two feet wide, and three or four feet deep. To
this spot the bear turned, and when, on crossing the
chasm, the bight of the rope fell into it, he placed
himself across the opening; then, suspending himself
by his hind feet, with a leg on each side, he dropped
his head and most part of his body into the chasm,
and, with a foot applied to each side of the neck,
attempted, for some minutes, to push the rope over
his head. Finding this scheme ineffectual, he
removed to the main ice, and, running with great impetuosity
from the ship, gave a remarkable pull on the rope;
then, going backwards a few steps, he repeated the
jerk. At length, after repeated attempts to escape
this way, every failure of which he announced by a
significant growl, he yielded himself to hard necessity,
and lay down on the ice in angry and sullen silence.
Like the brown and black bear, polar
bears are animals capable of great fierceness.
Brentz, in his voyage in search of the north-east passage
to China, had horrid proofs of their ferocity in the
Island of Nova Zembla, where they attacked his seamen,
seizing them in their mouth, carrying them off with
the utmost ease, and devouring them even in sight
of their comrades.
About twenty years ago, the crew of
a boat belonging to a ship in the whale fishery, shot
at a bear some little distance off, and wounded him.
The animal immediately set up a dreadful howl, and
scampered along the ice towards the boat. Before
he reached it, he had received a second wound.
This increased his fury, and he presently plunged into
the water, and swam to the boat; and, in his attempt
to board it, he placed one of his fore paws upon the
gunwale, and would have gained his point, had not
one of the sailors seized a hatchet and cut it off.
Even this had not the effect of damping his courage;
for he followed the boat till it reached the ship,
from whence several shots were fired at him, which
hit, but did not mortally wound him: he approached
the vessel, and ascended the deck, where, from his
dreadful fury, he spread such consternation, that
all the crew fled to the shrouds, and he was in the
act of pursuing them thither, when an effective shot
laid him dead on the deck.
THE RACCOON.
This animal is peculiar to America.
He resembles the bear, but is much smaller and more
elegantly formed. He is an active and lively animal;
an excellent climber of trees, in which the sharpness
of his claws greatly aids him; and he will even venture
to the extremity of slender branches. He is a
good-tempered animal, and, consequently, easily tamed;
but his habit of prying into every thing renders him
rather troublesome, for he is in constant motion,
and examining every object within his reach.
He generally sits on his hinder parts when feeding,
conveying all his food to his mouth with his fore paws.
He will eat almost every kind of food, but is particularly
fond of sweetmeats, and will indulge in spirituous
liquors even to drunkenness. He feeds chiefly
at night, in a wild state, and sleeps during the day.
Brickell gives an interesting account,
in his “History of North Carolina,” of
the cunning manifested by the raccoon in pursuit of
its prey. “It is fond of crabs, and, when
in quest of them, will take its station by a swamp,
and hang its tail over into the water, which the crabs
mistake for food, and lay hold of it; as soon as the
raccoon feels them pinch, it pulls up its tail with
a sudden jerk, and they generally quit their hold
upon being removed from the water. The raccoon
instantly seizes the crabs in its mouth, removes them
to a distance from the water, and greedily devours
its prey. It is very careful how it takes them
up, which it always does from behind, holding them
transversely, in order to prevent their catching its
mouth with their nippers.”
When enraged, or desirous of attacking
a person, the raccoon advances with arched back and
bristling hair, and with its chin or under jaw close
to the ground, uttering gruff sounds of displeasure.
If once injured, it seldom forgives its enemy.
On one occasion, a servant struck a tame raccoon with
a whip: in vain did he afterwards attempt a reconciliation;
neither eggs, nor food most coveted by the animal,
availed in pacifying it. At his approach, it flew
into a sort of fury; it darted at him with sparkling
eyes, uttering loud cries.
Its accents of anger were very singular;
sometimes one might fancy them the whistling of the
curlew, at others, the hoarse bark of an old dog.
If any one beat it, it opposed no resistance; it concealed
its head and its paws, like the hedgehog, by rolling
itself into a ball. In this position it would
suffer death. When its chain broke, it would allow
no one to approach it, and it was with great difficulty
refettered.
THE COATI.
This animal, which frequents the woods
of South America, resembles the raccoon, but is smaller.
He is in the habit of rooting under trees, and thus
overturns many of them, even those of large size.
The most curious incident in his history, is that
he eats his own tail! This is explained by Godman
as follows: “The extreme length of its tail,
in which the blood circulates but feebly, exposes
it to the influence of cold or frost; and the exceedingly
tormenting irritation produced thereby leads the animal
to gnaw and scratch the tail, to relieve the excessive
itching. The disease spreads, and the anguish
induces the coati to gnaw more furiously, and eventually
its life is destroyed by the extension of the inflammation
and irritability to the spine.”
THE BADGER.
Of this animal there are two species,
one European, the other American; but they have a
strong resemblance. It has short legs, and a long
body; lives in burrows by day, and goes forth at night
to prey on roots, snails, and worms. The American
species seems to be more carnivorous than his foreign
relation: in this respect he has high example,
for the people of America eat more butcher’s
meat than those of Europe for the reason,
however, that they are so fortunate as to be able to
get it.
In Europe, the badger is hunted as
a matter of sport, the chief amusement being derived
from the fierce resistance he makes to the dogs.
In South America, the creature is eaten, and badger
hams are deemed a delicacy. Catching this animal
is a great source of interest to the Indians.
We are told that a “party of eight, in one of
their expeditions, will destroy two or three hundred
badgers, and a quantity of deer on their return home,
besides guanas. These hunting parties are so
delightful, even to the women, that the hopes of being
allowed to accompany the men will make them behave
well all the year. On these excursions they live
well, and seem more happy than during the rainy season;
in their way home, they travel day and night rapidly,
in spite of obstructions, carrying long poles between
them, on which the animals are slung the
boys carrying the skins and lard; the dogs too are
well fed during this period, and seem to return with
regret. A cloud of vultures generally hover over
them, and are seen by their clans a day or two before
they arrive, who make every preparation to receive
them; their return is greeted like that of victors.
The rainy nights are passed in recounting their exploits
one to another.”
The habits of the badger are said
to be “the most social of any quadruped in the
universe; it is not known to quarrel with any other
animal; even the fox, polecat, opossum, land crab,
and snake, make it resign its abode, although it is
much stronger than any of them. It also lives
in the greatest harmony with its own species, subsisting
principally on nuts, roots, and vegetables; it is cleanly
in its habits, being observed to perform its ablutions
while the dew is on the ground.”
THE GLUTTON.
This animal, which is called wolverene
in this country, and carcajou by the Canadians,
is about three feet long, and of a dark-brown color.
It is strong and courageous, and will even attack and
destroy the fox in its burrow. Its extraordinary
voracity gives the impulse to all its exertions.
Incessantly in search of food, it kills animals larger
and stronger than itself, seizes the deer which the
hunter has just shot, plunders the baits on his traps,
or the game these have taken. A proof at once
of the strength, the cunning, and the strong appetite,
of the glutton, was afforded by one, at Hudson’s
Bay, some years since, which overset the greatest
part of a pile of wood of great extent, which contained
a whole winter’s firing; his object was to get
at some provisions that had been hidden there by the
company’s servants when going to the factory
to spend the Christmas holidays.
This animal had for many weeks been
lurking about their tent, and had committed many depredations
on the game caught in their traps and snares, as well
as eaten many of the foxes that were killed by guns
set for the purpose; but he was too cunning to touch
either gun or trap himself. The people thought
they had adopted the best method to secure their provisions,
by tying them in bundles, and laying them on the top
of wood piles. To their astonishment, when they
returned, they found the greatest part of the pile
thrown down, notwithstanding some of the trees with
which it was constructed were as much as two men could
carry. The wood was very much scattered about;
and it was supposed that, in the animal’s attempting
to carry off the booty, some of the small parcels
of provisions had fallen down into the heart of the
pile, and sooner than lose half his prize, he was
at the trouble of pulling away the wood. The
bags of flour, oatmeal, and peas, though of no use
to him, he tore all to pieces, and scattered the contents
about on the snow; but every bit of animal food, consisting
of beef, pork, bacon, venison, salted geese, and partridges,
in considerable quantities, he carried away.
When attacked by other animals, the
glutton fights desperately, and three stout dogs are
scarcely its match. A man who had tamed one of
them threw it one day into the water, and set a couple
of dogs upon it, when it immediately seized one of
them by the head, and held it under water till it
was drowned.
THE WEASEL.
The weasel stands as the type of a
large number of animals, such as the marten, sable,
polecat, otter, skunk, &c.; all being characterized
by a long body, short legs, and considerable energy
of disposition. Some of the species are celebrated
for their abominable odor.
The weasel is an active, bloodthirsty
little animal, not exceeding seven inches in length
from the nose to the tail. It is much about the
same size as a rat, though more slender; but it is
a mortal enemy to this animal, pursuing them to their
holes, and killing them in great numbers. It
is also often fatal to the hare, as it will either
creep upon it when at rest, or, lying unseen amidst
the rubbish or furze, will spring at its throat; where,
as in the case of other animals which it kills, it
fixes its bite, and then sucks the blood till its victim
expires. It makes a hole in the ends of eggs,
and sucks the contents differently from
the rat, which breaks the shell to pieces. It
is a destructive enemy to pigeons, as it creeps into
the holes of a dove-cot in the evening, and surprises
its prey while they are asleep; and, from the peculiar
construction of its body, there are few situations
it is incapable of reaching; for it can clamber up
an almost perpendicular wall. When it sees a
man, it endeavors as quickly as possible to get out
of the way, and hide itself amidst the grass or loose
stones; but if trodden on, or seized, it will turn
and bite, like a serpent. An ordinary dog does
not wish to attack it, for it instantly fastens itself
on his lips.
Miscellaneous Anecdotes. Weasels
seem to unite, in many cases, for mutual defence,
or the attack of man. In January, 1818, a laborer
in the parish of Glencairn, Dumfriesshire, was suddenly
attacked by six weasels, which rushed upon him from
an old dike in the field where he was at work.
The man, alarmed at such a furious onset, instantly
betook himself to flight; but he soon found he was
closely pursued. Although he had about him a
large horsewhip, with which he endeavored, by several
back-handed strokes, to stop them, yet, so eager was
the pursuit of the weasels, that he was on the point
of being seized by the throat, when he luckily noticed,
at some distance, the fallen branch of a tree, which
he made for, and, hastily snatching it up, manfully
rallied upon his enemies, and had such success, that
he killed three of them, and put the remaining three
to flight.
A similar case occurred some years
ago at Gilmerton, near Edinburgh, when a gentleman,
observing a person leaping about in an extraordinary
manner, made up to him, and found him beset, and dreadfully
bitten, by about fifteen weasels, which continued
their attack. Being both strong persons, they
succeeded in killing a number, and the rest escaped
by flying into the fissures of a neighboring rock.
The account the person gave of the commencement of
the affray was, that, walking through the park, he
ran at a weasel which he saw, and made several attempts
to strike it, remaining between it and the rock to
which its retreat lay. The animal, being thus
circumstanced, squeaked aloud, when an instantaneous
sortie was made by the colony, and an attack commenced.
The weasel is exceedingly difficult
to tame. When kept in a cage, it seems in a perpetual
state of agitation, is terrified at the sight of all
who approach to look at it, and generally endeavors
to hide itself behind the straw, or other substances,
which may be at the bottom of its cage. Yet instances
are not wanting to prove that the weasel may be brought
into complete subjection. Mademoiselle de Laistre,
in a letter on this subject, gives a very pleasing
account of the education and manners of a weasel which
she took under her protection, and which frequently
ate from her hand, seemingly more delighted with this
manner of feeding than any other. “If I
pour,” says this lady, “some milk into
my hand, it will drink a good deal; but if I do not
pay it this compliment, it will scarcely take a drop.
When satisfied, it generally goes to sleep. My
chamber is the place of its residence; and I have
found a method of dispelling its strong smell by perfumes.
By day it sleeps in a quilt, into which it gets by
an unsewn place which it has discovered on the edge;
during the night, it is kept in a wired box or cage,
which it always enters with reluctance, and leaves
with pleasure. If it be set at liberty before
my time of rising, after a thousand little playful
tricks, it gets into my bed, and goes to sleep on my
hand or on my bosom.
“If I am up first, it spends
a full half hour in caressing me; playing with my
fingers like a little dog, jumping on my head and on
my neck, and running round on my arms and body with
a lightness and elegance which I never found in any
other animal. If I present my hands at the distance
of three feet, it jumps into them without ever missing.
It shows a great deal of address and cunning in order
to compass its ends, and seems to disobey certain
prohibitions merely through caprice. During all
its actions it seems solicitous to divert, and to be
noticed; looking, at every jump, and at every turn,
to see whether it be observed or not. If no notice
be taken of its gambols, it ceases them immediately,
and betakes itself to sleep; and when awakened from
the soundest sleep, it instantly resumes its gayety,
and frolics about in as sprightly a manner as before.
It never shows any ill-humor, unless when confined,
or teased too much; in which case it expresses its
displeasure by a sort of murmur very different from
that which it utters when pleased. In the midst
of twenty people, this little animal distinguishes
my voice, seeks me out, and springs over every body
to come to me. His play with me is the most lovely
and caressing; with his two little paws he pats me
on the chin, with an air and manner expressive of
delight. This, and a thousand other preferences,
show that his attachment is real.
“When he sees me dressed to
go out, he will not leave me, and it is not without
some trouble that I can disengage myself from him.
He then hides himself behind a cabinet near the door,
and jumps upon me, as I pass, with so much celerity,
that I often can scarcely perceive him. He seems
to resemble a squirrel in vivacity, agility, voice,
and his manner of murmuring. During the summer
he squeaks and runs all the night long; and since
the commencement of the cold weather, I have not observed
this. Sometimes, when the sun shines while he
is playing on the bed, he turns and tumbles about,
and murmurs for a while.
“From his delight in drinking
milk out of my hand, into which I pour a very little
at a time, and his custom of sipping the little drops
and edges of the fluid, it seems probable that he
drinks dew in the same manner. He very seldom
drinks water, and then only for the want of milk;
and with great caution, seeming only to refresh his
tongue once or twice, and to be even afraid of that
fluid. During the hot weather, it rained a good
deal. I presented to him some rain water in a
dish, and endeavored to make him go into it, but could
not succeed. I then wetted a piece of linen cloth
in it, and put it near him, when he rolled upon it
with extreme delight. One singularity in this
charming animal is his curiosity; it being impossible
to open a drawer or box, or even to look at a paper,
but it will examine it also. If he gets into
any place where I am afraid to let him stay, I take
a paper or a book, and look attentively at it, when
he immediately runs upon my hand, and surveys, with
an inquisitive air, whatever I happen to hold.
I must further observe, that he plays with a young
cat and dog, both of some size; getting about their
necks and paws without their doing him the least harm.”
The following story regarding the
weasel is told in Selkirkshire: “A group
of haymakers, while busy at their work on Chapelhope
meadow, at the upper end of St. Mary’s Loch, or
rather of the Loch of the Lowes, which is separated
from it by a narrow neck of land, saw an
eagle rising above the steep mountains that enclose
the narrow valley. The eagle himself was, indeed,
no unusual sight; but there is something so imposing
and majestic in the flight of this noble bird, while
he soars upwards in spiral circles, that it fascinates
the attention of most people. But the spectators
were soon aware of something peculiar in the flight
of the bird they were observing. He used his wings
violently; and the strokes were often repeated, as
if he had been alarmed and hurried by unusual agitation;
and they noticed, at the same time, that he wheeled
in circles that seemed constantly decreasing, while
his ascent was proportionally rapid. The now
idle haymakers drew together in close consultation
on the singular case, and continued to keep their
eyes on the seemingly distressed eagle, until he was
nearly out of sight, rising still higher and higher
into the air. In a short while, however, they
were all convinced that he was again seeking the earth,
evidently not, as he ascended, in spiral curves; it
was like something falling, and with great rapidity.
But, as he approached the ground, they clearly saw
he was tumbling in his fall like a shot bird; the
convulsive fluttering of his powerful wings stopping
the descent but very little, until he fell at a small
distance from the men and boys of the party, who had
naturally run forward, highly excited by the strange
occurrence. A large black-tailed weasel or stoat
ran from the body as they came near; turned with the
nonchalance and impudence of the tribe; stood
up upon its hind legs; crossed its fore paws over its
nose, and surveyed its enemies a moment or two, as
they often do when no dog is near, and
bounded into a saugh bush. The king of the air
was dead; and, what was more surprising, he was covered
with his own blood; and, upon further examination,
they found his throat cut, and the weasel has been
suspected as the regicide unto this day.”
THE POLECAT.
This animal, which is confined to
the eastern continent, is thrice the size of the weasel,
but its prey is nearly the same. It has as high
a reputation in Europe, for its offensive smell, as
the skunk has here. The following fact is recorded
in Bewick’s Quadrupeds: “During a
severe storm, one of these animals was traced in the
snow from the side of a rivulet to its hole at some
distance from it. As it was observed to have
made frequent trips, and as other marks were to be
seen in the snow, which could not easily be accounted
for, it was thought a matter worthy of greater attention.
Its hole was accordingly examined, the polecat taken,
and eleven fine eels were discovered to be the fruits
of its nocturnal exertions. The marks on the
snow were found to have been made by the motions of
the eels while in the creature’s mouth.”
THE FERRET.
This animal is a native of Africa,
and requires much care to preserve it alive in cold
countries. It is kept for the purpose of dislodging
rabbits from their warren, and has such a natural antipathy
to these animals, that, if a dead one be presented
to a young ferret, though it has never seen a rabbit
before, it will eagerly seize it. Like the rest
of the species, it is remarkable for the pertinacity
with which it retains the bite which it has once taken.
This circumstance is illustrated by the following
occurrence: A man, of the name of Isles, a bargeman,
finding himself much incommoded by the repeated mischief
done in his barge by rats, procured a ferret to destroy
them. The ferret remaining away a considerable
time, he thought it was devouring some rats that it
had killed, and went to sleep, but was awakened early
next morning by the ferret, who was commencing an
attack upon him. The animal had seized him near
his eyebrow; and the man, after endeavoring in vain
to shake him off, at length severed the body from the
head with a knife, the latter still sticking
so fast, as to be with difficulty removed.
THE MINK.
This animal is found throughout a
great extent of country, from Carolina to Hudson’s
Bay, and in its habits and appearance resembles the
otter. The favorite haunts of this species are
the banks of streams, where it inhabits holes near
the water. It is an excellent swimmer and diver,
and feeds on frogs and fish. It also commits great
depredations in the poultry-yard. When provoked,
it ejects a fetid liquor, which is exceedingly unpleasant.
THE MARTEN.
Of this animal there are two or three
species, confined to the northern regions of the eastern
continent. Of all the weasel tribe it is the
most pleasing; all its motions show great grace as
well as agility; and there is scarcely an animal in
our woods that will venture to oppose it. Quadrupeds
five times as large are easily vanquished; the hare,
the sheep, and even the wild-cat itself, is not a
match for it. We are told of a marten which had
been tamed, and was extremely pretty and playful in
its manners. It went among the houses of the neighborhood,
and always returned home when hungry. It was
extremely fond of a dog that had been bred with it,
and used to play with it as cats are seen to play,
lying on its back, and biting without anger or injury.
THE SABLE.
This animal, as well as several others
of the tribe, is greatly valued for its fur.
It resembles the marten, and is found in the northern
parts of both continents. The enterprise, perseverance,
and hardships of the hunters, in America as well as
Siberia, in pursuit of this creature, are almost incredible.
In the latter country, the hunting of the sable chiefly
falls to the lot of condemned criminals, who are sent
from Russia into these wild and extensive forests,
that for the greatest part of the year are covered
with snow; and in this instance, as in many others,
the luxuries and ornaments of the vain are wrought
out of the dangers and miseries of the wretched.
These are obliged to furnish a certain number of skins
every year, and are punished if the proper quantity
is not provided.
The sable is also killed by the Russian
soldiers, who are sent into those parts for the purpose.
They are taxed a certain number of skins yearly, and
are obliged to shoot with only a single ball, to avoid
spoiling the skin, or else with cross-bows and blunt
arrows. As an encouragement to the hunters, they
are allowed to share among themselves the surplus
of those skins which they thus procure; and this,
in the process of six or seven years, amounts to a
considerable sum. A colonel, during his seven
years’ stay, gains about four thousand crowns
for his share, and the common men earn six or seven
hundred each.
THE SKUNK.
Of this animal there are several varieties
upon the American continent, to which it is confined;
though we have but one in this quarter of the United
States. This is of the size of a cat, and striped
with black and white. Its celebrity depends exclusively
upon its peculiar mode of defence that
of discharging upon its foe a liquid of the most revolting
and intolerable odor, and of such vigor as to fill
the air for half a mile around.
Some years ago, a Frenchman, who had
settled at Hartford, Connecticut, was going home from
Wethersfield, a place renowned for raising onions.
It was evening, and in the twilight the man saw a little
animal crossing the path before him. Not knowing
or suspecting its character, he darted upon it, caught
it, and put it in his pocket. When he reached
home, he took it out, and a general exclamation of
astonishment burst from the household, at the extraordinary
flavor of the little beast. “What is it?”
“What can it be?” was the general
inquiry. “I cannot say,” said the
Frenchman; “but I suppose it must be a Wethersfield
kitten!”
On a certain occasion, Dr. B ,
an eminent divine, was walking at evening in a by-way,
when he saw a small animal trotting along before him.
He easily guessed its true character, and having a
volume of Rees’s Cyclopedia under his arm, he
hurled it with all his might at the suspicious quadruped.
It took effect, but the animal retorted by discharging,
both upon the Cyclopedia and the D.D., a shaft from
his abominable quiver. It seems that the event
made an indelible impression both upon the garments
and the memory of the divine; the former he buried;
and when, some years after, he was advised to write
a book against a rival sect, he replied, “No,
no! I once threw a quarto at a skunk, and
got the worst of it. I shall not repeat such folly.”
“In the year 1749,” says
Kahn, “one of these animals came near the farm
where I lived. It was in winter time, during the
night; and the dogs that were on watch pursued it
for some time, until it discharged against them.
Although I was in a bed at some distance from the scene
of action, I thought I should have been suffocated,
and the cows and oxen, by their lowing, showed how
much they were affected by the stench.
“About the end of the same year,
another of these animals crept into our cellar, but
did not exhale the smallest scent when undisturbed.
A foolish woman, however, who perceived it one night
by the shining of its eyes, killed it, and at that
moment the fetid odor began to spread. The cellar
was filled with it to such a degree that the woman
kept her bed for several days; and all the bread,
meat, and other provisions that were kept there, were
so infected, that they were obliged to be thrown out
of doors.”
THE OTTER.
The otter is a native of the greater
part of Europe and America. Its principal food
being fish, it makes its habitation on the banks of
rivers, where it burrows to some depth.
Anecdotes. The females
produce from four to five at a birth. Their parental
affection is so powerful, that they will frequently
suffer themselves to be killed rather than quit their
progeny; and this has frequently been the occasion
of their losing their lives, when they might, otherwise,
have escaped. Professor Steller says, “Often
have I spared the lives of the female otters, whose
young ones I took away. They expressed their
sorrow by crying like human beings, and followed me
as I was carrying off their young ones, which called
to them for aid, with a tone of voice which very much
resembled the wailing of children. When I sat
down in the snow, they came quite close to me, and
attempted to carry off their young. On one occasion,
when I had deprived an otter of her progeny, I returned
to the place eight days after, and found the female
sitting by the river, listless and desponding; she
suffered me to kill her on the spot without making
any attempt to escape. On skinning her, I found
she was quite wasted away, from sorrow for the loss
of her young. Another time I saw, at some distance
from me, an old female otter sleeping by the side of
a young one, about a year old. As soon as the
mother perceived us, she awoke the young one, and
enticed him to betake himself to the river; but, as
he did not take the hint, and seemed inclined to prolong
his sleep, she took him up in her fore paws and plunged
him into the water.”
The otter is naturally ferocious;
but when taken young, and properly treated, it can
be rendered tame, and taught to catch fish, and fetch
them to its master. James Campbell, near Inverness,
procured a young otter, which he brought up and domesticated.
It would follow him wherever he chose; and, if called
on by its name, would immediately obey. When
apprehensive of danger from dogs, it sought the protection
of its master, and would endeavor to spring into his
arms for greater security. It was frequently
employed in catching fish, and would sometimes take
eight or ten salmon in a day. If not prevented,
it always made an attempt to break the fish behind
the anal fin, which is next the tail; and, as soon
as one was taken away, it always dived in pursuit
of more. It was equally dexterous at sea-fishing,
and took great numbers of young cod, and other fish,
there. When tired, it would refuse to fish any
longer, and was then rewarded with as much as it could
devour. Having satisfied its appetite, it always
coiled itself round, and fell asleep; in which state
it was generally carried home.
It appears that the otter, in its
native haunts, is of a playful and sportive humor.
We are told that, on the banks of the northern rivers,
where they dwell unmolested, they may be sometimes
seen sliding down the soft, muddy banks into the water,
like a parcel of boys coasting upon the snow.
They become quite animated with the sport, seeming
to emulate each other in the vigor and frolic of their
performances.
The sea otter is a larger species,
living in pairs along the northern shores of the Pacific
Ocean.
THE DOG.
The dog, in its wild state, differs
little in its habits from those of the same order
of quadrupeds; it resembles the wolf rather than the
fox, hunts in troops, and, thus associated, attacks
the most formidable animals wild boars,
tigers, and even lions. They are said, however,
even while in this condition, to exhibit a disposition
to yield to man; and, if approached by him with gentleness,
will submit to be caressed. On the other hand,
if dogs that have been once tamed are driven from
the haunts of men, and the protection to which they
have been accustomed, they readily become wild, and
associate together in troops. In Asia, there
are multitudes of these animals around the towns, which
live in a half-wild state, calling no man master.
But when domesticated, the dog presents
the appearance of the most thorough submission to
the will, and subservience to the use of man.
If we look at the individual, we perceive it attached
to a person whom it acknowledges as master, with whom
it has formed a very humble alliance, and whose interest
it considers its own. It answers to its name,
is willing to follow its master wherever he goes,
and exerts all its energies in any service to which
he may command it, and that without any constraint
except what arises from its own disposition. A
more perfect image of obedience and subservience cannot
be conceived. If, on the other hand, we survey
the species, we find it in every variety of size,
and shape, and disposition, according to the various
services of which it is capable. The division
of labor is almost as complete, among the different
species of the dog, as among men themselves. It,
like its masters, gives up the exercise of one faculty
that it may bring another to a greater perfection.
Miscellaneous Anecdotes. The
anecdotes which go to display the intelligence and
fidelity of dogs, are almost innumerable. Of these,
we can give only a few specimens. “My dog
Sirrah,” says the Ettrick shepherd, “was,
beyond all comparison, the best dog I ever saw.
He was of a surly and unsocial temper. Disdaining
all flattery, he refused to be caressed; but his attention
to my commands and interests will never again, perhaps,
be equalled by any of the canine race. When I
first saw him, a drover was leading him in a rope.
He was both lean and hungry, and far from being a
beautiful animal, for he was almost all black, and
had a grim face, striped with dark-brown. The
man had bought him of a boy, somewhere on the Border,
for three shillings, and had fed him very ill on his
journey. I thought I discovered a sort of sullen
intelligence in his countenance, notwithstanding his
dejected and forlorn appearance. I gave the drover
a guinea for him, and I believe there never was a
guinea so well laid out; at least, I am satisfied I
never laid one out to so good a purpose. He was
scarcely a year old, and knew so little of herding,
that he had never turned a sheep in his life; but
as soon as he discovered that it was his duty to do
so, and that it obliged me, I can never forget with
what anxiety and eagerness he learned his different
evolutions. He would try every way deliberately,
till he found out what I wanted him to do; and, when
I once made him understand a direction, he never forgot
or mistook it again. Well as I knew him, he often
astonished me; for, when hard pressed in accomplishing
the task that he was put to, he had expedients of
the moment that bespoke a great share of the reasoning
faculty.”
Among other remarkable exploits of
Sirrah, illustrative of his sagacity, Mr. Hogg relates
that, upon one occasion, about seven hundred lambs,
which were under his care at weaning time, broke up
at midnight, and scampered off, in three divisions,
across the neighboring hills, in spite of all that
he and an assistant could do to keep them together.
The night was so dark that he could not see Sirrah;
but the faithful animal heard his master lament their
absence in words which, of all others, were sure to
set him most on the alert; and, without more ado,
he silently set off in quest of the recreant flock.
Meanwhile, the shepherd and his companion did not
fail to do all in their power to recover their lost
charge; they spent the whole night in scouring the
hills for miles round, but of neither the lambs nor
Sirrah could they obtain the slightest trace.
It was the most extraordinary circumstance that had
ever occurred in the annals of pastoral life.
They had nothing to do, as day had dawned, but to
return to their master, and inform him that they had
lost his whole flock of lambs, and knew not what was
become of one of them. “On our way home,
however,” says Mr. Hogg, “we discovered
a lot of lambs at the bottom of a deep ravine called
the Flesh Cleuch, and the indefatigable Sirrah standing
in front of them, looking round for some relief, but
still true to his charge. The sun was then up;
and when we first came in view, we concluded that it
was one of the divisions, which Sirrah had been unable
to manage until he came to that commanding situation.
But what was our astonishment when we discovered that
not one lamb of the whole flock was wanting! How
he had got all the divisions collected in the dark
is beyond my comprehension. The charge was left
entirely to himself from midnight until the rising
sun; and if all the shepherds in the Forest had been
there to have assisted him, they could not have effected
it with greater propriety. All that I can further
say is, that I never felt so grateful to any creature
under the sun, as I did to my honest Sirrah that morning.”
Sir Walter Scott has furnished an
anecdote on this subject, concerning a dog, which,
though meritorious in himself, must ever deserve the
greatest share of fame and interest from the circumstance
of having belonged to such a master. “The
wisest dog,” says Sir Walter, “I ever
had, was what is called the bull-dog terrier.
I taught him to understand a great many words, insomuch
that I am positive that the communication betwixt
the canine species and ourselves might be greatly
enlarged. Camp once bit the baker, who was bringing
bread to the family. I beat him, and explained
the enormity of his offence; after which, to the last
moment of his life, he never heard the least allusion
to the story, in whatever voice or tone it was mentioned,
without getting up and retiring into the darkest corner
of the room, with great appearance of distress.
Then, if you said, ’The baker was well paid,’
or ‘The baker was not hurt after all,’
Camp came forth from his hiding-place, capered, barked,
and rejoiced. When he was unable, towards the
end of his life, to attend me when on horseback, he
used to watch for my return, and the servant used
to tell him ’his master was coming down the
hill, or through the moor;’ and although he did
not use any gesture to explain his meaning, Camp was
never known to mistake him, but either went out at
the front to go up the hill, or at the back to get
down to the moor-side. He certainly had a singular
knowledge of spoken language.”
It has been made a question, whether
the dog remembers his master after a long period of
separation. The voice of antiquity favors the
affirmative. Homer makes the dog of Ulysses to
recognize him after many years’ absence, and
describes Eumenes, the swineherd, as being thus led
to apprehend, in the person before him, the hero, of
seeing whom he had long despaired. Byron, on
the other hand, was skeptical on this point.
Writing to a friend, who had requested the results
of his experience on the subject, he states
that, on seeing a large dog, which had belonged to
him, and had formerly been a favorite, chained at Newstead,
the animal sprang towards him, as he conceived, in
joy but he was glad to make his escape
from it, with the comparatively trivial injury of the
loss of the skirts of his coat. Perhaps this circumstance
may have suggested the following verses of the poet:
“And now I’m in
the world alone,
Upon the wide,
wide sea;
But why should I for others
groan,
When none will
sigh for me?
Perchance my dog will whine
in vain,
Till fed by stranger
hands;
But long ere I come back again,
He’d tear
me where he stands.”
The affection of the dog for his master
does not end with his life; and innumerable are the
anecdotes on record of dogs, which have continued
to pine after their master’s death, or died immediately
after. We shall select but one or two well-authenticated
instances, for they are all so much alike, that it
is unnecessary to produce many. It is said, in
the Life of Mary, Queen of Scots, lately published
at Glasgow, that, after her head was cut off, her
little favorite lapdog, which had affectionately followed
her, and unobserved had nestled among her clothes,
now continued to caress her, and would not leave the
body till forced away, and then died two days afterwards.
Mr. Renton, of Lammerton, had a herdsman,
who, pursuing a sheep that had run down the steep
bank of Blackadder Water, fell into the river and
was drowned. His dog, a common shepherd’s
dog, returned home next morning, and led his wife
to the spot, holding her by the apron. The body
was found. The dog followed it even to the grave,
and died in a few days.
A mastiff dog belonging to the Honorable
Peter Bold, England, attended his master in his chamber
during the tedious sickness consequent on a pulmonary
consumption. After the gentleman expired, and
his corpse had been removed, the dog repeatedly entered
the apartment, making a mournful, whining noise; he
continued his researches for several days through
all the rooms of the house, but in vain. He then
retired to his kennel, which he could not be induced
to leave; refusing all manner of sustenance, he soon
died. Of this fact, and his previous affection,
the surgeon who attended his master was an eye-witness.
The regret of the dog for its master’s
death is not confined to inactive sorrow; if his death
has been caused by violence, it discovers a singular
and persevering hatred of the murderers, which in some
cases has led to their detection. The following
instance is related in a letter, written in 1764,
by a gentleman at Dijon, in France, to his friend
in London: “Since my arrival here, a man
has been broken on the wheel, with no other proof
to condemn him than that of a water-spaniel.
The circumstances attending it being so very singular
and striking, I beg leave to communicate them to you.
A farmer, who had been to receive a sum of money,
was waylaid, robbed, and murdered, by two villains.
The farmer’s dog returned with all speed to
the house of the person who had paid the money, and
expressed such amazing anxiety that he would follow
him, pulling him several times by the sleeve and skirt
of the coat, that at length the gentleman yielded
to his importunity. The dog led him to the field,
a little from the roadside, where the body lay.
From thence the gentleman went to a public house,
in order to alarm the country. The moment he
entered, (as the two villains were there drinking,)
the dog seized the murderer by the throat, and the
other made his escape. This man lay in prison
three months, during which time they visited him once
a week with the spaniel; and though they made him
change his clothes with other prisoners, and always
stand in the midst of a crowd, yet did the animal
always find him out, and fly at him. On the day
of trial, when the prisoner was at the bar, the dog
was let loose in the court-house, and, in the midst
of some hundreds, he found him out, though dressed
entirely in new clothes, and would have torn him to
pieces had he been allowed; in consequence of which
he was condemned, and at the place of execution he
confessed the fact. Surely so useful, so disinterestedly
faithful an animal, should not be so barbarously treated
as I have often seen them, particularly in London.”
Other cases might be produced, but
we shall only present that of the dog of Montargis,
which has become familiar to the public by being made
the subject of a mélodrame frequently acted at
the present time. The fame of this English blood-hound
has been transmitted by a monument in basso-relievo,
which still remains in the chimney-piece of the grand
hall, at the Castle of Montargis, in France. The
sculpture, which represents a dog fighting with a
champion, is explained by the following narrative:
Aubri de Mondidier, a gentleman of family and fortune,
travelling alone through the Forest of Bondy, was murdered,
and buried under a tree. His dog, a bloodhound,
would not quit his master’s grave for several
days; till at length, compelled by hunger, he proceeded
to the house of an intimate friend of the unfortunate
Aubri, at Paris, and, by his melancholy howling, seemed
desirous of expressing the loss sustained. He
repeated his cries, ran to the door, looked back to
see if any one followed him, returned to his master’s
friend, pulled him by the sleeve, and, with dumb eloquence,
entreated him to go with him. The singularity
of all these actions of the dog, added to the circumstance
of his coming there without his master, whose faithful
companion he had always been, prompted the company
to follow the animal, who conducted them to a tree,
where he renewed his howl, scratching the earth with
his feet, and significantly entreating them to search
the particular spot. Accordingly, on digging,
the body of the unhappy Aubri was found. Some
time after, the dog accidentally met the assassin,
who is styled, by all the historians that relate this
fact, the Chevalier Macaire; when, instantly seizing
him by the throat, he was with great difficulty compelled
to quit his victim. In short, whenever the dog
saw the chevalier, he continued to pursue and attack
him with equal fury.
Such obstinate violence in the animal,
confined only to Macaire, appeared very extraordinary especially
as several instances of Macaire’s envy and hatred
to Aubri de Mondidier had been conspicuous. Additional
circumstances created suspicion, and at length the
affair reached the royal ear. The king, Louis
VIII., accordingly sent for the dog, which appeared
extremely gentle till he perceived Macaire in the
midst of several noblemen, when he ran fiercely towards
him, growling at and attacking him, as usual.
The king, struck with such a combination of circumstantial
evidence against Macaire, determined to refer the
decision to the chance of battle; in other words, he
gave orders for a combat between the chevalier and
the dog. The lists were appointed in the Isle
of Notre Dame, then an unenclosed, uninhabited place,
and Macaire was allowed, for his weapon, a great cudgel.
An empty cask was given to the dog as a place of retreat,
to enable him to recover breath. Every thing
being prepared, the dog no sooner found himself at
liberty, than he ran round his adversary, avoiding
his blows, and menacing him on every side, till his
strength was exhausted; then springing forward, he
seized him by the throat, and threw him on the ground.
Macaire now confessed his guilt in presence of the
king and the whole court. In consequence of this,
the chevalier, after a few days, was convicted upon
his own acknowledgment, and beheaded on a scaffold
in the Isle of Notre Dame.
The instances in which persons have
been saved from drowning by the Newfoundland dog,
are innumerable. The following anecdote is the
more remarkable, as it does not appear that the affectionate
animal was of that species. A young man belonging
to the city of Paris, desirous of getting rid of his
dog, took it along with him to the River Seine.
He hired a boat, and, rowing into the stream, threw
the animal in. The poor creature attempted to
climb up the side of the boat, but his master, whose
intention was to drown him, constantly pushed him back
with the oar. In doing this, he fell himself into
the water, and would certainly have been drowned,
had not the dog, as soon as he saw his master struggling
in the stream, suffered the boat to float away, and
held him above the water till assistance arrived, and
his life was saved.
Of the alertness of the dog in recovering
the lost property of its master, we shall furnish
a striking instance. M. Dumont, a tradesman of
the Rue St. Denis, Paris, offered to lay a wager with
a friend that, if he were to hide a six-livre
piece in the dust, his dog would discover and
bring it to him. The wager was accepted, and the
piece of money secreted, after being carefully marked.
When they had proceeded some distance from the spot,
M. Dumont signified to his dog that he had lost something,
and ordered him to seek it. Caniche immediately
turned back, while his master and his companion pursued
their walk to the Rue St. Denis.
Meanwhile a traveller, who happened
to be just then returning in a small chaise from Vincennes,
perceived the piece of money, which his horse had
kicked from its hiding-place; he alighted, took it
up, and drove to his inn in Rue Pont-aux-Choux, and
Caniche had just reached the spot in search of
the lost piece when the stranger picked it up.
He followed the chaise, went into the inn, and stuck
close to the traveller. Having scented out the
coin, which he had been ordered to bring back, in
the pocket of the latter, he leaped up incessantly
at and about him. The gentleman, supposing him
to be some dog that had been lost or left behind by
his master, regarded his different movements as marks
of fondness; and as the animal was handsome, he determined
to keep him. He gave him a good supper, and, on
retiring to bed, took him with him to his chamber.
No sooner had he pulled off his breeches, than they
were seized by the dog; the owner, conceiving he wanted
to play with them, took them away again. The animal
began to bark at the door, which the traveller opened,
under the idea that he wanted to go out. Caniche
instantly snatched up the breeches, and away he flew.
The stranger posted after him with his night-cap on,
and nearly sans culottes.
Anxiety for the fate of a purse full
of double Napoleons, of forty francs each,
which was in one of the pockets, gave redoubled velocity
to his steps. Caniche ran full speed to his
master’s house, where the stranger arrived a
moment afterwards, breathless and furious. He
accused the dog of robbing him. “Sir,”
said the master, “my dog is a very faithful
creature, and if he has run away with your breeches,
it is because you have in them money which does not
belong to you.” The traveller became still
more exasperated. “Compose yourself, sir,”
rejoined the other, smiling; “without doubt there
is in your purse a six-livre piece
with such and such marks, which you picked up in the
Boulevard St. Antoine, and which I threw down there
with a firm conviction that my dog would bring it
back again. This is the cause of the robbery
which he has committed upon you!” The stranger’s
rage now yielded to astonishment; he delivered the
six-livre piece to the owner, and could
not forbear caressing the dog which had given him so
much uneasiness and such an unpleasant chase.
A shepherd on the Grampian Mountains,
having left his child at the foot of the hill, was
soon enveloped in mist; and, unable to return to the
precise place, he could not discover the child.
In vain he searched for it in the midst of the mist,
not knowing whither he went; and when, at length,
the moon shone clearly, he found himself at his cottage,
and far from the hill. He searched in vain next
day, with a band of shepherds. On returning to
his cottage, he found that the dog, on receiving a
piece of cake, had instantly gone off. He renewed
the search for several days, and still the dog had
disappeared, during his absence, taking with it a
piece of cake. Struck with this circumstance,
he remained at home one day, and when the dog, as usual,
departed with his piece of cake, he resolved to follow
him. The dog led the way to a cataract at some
distance from the spot where the shepherd had left
his child.
The banks of the waterfall almost
joined at the top, yet, separated by an abyss of immense
depth, presented that abrupt appearance which so often
astonishes and appals the traveller amidst the Grampian
Mountains. Down one of these rugged and almost
perpendicular descents the dog began, without hesitation,
to make his way, and at last disappeared in a cave,
the mouth of which was almost upon a level with the
torrent. The shepherd with difficulty followed;
but, on entering the cave, what were his emotions
when he beheld his infant eating, with much satisfaction,
the cake which the dog had just brought him, while
the faithful animal stood by, eyeing his young charge
with the utmost complacence. From the situation
in which the child was found, it appears that he had
wandered to the brink of the precipice, and either
fallen or scrambled down till he reached the cave,
which the dread of the torrent had afterwards prevented
him from leaving. The dog, by means of his scent,
had traced him to the spot, and afterwards prevented
him from starving by giving up to him his own daily
allowance. He appears never to have quitted the
child by night or day, except when it was necessary
to go for its food, and then he was always seen running
at full speed to and from the cottage.
The memory of the dog Gelert has been
preserved by tradition, and celebrated in poetry.
In the neighborhood of a village at the foot of Snowdon,
a mountain in Wales, Llewellyn, son-in-law to King
John, had a residence. The king, it is said,
had presented him with one of the finest greyhounds
in England, named Gelert. In the year 1205, Llewellyn
one day, on going out to hunt, called all his dogs
together; but his favorite greyhound was missing,
and nowhere to be found. He blew his horn as
a signal for the chase, and still Gelert came not.
Llewellyn was much disconcerted at the heedlessness
of his favorite, but at length pursued the chase without
him. For want of Gelert the sport was limited;
and, getting tired, he returned home at an early hour,
when the first object that presented itself to him
at the castle gate was Gelert, who bounded with the
usual transport to meet his master, having his lips
besmeared with blood. Llewellyn gazed with surprise
at the unusual appearance of his dog.
On going into the apartment where
he had left his infant son and heir asleep, he found
the bed-clothes all in confusion, the cover rent and
stained with blood. He called on his child, but
no answer was made, from which he hastily concluded
that the dog must have devoured him; and, giving vent
to his rage, plunged his sword to the hilt in Gelert’s
side. The noble animal fell at his feet, uttering
a dying yell which awoke the infant, who was sleeping
beneath a mingled heap of the bed-clothes, while beneath
the bed lay a great wolf covered with gore, whom the
faithful and gallant hound had destroyed. Llewellyn,
smitten with sorrow and remorse for the rash and frantic
deed which had deprived him of so faithful an animal,
caused an elegant marble monument, with an appropriate
inscription, to be erected over the spot where Gelert
was buried, to commemorate his fidelity and unhappy
fate. The place to this day is called Beth-Gelert,
or the Grave of the Greyhound.
“Here never could the
spearman pass,
Or forester, unmoved;
Here oft the tear-besprinkled
grass
Llewellyn’s
sorrow proved.
And here he hung his horn
and spear,
And oft, as evening
fell,
In fancy’s piercing
sounds would hear
Poor Gelert’s
dying yell.”
The bull-dog would appear the least
likely to combat with a heavy sea, and yet the following
circumstances are well authenticated: On board
a ship, which struck upon a rock near the shore, there
were three dogs, two of the Newfoundland variety,
and one a small but firmly-built English bull-dog.
It was important to have a rope carried ashore, and
it was thought that one of the Newfoundland dogs might
succeed; but he was not able to struggle with the
waves, and perished; and the other Newfoundland dog,
being thrown over with the rope, shared the same fate.
But the bull-dog, though not habituated to the water,
swam triumphantly to land, and thus saved the lives
of the persons on board. Among them was his master,
a military officer, who still has the dog in his possession.
Among the instances of sagacity, mingled
with an affection for its master, may be mentioned
those cases in which the dog notices or detects thefts,
and restores lost or stolen articles to its master.
An acquaintance of Lord Fife’s coachman had
put a bridle belonging to the earl in his pocket,
and would have abstracted it, had he not been stopped
by a Highland cur, that observed him, barked at him,
and absolutely bit his leg. This was unusual
conduct in the dog; but the wonder of the servants
ceased when they saw the end of the bridle peeping
out of the visitor’s pocket; and it being delivered
up, the dog became quiet. It is well known that
in London, the other year, a box, properly directed,
was sent to a merchant’s shop to lie there all
night, and be shipped off with other goods next morning,
and that a dog, which accidentally came into the shop
with a customer, by his smelling it, and repeatedly
barking in a peculiar way, led to the discovery that
the box contained not goods, but a rogue who intended
to admit his companions and plunder the shop in the
night-time.
A man who frequented the Pont Neuf
in Paris, and whose business it was to brush the boots
of persons passing by, taught his dog, which was a
poodle, to roll himself in the mud, and then brush
by gentlemen so as to soil their boots. In this
way, the animal largely contributed to support the
trade of his master.
There were two friends one
living in London, the other at Guildford. These
were on terms of the greatest intimacy, and for many
years it had been the custom of the London family
to pass the Christmas with the one at Guildford.
Their usual practice was to arrive to dinner the day
before, and they were always accompanied by a large
spaniel, who was as great a favorite of the visited
as of the visitors.
At the end of about seven years, the
two families had an unfortunate misunderstanding,
which occasioned an omission of the usual Christmas
invitation. About an hour before dinner, the Guildford
gentleman, who was standing at the window, exclaimed
to his wife, “Well, my dear, the W.’s
have thought better of it, for I declare they are coming
as usual, although we did not invite them; for here
comes Cæsar to announce them;” and the dog
came trotting up to the door, and was admitted, as
usual, into the parlor.
The lady of the house gave orders
to prepare beds; dinner waited an hour; but no guests
arrived. Cæsar, having staid the exact number
of days to which he had been accustomed, set off for
home, and reached it in safety. The correspondence
which subsequently occurred had the happy effect of
renewing the intercourse of the estranged friends;
and as long as Cæsar lived, he paid the annual visit
in company with his master and mistress.
A terrier, belonging to the Marchioness
of Stafford, having lost a litter of puppies, was
quite disconsolate, till, perceiving a brood of young
ducks, she immediately seized them, and carried them
to her lair, where she kept them, following them out
and in, and nursing them in her own way with the most
affectionate anxiety. When the ducklings, obeying
their instinct, went into the water, their foster-mother
exhibited the utmost alarm, and as soon as they returned
to land, she snatched them up, one by one, in her
mouth, and ran home with them.
The next year, the same animal, being
again deprived of her puppies, seized two cock chickens,
which she reared with infinite care. When they
began to crow, their foster-mother was as much annoyed
as she had been with the swimming of the young ducks,
and never failed to repress their attempts at crowing.
A man engaged in smuggling lace into
France from Flanders, trained an active and sagacious
spaniel to aid him in his enterprise. He caused
him to be shaved, and procured for him the skin of
another dog of the same hair and the same shape.
He then rolled the lace round the body of the dog,
and put over it the other skin so adroitly that the
trick could not be easily discovered. The lace
being thus arranged, the smuggler would say to the
docile messenger, “Homeward, my friend.”
At these words, the dog would start, and pass boldly
through the gates of Malines and Valenciennes in the
face of the vigilant officers placed there to prevent
smuggling.
Having thus passed the bounds, he
would await his master at a little distance in the
open country. There they mutually caressed and
feasted, and the merchant placed his rich package
in a place of security, renewing his occupation as
occasion required. Such was the success of this
smuggler, that, in less than five years, he amassed
a handsome fortune, and kept his coach.
Envy pursues the prosperous.
A mischievous neighbor at length betrayed the lace
merchant; notwithstanding all his efforts to disguise
the dog, he was suspected, watched, and discovered.
But the cunning of the dog was equal to the emergency.
Did the spies of the custom-house expect him at one
gate, he saw them at a distance, and ran to another;
were all the gates shut against him, he overcame every
obstacle; sometimes he leaped over the wall; at others,
passing secretly behind a carriage, or running between
the legs of travellers, he would thus accomplish his
aim. One day, however, while swimming a stream
near Malines, he was shot, and died in the water.
There was then about him five thousand crowns’
worth of lace the loss of which did not
afflict his master, but he was inconsolable for the
loss of his faithful dog.
A dog belonging to a chamois-hunter,
being on the glaciers in Switzerland, with an Englishman
and his master, observed the former approaching one
of the crevices in the ice, to look into it. He
began to slide towards the edge; his guide, with a
view to save him, caught his coat, and both slid onward,
till the dog seized his master’s clothes, and
preserved them both from inevitable death.
Dogs have a capacity to act upon excitements
of an artificial nature. A dog, in Paris, at
the commencement of the revolution, was known to musicians
by the name of Parade, because he regularly attended
the military at the Tuileries, stood by and marched
with the band. At night he went to the opera,
and dined with any musician who intimated, by word
or gesture, that his company was asked; yet always
withdrew from any attempt to be made the property
of any individual.
The Penny Magazine furnishes a still
more singular instance of the desire of excitement,
in a dog which, for several years, was always present
at the fires in London. Some years ago, a gentleman
residing a few miles from London, in Surrey, was roused
in the middle of the night by the intelligence that
the premises adjoining his house of business were
on fire. The removal of his furniture and papers,
of course, immediately called his attention; yet,
notwithstanding this, and the bustle that is ever
incident to a fire, his eye every now and then rested
on a dog, whom, during the progress of the devouring
element, he could not help noticing, running about,
and apparently taking a deep interest in what was
going on contriving to keep himself out
of every body’s way, and yet always present
amidst the thickest of the stir.
When the fire was got under, and the
gentleman had leisure to look about him, he again
observed the dog, who, with the firemen, appeared
to be resting from the fatigues of duty, and was led
to make inquiries respecting him. Stooping down,
and patting the animal, he addressed a fireman near
him, and asked him if the dog were his.
“No, sir,” replied the
man, “he does not belong to me, nor to any one
in particular. We call him the firemen’s
dog.”
“The firemen’s dog? Why so?
Has he no master?”
“No, sir; he calls none of us
master, though we are all of us willing to give him
a night’s lodging, and a pennyworth of meat;
but he won’t stay long with any of us.
His delight is to be at all the fires of London, and,
far or near, we generally find him on the road as we
are going along; and sometimes, if it is out of town,
we give him a lift. I don’t think that
there has been a fire for these two or three years
past which he has not been at.”
Three years after this conversation,
the same gentleman was again called up in the night
to a fire in the village where he resided, and, to
his surprise, he again met “the firemen’s
dog,” still alive and well, pursuing, with the
same apparent interest and satisfaction, the exhibition
of that which generally brings with it ruin and loss
of life. Still he called no man master, disdained
to receive bed or board from the same hand more than
a night or two at a time, nor could the firemen trace
out his ordinary resting-place.
To this long list, we might add many
other anecdotes, in evidence of the varied powers
of the canine family. We have endeavored to select
those only which are well authenticated. Some
of these are sufficiently marvellous, but there are
many other well-attested accounts equally wonderful.
Mr. Hogg seems to imagine that mankind are prepared
to believe any thing in respect to dogs which partakes
of the mysterious, and accordingly plays off the following
quiet joke upon his readers:
“It’s a good sign of a
dog when his face grows like his master’s.
It’s proof he’s aye glow’ring up
in his master’s e’en to discover what he’s
thinking on; and then, without the word or wave of
command, to be aff to execute the wull o’ his
silent thocht, whether it be to wean sheep, or to
run doon deer. Hector got so like me, afore he
dee’d, that I remember, when I was owre lazy
to gang to the kirk, I used to send him to take my
place in the pew, and the minister never kent the
difference. Indeed, he once asked me next day
what I thocht of the sermon; for he saw me wonderfu’
attentive amang a rather sleepy congregation.
“Hector and me gied ane anither
sic a look! and I was feared Mr. Paton would have
observed it; but he was a simple, primitive, unsuspecting
old man a very Nathaniel without guile,
and he jaloused nothing; tho’ both Hector and
me was like to split; and the dog, after laughing in
his sleeve for mair than a hundred yards, couldn’t
stand’t nae longer, but was obliged to loup
awa owre a hedge into a potato field, pretending to
scent partridges.”
THE WOLF.
This is a fierce and savage beast,
resembling in form and size the Newfoundland dog.
It hunts in packs, and attacks deer, sheep, and sometimes
even man himself. When taken young, it may be
tamed. It is found in the northern portions of
both continents. In North America, there are
several varieties.
Miscellaneous Anecdotes. Mr.
Cuvier gives an account of a wolf that had all the
obedience and affection that any dog could evince.
He was brought up by his master in the same manner
as a puppy, and, when full grown, was sent to the
menagerie at Paris. For many weeks, he was quite
disconsolate at the separation from his master, refused
to take food, and was indifferent to his keepers.
At length he became attached to those about him, and
seemed to have forgotten his old affections.
On his master’s return, however,
in a year and a half, the wolf heard his voice among
the crowd in the gardens, and, being set at liberty,
displayed the most violent joy. He was again separated
from his friend; and again, his grief was as extreme
as on the first occasion.
After three years’ absence,
his master once more returned. It was evening,
and the wolf’s den was shut up from any external
observation; yet, the moment the man’s voice
was heard, the faithful animal set up the most anxious
cries, and, on the door of his cage being opened, he
rushed to his friend, leaped upon his shoulders, licked
his face, and threatened to bite his keepers when
they attempted to separate them. When the man
again left him, he fell sick, and refused all food;
and from the time of his recovery, which was long
very doubtful, it was always dangerous for a stranger
to approach him.
A story is told of a Scotch bagpiper,
who was travelling in Ireland one evening, when he
suddenly encountered a wolf who seemed to be very
ravenous. The poor man could think of no other
expedient to save his life, than to open his wallet,
and try the effect of hospitality; he did so, and
the savage beast swallowed all that was thrown to him
with such voracity, that it seemed as if his appetite
was not in the least degree satisfied.
The whole stock of provisions was
of course soon spent, and now the man’s only
resource was in the virtues of his bagpipe; this the
monster no sooner heard than he took to the mountains
with the same precipitation with which he had left
them. The poor piper did not wholly enjoy his
deliverance; for, looking ruefully at his empty wallet,
he shook his fist at the departing animal, saying,
“Ay! Are these your tricks? Had I
known your humor, you should have had your music before
your supper.”
In Sweden, frequent attacks are made
upon the people by wolves, during the winter, as they
are then often in a famishing condition. In one
instance, a party of sixteen sledges were returning
from a dance on a cold and starlight night. In
the middle of the cavalcade was a sledge occupied
by a lady; at the back of the vehicle sat the servant;
and at her feet, on a bear skin, reposed her favorite
lapdog. In passing through a wood, a large wolf
suddenly sprang out, and, jumping into the sledge,
seized the poor dog, and was out of sight before any
steps could be taken for his rescue.
A Swedish peasant was one day crossing
a large lake on his sledge, when he was attacked by
a drove of wolves. This frightened the horse so
much that he went off at full speed. There was
a loose rope hanging from the back of the vehicle
that had been used for binding hay; to the end of
this a noose happened to be attached. Though this
was not intended to catch a wolf, it fortunately effected
that object; for one of the ferocious animals getting
his feet entangled in it, he was immediately destroyed,
owing to the rapidity with which the horse was proceeding.
The poor man at length reached a place
of safety. Though he had been dreadfully frightened
during the ride, he not only found himself much sooner
at the end of his journey than he expected, but richer
by the booty he had thus unexpectedly gained the
skin of a wolf in this country being worth about two
dollars and a half.
A peasant in Russia was once pursued
in his sledge by eleven wolves. Being about two
miles from home, he urged his horse to the very extent
of his speed. At the entrance to his residence
was a gate, which being shut at the time, the frightened
horse dashed open, and carried his master safely into
the courtyard. Nine of the wolves followed them
into the enclosure, when fortunately the gate swung
back, and shut them all as it were in a trap.
Finding themselves thus caught, the animals seemed
to lose all their ferocity; and, as escape was impossible,
slunk into holes and corners, molesting no one, and
offering no resistance. They were all despatched
without further difficulty.
The prairie wolf is said to be wonderfully
cunning and sagacious. Instances have been known
of his burrowing under ground to procure the bait
from a trap, rather than run the chance of being caught
above. Many and curious are the devices prepared
to ensnare this animal, but very few have succeeded.
This variety of wolf is common in the prairies of
the western country, where it hunts deer by running
them down. Sometimes a large number associate
together, and, forming a crescent, creep slowly towards
a herd of deer, so as not to alarm them. They
then rush on with hideous yells, and drive the poor
animals towards a precipice, seeming to know that,
when they are once at full speed, they will all follow
one another over the cliff. The wolves then descend
at leisure, and feed upon their slaughtered victims.
A farmer in France, one day looking
through the hedge in his garden, observed a wolf walking
round a mule, but unable to get at him on account
of the mule’s constantly kicking with his hind
legs. As the farmer perceived that the beast
was so well able to defend himself, he did not interfere.
After the attack and defence had lasted a quarter of
an hour, the wolf ran off to a neighboring ditch, where
he several times plunged into the water.
The farmer imagined that he did this
to refresh himself after the fatigue he had sustained,
and had no doubt that his mule had gained a complete
victory; but in a few minutes the wolf returned to
the charge, and, approaching as near as he could to
the head of the mule, shook himself, and spouted a
quantity of water into the animal’s eyes, which
caused him immediately to shut them. That moment,
the wolf leaped upon him, and killed the poor animal
before the farmer could come to his assistance.
In the commencement of the reign of
Louis XIV., of France, in the depth of winter, a party
of dragoons were attacked, at the foot of the mountains
of Jurat, by a multitude of wolves; the dragoons fought
bravely, and killed many hundreds of them; but at last,
overpowered by numbers, they and their horses were
all devoured. A cross is erected on the place
of combat, with an inscription in commemoration of
it, which is to be seen at this day.
THE FOX.
This animal, which resembles a small
dog, is widely distributed over the colder portions
of both continents. There are several species,
as the red, gray, black, silver, arctic, &c.
In all ages and countries, the fox has been remarkable
for his cunning, and, from the time of AEsop to the
present day, has figured, in allegory and fable, as
the personification of artifice and duplicity.
Fruitless Enterprise. A
fox finding himself hard run by the hounds, at a hunt
in Ireland, ran up a stone wall, from which he sprang
on the roof of an adjoining cabin, and mounted up
to the chimney-top. From that elevated station,
he looked all around him, as if reconnoitring the
coming enemy. A wily old hound approaching, and
having gained the roof, was preparing to seize the
fox, when, lo! renard dropped suddenly down the chimney.
The dog looked wistfully down the dark opening, but
dared not pursue the fugitive.
Meanwhile renard, half enrobed in
soot, had fallen into the lap of an old woman, who,
surrounded by a number of children, was gravely smoking
her pipe, not at all expecting the entrance of this
abrupt visitor. “Emiladh deouil!”
said the affrighted female, as she threw from her
the red and black quadruped. Renard grinned, growled,
and showed his fangs; and when the huntsmen, who had
secured the door, entered, they found him in quiet
possession of the kitchen, the old woman and children
having retired, in terror of the invader, to an obscure
corner of the room. The fox was taken alive without
much difficulty.
Unavailing Artifice. Two
gentlemen in New Jersey went out to hunt rabbits.
In a low, bushy swamp, the dogs started a fox, and
off they went in swift pursuit. After a chase
of two miles, he entered a very dense thicket, and,
making a circuit of the place, returned to the point
whence he first started. The dogs closely pursuing
the fox, he again started for the thicket, when one
of the sportsmen shot at him, and he fell apparently
dead at his feet. As he stooped to pick him up,
however, he rose upon his legs and escaped. For
two hours and a half, the thicket was the scene of
the wiles of renard; but at last he was taken, and,
being carried home by the men, was thrown, apparently
quite dead, into the corner of the room.
The family sat down to supper.
Finding them all busily engaged, he ventured to reconnoitre,
and had cautiously raised himself on his fore legs
for the purpose, but, on finding himself observed,
resumed his quiescent state. One of the party,
to ascertain whether the fox was alive or not, passed
a piece of lighted paper under his nose; but the inanimate
stone or log appeared not more senseless at that moment.
Finding all attempts to get away unavailing, renard
submitted to his destiny with a very good grace, and
the next morning was as well as ever, bating a slight
wound in the shoulder and a dirty skin.
Unexpected Resentment. Some
country people in Germany once caught a pike, but
in conveying it home during the night, it escaped.
As it was a large fish, they returned with torches
to secure their prize, and after some time found it
on the grass, having fast hold of a fox by the nose.
The animal caught in this novel trap made every effort
to escape, without success; and it was not until the
pike was killed, that it was possible to separate
them. It seems that, after the pike was dropped
by the fisherman, renard came across it, and in paying
his addresses to it, was received in the manner we
have described.
THE HYENA.
This animal, which is the size of
a large dog, belongs to Africa. It is very ferocious,
feeds on flesh, and prefers that which is in a state
of decay. It seems, with the vulture, to be a
scavenger to remove masses of putrid flesh, which,
in these hot regions, would otherwise breed infection
and disease.
Miscellaneous Anecdotes. Bruce,
in his “Travels in Africa,” gives us the
following account of the hyena:
“One night, being very busily
engaged in my tent, I heard something pass behind
me towards the bed, but, upon looking round, could
perceive nothing. Having finished what I was
about, I went out, resolving directly to return, which
I did. I now perceived a pair of large blue eyes
glaring at me in the dark. I called to my servant
to bring a light, and there stood a hyena, near the
head of my bed, with two or three large bunches of
candles in his mouth. As his mouth was full, I
was not afraid of him; so, with my pike, I struck him
as near the heart as I could judge. It was not
till then that he showed any signs of fierceness;
but, feeling his wound, he let the candles drop, and
endeavored to climb up the handle of the spear, to
arrive at me; so that, in self-defence, I was obliged
to draw a pistol from my girdle, and shoot him; nearly
at the same time, my servant cleft his skull with
a battle-axe.
“The hyena appears to be senseless
and stupid during the day. I have locked up with
him a goat, a kid, and a lamb, all day, when he was
fasting, and found them in the evening alive and unhurt.
Repeating the experiment one night, he ate up a young
ass, a goat, and a fox, all before morning, so as
to leave nothing but some small fragments of the ass’s
bones.”
Sparman furnishes us with the following
story: “One night, at a feast near
the Cape, a trumpeter, who had got himself well filled
with liquor, was carried out of doors in order to
cool and sober him. The scent of him soon attracted
a spotted hyena, which threw him on his back, and
carried him away to Sable Mountain, thinking him a
corpse, and consequently a fair prize.
“In the mean time, our drunken
musician awoke, sufficiently sensible to know the
danger of his situation, and to sound his alarm with
his trumpet, which he carried at his side. The
beast, as it may be imagined, was greatly frightened,
in its turn, and immediately ran away.”
THE LION.
This animal stands at the head of
the numerous family of cats, and has often been ranked
by naturalists as the lord of the brute creation, and
holding the same relation to quadrupeds as the eagle
does to birds.
Like all the rest of his genus, the
lion steals upon his prey, and, when at a proper distance,
rushes upon it with a bound, securing it in his sharp
claws. In general he is cowardly; but, in pursuit
of his prey, he is, to the last degree, fearless and
ferocious. His strength is so great that he can
break a man’s skull with the stroke of his paw,
and can drag the body of a cow over the ground at a
gallop. His roar is terrific, and when heard,
the animals around seem agitated with the wildest
terror. The lion is common in the hot parts of
Africa, and is occasionally found in India.
Miscellaneous Anecdotes. Some
Hottentots once perceived a lion dragging a buffalo
from the plain to a neighboring woody hill. They
soon forced him to quit his prey, in order to secure
it for themselves. They now found that the lion
had had the sagacity to take out those inner parts
of the buffalo that it rejected as food, in order to
make it easier to carry away the fleshy and eatable
parts of the carcass, thus showing reflection on his
part.
It is probable that the lion does
not easily venture upon any one who puts himself in
a posture of defence. The following anecdote would
seem to show that this is the case. A young man
was walking one day on his lands in the southern parts
of Africa, when he unexpectedly met a large lion.
Being an excellent shot, he thought himself sure of
killing him, and therefore fired. But unfortunately,
the charge had been in the piece for some time, and
the ball fell before it reached the animal. The
young man, seized with panic, now took to his heels;
but being soon out of breath, and closely pursued
by the lion, he jumped upon a little heap of stones,
and there made a stand, presenting the butt-end of
his gun to his adversary, fully resolved to defend
his life as well as he could.
This movement had such an effect upon
the lion, that he likewise came to a stand; and what
was still more singular, laid himself down at some
paces’ distance from the stones, seemingly quite
unconcerned. The sportsman, in the mean while,
did not dare to stir a step from the spot; besides,
in his flight, he had lost his powder-horn. At
length, after waiting a good half hour, the lion rose
up, and retreated slowly, step by step, as if it had
a mind to steal off; but as soon as it got to a greater
distance, it began to bound away with great rapidity.
It is related that Geoffrey de la
Tour, one of the knights that went upon the first
crusade to the Holy Land, heard, one day, as he rode
through a forest, a cry of distress. Hoping to
rescue some unfortunate sufferer, the knight rode
boldly into the thicket; but what was his astonishment,
when he beheld a large lion, with a serpent coiled
round his body! To relieve the distressed was
the duty of every knight; therefore, with a single
stroke of the sword, and regardless of the consequences
to himself, he killed the serpent, and extricated the
tremendous animal from his perilous situation.
From that hour the grateful creature
constantly accompanied his deliverer, whom he followed
like a dog, and never displayed his natural ferocity
but at his command. At length, the crusade being
terminated, Sir Geoffrey prepared to set sail for
Europe. He wished to take the lion with him;
but the master of the ship was unwilling to admit him
on board, and the knight was, therefore, obliged to
leave him on the shore. The lion, when he saw
himself separated from his beloved master, first began
to roar hideously; then, seeing the ship moving off,
he plunged into the waves, and endeavored to swim
after it. But all his efforts were in vain; and
at length, his strength being exhausted, he sank,
and the ocean ingulfed the noble animal, whose unshaken
fidelity deserved a better fate.
Some years since there was, in a menagerie
at Cassel, in Germany, a large lion, whose keeper
was a woman, to whom the animal seemed most affectionately
attached. In order to amuse the company, this
woman was in the habit of putting her hands, and even
her head, into the lion’s mouth, without experiencing
the least injury. Upon one occasion, however,
having introduced her head, as usual, between the animal’s
jaws, he made a sudden snap, and killed her on the
spot.
Undoubtedly, this catastrophe was
unintentional on the part of the lion; probably the
hair of the woman’s head irritated his throat,
so as to make him sneeze or cough. This supposition
is confirmed by the subsequent conduct of the animal;
for as soon as he perceived that he had killed his
attendant, the good-tempered, grateful creature exhibited
the signs of the deepest melancholy, laid himself down
by the side of the dead body, which he would not suffer
to be removed, refused to take any food, and, in a
few days, pined himself to death.
A remarkable instance of docility
in a lion once took place in the menagerie at Chester,
in England. A strange keeper, having fed a magnificent
lion one evening, neglected to fasten the door of the
den. The watchman, when going his rounds about
three the next morning, discovered the king of beasts
deliberately walking about the yard, and surveying
the objects with apparent curiosity. The watchman
went to call the proprietors, and when they arrived
they found the lion couchant upon the top of
one of the coaches in the yard. With very little
entreaty, the monarch of the forest deigned to descend
from his throne, and very graciously followed a young
lady, the proprietor’s daughter, back to his
den.
Some time ago, for the purpose of
seeing the manner in which the lion pounces upon his
prey, a little dog was, most cruelly, thrown into the
den of one of these animals in the Tower Menagerie.
The poor little animal skulked, in terror, to the
most remote corner of the lion’s apartment,
who, regarding him with complacency, refrained from
approaching him. The little trembler, seeing the
lion’s mildness, ventured to draw near him;
and soon becoming familiar, they lived together thenceforward
in the most perfect harmony; and, although the little
dog had sometimes the temerity to dispute his share
of food with the king of the beasts, yet he magnanimously
allowed him to satisfy his appetite before he thought
of making a meal himself.
A lioness in the Tower of London once
formed such an attachment for a little dog which was
kept with her in the den, that she would not eat till
the dog was first satisfied. After the lioness
had become a mother, it was thought advisable to take
the animal away, for fear that her jealous fondness
for her whelps might lead her to injure it. But
while the keeper was cleaning the den, the dog, by
some means, got into it, and approached the lioness
with his wonted fondness. She was playing with
her cubs; and, seeing the dog approach, she sprang
towards him, and, seizing the poor little animal by
the throat, seemed in the act of tearing him to pieces;
but as if she momentarily recollected her former fondness
for him, she carried him to the door of the den, and
suffered him to be taken out unhurt.
To the traveller in Africa, the lion
is formidable not at night only; he lies in his path,
and is with difficulty disturbed, to allow a passage
for his wagons and cattle, even when the sun is shining
with its utmost brilliancy; or he is roused from some
bushy place, on the roadside, by the indefatigable
dogs which always accompany a caravan. Mr. Burchell
has described, with great spirit, an encounter of this
nature:
“The day was exceedingly pleasant,
and not a cloud was to be seen. For a mile or
two we travelled along the banks of the river, which
in this part abounded in tall mat-rushes. The
dogs seemed much to enjoy prowling about, and examining
every bushy place, and at last met with some object
among the rushes which caused them to set up a most
vehement and determined barking. We explored the
spot with caution, as we suspected, from the peculiar
tone of their bark, that it was, what it proved to
be, lions. Having encouraged the dogs to drive
them out, a task which they performed with great willingness,
we had a full view of an enormous black-maned lion
and lioness. The latter was seen only for a minute,
as she made her escape up the river, under concealment
of the rushes; but the lion came steadily forward,
and stood still to look at us. At this moment
we felt our situation not free from danger, as the
animal seemed preparing to spring upon us, and we were
standing on the bank at the distance of only a few
yards from him, most of us being on foot and unarmed,
without any visible possibility of escaping.
“I had given up my horse to
the hunters, and was on foot myself; but there was
no time for fear, and it was useless to attempt avoiding
him. I stood well upon my guard, holding my pistols
in my hand, with my finger upon the trigger; and those
who had muskets kept themselves prepared in the same
manner. But at this instant the dogs boldly flew
in between us and the lion, and, surrounding him, kept
him at bay by their violent and resolute barking.
The courage of these faithful animals was most admirable;
they advanced up to the side of the huge beast, and
stood making the greatest clamor in his face, without
the least appearance of fear. The lion, conscious
of his strength, remained unmoved at their noisy attempts,
and kept his head turned towards us. At one moment,
the dogs, perceiving his eyes thus engaged, had advanced
close to his feet, and seemed as if they would actually
seize hold of him; but they paid dearly for their
imprudence; for, without discomposing the majestic
and steady attitude in which he stood fixed, he merely
moved his paw, and at the next instant I beheld two
lying dead. In doing this, he made so little
exertion, that it was scarcely perceptible by what
means they had been killed. Of the time which
we had gained by the interference of the dogs, not
a moment was lost. We fired upon him; one of
the balls went through his side just between the short
ribs, and the blood immediately began to flow; but
the animal still remained standing in the same position.
We had now no doubt that he would spring upon us;
every gun was instantly reloaded; but happily we were
mistaken, and were not sorry to see him move quietly
away; though I had hoped in a few minutes to have
been enabled to take hold of his paw without danger.
“This was considered, by our
party, to be a lion of the largest size, and seemed,
as I measured him by comparison with the dogs, to be,
though less bulky, as heavy as an ox. He was certainly
as long in body, though lower in stature; and his
copious mane gave him a truly formidable appearance.
He was of that variety which the Hottentots and boors
distinguish by the name of the black lion, on
account of the blacker color of the mane, and which
is said to be always larger and more dangerous than
the other, which they call the pale lion.
Of the courage of a lion I have no very high opinion;
but of his majestic air and movements, as exhibited
by this animal, while at liberty in his native plains,
I can bear testimony. Notwithstanding the pain
of a wound, of which he must soon afterwards have
died, he moved slowly away, with a stately and measured
step.”
THE TIGER.
This animal, of which there is but
one species, is found in the southern parts of Asia,
and the adjacent islands. It is inferior only
to the lion in strength, size, and courage. The
body is long, the legs rather short, the eyes glassy,
and the countenance haggard, savage, and ferocious.
It has strength to seize a man and carry him off at
full gallop, and its ferocity leads it to slay beyond
its desire for food. In contrast to these hideous
qualities, its skin is marked with a singular beauty,
being of a fawn color, splendidly striped downward
with black bands. Its step resembles that of a
cat. When taken young, and kindly treated, it
grows familiar, and exhibits gentleness and affection
towards its keeper.
Miscellaneous Anecdotes. Of
the muscular powers of the tiger we have the following
illustration: A buffalo, belonging to a peasant
in the East Indies, having fallen into a quagmire,
the man was himself unable to extricate it, and went
to call the assistance of his neighbors. Meanwhile,
a large tiger, coming to the spot, seized upon the
buffalo, and dragged him out. When the men came
to the place, they saw the tiger, with the buffalo
thrown over his shoulder, in the act of retiring with
him towards the jungle. No sooner, however, did
he observe the men, than he let fall the dead animal,
and precipitately escaped. On coming up, they
found the buffalo quite dead, and his whole blood
sucked out. Some idea may be gained of the immense
power of the tiger, when it is mentioned that the
ordinary weight of a buffalo is above a thousand pounds,
and consequently considerably more than double its
own weight.
The effect of feeding the tiger upon
raw flesh, is shown by the following anecdote:
A party of gentlemen, from Bombay, found, one day,
in a cavern, a tiger’s whelp, which was hidden
in an obscure corner. Snatching it up hastily,
they cautiously retreated. Being left entirely
at liberty, and well fed, the tiger became tame, like
the dog, grew rapidly, and appeared entirely domesticated.
At length it attained a great size, and began to inspire
terror by its tremendous strength and power, notwithstanding
its gentleness. Up to this moment, it had been
studiously kept from raw meat. But, unfortunately,
during its rambles, a piece of flesh dripping with
blood fell in its way. The instant it had tasted
it, something like madness seemed to seize the animal;
a destructive principle, hitherto dormant, was kindled:
it darted fiercely, and with glowing eyes, upon its
prey tore it with fury to pieces, and,
growling and roaring in the most frightful manner,
rushed off, and disappeared in the jungle.
Tigers are sometimes very cunning.
One of them was kept at a French factory, at Silsceri,
which was secured by a strong chain. This animal
used to scatter a portion of the rice that was set
before him as far round the front of his den as possible.
This enticed the poultry to come and pick it up.
The tiger pretended to be asleep, in order to induce
them to approach nearer, when he suddenly sprang upon
them, and seldom failed to make several of them his
prey.
This animal is susceptible of strong
attachments. An instance of this is recorded
of a tigress of great beauty in the Tower at London.
She was extremely docile in her passage home from
Calcutta, was allowed to run about the vessel, and
became exceedingly familiar with the sailors.
On her arrival in London, however, her temper became
irascible, and even dangerous, and she exhibited for
some days a savage and sulky disposition.
Shortly after, a sailor, who had had
charge of her on board the ship, came to the Tower,
and begged permission to enter her den. No sooner
did she recognize her old friend, than she fawned upon
him, licked and caressed him, exhibiting the most
extravagant signs of pleasure; and, when he left her,
she whined and cried the whole day afterwards.
In time, however, she became reconciled to her new
keeper and residence.
Some years ago, a tame tiger was led
about Madras by some of the natives, without any other
restraint than a muzzle, and a small chain round his
neck. The men lived by exhibiting, to the curious,
the tiger’s method of seizing his prey.
The manner in which they showed this, was by fastening
a sheep to a stake driven into the earth. The
tiger was no sooner brought in sight of it than he
crouched, and moved along the ground on his belly,
slowly and cautiously, till he came within the limits
of a bound, when he sprang upon the sheep with the
rapidity of an arrow, and struck it dead in an instant.
Although the tigress sometimes destroys
her young ones, she generally shows much anxiety for
them. Two cubs were once discovered by some villagers,
in India, while their mother was in quest of prey,
and presented by them to a gentleman, who had them
put in his stable. The creatures made piteous
howlings every night, which at last reached the ears
of the mother. She came to the spot, and answered
their cries by hideous howlings, which so alarmed
their keeper that he let the cubs loose, for fear
the dam would break the door of the stable. Nothing
was seen of them the next morning; the tigress had
carried them both off into the jungle.
The tiger is often hunted in India,
and frequently the sportsmen are mounted upon elephants.
Sometimes the animal is shot, and occasionally he
is trodden to death, or laid prostrate on the earth,
by the tramp of the elephant. Numerous anecdotes
are told of these rencounters, all tending to show
the fierce and formidable character of the tiger.
It is much more active and ferocious than the lion,
and is also more dangerous to the inhabitants who
live in the vicinity of its retreats.
THE PANTHER.
This animal, which is a native of
Northern Africa, is smaller than the tiger, but it
possesses the same ferocious disposition. It preys
upon every animal it can master, and man himself sometimes
falls a victim to its rapacity. Its color is
fawn, spotted with black.
A tame Panther. Notwithstanding
the savage character and habits of this animal, Mr.
Bowditch, who resided at Coomassie, in Western Africa,
gives us an interesting account of one that he tamed.
When he was about a year old, he was taken to Cape
Coast, being led through the country by a chain.
When he arrived, he was placed in a court, where he
became quite familiar with those around him, laying
his paws upon their shoulders, and rubbing his head
upon them. By degrees all fear of him subsided,
and he was allowed to go at liberty within the gates
of the castle, having a small boy for a keeper.
On one occasion, Saï, as the panther was
called, finding the lad sitting upright on the step
fast asleep, lifted his paw, and gave him a blow on
the side of the head, which knocked him down, and
then stood wagging his tail, as if enjoying the mischief
he had done.
On another occasion, as an old woman
was sweeping the hall with a short broom, which brought
her nearly down upon all fours, Saï, who
was hidden under the sofa, suddenly leaped upon her
back, where he stood in triumph. She screamed
violently, and all her fellow-servants scampered away
in terror; nor was she released till the governor himself
came to her assistance.
After the departure of Mr. Bowditch
from the castle, the ship in which he had embarked
lay at anchor some weeks in the River Gaboon:
while here, an orangoutang was brought on board, and
the rage of the panther, who had accompanied his master,
was indescribable. His back rose in an arch,
his tail was elevated and perfectly stiff, his eyes
flashed, and if he had not been restrained, he would
have torn the ape in pieces. At the same time,
the orang showed the greatest fear and terror.
After sailing to England, the change
of climate seemed to affect Saï, and medicine
was given him in the shape of pills. These had
the desired effect. On reaching the London Docks,
he was taken ashore, and presented to the Duchess
of York, who had him placed in Exeter ’Change.
Here he remained for some weeks, apparently in good
health; but he was taken suddenly ill, and died of
an inflammation on the lungs.
THE LEOPARD.
This animal is more slender and graceful
than the panther, yet it has all the savage qualities
of the feline race. Its skin is exceedingly beautiful,
being of a light fawn, marked with black spots.
Nothing can surpass the ease, grace, and agility,
of its movements.
Hunting the Leopard. Two
boors in Southern Africa, in the year 1822, returning
from hunting the hartebeest, fell in with a leopard
in a mountain ravine, and immediately gave chase to
him. The animal at first endeavored to escape,
by clambering up a precipice; but, being hotly pressed,
and slightly wounded by a musket-ball, he turned upon
his pursuers, with that frantic ferocity which, on
such emergencies, he frequently displays: springing
upon the man who had fired at him, he tore him from
his horse to the ground, biting him, at the same time,
very severely on the shoulder, and tearing his face
and arms with his claws. The other hunter, seeing
the danger of his comrade, sprang from his horse,
and attempted to shoot the leopard through the head;
but, whether owing to trepidation, the fear of wounding
his friend, or the sudden motions of the animal, he
unfortunately missed his aim. The leopard, abandoning
his prostrate enemy, darted with redoubled fury upon
this second antagonist; and so fierce and sudden was
his onset, that, before the boor could stab him with
his hunting-knife, he struck him in the eyes with
his claws, and had torn the scalp over his forehead.
In this frightful condition, the hunter grappled with
the raging beast, and, struggling for life, they rolled
together down a steep declivity. All this passed
so rapidly that the other man had scarcely time to
recover from the confusion into which his feline foe
had thrown him, to seize his gun, and rush forward
to aid his comrade when he beheld them
rolling together down the steep bank, in mortal conflict.
In a few moments he was at the bottom with them, but
too late to save the life of his friend, who had so
gallantly defended him. The leopard had torn
open the jugular vein, and so dreadfully mangled the
throat of the unfortunate man, that his death was
inevitable; and his comrade had only the melancholy
satisfaction of completing the destruction of the
savage beast, which was already much exhausted by
several deep wounds in the breast, from the desperate
knife of the expiring huntsman.
Captive Leopards. Mr.
Brown gives us the following account: “There
are at present in the Tower a pair of these animals,
from Asia, confined in the same den. The female
is very tame, and gentle in her temper, and will allow
herself to be patted and caressed by the keepers,
while she licks their hands, and purrs. She, however,
has one peculiarity that she cannot bear
many of the appendages which visitors bring with them
to the menagerie. She has a particular predilection
for the destruction of parasols, umbrellas, muffs,
and hats, which she frequently contrives to lay hold
of before the unwary spectator can prevent it, and
tears them to pieces in an instant. She has been
five years in the Tower, during which time she has
seized and destroyed several hundreds of these articles,
as well as other parts of ladies’ dress.
While this creature is in a playful mood, she bounds
about her cell with the quickness of thought, touching
the four sides of it nearly at one and the same instant.
So rapid are her motions, that she can scarcely be
followed by the eye; and she will even skim along the
ceiling of her apartment with the same amazing rapidity,
evincing great pliability of form and wonderful muscular
powers. The male has been about two years in
the Tower, and is only beginning to suffer familiarities;
but he seems jealous of the slightest approach.
He is larger than the female, the color of his skin
more highly toned, and the spotting more intensely
black.”
THE JAGUAR.
This animal is confined to South America,
where it is frequently called a tiger. It greatly
resembles the panther of Africa in size, appearance,
and habits. It inhabits thick forests, and sometimes
destroys cows and horses. It also feeds on fish,
which it entices to the surface by its spittle, and
then knocks them out of the water with its paw.
The Jaguar’s Cave. From
the numerous anecdotes in relation to this animal,
we select the following interesting account communicated
to the Edinburgh Literary Journal: “On
leaving the Indian village, we continued to wind round
Chimborazo’s wide base; but its snow-crowned
head no longer shone above us in clear brilliancy,
for a dense fog was gathering gradually around it.
Our guides looked anxiously towards it, and announced
their apprehensions of a violent storm. We soon
found that their fears were well founded. The
thunder began to roll, and resounded through the mountainous
passes with the most terrific grandeur. Then
came the vivid lightning; flash following flash above,
around, beneath every where a sea of fire.
We sought a momentary shelter in the cleft of the
rocks, whilst one of our guides hastened forward to
seek a more secure asylum. In a short time he
returned and informed us that he had discovered a
spacious cavern, which would afford us sufficient
protection from the elements. We proceeded thither
immediately, and with great difficulty, and some danger,
at last got into it.
“When the storm had somewhat
abated, our guides ventured out, to ascertain if it
were possible to continue our journey. The cave
in which we had taken refuge was so extremely dark,
that, if we moved a few paces from the entrance, we
could not see an inch before us; and we were debating
as to the propriety of leaving it, even before the
Indians came back, when we suddenly heard a singular
groaning or growling, in the farther end of the cavern,
which instantly fixed all our attention. Wharton
and myself listened anxiously; but our inconsiderate
young friend Lincoln, together with my huntsman, crept
about on their hands and knees, and endeavored to discover,
by groping, whence the sound proceeded.
“They had not advanced far into
the cavern, before we heard them utter an exclamation
of surprise; and they returned to us, each carrying
in his arms an animal singularly marked, about the
size of a cat, seemingly of great strength and power,
and furnished with immense fangs. The eyes were
of a green color; strong claws were upon their feet;
and a blood-red tongue hung out of their mouths.
Wharton had scarcely glanced at them, when he exclaimed
in consternation, ’We have come into the den
of a ’ He was interrupted
by a fearful cry of dismay from our guides, who came
rushing precipitately towards us, calling out, ‘A
tiger, a tiger!’ and, at the same time, with
extraordinary rapidity, they climbed up a cedar-tree
which stood at the entrance of the cave, and hid themselves
among the branches.
“After the first sensation of
horror and surprise, which rendered me motionless
for a moment, had subsided, I grasped my fire-arms.
Wharton had already regained his composure and self-possession;
and he called to us to assist in blocking up the mouth
of the cave with an immense stone which fortunately
lay near it. The sense of imminent danger augmented
our strength; for we now distinctly heard the growl
of the ferocious animal, and we were lost, beyond
redemption, if he reached the entrance before we could
get it closed. Ere this was done, we could distinctly
see the tiger bounding towards the spot, and stooping
in order to creep into his den by the narrow opening.
At this fearful moment, our exertions were successful,
and the great stone kept the wild beast at bay.
“There was a small, open space,
however, left between the top of the entrance and
the stone, through which we could see the head of the
animal, illuminated by his glowing eyes, which he rolled,
glaring with fury, upon us. His frightful roaring,
too, penetrated to the depths of the cavern, and was
answered by the hoarse growling of the cubs. Our
ferocious enemy attempted first to remove the stone
with his powerful claws, and then to push it with
his head from its place; and these efforts proving
abortive, served only to increase his wrath. He
uttered a tremendous, heart-piercing growl, and his
flaming eyes darted light into the darkness of our
retreat.
“‘Now is the time to fire
at him,’ said Wharton, with his usual calmness.
’Aim at his eyes; the ball will go through his
brain, and we shall then have a chance to get rid
of him.’
“Frank seized his double-barrelled
gun, and Lincoln his pistols. The former placed
the muzzle within a few inches of the tiger, and Lincoln
did the same. At Wharton’s command, they
both drew their triggers at the same moment; but no
shot followed. The tiger, who seemed aware that
the flash indicated an attack upon him, sprang growling
from the entrance, but, finding himself unhurt, immediately
turned back, and stationed himself in his former place.
The powder in both pieces was wet.
“‘All is now over,’
said Wharton. ’We have only now to choose
whether we shall die of hunger, together with these
animals who are shut up along with us, or open the
entrance to the bloodthirsty monster without, and
so make a quicker end of the matter.’
“So saying, he placed himself
close beside the stone, which for the moment defended
us, and looked undauntedly upon the lightning eyes
of the tiger. Lincoln raved, and Frank took a
piece of strong cord from his pocket, and hastened
to the farther end of the cave I knew not with what
design. We soon, however, heard a low, stifled
groaning; the tiger, which had heard it also, became
more restless and disturbed than ever. He went
backwards and forwards, before the entrance of the
cave, in the most wild and impetuous manner; then
stood still, and, stretching out his neck towards
the forest, broke forth into a deafening howl.
“Our two Indian guides took
advantage of this opportunity to discharge several
arrows from the tree; but the light weapons bounded
back harmless from his thick skin. At length,
however, one of them struck him near the eye, and
the arrow remained sticking in the wound. He now
broke anew into the wildest fury, sprang at the tree,
and tore it with his claws, as if he would have dragged
it to the ground. But having at length succeeded
in getting rid of the arrow, he became more calm, and
laid himself down, as before, in front of the cave.
“Frank now returned from the
lower end of the den, and a glance showed us what
he had been doing. In each hand, and dangling
from the end of a string, were the two cubs.
He had strangled them, and, before we were aware what
he intended, he threw them, through the opening, to
the tiger. No sooner did the animal perceive
them, than he gazed earnestly upon them, and began
to examine them closely, turning them cautiously from
side to side. As soon as he became aware that
they were dead, he uttered so piercing a howl of sorrow,
that we were obliged to put our hands to our ears.
“The thunder had now ceased,
and the storm had sunk to a gentle gale; the songs
of the birds were again heard in the neighboring forest,
and the sunbeams sparkled in the drops that hung from
the leaves. We saw, through the aperture, how
all nature was reviving, after the wild war of elements
which had so recently taken place; but the contrast
only made our situation the more horrible. The
tiger had laid himself down beside his whelps.
He was a beautiful animal, of great size and strength;
and his limbs, being stretched out at their full length,
displayed his immense power of muscle. A double
row of great teeth stood far enough apart to show
his large red tongue, from which the white foam fell
in large drops.
“All at once, another roar was
heard at a distance, and the tiger immediately rose,
and answered it with a mournful howl. At the same
instant, our Indians uttered a shriek, which announced
that some new danger threatened us. A few moments
confirmed our worst fears; for another tiger, not
quite so large as the former, came rapidly towards
the spot where we were.
“The howls which the tigress
gave, when she had examined the bodies of her cubs,
surpassed every thing of horrible that we had yet heard;
and the tiger mingled his mournful cries with hers.
Suddenly her roaring was lowered to a hoarse growling,
and we saw her anxiously stretch out her head, extend
her wide and smoking nostrils, and look as if she were
determined to discover immediately the murderers of
her young. Her eyes quickly fell upon us, and
she made a spring forward, with the intention of penetrating
our place of refuge. Perhaps she might have been
enabled, by her immense strength, to push away the
stone, had we not, with all our united power, held
it against her.
“When she found that all her
efforts were fruitless, she approached the tiger,
who lay stretched out beside his cubs, and he rose
and joined in her hollow roarings. They stood
together for a few moments, as if in consultation,
and then suddenly went off at a rapid pace, and disappeared
from our sight. Their howlings died away in the
distance, and then entirely ceased.
“Our Indians descended from
their tree, and called upon us to seize the only possibility
of yet saving ourselves, by instant flight, for that
the tigers had only gone round the height to seek another
inlet into the cave, with which they were, no doubt,
acquainted. In the greatest haste the stone was
pushed aside, and we stepped forth from what we had
considered a living grave. We now heard once more
the roaring of the tigress, though at a distance,
and, following the example of our guides, we precipitately
struck into a side path. From the number of roots
and branches of trees, with which the storm had strewed
our way, and the slipperiness of the road, our flight
was slow and difficult.
“We had proceeded thus for about
a quarter of an hour, when we found that our way led
along a rocky cliff, with innumerable fissures.
We had just entered upon it, when suddenly the Indians,
who were before us, uttered one of their piercing
shrieks, and we immediately became aware that the
tigers were in pursuit of us. Urged by despair,
we rushed towards one of the breaks or gulfs in our
way, over which was thrown a bridge of reeds, that
sprang up and down at every step, and could be trod
with safety by the light foot of the Indians alone.
Deep in the hollow below rushed an impetuous stream,
and a thousand pointed and jagged rocks threatened
destruction on every side.
“Lincoln, my huntsman, and myself,
passed over the chasm in safety; but Wharton was still
in the middle of the waving bridge, and endeavoring
to steady himself, when both the tigers were seen to
issue from the adjoining forest; and the moment they
descried us, they bounded towards us with dreadful
roarings. Meanwhile, Wharton had nearly gained
the safe side of the gulf, and we were all clambering
up the rocky cliff, except Lincoln, who remained at
the reedy bridge, to assist his friend to step upon
firm ground. Wharton, though the ferocious animals
were close upon him, never lost his courage or presence
of mind. As soon as he had gained the edge of
the cliff, he knelt down, and, with his sword, divided
the fastenings by which the bridge was attached to
the rock.
“He expected that an effectual
barrier would thus be put to the farther progress
of our pursuers; but he was mistaken; for he had scarcely
accomplished his task when the tigress, without a moment’s
pause, rushed towards the chasm, and attempted to
bound over it. It was a fearful sight to see
the mighty animal suspended for a moment in the air,
above the abyss; but the scene passed like a flash
of lightning. Her strength was not equal to the
distance; she fell into the gulf, and, before she
reached the bottom, was torn into a thousand pieces
by the jagged points of the rocks.
“Her fate did not in the least
dismay her companion. He followed her with an
immense spring, and reached the opposite side, but
only with his fore claws; and thus he clung to the
edge of the precipice, endeavoring to gain a footing.
The Indians again uttered a wild shriek, as if all
hope had been lost.
“But Wharton, who was nearest
the edge of the rock, advanced courageously towards
the tiger, and struck his sword into the animal’s
breast. Enraged beyond all measure, the wild beast
collected all his strength, and, with a violent effort,
fixing one of his hind legs upon the cliff, he seized
Wharton by the thigh. The heroic man still preserved
his fortitude. He grasped the trunk of a tree
with his left hand, to steady and support himself,
while, with his right hand, he wrenched and violently
turned the sword, that was still in the breast of
the tiger. All this was the work of an instant.
The Indians, Frank, and myself, hastened to his assistance;
but Lincoln, who was already at his side, had seized
Wharton’s gun, which lay near upon the ground,
and struck so powerful a blow with the butt-end upon
the head of the tiger, that the animal, stunned and
overpowered, let go his hold, and fell back into the
abyss.”
THE AMERICAN PANTHER.
This animal, which belongs to North
and South America, passes under the various titles
of cougar, puma, and panther.
The latter is its most common designation. It
is about the size of the European panther, but is
of a uniform reddish-brown color. It was once
common throughout the United States, but it has retired
from the more thickly-settled portions to the remote
forests of the country. It generally flies from
man, but occasions have frequently occurred in which
persons have fallen victims to its rage or rapacity.
Fatal Sport. Some
years since, two hunters, accompanied by two dogs,
went out in quest of game near the Catskill Mountains.
At the foot of a large hill, they agreed to go round
it in opposite directions, and, when either discharged
his rifle, the other was to hasten towards him to
aid in securing the game. Soon after parting,
the report of a rifle was heard by one of them, who,
hastening towards the spot, after some search, found
nothing but the dog, dreadfully lacerated, and dead.
He now became much alarmed for the fate of his companion,
and, while anxiously looking around, was horror-struck
by the harsh growl of a cougar, which he perceived
on a large limb of a tree, crouching upon the body
of his friend, and apparently meditating an attack
on himself. Instantly he levelled his rifle at
the beast, and was so fortunate as to wound it mortally,
when it fell to the ground along with the body of
his slaughtered companion. His dog then rushed
upon the wounded cougar, which, with one blow of its
paw, laid the poor animal dead by its side. The
surviving hunter now left the spot, and quickly returned,
with several other persons, when they found the lifeless
cougar extended near the dead bodies of the hunter
and the faithful dogs.
Terrible Revenge. The
following account is furnished by a correspondent
of the “Cabinet of Natural History:”
“It was on as beautiful an autumnal day as ever
ushered in the Indian summer, that I made an excursion
after game among a group of mountains, or rather on
a link in the great chain of the Alleghany range,
which runs in a north-eastern direction in that part
of Pennsylvania which bounds the New York line.
“I had kept the summit of the
mountains for several miles, without success, for
a breeze had arisen shortly after sunrise, which rattled
through the trees, and made it unfavorable for hunting
on dry ground; and indeed the only wild animal I saw
was a bear, that was feeding on another ridge across
a deep valley, and entirely out of reach of my rifle-shot.
I therefore descended the mountain in an oblique direction,
towards the salt springs, which I soon reached, and,
after finding others had preceded me here, I left
the spot for another mountain, on which I intended
to pass the remainder of the day, gradually working
my way home. This mountain was covered with chestnut-trees;
and here it was that I caught a glimpse of the bear
from the other ridge, and found he had disappeared
but a short time previous to my arrival on this mountain.
I followed his track for three miles, for chestnuts
lay in abundance on the ground, and bears, like hogs,
root up the leaves in search of food beneath; and
it no doubt had lingered about here eating its meal
until my near approach gave warning of its danger.
This I could discover, as, the leaves having been
wet by the melted frost on the top, a path could be
traced where the bear, in running, had turned the
dried part of the leaves uppermost. I quickened
my pace along the mountainside and around the turn
of the mountain, with the hopes of surprising the
bear; and, after a rapid chase for the distance above
mentioned, all proved fruitless, and I relinquished
further pursuit. Warm with this exercise, and
somewhat fatigued, I descended the mountain-side,
and took my seat beside a stream of water which gently
washed the base of the mountain, and emptied itself
into the head of the waters of the Susquehannah.
“I had remained, sitting on
a fallen tree, whose branches extended considerably
into the water, for, perhaps, an hour and a half, when,
of a sudden, I heard a rustling among the leaves on
the mountain immediately above my head, which, at
first, was so distant that I thought it merely an
eddy in the wind, whirling the leaves from the ground;
but it increased so rapidly, and approached so near
the spot where I sat, that instinctively I seized
my rifle, ready in a moment to meet any emergency
which might offer.
“That part of the mountain where
I was seated was covered with laurel and other bushes,
and, owing to the density of this shrubbery, I could
not discover an object more than ten yards from me;
this, as will afterwards appear, afforded me protection;
at any rate, it conduced to my success. The noise
among the leaves now became tremendous, and the object
approached so near, that I distinctly heard an unnatural
grunting noise, as if from some animal in great distress.
At length, a sudden plunge into the water, not more
than twenty yards from me, uncovered to my view a
full-grown black bear, intent upon nothing but its
endeavors to press through the water and reach the
opposite shore. The water, on an average, was
not more than two feet deep, which was not sufficient
for the animal to swim, and too deep to run through;
consequently, the eagerness with which the bear pressed
through the water created such a splashing noise as
fairly echoed through the hills. With scarcely
a thought, I brought my rifle to my shoulder with
the intention of shooting; but, before I could sight
it correctly, the bear rushed behind a rock which
shielded it from my view. This gave me a momentary
season for reflection; and, although I could have killed
the bear so soon as it had passed the rock, I determined
to await the result of such extraordinary conduct
in this animal; for I was wonder-struck at actions
which were not only strange, but even ludicrous, there
not appearing then any cause for them. The mystery,
however, was soon unravelled.
“The stream of water was not
more than ten rods in width; and before the bear was
two thirds across it, I heard another rustling, on
the mountain-side, among the leaves, as if by jumps,
and a second plunge into the water convinced me that
the bear had good cause for its precipitation; for
here, pressing hard at its heels, was a formidable
antagonist in an enormous panther, which pursued the
bear with such determined inveteracy and appalling
growls, as made me shudder as with a chill.
“The panther plunged into the
water not more than eighteen or twenty yards from
me; and, had it been but one third of that distance,
I feel convinced I should have been unheeded by this
animal, so intent was it on the destruction of the
bear. It must indeed be an extraordinary case
which will make a panther plunge into water, as it
is a great characteristic of the feline species always
to avoid water, unless driven to it either by necessity
or desperation; but here nature was set aside, and
some powerful motive predominated in the passions of
this animal, which put all laws of instinct at defiance,
and, unlike the clumsy bustling of the bear through
the water, the panther went with bounds of ten feet
at a time, and, ere the former reached the opposite
shore, the latter was midway of the stream. This
was a moment of thrilling interest; and that feeling
so common to the human breast, when the strong is
combating with the weak, now took possession of mine,
and, espousing the cause of the weaker party, abstractedly
from every consideration which was in the wrong, I
could not help wishing safety to the bear and death
to the panther. Under the impulse of these feelings,
I once more brought my rifle to my shoulder, with the
intention of shooting the panther through the heart;
but, in spite of myself, I shrank from the effort.
Perhaps it was well I reserved my fire; for, had I
only wounded the animal, I might have been a victim
to its ferocity.
“So soon as the bear found there
was no possibility of escape from an issue with so
dreadful an enemy, on reaching the opposite bank of
the stream, it shook the water from its hair like
a dog, ran about fifteen feet on the bank, and lay
directly on its back in a defensive posture.
This it had scarcely done, when the panther reached
the water’s edge, and then, with a yell of vengeance,
it made one bound, and sprang, with outstretched claws,
and spitting like a cat, immediately on the bear,
which lay in terror on the ground, ready to receive
its antagonist; but the contest was soon at an end.
Not more easily does the eagle rend in sunder its
terror-stricken prey, than did the enraged panther
tear in scattered fragments the helpless bear.
It appeared but the work of a moment, and that moment
was one of unrelenting vengeance; for no sooner did
the panther alight on its victim, than, with the most
ferocious yells, it planted its hinder claws deep
in the entrails of the bear, and, by a few rips, tore
its antagonist in pieces. Although the bear was
full grown, it must have been young, and deficient
in energy; for it was so overcome with dread as not
to be able to make the least resistance.
“Satisfied with glutting its
vengeance, the panther turned from the bear, and came
directly to the water’s edge to drink, and allay
the parching thirst created by so great excitement;
after which, it looked down and then up the stream,
as though it sought a place to cross, that it might
avoid the water; then, as if satisfied with revenge,
and enjoying its victory, stood twisting and curling
its tail like a cat, and then commenced licking itself
dry.
“The animal was now within thirty-five
yards of me; and seeing no prospect of its recrossing
the stream, I took rest for my rifle on a projecting
limb of the tree on which I still sat, and fired directly
at the panther’s heart. The moment I discharged
my rifle, the monster made a spring about six feet
perpendicular, with a tremendous growl, which reverberated
among the rocks; fell in the same spot whence it sprang,
with its legs extended; and lay in this situation,
half crouched, rocking from side to side, as if in
the dizziness of approaching death. I saw plainly
that my fire was fatal; but I had too much experience
to approach this enemy until I could no longer discover
signs of life. I therefore reloaded my rifle,
and with a second shot I pierced immediately behind
the ear. Its head then dropped between its paws,
and all was quiet.
“On examining the panther, no
marks of violence appeared, except where my rifle
balls had passed completely through, within a foot
of each other: but on turning the animal on its
back, I discovered it to be a female, and a mother,
who, by the enlargement of her teats, had evidently
been suckling her young. From this circumstance,
I supposed the bear had made inroads on her lair,
and probably had destroyed her kittens. I was
the more convinced of this from the fact, that I never
knew, from my own experience, nor could I learn from
the oldest hunters of my acquaintance, an instance
wherein a bear and a panther engaged in combat; and
again, no circumstance but the above would be sufficient
to awaken that vindictive perseverance, in the passions
of a panther, which would lead to the annihilation
of so formidable an animal as a bear.”
THE CAT.
This animal, which is chiefly known
in a domestic state, was originally wild, and is still
found in that condition in the forests of Europe and
Asia. It was not a native of the American continent,
but was brought hither by the European settlers.
The quadruped found in our woods, and sometimes called
by the name of wild-cat, is a lynx. In
a domestic state, the savage habits of the cat are
exchanged for a soft, gentle, and confiding character,
which renders her a favorite around every fireside.
Nor is puss to be admired only for these winning qualities,
and her utility as a mouser. She possesses considerable
genius, and the memoirs of her race are scarcely less
remarkable than those of her natural rival, the dog.
Miscellaneous Anecdotes. The
following story is furnished by a correspondent of
the Penny Magazine: “I was once on a visit
to a friend in the country, who had a favorite cat
and dog, who lived together on the best possible terms,
eating from the same plate and sleeping on the same
rug. Puss had a young family, and Pincher was
in the habit of making a daily visit to the kittens,
whose nursery was at the top of the house. One
morning, there was a tremendous storm of thunder and
lightning. Pincher was in the drawing-room, and
puss was attending to her family in the garret.
Pincher seemed annoyed by the vivid flashes of lightning;
and, just as he had crept nearer to my feet, some one
entered the room followed by puss, who walked in with
a disturbed air, and mewing with all her might.
She came to Pincher, rubbed her face against his cheek,
touched him gently with her paw, walked to the door,
stopped, looked back, and mewed, all of
which said, as plainly as words could have done, ‘Come
with me, Pincher;’ but the dog was too much
alarmed himself to give any consolation to her, and
took no notice of the invitation.
“The cat then returned, and
renewed her application, with increased energy; but
the dog was immovable, though it was evident that he
understood her meaning, for he turned away his head
with a half-conscious look, and crept closer to me;
and puss soon left the room. Not long after this,
the mewing became so piteous, that I could no longer
resist going to see what was the matter. I met
the cat at the top of the stairs, close by the door
of my chamber. She ran to me, rubbed herself
against me, and then went into the room, and crept
under the wardrobe. I then heard two voices,
and discovered that she had brought down one of her
kittens, and lodged it there for safety; but her fears
and cares being so divided between the kitten above
and this little one below, I suppose she wanted Pincher
to watch by this one, while she went for the other;
for, having confided it to my protection, she hastened
up stairs. Not, however, wishing to have charge
of the young family, I followed her up, taking the
kitten with me, placed it beside her, and moved the
little bed farther from the window, through which
the lightning flashed so vividly as to alarm poor puss
for the safety of her progeny. I then remained
in the garret till the storm had passed away.
“On the following morning, much
to my surprise, I found puss waiting for me at the
door of my apartment. She accompanied me down
to breakfast, sat by me, and caressed me in every
possible way. She had always been in the habit
of going down to breakfast with the lady of the house;
but on this morning she had resisted all her coaxing
to leave my door, and would not move a step till I
had made my appearance. She had never done this
before, and never did it again. She had shown
her gratitude to me for the care of her little ones,
and her duty was done.”
The editor of the “Edinburgh
Evening Courant” gives us the following
extraordinary story: “A country gentleman
of our acquaintance, who is neither a friend to thieves
nor poachers, has at this moment, in his household,
a favorite cat, whose honesty, he is sorry to say,
there is but too much reason to call in question.
The animal, however, is far from being selfish in
her principles; for her acceptable gleanings she regularly
shares among the children of the family in which her
lot is cast. It is the habit of this grimalkin
to leave the kitchen or parlor, as often as hunger
and an opportunity may occur, and wend her way to a
certain pastrycook’s shop, where, the better
to conceal her purpose, she endeavors slyly to ingratiate
herself into favor with the mistress of the house.
As soon as the shopkeeper’s attention becomes
engrossed in business, or otherwise, puss contrives
to pilfer a small pie or tart from the shelves on
which they are placed, speedily afterwards making
the best of her way home with her booty.
“She then carefully delivers
her prize to some of the little ones in the nursery.
A division of the stolen property quickly takes place;
and here it is singularly amusing to observe the sleekit
animal, not the least conspicuous among the numerous
group, thankfully munching her share of the illegal
traffic. We may add, that the pastrycook is by
no means disposed to institute a legal process against
poor Mrs. Puss, as the children of the gentleman to
whom we allude are honest enough to acknowledge their
fourfooted playmate’s failings to papa, who willingly
compensates any damage the shopkeeper may sustain from
the petty depredations of the would-be philanthropic
cat.”
In the month of July, 1801, a woman
was murdered in Paris. A magistrate, accompanied
by a physician, went to the place where the murder
had been committed, to examine the body. It was
lying upon the floor, and a greyhound, who was standing
by the corpse, licked it from time to time, and howled
mournfully. When the gentlemen entered the apartment,
he ran to them without barking, and then returned,
with a melancholy mien, to the body of his murdered
mistress. Upon a chest in a corner of the room
a cat sat motionless, with eyes, expressive of furious
indignation, steadfastly fixed upon the body.
Many persons now entered the apartment; but neither
the appearance of such a crowd of strangers, nor the
confusion that prevailed in the place, could make
her change her position.
In the mean time, some persons were
apprehended on suspicion of being the murderers, and
it was resolved to lead them into the apartment.
Before the cat got sight of them, when she only heard
their footsteps approaching, her eyes flashed with
increased fury, her hair stood erect, and so soon
as she saw them enter the apartment, she sprang towards
them with expressions of the most violent rage, but
did not venture to attack them, being probably afraid
of the numbers that followed. Having turned several
times towards them with a peculiar ferocity of aspect,
she crept into a corner, with a mien indicative of
the deepest melancholy. This behavior of the cat
astonished every one present. The effect which
it produced upon the murderers was such as almost
amounted to an acknowledgment of their guilt.
Nor did this remain long doubtful, for a train of
accessory circumstances was soon discovered, which
proved it to a complete conviction.
A cat, which had a numerous litter
of kittens, one summer day in spring, encouraged her
little ones to frolic in the vernal beams of the noon,
about the stable door, where she dwelt. While
she was joining them in a thousand tricks and gambols,
a large hawk, who was sailing above the barn-yard,
in a moment darted upon one of the kittens, and would
have as quickly borne it off, but for the courageous
mother, who, seeing the danger of her offspring, sprang
on the common enemy, who, to defend itself, let fall
the prize. The battle presently became severe
to both parties. The hawk, by the power of his
wings, the sharpness of his talons, and the strength
of his beak, had for a while the advantage, cruelly
lacerating the poor cat, and actually deprived her
of one eye in the conflict; but puss, no way daunted
at the accident, strove, with all her cunning and
agility, for her kittens, till she had broken the
wing of her adversary. In this state, she got
him more within the power of her claws, and, availing
herself of this advantage, by an instantaneous exertion
she laid the hawk motionless beneath her feet; and,
as if exulting in the victory, tore the head off the
vanquished tyrant. This accomplished, disregarding
the loss of her eye, she ran to the bleeding kitten,
licked the wounds made by the hawk’s talons
in its tender sides, and purred whilst she caressed
her liberated offspring.
In the summer of 1792, a gentleman
who lived in the neighborhood of Portsmouth, England,
had a cat, which kittened four or five days after
a hen had brought out a brood of chickens. As
he did not wish to keep more than one cat at a time,
the kittens were all drowned, and the same day the
cat and one chicken were missing. Diligent search
was immediately made in every place that could be
thought of, both in and out of the house, to no purpose;
it was then concluded that some mischance had befallen
both. Four days afterwards, however, the servant,
having occasion to go into an unfrequented part of
the cellar, discovered, to his great astonishment,
the cat lying in one corner, with the chicken hugged
close to her body, and one paw laid over it, as if
to preserve it from injury. The cat and adopted
chicken were brought into a closet in the kitchen,
where they continued some days, the cat treating the
chicken in every respect as a kitten. Whenever
the chicken left the cat to eat, she appeared very
uneasy; but, on its return, she received it with the
affection of a mother, pressed it to her body, purred,
and seemed perfectly happy. If the chicken was
carried to the hen, it immediately returned to the
cat. The chicken was by some accident killed,
and the cat would not eat for several days afterwards,
being inconsolable for its loss.
“I had,” says M. Wenzel,
“a cat and dog which became so attached to each
other, that they would never willingly be asunder.
Whenever the dog got any choice morsel of food, he
was sure to divide it with his whiskered friend.
They always ate sociably out of one plate, slept in
the same bed, and daily walked out together. Wishing
to put this apparently sincere friendship to the proof,
I, one day, took the cat by herself into my room,
while I had the dog guarded in another apartment.
I entertained the cat in a most sumptuous manner, being
desirous to see what sort of a meal she would make
without her friend, who had hitherto been her constant
table companion. The cat enjoyed the treat with
great glee, and seemed to have entirely forgotten
the dog. I had had a partridge for dinner, half
of which I intended to keep for supper. My wife
covered it with a plate, and put it into a cupboard,
the door of which she did not lock. The cat left
the room, and I walked out upon business. My
wife, meanwhile, sat at work in an adjoining apartment.
“When I returned home, she related
to me the following circumstances: The cat, having
hastily left the dining-room, went to the dog, and
mewed uncommonly loud, and in different tones of voice,
which the dog, from time to time, answered with a
short bark. They then went both to the door of
the room where the cat had dined, and waited till it
was opened. One of my children opened the door,
and immediately the two friends entered the apartment.
The mewing of the cat excited my wife’s attention.
She rose from her seat, and stepped softly up to the
door, which stood ajar, to observe what was going
on. The cat led the dog to the cupboard which
contained the partridge, pushed off the plate which
covered it, and, taking out my intended supper, laid
it before her canine friend, who devoured it greedily.
Probably the cat, by her mewing, had given the dog
to understand what an excellent meal she had made,
and how sorry she was that he had not participated
in it; but, at the same time, had given him to understand
that something was left for him in the cupboard, and
persuaded him to follow her thither. Since that
time I have paid particular attention to these animals,
and am perfectly convinced that they communicate to
each other whatever seems interesting to either.”
A cat belonging to an elderly lady
in Bath, England, was so attached to her mistress,
that she would pass the night in her bedchamber, which
was four stories high. Outside of the window was
the parapet wall, on which the lady often strewed
crumbs for the sparrows that came to partake of them.
The lady always sleeping with her window open, the
cat would pounce upon the birds, and kill them.
One morning, giving a “longing, lingering look”
at the top of the wall, and seeing it free from crumbs,
she was at a loss for an expedient to decoy the feathered
tribe, when, reconnoitring, she discovered a small
bunch of wheat suspended in the room, which she sprang
at, and succeeded in getting down. She then carried
it to the favorite resort of the sparrows, and actually
threshed the corn out, by beating it on the wall, then
hiding herself. After a while, the birds came,
and she resumed her favorite sport of killing the
dupes of her sagacity.
A cat belonging to a gentleman of
Sheffield, England, carried her notions of beauty
so far, that she would not condescend to nourish and
protect her own offspring, if they happened to be tinted
with colors different from what adorned her own figure,
which was what is usually denominated tortoise-shell.
She happened, on one occasion only, to produce one
kitten, of a jet black. The cruel mother drew
the unfortunate little creature out of the bed in
which it lay, and, refusing to give it suck, it perished
on the cold ground. Some time after, she gave
birth to three more, one of which had the misfortune
not to be clad in the same colors as the mother.
It was therefore ousted by the unnatural parent; and,
although again and again replaced in its bed, it was
as frequently turned out again. The owner of the
cat, finding it useless to persist in what puss had
determined should not be, in humanity consigned the
kitten to a watery grave, the victim of
a parent’s pride and cruelty.
“I once saw,” says De
la Croix, “a lecturer upon experimental philosophy
place a cat under the glass receiver of an air-pump,
for the purpose of demonstrating that very certain
fact, that life cannot be supported without air and
respiration. The lecturer had already made several
strokes with the piston, in order to exhaust the receiver
of its air, when the animal, who began to feel herself
very uncomfortable in the rarefied atmosphere, was
fortunate enough to discover the source from which
her uneasiness proceeded. She placed her paw upon
the hole through which the air escaped, and thus prevented
any more from passing out of the receiver. All
the exertions of the philosopher were now unavailing:
in vain he drew the piston; the cat’s paw effectually
prevented its operation. Hoping to effect his
purpose, he let air again into the receiver, which
as soon as the cat perceived, she withdrew her paw
from the aperture; but whenever he attempted to exhaust
the receiver, she applied her paw as before.
All the spectators clapped their hands in admiration
of the wonderful sagacity of the animal, and the lecturer
found himself under the necessity of liberating her,
and substituting in her place another, that possessed
less penetration, and enabled him to exhibit the cruel
experiment.”
A lady at Potsdam, in Prussia, tells
an anecdote of one of her children, who, when about
six years old, got a splinter of wood into her foot,
early one morning, and, sitting down on the floor of
the chamber, cried most vehemently. Her elder
sister, asleep in the same apartment, was in the act
of getting up to inquire the cause of her sister’s
tears, when she observed the cat, who was a favorite
playmate of the children, and of a gentle and peaceable
disposition, leave her seat under the stove, go up
to the crying girl, and, with one of her paws, give
her so smart a blow upon the cheek as to draw blood;
and with the utmost gravity resume her seat under
the stove, and relapse into slumber. As she was
otherwise so harmless, the conclusion was, that she
intended this as a chastisement for being disturbed,
in hopes that she might enjoy her morning nap without
interruption.
A lady residing in Glasgow had a handsome
cat sent her from Edinburgh. It was conveyed
to her in a close basket, and in a carriage. She
was carefully watched for two months; but having produced
a pair of young ones, at that time she was left to
her own discretion, which she very soon employed in
disappearing with both her kittens. The lady at
Glasgow wrote to her friend in Edinburgh, deploring
her loss, and the cat was supposed to have strayed
away.
About a fortnight, however, after
her disappearance from Glasgow, her well-known mew
was heard at the street door of her old mistress in
Edinburgh, and there she was with both her kittens!
they in the best condition but she very
thin. It is clear that she could only carry one
kitten at a time. The distance from Edinburgh
to Glasgow being forty miles, she must have travelled
one hundred and twenty miles at least! Her prudence
must likewise have suggested the necessity of journeying
in the night, with many other precautions for the safety
of her young.
ORDER IV - AMPHIBIA,
AMPHIBIOUS ANIMALS.
This order embraces several species
of the seal kind, which are found in all seas, but
chiefly in those of the polar regions. Their structure
is admirably adapted to their mode of life; the nostrils
and ears both closing when the animal dives.
Its hind feet alone are used for swimming. Its
movements on land are slow and painful, dragging itself
along like a reptile.
THE SEAL.
Miscellaneous Anecdotes. Mr.
Brown furnishes us with the following account:
About twenty-five years ago, a seal was so completely
domesticated that it remained with a gentleman, whose
residence was but a short distance from the sea, without
attempting to escape. It knew all the inmates
of the family, and would come to its master when he
called it by name. It was usually kept in the
stable, but was sometimes permitted to enter the kitchen,
where it seemed to take great delight in reposing
before the fire. It was taken to the sea every
day, and allowed to fish for itself, in which it was
very dexterous; but when unsuccessful, fish was bought
for it. When tired of swimming, it came up to
the boat, holding up its head to be taken in.
A farmer in Fifeshire, Scotland, while
looking for crabs and lobsters, among the rocks, caught
a young seal about two feet and a half long, and carried
it home. He fed it with pottage and milk, which
it ate with avidity. He kept it for three days,
feeding it on this meal, when, his wife being tired
of it, he took it away, and restored it to its native
element. He was accompanied by some of his neighbors.
On reaching the shore, it was thrown into the sea;
but, instead of making its escape, as one would have
expected, it returned to the men. The tallest
of them waded to a considerable distance into the
sea, and, after throwing it as far as he was able,
speedily got behind a rock, and concealed himself;
but the affectionate animal soon discovered his hiding-place,
and crept close up to his feet. The farmer, moved
by its attachment, took it home again, and kept it
for some time.
Seals are said to be delighted with
music. Mr. Laing, in his account of a voyage
to Spitzbergen, mentions that the son of the master
of the vessel in which he sailed, who was fond of
playing on the violin, never failed to have a numerous
auditory, when in the seas frequented by seals; and
they have been seen to follow a ship for miles when
any person was playing on the deck.
It is a common practice in Cornwall,
England, for persons, when in pursuit of seals, as
soon as the animal has elevated its head above water,
to halloo to it till they can approach within gunshot,
as it will listen to the sound for several minutes.
The bottlenose seal is in general
very inactive, but when irritated, is exceedingly
revengeful. A sailor, who had killed a young one,
was in the act of skinning it, when its mother approached
him unperceived, and, seizing him in her mouth, bit
him so dreadfully that he died of the wound in three
days.
THE WALRUS.
This animal is a native of the polar
regions, and in many of its habits resembles the seal.
It lives in troops, which visit the shore, or extensive
fields of ice, as a sort of home. Its food consists
of a kind of seaweed, which it tears up by means of
its tusks. It is very much hunted for its skin
and its oil.
Anecdote. In the
year 1766, a vessel which had gone to the north seas,
to trade with the Esquimaux, had a boat out with a
party of the crew. A number of walruses attacked
them, and, notwithstanding every effort to keep them
at bay, a small one contrived to get over the stern
of the boat, looked at the men for some time, and then
plunged into the water to rejoin his companions.
Immediately after, another one, of enormous bulk,
made the same attempt to get over the bow, which, had
he succeeded, would have upset the boat; but, after
trying every method in vain to keep him off, the boatswain
discharged the contents of a gun loaded with goose-shot
into the animal’s mouth, which killed him; he
immediately disappeared, and was followed by the whole
herd. Seeing what had happened to their companion,
the enraged animals soon followed the boat; but it
luckily reached the ship, and all hands had got on
board before they came up; otherwise, some serious
mischief would, doubtless, have befallen the boat’s
crew.
ORDER V - MARSUPIALA,
POUCHED ANIMALS.
This order includes animals with a
pouch under the belly, where the young are in some
cases produced and nursed.
THE OPOSSUM.
This curious animal belongs exclusively
to America, and is familiarly known in the milder
parts of the United States. It is about the size
of a cat, but its legs are short, and its body broad
and flat. The females are remarkable for having
an abdominal pouch, to which the young ones retreat
in time of danger. The hunting of this animal
is the favorite sport in some of the Middle States.
Parties go out in the moonlight evenings of autumn,
attended by dogs. These trace the opossum to some
tree, between the branches of which he hides himself
from the view of the hunter. The latter shakes
him down, and the quadruped, rolling himself into
a ball, pretends to be dead. If not immediately
seized, he uncoils himself, and attempts to steal
away. The various artifices it adopts for escape
have given rise to the proverb of “playing ’possum.”
THE KANGAROO.
The following description of this
animal, which is peculiar to New Holland, is taken
from Dawson’s “Present State of Australia:”
“The country on our right consisted
of high and poor, stony hills, thickly timbered; that
on the left, on the opposite side of the river, was
a rich and thinly-timbered country. A low and
fertile flat meadow there skirted the river; and,
at the extremity of the flat, hills gradually arose
with a gentle slope, covered with verdure, upon which
an immense herd of kangaroos were feeding. I crossed
over with Maty Bill and a brace of dogs, leaving the
party to proceed on their route. The moment we
had crossed, the kangaroos moved off. It is extremely
curious to see the manner in which a large herd of
these animals jump before you. It has often been
asserted that they make use of their tails to spring
from you when they are pursued. This is not correct.
Their tails never touch the ground when they move,
except when they are on their feed, or at play; and
the faster they run or jump, the higher they carry
them.
“The male kangaroos were called,
by the natives, old men, ‘wool man;’ and
the females, young ladies, ‘young liddy.’
The males are not so swift as the females; and the
natives, in wet seasons, occasionally run the former
down when very large, their weight causing them to
sink in the wet ground, and thus to become tired.
They frequently, however, make up for this disadvantage
by fierceness and cunning, when attacked either by
men or dogs; and it is exceedingly difficult for a
brace of the best dogs to kill a ‘corbon wool
man.’ When they can, they will hug a dog
or a man as a bear would do; and as they are armed
with long, sharp claws, they not unfrequently let
a dog’s entrails out, or otherwise lacerate
him in the most dreadful manner, sitting all the while
on their haunches, hugging and scratching with determined
fury.
“The kind of dog used for coursing
the kangaroo is, generally, a cross between the greyhound
and the mastiff, or sheep-dog; but, in a climate like
New South Wales, they have, to use the common phrase,
too much lumber about them. The true-bred greyhound
is the most useful dog. He has more wind; he
ascends the hills with more ease, and runs double the
number of courses in a day. He has more bottom
in running; and, if he has less ferocity when he comes
up with an ‘old man,’ so much the better,
as he exposes himself the less, and lives to afford
sport another day. The strongest and most courageous
dog can seldom conquer a ‘wool man’ alone,
and not one in fifty will face him fairly; the dog
who has the temerity is certain to be disabled, if
not killed.
“The herd of kangaroos we had
thus come upon was too numerous to allow of the dogs’
being let loose; but, as the day’s walk was drawing
to a close, I had given Maty Bill liberty to catch
another kangaroo, if we should fall in with a single
one. After moving up to the foot of the hill,
about a quarter of a mile from the river, my sable
companion eyed a ‘corbon wool man,’ as
he called it, quietly feeding at a distance, on the
slope of the hill. His eyes sparkled; he was all
agitation; and he called out, ’Massa, massa!
You tee! you tee! wool man! wool man! corbon wool
man!’ and off he ran with his dogs, till he was
within a fair distance, when he slipped their collars.
I was at this time on foot, and the whole of them,
therefore, were soon out of my sight. They had
turned round the bottom of the hill, in the direction
of the river; and, as I was following them down, I
heard the dogs at bay, and the shrill call of ‘coo-oo-oo,’
from my companion, to direct me to the spot; and,
on turning the corner of the hill, I met him, running,
and calling as fast and as loud as he could.
As soon as he saw me, he stopped, and called out,
’Massa, massa! Make haste! Dingo (dogs)
have got him in ribber. Many corbon wool man,
all the same like it bullock.’
“All this was said in a breath;
and as I could not pretend to run with him, I desired
him to go as fast as he could, and help the dogs, till
I should arrive. When I got up to the spot, he
was in the middle of the river, with about two feet
depth of water, while the kangaroo, sitting upright
on its haunches, was keeping both him and the dogs
at a respectful distance, and had laid bare the windpipe
of one of the dogs. Billy’s waddy was too
short to reach him without coming to close quarters,
and he knew better than to do that; at length he got
behind him, and, with a blow on the head, he despatched
him. No huntsman could have shown more ardor
in the pursuit, or more pleasure at the death of a
fox, than did poor Maty Bill upon this occasion.
The kangaroo was so heavy, weighing about a hundred
and fifty pounds, that he could not lift him out of
the water, and we were obliged to leave him till our
party arrived on the opposite side.”
ORDER VI - RODENTIA,
GNAWING ANIMALS.
This order embraces a considerable
number of small animals, most of which possess a gentle
and harmless character. They live upon vegetable
matter, and a large proportion use their fore-paws
in the manner of hands.
THE SQUIRREL.
Of this lively, pleasing genus, there
is a considerable variety, especially in the temperate
zone. They are very agile, and use their paws
with much grace and dexterity, in handling their food.
Miscellaneous Anecdotes. A
squirrel, seated in a nut-tree, was once observed
to weigh a nut in each paw, to discover by weight which
was good; the light ones he invariably dropped, thus
making a heap of them at the foot of the tree.
On examining this heap, it was found to consist entirely
of bad nuts.
A gentleman near Edinburgh took a
common squirrel from a nest, which he reared, and
rendered extremely docile. It was kept in a box,
nailed against the wall, which was wired in front,
and had a small aperture at the end, to allow the
animal to enter. To the end of the box was suspended
a rope, which touched the ground, by which the animal
descended from and ascended to its domicile at pleasure.
It became extremely playful, and was familiar with
every one of the family, but devotedly attached to
its master, who generally carried it about with him
in his coat-pocket.
The little creature used to watch
all its master’s movements. Whenever it
saw him preparing to go out, it ran up his legs, and
entered his pocket, from whence it would peep out
at passengers, as he walked along the streets never
venturing, however, to go out. But no sooner did
he reach the outskirts of the city, than the squirrel
leaped to the ground, ran along the road, ascended
the tops of trees and hedges with the quickness of
lightning, and nibbled at the leaves and bark; and,
if he walked on, it would descend, scamper after him,
and again enter his pocket. In this manner, it
would amuse itself during a walk of miles, which its
master frequently indulged in.
It was taught to catch food, roots,
and acorns, with its fore-paws, which it accomplished
with great neatness. It was also instructed to
leap over a stick, held out to it, and perform various
other little tricks.
A lady in England had a squirrel which
she taught to crack nuts for her, and hand her the
kernels with his paws. She also instructed him
to count money; and he was so attentive that, whenever
he found a coin on the ground, he took it up and carried
it to her. So attached was this little creature
to its mistress, that, whenever she was confined to
her bed, from indisposition, he lay still in his cage,
without moving, although, at other times, he was full
of life and vivacity.
Some years ago, as a Swede was constructing
a mill dike, late in the autumn, he accidentally came
upon an abode of the ground or striped squirrel.
He traced it to some distance, and found a gallery
on one side, like a branch, diverging from the main
stem, nearly two feet long; at its farther end was
a quantity of fine white oak acorns; he soon after
discovered another gallery, which contained a store
of corn; a third was filled with walnuts; while a
fourth contained three quarts of fine chestnuts; all
of which the provident little animal had stored up
for the winter.
A correspondent of the “Penny
Magazine” gives us the following account:
“Although apparently not adapted to swimming,
yet both gray and black squirrels venture across lakes
that are one or two miles wide. In these adventurous
exploits, they generally take advantage of a favorable
breeze, elevating their tails, which act like sails,
thus rendering their passage quicker and less laborious.
I have frequently noticed black squirrels crossing
Niagara River, and I always remarked that they swam
across when the morning first began to dawn. On
reaching the opposite shore, they appeared greatly
fatigued, and, if unmolested, generally took a long
rest preparatory to their setting off for the woods.”
The black and gray squirrels of the
western country frequently emigrate, in immense numbers,
from one district to another. They may be often
seen swimming across the Ohio; and it is not uncommon
for persons to stand upon the banks, and kill them
as they come to the shore, being then in an exhausted
state.
THE MOUSE.
Of this genus there are many species,
including not only the domestic mouse, but several
other kinds, as well as the various kinds of rats.
The common mouse was not originally a native of this
country, but was introduced from Europe. The
same may be said of the common rat. These animals
are spread over nearly the whole world, seeming always
to be the attendants upon man.
Miscellaneous Anecdotes. “On
a rainy evening,” says Dr. Archer, “as
I was alone in my chamber in the town of Norfolk, I
took up my flute and commenced playing. In a
few moments, my attention was directed to a mouse
that I saw creeping from a hole, and advancing to a
chair in which I was sitting. I ceased playing,
and it ran precipitately back to its hole. I
began again to play, and was much surprised to see
it reappear, and take its old position. It couched
upon the floor, shut its eyes, and appeared in ecstasy,
being differently affected by the music I played,
as it varied from slow and plaintive to lively and
animated.”
A gentleman who was on board a British
man of war, in the year 1817, states that, as he and
some officers were seated by the fire, one of them
began to play a plaintive air on the violin. He
had scarcely performed ten minutes, when a mouse,
apparently frantic, made its appearance in the centre
of the floor. The strange gestures of the little
animal strongly excited the attention of the officers,
who, with one consent, resolved to suffer it to continue
its singular actions unmolested. Its exertions
now appeared to be greater every moment; it shook
its head, leaped about the table, and exhibited signs
of the most ecstatic delight. After performing
actions that an animal so diminutive would at first
sight seem incapable of, the little creature suddenly
ceased to move, fell down, and expired, without evincing
any symptoms of pain.
An officer confined to the Bastille,
at Paris, begged to be allowed to play on his lute,
to soften his confinement by its harmonies. Shortly
afterwards, when playing on the instrument, he was
much astonished to see a number of mice come frisking
out of their holes, and many spiders descending from
their webs, and congregating round him while he continued
the music. Whenever he ceased, they dispersed;
whenever he played again, they reappeared. He
soon had a numerous audience, amounting to about a
hundred mice and spiders.
Mr. Olafsen gives an account of the
remarkable instinct of the Iceland mouse. In
a country where berries are but thinly dispersed, these
little animals are obliged to cross rivers to make
their distant forages. In their return with the
booty to their magazines, they are obliged to repass
the stream. “The party, which consists of
from six to ten, select a flat piece of dried cow-dung,
on which they place the berries on a heap in the middle;
then, by their united force, they bring it to the
water’s edge, and, after launching it, embark
and place themselves round the heap, with their heads
joined over it and their backs to the water, their
tails pendent in the stream, serving the purpose of
rudders.” Remarkable as this story is, the
truth of it is confirmed by many people who have watched
the arrangements of the tiny navigators.
THE DORMOUSE.
Mr. Mangili, an Italian naturalist,
made some curious experiments upon the dormouse.
He kept one in the cupboard in his study. When
the thermometer was 8 deg. above the freezing
point, the little animal curled himself up among a
heap of papers, and went to sleep. It was ascertained
that the animal breathed, and suspended his respiration,
at regular intervals, sometimes every four minutes.
Within ten days from his beginning to sleep, the dormouse
awoke, and ate a little. He then went to sleep
again, and continued through the winter to sleep some
days and then to awaken; but as the weather became
colder, the intervals of perfect repose, when no breathing
could be perceived, were much longer sometimes
more than twenty minutes.
THE RAT.
Miscellaneous Anecdotes. There
was, in the year 1827, in a farm-house in England,
a remarkable instance, not only of docility, but of
usefulness, in a rat. It first devoured the mice
which were caught in traps, and was afterwards seen
to catch others as they ventured from their holes;
till, at length, the whole house was cleared of these
animals. From the services it rendered, the family
kindly protected the rat, and it used to gambol about
the house, and play with the children, without the
least fear. It sometimes disappeared for a week
or ten days at a time, but regularly returned to its
abode.
During a dreadful storm in England,
in 1829, a singular instance occurred of sagacity
in a rat. The River Tyne was much swollen by the
water, and numbers of people had assembled to gaze
on the masses of hay it swept along in its irresistible
course. A swan was at last observed, sometimes
struggling for the land, at other times sailing majestically
along with the torrent. When it drew near, a black
spot was seen on its snowy plumage, and the spectators
were greatly pleased to find that this was a live
rat. It is probable that it had been borne from
its domicile in some hayrick, and, observing the swan,
had made for it as an ark of safety, in the hope of
prolonging its life. When the swan at length
reached the land, the rat leaped from his back, and
scampered away, amid the shouts of the spectators.
A surgeon’s mate on board a
ship, in 1757, relates that, while lying one evening
awake in his berth, he saw a rat come into the room,
and, after surveying the place attentively, retreat
with the utmost caution and silence. It soon
returned, leading by the ear another rat, which it
left at a small distance from the hole by which they
entered. A third rat then joined them. The
two then searched about, and picked up all the small
scraps of biscuit; these they carried to the second
rat, which seemed blind, and remained on the spot
where they had left it, nibbling such fare as was
brought to it by its kind providers, whom the mate
supposed were its offspring.
A steward of a ship infested with
rats used to play some lively airs on a flute after
he had baited his traps and placed them near the rat-holes.
The music attracted the rats, who entered the traps
unconscious of that danger which, without that allurement,
they would have instinctively avoided. In this
manner the steward caught fifteen or twenty rats in
three hours.
THE BEAVER.
There is but one species of this animal,
which is found in the temperate regions of both continents.
It spends a great part of its time in the water, where
it constructs dams and builds huts of the branches
of trees. It gnaws these asunder with wonderful
dexterity, frequently cutting off a branch, the size
of a walking-stick, with one effort. They live
in families composed of from two to ten.
A tame Beaver. Major
Roderfort, of New York, had a tame beaver, which he
kept in his house upwards of half a year, and allowed
to run about like a dog. The cat belonging to
the house had kittens, and she took possession of
the beaver’s bed, which he did not attempt to
prevent. When the cat went out, the beaver would
take one of the kittens between his paws, and hold
it close to his breast to warm it, and treated it
with much affection. Whenever the cat returned,
he restored her the kitten.
Affection of the Beaver. Two
young beavers were taken alive some years ago, and
carried to a factory near Hudson’s Bay, where
they grew very fast. One of them being accidentally
killed, the survivor began to moan, abstained from
food, and finally died in grief for the loss of its
companion.
A tame Beaver in the Zoological
Gardens of London. “This animal
arrived in England, in the winter of 1825, very young,
being small and woolly, and without the covering of
long hair which marks the adult beaver. It was
the sole survivor of five or six, which were shipped
at the same time, and was in a very pitiable condition.
Good treatment soon made it familiar. When called
by its name, ‘Binny,’ it generally answered
with a little cry, and came to its owner. The
hearth-rug was its favorite haunt, upon which it would
lie stretched out, sometimes on its back, and sometimes
flat on its belly, but always near its master.
The building instinct showed itself immediately after
it was let out of its cage, and materials were placed
in its way, and this before it had been
a week in its new quarters. Its strength, even
before it was half grown, was great. It would
drag along a large sweeping-brush, or a warming-pan,
grasping the handle with its teeth, so that the load
came over its shoulder; it then advanced in an oblique
direction, till it arrived at the point where it wished
to place it. The long and large materials were
always taken first; two of the longest were generally
laid crosswise, with one of the ends of each touching
the wall, and the other ends projecting out into the
room. The area formed by the crossed brushes
and the wall, he would fill up with hand-brushes, rush-baskets,
books, boots, sticks, cloths, dried turf, or any thing
portable. As the work grew high, he supported
himself on his tail, which propped him up admirably;
and he would often, after laying on one of his building
materials, sit up over against it, apparently to consider
his work, or, as the country people say, ‘judge
it.’ This pause was sometimes followed
by changing the position of the material ‘judged,’
and sometimes it was left in its place.
“After he had piled up his materials
in one part of the room, for he generally
chose the same place, he proceeded to wall
up the space between the feet of a chest of drawers,
which stood at a little distance from it, high enough
on its legs to make the bottom a roof for him, using
for this purpose dried turf and sticks, which he laid
very even, and filling up the interstices with bits
of coal, hay, cloth, or any thing he could pick up.
This last place he seemed to appropriate for his dwelling;
the former work seemed to be intended for a dam.
When he had walled up the space between the feet of
the chest of drawers, he proceeded to carry in sticks,
clothes, hay, cotton, and to make a nest; and, when
he had done, he would sit up under the drawers, and
comb himself with the nails of his hind-feet.
In this operation, that which appeared at first to
be a malformation was shown to be a beautiful adaptation
to the necessities of the animal. The huge webbed
hind-feet often turn in, so as to give the appearance
of deformities; but, if the toes were straight, instead
of being incurved, the animal could not use them for
the purpose of keeping its fur in order, and cleansing
it from dirt and moisture. Binny generally carried
small and light articles between his right fore-leg
and his chin, walking on the other three legs; and
large masses, which he could not grasp readily with
his teeth, he pushed forwards, leaning against them
with his right fore-paw and his chin. He never
carried any thing on his tail, which he liked to dip
in water, but he was not fond of plunging in his whole
body. If his tail was kept moist, he never cared
to drink; but if it was kept dry, it became hot, and
the animal appeared distressed, and would drink a
great deal. It is not impossible that the tail
may have the power of absorbing water, like the skin
of frogs; though it must be owned that the scaly integument
which invests that member has not much of the character
which generally belongs to absorbing surfaces.
Bread, and bread and milk, and sugar, formed the principal
part of Binny’s food; but he was very fond of
succulent fruits and roots. He was a most entertaining
creature; and some highly comic scenes occurred between
the worthy, but slow, beaver, and a light and airy
macauco, that was kept in the same apartment.”
THE PORCUPINE.
Of this animal there are several species.
The common porcupine of Europe is about two feet long,
and covered with long spines or quills. In defending
itself, it lies on one side, and rolls over upon its
enemy. The quills of the American porcupine are
used by the Indians in ornamenting their dress.
Curious Playmates. We
are told that Sir Ashton Lever had a tame porcupine,
a domesticated hunting leopard, and a Newfoundland
dog, which he used frequently to turn out together,
to play in a green behind his house. No sooner
were the dog and leopard let loose, than they began
to chase the porcupine, who uniformly, at the outset,
tried to escape by flight, but when he found there
was no chance of doing so, he would thrust his head
into some corner, and make a snorting noise, and erect
his spines. His pursuers, if too ardent, pricked
their noses, which made them angry; and in the quarrel
which usually ensued, the porcupine effected his escape.
Le Vaillant says that a wound from
a porcupine’s quill is difficult to cure, from
some poisonous quality it possesses; he mentions that
a Hottentot, who was pricked in the leg by one of
these, was ill for upwards of six months afterwards;
and that a gentleman at the Cape kept his bed for
about four months, and nearly lost his limb, in consequence
of a wound inflicted by one of these animals.
THE HARE.
Of this slender, graceful creature,
there are several species. The animal which passes
by the name of rabbit, in America, and is common in
our woods, is a hare. The pursuit of this animal
is a favorite sport in England, and some other countries
of Europe.
Miscellaneous Anecdotes. In
the “Annals of Sporting,” for 1822, we
find the following interesting account of a hare:
“Two years ago, a doe hare produced two young
ones in a field adjoining my cottage; and the three
were occasionally seen, during the summer, near the
same spot; but the leverets were, I have reason to
believe, killed at the latter end of September of
the same year. The old doe hare was also coursed,
and, making directly for my cottage, entered the garden,
and there blinked the dogs. I repeatedly afterwards
saw her sitting, sometimes in the garden, which is
one hundred and ten yards by forty-three, but more
frequently in the garden-hedge. She was repeatedly
seen by greyhounds when she sat at some distance,
but uniformly made for the garden, and never failed
to find security. About the end of the following
January, puss was no longer to be seen around the
garden, as she had probably retired to some distance
with a male companion. One day, in February, I
heard the hounds, and shortly afterwards observed a
hare making towards the garden, which it entered at
a place well known, and left not the least doubt on
my mind, that it was my old acquaintance, which, in
my family, was distinguished by the name of Kitty.
The harriers shortly afterwards came in sight, followed
Kitty, and drove her from the garden.
“I became alarmed for the safety
of my poor hare, and heartily wished the dogs might
come to an irrecoverable fault. The hare burst
away with the fleetness of the wind, and was followed,
breast high, by her fierce and eager pursuers.
In about twenty minutes I observed Kitty return towards
the garden, apparently much exhausted, and very dirty.
She took shelter beneath a small heap of sticks, which
lay at no great distance from the kitchen door.
No time was to be lost, as, by the cry of the hounds,
I was persuaded they were nearly in sight. I took
a fishing-net, and, with the assistance of the servant,
covered poor Kitty, caught her, and conveyed the little,
panting, trembling creature into the house. The
harriers were soon at the spot, but no hare was to
be found. I am not aware that I ever felt greater
pleasure than in thus saving poor Kitty from her merciless
pursuers. Towards evening I gave her her liberty;
I turned her out in the garden, and saw her not again
for some time.
“In the course of the following
summer, however, I saw a hare several times which
I took to be my old friend; and, in the latter end
of October, Kitty was again observed in the garden.
Henceforward, she was occasionally seen as on the
preceding winter. One morning, in January, when
I was absent, a gun was fired near my cottage.
Kitty was heard to scream, but, nevertheless, entered
the garden vigorously. The matter was related
to me on my return home; and I was willing to hope
that Kitty would survive. However, I had some
doubt on the subject; and, the next morning, as soon
as light permitted, I explored the garden, and found
that my poor, unfortunate favorite had expired.
She was stretched beneath a large gooseberry tree;
and I could not help regretting very much her death.”
Borlase informs us that he had a hare
so completely tamed as to feed from the hand.
It always lay under a chair in the ordinary sitting-room,
and was as much domesticated as a cat. It was
permitted to take exercise and food in the garden,
but always returned to the house to repose. Its
usual companions were a greyhound and a spaniel, with
whom it spent its evenings. The whole three seemed
much attached, and frequently sported together, and
at night they were to be seen stretched together on
the hearth. What is remarkable, both the greyhound
and spaniel were often employed in sporting, and used
secretly to go in pursuit of hares by themselves; yet
they never offered the least violence to their timid
friend at home.
Dr. Townson, the traveller, when at
Göttingen, brought a young hare into such a state
of domestication, that it would run and jump about
his sofa and bed. It leaped on his knee, patted
him with its fore feet; and frequently, while he was
reading, it would knock the book out of his hands,
as if to claim, like a fondled child, the preference
of his attention.
One Sunday evening, five choristers
were walking on the banks of the River Mersey, in
England. Being somewhat tired, they sat down,
and began to sing an anthem. The field where
they sat had a wood at its termination. While
they were singing, a hare issued from this wood, came
with rapidity towards the place where they were sitting,
and made a dead stand in the open field. She
seemed to enjoy the harmony of the music, and turned
her head frequently, as if listening. When they
stopped, she turned slowly towards the wood. When
she had nearly reached the end of the field, they
again commenced an anthem, at which the hare turned
round, and ran swiftly back, to within the same distance
as before, where she listened with apparent rapture
till they had finished. She then bent her way
towards the forest with a slow pace, and disappeared.
A hare, being hard run by a pack of
harriers in the west of England, and being nearly
exhausted, happened to come upon another hare in her
form. She instantly drew out the latter, and slipped
in herself; the pack followed the newly-started hare,
and the huntsmen, coming up, found the animal they
had been chasing, lying down in the form, panting
very hard, and covered with mud.
A gentleman, actuated by curiosity,
put one male and two female hares in a large garden,
walled entirely round, where they had plenty to eat.
Judge his surprise, when he opened the gate of the
garden in a year from the time that he had shut in
the animals, to find that his family had increased
to the number of forty-seven!
A hare was once seen to start from
its form at the sound of the hunting horn, run towards
a pool of water at a considerable distance, plunge
in, and run to some rushes in the middle, where it
lay down, and concealed itself. By this ingenious
trick, the animal balked its pursuers, and effected
its escape.
ORDER VII - EDENTATA,
ANIMALS WITHOUT FRONT TEETH.
The animals in this order are not
numerous, but they are marked with very peculiar characteristics.
The chief species are the sloths, armadilloes, ant-eaters,
and pangolins, of South America, and the platypus
of Australia. Most of these are too little known
to have furnished us with characteristic anecdotes.
THE SLOTH.
This singular animal is destined by
nature to live upon the trees. He is rare and
solitary; and, as he is good for food, he is much sought
after by the Indians and negroes. He is ill at
ease on the ground, having no soles to his feet, which
are so formed as to enable him to cling to the branches
of trees, from which he suspends himself.
Mr. Waterton kept one of these animals
in his room for several months. “I often
took him out of the house,” says he, “and
placed him on the ground, in order to get a good opportunity
of observing his motions. If the ground was rough,
he would pull himself forward, by means of his fore
legs, at a pretty good pace; but he invariably shaped
his course towards the nearest tree. But if I
put him upon a smooth and well-trodden part of the
road, he appeared to be in trouble and distress:
his favorite abode was on the back of a chair; and
after getting all his legs in a line upon the topmost
part of it, he would hang there for hours together,
and often, with a low and inward cry, would seem to
invite me to take notice of him.”
The same author thus describes an
adventure with a sloth: “One day, as we
were crossing the Essequibo, I saw a large two-toed
sloth on the ground upon the bank. How he got
there was a mystery. The Indian who was with
me said that he never surprised a sloth in such a situation
before. He could hardly have come there to drink;
for, both above and below, the branches of the trees
touched the water, and afforded him a safe and easy
access to it. Be this as it may, he could not
make his way through the sand time enough to escape
before we landed. As soon as we got up to him,
he threw himself upon his back, and defended himself
in gallant style with his fore legs. ‘Come,
poor fellow,’ said I to him, ’if thou
hast had a hobble to-day, thou shalt not suffer for
it; I’ll take no advantage of thee in misfortune.
The forest is large enough for thee and me to rove
in; go thy ways up above, and enjoy thyself in these
endless wilds. It is more than probable thou wilt
never again have an interview with man. So, fare
thee well!’
“Saying this, I took up a long
stick which was lying there, held it for him to hook
on, and then conveyed him to a high and stately tree.
He ascended with wonderful rapidity, and in about
a minute he was at the top. He now went off in
a side direction, and caught hold of the branch of
a neighboring tree. He then proceeded towards
the heart of the forest. I stood looking on,
lost in amazement at his singular mode of progression,
and followed him with my eyes till I lost sight of
him.”
THE PLATYPUS.
Among the strange and interesting
productions of Australia, no one is more wonderful
than the ornithorynchus, platypus, or water-mole.
It is aquatic in its habits, frequenting quiet streams,
where it excavates burrows to a great depth.
It is about eighteen inches long, and is covered with
fur. It is web-footed, at the same time that its
feet are well fitted for burrowing in the earth.
Its head terminates in a broad bill, like that of
a duck.
Mr. G. Bennett procured several specimens
of this curious creature, but did not succeed in taking
them to England. One of them was caught at the
mouth of its burrow, and taken by Mr. B. to Lansdowne
Park. “Here,” says he, “I availed
myself of the vicinity of some ponds, to give my platypus
a little recreation. On opening the box where
I kept it, it was lying in a corner, contracted into
a very small compass, and fast asleep. I tied
a very long cord to its hind leg, and roused it; in
return for which, I received numerous growls.
When placed on the bank, it soon found its way into
the water, and travelled up the stream, apparently
delighting in those places which most abounded in aquatic
weeds. Although it would dive in deep water, yet
it always preferred keeping close to the bank, occasionally
thrusting its beak into the mud, and at the roots
of the various weeds on the margin of the pond, as
if in search of insects.
“After it had wandered some
time, it crawled up the bank, and enjoyed the luxury
of scratching itself, and rolling about. In the
process of cleaning itself, the hind claws were alone
brought into use for the operation first
the claws of one hind leg, then the claws of the other.
The animal remained for more than an hour cleaning
itself, after which, it had a more sleek and glossy
appearance than before. It never became familiar,
and always manifested the greatest reluctance to be
placed in the box. One night it escaped, and I
was never able to find it again.”
ORDER VIII - PACHYDERMATA,
THICK-SKINNED ANIMALS.
THE ELEPHANT.
This is the largest quadruped at present
extant on the earth. It is nine feet high, and
in some cases has risen to the height of fifteen feet.
Its weight varies from four to nine thousand pounds.
Nor is it more distinguished for its size than its
sagacity. When tamed, it becomes the most gentle,
obedient, and affectionate of domestic animals, capable
of being trained to any service which may be required
of it.
There are two species of elephant the
Asiatic and the African. The former is the largest
and best known. In the mighty forests which they
inhabit, they hold undisputed sway; their immense size,
strength, and swiftness, enabling them to dislodge
all intruders from their abodes. Even the lion
and tiger fear their united attacks, and avoid being
in their vicinity. They are excellent swimmers,
and are capable of crossing the largest rivers.
This power seems essential, for the quantity of food
they consume renders it necessary for them to remove
often from one region to another.
Miscellaneous Anecdotes. Bishop
Heber, in his approach to Dacca, saw a number of elephants
bathing, which he thus describes: “At a
distance of about half a mile from those desolate palaces
a sound struck my ear, as if from the water itself
on which we were riding the most solemn
and singular I can conceive. It was long, loud,
deep, and tremulous something like the
blowing of a whale, or, perhaps, more like those roaring
buoys which are placed at the mouths of some English
harbors, in which the winds make a noise to warn ships
off them. ‘O,’ said Abdallah, ’there
are elephants bathing; Dacca much place for elephant.’
I looked immediately, and saw about twenty of these
fine animals, with their heads and trunks just appearing
above the water. Their bellowing it was which
I had heard, and which the water conveyed to us with
a finer effect than if we had been on shore.”
The manner of hunting and taming the
wild elephant, in Asia, is curious. In the middle
of a forest, where these animals are known to abound,
a large piece of ground is marked out, and surrounded
with strong stakes driven into the earth, interwoven
with branches of trees. One end of this enclosure
is narrow, and it gradually widens till it takes in
a great extent of country. Several thousand men
are employed to surround the herd of elephants, and
to prevent their escape. They kindle large fires
at certain distances; and, by hallooing, beating drums,
and playing discordant instruments, so bewilder the
poor animals, that they allow themselves to be insensibly
driven, by some thousands more Indians, into the narrow
part of the enclosure, into which they are decoyed
by tame female elephants, trained to this service.
At the extreme end of the large area is a small enclosure,
very strongly fenced in, and guarded on all sides,
into which the elephants pass by a long, narrow defile.
As soon as one enters this strait, a strong bar is
thrown across the passage from behind.
He now finds himself separated from
his neighbors, and goaded on all sides by huntsmen,
who are placed along this passage, till he reaches
the smaller area, where two tame female elephants are
stationed, who immediately commence disciplining him
with their trunks, till he is reduced to obedience,
and suffers himself to be conducted to a tree, to
which he is bound by the leg, with stout thongs of
untanned elk or buckskin. The tame elephants
are again conducted to the enclosure, where the same
operation is performed on the others, till all are
subdued. They are kept bound to trees for several
days, and a certain number of attendants left with
each animal to supply him with food, by little and
little, till he is brought by degrees to be sensible
of kindness and caresses, and thus allows himself
to be conducted to the stable.
So docile and susceptible of domestication
is the elephant, that, in a general way, fourteen
days are sufficient to reduce the animals to perfect
obedience. During this time, they are fed daily
with cocoa-nut leaves, of which they are excessively
fond, and are conducted to the water by the tame females.
In a short time, they become accustomed to the voice
of their keeper, and at last quietly resign their freedom,
and great energies, to the dominion of man.
The mode employed by the Africans,
to take elephants alive, is by pits. Pliny, whose
accounts were in general correct, mentions that, when
one of the herd happened to fall into this snare,
his companions would throw branches of trees and masses
of earth into the pit, with the intention of raising
the bottom, so that the animal might effect his escape.
Although this appears to be a species of reasoning
hardly to be expected from an animal, yet it has in
a great measure been confirmed by Mr. Pringle, who
says, “In the year 1821, during one
of my excursions in the interior of the Cape Colony,
I happened to spend a few days at the Moravian missionary
settlement of Enon, or White River. This place
is situated in a wild but beautiful valley, near the
foot of the Zuurberg Mountains, in the district of
Uiterhage, and is surrounded on every side by extensive
forests of evergreens, in which numerous herds of
elephants still find food and shelter.
“From having been frequently
hunted by the Boors and Hottentots, these animals
are become so shy as scarcely ever to be seen during
the day, except amongst the most remote and inaccessible
ravines and jungles; but in the night time they frequently
issue forth in large troops, and range, in search
of food, through the inhabited farms in the White
River valley; and on such occasions they sometimes
revenge the wrongs of their race upon the settlers
who have taken possession of their ancient haunts,
by pulling up fruit-trees, treading down gardens and
cornfields, breaking their ploughs, wagons, and so
forth. I do not mean, however, to affirm, that
the elephants really do all this mischief from feelings
of revenge, or with the direct intention of annoying
their human persecutors. They pull up the trees,
probably, because they want to browse on their soft
roots; and they demolish the agricultural implements
merely because they happen to be in their way.
“But what I am now about to
state assuredly indicates no ordinary intelligence.
A few days before my arrival at Enon, a troop of elephants
came down, one dark and rainy night, close to the outskirts
of the village. The missionaries heard them bellowing,
and making an extraordinary noise, for a long time,
at the upper end of the orchard; but, knowing well
how dangerous it is to encounter these powerful animals
in the night, they kept close within their houses till
daylight. Next morning, on their examining the
spot where they had heard the elephants, they discovered
the cause of all this nocturnal uproar. There
was at this spot a ditch or trench, about four or five
feet in width, and nearly fourteen feet in depth, which
the industrious missionaries had recently cut through
the banks of the river, on purpose to lead out water
to irrigate some part of their garden, and to drive
a corn-mill. Into this trench, which was still
unfinished, and without water, one of the elephants
had evidently fallen, for the marks of his feet were
distinctly visible at the bottom, as well as the impress
of his huge body on the sides.
“How he had got into it, was
not easy to conjecture; but how, being once in, he
ever contrived to get out again, was the marvel.
By his own unaided efforts it was obviously impossible
for such an animal to have extricated himself.
Could his comrades, then, have assisted him? There
can be no question that they had, though by what means,
unless by hauling him out with their trunks, it would
not be easy to conjecture; and, in corroboration of
this supposition, on examining the spot myself, I
found the edges of this trench deeply indented with
numerous vestiges, as if the other elephants had stationed
themselves on either side, some of them
kneeling, and others on their feet, and
had thus, by united efforts, and probably after many
failures, hoisted their unlucky brother out of the
pit.”
We are told that the Emperor Domitian
had a troop of elephants disciplined to dance to the
sound of music; and that one of them, which had been
beaten for not having his lesson perfect, was observed,
on the following night, to be practising by himself
in a meadow.
The elephant recently exhibited in
New York was fed by a young girl with cakes and apples.
While in the act of pulling an apple from her bag,
she drew out her ivory card-case, which fell, unobserved,
in the sawdust of the ring. At the close of the
performances, the crowd opened to let the elephant
pass out; but, instead of proceeding as usual, he
turned aside, and thrust his trunk in the midst of
a group of ladies and gentlemen, who, as might be
supposed, were very much alarmed. The keeper
at this moment discovered that the animal had something
in his trunk: upon examination, it was found
to be the young lady’s card-case, which the
elephant had picked up, and was now seeking out the
fair owner.
A female elephant, belonging to a
gentleman at Calcutta, being ordered from the upper
country to Chittagong, broke loose from her keeper,
and was lost in the woods. The excuses which
the man made were not admitted. It was supposed
that he had sold the elephant. His wife and family
were, therefore, sold as slaves, and he was himself
condemned to work upon the roads. About twelve
years after, this man was ordered into the country
to assist in catching wild elephants. In a group
that he saw before him, the keeper thought that he
recognized his long-lost elephant. He was determined
to go up to it; nor could the strongest representations
of the danger dissuade him from his purpose.
When he approached the creature, she
knew him and, giving him three salutes by waving her
trunk in the air, knelt down and received him on her
back. She afterwards assisted in securing the
other elephants, and likewise brought with her three
young ones, which she had produced during her absence.
The keeper recovered his character; and, as a recompense
for his sufferings and intrepidity, an annuity was
settled on him for life. This elephant was afterwards
in the possession of Warren Hastings.
Of the attachment of elephants to
their keepers, or to those who have done them a kindness,
many instances are on record. AElian relates that
a man of rank in India, having very carefully trained
up a female elephant, used daily to ride upon her.
She was exceedingly sagacious, and much attached to
her master. The prince, having heard of the extraordinary
gentleness and capacity of this animal, demanded her
of her owner. But so attached was this person
to his elephant, that he resolved to keep her at all
hazards, and fled with her to the mountains.
The prince, having heard of his retreat, ordered a
party of soldiers to pursue, and bring back the fugitive
with his elephant. They overtook him at the top
of a steep hill, where he defended himself by throwing
stones down upon his pursuers, in which he was assisted
by his faithful elephant, who threw stones with great
dexterity. At length, however, the soldiers gained
the summit of the hill, and were about to seize the
fugitive, when the elephant rushed amongst them with
the utmost fury, trampled some to death, dashed others
to the ground with her trunk, and put the rest to
flight. She then placed her master, who was wounded
in the contest upon her back, and conveyed him to a
place of security.
When Pyrrhus, king of Epirus, attacked
the territory of Argos, one of his soldiers, who was
mounted upon an elephant, received a dangerous wound,
and fell to the ground. When the elephant discovered
that he had lost his master in the tumult, he furiously
rushed among the crowd, dispersing them in every direction,
till he had found him. He then raised him from
the ground with his trunk, and, placing him across
his tusks, carried him back to the town.
Some years ago, an elephant at Dekan,
from a motive of revenge, killed its conductor.
The wife of the unfortunate man was witness to the
dreadful scene; and, in the frenzy of her mental agony,
took her two children, and threw them at the feet
of the elephant, saying, “As you have slain
my husband, take my life, also, as well as that of
my children!” The elephant became calm, seemed
to relent, and, as if stung with remorse, took up
the eldest boy with its trunk, placed him on its neck,
adopted him for its cornac, and never afterwards
allowed another to occupy that seat.
A soldier, in India, was in the habit
of giving to an elephant, whenever he received his
pay, a certain quantity of arrack. Once, being
intoxicated, this soldier committed some excesses,
and was ordered to be sent to the guard-house; but
he fled from the soldiers who were sent to apprehend
him, and took refuge under the body of his favorite
elephant, where he laid himself down quietly, and fell
asleep. In vain the guard attempted to seize
upon him, and draw him from his place of refuge; for
the grateful elephant defended him with his trunk,
and they were obliged to abandon their attempt to
secure him. When the soldier awoke next morning
from his drunken slumber, he was very much alarmed
at finding himself under the belly of such an enormous
animal; but the elephant caressed him with his trunk,
so as to quiet his apprehensions, and he got up and
departed in safety.
The author of the “Twelve Years’
Military Adventures” says, “I
have seen the wife of a mohout give a baby
in charge to an elephant, while she was on some business,
and have been highly amused in observing the sagacity
and care of the unwieldy nurse. The child, which,
like most children, did not like to lie still in one
position, would, as soon as left to itself, begin
crawling about, in which exercise it would probably
get among the legs of the animal, or entangle itself
in the branches of the trees on which he was feeding,
when the elephant would, in the most tender manner,
disengage his charge, either by lifting it out of
the way with his trunk, or by removing the impediments
to his free progress. If the child had crawled
to such a distance as to verge upon the limits of
his range, for the animal was chained by
the leg to a peg driven into the ground, he
would stretch out his trunk, and lift it back, as
gently as possible, to the spot whence it had started.”
The elephant is not less disposed
to resent an injury than to reward a benefit.
It has been frequently observed, by those who have
had the charge of these animals, that they seem sensible
of being ridiculed, and seldom miss an opportunity
of revenging themselves for the insults they receive
in this way. An artist in Paris wished to draw
the elephant in the menagerie at the Jardin des
Plantes in an extraordinary attitude, which was
with his trunk elevated in the air, and his mouth
open. An attendant on the artist, to make the
elephant preserve the attitude, threw fruits into
his mouth, and often pretended to throw them, without
doing so. The animal became irritated, and, seeming
to think that the painter was the cause of his annoyance,
turned to him, and dashed a quantity of water from
his trunk over the paper on which the painter was
sketching the portrait.
An amusing anecdote is related, by
Captain Williamson, of an elephant, which went by
the name of the paugal, or fool, who, by his
sagacity, showed he could act with wisdom. This
animal, when on a march, refused to carry on his back
a larger load than was agreeable to him, and pulled
down as much of the burden as reduced it to the weight
which he conceived proper for him to bear. One
day, the quarter-master of brigade became enraged
at this obstinacy in the animal, and threw a tent-pin
at his head. A few days afterwards, as the creature
was on his way from camp to water, he overtook the
quarter-master, and, seizing him in his trunk, lifted
him into a large tamarind-tree, which overhung the
road, and left him to cling to the branches, and to
get down the best way he could.
We shall conclude our anecdotes of
the elephant with one which shows it in a most amiable
light. The Rajah Dowlah chose once to take the
diversion of hunting in the neighborhood of Lucknow,
where there was a great abundance of game. The
grand vizier rode his favorite elephant, and was accompanied
by a train of Indian nobility. They had to pass
through a ravine leading to a meadow, in which several
sick persons were lying on the ground, in order to
receive what benefit they could from exposure to the
air and the rays of the sun. As the vizier approached
with his numerous hunting party, the attendants of
these sick persons betook themselves to flight, leaving
the helpless patients to their fate. The nabob
seriously intended to pass with his elephants over
the bodies of these poor wretches. He therefore
ordered the driver to goad on his beast. The
elephant, as long as he had a free path, went on at
full trot; but, as soon as he came to the first of
the sick people, he stopped. The driver goaded
him, and the vizier cursed; but in vain. “Stick
the beast in the ear!” cried the nabob.
It was done; but the animal remained steadfast before
the helpless human creatures. At length, when
the elephant saw that no one came to remove the patients,
he took up one of them with his trunk, and laid him
cautiously and gently to a side. He proceeded
in the same way with a second and a third; and, in
short, with as many as it was necessary to remove,
in order to form a free passage, through which the
nabob’s retinue could pass without injuring
any of them. How little did this noble animal
deserve to be rode by such an unfeeling brute in human
form!
THE HIPPOPOTAMUS.
This is among the largest of quadrupeds,
being sometimes twelve feet long, and six feet high.
Its body is very massive, its legs short, and its
head large. The skin is extremely thick.
It lives on the muddy banks of rivers in Africa, diving
on the approach of danger. It eats grass, and
generally feeds at night. It swims well, and walks
on the bottom with ease. The negroes of Africa
hunt this animal for his flesh, and when one of them
is captured, it is the signal for a general feast.
Effect of Music. The
enterprising and lamented traveller Clapperton informs
us that, when he was departing on a warlike expedition
from Lake Muggaby, he had convincing proofs that the
hippopotami are sensibly affected by musical sounds.
“As the expedition passed along the banks of
the lake at sunrise,” says he, “these uncouth
and stupendous animals followed the drums the whole
length of the water, sometimes approaching so close
to the shore, that the spray they spouted from their
mouths reached the persons who were passing along
the banks. I counted fifteen, at one time, sporting
on the surface of the water.”
Hunting the Hippopotamus. Dr.
Edward Russell gives us the following account of a
hunt of the hippopotamus in Dongola: “One
of the animals that we killed was of an enormous size.
We fought with him for four good hours by night, and
were very near losing our large boat, and probably
our lives too, owing to the fury of the animal.
As soon as he spied the huntsmen in the small canoe,
he dashed at them with all his might, dragged the
canoe with him under water, and smashed it to pieces.
The two huntsmen escaped with difficulty. Of twenty-five
musket-balls aimed at the head, only one pierced the
skin, and the bones of the nose; at each snorting,
the animal spouted out large streams of blood on the
boat. The rest of the balls stuck in the thick
hide.
“At last, we availed ourselves
of a swivel; but it was not till we had discharged
five balls from it, at the distance of a few feet,
that the colossus gave up the ghost. The darkness
of the night increased the danger of the contest;
for this gigantic animal tossed our boat about in
the stream at his pleasure; and it was at a fortunate
moment indeed for us that he gave up the struggle,
as he had carried us into a complete labyrinth of
rocks, which, in the midst of the confusion, none
of our crew had observed.”
THE RHINOCEROS.
In common with the lion and elephant,
the rhinoceros frequents the vast deserts of Asia
and Africa. Its appearance is chiefly remarkable,
from possessing one solid conical horn on the nose,
sometimes three feet in length, and from having the
skin disposed about the neck in large plaits or folds.
The body of this animal is little inferior in size
to the elephant, but he is much shorter in the legs;
his length, from the muzzle to the tail, is nearly
twelve feet, and the girth about the same measurement:
from the shortness of his legs, the belly nearly touches
the ground.
The rhinoceros can run with great
swiftness; and, from his strength, and hard, impenetrable
hide, he is capable of rushing through the thickets
with resistless fury, almost every obstacle being quickly
overturned in his track. There is a two-horned
species in Africa, but little is known of it.
In India, the hunting of the rhinoceros
is famous sport. The people go out mounted on
elephants, and usually find five or six of these animals
in a drove. Their hides are so thick that it is
difficult to kill them. One will often receive
twenty bullets before he falls. The rhinoceros
attacks an elephant fearlessly, and endeavors to get
his horn under him, so as to rip him open. But
the elephant, finding what he would be at, turns his
rear to the assailant, who gives him a hunch behind,
and tumbles his huge enemy upon his knees. Then
the men upon the elephants fire their guns, and pepper
the thick hide of the rhinoceros with their bullets.
Anecdotes. In the
year 1790, a rhinoceros arrived in England, about
five years old, and was purchased by Mr. Pidcock, of
Exeter ’Change, for seven hundred pounds.
He was very mild, and allowed himself to be patted
on the back by strangers. He was quite obedient
to the orders of his keepers, and would move through
the apartment to exhibit himself. His daily allowance
of food was twenty-eight pounds’ weight of clover,
besides an equal provision of ship bread, and a great
quantity of greens; he drank five pails of water every
twenty-four hours. He liked sweet wines, and
was sometimes indulged with a few bottles. His
voice resembled that of a calf, which he usually exerted
at the sight of fruit, or any favorite food.
This animal suffered much from a dislocation of the
joint of one of his fore-legs, which induced inflammation,
and he died nine months afterwards.
The following particulars of a rhinoceros,
exhibited at Exeter ’Change, were obtained,
by the late Sir Everard Home, from the person who kept
him for three years. “It was so savage,”
says he, “that, about a month after it came,
it endeavored to kill the keeper, and nearly succeeded.
It ran at him with the greatest impetuosity; but, fortunately,
the horn passed between his thighs, and threw the
keeper on its head; the horn came against a wooden
partition, into which the animal forced it to such
a depth as to be unable for a minute to withdraw it;
and, during this interval, the man escaped. Its
skin, though apparently so hard, is only covered with
small scales, of the thickness of paper, with the
appearance of tortoise-shell; at the edges of these,
the skin itself is exceedingly sensible, either to
the bite of a fly or the lash of a whip. By discipline,
the keeper got the management of it, and the animal
was brought to know him; but frequently, more especially
in the middle of the night, fits of frenzy came on;
and, while these lasted, nothing could control its
rage, the rhinoceros running with great
swiftness round the den, playing all kinds of antics,
making hideous noises, knocking every thing to pieces,
disturbing the whole neighborhood, and then, all at
once, becoming quiet. While the fit was on, even
the keeper durst not make his approach. The animal
fell upon its knee when it wished to strike any object
with its horn. It was quick in all its motions,
ate voraciously all kinds of vegetables, appearing
to have no selection. It was chiefly fed on branches
of willow. Three years’ confinement made
no alteration in its habits.”
THE WILD BOAR.
This is the original from which all
the different kinds of the tame hog have sprung.
He is not subject to the varieties of the domestic
races, but is uniformly of a brindled or dark gray,
inclining to black. His snout is longer than
that of the tame hog, his ears short, and pricked.
He has formidable tusks in each jaw, sometimes nearly
a foot long, those in the upper jaw bending
upwards in a circular form, exceedingly sharp, being
those with which the animal defends himself, and frequently
inflicts mortal wounds.
The wild boar is to be met with in
various parts of Europe, Asia, and Africa. The
hunting of this animal has always afforded a rather
barbarous sport to the natives of the countries in
which it is to be found. The season for this
sport is in the beginning of winter. The huntsmen
ride with the dogs, and encourage them at the same
time that, by the spear, they endeavor to dishearten
the boar. The weapon is generally directed towards
the front of the animal’s head, but cautiously;
for, were the boar to seize the spear, which it attempts
to do, it would wrest it from the hand of the hunter;
and the latter, unless supported, would fall a victim
to its strength and ferocity. There are generally
more hunters than one; the boar is called off by each
man as he provokes it, and the animal thus generally
perishes by a series of attacks.
Anecdotes. A boar
from Ethiopia was, in 1765, sent by the governor of
the Cape of Good Hope to the Prince of Orange.
From confinement and attention he became tolerably
mild and gentle, except when offended, in which case
even those persons to whose care he was intrusted were
afraid of him. In general, however, when the door
of his cage was opened, he came out in perfect good-humor,
frisked about in search of food, and greedily devoured
whatever was given him. He was one day left alone
in the court-yard for a few minutes; and, on the return
of the keeper, was found busily digging into the earth,
where, notwithstanding the cemented bricks of the
pavement, he had made a very large hole, for the purpose,
as was afterwards conceived, of reaching a common sewer
that passed at a considerable depth below. When,
after long confinement, he was set at liberty, for
a little while he was very gay, and leaped about in
an entertaining manner.
During Sparman’s residence in
Africa, he witnessed a curious method by which the
wild hogs protected their young, when pursued.
The heads of the females, which, at the commencement
of the chase, had seemed of a tolerable size, appeared,
on a sudden, to have grown larger and more shapeless
than they were. This he found to have been occasioned
by the fact, that each of the old ones, during its
flight, had taken up and carried forward a young pig
in its mouth; and this explained to him another subject
of surprise, which was, that all the pigs he had just
before been chasing with the old ones, had suddenly
vanished.
THE DOMESTIC HOG.
The effect of domestication on the
larger animals seems to be a diminution of their powers
of resistance or defence, no longer necessary to their
safety; and, on account of the want of free exercise,
an increase of size, attended by a relaxation of the
fibres and frame of the body. In this way, domestication
has told with considerable disadvantage on the hog.
By the diminution of the size of its tusks, and of
its inclination or power to use them, it ceases to
be very formidable; and by luxurious habits, by overfeeding,
and indolence, the animal that fearlessly ranges the
forest becomes one whose sole delight it seems to
be to rise to eat, and to lie down to digest, and
one whose external appearance, beyond that of any other
quadruped, testifies the gluttony of its disposition
and of its practices. The hog uses considerable
selection in its vegetable diet, but it compensates
itself for the loss which its appetite might thus
sustain, by occasional recourse to animal food.
Miscellaneous Anecdotes. The
following statement, made a few years ago by a gentleman
in Stanbridge, England, develops the carnivorous propensities
which the hog sometimes discovers, even in a condition
of perfect domestication, the variety too
of animals which it is inclined to devour. “I
had a pig,” says this writer, “of the Chinese
species, a most voracious fellow; but through necessity
I have lately been obliged to have him killed, finding
that he endangered the safety of my rabbits, hens,
and ducks. Previous to possessing him, I had a
small warren of about forty yards square, walled in,
and well stocked with various-colored rabbits, which
I had been at infinite pains to collect. But,
unfortunately, one day a rabbit having intruded into
his sty, the pig immediately caught and devoured it.
This having given him an opportunity of knowing the
agreeable flavor of rabbit, he next day, when let
out, directed his course to the warren, and soon was
successful in securing another; he then returned to
his sty, and consumed it with the greatest avidity.
“After this circumstance occurred,
he was confined three weeks; but being again set at
liberty, he immediately returned to his favorite pursuit,
and, after trying various manoeuvres for the space
of a quarter of an hour he seized another rabbit,
and was returning, when I ordered my servant to take
it away. Unluckily for the servant, the pig,
after trying many devices to get by him, crouched for
a moment, and then, running furiously at him, seized
on his leg, lacerating it so severely, that he was
confined to the house for six weeks. So greedy
was the pig, that, while the man was limping towards
the house, he actually went back to his prey, and
carried it off victoriously.
“Being at a party the next day,
and relating the above, a gentleman in company appeared
to doubt the veracity of the account. I asked
him, with the rest of the party, to dine with me the
following day, that they might witness the exploits
of the creature. They all attended at an early
hour. No sooner had we released him, than off
he went with the most voracious eagerness, and entered
the warren through a hole in the wall; but he was
not quite so successful to-day, for, after making many
fruitless attempts, most of the rabbits were driven
to their burrows. He now seemed as we supposed,
despairing of success, as he lay down amongst some
furze; but, on our returning to the house, we were
surprised by the cry of his victim, and, immediately
turning round, saw him coming through the hole in
the wall with a fine black rabbit. The gentleman
who doubted the facts over-night nearly met the fate
of my servant; but by actively springing over him,
at the moment the furious animal was seizing his legs,
he escaped unhurt. After showing his dexterity
to many more gentlemen, I devised means to keep him
out of the warren. The carnivorous animal then
took to my ducks and hens. Still, however, I
put up with his depredations while he confined himself
to my own yard; but having visited a neighbor’s,
and killed two ducks and a favorite Guinea-hen, and
much frightened the lady who went to drive him away,
I was obliged to kill him the next morning.”
A gamekeeper of Sir Henry Mildmay,
of England, broke a black sow to find game, back,
and stand to her point, nearly as steadily as a well-bred
dog. The sow was a thin, long-legged animal, of
the New Forest breed. When young, she manifested
a great partiality for some pointer puppies; and it
occurred to the gamekeeper, that, as he had often
succeeded with obstinate dogs, he might attempt to
break a pig. He enticed her to follow him by
bits of barley-meal pudding, which he carried in one
of his pockets, while the other was filled with stones,
which he threw at his pupil when she misbehaved, as
she would not allow herself to be caught and corrected,
like a dog. Under this system she proved tolerably
tractable. When she came on the cold scent of
game, she slackened her trot, and gradually dropped
her ears and tail till she was certain, and then fell
down on her knees. As soon as the game rose,
she returned, grunting, for her reward of pudding.
When the gamekeeper died, his widow
sent the pig to Sir Henry Mildmay, who kept it for
three years, and often amused his friends by hiding
a fowl among the fern in some part of the park, and
bringing out the pig, which never failed to point
at it in the manner described. Some time after,
a great number of lambs were lost nearly as soon as
they were dropped; and a person, being sent to watch
the flock, detected the sow in the act of devouring
a lamb. This carnivorous propensity was ascribed
to her having been accustomed to feed with the dogs
on flesh; but it obliterated the memory of her singular
sagacity, and she was killed for the benefit of the
widow of the gamekeeper who had trained her.
THE TAPIR.
This quadruped resembles the hog in
shape, but is much larger. It is of a brown color,
and has a long, flexible nose, somewhat like the elephant’s
trunk. It sleeps during the day, and goes forth
at night in search of pasture, melons, and vegetables.
One species is found in South America, and one in
Malacca and Sumatra. It is docile, is easily
tamed, and capable of strong attachments.
A young specimen of this animal was
sent from Sumatra to Bengal, which became very tractable.
It was allowed to roam in the park, and frequently
entered the ponds, and walked along on the bottom,
making no attempt to swim.
A full-grown tapir was recently at
the Zoological Gardens, in London, which seemed to
thrive very well. From its curious formation,
and its gentle, inoffensive manners, it became an
object of great attraction.
THE HORSE.
This animal is now only known in a
domestic state, or, if wild, but as the offspring
of domestic varieties. Most countries possess
races of this animal peculiar to themselves.
The finest breed is that of Arabia. The horse
may be considered the most valuable of all the brute
creation to man. He combines strength, speed,
and docility, beyond any other animal. The wild
herds in the western regions, Mexico, and South America,
are sprung from horses brought into the country by
the Spaniards.
The Arabian horse is a hardy animal,
“left exposed,” says Chateaubriand, “to
the most intense heat of the sun, tied by the four
legs to stakes set in the ground, and refreshed generally
only once in the twenty-four hours. Yet,”
continues the same writer, “release his legs
from the shackles, spring upon his back, and he will
paw in the valley; he will rejoice in his strength;
he will swallow the ground in the fierceness of his
rage, and you recognize the original picture of Job.”
Miscellaneous Anecdotes. The
Arab has a strong affection for his horse; nor is
it wonderful, when we consider that he is his support
and comfort his companion through many
a dreary day and night, enduring hunger and thirst
in his service. From their constant community,
a kind of sociality of feeling exists between them.
The terms in which he addresses his horse are thus
given by Clarke: “Ibrahim went frequently
to Rama to inquire news of the mare, whom he dearly
loved; he would embrace her, wipe her eyes with his
handkerchief, would rub her with his shirt sleeves,
would give her a thousand benedictions during whole
hours that he would remain talking to her. ’My
eyes! my soul! my heart!’ he would say; ’must
I be so unfortunate as to have thee sold to many masters,
and not keep thee myself? I am poor, my antelope!
I brought thee up in my dwelling as a child; I did
never beat nor chide thee.’” But the poverty
of the Arabs, and the desire of foreigners to possess
their horses, frequently compel them to do what they
so much deprecate to sell their horse.
A horse he may be tempted by a large sum to part with,
but to sell a mare is a heart-rending trial to an
Arab. “When the envoy,” says Sir John
Malcolm, “was encamped near Bagdad, an Arab
rode a bright bay mare, of extraordinary shape and
beauty, before his tent, until he attracted his attention.
On being asked if he would sell her, ‘What will
you give me?’ was the reply. ‘That
depends upon her age; I suppose she is past five.’
‘Guess again,’ said he. ‘Four?’
‘Look at her mouth,’ said the Arab, with
a smile. On examination, she was found to be
rising three. This, from her size and symmetry,
greatly enhanced her value. The envoy said, ’I
will give you fifty tomans,’ (a coin
nearly of the value of a pound sterling.) ‘A
little more, if you please,’ said the fellow,
a little entertained. ‘Eighty a
hundred.’ He shook his head and smiled.
The officer at last came to two hundred tomans.
‘Well,’ said the Arab, ’you need
not tempt me further. You are a rich elchee,
(nobleman;) you have fine horses, camels, and mules,
and I am told you have loads of silver and gold.
Now,’ added he, ’you want my mare; but
you shall not have her for all you have got.’”
Nor does the Arabian horse fail to
repay the attachment of his master. It not only
flies with him over the desert, but, when he lies down
to sleep, the faithful animal will browse on such
herbage as is near the spot; will watch its master
with solicitude; and, if a man or animal approaches,
will neigh loudly till he is awakened. “When
I was at Jerusalem,” says Chateaubriand, “the
feats of one of these steeds made a great noise.
The Bedouin to whom the animal, a mare, belonged, being
pursued by the governor’s guards, rushed with
him from the top of the hills that overlooked Jericho.
The mare scoured at full gallop down an almost perpendicular
declivity without stumbling, and left the soldiers
lost in admiration and astonishment. The poor
creature, however, dropped down dead on entering Jericho;
and the Bedouin, who would not quit her, was taken,
weeping over the body of his faithful companion.
Ali Aga religiously showed me, in the mountains near
Jericho, the footsteps of the beast that died in the
attempt to save her master!”
The powers of the horse, as evinced
in certain cases, appear almost incredible. At
four o’clock in the morning, a gentleman was
robbed at Gadshill, on the west side of Chatham, England,
by a highwayman named Nicks, who rode a bay mare.
Nicks set off instantly for Gravesend, where he was
detained nearly an hour by the difficulty of getting
a boat an interval which he employed to
advantage in baiting his horse. From thence he
got to Essex and Chelmsford, where he again stopped
about half an hour, to refresh his horse. He then
went to Braintree, Bocking, Westerfield, and over
the downs to Cambridge, and, still pursuing the cross
roads, he went to Huntingdon, where he again rested
about half an hour. Proceeding now on the north
road, and at full gallop most of the way, he arrived
at York the same afternoon, put off his boots and
riding clothes, and went dressed to the bowling-green,
where, among other promenaders, happened to be the
lord mayor of the city. He there studied to do
something particular, that his lordship might remember
him, and, asking what o’clock it was, the mayor
informed him that it was a quarter past eight.
Upon prosecution for the robbery, the whole safety
of the prisoner rested upon this point. The gentleman
swore positively to the time and place; but, on the
other hand, the proof was equally clear of his being
at York at the time specified. The jury acquitted
him on the supposed impossibility of his having got
so great a distance from Kent by the time he was seen
in the bowling-green. Yet it appeared afterwards
that he was the robber, and had performed this feat
of horsemanship to escape conviction.
Very extraordinary performances of
the horse, in swimming, are on record. A violent
gale of wind, at the Cape of Good Hope, setting in
from north and northwest, a vessel in the road dragged
her anchors, was forced on the rocks, and bilged;
and, while the greater part of the crew fell an immediate
sacrifice to the waves, the remainder were seen, from
the shore, struggling for their lives by clinging to
the different pieces of the wreck. The sea ran
dreadfully high, and broke over the sailors with such
amazing fury that no boat whatever could venture off
to their assistance. Meanwhile a planter, considerably
advanced in life, had come from his farm to be a spectator
of the shipwreck. His heart melted at the sight
of the unhappy seamen; and, knowing the bold and enterprising
spirit of his horse, and his particular excellence
as a swimmer, he instantly determined to make a desperate
effort for their deliverance. He alighted, and
blew a little brandy into his horse’s nostrils,
and again seating himself in the saddle, he instantly
pushed into the midst of the breakers. At first
both disappeared; but it was not long before they
floated on the surface, and swam up to the wreck;
when, taking with him two men, each of whom held by
one of his boots, he brought them safe to shore.
This perilous expedition he repeated no less than
seven times, and saved fourteen lives; but, on his
return the eighth time, his horse being much fatigued,
and meeting a most formidable wave, he lost his balance,
and was overwhelmed in a moment. The horse swam
safely to land, but his gallant rider was no more!
The effects of habit and discipline
upon the horse are exemplified by the following anecdotes: An
old cavalry horse has been known to stop, in the midst
of a rapid gallop, on hearing the word Halt,
uttered by an officer in the ranks. The Tyrolese,
in one of their insurrections in 1809, took fifteen
Bavarian horses, on which they mounted as many of
their own soldiers. A rencounter occurring with
a squadron of the regiment of Bubenhoven, these horses,
on hearing the trumpet and recognizing the uniform
of their corps, set off at full gallop, and carried
their riders, in spite of all their resistance, into
the midst of the Bavarian ranks, where they were made
prisoners.
Previously to the erection of the
cavalry barracks in Glasgow, the detachment of horse
for the west of Scotland was sometimes divided between
Hamilton and Kilmarnock. Those assigned to the
latter place, having been sent to the fine grass fields
in the vicinity of Loudon Castle, presented on one
occasion a most striking appearance. The day
was heavy and sultry; the thunder, which had at first
been heard only at a distance, began to increase in
loudness and frequency, and drew the marked attention
of the horses. As it still became more loud, and
the numerous peals, echoed along the extensive slopes
of Galston Moor, crept along the water of the Irvine,
or were reverberated through the woods, the horses
became animated with the same enthusiasm which seizes
them on hearing the rolling sounds emitted from numerous
cannon. They rushed together, and, rapidly arranging
themselves in their accustomed ranks, presented the
front of a field of battle.
In the following case, related by
Professor Kruger, of Halle, the horse has rivalled
the most remarkable examples of the sagacity and fidelity
of the dog. “A friend of mine,” says
he, “who was, one dark night, riding home through
a wood, had the misfortune to strike his head against
the branch of a tree, and fell from his horse stunned
by the blow. The horse immediately returned to
the house they had left, which stood about a mile
distant. He found the door closed the
family had retired to bed. He pawed at the door,
till one of them, hearing the noise, arose and opened
it, and, to his surprise, saw the horse of his friend.
No sooner was the door opened than the horse turned
round; and the man, suspecting there was something
wrong, followed the animal, which led him directly
to the spot where his master lay on the ground in
a fainting fit.”
A horse in England, among other bad
propensities, constantly resented the attempts of
the groom to trim his fetlocks. This circumstance
had been mentioned in a conversation, during which
a young child, a very few years old, was present,
when its owner defied any man to perform the operation
singly. The father, next day, in passing through
the stable-yard, beheld, with the utmost distress,
the infant employed, with a pair of scissors, in clipping
the fetlocks of the hind legs of this vicious hunter an
operation which had been always hitherto performed
with great danger, even by a number of men. But
the horse, in the present case, was looking with the
greatest complacency on the little groom, who soon
after, to the very great relief of his father, walked
off unhurt.
A gentleman in Bristol had a greyhound
which slept in the same stable, and contracted a very
great intimacy, with a fine hunter. When the dog
was taken out, the horse neighed wistfully after him;
he welcomed him home with a neigh; the greyhound ran
up to the horse and licked him; the horse, in return,
scratched the greyhound’s back with his teeth.
On one occasion, when the groom had the pair out for
exercise, a large dog attacked the greyhound, bore
him to the ground, and seemed likely to worry him,
when the horse threw back his ears, rushed forward,
seized the strange dog by the back, and flung him
to a distance.
That the horse is much affected by
musical sounds, must be evident to every one who has
paid attention to its motions, and the expression of
its countenance, while listening to the performances
of a military band. It is even said that, in
ancient times, the Libyan shepherds were enabled to
allure to them wild horses by the charms of music.
That this is at least not entirely improbable, is
evident from an experiment made by a gentleman, in
the year 1829, on some of the Duke of Buccleuch’s
hunters. The horses being shy of his approach,
and, indeed, retreating from it, he sounded a small
musical instrument, called the mouth Eolian harp.
On hearing it, they immediately erected their heads,
and turned round. On his again sounding it, they
approached nearer him. He began to retreat, and
they to follow. Having gone over a paling, one
of the horses came up to him, putting its mouth close
to his breast, and seemingly delighted with the sounds
which he continued to produce. As the other horses
were coming up, apparently to follow the example of
their more confident comrade, the gentleman retired.
A farmer in England, on his way home
one evening, having drank rather hard at an alehouse,
could not keep an erect position on his horse, and
rolled off the animal into the road. His horse
stood still; but, after remaining patiently for some
time, and not perceiving any disposition in his rider
to get up and proceed farther, he took him by the collar
and shook him. This had little or no effect, for
the farmer only gave a grumble of dissatisfaction
at having his repose disturbed. The horse was
not to be put off with any such evasion, and so he
applied his mouth to one of his coat-laps, and after
several attempts, by dragging at it, to raise him
upon his feet, the coat-lap gave way. Three individuals
who witnessed this extraordinary proceeding then went
up, and assisted in putting him on his horse, putting
the one coat-lap into the pocket of the other, when
the horse trotted off and safely reached home.
He was said to be very fond of his master, and to gambol
with him like a dog.
As a gentleman was proceeding from
a survey at Fort Augustus to his own house, a
distance of about sixteen miles, the road
became completely blocked up by snow, and nearly indiscernible.
In this dilemma, he thought it best to trust to his
horse, and, loosing the reins, allowed him to choose
his own course. The animal made way, cautiously
and slowly, till, coming to a gully or ravine, both
horse and rider suddenly disappeared in a snow wreath
several fathoms deep. The gentleman, on recovering,
found himself nearly three yards from the dangerous
spot, with his faithful horse standing over him and
licking the snow from his face. He supposed that
the bridle must have been attached to his person,
by means of which he had been drawn out of the pit.
A cart-horse belonging to a Mr. Leggat,
of Glasgow had been several times afflicted with the
bots, and as often cured by a farrier by the name
of Dawine. He had not, however, been troubled
with that disease for a considerable time; but on
a recurrence of the disorder, he happened, one morning,
to be employed nearly a mile from the farrier’s
house. He was arranged in a row with other horses
engaged in the same work, and, while the carters were
absent, he went, unattended by any driver, through
several streets, and up a narrow lane, when he stopped
at the farrier’s door. As neither Mr. Leggat
nor any one else appeared with the horse, it was surmised
that he had been seized with his old complaint.
Being unyoked from the cart, he lay down, and showed,
by every means of which he was capable, that he was
in distress. He was treated as usual, and sent
home to Mr. Leggat, who had by that time sent persons
in all directions in search of him.
A curious instance of instinct occurred
at Bristol, England, some years ago, which proves
the great local memory possessed by horses. A
person, apparently a townsman, recognized a horse,
bestrode by a countryman, to be one which he had lost
about nine months before. He seized his property,
and put in his claim: “This is my horse.
I will prove it in two minutes, or quit my claim.”
He then set the horse free, and declared his proof
to be that the horse would be found at his stables,
at some distance a fact that was attested,
in a few minutes, by the two claimants, and several
bystanders, repairing to the stables, where they found
the horse “quite at home.”
The celebrated Polish General Kosciusko
once wished to send some bottles of good wine to a
clergyman at Solothurn; and, as he hesitated to send
them by his servant, lest he should smuggle a part,
he gave the commission to a young man of the name
of Zeltner, and desired him to take the horse he usually
rode. Young Zeltner, on returning, said that
he would never ride his horse again without he gave
him his purse at the same time. Kosciusko asking
him what he meant, he answered, “As soon as
a poor man on the road takes off his hat, and asks
for charity, the horse immediately stands still, and
will not stir till something is given to the petitioner;
and as I had no money about me, I was obliged to make
a motion as if I had given something, in order to satisfy
the horse.” A higher eulogy could hardly
be pronounced upon the owner of the horse.
The wild horses of the western country
are thus described by Mr. Catlin: “There
is no other animal on the prairies so wild and sagacious
as the horse, and none so difficult to come up with.
So remarkably keen is their eye, that they will generally
run ‘at sight’ a mile distant; and, when
once in motion, they seldom stop short of three or
four miles. I made many attempts to approach
them by stealth, when they were grazing, and playing
their gambols, without succeeding more than once.
In this instance I left my horse, and skulked through
a ravine for a couple of miles, until I was within
gunshot of a fine herd of them. These were of
all colors some milk-white, some jet-black;
others were sorrel, and bay, and cream color; and
many were of an iron-gray. Their manes were profuse,
and hanging in the wildest confusion over their faces
and necks, while their long tails swept the ground.”
The Camanches and other tribes of
Indians capture great numbers of wild horses.
The process is described by Catlin as follows:
“The Indian, when he starts for a wild horse,
mounts one of the fleetest he can get, and, coiling
his lasso under his arm, which consists of a thong
of cowhide ten or fifteen yards long, with a noose
at the end of it, he starts under ‘full whip’
till he can enter the drove, when he soon gets the
noose over the neck of one of them. He then dismounts,
leaving his own horse, and runs as fast as he can,
letting the lasso pass out gradually and carefully
through his hands, until the horse falls for want
of breath, and lies helpless on the ground. The
Indian then advances slowly towards his head, keeping
the lasso tight upon his neck, until he fastens a
pair of hobbles on his two fore feet, and also loosens
the lasso, and moves it round the under jaws; by which
he gets great power over the affrighted animal, which
is constantly rearing and plunging. He then advances,
hand over hand, towards the horse’s nose, and
places one hand over his eyes; he then breathes in
his nostrils, when he soon becomes conquered and docile,
and allows himself to be led or ridden to the camp.”
It appears that horses are subject
to a kind of panic, which in the western prairies
is called stampede. The instances of this
frenzy, as described by travellers, sometimes present
the most terrific spectacles. Mr. Kendall, in
his “Narrative,” gives us the following
lively sketch:
“As there was no wood about
our camping-ground, some half a dozen men pushed on
in search of it. One of them had a wild, half-broken
Mexican horse, naturally vicious, and with difficulty
mastered. His rider found a small, dry tree,
cut it down with a hatchet, and very imprudently made
it fast to his horse’s tail by means of a rope.
The animal took it unkindly from the first, and dragged
his strange load with evident symptoms of fright;
but when within a few hundred yards of the camp, he
commenced pitching, and finally set off into a gallop,
with the cause of all his uneasiness and fear still
fast to his tail. His course was directly for
the camp; and, as he sped along the prairie, it was
evident that our horses were stricken with a panic
at his approach. At first they would prick up
their ears, snort, and trot majestically about in
circles; then they would dash off at the top of their
speed, and no human power could arrest their mad career.
“‘A stampede!’ shouted
some of the old campaigners, a stampede!
Look out for your horses, or you’ll never see
them again,’ was heard on every side. Fortunately
for us, the more intractable horses had been not only
staked, but hobbled, before the panic became general,
and were secured with little difficulty; else we might
have lost half of them. Frequent instances have
occurred where a worthless horse has occasioned the
loss of hundreds of valuable animals.
“Nothing can exceed the grandeur
of the scene when a large cavallada, or drove
of horses, takes a ‘scare.’ Old, weather-beaten,
time-worn, and broken-down steeds horses
that have nearly given out from hard work and old
age will at once be transformed into wild
and prancing colts. With heads erect, tails and
manes streaming in the air, eyes lit up, and darting
beams of fright, old and jaded hacks will
be seen prancing and careering about with all the
buoyancy which characterizes the action of young colts.
Then some one of the drove, more frightened than the
rest, will dash off in a straight line, the rest scampering
after him, and apparently gaining fresh fear at every
jump. The throng will then sweep along the plain
with a noise which may be likened to something between
a tornado and an earthquake; and as well might feeble
man attempt to arrest the earthquake as the stampede.”
THE PONY.
This is a variety of the horse its
small stature being the result of the climate in which
it is bred. The most remarkable kinds are produced
in Wales, the Highlands of Scotland, and the Shetland
Isles.
Miscellaneous Anecdotes. One
afternoon in September, a gentleman in England, mounted
on a favorite old shooting pony, had beaten for game
all day without meeting with any success, when, on
a sudden, to his great astonishment, his pony stopped
short, and he could not persuade him to move, either
by whip or spur. He desired his keeper to go
forward. He did. A covey of fifteen partridges
rose. They were, of course, killed by the astonished
sportsman. The pony had been accustomed to carry
his master for many years on shooting expeditions,
and had, no doubt, acquired a knowledge of the scent
of birds.
A little girl, the daughter of a gentleman
in Warwickshire, England, playing one day on the banks
of a canal which ran through the grounds, had the
misfortune to fall in, and in all probability would
have been drowned, had not a little pony, which was
grazing near, and which had been kept by the family
many years, plunged into the stream, and, taking the
child up by her clothes, brought her safely to shore
without the slightest injury.
A gentleman was some time since presented
with a Shetland pony, which was only seven hands in
height, and very docile and beautiful. He was
anxious to convey his present home as soon as possible,
but, being at a considerable distance, he was at a
loss how to do so easily. The friend who presented
it to him said, “Can you not convey him home
in your chaise?” He accordingly made the experiment.
The pony was lifted into the bottom of the gig, and
covered up with the boot some bits of bread
being given him, to keep him quiet. He lay quite
peaceably till his master had reached his place of
destination; thus exhibiting the novel spectacle of
a horse riding in a gig.
A pony mare belonging to Mr. Evans,
of Montgomeryshire, England, had a colt, and they
both grazed in a field adjoining the River Severn.
One day, the pony made her appearance in front of
the house, making a clattering with her feet, and
other noises, to attract attention. Observing
this, a person went out, and the pony immediately galloped
off. Mr. Evans desired he should be followed.
On reaching the field, the pony was found looking
into the river, where the colt was drowned.
THE ASS.
When the ass is brought into comparison
with the horse, in respect to external form, every
thing appears to be in favor of the latter animal.
The ass is inferior to the horse in size, less sprightly
in its motions, its head is heavy, and it stoops in
its gait. The horse generally moves with its
head erect, looks freely abroad on the skies and earth,
with an eye expressive of lively emotions. The
ass is seen trudging slowly along, as if sensible
of the hopelessness of a cessation from toil; and,
full of melancholy thoughts, its leaden eye is fixed
on the ground. Yet its shape and its habits, in
its state of servitude, present something that is
pleasing, though, on the whole, they are somewhat
untoward and ungainly.
Miscellaneous Anecdotes. The
ass is far from being incapable of understanding the
nature of the employments in which he is engaged, or
disobedient to the commands of his master. An
ass was employed, at Carisbrook, in the Isle of Wight,
in drawing water by a large wheel from a deep well,
supposed to have been sunk by the Romans. When
his keeper wanted water, he would call the ass by
his name, saying, “I want water; get into the
wheel;” which wish the ass immediately complied
with; and there can be no doubt but that he knew the
precise number of times necessary for the wheel to
revolve upon its axis in order to complete his labor;
for every time he brought the bucket to the surface
of the well, he stopped and turned round his head to
observe the moment when his master laid hold of the
bucket to draw it towards him, because he had then
a nice motion to make either slightly forward or backward,
as the situation of the bucket might require.
In 1816, an ass belonging to Captain
Dundas was shipped on board the Ister, bound from
Gibraltar to Malta. The vessel struck on a sand-bank
off the Point de Gat, and the ass was thrown overboard
into a sea which was so stormy that a boat that soon
after left the ship was lost. In the course of
a few days, when the gates of Gibraltar were opened
in the morning, the guard was surprised by the same
ass, which had so recently been removed, presenting
itself for admittance. On entering, it proceeded
immediately to the stable which it had formerly occupied.
The ass had not only swam to the shore, but found its
own way from Point de Gat to Gibraltar, a distance
of more than two hundred miles, through a mountainous
and intricate country intersected by streams, which
it had never passed before, but which it had now crossed
so expeditiously that it must have gone by a route
leading the most directly to Gibraltar.
A few years ago, at Swalwell, England,
a man set his bull-dog to attack an ass, that for
a while gallantly defended itself with its heels,
which it was agile enough to keep presented to the
dog. Suddenly turning round on its adversary,
it caught it with its teeth, in such a manner that
the dog was unable to retaliate. It then dragged
the assailant to the River Derwent, into which it
plunged it overhead, and lying down upon it, kept
it in the water till it was drowned.
Though the ass is frequently the subject
of ill treatment, yet it seems to be an animal not
without affection for its master, which in many cases
we may suppose to be returned by kindness and care
on his part. A pleasing instance to this effect
we have in the following anecdote: “An
old man, who some time ago sold vegetables in London,
had an ass which carried his baskets from door to
door. He frequently gave the poor industrious
creature a handful of hay, or some pieces of bread
or greens, by way of refreshment and reward.
The old man had no need of any goad for the animal,
and seldom, indeed, had he to lift up his hand to
drive it on. His kind treatment was one day remarked
to him, and he was asked whether the beast was not
apt to be stubborn. ‘Ah!’ he said,
’it is of no use to be cruel; and as for stubbornness,
I cannot complain, for he is ready to do any thing
or go any where. I bred him myself. He is
sometimes skittish and playful, and once ran away from
me: you will hardly believe it, but there were
more than fifty people after him, attempting in vain
to stop him; yet he turned back of himself, and never
stopped till he ran his head kindly into my bosom.’”
The following is a pleasing anecdote
of the sagacity of the ass, and the attachment displayed
by the animal to his master. Thomas Brown travelled
in England as a pedler, having an ass the partner of
his trade. From suffering under paralysis, he
was in the habit of assisting himself on the road
by keeping hold of the crupper of the saddle, or more
frequently the tail of the ass. During
a severe winter some years ago, whilst on one of his
journeys, the old man and his ass were suddenly plunged
into a wreath of snow. There they lay far from
help, and ready to perish.
At last, after a severe struggle,
the poor ass got out; but, finding his unfortunate
master absent, he eyed the snow-bank some time with
a wistful look, and at last forced his way through
it to where his master lay, when, placing his body
in such a position as to allow him to lay a firm hold
on his tail, the honest pedler was enabled to grasp
it, and was actually dragged out by the faithful beast
to a place of safety!
THE ZEBRA.
The zebra possesses some of the characteristics
of the horse; smaller in size, it strongly
resembles it in the shape of its body, its head, its
limbs, and its hoofs. It moves in the same paces,
with a similar activity and swiftness. But it
discovers none of that docility which has rendered
the services of the horse so invaluable to man.
On the contrary, it is proverbially untamable; it
is ever the most wild even among those ferocious animals
which are ranged in the menagerie, and it preserves
in its countenance the resolute determination never
to submit.
In the year 1803, General Dundas brought
a female zebra from the Cape of Good Hope, which was
deposited in the Tower, and there showed less than
the usual impatience of subordination. The person
who had accompanied her home, and attended her there,
would sometimes spring on her back, and proceed thus
for about two hundred yards, when she would become
restive, and oblige him to dismount. She was very
irritable, and would kick at her keeper. One
day she seized him with her teeth, threw him down,
and showed an intention to destroy him, which he disappointed
by rapidly extricating himself. She generally
kicked in all directions with her feet, and had a
propensity to seize with her teeth whatever offended
her. Strangers she would not allow to approach
her, unless the keeper held her fast by the head,
and even then she was very prone to kick.
The most docile zebra on record was
burnt at the Lyceum, near Exeter ’Change.
This animal allowed its keeper to use great familiarities
with it, to put children on its back, without
discovering any resentment. On one occasion,
a person rode it from the Lyceum to Pimlico. It
had been bred in Portugal, and was the offspring of
parents half reclaimed.
The zebra of the plain differs from
the other species in having the ground color of the
body white, the mane alternately striped with black
and white, and the tail of a yellowish white.
A specimen of this animal was a few years since in
the Tower of London, where it was brought to a degree
of tameness seldom reached by the other variety.
It ran peaceably about the Tower, with a man by its
side, whom it did not attempt to leave except for
the purpose of breaking off to the canteen, where
it was sometimes regaled with a glass of ale, a liquor
for which it discovered a considerable fondness.
ORDER IX - RUMINANTIA,
RUMINATING ANIMALS THOSE THAT CHEW THE
CUD.
THE CAMEL.
Of this quadruped there are two species,
the dromedary, and the Bactrian camel, which has two
hunches on the back. It has been used from the
earliest ages, and is one of the most useful of all
the animals over which the inhabitants of Asia and
Africa have acquired dominion. These continents
are intersected by vast tracts of burning sand, the
seats of desolation and drought; but by means of the
camel, the most dreary wastes are traversed.
The camel’s great strength, and astonishing
powers of abstinence both from food and drink, render
it truly invaluable in these inhospitable countries.
Denon tells us that, in crossing the Arabian Desert,
a single feed of beans is all their food for a day.
Their usual meal is a few dates, or some small balls
of barleymeal, or, occasionally, the dry and thorny
plants they meet with, at remote intervals, during
their progress across the desert. With these
scanty meals, the contented creature will lie down
to rest amid the scorching sands, without exhibiting
either exhaustion or a desire for better fare.
Well may the Arab call the camel “the ship of
the desert!”
Mr. McFarlane says, “I have
been told that the Arabs will kiss their camels, in
gratitude and affection, after a journey across the
deserts. I never saw the Turks, either of Asia
Minor or Roumelia, carry their kindness so far as
this; but I have frequently seen them pat their camels
when the day’s work was done, and talk to them
on their journey, as if to cheer them. The camels
appeared to me quite as sensible to favor and gentle
treatment as is a well-bred horse. I have seen
them curve and twist their long, lithe necks as their
driver approached, and often put down their tranquil
heads toward his shoulder. Near Smyrna, and at
Magnesia and Sardes, I have occasionally seen
a camel follow his master like a pet dog, and go down
on his knees before him, as if inviting him to mount.
I never saw a Turk ill-use the useful, gentle, amiable
quadruped; but I have frequently seen him give it a
portion of his own dinner, when, in unfavorable places,
it had nothing but chopped straw to eat. I have
sometimes seen the devidjis, on a hot day, or
in passing a dry district, spirt a little water in
the camels’ nostrils; they pretend it refreshes
them.”
The same writer says that, upon his
first camel adventure, he was so taken by surprise
by the creature’s singular rising behind, that
he was thrown over his head, to the infinite amusement
of the Turks, who were laughing at his inexperience.
“I was made acquainted with this peculiarity
of the animal’s movement, in a striking manner,
the first time I mounted a camel out of curiosity.
I ought to have known better and, indeed,
did know better; but when he was about to rise, from
old habits associated with the horse, I expected he
would throw out his fore legs, and I threw myself
forward accordingly when up sprang his
hind legs, and clean I went over his ears, to the great
delight of the devidjis.”
The following interesting story of
the sufferings of a caravan, from thirst, is related
by Burckhardt: “In the month of August,
a small caravan prepared to set out from Berber to
Daraou. They consisted of five merchants and
about thirty slaves, with a proportionate number of
camels. Afraid of the robber Naym, who at that
time was in the habit of waylaying travellers about
the wells of Nedjeym, and who had constant intelligence
of the departure of every caravan from Berber, they
determined to take a more easterly road, by the well
of Owareyk. They had hired an Ababde guide, who
conducted them in safety to that place, but who lost
his way from thence northward, the route being little
frequented. After five days’ march in the
mountains, their stock of water was exhausted, nor
did they know where they were. They resolved,
therefore, to direct their course towards the setting
sun, hoping thus to reach the Nile. After experiencing
two days’ thirst, fifteen slaves and one of
the merchants died: another of them, an Ababde,
who had ten camels with him, thinking that the animals
might know better than their masters where water was
to be found, desired his comrades to tie him fast
upon the saddle of his strongest camel, that he might
not fall down from weakness; and thus he parted from
them, permitting his camels to take their own way;
but neither the man nor his camels were ever heard
of afterwards. On the eighth day after leaving
Owareyk, the survivors came in sight of the mountains
of Shigre, which they immediately recognized; but
their strength was quite exhausted, and neither men
nor beasts were able to move any farther. Lying
down under a rock, they sent two of their servants,
with the two strongest remaining camels, in search
of water. Before these two men could reach the
mountain, one of them dropped off his camel, deprived
of speech, and able only to move his hands to his
comrade, as a sign that he desired to be left to his
fate. The survivor then continued his route;
but such was the effect of thirst upon him, that his
eyes grew dim, and he lost the road, though he had
often travelled over it before, and had been perfectly
acquainted with it. Having wandered about for
a long time, he alighted under the shade of a tree,
and tied the camel to one of its branches; the beast,
however, smelt the water, (as the Arabs express it,)
and, wearied as it was, broke its halter, and set off
galloping in the direction of the spring, which, as
afterwards appeared, was at half an hour’s distance.
The man, well understanding the camel’s action,
endeavored to follow its footsteps, but could only
move a few yards; he fell exhausted on the ground,
and was about to breathe his last, when Providence
led that way, from a neighboring encampment, a Bisharye
Bedouin, who, by throwing water upon the man’s
face, restored him to his senses. They then went
hastily together to the water, filled their skins,
and, returning to the caravan, had the good fortune
to find the sufferers still alive. The Bisharye
received a slave for his trouble.”
DEER.
Of this genus there are many species,
as the elk, moose, stag, fallow-deer, reindeer, &c.
They are characterized by timidity, a love of retirement
in the solitudes of the forest, a general capacity
for domestication, and great swiftness of foot.
The MOOSE. In the immense
forests of North America, this animal is hunted by
the Indians with such relentless perseverance, that
all its instincts are called forth for the preservation
of its existence. Tanner tells us that, “in
the most violent storm, when the wind, the thunder,
and the falling timber, are making the loudest and
most incessant roar, if a man, either with his foot
or hand, breaks the smallest dry limb in the forest,
the moose will hear it; and though he does not always
run, he ceases eating, and gives all his attention
to the sounds he may hear, and he does not relax this
till after three or four hours of the keenest vigilance.”
The AMERICAN ELK. This
stately creature is easily domesticated, and will
then come at the call of his master, follow him to
a distance from home, and return with him quietly.
Although of a gentle disposition, instances have occurred
of its turning upon its pursuers. A wounded one
was once known to turn and face a hunter in the woods
of Canada; the man was found next day pounded to a
jelly, his bones being broken to pieces; the deer,
having exhausted its fury, was found dead by his side.
The RED DEER. The stag
is said to love music, and to show great delight at
hearing any one sing. If a person happens to whistle,
or call some one at a distance, the creature stops
short, and gazes upon the stranger with a kind of
silent admiration; and if he perceives neither fire-arms
nor dogs, he slowly approaches him with apparent unconcern.
He seems highly delighted with the sound of the shepherd’s
pipe. Playford says, “Travelling some years
since, I met, on the road near Royston, a herd of
about twenty bucks, following a bagpipe and violin.
While the music continued, they proceeded; when it
ceased, they all stood still.”
Brown tells us the following story:
“As Captain Smith, of the Bengal Native Infantry,
was out in the country with a shooting party, very
early in the morning, they observed a tiger steal out
of a jungle in pursuit of a herd of deer. Having
selected one as his object, it was quickly deserted
by the herd. The tiger advanced with such amazing
swiftness that the stag in vain attempted to escape,
and, at the moment the gentleman expected to see the
fatal spring, the deer gallantly faced his enemy,
and for some minutes kept him at bay; and it was not
till after three attacks that the tiger succeeded in
securing his prey. He was supposed to have been
considerably injured by the horns of the stag, as,
on the advance of Captain Smith, he abandoned the carcass,
having only sucked the blood from the throat.”
The following circumstances are mentioned
by Delacroix: “When I was at Compiègne,”
says he, “my friends took me to a German who
exhibited a wonderful stag. As soon as we had
taken our seats in a large room, the stag was introduced.
He was of an elegant form and majestic stature, his
aspect at once animated and gentle. The first
trick he performed was, to make a profound obeisance
to the company, as he entered, by bowing his head;
after which he paid his respects to each individual
of us in the same manner. He next carried about
a small stick in his mouth, to each end of which a
small wax taper was attached. He was then blindfolded,
and, at the beat of a drum, fell upon his knees, and
laid his head upon the ground. As soon as the
word pardon was pronounced, he instantly sprang
upon his feet. Dice were thrown upon the head
of a drum, and he told the numbers that were cast
up, by bowing his head so many times. He discharged
a pistol, by drawing with his teeth a string that
was tied to the trigger. He fired a small cannon
by means of a match that was fastened to his right
foot, without showing any signs of fear. He leaped
several times, with the greatest agility, through
a hoop, which his master held at a man’s height
from the ground. At length the exhibition was
closed with his eating a handful of oats from the
head of a drum, which a person was beating the whole
time with the utmost violence. Almost every trick
was performed with as much steadiness as it could
have been accomplished by the best-trained dog.”
At Wonersh, near Guildford, the seat
of Lord Grantley, a fawn was drinking in the lake,
when one of the swans suddenly flew upon it, and pulled
the poor animal into the water, where it held it under
till it was drowned. This act of atrocity was
noticed by the other deer in the park, and they took
care to revenge it the first opportunity. A few
days after, this swan, happening to be on land, was
surrounded and attacked by the whole herd, and presently
killed. Before this time, they were never known
to molest the swans.
The VIRGINIA DEER. A young
gentleman, in Bath, Virginia, killed two large bucks,
the horns of which were so interlocked that they could
not disengage themselves. There is no doubt that
they had had a combat; and, from observations made
by the sportsman, he supposed them to have been in
that condition several days. The horns were so
securely fastened that, he could not separate them
without breaking off one of the prongs. The bucks
were killed at two shots, and the one which escaped
the first ball carried the other a hundred yards before
he met his death.
A farmer in the state of Kentucky
domesticated a female deer, but lost her during the
whole spring and summer. After an absence of several
months, she returned with a fawn at her side, and,
on her arrival, seemed to take great pleasure in showing
her young one.
The Virginia deer is said by the hunters
to evince a strong degree of animosity towards serpents,
and especially to the rattlesnake. In order to
destroy one of these creatures, the deer makes a bound
into the air, and alights upon the serpent with all
four feet brought together in a square, and these
violent blows are repeated till the hated reptile is
destroyed.
The REINDEER. This animal,
as is well known, is the great resource of the Laplanders,
to whom it furnishes most of the necessaries of life.
Two or three varieties are found in the polar regions
of the American continent. “They visit
the Arctic shores,” says Captain Lyon, “at
the latter end of May or the early part of June, and
remain until late in September. On his first
arrival, the animal is thin, and his flesh is tasteless;
but the short summer is sufficient to fatten him.
When feeding on the level ground, an Esquimaux makes
no attempt to approach him; but should a few rocks
be near, the wary hunter feels secure of his prey.
Behind one of these he cautiously creeps, and, having
laid himself very close, with his bow and arrow before
him, imitates the bellow of the deer when calling
to its mate. Sometimes, for more complete deception,
the hunter wears his deer-skin coat and hood so drawn
over his head, as to resemble, in a great measure,
the unsuspecting animals he is enticing. Though
the bellow proves a considerable attraction, yet if
a man has great patience, he may do without it, and
may be equally certain that his prey will ultimately
come to examine him; the reindeer being an inquisitive
animal, and at the same time so silly, that, if he
sees any suspicious object which is not actually chasing
him, he will gradually, and after many caperings,
and forming repeated circles, approach nearer and nearer
to it.
“The Esquimaux rarely shoot
until the creature is within twelve paces, and I have
frequently been told of their being killed at a much
shorter distance. It is to be observed that the
hunters never appear openly, but employ stratagem
for their purpose thus by patience and ingenuity
rendering their rudely-formed bows, and still worse
arrows, as effective as the rifles of Europeans.
When two men hunt in company, they sometimes purposely
show themselves to the deer, and when his attention
is fully engaged, walk slowly away from him, one before
the other. The deer follows, and when the hunters
arrive near a stone, the foremost drops behind it,
and prepares his bow, while his companion continues
walking steadily forward. This latter the deer
still follows unsuspectingly, and thus passes near
the concealed man, who takes a deliberate aim, and
kills him.”
THE GIRAFFE.
This animal, the tallest of quadrupeds,
is found in the interior of Africa. Its height
is about seventeen feet. It is of a fawn color,
marked with dark spots. Its neck is slender, its
head gracefully formed, and its eyes soft, yet animated.
It associates in small troops, and feeds upon the
twigs and leaves of trees.
Miscellaneous Anecdotes. Some
years ago, a giraffe was sent from Egypt to Constantinople.
Its keeper used to exercise it in an open square,
where the Turks used to flock daily, in great crowds,
to see the extraordinary animal. Seeing how inoffensive
it was, and how domesticated it became, the keeper
used to take it with him through the city, and, whenever
he appeared, a number of friendly hands were held
out of the latticed windows to offer it something to
eat. The women were particularly attentive to
it. When it came to a house where it had been
well treated, if no one was at the window, it would
tap gently against the wooden lattice, as if to announce
its visit. It was extremely docile and affectionate;
and, if left to itself it always frequented the streets
where it had the most and best friends.
The giraffe has become familiar to
us, in the menageries, of late years; but half a century
ago, its very existence was doubted. Le Vaillant
was the first to dissipate the mystery which enveloped
it. His account of his success in killing one,
is given in the following glowing terms: “The
18th of November was the happiest day of my life.
By sunrise I was in pursuit of game, in the hope to
obtain some provision for my men. After several
hours’ fatigue, we descried, at the turn of
a hill, seven giraffes, which my pack instantly pursued.
Six of them went off together; but the seventh, cut
off by my dogs, took another way. Bernfry was
walking by the side of his horse; but in the twinkling
of an eye, he was in the saddle, and pursued the six.
For myself, I followed the single one at full speed;
but, in spite of the efforts of my horse, she got
so much ahead of me, that, in turning a little hill,
I lost sight of her altogether; and I gave up the pursuit.
My dogs, however, were not so easily exhausted.
They were soon so close upon her, that she was obliged
to stop, to defend herself. From the place where
I was, I heard them give tongue with all their might;
and, as their voices appeared all to come from the
same spot, I conjectured that they had got the animal
in a corner; and I again pushed forward. I had
scarcely got round the hill, when I perceived her surrounded
by the dogs, and endeavoring to drive them away by
heavy kicks. In a moment I was on my feet, and
a shot from my carbine brought her to the earth.
Enchanted with my victory, I returned to call my people
about me, that they might assist in skinning and cutting
up the animal. Whilst I was looking for them,
I saw one of my men, who kept making signals which
I could not comprehend. At length, I went the
way he pointed; and, to my surprise, saw a giraffe
standing under a large ebony-tree, assailed by my
dogs. It was the animal I had shot, who had staggered
to this place; and it fell dead at the moment I was
about to take a second shot. Who could have believed
that a conquest like this would have excited me to
a transport almost approaching to madness! Pains,
fatigues, cruel privation, uncertainty as to the future,
disgust sometimes as to the past, all these
recollections and feelings fled at the sight of this
new prey. I could not satisfy my desire to contemplate
it. I measured its enormous height. I looked
from the animal to the instrument which had destroyed
it. I called and recalled my people about me.
Although we had combated together the largest and
most dangerous animals, it was I alone who had killed
the giraffe. I was now able to add to the riches
of natural history. I was now able to destroy
the romance which attached to this animal, and to
establish a truth. My people congratulated me
on my triumph. Bernfry alone was absent; but he
came at last, walking at a slow pace, and holding
his horse by the bridle. He had fallen from his
seat, and injured his shoulder. I heard not what
he said to me. I saw not that he wanted assistance;
I spoke to him only of my victory. He showed
me his shoulder; I showed him my giraffe. I was
intoxicated, and I should not have thought even of
my own wounds.”
THE GOAT.
Of this animal there are many species,
some wild and some domestic. They seem to be
a link between the sheep and antelope, and to partake
of the qualities of both. In some European countries,
goat’s milk is used, by the poor, as a substitute
for that of the cow.
Anecdotes. A person
in Scotland having missed one of his goats when his
flock came home at night, being afraid the wanderer
would get among the young trees in his nursery, two
boys, wrapped in their plaids, were ordered to watch
all night. The morning had but faintly dawned,
when they sprang up the brow of a hill in search of
her. They could but just discern her on a pointed
rock far off, and, hastening to the spot, perceived
her standing with a newly-dropped kid, which she was
defending from a fox. The enemy turned round and
round to lay hold of his prey, but the goat presented
her horns in every direction. The youngest boy
was despatched to get assistance to attack the fox,
and the eldest, hallooing and throwing up stones,
sought to intimidate him as he climbed to rescue his
charge. The fox seemed well aware that the child
could not execute his threats; he looked at him one
instant, and then renewed the assault, till, quite
impatient, he made a resolute effort to seize the
kid. Suddenly the whole three disappeared, and
were soon found at the bottom of the precipice.
The goat’s horns were fast into the back of
the fox; the kid lay stretched beside her. It
is supposed the fox had fixed his teeth in the kid,
for its neck was lacerated; but when the faithful
mother inflicted a death-wound upon her mortal enemy,
he probably staggered, and brought his victims with
him over the rock.
Dr. Clarke, in his “Travels
in Palestine,” relates the following: “Upon
our road we met an Arab with a goat, which he led about
the country for exhibition, in order to gain a livelihood.
He had taught this animal, while he accompanied its
movements with a song, to mount upon little cylindrical
blocks of wood, placed successively one above the other,
and in shape resembling the dice-boxes belonging to
a backgammon-table. In this manner, the goat
stood first on the top of one cylinder, and then upon
the top of two, and afterwards of three, four, five,
and six, until it remained balanced upon the top of
them all, elevated several feet from the ground, and
with its feet collected upon a single point, without
throwing down the disjointed fabric upon which it stood.
The diameter of the upper cylinder, on which its feet
ultimately remained until the Arab had ended his ditty,
was only two inches, and the length of each was six
inches.”
We are told by a late traveller that
the Spaniards do not milk, and then distribute to
their customers, in the same manner as with us, but
drive their flock of goats to the residence of each
customer, and then milk and furnish according to contract.
“I was looking out of the window of the dining-room
of my hotel one morning; there were at least forty
goats, young and old, and the old man who managed the
affair seemed hard pushed to get our regular supply.
He had to go over the whole flock once, and some twice,
before he could completely fulfil his contract.
After carrying in his milk, he came to the door and
uttered a few Spanish words, and in an instant the
whole moved off, the herdsman bringing up the rear.
They moved at the word of command much quicker, and
marched off in better order, than do our militia.”
THE SHEEP.
Of this useful creature there are
many varieties, all of which are supposed to have
sprung from the argali, which is found in Asia, Europe,
and America.
Anecdotes. The house
of the celebrated Dr. Cotton, of Massachusetts, stood
on an eminence, with a garden sloping down in front,
filled with fruit-trees. At the foot of the garden
was a fence, and in a straight line with the fence
was an old well-curb. Mr. Cotton kept a great
many sheep, and one day these uneasy creatures took
it into their heads to get a taste of their master’s
fruit. But the minister had another mind about
the matter, and sallied out to chastise the marauders.
These were very much alarmed; and, according to their
usual habit, all followed their leader to escape.
The well-curb being the lowest part of the barrier
which presented itself to the retreating animal, over
he leaped, and down he went to the very bottom of
the well, and after him came several of his followers,
till it was in danger of being choked up by the silly
sheep. Dr. Cotton leaped over the barrier himself,
and prevented the rest from destruction. As for
those in the well, they humbly stretched out their
forefeet to their master, and bleated piteously, as
if petitioning him to release them. “Don’t
be in haste,” quietly replied the good pastor:
“wait patiently till I go to the house for a
rope then I will try to save you.”
He was as good as his word; he fastened the rope around
their bodies, and drew them one by one out of the
water.
“There are few things,”
says Hogg, “more amusing than a sheep-shearing.
We send out all the lambs to the hill, and then, as
fast as the ewes are shorn, we send them to find their
young ones. The moment that a lamb hears its
dam’s voice, it rushes from the crowd to meet
her; but instead of finding the rough, well-clad,
comfortable mamma, which it left a few hours ago,
it meets a poor, naked, shivering, most deplorable-looking
creature. It wheels about, and, uttering a loud,
tremulous bleat of despair, flies from the frightful
vision. The mother’s voice arrests its
flight it returns flies and returns
again generally for a dozen times, before
the reconciliation is fairly made up.”
The following pleasing anecdote of
the power of music is given by the celebrated Haydn:
“In my early youth,” says he, “I
went with some other young people equally devoid of
care, one morning during the extreme heat of summer,
to seek for coolness and fresh air on one of the lofty
mountains which surround the Lago Maggiore, in Lombardy.
Having reached the middle of the ascent by daybreak,
we stopped to contemplate the Borromean Isles, which
were displayed under our feet, in the middle of the
lake, when we were surrounded by a large flock of sheep,
which were leaving their fold to go to the pasture.
“One of our party, who was no
bad performer on the flute, and who always carried
the instrument with him, took it out of his pocket.
’I am going,’ said he, ’to turn
Corydon; let us see whether Virgil’s sheep will
recognize their pastor.’ He began to play.
The sheep and goats, which were following one another
towards the mountain, with their heads hanging down,
raised them at the first sound of the flute, and all,
with a general and hasty movement, turned to the side
from whence the agreeable noise proceeded. They
gradually flocked round the musician, and listened
with motionless attention. He ceased playing,
and the sheep did not stir.
“The shepherd with his staff
now obliged them to move on; but no sooner did the
fluter begin again to play, than his innocent auditors
again returned to him. The shepherd, out of patience,
pelted them with clods of earth, but not one of them
would move. The fluter played with additional
skill; the shepherd fell into a passion, whistled,
scolded, and pelted the poor creatures with stones.
Such as were hit by them began to march, but the others
still refused to stir. At last, the shepherd
was forced to entreat our Orpheus to stop his magic
sounds; the sheep then moved off, but continued to
stop at a distance as often as our friend resumed
the agreeable instrument.
“The tune he played was nothing
more than a favorite air, at that time performing
at the Opera in Milan. As music was our continual
employment, we were delighted with our adventure; we
reasoned upon it the whole day, and concluded that
physical pleasure is the basis of all interest in
music.”
A gentleman, while passing through
a lonely district of the Highlands, observed a sheep
hurrying towards the road before him, and bleating
most piteously. On approaching nearer, it redoubled
its cries, looked in his face, and seemed to implore
his assistance. He alighted, left his gig, and
followed the sheep to a field in the direction whence
it came. There, in a solitary cairn, at a considerable
distance from the road, the sheep halted, and the
traveller found a lamb completely wedged in betwixt
two large stones of the cairn, and struggling feebly
with its legs uppermost. He instantly extricated
the sufferer, and placed it on the greensward, while
the mother poured forth her thanks and joy in a long-continued
and significant strain.
THE OX.
There are many varieties of the domestic
ox or cow, all of which are supposed to have sprung
from a species still found wild in Europe and Asia.
The herds of wild cattle in North and South America
are the progeny of animals brought hither by the Spanish
settlers.
Miscellaneous Anecdotes. The
following account is from the journal of a Santé
Fe trader: “Our encampment was in a beautiful
plain. Our cattle were shut up in the pen with
the wagons; and our men were, with the exception of
the guard, all wrapped in a peaceful slumber, when
all of a sudden, about midnight, a tremendous uproar
was heard, which caused every man to start in terror
from his couch, with arms in hand. Some animal,
it appeared, had taken fright at a dog, and, by a sudden
start, set all around him in violent motion. The
panic spread simultaneously through the pen; and a
scene of rattle, clash, and ‘lumbering’
succeeded, which far surpassed every thing we had yet
witnessed. A general stampede was the result.
Notwithstanding the wagons were tightly bound together,
wheel to wheel, with ropes or chains, the oxen soon
burst their way out; and, though mostly yoked in pairs,
they went scampering over the plains. All attempts
to stop them were in vain; but early the next morning
we set out in search of them, and recovered all the
oxen, except half a dozen.” Similar cases
of panic are frequently described by travellers upon
the western prairies.
The cattle of South America, especially
in the neighborhood of Buenos Ayres, are said to give
indications of approaching rain, before the signs
of it are visible in the atmosphere. A traveller
relates that, in passing from this place, the weather
had been long dry, almost every spring had failed,
and the negroes were sent in all directions to discover
fountains. Soon after, the cattle began to stretch
their necks to the west, and to snuff in a singular
manner through their noses, which they held very high
in the air. Not a cloud was then seen, nor the
slightest breath of wind felt. But the cattle
proceeded, as if seized with a sudden madness, to
scamper about, then to gather together, squeezing
closer and closer, and snuffing as before. While
he was wondering what was to be the result of such
extravagant motions, a black cloud rose above the
mountains, thunder and lightning followed, the rain
fell in torrents, and the cattle were soon enabled
to quench their thirst on the spot where they stood.
There are many anecdotes which show
that the ox, or cow, has a musical ear. The carts
in Corunna, in Spain, make so loud and disagreeable
a creaking with their wheels, for the want of oil,
that the governor once issued an order to have them
greased; but the carters petitioned that this might
not be done, as the oxen liked the sound, and would
not draw so well without their accustomed music.
Professor Bell assures us that he
has often, when a boy, tried the effect of the flute
on cows, and has always observed that it produced
great apparent enjoyment. Instances have been
known of the fiercest bulls being calmed into gentleness
by music.
It is probable that the old rhyme
had its origin in reality:
“There was a piper had
a cow,
And nothing had
to give her:
He took his pipe and played
a tune
‘Consider,
cow, consider.’”
A correspondent of the Penny Magazine
says that, while on a visit to the country-house of
a lady, it one day happened that they were passing
the cow-house just at the time when the dairymaid was
driving home the cows, to be milked. They all
passed in quietly enough, with the exception of one,
which stood lowing at the door, and resisted every
effort of the dairymaid to induce her to enter.
When the maid was interrogated as to the cause of
this obstinacy, she attributed it to pride; and when
surprise was expressed at this, she explained that,
whenever any of the other cows happened to get before
her, this particular cow would seem quite affronted,
and would not enter at all, unless the others were
turned out again. This statement having excited
curiosity, the maid was desired to redouble her exertions
to induce the cow to enter; on which she chased the
animal through every corner of the yard, but without
success, until she at last desisted, from want of
breath, declaring that there was no other remedy than
to turn out the other cows. She was then permitted
to make the experiment; and no sooner were the others
driven out, than in walked the gratified cow, with
a stately air her more humble-minded companions
following in her rear.
THE BISON.
This animal is peculiar to North America,
and wanders in vast herds over the western plains.
They are much attracted by the soft, tender grass,
which springs up after a fire has spread over the prairie.
In winter, they scrape away the snow with their feet,
to reach the grass. The bulls and cows live in
separate herds for the greater part of the year; but
at all seasons, one or two bulls generally accompany
a large herd of cows. The bison is in general
a shy animal, and takes to flight instantly on winding
an enemy, which the acuteness of its sense of smell
enables it to do from a great distance. They are
less wary when they are assembled together in numbers,
and will then often blindly follow their leaders,
regardless of, or trampling down, the hunters posted
in their way. It is dangerous for the sportsman
to show himself after having wounded one, for it will
pursue him, and, although its gait may be heavy and
awkward, it will have no difficulty in overtaking
the fleetest runner.
Anecdotes. Many
instances might be mentioned of the pertinacity with
which this animal pursues his revenge. We are
told of a hunter having been detained for many hours
in a tree by an old bull, which had taken its post
below, to watch him. When it contends with a dog,
it strikes violently with its fore feet, and in that
way proves more than a match for an English bull-dog.
The favorite Indian method of killing the bison, is
by riding up to the fattest of the herd on horseback,
and shooting it with an arrow. When a large party
of hunters are engaged in this way, the spectacle
is very imposing, and the young men have many opportunities
of displaying their skill and agility. The horses
appear to enjoy the sport as much as their riders,
and are very active in eluding the shock of the animal,
should it turn on its pursuer. The most common
method, however, of shooting the bison, is by crawling
towards them from to leeward; and in favorable places,
great numbers are taken in pounds. When the bison
runs, it leans very much first to one side, for a
short space of time, and then to the other, and so
on alternately.
When the Indians determine to destroy
bisons, as they frequently do, by driving them over
a precipice, one of their swiftest-footed and most
active young men is selected, who is disguised in a
bison skin, having the head, ears, and horns adjusted
on his own head, so as to make the deception very
complete; and, thus accoutred, he stations himself
between the bison herd and some of the precipices that
often extend for several miles along the rivers.
The Indians surround the herd as nearly as possible,
when, at a given signal, they show themselves, and
rush forward with loud yells. The animals being
alarmed, and seeing no way open but in the direction
of the disguised Indian, run towards him, and he,
taking to flight, dashes on to the precipice, where
he suddenly secures himself in some previously ascertained
crevice. The foremost of the herd arrives at
the brink there is no possibility of retreat,
no chance of escape; the foremost may for an instant
shrink with terror, but the crowd behind, who are
terrified by the approaching hunters, rush forward
with increasing impetuosity, and the aggregated force
hurls them successively into the gulf, where certain
death awaits them.
ORDER X - CETACEA,
THE WHALE KIND.
This order contains a class of animals
which live in the water, propel themselves by fins,
and have the general form of fishes; yet they are
viviparous, and suckle their young; in these respects
forming a striking contrast to all the other finny
inhabitants of the wave. The principal species
are the dolphin, grampus, porpoise, and whale.
The latter is remarkable as being by far the largest
creature known to the animal kingdom.
THE DOLPHIN.
This animal usually swims in troops,
and its motions in the water are performed with such
wonderful rapidity, that the French sailors call it
la flèche de la mer, or the sea-arrow.
St. Pierre, in his “Voyage to the Isle of France,”
assures us that he saw a dolphin swim with apparent
ease round the vessel in which he was sailing, though
it was going at the rate of about six miles an hour.
A shoal of dolphins followed the ships of Sir Richard
Hawkins upwards of a thousand leagues. They were
known to be the same, from the wounds they occasionally
received from the sailors. They are greedy of
almost any kind of scraps that are thrown overboard,
and consequently are often caught by means of large
iron hooks, baited with pieces of fish and garbage.
The bounding and gambolling of dolphins
has attracted the attention of writers and poets in
all ages, and is described as being extremely beautiful.
The ancients believed that dolphins
attended all cases of shipwreck, and transported the
mariners in safety to the shore. Piroetes, having
made captive Arion, the poet, at length determined
on throwing him overboard; and it is said that he
escaped in safety to the shore on the back of a dolphin.
The poet says,
“Kind, generous dolphins
love the rocky shore,
Where broken waves with fruitless
anger roar.
But though to sounding shores
they curious come,
Yet dolphins count the boundless
sea their home.
Nay, should these favorites
forsake the main,
Neptune would grieve his melancholy
reign.
The calmest, stillest seas,
when left by them,
Would awful frown, and all
unjoyous seem.
But when the darling frisks
his wanton play,
The waters smile, and every
wave looks gay.”
THE GRAMPUS.
This inhabitant of the deep is from
twenty to twenty-five feet in length, and seems to
cherish a mortal spite against the whale. It
possesses the strong affection for its young common
to this order. One of the poems of Waller is
founded upon the following incident: A grampus
in England, with her cub, once got into an arm of the
sea, where, by the desertion of the tide, they were
enclosed on every side. The men on shore saw
their situation, and ran down upon them with such
weapons as they could at the moment collect. The
poor animals were soon wounded in several places,
so that all the immediately surrounding water was
stained with their blood. They made many efforts
to escape; and the old one, by superior strength,
forced itself over the shallow, into a deep of the
ocean. But though in safety herself, she would
not leave her young one in the hands of assassins.
She therefore again rushed in, and seemed resolved,
since she could not prevent, at least to share, the
fate of her offspring: the tide coming in, however,
conveyed them both off in triumph.
THE PORPOISE.
This creature is familiar to every
one who has been at sea, or who has frequented the
bays and harbors along our coast. It may often
be seen in troops gambolling in the water, and seeming
like a drove of black hogs, with their backs above
the waves. It is imagined by the sailors that
they are the most sportive just before a storm.
The following method is adopted for taking them on
the banks of the St. Lawrence: When the fishing
season arrives, the people collect together a great
number of sallow twigs, or slender branches of other
trees, and stick them pretty firmly into the sand-banks
of the river, which at low water are left dry; this
is done on the side towards the river, forming a long
line of twigs at moderate distances, which at the upper
end is connected with the shore, an opening being
left at the lower end, that they may enter. As
the tide rises, it covers the twigs, so as to keep
them out of sight: the porpoise, in quest of his
prey, gets within the line; when those who placed
the snare rush out in numbers, properly armed, and,
while in this defenceless state, they overpower him
with ease.
THE WHALE.
Of this monster of the deep there
are several species as the Great Whale,
which is seventy or eighty feet in length; the Spermaceti
Whale, which is somewhat smaller, &c. They frequent
various seas, and are most common in cold latitudes.
To the Greenlanders, as well as the
natives of more southern climates, the whale is an
animal of essential importance; and these people spend
much time in fishing for it. When they set out
on their whale-catching expeditions, they dress themselves
in their best apparel, fancying that, if they are
not cleanly and neatly clad, the whale, who detests
a slovenly and dirty garb, would immediately avoid
them. In this manner about fifty persons, men
and women, set out together in one of their large
boats. The women carry along with them their needles,
and other implements, to mend their husbands’
clothes, in case they should be torn, and to repair
the boat, if it happen to receive any damage.
When the men discover a whale, they strike it with
their harpoons, to which are fastened lines or straps
two or three fathoms long, made of seal-skin, having
at the end a bag of a whole seal-skin, blown up.
The huge animal, by means of the inflated bag, is
in some degree compelled to keep near the surface
of the water. When he is fatigued, and rises,
the men attack him with their spears till he is killed.
The affection and fidelity of the
male and female are very great. Anderson informs
us that some fishermen having harpooned one of two
whales that were in company together, the wounded animal
made a long and terrible resistance; it upset a boat
containing three men with a single blow of its tail,
by which all went to the bottom. The other still
attended its companion, and lent it every assistance,
till at last the one that was struck sank under its
wounds; while its faithful associate, disdaining to
survive the loss, with great bellowing, stretched
itself upon the dead animal, and shared its fate.
The whale is remarkable also for its
attachment to its young, and may be frequently seen
urging and assisting them to escape from danger, with
the most unceasing care and fondness. They are
not less remarkable for strong feeling of sociality
and attachment to one another. This is carried
to so great an extent, that, where one female of a
herd is attacked or wounded, her faithful companions
will remain around her to the last moment, until they
are wounded themselves. This act of remaining
by a wounded companion is called “heaving to,”
and whole “schools,” or herds, have been
destroyed by dexterous management, when several ships
have been in company, wholly from their possessing
this remarkable disposition.
In the year 1814, an English harpooner
struck a cub, in hopes of attracting the attention
of the mother. When the young one was wounded,
the whale rose to the surface, seized the cub, and
dragged a hundred fathoms of line from the boat with
great velocity. She again rose to the surface,
and dashed furiously about, seemingly deeply concerned
for the fate of her young one. Although closely
pursued, she did not again descend; and, regardless
of the surrounding danger, continued in this state,
till she received three harpoons, and was at length
killed.
There are few incidents in which the
enterprise and power of man are more strikingly displayed
than in the chase and capture of the whale. It
would be easy to fill a volume with thrilling tales
of adventure in this hazardous vocation. One
of the most curious occurrences upon record, in relation
to the whale fishery, happened to a Nantucket ship
some years since in the Pacific Ocean. An attack
having been made upon a young whale, the dam went
to a distance, and, turning toward the ship, came
against the bow with a terrific force, which beat it
in, and the vessel sank, only allowing time for the
hands to get into the boat. In this they roamed
upon the ocean for several weeks, and, when emaciated
to the last degree by fatigue and privation, they were
finally picked up and saved.