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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #51847 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/51847)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Birds and Beasts, by Camille Lemonnier
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Birds and Beasts
-
-Author: Camille Lemonnier
-
-Illustrator: E. J. Detmold
-
-Translator: A. R. Allinson
-
-Release Date: April 24, 2016 [EBook #51847]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BIRDS AND BEASTS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Suzanne Shell, Stephen Hutcheson, and the
-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-(This file was produced from images generously made
-available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Birds and Beasts
-
-
- _Translated by_ A. R. Allinson _from the French of_ Camille Lemonnier
-
- _Illustrated by_
- E. J. Detmold
-
- London: George Allen & Company, Ltd.
- _Ruskin House_, Rathbone Place. Mcmxi
-
- [All rights reserved]
-
- Printed by Ballantyne, Hanson & Co.
- At the Ballantyne Press, Edinburgh
-
-
-
-
- Contents and Illustrations
-
-
- PAGE
- Jack and Murph 1
- The Captive Goldfinch 53
- Strange Adventures of a Little White Rabbit 91
- “Monsieur Friquet” 106
- A Lost Dog 133
- Misadventures of an Owl 156
-
-
-
-
- Birds and Beasts
-
-
-[Illustration: JACK AND MURPH]
-
-
-
-
- Jack and Murph
-
-
- I
-
-Jack and Murph were friends, old friends, trusty and tried.
-
-It was now nearly six years since the day chance had brought them
-together as members of the same company. Jack had come straight from the
-African forests; he had crossed the seas, and set foot on the continent
-of Europe for the first time; his amazement knew no bounds.
-
-It is not for nothing a little fellow of his sort is torn from the
-freedom of his vagabond life in the woods and surrendered to the tender
-mercies of a showman of performing animals. He learned to know the cruel
-tedium of captivity; shut up in a cage, he thought sadly of his merry
-gambols in the tree-tops; his little face grew wan and withered, and he
-came near pining to death. But time damped the keenness of his grief; by
-dint of seeing around him other little creatures that, like himself, had
-wearied for their native wilds, then little by little had grown
-reconciled to their fate, and now seemed to get a prodigious amount of
-fun out of their new life, he made the best of the bars, the tainted air
-of the booth, and the clown’s grimaces, rehearsing his drolleries before
-the animals’ cages.
-
-At the same time he could never quite share the gaiety of his companions
-in misfortune. While they were enjoying everlasting games of
-hide-and-seek, scuffling, squabbling, pelting each other with nuts, he
-would cower timidly in a corner, too sad at heart to join in their noisy
-merriment. Sometimes, when his feelings grew too much for him, he would
-break out in a series of sharp, shrill outcries, or wail like a new-born
-babe in his doleful despair.
-
-The master was very fond of him, for he was both intelligent and
-teachable. In a very short time he learned to do his musket drill, to
-walk the slack-rope, and use the spring-board. But these accomplishments
-only earned him the ill-will of the other pupils. There was never a
-prank they did not play him. No sooner had he cracked a nut, to eat the
-kernel, than a hand would dart over his shoulder and snatch the morsel
-just as he was putting it between his teeth. They slapped his face,
-pinched his tail, scarified his head with their nails, jumped upon him,
-or half strangled him in a corner, till a day came at last when his
-master, noticing how he was bullied, put him in a separate cage all by
-himself. But this loneliness only made him more unhappy still; he spent
-his life in lamentation, sitting stock-still all day long, with his arms
-hanging limp, and his eyes fixed on vacancy, refusing either to eat or
-drink. This would never do; so they left him at liberty to wander at
-will in the house.
-
-
- II
-
-Oh! but this house was not a bit like mine or yours; yet it had doors
-and windows like any other house, but so tiny these doors and windows
-were, they were hardly worth mentioning. Imagine a house on four wheels,
-and no higher than a man of middle size, with three little windows high
-up admitting light and air from outside; you entered by a wooden
-staircase that looked more like the ladder of a windmill than anything
-else.
-
-This queer construction rolled most part of the year along the high
-roads, jolting, gee-wo, gee-hup! in and out of the ruts, and carting
-about in its interior men and animals, to say nothing of household
-stuff—beds, cooking-stoves, chests crammed with clothes, and a whole
-heap of other things. An old horse, who was little better than a bag of
-bones, was in the shafts; when a halt was called, they let him crop the
-grass alongside the hedgerows.
-
-It was the funniest thing, being hauled along like this, tossing and
-tumbling in this box on wheels where the furniture seemed to be always
-just on the point of starting a polka. The table would throw up its legs
-in the air, and the chairs turn head over heels, while the pots and pans
-knocked together in the corners, making the quaintest music, sharp or
-flat in key according to the jolts.
-
-Jack, perched atop of a big press, held on tooth and nail to save a
-tumble. More often than not he found himself under the table along with
-his good friend Murph, a Stoic philosopher, who let nothing ever disturb
-his equanimity, but calmly went on beating the bush of his thick woolly
-coat in search of the game that lived there. All the while the caravan,
-bumping and thumping with a terrific rattle, was tacking and luffing
-over the rolling billows of the stony roads.
-
-
- III
-
-It is high time to tell you that Jack was a dear, pretty little monkey
-of the chimpanzee kind, with tiny, delicate hands, nervous and
-semi-transparent, almost like a sick child’s. He was no bigger, the
-whole body of him, than a pocket-handkerchief, and you could have easily
-hidden him inside your hat. He was slim and slender, daintily made, with
-narrow chest and sloping shoulders—a creature all nerves, with a
-wonderful little pale phiz of his own, puckered and wrinkled, and long,
-drooping eyelids, greyish-white, and as thin as an onion skin, that
-slowly, rhythmically, opened and closed over brown eyes ringed with
-yellow. He bore the solemn, serious look of those who suffer; his eyes
-seemed fixed on something beyond the visible world, and now and again he
-would pass his long, dry fingers across his eyes as if to wipe away a
-tear. He seldom gambolled, and never indulged in the grotesque
-contortions of other apes; their restless, ceaseless activity seemed
-foreign to his nature, and even his grimaces had nothing in common with
-theirs.
-
-Noise scared him; he was never angry, but habitually silent and
-thoughtful. He preferred to lurk alone in dark corners, where he would
-spend long hours, squatted on his tail, almost motionless, dreaming
-sadly of some mysterious, unattainable future. But, for all his
-unlikeness to his colleagues and their comicality, his queer little
-crumpled, wrinkled face never failed to produce its effect on the
-spectators. Jack was perfectly irresistible; no one _could_ look at him
-for any length of time without bursting out laughing. His aspect was at
-once so piteous and so ridiculous, his gaze so pathetic and so
-grotesque, his deadly earnestness so side-splitting, while his eyelids
-would droop suddenly ever and anon in so anxious and appealing a wink,
-that the result was comic beyond belief. An old, old man’s head on a
-baby’s body, a mask that was for ever changing, twitching, wrinkling,
-with eyes that looked out grave, intense, solemn, from beneath a low,
-flat brow crowned by what looked for all the world like a wig!
-
-The louder the merriment he excited, the more serious Jack became. On
-show days, while the audience was convulsed with mirth, the gravity of
-his mien, the careworn look in his eyes, over which the lids dropped
-mechanically at regular intervals, as if weighed down with their load of
-melancholy, reached the acme of fantastic absurdity.
-
-Alas! men cannot tell what monkeys are thinking of. If they knew, they
-would not always laugh. Jack was dreaming of the sun, the vast green
-forests, the friends he had left behind; he was dreaming of the delights
-of swinging high in the air, cradled in the leafy hammocks of the
-boughs, dreaming of the trailing lianas, of the romps and games with his
-fellows throwing cocoanuts at one another’s heads, and of the endless
-chivyings and chasings from tree-top to tree-top above the rolling
-billows of the wind-tossed jungles, through which the wild
-beasts—elephants, panthers, and lions—plough their way like ships on the
-high seas, leaving in their wake a broad furrow of floating odours and
-deep-toned sounds.
-
-
- IV
-
-But Jack had a friend, and he never embarked on his voyages into the
-far-away dreamland without calling on his old chum Murph to join him.
-
-Yes, Murph gambolled with him in the tropical jungles, Murph frolicked
-with him in the tall grasses, Murph and he amused themselves together at
-never-ending games of play; if ever it was granted him to see his native
-land again, he fully hoped to take Murph along with him.
-
-Poor Jack! he did not understand that the worthy Murph, acrobat as he
-was, would have found it hard to follow him in the lofty regions where
-his congeners are wont to disport themselves, nearer to the stars than
-the earth. Not a doubt of it, Murph would have had to kick his heels at
-the foot of a tree, while his friend was off and away aloft; and the
-smallest of his perils would have been to find himself, on looking
-round, face to face with a python-snake, just uncoiling his folds to
-spring, or else, on the river-banks, confronted with the gaping jaws of
-a crocodile.
-
-Murph could play dominoes, tell fortunes, hunt for a handkerchief in a
-spectator’s pocket, read the paper. Murph had many other accomplishments
-besides, but it is far from certain that he would have extricated
-himself successfully from a _tête-à-tête_ of this sort with beasts that
-could boast neither his education nor his manners.
-
-The liking was reciprocal. From the very first Jack had taken a fancy to
-the big woolly-coated dog, as woolly as a sheep, who never barked or
-growled or grumbled or showed his teeth—so unlike the other dogs in the
-menagerie; in the same way Murph, the big dog, had formed an affection
-for the well-behaved, sad-faced little ape, who never pulled his tail
-and never tried to scratch out his eyes.
-
-As it happened, the showman had made up his mind to make them perform
-together. Murph was the best runner in the troupe; there was nobody like
-him for a round trot or a swinging gallop, for wheeling suddenly round
-and dropping to his knees just before making his exit, nobody to match
-Murph, always good-tempered and imperturbable, always on the look-out,
-with his bright eyes half hid under the bushy eyebrows, for a bit of
-sugar and a round of applause.
-
-Jack, for his part, had very soon become a brilliant horseman, lissom
-and fearless, an adept at leaping through the hoops and vaulting the
-bars. Thus the two seemed made for each other, both in body and mind.
-They bore the hardships of the life together, and they shared its
-successes; by dint of standing so often back against back and muzzle
-against muzzle, they found their hearts brought close together too, and
-became fast friends. Murph was never to be seen without Jack; wherever
-Jack was, Murph was there as well; they lived curled up on the same rug,
-in the same corner, under the same table, Murph licking Jack in the
-neck, and Jack stroking Murph’s nose, each bound to each in perfect
-trust and amity.
-
-
- V
-
-Murph was older than Jack by nearly nine years, and his years made him
-nearly as serious-minded as his friend. But it was a different sort of
-gravity. Murph was neither morose nor disillusioned; his was the gentle
-seriousness of old age. He had seen many things since he had been in the
-world, but life did not appear to have left only its dregs in him. He
-still believed in springtide, in friendship, in the master’s kind heart;
-then he had neither family nor native land to regret, for he had been
-born in the menagerie of a father and mother broken in like himself to
-circle the trapeze and leap through the hoop.
-
-His horizon was bounded by the four walls of the caravan in which, as a
-puppy still sucking at his mother’s breast, he had been carted from fair
-to fair. Day by day he had watched from behind the window-panes the long
-procession of cities and countries filing past; he had visited most
-parts of Europe, in company with the strange _omnium-gatherum_ of apes,
-goats, parrots, and dogs that at each halting-place was the delight of
-the infant population. But he had never taken it upon him to covet the
-kingdom of this world; he had never craved to roam at liberty through
-the streets; never, in one word, had he so much as dreamt of playing
-truant. He was a very learned dog, and, like other learned people, he
-lived absorbed in his own thoughts, self-centred within the circle of
-his meditations, seeking nothing of things outside.
-
-
- VI
-
-Murph was a poodle by breed, and you might have searched long before you
-found a bigger or better-built one. Standing well on his legs, with a
-good, strong, supple back of his own, he carried his head high, as a
-self-respecting poodle should. I mean, of course, in the days when Murph
-was still young, for since age had crept on him, it _would_ droop more
-or less; but even so, there was something proud and dignified about its
-carriage that always attracted attention. He walked slowly and sedately,
-as if intent on the solution of an ever-insoluble problem. His thick,
-curly fleece clothed his neck like a mane, while a stout pair of long
-drooping moustaches gave him the look of an old cavalry officer; his
-skin was smooth and polished where the coat had been cut very close; he
-wore heavy ruffles round his ankles, and his tail ended in a woolly
-tuft.
-
-Thus accoutred, Murph was a fine-looking dog; the curs of low degree
-that came prowling round the van, and caught a glimpse of him through
-the crack of the door, gazed at him with admiration. He had the majestic
-port of beings destined to greatness; it was easy to see he might have
-been a diplomatist, or a great general, if nature, in fashioning his
-lot, had not chosen rather to give him the shape of a poodle; nor was
-Murph slow to appreciate and enjoy the impression he produced.
-
-Fine fellow as he was, he was not altogether free from vanity; the
-humblest animal with which Murph compared himself was the lion; he had
-seen one once in a travelling menagerie, and been struck by his own
-likeness to the king of beasts. Why, had he not, like the lion, a mane
-about his neck, a tuft to his tail, and bracelets of hair about his
-ankles? Had he not likewise his Olympian look and superb carriage? By
-dint of a little imagination, Murph had come to believe the lion a
-degenerated type of poodle dog.
-
-But let us pass lightly over his foibles; every one has his little
-weaknesses. Time, moreover, that damps the foolish ardour of mankind and
-dogkind, had tamed our friend’s ambitions. He was by now as
-contemplative and calm as some wise philosopher satiated with the
-glories of this world. More often on his back than on his feet, he would
-watch the younger dogs, his juniors in the profession, capering and
-giving themselves the airs of a drum-major heading his regiment, without
-any other feeling towards them but one of kindly indulgence; and if any
-one else was disposed to rebuke them, he would shake his head, as much
-as to say, “There, there, we have all of us done the like in our day!”
-
-
- VII
-
-Jack had come as a solace to his old age; he had loved him as a friend,
-almost as a son, with a truly fatherly affection.
-
-This little suffering, delicate creature, so morbidly nervous and
-excitable, had roused in him some mysterious instinct of protection,
-that had grown little by little and ended by forming an unbreakable bond
-of brotherhood. Ceaselessly he watched over his protégé, sheltered him,
-defended him, kept for him the best of his bodily heat and his warm
-heart. If a bullying animal ran after Jack, in one bound the latter was
-beside Murph, who would show a determined front, that soon sent the
-would-be tormentor to the right-about. One day, indeed, Murph, usually
-so good-tempered, showed his teeth to the master himself, who, for some
-small fault, had thought good to lift his whip at the little monkey. If
-Jack was a-cold—and he was always shivering, blow the wind from what
-quarter it might—quick he would slip between Murph’s paws and cuddle
-against his breast in the warm, cosy place. Murph was Jack’s special
-providence.
-
-Thus they had been living for nearly half-a-dozen years. Never a cloud
-had dimmed their good accord; never an angry snap of the teeth—never a
-pettish fit; mankind might have taken a lesson in the art of friendship
-from them. Thus they had grown old, loving, fondling, helping each
-other, making between them the prettiest happy family ever known in the
-world, never weary one of the other, but realising the ideal of the most
-perfect union.
-
-Mutual esteem further increased their affection. Murph had never seen an
-ape more alert and clever, more intelligent and active than Jack; he
-would gladly have stood for hours watching him performing his tricks,
-clinging to the cords with his delicate, dry little hands, then hurling
-himself into space to alight again on his feet, or else holding on by
-his tail and swinging from earth to heaven on the trapeze.
-
-On his side Jack—Jack the cynic, whose lack-lustre eyes seemed incapable
-of any curiosity—admired his friend Murph as a creature of extraordinary
-gifts.
-
-And what wonderful things the good dog could do, to be sure! I have
-mentioned some of them; I could tell of many others. Murph could climb a
-ladder; Murph could walk along a line of bottle necks; Murph could nose
-out the prettiest lady in the audience; Murph could play the
-cornet-à-piston; Murph could smoke a pipe; Murph was almost a man.
-
-
- VIII
-
-It did one good to see him “come on,” a big pink bow knotted in the
-tufts that adorned his tail. He would enter gravely, bow politely to
-right and left, then cast a questioning look at his master, quite
-motionless the while, except for a slight quiver of the tail, waiting
-for the conclusion of the introductory remarks which the “old man” never
-failed to address to the audience. At last came the loud “Hi,
-Murph!”—and the good dog began his evening’s work.
-
-He could have given points to the most experienced actors by his aplomb,
-his punctiliousness, his patient and never-flagging attention. Nothing
-ever distracted him from his part. Wags would amuse themselves sometimes
-by offering him a lump of sugar, or even pitch a sausage or a cake right
-between his paws; but Murph was adamant against such temptations. How
-the crowd cheered and clapped hands and stamped feet when he went
-bounding from hoop to hoop, so supple and nimble and self-possessed,
-never losing step or missing a spring, striking the paper with his head
-fair and square in the middle every time, crashing through and landing
-again on his feet, gravely and yet so elegantly.
-
-His tricks finished, he would repeat his bows to right and left, still
-quite sedate and unintoxicated by the thunders of applause. The fact is,
-Murph respected both his audience and himself; he knew how to keep his
-feelings to himself—how different from those ill-trained dogs that yelp
-and bark and lose their heads in the hurly-burly, quite forgetting that
-the finest thing on earth is to take one’s triumph modestly.
-
-
- IX
-
-But Murph was particularly admirable in the tricks he went through with
-Jack. Each of the two friends seemed made to help out the other, and
-each vied with the other in sacrificing himself to enhance the general
-effect. Now it was “Mazeppa’s ride”; you know—Mazeppa bound on the back
-of his fiery charger and borne on and on in wild career over the steppes
-in a whirlwind of flying stones and smothering dust. Now it was a
-_powder-play_ of Bedouins, pursuing, retreating, prancing, curvetting,
-rising in their stirrups and brandishing their muskets; or else a mortal
-combat between two troops of horse, firing at each other, reloading and
-firing again. The spectacle, whatever it was, was always thrilling.
-
-Murph would stand waiting in the side-scenes for his cue. Suddenly he
-would give a spring, a tremendous spring, and like a bomb-shell he was
-on the stage, with mane erect and flashing eyes; clearing every
-obstacle, upsetting everything he encountered, animate or inanimate, he
-hurled himself on to the boards; on his back, clinging to his woolly
-coat, shaking and shivering, teeth hard set and mouth awry, rode a
-little black figure wrapped in a voluminous burnous that flapped in the
-wind.
-
-And bing! bang! bang! as his steed dashed by, with all the flash and
-dazzle of red saddle braided with gold, scarlet bridle, and red, green,
-blue spangles, shaking the boards, rattling the lustres, rustling the
-curtain, to reiterated cries of “Hi! hip! hurrah, hurrah!” and the crack
-of the whip going off like pistol-shots behind, Jack would fire off his
-gun over and over again, till he was shrouded in a cloud of smoke,
-through which he could be discerned still tireless, still indefatigable,
-bestriding Murph in every possible position, now perched on the neck,
-now on the crupper. He seemed made of iron, the frail little being!
-Murph might prance and jib and shy, buck-jump and leap fences—nothing
-could unseat Jack. The performance over, the latter would shake his
-little head under its jockey-cap two or three times, by way of bow, and
-so exit, as his friend the poodle gave one last tremendous bound that
-carried him and his rider out of sight.
-
-The enthusiasm of the spectators followed him behind the scenes, and the
-floor trembled and shook under the drumming of heavy boots. The applause
-grew deafening, and suddenly Jack and Murph made a final whirlwind dash
-across the stage, executed a last frantic _fantasia_—and retired for
-good and all.
-
-
- X
-
-But, alas! Murph was getting old. His exertions tired him dreadfully;
-after each performance he had to be rubbed down and attended to, or he
-would have lain moaning and groaning for an hour.
-
-His master was sorry for him, and with deep regret—for he saw no glimpse
-among his troupe of any talent to take the place of the “falling
-star”—he set him to do his more quiet tricks—playing dominoes, finding
-handkerchiefs, walking on bottles.
-
-At the same time he resolved to try a young poodle to fill the hole in
-the receipts his good, faithful Murph’s retirement was bound to make. He
-trained the animal to run in circles, to leap through hoops, to clear
-obstacles, and one fine day clapped Jack on his back.
-
-Banco—that was the poodle’s name—had not gone three steps before he was
-bitten, beaten, garrotted, and left blinded and bleeding. The master
-punished Jack severely, and presently made a fresh attempt. But, no—Jack
-_would_ not obey; he tore Banco’s ear in two, and then sprang from the
-saddle and hid himself in a dark corner.
-
-Much the same thing happened at every new trial. The whip was no sort of
-use; Jack was not to be moved. At last, wearied out, the showman gave
-in, and Jack and Murph remained inseparable, living and working together
-as before.
-
-One night Murph came in from his performance utterly worn out, his
-tongue hanging out of his mouth and his strength exhausted; his midday
-meal had proved indigestible, and, to cap all, the applause to-night had
-been faint and feeble.
-
-Ah! few of us know how actors live on that elusive thing, the favour of
-the public, and what renewed force, when they are grown old and have one
-foot in the grave already, what fresh vigour the smiles of a delighted
-audience instil in their veins, when the blood is beginning to run
-feeble!
-
-No, the thankless audience did not for once acknowledge Murph as their
-old favourite, the veteran of the boards, the good and gallant beast
-that had so often been their darling and their delight. Under his
-outward show of indifference Murph hid a vast fund of sensibility, and
-the coldness of his audience cut him to the quick, coming so soon after
-his late successes. He thought the dark night of public neglect was
-beginning for him; he realised his loss of vigour, his waning energies,
-and, like other old players, he saw himself superannuated, out of date,
-unknown, and misunderstood by a new public, become a mere shadow on the
-scene of his former triumphs. Add to this his master’s evident
-ill-humour, as he foresaw the inevitable moment when his old servant
-would be a mere pensioner on his bounty.
-
-Murph staggered off, and fell panting on the rug that formed his bed.
-
-Then Jack came to help him; but, alas! even Jack could not console him
-just at first. Murph rejected his friend’s ministrations, so bitter was
-his rancour against mankind. But his pique was soon over, and his
-wounded heart found healing under the gentle hand of his lifelong
-companion.
-
-
- XI
-
-But the fatal hour had struck; old age was upon him. Murph had grown
-infirm; he would take a dozen steps, crawling from one corner to
-another, and then sink down helplessly. His legs, once so prodigiously
-strong and active, tottered and stumbled from sheer weakness. In vain
-his master’s voice called him to show his tricks; he would struggle to
-his feet, for an instant his head would recover its proud carriage of
-old days; then suddenly, his momentary strength exhausted, his limbs
-tingling with rheumatic pains that cut like whip-lashes, he would slink
-away to fall back again into the lifeless attitude of an aged invalid.
-
-A cloud floated before his eyes, he could no longer see things clearly,
-and a growing deafness filled his head with a buzz-buzzing that never
-stopped. Life was slowly dying down in the old body. He would lie torpid
-for hours and doze away the time in dark corners, under tables, where
-nothing would wake him, neither the yapping of the other dogs nor the
-chattering of the monkeys, neither the noise of footsteps coming and
-going nor the shrill trumpetings of the clown’s cornet-à-piston playing
-“Malbrouck s’en va-t-en guerre!”
-
-It was a deep, dreamless sleep. Jack did not like it, and would crouch
-down beside him, watching him with sad eyes, like a friend at a sick
-man’s bedside. Poor beast, he could make nothing of this new state of
-affairs. Some change he could not comprehend had come over his chum and
-laid him low. He seemed to be mutely questioning him, asking him why he
-never nowadays trotted about behind the scenes. But it was all Murph
-could do to see his little anxious, sorrowful face; he could only view
-him as if through a fog, an indistinct shape of sympathy hardly
-distinguishable from surrounding objects.
-
-Nevertheless, he still tried hard to make out in the dusk of his
-blindness his kindly comrade of yore; he would raise his palsied head,
-and from the depths of his dim eyes, veiled by a milky film, dart a pale
-look of infinite gentleness.
-
-Sometimes the two bushy tufts on his forehead dropped right over his
-eyes and further confused his vision. But Jack would put them back
-lightly with the tips of his delicate fingers. Indeed he never left his
-side, tickling his ears to amuse him, tapping and stroking him, ever on
-the watch, a tender-hearted nurse of inexhaustible care and foresight.
-
-This lowly being had learnt to love like a mother; his little dim soul
-had emerged from its darkness to answer his dying comrade’s need, and
-now, shining bright in the light of day, was working deeds of charity.
-
-
- XII
-
-One evening the show pitched on the outskirts of a big town. The booth
-was raised, the trestles fixed, the boards laid, and the costume-chests
-emptied of their miscellaneous finery.
-
-Murph lay curled up by himself behind the stove; all round him reigned a
-deafening uproar, a rush and scurry of feet, a perfect hurricane of
-noise. The master was shouting and scolding; the Jack-pudding with his
-hoarse voice was yelping like a dog, mewing like a cat, crowing like a
-cock, getting into trim for the patter-speech with which to tickle the
-ears of the groundlings, while the general hands were bustling about,
-nailing and hammering, stimulated by copious libations of wine.
-
-The monkeys, too, bore their part; hearing all this uproar, they joined
-in with a will. Their shrill scolding rose above the hammering, and they
-chattered incessantly and shook the bars of their cages. The dogs
-barked, a solemn-faced parrot repeated a bad word over and over again,
-while the musicians hired for the evening performance drew lugubrious
-notes from their instruments by way of keeping their hand in.
-
-Hurrah! the stage was set up at last.
-
-Then the dogs were dressed, the seats given a last wipe-down—and
-suddenly boom! boom! the big drum, furiously beaten, rolled out its
-deep-toned summons. Instantly a perfect hurricane of discordant,
-ear-splitting noises was let loose in front of the show-tent. Answering
-the deafening rumble of the big drum, the fifes and ophicleide awoke,
-the kettledrum began its rub-a-dub, the cymbals clashed, and the whole
-booth shivered and shook from floor to roof-tree.
-
-Shouts, yells, bursts of ribald laughter, combined in one deep-toned,
-incessant roar to form the bass, while cat-calls, cries of vituperation
-and repartee, the trampling of many feet marking time before the doors,
-the clown’s voice rising and falling amid a tempest of scuffling and
-kicking, all met and mingled in the air above the red glow of the
-pitch-pine torches flaring in the wind, and punctuating the general din
-one never-ceasing refrain—
-
-“First seats one franc; second seats half a franc; third places twenty
-centimes—_only_ twenty centimes. Walk up, ladies and gentlemen; just
-about to begin! Citizens and soldiers, walk up, walk up!”
-
-
- XIII
-
-A torrent of humanity surged up the steps, pushing, shoving, shouting;
-then, suddenly released, poured tumultuously over the seats of the
-auditorium. Then the big drum redoubled its efforts, the fife blew its
-shrillest, the ophicleide lost all control of its keys, tom-toms and
-hand-bells, frantically beaten, added their quota to the din, the
-kettledrums made a terrific rub-a-dub, and the whole force of the
-company, a mad whirl of startling colours and flashing spangles, danced
-a fandango on the platform.
-
-“Walk up, gentlemen, walk up!” the master-showman kept yelling; “here
-you shall see what you _shall_ see—marvels and miracles you’ve never
-seen the like of before! Look at me! I am the world-famous Brinzipoff,
-director-in-chief to the Royal Theatre of St. Petersburg and to all the
-crowned heads of Europe! Hi! ho! hup! _only_ twenty centimes the back
-seats! Halloa! ha! hurrah! here you are, here you are, ladies and
-gentlemen, _this_ way for the front seats!”
-
-A pause of comparative calm succeeded this grand chorus of ear-splitting
-noises.
-
-The close-packed audience was waiting, stamping with impatience, for the
-curtain to rise. Then Jack-pudding came on, pulled his funny faces, and
-let off his jokes amidst a dropping fire of jeers and bravos, and
-presently made way for Esmeralda, the performing goat, “the unique, the
-incomparable Esmeralda, the very same identical animal described by the
-immortal _Alexandre_ Hugo!” The musicians struck up an appropriate air,
-mostly made up of the vigorous thumping of drumsticks on drumheads.
-
-
- XIV
-
-Murph had never budged from his corner; he was quite insensible as yet
-to the din that had once had such power to excite him. His head resting
-on his outstretched paws, he lay asleep, stolid and stupid, callous to
-all external things. Round his neck, buried in the dirty, matted fleece,
-now long untouched by the curry-comb, were wound Jack’s arms; for Jack
-never left his side.
-
-Esmeralda made her exit, and then suddenly bombarding the audience with
-a tornado of sound, the big drum rolled again, as if to announce some
-special and extraordinary turn.
-
-Murph knew this furious, frantic prelude well; this was always the way
-Mazeppa’s headlong ride began. Yes, next moment, fifes, drums, bells,
-tom-toms struck up together in a mad concert of all the instruments
-combined, whereby the bandsmen strove to depict poor Mazeppa’s terrors
-as his galloping steed bore him off to be the prey of all the fiends of
-hell!
-
-
- XV
-
-Then something stirred in the old dog’s brain. Did he recall his former
-triumphs, the shouts of excited audiences, the encores, all the
-intoxicating successes of his life on the boards? Did some vision of an
-applauding multitude, of arms outstretched, and voices raised in
-gratitude, amid the crash of trumpet and drum, in the hot air thick with
-men’s breath and the fumes of powder—did some vision of all this pass
-before the poodle’s dying eyes?
-
-It was a strange awakening, at any rate. Murph sprang suddenly to his
-feet, took a leap, and bounded on the stage, tail proudly swinging, and
-head erect, Jack hanging on to his woolly coat. Delighted, entranced,
-amazed, the poor little beast kept craning over to peer into his
-comrade’s face, to see if it was really true, and watch the light of
-life dawning and brightening in his deep-set eyes.
-
-So his friend was himself again at last! So they were to begin the old
-merry life again, to gallop and leap, and risk their necks as in the
-dear, daredevil days of yore! Jack danced and pranced on the poodle’s
-back, as if drunk with the delight of this miraculous transformation.
-
-At sight of this great, hollow-flanked, unkempt beast, with his dirty,
-greasy, tangled fleece, standing there stark and stiff, his legs
-tottering under him, his body shaken from head to foot by a nervous
-tremor, paws sprawling, back bending, a few scanty hairs bristling in
-his tail—when the crowd beheld this pitiful ruin, to which Jack, alert
-and debonair, Jack and his grimaces and contortions, Jack and his
-caresses, the tender eyes he made, and the close, loving embrace he cast
-about his comrade’s neck, all added a touch of comedy, at once sad and
-irresistibly ludicrous, a mighty shout of laughter arose.
-
-It burst like a rocket, then spread from row to row of the spectators,
-till it ended in a tempest of merriment that from the audience extended
-to the stage, and burst on the dying comedian who stood there.
-
-Suddenly the dog’s legs gave way beneath him, and Murph fell over on his
-side. His supreme effort had killed him; he had succumbed, as great men
-sometimes will, at the very moment of their greatness.
-
-He lay there, the death-rattle in his throat, the death-agony shaking
-his poor body in a last, dreadful spasm. He opened his eyes wide,
-unnaturally wide, in a stony, sightless stare, as empty as the heads of
-the thoughtless crowd in front.
-
-Then they came and dragged him off the scene.
-
-
- XVI
-
-Jack was farther from understanding things than ever; his wonder had
-only increased.
-
-Why had his friend stopped short when so well under way? He could not
-tell; he could only gaze at him with questioning eyes, his eyelids
-winking very fast in a startled way.
-
-He pressed closer and closer to Murph, and felt a shock as of something
-snapping, a shudder, the quiver of a breaking chain. A deeper darkness
-still crept over poor Murph’s senses; he was dying!
-
-Jack crouched over him, gazing down at his friend.
-
-Just then Murph made a supreme effort, half turned his head and peered
-up in his friend’s face, while a look of tender affection passed over
-his glazing eyeballs, mingled with the reflection of the objects he had
-known all his life.
-
-The tip of a white, dry tongue came out between his teeth, and
-lengthening out like a slender riband, licked Jack’s paw. It was not
-drawn back again; Murph was dead.
-
-Close by in the slips the fifes were shrilling, the drums beating, the
-audience in front clapping hands and stamping.
-
-Jack watched beside his friend all night. At first he had crept in
-between his paws, as he had always done; but the chill of the cold,
-rigid limbs had forced him to abandon his position.
-
-His little brain was sorely exercised, you may take my word for that.
-What was this icy chill, like the coldest winter’s frost, that drove him
-from his dear comrade’s bosom, generally so warm a refuge? He lay there
-by Murph’s side, dozing with one eye open; then, suddenly starting wide
-awake in a panic, he would touch his friend with exploring fingers to
-see if he was still asleep.
-
-Finally, he lost all patience at the other’s prolonged slumbers; he
-shook him, he plucked at the tufts of his woolly coat, he tickled his
-nose—gently at first, then more roughly. But it was all no use.
-
-Then he took Murph’s head in his little arms; it was as heavy as lead
-and dragged him down all sideways. But he would not let it go, holding
-it hard against his breast, examining it all the while with surprise and
-consternation. Presently, recalling what he had seen his master’s wife
-do, he began to rock it to and fro, cradling it softly and swaying it
-slowly, unceasingly from side to side, his queer little head swaying in
-time, like an old man’s crooning over an infant.
-
-The dawn filtered in through the shutters of the van, and a sunbeam
-trembled for an instant in the dead poodle’s eyes.
-
-
- XVII
-
-Jack absolutely refused to be parted from Murph. He fell into a fury,
-and bit the men who tried to separate them on face and hands. He had to
-be dragged away and shut up in a cage. There he lived for three days,
-whimpering like an old man fallen into the imbecility of dotage, his
-haggard eyes looking out despairingly from between his wrinkled temples,
-his little face all shrivelled like a medlar, his lips as pale as wax,
-and an expression of utter life-weariness in every feature.
-
-He would eat nothing, leaving untasted the carrots he was once so fond
-of, and refusing to touch either sugar or milk. All day long he cowered
-motionless in a corner, moaning, his eyes fixed on something invisible
-to others, outside the cage, far away.
-
-
- XVIII
-
-On the morning of the third day they found him stark and cold, his
-angular little skeleton almost piercing through the skin. His long, dry
-hands were closed convulsively; the lips were drawn back and showed the
-small, white teeth; two deep, moist furrows were visible on either side
-his nose, as if, before he died, the ape had been weeping for his
-friend.
-
-[Illustration: THE CAPTIVE GOLDFINCH]
-
-
-
-
- The Captive Goldfinch
-
-
- I
-
-Once upon a time, far away in the depths of a great orchard, there lived
-a goldfinch. He was born in the spring, amid the fragrance of the fresh
-leaves, and there was not a prettier, sweeter little fellow to be found
-in any of the nests round about. His mother longed to keep him near her
-always, she loved him so dearly; but then, there is nothing so tempting
-as a pair of wings, and once July was come, the month of daring flights
-and dashing enterprises, light and agile as only young birds are, he
-left the maternal nest in search of distant adventures.
-
-Oh! but it is enough to turn any goldfinch’s head, this flying free over
-the blue expanse of the skies! Hardly had he passed the limits of the
-orchard where he was born ere he clean forgot all about his fond mother,
-her warm breast, and her dark eye so full of tender solicitude.
-
-A sort of frenzy seized him. Thinking the leaves were as eternal as the
-springtide, he boldly took his flight, and away across the sky; soaring
-ever higher and higher, he rose into the heat and glory of the sun, into
-the regions where the larks sing and the swallows dart, where all the
-wild wings make a sound as of a mighty fan opening and shutting.
-
-Wonder of wonders! now the earth below him looked round and shining like
-a ball of flowers floating in an enveloping cloud of gold-dust; and
-bathed in splendour, he saw the sun rise and set in the glory of
-limitless horizons.
-
-Oh! what glorious flights he had in the blue depths of the clouds! what
-games of hide-and-seek among the flickering leaves, what cries and songs
-and dartings after gnats, and all the delights known only to the little
-winged souls we call birds!
-
-The nightingales lulled him to sleep with the melody of their concerts,
-the cock woke him with the shrill clarion-call of his crowing; all the
-day long he flitted and flew amid the endless twittering and warbling of
-linnets, tomtits, bullfinches, sparrows, and chaffinches, taking _his_
-part too in the orchestra, and near bursting his little throat to
-produce his finest notes, with that vanity that makes us one, and
-believe Nature has implanted in us the soul of an artist—a great,
-mysterious, unappreciated artist.
-
-
- II
-
-But the summer passed into autumn, and drenching rains succeeded the
-sunny days; the poor goldfinch had to perch of nights in rain-soaked
-trees, where he had to sit cold and shivering, feeling his feathers
-getting wet and draggled one by one. Furious winds tore away the leaves,
-and lo! one morning when he opened his eyes, he saw a new and strange
-world—the ground was covered with snow, and far as sight could reach
-were only white roofs, white hedges, and white trees. Winter was come!
-
-Then oh! how bitterly he regretted his mother’s warm breast! How gladly
-would he have given the joys of the past summer to find himself once
-more pressed close to her side and feel her heart beating against his in
-the cosy nest! But all summer the wind had been busy confusing the
-pathways of the air, so that it was now impossible to discover the one
-that should have led him back to the nest; nay, a more blighting wind
-than all the rest blew out of the skies; the wind of forgetfulness had
-breathed upon his spirit, carrying away the memory of that happy
-road—the first that young folks forget. And now winter grew fierce and
-fell, devastating the orchards, bombarding the cottages with hailstones,
-driving hope from all breasts and killing the little birds in the
-nests—the young birds that are the hope of the verdant springtide and
-happy days to come.
-
-The little goldfinch was quite sure this horror would never end, that
-the trees would never grow green again, that never more would the
-harvest clothe the fields in green, that gaiety, sunshine, and youth
-were vanished away for good and all.
-
-Cowering in the hollow of an old branch, he watched the days go by like
-a procession of white phantoms, each uglier than the other, and his
-little feet all stiff with cold, his feathers frozen together with
-hoar-frost, sad and shivering, he thought many and many a time his last
-hour was come.
-
-In vain the old birds told him of a re-birth; he could not believe in
-the resurrection of things when this dreary time of mourning should be
-over.
-
-
- III
-
-Little by little, however, the snowstorms grew rarer, stray sunbeams
-pierced the murkiness of the heavens, and a verdant down, at first light
-as a vapour, but which presently grew denser and soon took on the
-solidity and sheen of satin, hemmed round the sombre garment of the
-fields. A mildness filled the air—something restful, calm, and kindly,
-that was like a benediction, something the winds distilled, the sun
-diffused, the growing grass and humming insects and fragrant violets
-spread abroad, something which, like a river fed by a myriad rippling
-rills, gushed forth along the torrent-bed of creation.
-
-A door seemed to open in the sooty firmament of winter, and this portal,
-rolling back on golden hinges, suddenly revealed the sun in his
-splendour, like a king stepping forth to bring peace to the peoples.
-Then sounded the first chord in the plain-song of the woods; waters,
-sky, and earth joined in the harmony with a deep, long-drawn note that
-rose and swelled, sobbed and sighed, grew louder and louder, assumed the
-majestic breadth of an orchestral symphony, and waxing gradually, ended
-by filling the depths and heights of air with a mighty diapason, as if
-all mouths, all voices, all breaths were raised together in one vast
-unison.
-
-I leave you to guess if the goldfinch lifted up _his_ voice in this
-universal hymn of praise!
-
-So it was true, then! The sun had indeed returned! A fine lacework of
-filmy greenery began to clothe the tree boles, and the water-springs to
-sparkle in the shy recesses of the forest; the air was free; once more
-he and his comrades could laugh and sing, flit idly to and fro, pilfer
-and steal, plunder the orchards, peck the flowers, drink in from a drop
-of dew intoxication to last the livelong day, and revel in that
-twice-blessed existence that is full of a fine frenzy of delight to make
-the thrushes envious.
-
-Good-bye to the winter covert, the crevice in the protecting bough, the
-moss that still keeps the impress of his little body! Nothing will
-satisfy him now but the wild fields of space; and with a bold sweep of
-wing the masterful goldfinch has left his dolorous refuge, never to
-return. A second piece of ingratitude, another act of forgetfulness!
-Yes, it must be allowed a little bird’s head has small room in it for
-remembrance.
-
-
- IV
-
-Good times began again. White and pink, the orchards blossomed like
-bridal bouquets. It snowed butterflies’ wings and flower stamens in the
-tall grass; lilacs hung in clusters over the walls; like a good priest
-saying mass, the earth donned a golden cope, and all Nature trembled and
-loved.
-
-Then was the time for our pretty bird to abandon himself to endless idle
-wanderings and loiterings, hopping hither and thither, always on one
-leg, barely lighting and then off again, shaking the leaves with an
-incessant flutter of wings, twittering and chirping, flirting with the
-daisies, ruffling the hawthorn, hooting the holly. At peep of dawn he
-never failed, when the harebells rang their morning summons, to come
-down to attend the good God’s church whither the flies and sparrows
-assemble, still half asleep and blundering against the pillars; next the
-beetles get under way along the roads, teased and tormented by the
-butterflies and ladybirds; then the linnet leaves her bough and flies
-off to where the bells tinkle, but of a sudden darts back again, finding
-she has left something behind, lost something—more often than not her
-head—for the poor lady generally wears it wrong side before! Thither fly
-the chaffinches too, and the grave-faced oriole, the pretty bullfinch,
-and the chattering cock-sparrow. Then the cockchafers come, too, too
-often, alas! trailing after them the thread of captivity clinging to
-them—the burly cockchafers that, with the bumble-bee, are the bass
-voices of the underwoods. Plain and woodland are all alive, for there is
-never a creature at this fair hour of daybreak, while the skies are
-brightening, but is eager to come and make its orison to God in His
-temple.
-
-So the little goldfinch followed their example; he preened his feathers,
-looking at himself admiringly in a dewdrop the while. Then, his toilet
-done, like all the rest of the world, he bustled off to his business and
-his pleasures.
-
-
- V
-
-Goldfinches’ hearts are made much the same as men’s; the spring awakes
-both to thoughts of love.
-
-Our hero had remarked in his neighbourhood a sweet little hen-goldfinch.
-She lived with her parents in the tall branches of an apple-tree; more
-than once, coming home at evening, he had admired the fascinating smile
-of her beak at the window, embowered in foliage, where she sat watching
-for his going-by.
-
-Was it his fancy? Was it really and truly a modest blush, or only the
-rosy reflection cast by the setting sun? Yes, sure—he had seen her
-redden. It needed no more to decide him to ask her hand in marriage.
-
-One morning he made his bravest toilet, scented himself with lavender
-and thyme, polished up his little claws, and in this gallant array he
-set out, with a shining face but an anxious heart, to see the parents.
-They received him politely, but could not make up their minds, and
-begged him to come again.
-
-He came again and again, and the more he saw of his little sweetheart,
-the deeper he fell in love. She was as pretty as seven in her little
-brown mantle with yellow facings, and her dainty head in its red hood
-was poised on her neck with an incomparable grace. Saucy and alert, she
-was as slight and slim as a flower waving in the breeze, as bright as a
-sunbeam piercing through the leaves, as agile as the wind. Dewdrops
-seemed to sparkle in the depths of her little round pupils. She was a
-vision of the spring-tide made into a bird!
-
-True, our hero was no less brave to see. Gallant and gay, he cocked his
-beak boldly and carried the colours of his race with becoming pride.
-
-At last the wedding-day was fixed; but the bride’s trousseau was still
-to seek. No doubt birds are able to start housekeeping at small cost,
-neither needing tables and chairs nor pots and pans; still, there must
-be some little fitting-out to be done.
-
-And so thought the bride’s parents, who were prudent people, and loved
-their daughter.
-
-A fine to-do there was, to be sure, on the bough where the old couple
-had their home; a stir that never ceased all day long kept the green
-hangings of the house shaking, and the doors banging; everlasting
-comings and goings turned the stairways upside down. Pale and
-eager-eyed, the little hen-goldfinch awaited the happy hour when she
-could fly away with her mate.
-
-
- VI
-
-Soon the news of the betrothal spread amongst the neighbours. The
-nearest trees were all agog; nothing was to be heard but twitterings and
-whisperings, not to mention backbitings, for envy is to be found
-everywhere in this world. The tomtits above all took a delight in saying
-evil of the bride, calling her a silly, insipid little thing; they
-chirped and chattered, whistled and whispered, pecking and pulling to
-pieces the poor innocent child’s good name. In vain the bullfinches,
-good, decent bodies, tried to interfere: the tomtits’ cackle quite
-drowned their grave remonstrances. The critics had enlisted a naughty
-grisette, a chaffinch, a minx who had kicked over the traces in her day,
-and was renowned for her spiteful tongue; a blackbird too had joined the
-conspiracy, and now, perched all together on a high branch, from which
-they could spy upon the comings and goings of the goldfinch household,
-they kept up a famous uproar.
-
-The Master of Ceremonies of the birds’ parish arrived in the afternoon;
-he had come to inquire the hour at which the young folks were to be
-married, and if they wanted choristers to attend. It was agreed to
-engage a lark and a chaffinch; nightingales were too expensive. A pretty
-carpet of green would be laid down, as green as on the finest summer’s
-day; the porch was to be decorated with anemones, and the chancel with
-daisies; the sun would be ordered for five o’clock, to make a grand show
-of purple and gold. Of course the drones would be at the organ, and they
-would ask the wind to give them a helping hand by roaring in the pipes.
-The harebells would strike up a merry peal at peep of day, and ring till
-the bridal pair arrived. The holy-water stoup would be filled with dew.
-As for incense, the violets would see the censers were well filled, and
-the bees would keep them swinging all through the ceremony.
-
-I forgot to tell you that a wedding breakfast had been ordered, at
-which, besides flies and worms galore, they were to regale themselves on
-a cricket and a locust—a magnificent spread indeed. The nearest spring
-would supply the wine; they were to have corn-berries for dessert, and
-the table would be laid in the thickest of an apple-tree in full
-blossom, where a cloud of gnats was always buzzing and making beautiful
-music. A yellowhammer was invited; he was a rollicking blade, and there
-was nobody to match him at singing a comic song.
-
-All was going as well as could be; yet how long seemed the hours of
-waiting to the little bridegroom! To and fro he flitted, up and down the
-roads he sauntered, trying to cheat his impatience by incessant
-movement; presently he would light on a bough and fall a-dreaming, while
-his little heart beat fast and furiously.
-
-Every minute he kept glancing up at the great dial God has set in the
-sky, and which only the birds can read; but the sunbeam which is the
-hand of this aerial clock would _not_ move fast enough for his
-impatience. He could only bewail his lot, and force himself to drop
-asleep to kill the lagging time. He even went to see the village
-clockmaker, an old cuckoo, a greybeard bird with a nid-nodding head, who
-all day long used to strike the hours with exasperating punctuality, and
-besought him to quicken up the evening a bit.
-
-But the cuckoo shook his head.
-
-“Little madcap,” he told him, “am I to put out all the folk of the
-countryside for you? Don’t you know everything goes on by rule and
-regulation among your neighbours, and that each hour brings its own
-tasks? Why, whatever would they think if I rang vespers before the great
-timepiece of the heavens had indicated the time of twilight? What would
-the mole say if I brought him out of his underground house, looking
-black as a collier, before nightfall, and if suddenly the sun dazzled
-him with its light—poor purblind fellow who had never in his life dared
-look at anything but the moon?”
-
-So, the cuckoo having shown him the door, he wandered off again,
-flitting from hedgerow to hedgerow, burning with impatience.
-
-
- VII
-
-A heap of little white grubs lay under the hedge of an orchard. More for
-lack of anything else to do than because he was hungry, the goldfinch
-flew up and fell upon it.
-
-Ah! have a care, pretty birdie. A man was busy thereabouts just now.
-
-But, alas, it is too late; a whole life of happiness is ruined by a
-moment’s curiosity. Hardly had the poor fellow plunged his beak in the
-mass when a string pulled the catch; down comes the trap, and he is a
-prisoner. Then the shape crouching behind a tree comes out from its
-hiding-place; it approaches, looms larger and larger, turns into a big
-bearded man, who opens enormous great hands, seizes the poor bird, and
-claps it in a cage, grinning a broad grin of satisfaction. Good-bye,
-little bride! Good-bye, marriage-feast and wedding-march! Good-bye,
-woods and orchards, gardens and flowers! Good-bye, twittering nests!
-Good-bye, life and love!
-
-Consternation nailed our little hero to the spot; something had befallen
-him he could make nothing of; he gazed at the cage with haggard eyes,
-too scared to think.
-
-Ah! if only he had lost his memory! But this consolation was denied him.
-He shook himself, dashed at the bars, pecked and bit at them, thinking
-maybe they would open and leave him free as air again.
-
-But no; the bars would _not_ give way.
-
-Then he shuddered from head to foot. Anger and terror frenzied his
-little brain. He flew wildly at the bars; but all in vain—the cage was
-solid and strong.
-
-Suddenly he realised his calamity, and, filled with a perfect frenzy of
-despair, with panting breath and trembling, shuddering limbs, he hurled
-himself at the bars, beat his head against the wires, tearing and
-lacerating beak and claws, flew madly up and down, breaking his wings,
-till, battered and bruised, his feathers all dripping with blood,
-exhausted and out of breath, he rolled half-dead into a corner.
-
-It was all over!
-
-While joy was paramount yonder in his bride’s home, while song and
-laughter were the order of the day, while preparations for the
-wedding—bitter mockery!—were completing, and all things, leaves and
-butterflies and nests, were a-flutter, the poor bridegroom lay in his
-agony amid the silence of a prison.
-
-
- VIII
-
-Evening lit up the sky with its gleaming tints of copper; little by
-little the chattering family groups fell silent, and the darkling trees
-assumed the look of long-drawn, solemn colonnades. Alas! it was not
-under this familiar aspect that night fell for our captive goldfinch. A
-dirty whitewashed wall, on which hung strangely shaped objects, replaced
-the sable curtain spangled with stars that twilight spreads over the
-countryside. A guttering, flaring candle smoked on the table, bearing
-how faint a resemblance to the silver moon! and by its sordid light the
-hard-hearted wretch who had robbed him of his liberty was moving to and
-fro.
-
-Ah! what right had he, this miserable birdcatcher, this highway robber,
-to tear him from the free air, the hedgerows and the green fields? Tiny
-though he be, is the bird therefore of no import to the leaves, the
-winds, the trees, which without him would be voiceless? Has the blue sky
-no need of his outspread wings, his echoing song, the flutter of his
-plumage?
-
-What use the pool glittering in the woodland, if he was not there to dip
-his beak in it and absorb in a drop of water the red of dawn, the gold
-of noon, the deep shadow of the quivering leaves? Is not a little bird
-the less a disaster in the forests and orchard-closes, a voice silenced
-in the symphony of nature, a furrow left barren in the fields of space,
-a bright point vanished from the azure sky? Is not the universe
-disturbed for the loss of a little creature wherein all nature is summed
-up and glorified?
-
-The man blew out the taper, and a moonbeam shot in at the garret-window
-and fell on the poor captive.
-
-It formed, as it were, a luminous rail on which his thoughts glided; and
-they always travelled in one direction—to his little _fiancée_, who at
-that moment, softly cradled by the night wind, was fast asleep and
-dreaming of the great to-morrow.
-
-The moon paled and daylight appeared.
-
-Yonder no doubt all was ready; the harebells were ringing their peal,
-the drones were organing their deep music, while the trembling bride,
-white as the lilies, was asking herself why her bridegroom did not come.
-
-The cuckoo clanged out the hour of dawn. One and all were ready for the
-fête; only _his_ arrival was waited for.
-
-The hours slipped by without his appearing, and little by little the
-murmuring and muttering, low at first, grew louder and louder, and rose
-into a perfect tempest of cries and jeers and gibes. The chaffinches
-were jubilant, the parents disconsolate. And what of her, the poor,
-despairing bride? Her pretty innocent eyes could not bear the light of
-day; stricken to the heart by this unaccountable desertion, she was
-borne away fainting, half dead with shame and sorrow.
-
-
- IX
-
-Dark days followed. At first only a prisoner, his cruel master now made
-him into a galley-slave. He put a chain round his foot, and condemned
-him to the servitude of the car and cord. So drag your weight, work your
-pulley, haul in your little car, poor outcast! Who has not seen the
-monstrous spectacle—one of God’s creatures, created to fly free in the
-realms of air, coming and going on a toy platform, a ring about its leg?
-Who has not seen the unhappy captive, to win meat and drink, drawing up
-by little laborious jerks the water-jar and car, its eye gleaming with
-pitiful longing, gaining its subsistence by a never-ending useless
-martyrdom? Only he who has seen the cruel sight knows to what lengths
-the cruelty of bad men can go.
-
-This was the fate of the poor goldfinch.
-
-The man had given him a cage to imitate a Swiss châlet, in front of
-which was a little terrace. On the terrace was fixed a post, with a
-pulley attached worked by a thread. This thread the captive had to pull
-in with his beak, little by little, till the little drinking-bucket
-hooked to the other end rose to the level of the platform; then putting
-his foot on the cord, he had to hold it in place and so drink a drop,
-bitter as a tear, hurriedly and fearfully, lest the thread should slip
-from under his claw and suddenly let the bucket run down again.
-
-More often than not the bucket upset in its descent, and then he had to
-go without water for the rest of the day.
-
-A second thread made it possible for him to haul to the edge of the
-platform a miniature car running on an inclined plane outside the cage;
-this held his bird-seed. What a struggle it was to drag it up! At each
-snap of the beak the car would ascend, but oh! so slowly. By successive
-jerks, never tiring, never stopping, with straining neck, working with
-the adroitness of a galley-slave, and clapping his foot on the cord
-after each pull, he had to drag up the accursed car, which would
-sometimes elude him and dash down the incline again, spilling the seed
-and mocking all his laborious efforts!
-
-A hundred times a day he was forced to begin the horrid task again.
-
-Many a time the goldfinch resolved to give in and die of hunger; but
-hunger is a terrible thing, and no sooner did its pangs begin to pinch
-his little stomach than he would seize the cord afresh and pull for dear
-life.
-
-
- X
-
-So passed the hours for the once happy bridegroom. Never a chirp now,
-never a flirt of the tail! Disconsolate and draggled, every feather of
-his little body betraying the misery of his broken life, he seemed an
-embodiment of the bitter protest of the winged creation against the
-cruelty of man.
-
-A feeble ray of sunshine used to flicker on the garret walls towards
-midday; he would watch for it, and when it came at last, shooting a
-slender pencil of gold, in which the dust-motes danced athwart the gloom
-of his prison-house, it was like a brief instant of recovered freedom;
-for a moment he forgot his chain, his car, his slavery, and away he flew
-in fancy to the great orchards that showed their black masses of shadow
-on the horizon. Alas! the sunbeam slid along the wall and disappeared,
-and the appalling reality came home to him again.
-
-What had he done to deserve this cruel fate? To filch a grain of corn
-here and there, to forage in the kitchen-gardens, to play the truant, to
-make the most of life, all day long to fly hither and thither, the free
-denizen of air—was this a crime? He never reflected how he had forgotten
-his mother, and that this crime alone deserved the sternest expiation.
-
-His master was one of those good-for-nothing workmen who make the whole
-week a series of Sundays. One night he forgot to come home at all; next
-morning the ill-starred captive found bucket and car both empty. No use
-hauling them up to him and pecking about in every corner; never a grain
-of seed was to be found, never a drop of water! Then indeed he knew the
-torments of hunger and thirst. In vain he toiled at his cruel, slavish
-task; the car ascended, the bucket rose, but without bringing solace to
-his famished cravings. His tools refused their office; with pale eyes of
-consternation the poor prisoner gazed at them, and could not understand.
-
-As if by the irony of fate, the window had been left wide open, and he
-could plainly see the green of the nearest trees, in which the birds,
-his more fortunate brethren, were squabbling. He saw the sun slowly sink
-and the shadows of the house-roofs lengthen. Then a frenzy of madness
-seized him; with quick, frantic pecks he tore at the chain riveted round
-his leg, and by sheer fury burst its rings.
-
-To dart to the window, to sail away for the paling blue of the sky, was
-the work of an instant; but next minute he fell to earth again, so weak
-was he with hunger. Luckily, not far from the foot of the tree where he
-had dropped, a flock of pigeons was enjoying a feast of oats at the door
-of a stable. He joined the band, and in a very short while had plumped
-his crop to such good purpose that he felt his full strength come back
-to him.
-
-A long time had passed since he had quitted his bonny bride, and he
-trembled to think what changes the days might have brought with them in
-her life. Still the longing to see her again grew so irresistible after
-he had been free an hour that, even if she had forgotten him, he was
-fain to bid her farewell.
-
-And pr-r-r-rt! he was off like the wind.
-
-All the world was asleep when he arrived—even the tomtits, those
-inveterate gossips, who love to loiter at their doors long after dark,
-talking scandal of their neighbours.
-
-“Little bride! little bride!” he breathed softly.
-
-A yellowhammer answered him in a cross voice—
-
-“Third tree to the left in the next orchard!”
-
-Why, actually the goldfinches had removed! He hurried to the tree
-indicated, and once again, “Little bride!” he whispered.
-
-A faint cry answered, and next moment his sweetheart appeared.
-
-“I was waiting for you,” she cried.
-
-Ah! these were happy moments that made up for all their sufferings. He
-told her all his adventures; she told him how her faith in him had never
-faltered. They woke the parents, who warmly welcomed the returned
-prodigal.
-
-“Just think,” said the mother, “those odious chaffinches positively
-forced us to leave the neighbourhood. Life was become unbearable;
-morning, noon, and night it was nothing but insulting remarks. But now
-you are come back again! So these spiteful folks will be finely
-confounded.”
-
-Another old hen-goldfinch was there, who was gazing at him with wet eyes
-and wings all a-tremble.
-
-“Ah!” cried our hero, “why, it is mamma, my poor mother I had forgotten
-so long!”
-
-Yes, it was his mother indeed: his little bride, after his
-disappearance, had never wearied till she found her, telling herself
-that, with her for company, there would be two of them to wait for his
-return.
-
-Their happiness was complete.
-
-Two days after, but soberly this time, without drum or trumpet, the
-wedding was solemnised.
-
-The story has its moral, as every story should. It was the goldfinch’s
-father-in-law who undertook to draw it for his young friend’s benefit.
-
-“Son-in-law,” he said, “I hope you will teach your little ones two
-lessons. The first is—never forget your mother; the second—beware of
-traps in the hedgerows.”
-
-[Illustration: STRANGE ADVENTURES OF A LITTLE WHITE RABBIT]
-
-
-
-
- Strange Adventures of a Little White Rabbit
-
-
-Four little rabbits had seen the light in a hutch snugly stuffed with
-straw, where they lived cosy and warm by their mother’s side.
-
-They were pretty, plump little things, all four as fat as butter, and
-just as well-liking one as the other; but while three of them had white
-bellies and dappled backs, one was white all over from head to foot, and
-his mother was mighty proud of his beauty, you may be sure.
-
-You could not have found so exquisite a rabbit, no, not for three
-leagues round, and every day he grew handsomer and handsomer, like a
-king’s son. Two great rubies glittered in his fine eyes, and his teeth
-were just like the edge of a saw; yes, and he had a moustache—three
-hairs, which made him, oh! so conceited.
-
-Mother Rabbit loved them all tenderly; but she loved Jannot, her
-firstborn, best of all.
-
-To begin with, he was the eldest; then she had had more trouble to rear
-him, and ill-health always draws a closer bond between mother and child;
-besides, she was inordinately proud of his white coat, and dreamt he was
-destined for greatness. What form would it take? This she could not
-tell. Perhaps he would take first prize at a show—perhaps he would found
-a breed of white rabbits like himself. She lavished every delicacy upon
-her darling, and his prospective honours consoled her for the triviality
-of everyday existence.
-
-They would soon be two months old, and that is the age when young
-bunnies are taken from their mothers. She dreaded the moment of parting;
-Jannot would have to go with the rest.
-
-In fact, all four were weaned by this time; they were beginning to gnaw
-at carrots now, and would often try to get out through any gaps they
-could find, for they longed to see the great world. The hutch had open
-bars, and they could look out into a kitchen-garden with lettuce-beds,
-and beyond that see a flock of ducks paddling about beside a brook.
-There was an apple-tree to the right, with a cloud of sparrows always
-squabbling round it. To the left an outhouse door gave a glimpse of cows
-and horses, dimly outlined in the gloom of the interior. There were
-cats, too, stretching themselves in the sun or stalking sedately up and
-down.
-
-At peep of day the whole farmyard woke up; noon brought a momentary
-silence; then, as the sun grew hotter, sparrows chirped, ducks quacked,
-cows lowed, and the din went on uninterruptedly till dusk.
-
-The little bunnies would fain have joined the other animals; they would
-gaze wistfully at the birds flying high in the air, and the sight of the
-cattle marching off cheerfully for the pastures gave them a craving for
-the green fields.
-
-How big the farmyard seemed, to be sure! and how amazed they were when
-Mother Rabbit told them there were other places bigger still which they
-could not see. She described the woods and ravines and burrows, for she
-knew these well enough from hearsay; why, they could not have travelled
-round the world in a whole day, so enormous it was! Squatted round their
-mother, the youngsters listened to all this, and their hearts almost
-failed them.
-
-But not so Jannot; _his_ imagination was stimulated by what he heard.
-
-“Ah!” he would cry, “will they never let me out, that I may have _my_
-chance of seeing all these wonderful things?”
-
-Then his mother was alarmed; but he would kiss her and promise he would
-come back again directly, once he had seen the world. But she only shook
-her head, and could not make up her mind to let him go.
-
-“The world is full of cruel beasts; you will never, never escape its
-dangers.”
-
-“I have teeth and claws.”
-
-“So have they, child; but their teeth are longer and their claws sharper
-than yours. Restrain your eagerness; time enough yet to go forth into
-the wide, wide world.”
-
-He would shake his head impatiently and fall to gnawing at the woodwork
-of the hutch; in fact his mind was full of guilty thoughts of escape. At
-last, one fine morning, when his mother was tidying the litter, he made
-a bolt for it.
-
-Scarcely had he gone a hundred steps when he was arrested by a startling
-sight. He beheld half-a-dozen hairy brown skins nailed up in a row. They
-still retained the shape of the bodies they had once clothed, and little
-trickles of blood ran down the wall where they hung. There was no
-mistaking; they had belonged to rabbits like himself.
-
-“Oh, dear!” he thought, “so they kill rabbits, do they?”
-
-But this sinister sight was quickly forgotten in the variety of new
-wonders he encountered. A pig was grunting on a dunghill, with a young
-foal kicking at him and destroying his peace of mind, and a goat
-gambolling near by; one after the other he saw a rat, a dog, a calf, and
-a flock of pigeons that suddenly took wing.
-
-They rose in the warm morning air, glittering in the sun, flying so high
-he soon lost sight of them altogether. Looking down again, he noticed a
-cat watching him, and remembered he had seen her in the garden, prowling
-among the lettuces.
-
-The width of the yard was between them, and he had a barn behind him.
-The cat lay crouched on the kitchen steps; she never moved, but her eyes
-were wide open and glittered cruelly. Then she got up slowly.
-
-Jannot believed his last hour was come; he thought of his mother, and
-shut his eyes. A furious barking made him open them again. The cat was
-gone; with one bound Jannot sprang into a cart round which a bull-dog
-was racing with his mouth wide open, and leapt from there into the barn.
-
-Inside the straw was piled up mountains high, so close to the wall he
-had some difficulty in forcing a passage; still, it was only betwixt the
-wall and the straw he could hope to find a safe refuge. He durst not
-come out again, and stayed there in hiding till nightfall.
-
-Then he plucked up spirit, took a step or two in the dark, and came upon
-a hole close down to the floor through which he could slip.
-
-What a sight met him outside! The country lay white in the moonlight,
-house-roofs, pools, watercourses glittering in the beams. The leaves
-quivered restlessly in the night wind, and the distant clumps of
-brushwood stood out in clear-cut outline. It was very beautiful; but
-look! suddenly, close to him, two long, black, moving shadows scared him
-out of his seven senses.
-
-The cat!
-
-Jannot never stopped till he reached the woods, after darting across the
-garden, leaping a brook, scurrying over the fields, breathless and
-exhausted. Vague shadows loomed around him; flying footsteps sounded
-about his path; suddenly, by the startled cry that escaped a little
-creature which halted right before his nose, he knew he was in presence
-of another rabbit.
-
-“I am Jannot,” he said, in a low voice; “perhaps we are relations.”
-
-From the first moment the rabbit saw him, he loaded him with polite
-attentions, declared he loved him already, and offered him the
-hospitality of his house; so the two of them jogged off in company. But
-after a moment or two Goodman Rabbit stopped dead, saying—
-
-“You’d best go by the clearing, and I through the scrub; it will never
-do to let the polecat see us. We will meet at the foot of a great oak
-you can’t help seeing.”
-
-Jannot followed his companion’s advice; but no sooner were they together
-again than the rabbit, after fifty yards or so, cried out once more—
-
-“The place we’re in now is just as dangerous as the other. A wild-cat
-lurks hereabouts, and slaughters whatever comes under his claws. You go
-that way; I’ll go this. A rock you will see will serve as rendezvous.”
-
-They reached the rock at the same moment, and then trotted off again.
-They were just coming to a coppice of young trees with narrow winding
-paths through it when his experienced friend called a halt for the third
-time, crying—
-
-“Well, we did well not to travel side by side. My advice is that we go
-each his own way again, without bothering about one another, till we
-come to the crossroads you’ll find down yonder. Ah! d’ye see those
-snares? Mind you don’t get into them, for if the polecat and the
-wild-cat are lords of the lands we have just been through, the poacher
-rules here as monarch paramount.”
-
-The advice was good, but its giver had no time to finish it; he was
-caught by the foot in one of the gins, and the more he struggled to get
-free, the tighter the dreadful noose was drawn.
-
-“Help! help!” he clamoured.
-
-But already Jannot was off and away, panic-stricken; he ran on and on,
-never once stopping till he won back as quick as ever he could to the
-edge of the woodland where he and Master Rabbit had first met.
-
-“If the world is so strewn with dangers,” he thought to himself, “better
-to live in peace and quietness in a hutch. What use in roaming the
-woods, when death is at the journey’s end?”
-
-Then in his mind’s eye he saw his mother again and his brothers; and the
-safe shelter where they awaited his return seemed a far-off, happy
-refuge he could hardly hope to reach.
-
-Field-mice and weasels and martens were stirring in the dark underwood
-and shaking the leaves. Suddenly a new terror, more appalling than all
-the rest, gripped him; he thought he was being pursued. Then he dashed
-out into the plain that lay clear in the moonlight, and, with ears
-pricked, thinking all the while he could hear at his heels the
-unwearying, unflagging trot, trot of the fell creatures that were on his
-track, he pushed through hedges, leapt ditches, climbed banks.
-
-He had his back to the moon, and two black shadows, the same he had seen
-at the outset of his escapade, stretched out before him; this time they
-went in front, never leaving him, and sometimes lengthening out to
-portentous proportions.
-
-No doubt about it, a whole host of enemies was after him!
-
-At last his breath failed him and he sank down in despair, waiting for
-death; but as it was a long time coming, he began to recover a little
-courage, and, turning round, stared hard into the night.
-
-Not a thing was visible amid the loneliness of the fields, and the moon
-seemed to be grinning down at him from the sky.
-
-Then he discovered that the two shadows that had terrified him so were
-only the shadows of his own two ears. This was mortifying!
-
-Day dawned by slow degrees; and presently he found himself back by the
-brook, the ducks, the cow-shed and the kitchen-garden.
-
-“Mind this,” his mother told him, “there’s no adventures so fine as to
-match the pleasure of being safe at home, among the folks who love you.”
-
-
-
-
- “Monsieur Friquet”
-
-
-Nature had not been generous to the poor thing; Claire was born a
-hunchback, and a hunchback she had grown up—if indeed she can be said
-ever to have grown up—an undersized, sickly, suffering creature, who at
-thirty was not as high, from head to heels, as a little girl of nine.
-
-She had been left an orphan when quite a child; first her mother died,
-and her father had not survived her long. So Claire had had to face the
-world alone, with her own ten fingers for all her fortune. Her parents
-had never spoilt her with overmuch indulgence. They were poor,
-hardworking folks, who hardly knew what it was to smile. Even when they
-were alive, she had led a lonely enough existence. Still, after their
-death, she missed the life lived in common, the destitution shared with
-others, the bustle of the hugger-mugger household, where scolding and
-grumbling were by no means unknown. Her parents were her parents after
-all; with them life had its happy moments, now and then.
-
-[Illustration: “MONSIEUR FRIQUET”]
-
-They were hard times now for Claire. Shut up all day long in the
-unhealthy air of workrooms, she seemed to grow more and more emaciated,
-and smaller and smaller every day. Nobody ever thought of pitying the
-poor, uncouth being who sat sewing apart from the rest, who, with a
-gentle humility, always sought the shade, where her deformity was less
-noticeable; nobody ever dreamed of asking if there was a soul within
-that misshapen body, and her great eyes—light blue, sickly-looking eyes,
-which she would raise slowly and languidly, as if afraid of the
-light—encountered only mockery and indifference from all about her.
-
-The tall, handsome girls who sat round the sewing-table had nothing but
-hard words for her; scarcely knowing why, yielding to a cruel impulse
-which a little thought, if nothing better, would have checked, they
-treated her vilely.
-
-Little by little she had become the general butt of the workroom; one
-dismal day in December a last outrage was added to all the rest.
-
-An ill-conditioned cripple, a girl who had borne Claire a grudge from
-the first day of her coming, because of their sisterhood in misfortune,
-which caused twice as many gibes to be levelled at her own club-foot,
-contrived to secrete a piece of silk, in order to accuse Claire of the
-theft. She declared stoutly she had taken the piece and hidden it inside
-her dress. In vain the poor girl, bursting into tears, swore she was
-innocent. The head of the shop ordered her to strip. She begged
-piteously for mercy, clasping her hands in supplication; but the cripple
-moved heaven and earth to set the others against her. Rough hands were
-laid on her; she was bruised and shaken and hurt; all she could do was
-to stammer out appeals to their compassion; she was nearly fainting, and
-the tears were streaming down her cheeks. No use; the poor back was
-bared, and while the mistress was searching her, the pretty,
-rosy-cheeked workgirls were feeling the deformity curiously, examining
-what like a hump exactly was.
-
-Claire had buried her face in her hands; her hair had fallen about her
-ears, and there she stood, quite still and helpless, terrified at the
-angry faces about her; her throat was dry and her whole body quivering
-with overmastering agitation. She wished she was dead.
-
-The mistress’s hard voice dismissing her roused her at last; she got to
-her feet amidst the jeers of the workroom, buttoned her frock, collected
-her needles and scissors, and, shuddering and shaking, catching her feet
-in her skirts, she hurried to the door; there was a loud buzzing in her
-ears, and she seemed to see everything through a sort of mist.
-
-She dashed downstairs two steps at a time and reached the riverside
-quays, looking in her despair for an unfrequented bridge from which an
-unhappy hunchback might throw herself into the water and not be noticed.
-But everywhere she seemed to see mocking eyes pursuing her.
-
-By degrees she began to think of the dreadful publicity of such a death;
-she saw herself dragged from the river, laid on the crowded bank, under
-the eyes of a throng of curious onlookers, in the glaring light of day.
-
-No, what she craved was a quiet death in some dark corner, where she
-would be sheltered from prying looks.
-
-She retraced her steps, bought a supply of charcoal, which she hid in a
-fold of her gown, and made her way home. Her poor worn hands had helped
-her—how hardly!—to live, now they should help her to die.
-
-Possessed by these ideas, she pushed open the door of the room—and
-suddenly stopped....
-
-How, when, by what way had he got in, the little sparrow she saw beating
-his wings against the walls, looking so scared and frightened, trying in
-vain to find a way out of the garret he had invaded so impudently, like
-the little good-for-nothing scamp he was?
-
-Yes, she remembered; that morning, before leaving, she had left the
-window ajar; but no doubt the wind had blown it to, and after coming in
-unhindered, like a conquering hero taking possession of a new kingdom,
-the bird was now a prisoner.
-
-A prisoner? But why a prisoner? What had she and he in common? He only
-asked to live, to fly, to soar in the free air, while she, she was fain
-to die. Begone, little madcap! you shall have your freedom again.
-
-She went to the window; but as her hand touched the latch, she paused.
-The sparrow had stopped fluttering about the room; cowering in the
-corner of a cupboard, his little breast heaving with terror and
-breathlessness, he was looking at her with his frightened eyes.
-
-To see him shivering and shaking and ruffling his feathers in terror,
-she seemed to recognise a fellow-sufferer. _Her life_, from first to
-last, had it not been one long quaking agony of fear, exposed to
-never-ending uncertainties and disappointments? The similarity made a
-sort of common bond between them, and her heart stirred with a longing
-for a last touch of love and sympathy with the living creatures of this
-earth she was about to quit.
-
-She left the window, advanced a step, and held out her finger to beckon
-and encourage him. But the movement, gentle as it was, was misunderstood
-by the bird; he spread his wings and darted up to the ceiling. Then she
-spoke to him, and very humbly—she found it very easy to be
-humble—besought him—
-
-“Poor birdie, why should you be afraid of me? Do you think I want to
-hurt you? I only ask you one favour—to kiss you once, just once,
-before.... There, come, light there on my hand; let me just hold you;
-you shall fly away again directly after. Come, dear birdie, I know I am
-ugly to look at, but I am not cruel.”
-
-And stepping softly, silently, she followed him about the room, with
-outstretched fingers and smiling lips, almost like a mother, as if she
-were talking to a little child. Then, as he would not come—
-
-“Come, now.... Does my back shock you—like the others? Why should you
-care if I _am_ hunchbacked, when you are so pretty? Come, pretty
-birdie—if only to give me the strength I need so badly.”
-
-She crumbled some bread on the table. This made the bird hesitate; he
-did not come down at once, but, still perching aloft, gazed down at the
-white crumbs, craning his neck, his eyes glittering with greediness.
-
-Finally appetite overcame prudence. He darted down on to the table and
-began to peck—_tock, tock!_ at the food, stopping every now and then to
-shake out his feathers and cocking up his head to look about him.
-
-Presently she scattered more crumbs, first on the floor and then on the
-window-sill, and he soon came hopping up to them on his little pink
-toes, flirting his tail and looking as happy as a king, the glutton!
-
-What a darling he was, to be sure! She forgot all thoughts of death, to
-see him so alive and so handsome, coming and going, marching up and down
-with his mettlesome air, his rolling eye, his tossing head, his
-everlasting pickings and peckings and his fine look of swagger and
-impudence. He had a way of peeping at her askance, winking one eye with
-a merry, mocking glint in it, that seemed to say unmistakably: “I don’t
-mind eating your bread, because it’s downright good; but never you think
-I’m going to give up my freedom for you. I shall be off and away again
-just whenever I choose.”
-
-Other times he would fix his little black beads of eyes meditatively
-upon her face, scrutinising her features as if bent on reading her
-inmost thoughts, but never missing a peck at the food for all that, or
-one crumb of this long, luxurious repast.
-
-When he had eaten up every scrap, she got some more and offered it him,
-this time in her palm.
-
-Up he fluttered, took his stand in front of her hand, examined it from
-every side, from above and from below, wishing but not daring; then
-suddenly caution carried the day, and he hopped away.
-
-“Pst! pst!” she chirped to him, but never stirred. Her stillness
-reassured him; with a determined air, feeling a sinking again in his
-insatiable little stomach—it was not every day he had such a chance of
-filling it—he hopped forward, then drew back again; finally, making up
-his mind once for all, he began to peck warily at the contents of the
-well-stored hand.
-
-She watched him with delight and admiration. The sight of him and his
-pretty ways stirred deep, unsuspected feelings within her. The blue sky
-seemed to have entered at her humble window, as if the bird had brought
-in along with him a fragment of space. Under his wing he hid, Claire
-thought, all the gaiety and brightness of the spring.
-
-Memories awoke in her heart; she dreamed of the woodlands, the fields of
-golden grain, the water-springs, all the glories of kindly Mother
-Nature. Three or four times in her colourless life she had been taken
-into the country; she had heard the birds sing, the great trees swaying
-and rustling in the breeze and the prattling of the brooks. One day—it
-was fifteen years ago at least—she had actually dropped asleep on the
-moss in the warm shadow of the woods, and when she awoke the old oaks
-seemed to be smiling down on her.
-
-Her black thoughts fled before this memory of rosy hours.
-
-Besides, after days of gloom do not happier days follow? Had not he,
-too, her little friend, had not he known the hardships of winter?
-Shivering with cold, he had endured frost and bitter wind; his nest
-battered by the hail, his plumage soaked by the rain, his wings stiff
-with pain—was not all this far harder to bear than the gibes and insults
-of a few silly girls, giddy-pated perhaps rather than really
-ill-natured? Twenty times, a hundred times over, death had hovered near,
-when the storms scattered the leaves and tore down the nests all round
-him; but he had kept a good heart, and when spring-time came back again,
-had he not been rewarded for his bravery by happy, happy days? As she
-thought of the stubborn courage of the little sparrow, she was ashamed
-of her own weakness.
-
-Who knows?—perhaps the bird had been sent to call her back to duty, to
-encourage her never to despair, to bring her a lesson straight from
-Mother Nature. Something of Nature’s tender care for the weak and
-unprotected was in his coming to visit her garret; it was not for
-nothing he had chosen out the barest and poorest of them all, driving
-away with the rustle of his tiny wings those other dark, overshadowing
-wings—the wings of death. She found herself calling down blessings on
-him, thanking him for arriving so opportunely, weeping with joy to see
-his graceful gambols; for he was not frightened now, but bright and gay,
-and rather amused than otherwise at the four walls that had suddenly
-replaced the boundless plains of air.
-
-A new life began for the two.
-
-Monsieur Friquet—that was the name she had given him—seemed to be quite
-content to take his place as house-mate with the poor work-girl, whose
-heart was so full of affection, and who, to his partial eyes, looked as
-pretty as the prettiest things he had ever seen in the world outside.
-Did she not always wear a kind smile on her lips whenever she came home?
-And is not kindness, when all is said and done, the same thing as
-beauty?
-
-Monsieur Friquet had forgotten all about the distractions of the
-streets. Like a rakish younger son who has been living for years on his
-wits, he thoroughly enjoyed this life of slippered ease in a cosy house,
-where, it is true, the sun did not often penetrate, but then neither did
-the wind. Its quiet was unbroken all day long while his mistress was
-abroad, allowing him to doze and dream away the long hours till her
-return set stove and saucepans in activity again.
-
-He was a lazy loon, and nothing could have suited him better than to
-have a place at table laid out for him morning and evening, without his
-having so much as to put his head outside the door.
-
-He had known so many of his comrades who had perished miserably under a
-cat’s claws, at the corner of a gutter-pipe or in the treacherous shadow
-of a chimney-stack; so many who, grown old and impotent, and unable to
-find themselves a warm lodging, had died a lonely death on some deserted
-housetop; in fact, he had witnessed so much disappointment and
-disillusion and misery that he was ready—some days, at any rate—to swear
-he would not exchange for all the spacious blue of heaven shining in
-through the windowpane the indigo-blue paper with white bunches of
-flowers that covered the garret walls.
-
-He had put on flesh, and his chirp had grown thick and fruity; nowadays
-the graceless fellow had nothing but ill to say of the freedom he had
-lost, but which, after all, was limited, in summer, to scolding and
-squabbling in the tree-tops, and, in winter, to freezing on a wretched
-perch.
-
-And _pr’t! prr’t! chirp! chirp!_ he went, in scorn of everything that
-could remind him of the old bad times of his life.
-
-How much better to sit soft and warm over a good feed of bird-seed, to
-sleep away his afternoons in slothful ease, never to soil his feathers
-scratching for doles in a dungheap, but to live like a gentleman on his
-means, among his own belongings, without even a thought of work or
-worry!
-
-Monsieur Friquet, you see, was a philosopher of an accommodating temper.
-
-Thank God! everybody does not think alike; for what would become of the
-sky and the woodland if all the race of sparrows forsook them like him
-for cosy quarters and a free table? He was one of those selfish folk who
-deem all is well directly all is well with them, and who only think of
-being on the best terms with the world and with themselves, without ever
-a care beyond.
-
-True, he was barely awake ere he saw his kind mistress bustling about in
-her room and filling up his bowl with new milk; true, she shared her
-loaf and her eggs with him, always giving him the best of everything and
-cheerfully keeping the crust and the white for herself; true, all day
-long the table was laid for him, and he had nothing to do but to eat and
-drink to his heart’s content, like the regular glutton he was; but
-Monsieur Friquet never once thought at the cost of what painful
-sacrifices he enjoyed all these good things.
-
-Claire had resumed the cruel slavery of the workroom.
-
-Every morning, at seven o’clock, she set out, a meagre hunch of bread in
-her basket, and along the sleeping streets where the yawning passers-by
-were few and far between, half dozing herself, but brave and thinking of
-Monsieur Friquet, she would make her way to the dismal room where she
-was to be kept prisoner all day. Her companions never dreamed what
-strength to bear unhappiness a friend affords, a good friend you are
-sure to find at home on your return, who welcomes you with bright eyes
-of pleasure and who fills your thoughts even when he is not there.
-
-How he filled her thoughts, to be sure! What endless dialogues she had
-with him down in her own heart, just between the two of them.
-
-“Now then, Monsieur Friquet, what are we going to have for dinner? A
-couple of poached eggs? I’ve just bought them, new laid, at the
-green-grocer’s. Oh! you can almost see through them; just you look. And
-not too dear either, thank God! There, the fire just burning up nicely.
-Well, have you made up your mind? Will you have them poached or boiled?
-Oh! never mind me. To begin with, I don’t care which; I like one as well
-as the other. I’ve got some salad too—fine fresh salad. Ah! so you’re
-laughing, Monsieur Friquet! You’ll laugh better still directly. Boiled,
-then, it’s to be, eh? You see, you bad boy, we only think of pleasing
-you.”
-
-She was hardly home before the fire was crackling, the egg-boiler
-singing; in next to no time the eggs were on the table, and the two of
-them, Claire and the sparrow, were pecking away, she sitting in front of
-the cloth, he perched in front of her on the edge of a glass or else
-clinging to her fingers.
-
-At every mouthful he would give his wings a shake, looking saucily now
-at the food, now at Claire, with his head on one side.
-
-_Chirp! chirp! chirp!_ he would say in his shrill treble. It was at once
-an appeal to his mistress to give him more, and a way of thanking her
-for the trouble she took in feeding him.
-
-His impudent little beak would dive into every single thing—bread, salt,
-salad, the hollow of his mistress’s hand, poking everywhere, filching
-bits from her very lips, never still for an instant. Teasing, defying,
-thieving, he was in perpetual motion, as his brethren are among the
-leaves of the forest trees.
-
-They drank out of the same cup, ate off the same plate. Ah! but Monsieur
-Friquet had his wilful moods too at times; _he_ was not the fellow to be
-satisfied with everything; now it was the bread he refused with a little
-decided peck that said as plain as words: “I won’t have it!”—now it was
-the egg, or the salad, or something else. You see, he knew quite well,
-did Monsieur Friquet, there was a biscuit waiting for him in the
-cupboard, and he was inordinately fond of biscuit.
-
-Sunday was a special festival.
-
-Up betimes as usual, for workgirls are never lie-abeds, Claire would set
-to rights the disorder of the week, tripping on tip-toe about the room,
-not to wake Monsieur Friquet, who was snoring in a corner, a fat ball of
-feathers, with his head under his wing.
-
-“Monsieur Friquet won’t be awake for another hour,” she would think to
-herself. “I shall have time enough to set all straight”—and she would
-set to work, dusting, sweeping, washing the floor, happy in the prospect
-of the coming Sunday that would release her a while from her chain of
-servitude.
-
-At last the bird would wake up, and there would be quick cries of: “Good
-morning, Monsieur Friquet! How have you slept?”
-
-“Chirp! chirp!” would come the answer.
-
-And she would reply—
-
-“Oh! so have I—excellently, thank you.”
-
-Then breakfast would be served at once. He would come to table still
-half asleep, with heavy eyes, to be scolded and fondled and chided.
-
-“Lazybones! why, it’s close on eight o’clock!”
-
-But he would hop on her shoulder, and put his little round head to her
-lips as if to ask pardon.
-
-Then they would talk of serious matters.
-
-“Monsieur Friquet! I say, Monsieur Friquet!”
-
-“Chirp! chirp!”—which meant: “Well, what? I’m all attention!”
-
-“Monsieur Friquet, I want your advice. What shall we have to eat for
-Sunday?”
-
-“Chirp!”
-
-“I hear you! Biscuit! biscuit! But people can’t live only on biscuit! We
-must have something else _to go with it_. Suppose we bought a couple of
-artichokes! Do you like artichokes, Monsieur Friquet? Yes? Ah! I knew an
-artichoke would please you. Wait here for me, and I’ll run round to the
-greengrocer’s.”
-
-So the Sunday wore away in happy play and merry nonsense between the
-pair.
-
-What more was needed to transform the sharp thorns of pain into fragrant
-roses of content? She had invested the bold little chattering fellow
-with all the treasures of her tenderness; on him she lavished all her
-care and devotion; he was father and mother and family to her, and where
-he was, was home.
-
-They lived long and happily together, and their love was never
-interrupted.
-
-[Illustration: A LOST DOG]
-
-
-
-
- A Lost Dog
-
-
- I
-
-Have you ever noticed the melancholy pensive look masterless dogs assume
-at the hour when the press thins, and the passers-by slacken their pace
-on the side-walks, like waters from a tap running dry?
-
-As the silence deepens they appear from every side, these poor,
-friendless beasts, their meagre forms slinking through the fog and
-gloom; up and down the streets they prowl, noses to the ground, and
-tails drooping, like so many lost souls. Some have sound legs to run on,
-others can hardly drag themselves along; but all have hollow flanks and
-protruding ribs. They are out in search of food, nosing in the refuse
-heaps, scratching in the mud, filching from the scavengers bones as
-fleshless as themselves.
-
-What the world lets fall from its table is still a banquet for their
-starving bellies. They are not hard to please; till the wan light of
-dawn surprises them, they hunt the streets, rain-soaked and
-frost-bitten; then they creep back into mysterious holes and corners,
-where they curl themselves up in a round and sleep away the livelong
-day.
-
-Most of them are wild and shy, for they have only known the blackest
-side of life—cuffs and kicks, wretchedness and desertion. For them no
-hope survives the shipwreck of friendships betrayed; alone they live and
-alone they creep into a hole to die—creatures of the dunghill whose
-obsequies will be performed by the scavenger’s cart.
-
-But if some are discouraged and disillusioned, there are bolder spirits
-too who will sometimes, when they hear the steps of a belated wayfarer,
-tear themselves from the heap they are foraging in and stand panting and
-eager in the dark street, with the desperate eye of a swimmer looking
-out across the raging foam in search of a port of safety. Hope is not
-yet dead in _them_; they still have faith in mankind, and each shadowy
-form that emerges in the light of the gas-lamps entices them as offering
-promise of a home. For hours they will trot, with a humble, gentle,
-deprecating gait, at the heels of a casual passer-by, a shadow among
-shadows, dogging his steps to the last, hoping against hope. It is a
-_friend_ they are fain to run to earth; but alas! the chase is one that
-is repeated night after night—and it is almost always unsuccessful. More
-often than not, the pursued has no inkling even of the dumb escort that
-attends him through the night.
-
-How _should_ he know? Behind his back the dog treads noiselessly, with
-paws of velvet and nose to earth, checking his pace when the stranger
-slackens his, stopping when he stops, bit by bit learning his walk and
-ways. At last, when he has journeyed far through the dark streets, when
-his legs ache with pursuing under the wayfarer’s form a dream that is
-never to come true, a door will interpose, a ponderous, an impassable
-barrier between him and his fond hopes. Yet, who can tell? perhaps he
-will still linger on, shivering, till daylight, so unconquerable is his
-faith in man.
-
-It was one of these hopeful but unappreciated souls that encountered an
-old schoolmaster one night, when the latter had tarried late in the
-fields outside the fortifications, anxious to assist at the noble
-spectacle the sun gives gratuitously to one and all, as he sets in the
-glowing west.
-
-He was returning by the boulevards, his heart full of these glories no
-fireworks have ever yet been invented to match; as he jogged along, he
-was thinking of God’s goodness, who every night lights up these ruddy
-lamps of the sky to make fine flame-coloured curtains for the slumbers
-of His creatures.
-
-A little black dog, the ugliest little dog you ever saw, without ears
-and without a tail, or as good as without, saw the solitary stranger.
-Did he divine perhaps beneath the man’s easy, good-natured exterior a
-fellow-sufferer, the heart of a disappointed, disillusioned being like
-himself? Sometimes animals can see very far into things.
-
-At any rate he started off in pursuit.
-
-The stranger noticed nothing, but marched along, striding over gutters
-and stamping across pavements, knocking sometimes against benches and
-trees in his preoccupation. It had been raining for an hour past, as it
-does come down in spring, in floods of warm soaking rain and sudden
-showers that wetted man and dog to the skin, without either one or the
-other being much disturbed.
-
-Absent-minded as he was, the old man presently felt something rubbing
-softly against his leg, and, looking down, was surprised to see the
-wretched-looking cur beside him.
-
-It was crawling and cringing, and with little half-stifled barks seemed
-to be appealing to the generosity of this unknown friend, perhaps less
-hard-hearted than the generality of mankind.
-
-Many people, seeing what a hideous beast it was, would have said “No,
-no!” at once. But it was just the creature’s hideousness that moved the
-worthy man’s pity irresistibly. Touched by its repulsive looks, he
-guessed at the pitiful hardships the wretched animal must have borne in
-secret. He saw its sunken flanks, its mangy coat, its sharp-ridged back,
-and loved it with a sudden ardour of affection—the affection poor
-suffering folks feel for one another. All very well for happy people to
-test and try one another for ever so long to see if they suit each
-other, but they who have nothing to lose by mutual affection make no
-bones about clapping hand in hand straight away and swearing eternal
-friendship.
-
-And so it was with these two new comrades.
-
-Both were poor, and they fraternised at once. The dog was enchanted to
-have met a kind stranger to help him in his need, while his benefactor
-thought to himself how pleasant it would be to have the faithful
-creature to share his solitude. He stooped, patted the animal’s
-streaming coat, tickled his ear, or as much of it as there was to
-tickle, and ended by taking him home to his garret.
-
-It was many a day since the poor beast had known the comfort of four
-walls and a roof—if indeed he ever had! For two whole days, barring meal
-times, he slept like a log; on the third he roused himself from his
-lethargy, trotted up and down the room, poked his nose into every
-corner, and showed every sign of being wide awake at last.
-
-The dog must have a name, and the good schoolmaster was not long in
-finding one. Azor and Faithful are names that never come amiss for poor
-folk’s dogs; he chose Azor, perhaps keeping Faithful for himself—and he
-well deserved it! He had only to move his lips, pronouncing the two
-syllables “Az-or” below his breath, and the dog was instantly on the
-alert, looking up at him with roguish eyes, wondering what he was going
-to say next. No doubt of it, he was a very intelligent animal.
-
-It was a happy household. Not that bread was over and above plentiful;
-but people who have nothing are cheaply satisfied, and if stomachs were
-pinched some days, at any rate hearts were never chilled. The dog had
-come into the man’s life like a special providence; henceforth his
-existence had an object; he had some one to love, some one besides
-himself to think of; poverty, so heavy a burden for a lonely man, seemed
-almost a boon now there were two to bear it—like a load of which each
-carries his half.
-
-He loved and indulged him like a child, and something of selfishness
-entering into all ardent affections, Azor soon came to represent all
-humanity in his eyes. One day, to make him look fine, he fastened in the
-coarse hair of his neck a pink bow a young girl had dropped in the
-street, and told himself the dog was the handsomest beast alive. Slender
-greyhound, fleet-footed pointer, sturdy Newfoundland, none were a patch,
-in the eye of this partial judge, on the little ragged-haired,
-undersized mongrel he had introduced to his hearth and home.
-
-Azor had just as great an admiration for his master. Sitting up on his
-haunches in front of him, he would gaze into his face for hours together
-in a sort of ecstasy.
-
-Did he see him transmuted into something other than he was, or did the
-rough face, scored with its network of heavy wrinkles, from amid which
-the nose shone like a beacon-fire, embody for the wee doggie the
-beau-ideal of manly beauty? For my part, I think Azor beheld in it a
-beauty of a higher sort than the perishable beauty of the features; the
-old man, to be sure, was goodness incarnate, and is not goodness the
-highest form of beauty?
-
-They lived for one another. Azor yapped, and the old man talked, and
-between them they had wonderful fine dialogues; beginning in the garret,
-these were resumed in the street the days they took the air together.
-
-The pair might be seen marching side by side, the old man laughing, the
-dog laughing, too, in a way he had of his own. And so they wandered
-through the streets, in search of quiet, both taking little short steps.
-True, Azor was young still, and would have liked to dart on ahead; but
-his friend could not have kept up, and that was quite enough to make him
-adopt the peaceful gait of a dog who has ceased to care for the
-distractions of the roadside.
-
-But out in the fields you may be sure this sedateness was exchanged for
-wild excitement. Intoxicated by the open air, Azor would dash away,
-gambolling and wheeling and leaping like a mad creature, and performing
-a hundred tricks that mightily amused his good old master.
-
-
- II
-
-Azor had his little ways. Every morning he used to go down into the
-street to inspect the gutters and pay a visit to the dogs of the
-neighbourhood. He was always back in a quarter of an hour or so.
-
-But one day he did not return.
-
-His master waited patiently for him till midday. Animals are like men,
-and love to linger; perhaps he had met friends—and the old schoolmaster
-smiled indulgently at the notion.
-
-However, when half the afternoon was gone, and still Azor did not
-appear, he began to get anxious. Had some accident befallen him? and he
-thought of carriage wheels and horses’ hoofs and the rush and roar of
-the main streets.
-
-His first impulse was to rush to the stairs; but Azor might come back at
-any moment, so he stayed where he was, more dead than alive.
-
-The window opened on the roof; the old man took a chair, climbed on it
-and craned his head over the sill till he could see down over the edge
-of the rain-shoot. There he stood for ever so long watching the little
-black dots darting in and out among the legs of the passers-by. But not
-one of them was Azor.
-
-A cold sweat broke out on his forehead; he was obliged to get down off
-the chair.
-
-At last, as dusk was falling, a paw came scratching at the door, and he
-flew to open it.
-
-Yes, it was his old comrade—but in what a plight! dyed blue, with a
-rope’s end still dangling round his neck! Some tragedy had befallen, no
-doubt, of which he had been the victim—and he patted the poor beast, his
-mind a prey to a hundred sinister apprehensions. Azor meantime fawned
-round him, looking as contrite as a culprit who cannot hope to be
-forgiven.
-
-The dye refused to be washed out; soap was of no avail, and they had to
-resort to caustics; but for all they could do, a tinge of blue remained.
-It lasted nearly a month, but at last the black reappeared. While his
-master was busy over these operations, Azor would lick his hands, only
-stopping to sneeze, when the strong fumes got up his nose. He seemed
-cured of all wish for adventures.
-
-Nevertheless, when a month was over, these prolonged absences began
-again. Sometimes he would stay away an hour; one Saturday he was abroad
-six hours. This irregular behaviour vexed his good master exceedingly.
-What could the mysterious attraction be that kept his faithful friend
-like this? He determined to find out.
-
-He had noticed that Azor, the better to elude his vigilance, apparently
-used always to loiter a bit in front of the house, not starting away
-before he felt certain no one was looking; then in one bound he would be
-at the end of the street and disappear.
-
-One day he followed the truant. Now and again the dog would stop, nose
-all along the pavement, then, reassured, set off again at a trot. He
-turned the corner, then down a broader street, and so eventually into a
-square. The clumps of rhododendrons hid him for a moment from his
-master, who came puffing up; but presently he caught sight of him in the
-middle of a group of children. He was barking joyously, leaping up at
-them, rolling on his back in the grass, in transports of delight. They
-were five little pale-faced things, and among them one face paler still
-and pinched with illness.
-
-The shock nailed the old man to the spot. Was it possible? Was Azor a
-traitor to his friend? And he gazed first at the dog and then at the
-children with the look a man wears who sees an edifice he has long been
-labouring at crumbling into ruin. He had put his trust in the animal; he
-esteemed him as well as loved him—and, lo! the ingrate was sharing his
-caresses with others. He hated duplicity, and his gorge rose at the
-thought.
-
-“Come here!” he shouted.
-
-Azor knew his voice instantly, and, crawling along the ground like a
-serpent, he crept up to his benefactor, his tail dragging in the dust.
-But the latter never so much as thought of punishing him, and patted him
-on the back gently. Their eyes met; the man’s were full of sadness, the
-dog’s besought forgiveness. Then, still in the same humble attitude, he
-tried to draw his master towards the little group of pale faces.
-
-The children had come forward—all except the little invalid, who stayed
-where he was; and all with one accord, their hands behind their backs,
-were staring at the new arrival.
-
-Was he going to take their dog from them? Their brows were puckered with
-anxiety, and as he watched them, he was amazed to think his anger had
-been so easily roused.
-
-What harm had Azor done after all? Ah! the blow would have been harder
-to bear if he had betrayed him for another man; but children! The
-piteous air of the little one who had remained behind touched him so
-that he took his hands with a smile and asked him if he loved Azor too.
-
-“Oh! yes,” cried the child.
-
-His eyes moved languidly under drooping lids, and he wore the careworn
-look of an invalid. Azor laid his head on the child’s knees, and he
-caressed him with his thin fingers long and lovingly.
-
-The others soon found their tongues. Azor, they said, used to come every
-morning, and they romped together. They had known him for a long time in
-fact; but he had been a month once without appearing, and they had
-believed he was dead. A dyer’s apprentice, after tying a cord round his
-neck, had dragged him off, and as they never saw him any more, they had
-laid his death at the bad boy’s door.
-
-“So that’s the explanation!” the old man muttered, and remembered the
-long day of agonised suspense when he waited for him at the garret
-window, and then how he had come back dyed blue. It was a relief to know
-the truth.
-
-He went again at the same time next day, the dog careering gaily ahead
-as if he quite understood. Presently all found themselves in the square
-again, and all faces lit up with a common pleasure.
-
-They became fast friends; he learned their names, and that two of them
-were brothers of the pale-faced little fellow; their mother always sent
-them to look after him in the garden; they lived only a few steps away.
-His heart was filled with compassion for the frail-looking little lad.
-As Pierre could not walk, he got into the way by degrees of carrying him
-home in his arms as far as the door, Azor galloping after them, wagging
-his tail.
-
-One day the child’s mother came down to thank the “kind gentleman,” and
-they fell into talk. The boy’s father was a workman on the railway,
-while she worked at fine sewing; the little one was a sore trouble to
-them; he had to be taken out for fresh air, and constantly looked after;
-and all hope of cure had had to be abandoned long ago.
-
-“And yet he’s no fool either, sir; of the three he’s the cleverest.”
-
-He only nodded, his head full of a notion that still occupied him after
-he got home; Azor lay at his feet and watched him thinking, thinking all
-day long. At nightfall he took the dog’s head between his hands.
-
-“There!” he cried merrily, “you’ll be pleased with your old master this
-time.”
-
-Three days later he bought a go-cart, in which he installed Pierre, and
-every morning they used to set out for the country, Azor scouting ahead
-and his master following with the child in tow.
-
-The old schoolmaster would explain all they saw to him—animals and
-things; he had made him a present of an alphabet with coloured pictures
-where a yacht stood for Y and a zebra for Z. And Pierre soon learnt to
-read.
-
-On Sundays, instead of three, they were seven; the whole family would
-join the expedition, and they would linger on till dark in the starlit
-fields.
-
-They were very happy, and their happiness lasted many long years.
-
-
-
-
- Misadventures of an Owl
-
-
-His plumage was glossy and abundant, his eye alert, his claws long and
-strong; in all points he was everything a handsome young owl should be.
-For two years he had slept snug under his mother’s wing, the fond object
-of her jealous care; but when spring came round again, his father, who
-was a very sententious bird, addressed him in these terms—
-
-[Illustration: MISADVENTURES OF AN OWL]
-
-“You are grown up now, and the time is come when we must part. The nest
-would be too small to hold both you and those who will come after you.
-Moreover, no owl is ever happy save as head of a household. All sorts of
-trials and tribulations await us; men feel nothing but anger and
-contempt for our race. No matter for the watch and ward we keep over the
-orchards, the war of extermination we wage on the prolific broods that
-devastate the wheat, for all our well-meant efforts to aid the harvests
-to grow and the fruit-trees to bloom, our only guerdon is to be shot at
-with guns. Alas! the most of us end by being nailed up to a barn-door,
-with spread-eagled wings. A wife and family will console you under all
-this cruel injustice. Year by year your heart will grow green again amid
-the joys of domesticity, and you will attach a higher value to life when
-you no longer stand alone to bear its burden. So quit the nest, as I did
-before you; choose a good helpmeet of your own age, and may you be happy
-together, as we are, your mother and I.”
-
-Accordingly the youngster took his departure. Gravity comes early to
-owls, and though only two years old, he already wore the severe air of
-an old philosopher. But the young lady owls, likewise brought up to
-scorn worldly pleasures, prefer this serious deportment to the gay
-exterior the other birds find so fascinating.
-
-He went methodically round the village, and was well received by the
-parents, while more than one young thing turned her head to look after
-him. But there was not one of them, he thought, like his mother, and as
-she was the paragon of all merit in his eyes, he had sworn only to
-choose a mate who should resemble her in mind if not in face. He was in
-despair, and on the point of returning to the paternal roof when, one
-evening, as he was hovering about an old church-steeple, he caught sight
-of a charming little head peeping out between the luffer-boards.
-
-Was he weary of the search perhaps, or did the little face really remind
-him of the adored image of his parent? He lingered long in admiration,
-never tired of watching her dainty ways, and little by little something
-began to thump inside him, something he had never felt before. She was
-busy crunching a mouse, pecking and worrying at it with her sharp beak,
-and had very soon left nothing but the bare bones. Then she wiped her
-beak and preened her feathers prettily, as every well-bred young lady
-owl should.
-
-Just as she was finished, she saw him sitting in the next tree, and,
-startled at being caught at her toilet, she hid her head under her wing;
-nor was he a whit less embarrassed, and each of them gazed at the other
-in equal confusion, without saying one word. At last he made up his mind
-and spoke to the parents, who both thought him a very charming fellow.
-
-It was a quiet wedding, as weddings always are among the owls. There was
-no music or nonsense; they were married at night, in the old steeple,
-and the moon lent her illumination. When all was over, the parents gave
-their blessing, and the young couple set out on their honeymoon.
-
-But it was not the sort of jaunt the sparrows indulge in, sailing away
-into the blue, so high, so high they seem as if they would never come
-back again; _they_ lighted sedately on the bough of an old oak, and,
-finding it a good place, stopped there for good. Besides, the oak, being
-decrepit with years, had not, as a younger tree would, a whole host of
-impudent little cock-sparrows for its denizens; a blackbird lodged on
-the first floor, and a magpie had selected the trunk as his residence,
-and though both were great chatterers, the owls did not find their
-company disagreeable.
-
-But it was not so with Father Blackbird and Mother Magpie; they were
-fond of gaiety, and the newcomers struck them as dismal neighbours to
-have. So they went off to see the tomtits, who are naturally very daring
-fellows, and told them about the hum-drum life the happy pair led; and
-between them they planned a fine _charivari_ for the benefit of their
-new neighbours in the early hours of the morning.
-
-Our friends were still fast asleep, snugly ensconced in the depths of a
-hollow bole, when the hostile band appeared. Suddenly an appalling
-uproar woke them with a start; screwing up their eyes, they tried to
-discover what was the matter, but they could not see a thing. Meantime
-dawn had broken, the sun was already shooting his beams like fireworks
-through the boughs, and great dragonflies were darting to and fro,
-glittering like emeralds. At last they made out a whirl of wings,
-looming like a black shadow in the clear morning air. Their assailants
-swept down and crowded every branch of the old oak, which hummed like a
-gigantic harp with the twittering of a thousand throats.
-
-The poor owls could make nothing of it; owls are simple-minded folk, and
-all they could think of was that another newly-married couple were
-celebrating their nuptials, and that the discordant noises they heard
-were the cries of transport to be expected under the circumstances. They
-shrunk away still deeper in their hole, not wishing to interrupt other
-people’s enjoyment. But the tomtits were not satisfied—not they; it was
-nothing merely to have startled them in their slumbers; they meant to
-expel them from the old oak altogether. Prompted by the magpie, who sat
-screaming defiance from the foot of the tree, some of the bolder spirits
-poked in their heads at the entrance of the cavern. Inside it was dark
-as night, and from the depths four eyes blazed out like balls of fire.
-The champions took fright, and fell back hurriedly on the main body.
-
-“Cowards!” screeched their amiable ally, raising her harsh voice to its
-shrillest pitch; “d’ye mean to leave the villains in peace in their den?
-Think of the horrid carnage there will be in the woods every night! Not
-one of you will be safe in his nest any more. From time immemorial the
-owl tribe has been the scourge of the whole bird nation. Their heads are
-full of nothing but wile and wickedness, and the better to shed blood,
-they go to work like murderers in the dark! Worse still, they are all
-heretics. The witches use them in their incantations. They are birds of
-hell. Slay, slay the foes of Holy Church!”
-
-This speech rallied the waverers, and all together they forced a way
-into the dark, yawning cavern.
-
-In a moment a hundred beaks were pecking savagely at the two victims,
-who, blinded by the light, struck out wildly in self-defence. Two of the
-tomtits were left on the field, while the rest flew away in a panic,
-screaming in chorus—“Vengeance! vengeance on the rascally owls!”
-
-What had they done? What crime had they committed? Astounded as they
-were, and amazed to think what motive should have prompted the attack,
-they could no longer doubt that open war was declared upon them.
-
-So they went in search of another home, and as night was falling, found
-a safe retreat under the eaves of a lonely presbytery. “Here, at any
-rate,” they thought, “no one will come to molest us. Alas! it is only
-too true—we are not made for the society of our fellow-creatures, and
-this deserted roof will hide us better than a prison.”
-
-They had happy times; they reared a family of little ones, and lived a
-patriarchal life in the hollow under the roof. Everybody has his own way
-of being happy in this world of ours, and for all it was different from
-the general fashion, this was good enough for them. To begin with,
-dwelling by themselves, they knew nothing of envy, and no thought of
-ambition vexed them; their only wish was to live as long as possible,
-pariahs and outcasts as they were, and grow old together.
-
-Let others go in search of adventures; their desires were limited by the
-modest horizon they had before their eyes, and a secure abode, poor and
-bare though it might be, seemed to them preferable to all the treasures
-of Golconda. You see what reasonable, respectable people they were!
-
-Certainly their dun-coloured plumage was not of the sort to let them
-flaunt in the sunlight like other birds; after spending a luxurious
-morning dozing side by side, they would wake just when the linnets,
-goldfinches, and chaffinches were going to bed. A great silence brooded
-over nature; for the giddy-pates who had been playing truant all the
-day, and had left a feather or two of their plumage to dance in every
-sunbeam, it would have seemed as dull as death; but they thought
-otherwise, and for them the night was filled with infinite music. Did
-not the breeze blow soft in the leaves with a murmur as of running
-waters and prattling brooks? A wide peace fell upon the woodlands which
-from noon to twilight had throbbed under the golden beams of the sun,
-while the moon, the owl’s sun, spread her white beams over the landscape
-like a river of milk.
-
-Then their keen ear, an instrument of extraordinary delicacy, being very
-large, and forming, as every bird-lover knows, a double spiral of
-enormous dimensions, and admirably adapted to catch the faintest sounds,
-noted from afar light rustlings and soft sighs, and a confused murmur of
-music, wherein the wind seemed, turn and turn about, to pipe through
-clarinet and oboe. Silent and awe-struck, the two outcasts felt the
-kindly beneficence of nature moving on the face of the world. At times
-louder sounds would mingle with the whisperings of the night, telling
-them of the fawns pushing through the matted undergrowth, of companies
-of woodland creatures sallying out to feed, lovers like themselves of
-the darkness—badgers, polecats, wild-cats, weasels, and rabbits, of a
-vast stir of life and activity down in the dim, intricate forest tracks.
-Cats were prowling, their yellow eyes flaming along the darkling ways,
-while from the homesteads rose rhythmically, pledge of security for all
-the host of fur and feathers, the heavy snoring of the sleepers within.
-
-Then they would come out and stand at the edge of the eaves, and gaze
-forth, as from a balcony, on all the moving spectacle of the kindly
-night. Sparkling gleams would flash along the ground like diamonds, and
-the slates glitter like so many mirrors on the house-roofs. They could
-see the stars reflected in the brook; mysterious eyes looked out from
-under the trees, vague shapes went gliding along the road, while high in
-the heavens, with a round face that seemed to laugh good-humouredly,
-sailed the lady moon.
-
-As long as they had no children, they enjoyed these hours of
-contemplation like true artists who grudge to miss one note of harmony
-or one gleam of beauty; they would never stir till dawn, hardly
-troubling themselves even to go in search of food. But when the brood of
-youngsters arrived, they had perforce to forgo these ecstasies. The
-little beaks were for ever crying for more, and Goodman Owl, who was the
-best of parents, became a mighty hunter.
-
-Scarce was evening fallen ere he had taken post on the roof, heedless
-now of the mysterious splendours of the night, the furtive comings and
-goings of his prey occupying all his thoughts; the music of the spheres
-was henceforth confined for him to the rustling of the field-mice
-climbing the espaliers and the house-mice scuttling along the walls;
-still as a statue he stood there watching and picking out the fattest
-victim. Before the little creature had time to turn its head, he held it
-in his terrible jaws, and was flying off with his prey, panting in
-mortal terror, to his young ones, who instantly made a meal of it.
-
-The poor little mouse saw nothing, heard nothing. A soft, fanning sound
-from the night-bird’s velvety pinions was the only warning that anything
-untoward was near; but already the ravisher had seized his prey; there
-was a stifled squeal, and all was over!
-
-Every ten minutes—the same regular interval has been observed in all
-owls questing for food—he would bring fresh provender to the nest. The
-darkest night was no hindrance; his shining eyes, with their widely
-dilated pupils, pierced the blackest shadows as if they were
-transparent, and there was no hole or corner where the little night
-prowlers did not go in terror of their lives.
-
-Meanwhile the mother-bird was feeding her brood, sometimes when the
-mouse was particularly tough, tearing it piecemeal for her little ones
-to devour more easily.
-
-At other times father and mother together would guide the little family
-along the roofs, patiently teaching the inexperienced wings to fly, and
-giving a helping touch with beak or wing when they stumbled and tumbled
-in their attempts. At full moon they carried the youngsters to a
-neighbouring tree, he taking one, she another, and it was pretty to see
-their amazement when, craning their little necks, they watched the dim
-outlines of moving objects against the blue distance.
-
-But they were getting big now, and the old owl lectured them sagely, as
-his father had lectured him; he would tell them of the joys and sorrows
-of life, and advise them to marry. No, it was not callousness—far from
-it; he loved them tenderly, for by reason and instinct he was a pattern
-of all the domestic virtues. But he was a wise and far-seeing parent,
-who dreaded what their fate would be, should he and his mate one day
-meet the doom all owls are liable to. Perhaps one morning a yokel would
-climb to their hiding-hole and carry them off to kill them. True, the
-good Curé, whose house sheltered them, had forbidden their being
-molested; but he was an old man now, and nobody cared much what he said;
-then, with a ladder, it was so easy to reach the nest! The old owl
-always spoke like a philosopher; the future did not terrify him, and he
-seemed quite resigned to the cruel lot men mete out to his species. His
-words were without gall or bitterness; but a deep-seated melancholy gave
-them the gravity that ever marks creatures born to suffer.
-
-In younger days he had known rebellious thoughts, and the sense of human
-injustice had oppressed his spirit; he had even dreamt of flying his
-country for the lands the swallows in September told him of, and far
-away from cruel men, living in peace and quietness with the mate who had
-joined her life to his. But time had softened these resentments; he had
-bowed his head, recognising a higher power above him, and content to
-live on, harmless and obscure, asking only to repay good for evil.
-
-One morning the young birds deserted the nest.
-
-Then, alone once more, they resumed their former existence in the dark
-hollow of the old oak, so solitary and silent now; they bore their
-children’s departure as only another of nature’s inevitable necessities.
-They seldom stirred from home now, seeing hardly a soul except a couple
-of old friends sometimes on Sabbath days; as of old, they held long,
-long talks of nights with the moon. Perched side by side on the eaves,
-their dark shapes threw long black shadows across the roof; there they
-sat stiff and still, save when, from time to time, they spread their
-wings, swooped down on their prey, then resumed the same rigid attitude.
-These murderous assassins were at heart the most peaceable of good
-citizens. It was never their way, coming home at night, to wake the
-other birds asleep among the foliage; no one ever heard them quarrelling
-or shifting the furniture or pecking at the wall, as the cuckoos,
-linnets, and chaffinches are so fond of doing; only, six or eight times
-in the night, to advertise the country folk, they would cry _To-hoo!
-to-hoo!_ if next day was going to be fine, and _To-whit!_ if it was
-going to rain, at regular intervals, like talking barometers.
-
-A pair of young turtle-doves nesting on the next roof found this habit
-annoying, and went to the judge of the district to lodge a complaint.
-
-The judge was a very old raven, whom years had only made more sly and
-artful; he was said to be a hundred, and certainly his bald pate was as
-shiny as a polished stone. He lived in a crevice in the rocks, alone
-with his own thoughts. But these thoughts, unlike most old men’s, were
-full of mockery for all created beings. This feathered Methuselah had
-seen so much in his day! and experience had only taught him to laugh at
-griefs and joys and everything else.
-
-While appreciating his usefulness, he did not like Mr. Owl, and was not
-sorry to make things unpleasant for him; he could always dismiss the
-case in the end, after getting his fun out of it, if the turtles proved,
-as he half suspected, to have been in the wrong after all.
-
-Three blackbirds he employed as constables arrived at break of day at
-the owls’ front door and knocked. Three times they had to repeat the
-summons, so fast asleep was the worthy couple, till, roused at last, the
-latter poked out their heads in great alarm to ask what was wanted with
-them. Both looked so upset, he, poor fellow, in a nightcap, and she,
-good dame, in morning deshabille, that the blackbirds, who are always
-fond of a joke, burst into such a peal of laughter it took them ten
-minutes to recover their gravity.
-
-They laughed so heartily that the sparrows of the neighbourhood were
-attracted by the noise, and began to turn and wheel in flocks above the
-roof, while a horrid hubbub, a vile chirp! chirp! chirp! broke out,
-deafening and confusing the poor owls still more.
-
-The blackbirds, when they had done laughing, called for silence, which,
-however, it took some time to establish. Then they announced—
-
-“We, assistant officers of justice of this district, and by order of His
-Honour the Judge, do hereby summon you to appear this day before stroke
-of noon at his Court, situate, to wit, in the first crevice on the right
-hand, beginning from above, of the cliff bordering the Great Meadow.”
-
-This order was promulgated in shrill, nasal tones amid the rustling of
-the wings of all present, who, the instant the last word was uttered,
-began to amuse themselves by screaming in frantic delight. On the
-blackbirds departing, a number of sparrows lingered on to enjoy the
-confusion of the two owls.
-
-These had shrunk away into the deepest recess of their lair, terrified
-yet resigned, and their inquisitive tormentors heard none of the
-lamentations they expected.
-
-What black deed had been laid to their charge? The blackbirds had given
-no indication, and they began mentally to review their past, searching
-in vain for any crime they could be accused of. They had not robbed
-other people’s goods, nor slandered their neighbours; they had never,
-no, never caused any one’s death, while they had honestly and honourably
-performed the duties Nature had given them to do. What more could be
-asked of them?
-
-The Judge was waiting—they must be off. It was a woeful pilgrimage. The
-bright daylight dazzled them, and they went along blindly, running
-against everything and perpetually losing their way; twenty times over
-they lost their bearings and had to retrace their steps, covered with
-confusion, while their dusky plumage made a dirty-looking blotch in the
-fresh morning air.
-
-“This way!” cried some tomtits, flying ahead of them—and, taking their
-word, they blundered into a nest of yellowhammers, which luckily
-happened to be empty.
-
-“Don’t listen to them—come along with us,” the chaffinches advised them
-next—and they went crash! head first into a wall.
-
-A cloud of small birds followed behind. They were clawed and scratched,
-and half-dazed, as they wandered about like phantoms of the night
-masquerading at high noon.
-
-When at last, after a thousand tribulations, with eyeballs starting from
-their heads, battered and beaten and jeered at, they reached the Court,
-another swarm of tormentors was waiting to receive them. There were at
-least eight hundred, and every second others kept coming up, who, after
-flying wildly about in search of places, lighted here and there and
-everywhere, chattering and squabbling. The rock was soon so crowded from
-top to bottom that a linnet, who had been detained at home feeding her
-chicks, could not find a perch anywhere, and fluttered up and down the
-tumultuous ranks, beseeching the audience in vain to sit a little
-closer. The ladies especially seemed determined not to give up a single
-inch of room, and all vied together in raising a hubbub, shrieking and
-laughing and chattering as if they would never stop.
-
-“Accused,” ordered the raven suddenly, “stand up. Our Clerk of the Court
-will now read the statement of misdemeanours charged against you.”
-
-For a little while the uproar still continued, mingled now with sharp
-calls to order and appeals for silence; then, diminishing gradually,
-died away into the light rustle of many wings. Then a magpie was seen to
-rise briskly to his feet; his dark eye rolled roguishly, as he unfolded
-with his beak a huge sheet of paper scribbled all over with writing and
-read out in a dry, rasping voice—
-
-“We, Clerk of the Court, &c., &c., do hereby certify that the
-appellants, to wit M. Narcisse Tourtereau and his consort, Mme. Virginie
-Tourtereau or Colombelle, have duly appeared before us and deponed that
-the said appellants, cohabiting near by the messuage whereat the Owls,
-man and wife, have taken up their abode, are nightly awakened by the
-clamours, complaints, moans, groans, and quarrels of the aforesaid Owls,
-who, instead of sleeping in their beds during the interval of time
-falling betwixt sunset and sunrise, as do all the other birds, do choose
-these selfsame hours, that are customarily devoted to repose, for
-robbing and murdering and maliciously and mischievously disturbing their
-neighbours’ night’s rest by reason of unseemly and uncouth noises.—I
-have spoken.”
-
-The magpie flirted his tail four times in token of satisfaction at his
-own performance, snapped up a gnat to clear his throat, and, resuming
-his seat, devoted himself to an endless succession of smiles directed to
-the feminine portion of his audience. An approving murmur greeted the
-conclusion of the statement of accusation.
-
-Then, after a few moments of disorder, which was promptly checked, “Caw!
-caw!” went the raven, with a fine attempt at seriousness, his great
-round-eyed spectacles perched on his nose; then, turning to the owl, he
-lisped in an affected voice—
-
-“The word is with you; the Court will hear you in your own defence.”
-
-Never, never had the birds enjoyed so laughable a spectacle before, as
-they beheld the fowl of night step forward, looking oh! so awkward and
-uncouth, with such a heavy hang-dog air! His great eyes rolled in his
-head, he stumbled at every step, while behind his back grimaced his
-shadow, mimicking every movement of his neck as it jerked in and out,
-first short, then long, like the barrels of an opera-glass.
-
-A wild spasm of merriment seized the vast concourse at sight of the
-grotesque creature, and tomtits, linnets, birds of every sort and kind,
-broke into a frantic peal of mirth.
-
-“Silence in the Court!” shrieked the magpie.
-
-But laughter is infectious. Quickly it extended to the lower ledges of
-the rock, where the spectators sat half hidden from each other in the
-semi-darkness, and the mighty cliff shook as if lashed by a hurricane.
-
-The contagion caught even the magpie, the blackbirds, the Judge himself,
-who began to sneeze again and again, in the effort to recover his
-dignity. By fits and starts, the laughter would die down, only to burst
-out afresh with redoubled vigour, and it was long before the excitement
-subsided and heads ceased to wag. When at last the audience had
-recovered something like composure, even then fans could be seen here
-and there waving to hide behind their shield a last dying echo of
-hilarity.
-
-Meanwhile, the poor buffoon, the butt of all this scathing opprobrium,
-stood silent and uncomplaining, humbly waiting his chance to speak.
-Finally, when quiet was restored, he said—
-
-“I am aware, your Honour, that men and birds all hold me and mine in
-detestation. There is no villainy they do not impute to us, no crime
-they do not charge us with, and when we have the misfortune to show
-ourselves, the howl of hate rises as high about us as a tower. But are
-we criminals? Do we lurk in the woods to rob our fellow-birds by night
-or day? Do we plunder the granaries? Do we go thieving in the hedges? Do
-we ever interfere with the livelihood of any of God’s creatures with
-whom He has bidden us live in peace? Never, your Honour, never! All the
-day we lie quiet in our hole, loving our wives and children, and
-troubling nobody; then, when night is fallen, we win our nourishment by
-exterminating rats and mice, field-rats and field-mice. I would hurt no
-one’s feelings, but it is well to make comparisons sometimes, and I ask
-myself—Which fulfils the more useful function, he who from dawn to dark
-scours the orchards, stealing cherries, plums, and pears, so that the
-countryman, when winter comes, has but the half of the crop he hoped
-for, or he who, seconding the farmer’s toils with an incessant but
-unseen activity that wins no reward, secures him the proper reward of
-his pains?”
-
-Protests were heard at these words, the goldfinches and sparrows crying
-out indignantly—
-
-“Ah! he shifts the blame on us, the sly-boots! He knows he can say what
-he likes here, but outside the Court—why, he durst not so much as look
-us in the face.”
-
-“Oh! but, my good gentlemen,” retorted the orator quietly, “it is no
-fault of mine if I cannot look at you in the way you wish; a natural
-infirmity makes it impossible for us to see in daylight; such floods of
-light beat into the wide pupils of our eyes as would blind us if we had
-to face the sunshine long. That is the reason why you mocked at us just
-now, when you saw us disabled by this excess of light, whose rays
-pricked and pained our eyeballs like so many needles. Would you not feel
-yourselves at the same painful disadvantage if you were obliged to fly
-at night, when we owls come and go at our ease, our great pupils serving
-us as lamps to see by? You would very soon break your heads against a
-wall, let me tell you!
-
-“But let me come to the allegations that have brought me here, into the
-dock. Indeed, I have touched on them already; for is not the specific
-charge against us that we choose the night to come out of our holes and
-find our food? Why, what else could we do, when by daylight, by dint of
-seeing too much, we cease to see anything at all? Nature has given us
-the night, as she has given other birds the day, unwilling, in her
-kindly wisdom, to see the dark less useful than the light; she has
-appointed us her guardians to watch over the storehouses and orchards
-and granaries, which, above all in the night-time, become the prey of a
-host of pillagers.
-
-“They talk of robbery; why, what robbery can they reproach us with? Is
-it a malefactor’s work to purge the earth of the creatures that pick and
-steal, and, like unnatural cannibals, would bring their mother to her
-death, if we and some others, our colleagues in the same beneficent
-task, did not put a check on their never-ending mischiefs? Just think if
-we folded our arms and left them a free field; they would end by
-devouring the trees, along with the bit of ground where they grow, and
-the very folks who can never satiate their spite against us, finding
-themselves deprived of shady leaves and luscious fruits alike, would
-very soon come begging and beseeching us to return to our never-ending
-task.
-
-“Yet the owls, as your Honour knows, win neither respect nor profit from
-their irksome labours. They are not proud; you will never hear them
-bragging of the services they render; but modest, as becomes good
-workers to be, they roost quietly at home all the time they do not
-devote to the chase. Scorned by their brethren the birds, and persecuted
-by mankind, they are victims of consistent ingratitude from the very
-creatures they benefit; if I say this, it is to have the fact known once
-for all, not to protest against a state of things established for all
-time. We are therefore compelled to find in ourselves a happiness which
-society refuses us, and, living in solitude, we rear our little ones for
-a lot like our own. There is the head and front of our offending.
-
-“There is yet another grievance against us; we disturb, so they allege,
-our neighbours’ rest by our uproar. Surely the word is rather strong to
-apply to us who are lovers of silence, shunning noise in others as much
-as we avoid it in our own homes. If we make ourselves heard, it is not
-for the pleasure of listening to our own voices! We well know we are no
-sweet-voiced choristers, and when the nightingale sings, we have never
-dreamt of posing as his rivals. There are, so the migrants have told us,
-in the far-off cities of other lands, men who proclaim the hour from the
-tall minarets in the silence of the night. We do not announce the
-time—the cuckoo alone has this office to perform during daylight—but we
-instruct the swallows on the point of winging away, we inform the
-cricket, the bee, the ant, the ploughman, all to whom rain and sunshine
-are not matters of indifference, if they may count or not on a
-favourable morrow. So the kindly mother of man and beast has put two
-notes in our throats, deeming we needed no more, not to make us singing
-birds, but only birds of good help.
-
-“I have no more to say, for indeed we are no great talkers, and oratory
-is an art unknown to us. I will say no more, therefore, save only
-this—that if you are not satisfied with my pleas, I offer myself—and my
-companion here present will do the like—I offer myself a willing victim
-to your resentment, if so be the common good, which could not heretofore
-exist without our aid, is now only to be secured by the sacrifice of our
-lives.”
-
-Not a little surprised at his own eloquence, the bird of night stepped
-back to his place with tottering limbs. Thereupon the jays and
-yellowhammers began a hoot of derision, which was quickly drowned by the
-protests of the mother birds trembling for their young; and then the old
-raven, rising slowly to his feet, folded up his glasses, coughed,
-croaked, and, inspired apparently by the general sense of justice,
-summed up as follows—
-
-“You, Sir Owl, you have done wrong in crying out over loud; but you,
-young Turtle-dove, you have done a far graver wrong by haling an
-innocent prisoner to the bar. You therefore will pay the fine to which
-you would have had your neighbours condemned, and the costs of the trial
-to boot. Moreover, I will take this opportunity to do an act of justice,
-and extend a hand of brotherly affection to our honoured friend the owl,
-who is henceforth to be treated with proper consideration and respect,
-or I will know the reason why.”
-
-Little by little the audience dispersed, the swarm of birds scattered
-into space, and the raven’s rock was left to its former solitude.
-
-
- Printed by Ballantyne, Hanson & Co.
- Edinburgh & London
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
---Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook
- is public-domain in the country of publication.
-
---Corrected a few palpable typos.
-
---In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by
- _underscores_.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Birds and Beasts, by Camille Lemonnier
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Birds and Beasts
-
-Author: Camille Lemonnier
-
-Illustrator: E. J. Detmold
-
-Translator: A. R. Allinson
-
-Release Date: April 24, 2016 [EBook #51847]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BIRDS AND BEASTS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Suzanne Shell, Stephen Hutcheson, and the
-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-(This file was produced from images generously made
-available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Birds and Beasts
-
-
- _Translated by_ A. R. Allinson _from the French of_ Camille Lemonnier
-
- _Illustrated by_
- E. J. Detmold
-
- London: George Allen & Company, Ltd.
- _Ruskin House_, Rathbone Place. Mcmxi
-
- [All rights reserved]
-
- Printed by Ballantyne, Hanson & Co.
- At the Ballantyne Press, Edinburgh
-
-
-
-
- Contents and Illustrations
-
-
- PAGE
- Jack and Murph 1
- The Captive Goldfinch 53
- Strange Adventures of a Little White Rabbit 91
- "Monsieur Friquet" 106
- A Lost Dog 133
- Misadventures of an Owl 156
-
-
-
-
- Birds and Beasts
-
-
-[Illustration: JACK AND MURPH]
-
-
-
-
- Jack and Murph
-
-
- I
-
-Jack and Murph were friends, old friends, trusty and tried.
-
-It was now nearly six years since the day chance had brought them
-together as members of the same company. Jack had come straight from the
-African forests; he had crossed the seas, and set foot on the continent
-of Europe for the first time; his amazement knew no bounds.
-
-It is not for nothing a little fellow of his sort is torn from the
-freedom of his vagabond life in the woods and surrendered to the tender
-mercies of a showman of performing animals. He learned to know the cruel
-tedium of captivity; shut up in a cage, he thought sadly of his merry
-gambols in the tree-tops; his little face grew wan and withered, and he
-came near pining to death. But time damped the keenness of his grief; by
-dint of seeing around him other little creatures that, like himself, had
-wearied for their native wilds, then little by little had grown
-reconciled to their fate, and now seemed to get a prodigious amount of
-fun out of their new life, he made the best of the bars, the tainted air
-of the booth, and the clown's grimaces, rehearsing his drolleries before
-the animals' cages.
-
-At the same time he could never quite share the gaiety of his companions
-in misfortune. While they were enjoying everlasting games of
-hide-and-seek, scuffling, squabbling, pelting each other with nuts, he
-would cower timidly in a corner, too sad at heart to join in their noisy
-merriment. Sometimes, when his feelings grew too much for him, he would
-break out in a series of sharp, shrill outcries, or wail like a new-born
-babe in his doleful despair.
-
-The master was very fond of him, for he was both intelligent and
-teachable. In a very short time he learned to do his musket drill, to
-walk the slack-rope, and use the spring-board. But these accomplishments
-only earned him the ill-will of the other pupils. There was never a
-prank they did not play him. No sooner had he cracked a nut, to eat the
-kernel, than a hand would dart over his shoulder and snatch the morsel
-just as he was putting it between his teeth. They slapped his face,
-pinched his tail, scarified his head with their nails, jumped upon him,
-or half strangled him in a corner, till a day came at last when his
-master, noticing how he was bullied, put him in a separate cage all by
-himself. But this loneliness only made him more unhappy still; he spent
-his life in lamentation, sitting stock-still all day long, with his arms
-hanging limp, and his eyes fixed on vacancy, refusing either to eat or
-drink. This would never do; so they left him at liberty to wander at
-will in the house.
-
-
- II
-
-Oh! but this house was not a bit like mine or yours; yet it had doors
-and windows like any other house, but so tiny these doors and windows
-were, they were hardly worth mentioning. Imagine a house on four wheels,
-and no higher than a man of middle size, with three little windows high
-up admitting light and air from outside; you entered by a wooden
-staircase that looked more like the ladder of a windmill than anything
-else.
-
-This queer construction rolled most part of the year along the high
-roads, jolting, gee-wo, gee-hup! in and out of the ruts, and carting
-about in its interior men and animals, to say nothing of household
-stuff--beds, cooking-stoves, chests crammed with clothes, and a whole
-heap of other things. An old horse, who was little better than a bag of
-bones, was in the shafts; when a halt was called, they let him crop the
-grass alongside the hedgerows.
-
-It was the funniest thing, being hauled along like this, tossing and
-tumbling in this box on wheels where the furniture seemed to be always
-just on the point of starting a polka. The table would throw up its legs
-in the air, and the chairs turn head over heels, while the pots and pans
-knocked together in the corners, making the quaintest music, sharp or
-flat in key according to the jolts.
-
-Jack, perched atop of a big press, held on tooth and nail to save a
-tumble. More often than not he found himself under the table along with
-his good friend Murph, a Stoic philosopher, who let nothing ever disturb
-his equanimity, but calmly went on beating the bush of his thick woolly
-coat in search of the game that lived there. All the while the caravan,
-bumping and thumping with a terrific rattle, was tacking and luffing
-over the rolling billows of the stony roads.
-
-
- III
-
-It is high time to tell you that Jack was a dear, pretty little monkey
-of the chimpanzee kind, with tiny, delicate hands, nervous and
-semi-transparent, almost like a sick child's. He was no bigger, the
-whole body of him, than a pocket-handkerchief, and you could have easily
-hidden him inside your hat. He was slim and slender, daintily made, with
-narrow chest and sloping shoulders--a creature all nerves, with a
-wonderful little pale phiz of his own, puckered and wrinkled, and long,
-drooping eyelids, greyish-white, and as thin as an onion skin, that
-slowly, rhythmically, opened and closed over brown eyes ringed with
-yellow. He bore the solemn, serious look of those who suffer; his eyes
-seemed fixed on something beyond the visible world, and now and again he
-would pass his long, dry fingers across his eyes as if to wipe away a
-tear. He seldom gambolled, and never indulged in the grotesque
-contortions of other apes; their restless, ceaseless activity seemed
-foreign to his nature, and even his grimaces had nothing in common with
-theirs.
-
-Noise scared him; he was never angry, but habitually silent and
-thoughtful. He preferred to lurk alone in dark corners, where he would
-spend long hours, squatted on his tail, almost motionless, dreaming
-sadly of some mysterious, unattainable future. But, for all his
-unlikeness to his colleagues and their comicality, his queer little
-crumpled, wrinkled face never failed to produce its effect on the
-spectators. Jack was perfectly irresistible; no one _could_ look at him
-for any length of time without bursting out laughing. His aspect was at
-once so piteous and so ridiculous, his gaze so pathetic and so
-grotesque, his deadly earnestness so side-splitting, while his eyelids
-would droop suddenly ever and anon in so anxious and appealing a wink,
-that the result was comic beyond belief. An old, old man's head on a
-baby's body, a mask that was for ever changing, twitching, wrinkling,
-with eyes that looked out grave, intense, solemn, from beneath a low,
-flat brow crowned by what looked for all the world like a wig!
-
-The louder the merriment he excited, the more serious Jack became. On
-show days, while the audience was convulsed with mirth, the gravity of
-his mien, the careworn look in his eyes, over which the lids dropped
-mechanically at regular intervals, as if weighed down with their load of
-melancholy, reached the acme of fantastic absurdity.
-
-Alas! men cannot tell what monkeys are thinking of. If they knew, they
-would not always laugh. Jack was dreaming of the sun, the vast green
-forests, the friends he had left behind; he was dreaming of the delights
-of swinging high in the air, cradled in the leafy hammocks of the
-boughs, dreaming of the trailing lianas, of the romps and games with his
-fellows throwing cocoanuts at one another's heads, and of the endless
-chivyings and chasings from tree-top to tree-top above the rolling
-billows of the wind-tossed jungles, through which the wild
-beasts--elephants, panthers, and lions--plough their way like ships on
-the high seas, leaving in their wake a broad furrow of floating odours
-and deep-toned sounds.
-
-
- IV
-
-But Jack had a friend, and he never embarked on his voyages into the
-far-away dreamland without calling on his old chum Murph to join him.
-
-Yes, Murph gambolled with him in the tropical jungles, Murph frolicked
-with him in the tall grasses, Murph and he amused themselves together at
-never-ending games of play; if ever it was granted him to see his native
-land again, he fully hoped to take Murph along with him.
-
-Poor Jack! he did not understand that the worthy Murph, acrobat as he
-was, would have found it hard to follow him in the lofty regions where
-his congeners are wont to disport themselves, nearer to the stars than
-the earth. Not a doubt of it, Murph would have had to kick his heels at
-the foot of a tree, while his friend was off and away aloft; and the
-smallest of his perils would have been to find himself, on looking
-round, face to face with a python-snake, just uncoiling his folds to
-spring, or else, on the river-banks, confronted with the gaping jaws of
-a crocodile.
-
-Murph could play dominoes, tell fortunes, hunt for a handkerchief in a
-spectator's pocket, read the paper. Murph had many other accomplishments
-besides, but it is far from certain that he would have extricated
-himself successfully from a _tte--tte_ of this sort with beasts that
-could boast neither his education nor his manners.
-
-The liking was reciprocal. From the very first Jack had taken a fancy to
-the big woolly-coated dog, as woolly as a sheep, who never barked or
-growled or grumbled or showed his teeth--so unlike the other dogs in the
-menagerie; in the same way Murph, the big dog, had formed an affection
-for the well-behaved, sad-faced little ape, who never pulled his tail
-and never tried to scratch out his eyes.
-
-As it happened, the showman had made up his mind to make them perform
-together. Murph was the best runner in the troupe; there was nobody like
-him for a round trot or a swinging gallop, for wheeling suddenly round
-and dropping to his knees just before making his exit, nobody to match
-Murph, always good-tempered and imperturbable, always on the look-out,
-with his bright eyes half hid under the bushy eyebrows, for a bit of
-sugar and a round of applause.
-
-Jack, for his part, had very soon become a brilliant horseman, lissom
-and fearless, an adept at leaping through the hoops and vaulting the
-bars. Thus the two seemed made for each other, both in body and mind.
-They bore the hardships of the life together, and they shared its
-successes; by dint of standing so often back against back and muzzle
-against muzzle, they found their hearts brought close together too, and
-became fast friends. Murph was never to be seen without Jack; wherever
-Jack was, Murph was there as well; they lived curled up on the same rug,
-in the same corner, under the same table, Murph licking Jack in the
-neck, and Jack stroking Murph's nose, each bound to each in perfect
-trust and amity.
-
-
- V
-
-Murph was older than Jack by nearly nine years, and his years made him
-nearly as serious-minded as his friend. But it was a different sort of
-gravity. Murph was neither morose nor disillusioned; his was the gentle
-seriousness of old age. He had seen many things since he had been in the
-world, but life did not appear to have left only its dregs in him. He
-still believed in springtide, in friendship, in the master's kind heart;
-then he had neither family nor native land to regret, for he had been
-born in the menagerie of a father and mother broken in like himself to
-circle the trapeze and leap through the hoop.
-
-His horizon was bounded by the four walls of the caravan in which, as a
-puppy still sucking at his mother's breast, he had been carted from fair
-to fair. Day by day he had watched from behind the window-panes the long
-procession of cities and countries filing past; he had visited most
-parts of Europe, in company with the strange _omnium-gatherum_ of apes,
-goats, parrots, and dogs that at each halting-place was the delight of
-the infant population. But he had never taken it upon him to covet the
-kingdom of this world; he had never craved to roam at liberty through
-the streets; never, in one word, had he so much as dreamt of playing
-truant. He was a very learned dog, and, like other learned people, he
-lived absorbed in his own thoughts, self-centred within the circle of
-his meditations, seeking nothing of things outside.
-
-
- VI
-
-Murph was a poodle by breed, and you might have searched long before you
-found a bigger or better-built one. Standing well on his legs, with a
-good, strong, supple back of his own, he carried his head high, as a
-self-respecting poodle should. I mean, of course, in the days when Murph
-was still young, for since age had crept on him, it _would_ droop more
-or less; but even so, there was something proud and dignified about its
-carriage that always attracted attention. He walked slowly and sedately,
-as if intent on the solution of an ever-insoluble problem. His thick,
-curly fleece clothed his neck like a mane, while a stout pair of long
-drooping moustaches gave him the look of an old cavalry officer; his
-skin was smooth and polished where the coat had been cut very close; he
-wore heavy ruffles round his ankles, and his tail ended in a woolly
-tuft.
-
-Thus accoutred, Murph was a fine-looking dog; the curs of low degree
-that came prowling round the van, and caught a glimpse of him through
-the crack of the door, gazed at him with admiration. He had the majestic
-port of beings destined to greatness; it was easy to see he might have
-been a diplomatist, or a great general, if nature, in fashioning his
-lot, had not chosen rather to give him the shape of a poodle; nor was
-Murph slow to appreciate and enjoy the impression he produced.
-
-Fine fellow as he was, he was not altogether free from vanity; the
-humblest animal with which Murph compared himself was the lion; he had
-seen one once in a travelling menagerie, and been struck by his own
-likeness to the king of beasts. Why, had he not, like the lion, a mane
-about his neck, a tuft to his tail, and bracelets of hair about his
-ankles? Had he not likewise his Olympian look and superb carriage? By
-dint of a little imagination, Murph had come to believe the lion a
-degenerated type of poodle dog.
-
-But let us pass lightly over his foibles; every one has his little
-weaknesses. Time, moreover, that damps the foolish ardour of mankind and
-dogkind, had tamed our friend's ambitions. He was by now as
-contemplative and calm as some wise philosopher satiated with the
-glories of this world. More often on his back than on his feet, he would
-watch the younger dogs, his juniors in the profession, capering and
-giving themselves the airs of a drum-major heading his regiment, without
-any other feeling towards them but one of kindly indulgence; and if any
-one else was disposed to rebuke them, he would shake his head, as much
-as to say, "There, there, we have all of us done the like in our day!"
-
-
- VII
-
-Jack had come as a solace to his old age; he had loved him as a friend,
-almost as a son, with a truly fatherly affection.
-
-This little suffering, delicate creature, so morbidly nervous and
-excitable, had roused in him some mysterious instinct of protection,
-that had grown little by little and ended by forming an unbreakable bond
-of brotherhood. Ceaselessly he watched over his protg, sheltered him,
-defended him, kept for him the best of his bodily heat and his warm
-heart. If a bullying animal ran after Jack, in one bound the latter was
-beside Murph, who would show a determined front, that soon sent the
-would-be tormentor to the right-about. One day, indeed, Murph, usually
-so good-tempered, showed his teeth to the master himself, who, for some
-small fault, had thought good to lift his whip at the little monkey. If
-Jack was a-cold--and he was always shivering, blow the wind from what
-quarter it might--quick he would slip between Murph's paws and cuddle
-against his breast in the warm, cosy place. Murph was Jack's special
-providence.
-
-Thus they had been living for nearly half-a-dozen years. Never a cloud
-had dimmed their good accord; never an angry snap of the teeth--never a
-pettish fit; mankind might have taken a lesson in the art of friendship
-from them. Thus they had grown old, loving, fondling, helping each
-other, making between them the prettiest happy family ever known in the
-world, never weary one of the other, but realising the ideal of the most
-perfect union.
-
-Mutual esteem further increased their affection. Murph had never seen an
-ape more alert and clever, more intelligent and active than Jack; he
-would gladly have stood for hours watching him performing his tricks,
-clinging to the cords with his delicate, dry little hands, then hurling
-himself into space to alight again on his feet, or else holding on by
-his tail and swinging from earth to heaven on the trapeze.
-
-On his side Jack--Jack the cynic, whose lack-lustre eyes seemed
-incapable of any curiosity--admired his friend Murph as a creature of
-extraordinary gifts.
-
-And what wonderful things the good dog could do, to be sure! I have
-mentioned some of them; I could tell of many others. Murph could climb a
-ladder; Murph could walk along a line of bottle necks; Murph could nose
-out the prettiest lady in the audience; Murph could play the
-cornet--piston; Murph could smoke a pipe; Murph was almost a man.
-
-
- VIII
-
-It did one good to see him "come on," a big pink bow knotted in the
-tufts that adorned his tail. He would enter gravely, bow politely to
-right and left, then cast a questioning look at his master, quite
-motionless the while, except for a slight quiver of the tail, waiting
-for the conclusion of the introductory remarks which the "old man" never
-failed to address to the audience. At last came the loud "Hi,
-Murph!"--and the good dog began his evening's work.
-
-He could have given points to the most experienced actors by his aplomb,
-his punctiliousness, his patient and never-flagging attention. Nothing
-ever distracted him from his part. Wags would amuse themselves sometimes
-by offering him a lump of sugar, or even pitch a sausage or a cake right
-between his paws; but Murph was adamant against such temptations. How
-the crowd cheered and clapped hands and stamped feet when he went
-bounding from hoop to hoop, so supple and nimble and self-possessed,
-never losing step or missing a spring, striking the paper with his head
-fair and square in the middle every time, crashing through and landing
-again on his feet, gravely and yet so elegantly.
-
-His tricks finished, he would repeat his bows to right and left, still
-quite sedate and unintoxicated by the thunders of applause. The fact is,
-Murph respected both his audience and himself; he knew how to keep his
-feelings to himself--how different from those ill-trained dogs that yelp
-and bark and lose their heads in the hurly-burly, quite forgetting that
-the finest thing on earth is to take one's triumph modestly.
-
-
- IX
-
-But Murph was particularly admirable in the tricks he went through with
-Jack. Each of the two friends seemed made to help out the other, and
-each vied with the other in sacrificing himself to enhance the general
-effect. Now it was "Mazeppa's ride"; you know--Mazeppa bound on the back
-of his fiery charger and borne on and on in wild career over the steppes
-in a whirlwind of flying stones and smothering dust. Now it was a
-_powder-play_ of Bedouins, pursuing, retreating, prancing, curvetting,
-rising in their stirrups and brandishing their muskets; or else a mortal
-combat between two troops of horse, firing at each other, reloading and
-firing again. The spectacle, whatever it was, was always thrilling.
-
-Murph would stand waiting in the side-scenes for his cue. Suddenly he
-would give a spring, a tremendous spring, and like a bomb-shell he was
-on the stage, with mane erect and flashing eyes; clearing every
-obstacle, upsetting everything he encountered, animate or inanimate, he
-hurled himself on to the boards; on his back, clinging to his woolly
-coat, shaking and shivering, teeth hard set and mouth awry, rode a
-little black figure wrapped in a voluminous burnous that flapped in the
-wind.
-
-And bing! bang! bang! as his steed dashed by, with all the flash and
-dazzle of red saddle braided with gold, scarlet bridle, and red, green,
-blue spangles, shaking the boards, rattling the lustres, rustling the
-curtain, to reiterated cries of "Hi! hip! hurrah, hurrah!" and the crack
-of the whip going off like pistol-shots behind, Jack would fire off his
-gun over and over again, till he was shrouded in a cloud of smoke,
-through which he could be discerned still tireless, still indefatigable,
-bestriding Murph in every possible position, now perched on the neck,
-now on the crupper. He seemed made of iron, the frail little being!
-Murph might prance and jib and shy, buck-jump and leap fences--nothing
-could unseat Jack. The performance over, the latter would shake his
-little head under its jockey-cap two or three times, by way of bow, and
-so exit, as his friend the poodle gave one last tremendous bound that
-carried him and his rider out of sight.
-
-The enthusiasm of the spectators followed him behind the scenes, and the
-floor trembled and shook under the drumming of heavy boots. The applause
-grew deafening, and suddenly Jack and Murph made a final whirlwind dash
-across the stage, executed a last frantic _fantasia_--and retired for
-good and all.
-
-
- X
-
-But, alas! Murph was getting old. His exertions tired him dreadfully;
-after each performance he had to be rubbed down and attended to, or he
-would have lain moaning and groaning for an hour.
-
-His master was sorry for him, and with deep regret--for he saw no
-glimpse among his troupe of any talent to take the place of the "falling
-star"--he set him to do his more quiet tricks--playing dominoes, finding
-handkerchiefs, walking on bottles.
-
-At the same time he resolved to try a young poodle to fill the hole in
-the receipts his good, faithful Murph's retirement was bound to make. He
-trained the animal to run in circles, to leap through hoops, to clear
-obstacles, and one fine day clapped Jack on his back.
-
-Banco--that was the poodle's name--had not gone three steps before he
-was bitten, beaten, garrotted, and left blinded and bleeding. The master
-punished Jack severely, and presently made a fresh attempt. But,
-no--Jack _would_ not obey; he tore Banco's ear in two, and then sprang
-from the saddle and hid himself in a dark corner.
-
-Much the same thing happened at every new trial. The whip was no sort of
-use; Jack was not to be moved. At last, wearied out, the showman gave
-in, and Jack and Murph remained inseparable, living and working together
-as before.
-
-One night Murph came in from his performance utterly worn out, his
-tongue hanging out of his mouth and his strength exhausted; his midday
-meal had proved indigestible, and, to cap all, the applause to-night had
-been faint and feeble.
-
-Ah! few of us know how actors live on that elusive thing, the favour of
-the public, and what renewed force, when they are grown old and have one
-foot in the grave already, what fresh vigour the smiles of a delighted
-audience instil in their veins, when the blood is beginning to run
-feeble!
-
-No, the thankless audience did not for once acknowledge Murph as their
-old favourite, the veteran of the boards, the good and gallant beast
-that had so often been their darling and their delight. Under his
-outward show of indifference Murph hid a vast fund of sensibility, and
-the coldness of his audience cut him to the quick, coming so soon after
-his late successes. He thought the dark night of public neglect was
-beginning for him; he realised his loss of vigour, his waning energies,
-and, like other old players, he saw himself superannuated, out of date,
-unknown, and misunderstood by a new public, become a mere shadow on the
-scene of his former triumphs. Add to this his master's evident
-ill-humour, as he foresaw the inevitable moment when his old servant
-would be a mere pensioner on his bounty.
-
-Murph staggered off, and fell panting on the rug that formed his bed.
-
-Then Jack came to help him; but, alas! even Jack could not console him
-just at first. Murph rejected his friend's ministrations, so bitter was
-his rancour against mankind. But his pique was soon over, and his
-wounded heart found healing under the gentle hand of his lifelong
-companion.
-
-
- XI
-
-But the fatal hour had struck; old age was upon him. Murph had grown
-infirm; he would take a dozen steps, crawling from one corner to
-another, and then sink down helplessly. His legs, once so prodigiously
-strong and active, tottered and stumbled from sheer weakness. In vain
-his master's voice called him to show his tricks; he would struggle to
-his feet, for an instant his head would recover its proud carriage of
-old days; then suddenly, his momentary strength exhausted, his limbs
-tingling with rheumatic pains that cut like whip-lashes, he would slink
-away to fall back again into the lifeless attitude of an aged invalid.
-
-A cloud floated before his eyes, he could no longer see things clearly,
-and a growing deafness filled his head with a buzz-buzzing that never
-stopped. Life was slowly dying down in the old body. He would lie torpid
-for hours and doze away the time in dark corners, under tables, where
-nothing would wake him, neither the yapping of the other dogs nor the
-chattering of the monkeys, neither the noise of footsteps coming and
-going nor the shrill trumpetings of the clown's cornet--piston playing
-"Malbrouck s'en va-t-en guerre!"
-
-It was a deep, dreamless sleep. Jack did not like it, and would crouch
-down beside him, watching him with sad eyes, like a friend at a sick
-man's bedside. Poor beast, he could make nothing of this new state of
-affairs. Some change he could not comprehend had come over his chum and
-laid him low. He seemed to be mutely questioning him, asking him why he
-never nowadays trotted about behind the scenes. But it was all Murph
-could do to see his little anxious, sorrowful face; he could only view
-him as if through a fog, an indistinct shape of sympathy hardly
-distinguishable from surrounding objects.
-
-Nevertheless, he still tried hard to make out in the dusk of his
-blindness his kindly comrade of yore; he would raise his palsied head,
-and from the depths of his dim eyes, veiled by a milky film, dart a pale
-look of infinite gentleness.
-
-Sometimes the two bushy tufts on his forehead dropped right over his
-eyes and further confused his vision. But Jack would put them back
-lightly with the tips of his delicate fingers. Indeed he never left his
-side, tickling his ears to amuse him, tapping and stroking him, ever on
-the watch, a tender-hearted nurse of inexhaustible care and foresight.
-
-This lowly being had learnt to love like a mother; his little dim soul
-had emerged from its darkness to answer his dying comrade's need, and
-now, shining bright in the light of day, was working deeds of charity.
-
-
- XII
-
-One evening the show pitched on the outskirts of a big town. The booth
-was raised, the trestles fixed, the boards laid, and the costume-chests
-emptied of their miscellaneous finery.
-
-Murph lay curled up by himself behind the stove; all round him reigned a
-deafening uproar, a rush and scurry of feet, a perfect hurricane of
-noise. The master was shouting and scolding; the Jack-pudding with his
-hoarse voice was yelping like a dog, mewing like a cat, crowing like a
-cock, getting into trim for the patter-speech with which to tickle the
-ears of the groundlings, while the general hands were bustling about,
-nailing and hammering, stimulated by copious libations of wine.
-
-The monkeys, too, bore their part; hearing all this uproar, they joined
-in with a will. Their shrill scolding rose above the hammering, and they
-chattered incessantly and shook the bars of their cages. The dogs
-barked, a solemn-faced parrot repeated a bad word over and over again,
-while the musicians hired for the evening performance drew lugubrious
-notes from their instruments by way of keeping their hand in.
-
-Hurrah! the stage was set up at last.
-
-Then the dogs were dressed, the seats given a last wipe-down--and
-suddenly boom! boom! the big drum, furiously beaten, rolled out its
-deep-toned summons. Instantly a perfect hurricane of discordant,
-ear-splitting noises was let loose in front of the show-tent. Answering
-the deafening rumble of the big drum, the fifes and ophicleide awoke,
-the kettledrum began its rub-a-dub, the cymbals clashed, and the whole
-booth shivered and shook from floor to roof-tree.
-
-Shouts, yells, bursts of ribald laughter, combined in one deep-toned,
-incessant roar to form the bass, while cat-calls, cries of vituperation
-and repartee, the trampling of many feet marking time before the doors,
-the clown's voice rising and falling amid a tempest of scuffling and
-kicking, all met and mingled in the air above the red glow of the
-pitch-pine torches flaring in the wind, and punctuating the general din
-one never-ceasing refrain--
-
-"First seats one franc; second seats half a franc; third places twenty
-centimes--_only_ twenty centimes. Walk up, ladies and gentlemen; just
-about to begin! Citizens and soldiers, walk up, walk up!"
-
-
- XIII
-
-A torrent of humanity surged up the steps, pushing, shoving, shouting;
-then, suddenly released, poured tumultuously over the seats of the
-auditorium. Then the big drum redoubled its efforts, the fife blew its
-shrillest, the ophicleide lost all control of its keys, tom-toms and
-hand-bells, frantically beaten, added their quota to the din, the
-kettledrums made a terrific rub-a-dub, and the whole force of the
-company, a mad whirl of startling colours and flashing spangles, danced
-a fandango on the platform.
-
-"Walk up, gentlemen, walk up!" the master-showman kept yelling; "here
-you shall see what you _shall_ see--marvels and miracles you've never
-seen the like of before! Look at me! I am the world-famous Brinzipoff,
-director-in-chief to the Royal Theatre of St. Petersburg and to all the
-crowned heads of Europe! Hi! ho! hup! _only_ twenty centimes the back
-seats! Halloa! ha! hurrah! here you are, here you are, ladies and
-gentlemen, _this_ way for the front seats!"
-
-A pause of comparative calm succeeded this grand chorus of ear-splitting
-noises.
-
-The close-packed audience was waiting, stamping with impatience, for the
-curtain to rise. Then Jack-pudding came on, pulled his funny faces, and
-let off his jokes amidst a dropping fire of jeers and bravos, and
-presently made way for Esmeralda, the performing goat, "the unique, the
-incomparable Esmeralda, the very same identical animal described by the
-immortal _Alexandre_ Hugo!" The musicians struck up an appropriate air,
-mostly made up of the vigorous thumping of drumsticks on drumheads.
-
-
- XIV
-
-Murph had never budged from his corner; he was quite insensible as yet
-to the din that had once had such power to excite him. His head resting
-on his outstretched paws, he lay asleep, stolid and stupid, callous to
-all external things. Round his neck, buried in the dirty, matted fleece,
-now long untouched by the curry-comb, were wound Jack's arms; for Jack
-never left his side.
-
-Esmeralda made her exit, and then suddenly bombarding the audience with
-a tornado of sound, the big drum rolled again, as if to announce some
-special and extraordinary turn.
-
-Murph knew this furious, frantic prelude well; this was always the way
-Mazeppa's headlong ride began. Yes, next moment, fifes, drums, bells,
-tom-toms struck up together in a mad concert of all the instruments
-combined, whereby the bandsmen strove to depict poor Mazeppa's terrors
-as his galloping steed bore him off to be the prey of all the fiends of
-hell!
-
-
- XV
-
-Then something stirred in the old dog's brain. Did he recall his former
-triumphs, the shouts of excited audiences, the encores, all the
-intoxicating successes of his life on the boards? Did some vision of an
-applauding multitude, of arms outstretched, and voices raised in
-gratitude, amid the crash of trumpet and drum, in the hot air thick with
-men's breath and the fumes of powder--did some vision of all this pass
-before the poodle's dying eyes?
-
-It was a strange awakening, at any rate. Murph sprang suddenly to his
-feet, took a leap, and bounded on the stage, tail proudly swinging, and
-head erect, Jack hanging on to his woolly coat. Delighted, entranced,
-amazed, the poor little beast kept craning over to peer into his
-comrade's face, to see if it was really true, and watch the light of
-life dawning and brightening in his deep-set eyes.
-
-So his friend was himself again at last! So they were to begin the old
-merry life again, to gallop and leap, and risk their necks as in the
-dear, daredevil days of yore! Jack danced and pranced on the poodle's
-back, as if drunk with the delight of this miraculous transformation.
-
-At sight of this great, hollow-flanked, unkempt beast, with his dirty,
-greasy, tangled fleece, standing there stark and stiff, his legs
-tottering under him, his body shaken from head to foot by a nervous
-tremor, paws sprawling, back bending, a few scanty hairs bristling in
-his tail--when the crowd beheld this pitiful ruin, to which Jack, alert
-and debonair, Jack and his grimaces and contortions, Jack and his
-caresses, the tender eyes he made, and the close, loving embrace he cast
-about his comrade's neck, all added a touch of comedy, at once sad and
-irresistibly ludicrous, a mighty shout of laughter arose.
-
-It burst like a rocket, then spread from row to row of the spectators,
-till it ended in a tempest of merriment that from the audience extended
-to the stage, and burst on the dying comedian who stood there.
-
-Suddenly the dog's legs gave way beneath him, and Murph fell over on his
-side. His supreme effort had killed him; he had succumbed, as great men
-sometimes will, at the very moment of their greatness.
-
-He lay there, the death-rattle in his throat, the death-agony shaking
-his poor body in a last, dreadful spasm. He opened his eyes wide,
-unnaturally wide, in a stony, sightless stare, as empty as the heads of
-the thoughtless crowd in front.
-
-Then they came and dragged him off the scene.
-
-
- XVI
-
-Jack was farther from understanding things than ever; his wonder had
-only increased.
-
-Why had his friend stopped short when so well under way? He could not
-tell; he could only gaze at him with questioning eyes, his eyelids
-winking very fast in a startled way.
-
-He pressed closer and closer to Murph, and felt a shock as of something
-snapping, a shudder, the quiver of a breaking chain. A deeper darkness
-still crept over poor Murph's senses; he was dying!
-
-Jack crouched over him, gazing down at his friend.
-
-Just then Murph made a supreme effort, half turned his head and peered
-up in his friend's face, while a look of tender affection passed over
-his glazing eyeballs, mingled with the reflection of the objects he had
-known all his life.
-
-The tip of a white, dry tongue came out between his teeth, and
-lengthening out like a slender riband, licked Jack's paw. It was not
-drawn back again; Murph was dead.
-
-Close by in the slips the fifes were shrilling, the drums beating, the
-audience in front clapping hands and stamping.
-
-Jack watched beside his friend all night. At first he had crept in
-between his paws, as he had always done; but the chill of the cold,
-rigid limbs had forced him to abandon his position.
-
-His little brain was sorely exercised, you may take my word for that.
-What was this icy chill, like the coldest winter's frost, that drove him
-from his dear comrade's bosom, generally so warm a refuge? He lay there
-by Murph's side, dozing with one eye open; then, suddenly starting wide
-awake in a panic, he would touch his friend with exploring fingers to
-see if he was still asleep.
-
-Finally, he lost all patience at the other's prolonged slumbers; he
-shook him, he plucked at the tufts of his woolly coat, he tickled his
-nose--gently at first, then more roughly. But it was all no use.
-
-Then he took Murph's head in his little arms; it was as heavy as lead
-and dragged him down all sideways. But he would not let it go, holding
-it hard against his breast, examining it all the while with surprise and
-consternation. Presently, recalling what he had seen his master's wife
-do, he began to rock it to and fro, cradling it softly and swaying it
-slowly, unceasingly from side to side, his queer little head swaying in
-time, like an old man's crooning over an infant.
-
-The dawn filtered in through the shutters of the van, and a sunbeam
-trembled for an instant in the dead poodle's eyes.
-
-
- XVII
-
-Jack absolutely refused to be parted from Murph. He fell into a fury,
-and bit the men who tried to separate them on face and hands. He had to
-be dragged away and shut up in a cage. There he lived for three days,
-whimpering like an old man fallen into the imbecility of dotage, his
-haggard eyes looking out despairingly from between his wrinkled temples,
-his little face all shrivelled like a medlar, his lips as pale as wax,
-and an expression of utter life-weariness in every feature.
-
-He would eat nothing, leaving untasted the carrots he was once so fond
-of, and refusing to touch either sugar or milk. All day long he cowered
-motionless in a corner, moaning, his eyes fixed on something invisible
-to others, outside the cage, far away.
-
-
- XVIII
-
-On the morning of the third day they found him stark and cold, his
-angular little skeleton almost piercing through the skin. His long, dry
-hands were closed convulsively; the lips were drawn back and showed the
-small, white teeth; two deep, moist furrows were visible on either side
-his nose, as if, before he died, the ape had been weeping for his
-friend.
-
-[Illustration: THE CAPTIVE GOLDFINCH]
-
-
-
-
- The Captive Goldfinch
-
-
- I
-
-Once upon a time, far away in the depths of a great orchard, there lived
-a goldfinch. He was born in the spring, amid the fragrance of the fresh
-leaves, and there was not a prettier, sweeter little fellow to be found
-in any of the nests round about. His mother longed to keep him near her
-always, she loved him so dearly; but then, there is nothing so tempting
-as a pair of wings, and once July was come, the month of daring flights
-and dashing enterprises, light and agile as only young birds are, he
-left the maternal nest in search of distant adventures.
-
-Oh! but it is enough to turn any goldfinch's head, this flying free over
-the blue expanse of the skies! Hardly had he passed the limits of the
-orchard where he was born ere he clean forgot all about his fond mother,
-her warm breast, and her dark eye so full of tender solicitude.
-
-A sort of frenzy seized him. Thinking the leaves were as eternal as the
-springtide, he boldly took his flight, and away across the sky; soaring
-ever higher and higher, he rose into the heat and glory of the sun, into
-the regions where the larks sing and the swallows dart, where all the
-wild wings make a sound as of a mighty fan opening and shutting.
-
-Wonder of wonders! now the earth below him looked round and shining like
-a ball of flowers floating in an enveloping cloud of gold-dust; and
-bathed in splendour, he saw the sun rise and set in the glory of
-limitless horizons.
-
-Oh! what glorious flights he had in the blue depths of the clouds! what
-games of hide-and-seek among the flickering leaves, what cries and songs
-and dartings after gnats, and all the delights known only to the little
-winged souls we call birds!
-
-The nightingales lulled him to sleep with the melody of their concerts,
-the cock woke him with the shrill clarion-call of his crowing; all the
-day long he flitted and flew amid the endless twittering and warbling of
-linnets, tomtits, bullfinches, sparrows, and chaffinches, taking _his_
-part too in the orchestra, and near bursting his little throat to
-produce his finest notes, with that vanity that makes us one, and
-believe Nature has implanted in us the soul of an artist--a great,
-mysterious, unappreciated artist.
-
-
- II
-
-But the summer passed into autumn, and drenching rains succeeded the
-sunny days; the poor goldfinch had to perch of nights in rain-soaked
-trees, where he had to sit cold and shivering, feeling his feathers
-getting wet and draggled one by one. Furious winds tore away the leaves,
-and lo! one morning when he opened his eyes, he saw a new and strange
-world--the ground was covered with snow, and far as sight could reach
-were only white roofs, white hedges, and white trees. Winter was come!
-
-Then oh! how bitterly he regretted his mother's warm breast! How gladly
-would he have given the joys of the past summer to find himself once
-more pressed close to her side and feel her heart beating against his in
-the cosy nest! But all summer the wind had been busy confusing the
-pathways of the air, so that it was now impossible to discover the one
-that should have led him back to the nest; nay, a more blighting wind
-than all the rest blew out of the skies; the wind of forgetfulness had
-breathed upon his spirit, carrying away the memory of that happy
-road--the first that young folks forget. And now winter grew fierce and
-fell, devastating the orchards, bombarding the cottages with hailstones,
-driving hope from all breasts and killing the little birds in the
-nests--the young birds that are the hope of the verdant springtide and
-happy days to come.
-
-The little goldfinch was quite sure this horror would never end, that
-the trees would never grow green again, that never more would the
-harvest clothe the fields in green, that gaiety, sunshine, and youth
-were vanished away for good and all.
-
-Cowering in the hollow of an old branch, he watched the days go by like
-a procession of white phantoms, each uglier than the other, and his
-little feet all stiff with cold, his feathers frozen together with
-hoar-frost, sad and shivering, he thought many and many a time his last
-hour was come.
-
-In vain the old birds told him of a re-birth; he could not believe in
-the resurrection of things when this dreary time of mourning should be
-over.
-
-
- III
-
-Little by little, however, the snowstorms grew rarer, stray sunbeams
-pierced the murkiness of the heavens, and a verdant down, at first light
-as a vapour, but which presently grew denser and soon took on the
-solidity and sheen of satin, hemmed round the sombre garment of the
-fields. A mildness filled the air--something restful, calm, and kindly,
-that was like a benediction, something the winds distilled, the sun
-diffused, the growing grass and humming insects and fragrant violets
-spread abroad, something which, like a river fed by a myriad rippling
-rills, gushed forth along the torrent-bed of creation.
-
-A door seemed to open in the sooty firmament of winter, and this portal,
-rolling back on golden hinges, suddenly revealed the sun in his
-splendour, like a king stepping forth to bring peace to the peoples.
-Then sounded the first chord in the plain-song of the woods; waters,
-sky, and earth joined in the harmony with a deep, long-drawn note that
-rose and swelled, sobbed and sighed, grew louder and louder, assumed the
-majestic breadth of an orchestral symphony, and waxing gradually, ended
-by filling the depths and heights of air with a mighty diapason, as if
-all mouths, all voices, all breaths were raised together in one vast
-unison.
-
-I leave you to guess if the goldfinch lifted up _his_ voice in this
-universal hymn of praise!
-
-So it was true, then! The sun had indeed returned! A fine lacework of
-filmy greenery began to clothe the tree boles, and the water-springs to
-sparkle in the shy recesses of the forest; the air was free; once more
-he and his comrades could laugh and sing, flit idly to and fro, pilfer
-and steal, plunder the orchards, peck the flowers, drink in from a drop
-of dew intoxication to last the livelong day, and revel in that
-twice-blessed existence that is full of a fine frenzy of delight to make
-the thrushes envious.
-
-Good-bye to the winter covert, the crevice in the protecting bough, the
-moss that still keeps the impress of his little body! Nothing will
-satisfy him now but the wild fields of space; and with a bold sweep of
-wing the masterful goldfinch has left his dolorous refuge, never to
-return. A second piece of ingratitude, another act of forgetfulness!
-Yes, it must be allowed a little bird's head has small room in it for
-remembrance.
-
-
- IV
-
-Good times began again. White and pink, the orchards blossomed like
-bridal bouquets. It snowed butterflies' wings and flower stamens in the
-tall grass; lilacs hung in clusters over the walls; like a good priest
-saying mass, the earth donned a golden cope, and all Nature trembled and
-loved.
-
-Then was the time for our pretty bird to abandon himself to endless idle
-wanderings and loiterings, hopping hither and thither, always on one
-leg, barely lighting and then off again, shaking the leaves with an
-incessant flutter of wings, twittering and chirping, flirting with the
-daisies, ruffling the hawthorn, hooting the holly. At peep of dawn he
-never failed, when the harebells rang their morning summons, to come
-down to attend the good God's church whither the flies and sparrows
-assemble, still half asleep and blundering against the pillars; next the
-beetles get under way along the roads, teased and tormented by the
-butterflies and ladybirds; then the linnet leaves her bough and flies
-off to where the bells tinkle, but of a sudden darts back again, finding
-she has left something behind, lost something--more often than not her
-head--for the poor lady generally wears it wrong side before! Thither
-fly the chaffinches too, and the grave-faced oriole, the pretty
-bullfinch, and the chattering cock-sparrow. Then the cockchafers come,
-too, too often, alas! trailing after them the thread of captivity
-clinging to them--the burly cockchafers that, with the bumble-bee, are
-the bass voices of the underwoods. Plain and woodland are all alive, for
-there is never a creature at this fair hour of daybreak, while the skies
-are brightening, but is eager to come and make its orison to God in His
-temple.
-
-So the little goldfinch followed their example; he preened his feathers,
-looking at himself admiringly in a dewdrop the while. Then, his toilet
-done, like all the rest of the world, he bustled off to his business and
-his pleasures.
-
-
- V
-
-Goldfinches' hearts are made much the same as men's; the spring awakes
-both to thoughts of love.
-
-Our hero had remarked in his neighbourhood a sweet little hen-goldfinch.
-She lived with her parents in the tall branches of an apple-tree; more
-than once, coming home at evening, he had admired the fascinating smile
-of her beak at the window, embowered in foliage, where she sat watching
-for his going-by.
-
-Was it his fancy? Was it really and truly a modest blush, or only the
-rosy reflection cast by the setting sun? Yes, sure--he had seen her
-redden. It needed no more to decide him to ask her hand in marriage.
-
-One morning he made his bravest toilet, scented himself with lavender
-and thyme, polished up his little claws, and in this gallant array he
-set out, with a shining face but an anxious heart, to see the parents.
-They received him politely, but could not make up their minds, and
-begged him to come again.
-
-He came again and again, and the more he saw of his little sweetheart,
-the deeper he fell in love. She was as pretty as seven in her little
-brown mantle with yellow facings, and her dainty head in its red hood
-was poised on her neck with an incomparable grace. Saucy and alert, she
-was as slight and slim as a flower waving in the breeze, as bright as a
-sunbeam piercing through the leaves, as agile as the wind. Dewdrops
-seemed to sparkle in the depths of her little round pupils. She was a
-vision of the spring-tide made into a bird!
-
-True, our hero was no less brave to see. Gallant and gay, he cocked his
-beak boldly and carried the colours of his race with becoming pride.
-
-At last the wedding-day was fixed; but the bride's trousseau was still
-to seek. No doubt birds are able to start housekeeping at small cost,
-neither needing tables and chairs nor pots and pans; still, there must
-be some little fitting-out to be done.
-
-And so thought the bride's parents, who were prudent people, and loved
-their daughter.
-
-A fine to-do there was, to be sure, on the bough where the old couple
-had their home; a stir that never ceased all day long kept the green
-hangings of the house shaking, and the doors banging; everlasting
-comings and goings turned the stairways upside down. Pale and
-eager-eyed, the little hen-goldfinch awaited the happy hour when she
-could fly away with her mate.
-
-
- VI
-
-Soon the news of the betrothal spread amongst the neighbours. The
-nearest trees were all agog; nothing was to be heard but twitterings and
-whisperings, not to mention backbitings, for envy is to be found
-everywhere in this world. The tomtits above all took a delight in saying
-evil of the bride, calling her a silly, insipid little thing; they
-chirped and chattered, whistled and whispered, pecking and pulling to
-pieces the poor innocent child's good name. In vain the bullfinches,
-good, decent bodies, tried to interfere: the tomtits' cackle quite
-drowned their grave remonstrances. The critics had enlisted a naughty
-grisette, a chaffinch, a minx who had kicked over the traces in her day,
-and was renowned for her spiteful tongue; a blackbird too had joined the
-conspiracy, and now, perched all together on a high branch, from which
-they could spy upon the comings and goings of the goldfinch household,
-they kept up a famous uproar.
-
-The Master of Ceremonies of the birds' parish arrived in the afternoon;
-he had come to inquire the hour at which the young folks were to be
-married, and if they wanted choristers to attend. It was agreed to
-engage a lark and a chaffinch; nightingales were too expensive. A pretty
-carpet of green would be laid down, as green as on the finest summer's
-day; the porch was to be decorated with anemones, and the chancel with
-daisies; the sun would be ordered for five o'clock, to make a grand show
-of purple and gold. Of course the drones would be at the organ, and they
-would ask the wind to give them a helping hand by roaring in the pipes.
-The harebells would strike up a merry peal at peep of day, and ring till
-the bridal pair arrived. The holy-water stoup would be filled with dew.
-As for incense, the violets would see the censers were well filled, and
-the bees would keep them swinging all through the ceremony.
-
-I forgot to tell you that a wedding breakfast had been ordered, at
-which, besides flies and worms galore, they were to regale themselves on
-a cricket and a locust--a magnificent spread indeed. The nearest spring
-would supply the wine; they were to have corn-berries for dessert, and
-the table would be laid in the thickest of an apple-tree in full
-blossom, where a cloud of gnats was always buzzing and making beautiful
-music. A yellowhammer was invited; he was a rollicking blade, and there
-was nobody to match him at singing a comic song.
-
-All was going as well as could be; yet how long seemed the hours of
-waiting to the little bridegroom! To and fro he flitted, up and down the
-roads he sauntered, trying to cheat his impatience by incessant
-movement; presently he would light on a bough and fall a-dreaming, while
-his little heart beat fast and furiously.
-
-Every minute he kept glancing up at the great dial God has set in the
-sky, and which only the birds can read; but the sunbeam which is the
-hand of this aerial clock would _not_ move fast enough for his
-impatience. He could only bewail his lot, and force himself to drop
-asleep to kill the lagging time. He even went to see the village
-clockmaker, an old cuckoo, a greybeard bird with a nid-nodding head, who
-all day long used to strike the hours with exasperating punctuality, and
-besought him to quicken up the evening a bit.
-
-But the cuckoo shook his head.
-
-"Little madcap," he told him, "am I to put out all the folk of the
-countryside for you? Don't you know everything goes on by rule and
-regulation among your neighbours, and that each hour brings its own
-tasks? Why, whatever would they think if I rang vespers before the great
-timepiece of the heavens had indicated the time of twilight? What would
-the mole say if I brought him out of his underground house, looking
-black as a collier, before nightfall, and if suddenly the sun dazzled
-him with its light--poor purblind fellow who had never in his life dared
-look at anything but the moon?"
-
-So, the cuckoo having shown him the door, he wandered off again,
-flitting from hedgerow to hedgerow, burning with impatience.
-
-
- VII
-
-A heap of little white grubs lay under the hedge of an orchard. More for
-lack of anything else to do than because he was hungry, the goldfinch
-flew up and fell upon it.
-
-Ah! have a care, pretty birdie. A man was busy thereabouts just now.
-
-But, alas, it is too late; a whole life of happiness is ruined by a
-moment's curiosity. Hardly had the poor fellow plunged his beak in the
-mass when a string pulled the catch; down comes the trap, and he is a
-prisoner. Then the shape crouching behind a tree comes out from its
-hiding-place; it approaches, looms larger and larger, turns into a big
-bearded man, who opens enormous great hands, seizes the poor bird, and
-claps it in a cage, grinning a broad grin of satisfaction. Good-bye,
-little bride! Good-bye, marriage-feast and wedding-march! Good-bye,
-woods and orchards, gardens and flowers! Good-bye, twittering nests!
-Good-bye, life and love!
-
-Consternation nailed our little hero to the spot; something had befallen
-him he could make nothing of; he gazed at the cage with haggard eyes,
-too scared to think.
-
-Ah! if only he had lost his memory! But this consolation was denied him.
-He shook himself, dashed at the bars, pecked and bit at them, thinking
-maybe they would open and leave him free as air again.
-
-But no; the bars would _not_ give way.
-
-Then he shuddered from head to foot. Anger and terror frenzied his
-little brain. He flew wildly at the bars; but all in vain--the cage was
-solid and strong.
-
-Suddenly he realised his calamity, and, filled with a perfect frenzy of
-despair, with panting breath and trembling, shuddering limbs, he hurled
-himself at the bars, beat his head against the wires, tearing and
-lacerating beak and claws, flew madly up and down, breaking his wings,
-till, battered and bruised, his feathers all dripping with blood,
-exhausted and out of breath, he rolled half-dead into a corner.
-
-It was all over!
-
-While joy was paramount yonder in his bride's home, while song and
-laughter were the order of the day, while preparations for the
-wedding--bitter mockery!--were completing, and all things, leaves and
-butterflies and nests, were a-flutter, the poor bridegroom lay in his
-agony amid the silence of a prison.
-
-
- VIII
-
-Evening lit up the sky with its gleaming tints of copper; little by
-little the chattering family groups fell silent, and the darkling trees
-assumed the look of long-drawn, solemn colonnades. Alas! it was not
-under this familiar aspect that night fell for our captive goldfinch. A
-dirty whitewashed wall, on which hung strangely shaped objects, replaced
-the sable curtain spangled with stars that twilight spreads over the
-countryside. A guttering, flaring candle smoked on the table, bearing
-how faint a resemblance to the silver moon! and by its sordid light the
-hard-hearted wretch who had robbed him of his liberty was moving to and
-fro.
-
-Ah! what right had he, this miserable birdcatcher, this highway robber,
-to tear him from the free air, the hedgerows and the green fields? Tiny
-though he be, is the bird therefore of no import to the leaves, the
-winds, the trees, which without him would be voiceless? Has the blue sky
-no need of his outspread wings, his echoing song, the flutter of his
-plumage?
-
-What use the pool glittering in the woodland, if he was not there to dip
-his beak in it and absorb in a drop of water the red of dawn, the gold
-of noon, the deep shadow of the quivering leaves? Is not a little bird
-the less a disaster in the forests and orchard-closes, a voice silenced
-in the symphony of nature, a furrow left barren in the fields of space,
-a bright point vanished from the azure sky? Is not the universe
-disturbed for the loss of a little creature wherein all nature is summed
-up and glorified?
-
-The man blew out the taper, and a moonbeam shot in at the garret-window
-and fell on the poor captive.
-
-It formed, as it were, a luminous rail on which his thoughts glided; and
-they always travelled in one direction--to his little _fiance_, who at
-that moment, softly cradled by the night wind, was fast asleep and
-dreaming of the great to-morrow.
-
-The moon paled and daylight appeared.
-
-Yonder no doubt all was ready; the harebells were ringing their peal,
-the drones were organing their deep music, while the trembling bride,
-white as the lilies, was asking herself why her bridegroom did not come.
-
-The cuckoo clanged out the hour of dawn. One and all were ready for the
-fte; only _his_ arrival was waited for.
-
-The hours slipped by without his appearing, and little by little the
-murmuring and muttering, low at first, grew louder and louder, and rose
-into a perfect tempest of cries and jeers and gibes. The chaffinches
-were jubilant, the parents disconsolate. And what of her, the poor,
-despairing bride? Her pretty innocent eyes could not bear the light of
-day; stricken to the heart by this unaccountable desertion, she was
-borne away fainting, half dead with shame and sorrow.
-
-
- IX
-
-Dark days followed. At first only a prisoner, his cruel master now made
-him into a galley-slave. He put a chain round his foot, and condemned
-him to the servitude of the car and cord. So drag your weight, work your
-pulley, haul in your little car, poor outcast! Who has not seen the
-monstrous spectacle--one of God's creatures, created to fly free in the
-realms of air, coming and going on a toy platform, a ring about its leg?
-Who has not seen the unhappy captive, to win meat and drink, drawing up
-by little laborious jerks the water-jar and car, its eye gleaming with
-pitiful longing, gaining its subsistence by a never-ending useless
-martyrdom? Only he who has seen the cruel sight knows to what lengths
-the cruelty of bad men can go.
-
-This was the fate of the poor goldfinch.
-
-The man had given him a cage to imitate a Swiss chlet, in front of
-which was a little terrace. On the terrace was fixed a post, with a
-pulley attached worked by a thread. This thread the captive had to pull
-in with his beak, little by little, till the little drinking-bucket
-hooked to the other end rose to the level of the platform; then putting
-his foot on the cord, he had to hold it in place and so drink a drop,
-bitter as a tear, hurriedly and fearfully, lest the thread should slip
-from under his claw and suddenly let the bucket run down again.
-
-More often than not the bucket upset in its descent, and then he had to
-go without water for the rest of the day.
-
-A second thread made it possible for him to haul to the edge of the
-platform a miniature car running on an inclined plane outside the cage;
-this held his bird-seed. What a struggle it was to drag it up! At each
-snap of the beak the car would ascend, but oh! so slowly. By successive
-jerks, never tiring, never stopping, with straining neck, working with
-the adroitness of a galley-slave, and clapping his foot on the cord
-after each pull, he had to drag up the accursed car, which would
-sometimes elude him and dash down the incline again, spilling the seed
-and mocking all his laborious efforts!
-
-A hundred times a day he was forced to begin the horrid task again.
-
-Many a time the goldfinch resolved to give in and die of hunger; but
-hunger is a terrible thing, and no sooner did its pangs begin to pinch
-his little stomach than he would seize the cord afresh and pull for dear
-life.
-
-
- X
-
-So passed the hours for the once happy bridegroom. Never a chirp now,
-never a flirt of the tail! Disconsolate and draggled, every feather of
-his little body betraying the misery of his broken life, he seemed an
-embodiment of the bitter protest of the winged creation against the
-cruelty of man.
-
-A feeble ray of sunshine used to flicker on the garret walls towards
-midday; he would watch for it, and when it came at last, shooting a
-slender pencil of gold, in which the dust-motes danced athwart the gloom
-of his prison-house, it was like a brief instant of recovered freedom;
-for a moment he forgot his chain, his car, his slavery, and away he flew
-in fancy to the great orchards that showed their black masses of shadow
-on the horizon. Alas! the sunbeam slid along the wall and disappeared,
-and the appalling reality came home to him again.
-
-What had he done to deserve this cruel fate? To filch a grain of corn
-here and there, to forage in the kitchen-gardens, to play the truant, to
-make the most of life, all day long to fly hither and thither, the free
-denizen of air--was this a crime? He never reflected how he had
-forgotten his mother, and that this crime alone deserved the sternest
-expiation.
-
-His master was one of those good-for-nothing workmen who make the whole
-week a series of Sundays. One night he forgot to come home at all; next
-morning the ill-starred captive found bucket and car both empty. No use
-hauling them up to him and pecking about in every corner; never a grain
-of seed was to be found, never a drop of water! Then indeed he knew the
-torments of hunger and thirst. In vain he toiled at his cruel, slavish
-task; the car ascended, the bucket rose, but without bringing solace to
-his famished cravings. His tools refused their office; with pale eyes of
-consternation the poor prisoner gazed at them, and could not understand.
-
-As if by the irony of fate, the window had been left wide open, and he
-could plainly see the green of the nearest trees, in which the birds,
-his more fortunate brethren, were squabbling. He saw the sun slowly sink
-and the shadows of the house-roofs lengthen. Then a frenzy of madness
-seized him; with quick, frantic pecks he tore at the chain riveted round
-his leg, and by sheer fury burst its rings.
-
-To dart to the window, to sail away for the paling blue of the sky, was
-the work of an instant; but next minute he fell to earth again, so weak
-was he with hunger. Luckily, not far from the foot of the tree where he
-had dropped, a flock of pigeons was enjoying a feast of oats at the door
-of a stable. He joined the band, and in a very short while had plumped
-his crop to such good purpose that he felt his full strength come back
-to him.
-
-A long time had passed since he had quitted his bonny bride, and he
-trembled to think what changes the days might have brought with them in
-her life. Still the longing to see her again grew so irresistible after
-he had been free an hour that, even if she had forgotten him, he was
-fain to bid her farewell.
-
-And pr-r-r-rt! he was off like the wind.
-
-All the world was asleep when he arrived--even the tomtits, those
-inveterate gossips, who love to loiter at their doors long after dark,
-talking scandal of their neighbours.
-
-"Little bride! little bride!" he breathed softly.
-
-A yellowhammer answered him in a cross voice--
-
-"Third tree to the left in the next orchard!"
-
-Why, actually the goldfinches had removed! He hurried to the tree
-indicated, and once again, "Little bride!" he whispered.
-
-A faint cry answered, and next moment his sweetheart appeared.
-
-"I was waiting for you," she cried.
-
-Ah! these were happy moments that made up for all their sufferings. He
-told her all his adventures; she told him how her faith in him had never
-faltered. They woke the parents, who warmly welcomed the returned
-prodigal.
-
-"Just think," said the mother, "those odious chaffinches positively
-forced us to leave the neighbourhood. Life was become unbearable;
-morning, noon, and night it was nothing but insulting remarks. But now
-you are come back again! So these spiteful folks will be finely
-confounded."
-
-Another old hen-goldfinch was there, who was gazing at him with wet eyes
-and wings all a-tremble.
-
-"Ah!" cried our hero, "why, it is mamma, my poor mother I had forgotten
-so long!"
-
-Yes, it was his mother indeed: his little bride, after his
-disappearance, had never wearied till she found her, telling herself
-that, with her for company, there would be two of them to wait for his
-return.
-
-Their happiness was complete.
-
-Two days after, but soberly this time, without drum or trumpet, the
-wedding was solemnised.
-
-The story has its moral, as every story should. It was the goldfinch's
-father-in-law who undertook to draw it for his young friend's benefit.
-
-"Son-in-law," he said, "I hope you will teach your little ones two
-lessons. The first is--never forget your mother; the second--beware of
-traps in the hedgerows."
-
-[Illustration: STRANGE ADVENTURES OF A LITTLE WHITE RABBIT]
-
-
-
-
- Strange Adventures of a Little White Rabbit
-
-
-Four little rabbits had seen the light in a hutch snugly stuffed with
-straw, where they lived cosy and warm by their mother's side.
-
-They were pretty, plump little things, all four as fat as butter, and
-just as well-liking one as the other; but while three of them had white
-bellies and dappled backs, one was white all over from head to foot, and
-his mother was mighty proud of his beauty, you may be sure.
-
-You could not have found so exquisite a rabbit, no, not for three
-leagues round, and every day he grew handsomer and handsomer, like a
-king's son. Two great rubies glittered in his fine eyes, and his teeth
-were just like the edge of a saw; yes, and he had a moustache--three
-hairs, which made him, oh! so conceited.
-
-Mother Rabbit loved them all tenderly; but she loved Jannot, her
-firstborn, best of all.
-
-To begin with, he was the eldest; then she had had more trouble to rear
-him, and ill-health always draws a closer bond between mother and child;
-besides, she was inordinately proud of his white coat, and dreamt he was
-destined for greatness. What form would it take? This she could not
-tell. Perhaps he would take first prize at a show--perhaps he would
-found a breed of white rabbits like himself. She lavished every delicacy
-upon her darling, and his prospective honours consoled her for the
-triviality of everyday existence.
-
-They would soon be two months old, and that is the age when young
-bunnies are taken from their mothers. She dreaded the moment of parting;
-Jannot would have to go with the rest.
-
-In fact, all four were weaned by this time; they were beginning to gnaw
-at carrots now, and would often try to get out through any gaps they
-could find, for they longed to see the great world. The hutch had open
-bars, and they could look out into a kitchen-garden with lettuce-beds,
-and beyond that see a flock of ducks paddling about beside a brook.
-There was an apple-tree to the right, with a cloud of sparrows always
-squabbling round it. To the left an outhouse door gave a glimpse of cows
-and horses, dimly outlined in the gloom of the interior. There were
-cats, too, stretching themselves in the sun or stalking sedately up and
-down.
-
-At peep of day the whole farmyard woke up; noon brought a momentary
-silence; then, as the sun grew hotter, sparrows chirped, ducks quacked,
-cows lowed, and the din went on uninterruptedly till dusk.
-
-The little bunnies would fain have joined the other animals; they would
-gaze wistfully at the birds flying high in the air, and the sight of the
-cattle marching off cheerfully for the pastures gave them a craving for
-the green fields.
-
-How big the farmyard seemed, to be sure! and how amazed they were when
-Mother Rabbit told them there were other places bigger still which they
-could not see. She described the woods and ravines and burrows, for she
-knew these well enough from hearsay; why, they could not have travelled
-round the world in a whole day, so enormous it was! Squatted round their
-mother, the youngsters listened to all this, and their hearts almost
-failed them.
-
-But not so Jannot; _his_ imagination was stimulated by what he heard.
-
-"Ah!" he would cry, "will they never let me out, that I may have _my_
-chance of seeing all these wonderful things?"
-
-Then his mother was alarmed; but he would kiss her and promise he would
-come back again directly, once he had seen the world. But she only shook
-her head, and could not make up her mind to let him go.
-
-"The world is full of cruel beasts; you will never, never escape its
-dangers."
-
-"I have teeth and claws."
-
-"So have they, child; but their teeth are longer and their claws sharper
-than yours. Restrain your eagerness; time enough yet to go forth into
-the wide, wide world."
-
-He would shake his head impatiently and fall to gnawing at the woodwork
-of the hutch; in fact his mind was full of guilty thoughts of escape. At
-last, one fine morning, when his mother was tidying the litter, he made
-a bolt for it.
-
-Scarcely had he gone a hundred steps when he was arrested by a startling
-sight. He beheld half-a-dozen hairy brown skins nailed up in a row. They
-still retained the shape of the bodies they had once clothed, and little
-trickles of blood ran down the wall where they hung. There was no
-mistaking; they had belonged to rabbits like himself.
-
-"Oh, dear!" he thought, "so they kill rabbits, do they?"
-
-But this sinister sight was quickly forgotten in the variety of new
-wonders he encountered. A pig was grunting on a dunghill, with a young
-foal kicking at him and destroying his peace of mind, and a goat
-gambolling near by; one after the other he saw a rat, a dog, a calf, and
-a flock of pigeons that suddenly took wing.
-
-They rose in the warm morning air, glittering in the sun, flying so high
-he soon lost sight of them altogether. Looking down again, he noticed a
-cat watching him, and remembered he had seen her in the garden, prowling
-among the lettuces.
-
-The width of the yard was between them, and he had a barn behind him.
-The cat lay crouched on the kitchen steps; she never moved, but her eyes
-were wide open and glittered cruelly. Then she got up slowly.
-
-Jannot believed his last hour was come; he thought of his mother, and
-shut his eyes. A furious barking made him open them again. The cat was
-gone; with one bound Jannot sprang into a cart round which a bull-dog
-was racing with his mouth wide open, and leapt from there into the barn.
-
-Inside the straw was piled up mountains high, so close to the wall he
-had some difficulty in forcing a passage; still, it was only betwixt the
-wall and the straw he could hope to find a safe refuge. He durst not
-come out again, and stayed there in hiding till nightfall.
-
-Then he plucked up spirit, took a step or two in the dark, and came upon
-a hole close down to the floor through which he could slip.
-
-What a sight met him outside! The country lay white in the moonlight,
-house-roofs, pools, watercourses glittering in the beams. The leaves
-quivered restlessly in the night wind, and the distant clumps of
-brushwood stood out in clear-cut outline. It was very beautiful; but
-look! suddenly, close to him, two long, black, moving shadows scared him
-out of his seven senses.
-
-The cat!
-
-Jannot never stopped till he reached the woods, after darting across the
-garden, leaping a brook, scurrying over the fields, breathless and
-exhausted. Vague shadows loomed around him; flying footsteps sounded
-about his path; suddenly, by the startled cry that escaped a little
-creature which halted right before his nose, he knew he was in presence
-of another rabbit.
-
-"I am Jannot," he said, in a low voice; "perhaps we are relations."
-
-From the first moment the rabbit saw him, he loaded him with polite
-attentions, declared he loved him already, and offered him the
-hospitality of his house; so the two of them jogged off in company. But
-after a moment or two Goodman Rabbit stopped dead, saying--
-
-"You'd best go by the clearing, and I through the scrub; it will never
-do to let the polecat see us. We will meet at the foot of a great oak
-you can't help seeing."
-
-Jannot followed his companion's advice; but no sooner were they together
-again than the rabbit, after fifty yards or so, cried out once more--
-
-"The place we're in now is just as dangerous as the other. A wild-cat
-lurks hereabouts, and slaughters whatever comes under his claws. You go
-that way; I'll go this. A rock you will see will serve as rendezvous."
-
-They reached the rock at the same moment, and then trotted off again.
-They were just coming to a coppice of young trees with narrow winding
-paths through it when his experienced friend called a halt for the third
-time, crying--
-
-"Well, we did well not to travel side by side. My advice is that we go
-each his own way again, without bothering about one another, till we
-come to the crossroads you'll find down yonder. Ah! d'ye see those
-snares? Mind you don't get into them, for if the polecat and the
-wild-cat are lords of the lands we have just been through, the poacher
-rules here as monarch paramount."
-
-The advice was good, but its giver had no time to finish it; he was
-caught by the foot in one of the gins, and the more he struggled to get
-free, the tighter the dreadful noose was drawn.
-
-"Help! help!" he clamoured.
-
-But already Jannot was off and away, panic-stricken; he ran on and on,
-never once stopping till he won back as quick as ever he could to the
-edge of the woodland where he and Master Rabbit had first met.
-
-"If the world is so strewn with dangers," he thought to himself, "better
-to live in peace and quietness in a hutch. What use in roaming the
-woods, when death is at the journey's end?"
-
-Then in his mind's eye he saw his mother again and his brothers; and the
-safe shelter where they awaited his return seemed a far-off, happy
-refuge he could hardly hope to reach.
-
-Field-mice and weasels and martens were stirring in the dark underwood
-and shaking the leaves. Suddenly a new terror, more appalling than all
-the rest, gripped him; he thought he was being pursued. Then he dashed
-out into the plain that lay clear in the moonlight, and, with ears
-pricked, thinking all the while he could hear at his heels the
-unwearying, unflagging trot, trot of the fell creatures that were on his
-track, he pushed through hedges, leapt ditches, climbed banks.
-
-He had his back to the moon, and two black shadows, the same he had seen
-at the outset of his escapade, stretched out before him; this time they
-went in front, never leaving him, and sometimes lengthening out to
-portentous proportions.
-
-No doubt about it, a whole host of enemies was after him!
-
-At last his breath failed him and he sank down in despair, waiting for
-death; but as it was a long time coming, he began to recover a little
-courage, and, turning round, stared hard into the night.
-
-Not a thing was visible amid the loneliness of the fields, and the moon
-seemed to be grinning down at him from the sky.
-
-Then he discovered that the two shadows that had terrified him so were
-only the shadows of his own two ears. This was mortifying!
-
-Day dawned by slow degrees; and presently he found himself back by the
-brook, the ducks, the cow-shed and the kitchen-garden.
-
-"Mind this," his mother told him, "there's no adventures so fine as to
-match the pleasure of being safe at home, among the folks who love you."
-
-
-
-
- "Monsieur Friquet"
-
-
-Nature had not been generous to the poor thing; Claire was born a
-hunchback, and a hunchback she had grown up--if indeed she can be said
-ever to have grown up--an undersized, sickly, suffering creature, who at
-thirty was not as high, from head to heels, as a little girl of nine.
-
-She had been left an orphan when quite a child; first her mother died,
-and her father had not survived her long. So Claire had had to face the
-world alone, with her own ten fingers for all her fortune. Her parents
-had never spoilt her with overmuch indulgence. They were poor,
-hardworking folks, who hardly knew what it was to smile. Even when they
-were alive, she had led a lonely enough existence. Still, after their
-death, she missed the life lived in common, the destitution shared with
-others, the bustle of the hugger-mugger household, where scolding and
-grumbling were by no means unknown. Her parents were her parents after
-all; with them life had its happy moments, now and then.
-
-[Illustration: "MONSIEUR FRIQUET"]
-
-They were hard times now for Claire. Shut up all day long in the
-unhealthy air of workrooms, she seemed to grow more and more emaciated,
-and smaller and smaller every day. Nobody ever thought of pitying the
-poor, uncouth being who sat sewing apart from the rest, who, with a
-gentle humility, always sought the shade, where her deformity was less
-noticeable; nobody ever dreamed of asking if there was a soul within
-that misshapen body, and her great eyes--light blue, sickly-looking
-eyes, which she would raise slowly and languidly, as if afraid of the
-light--encountered only mockery and indifference from all about her.
-
-The tall, handsome girls who sat round the sewing-table had nothing but
-hard words for her; scarcely knowing why, yielding to a cruel impulse
-which a little thought, if nothing better, would have checked, they
-treated her vilely.
-
-Little by little she had become the general butt of the workroom; one
-dismal day in December a last outrage was added to all the rest.
-
-An ill-conditioned cripple, a girl who had borne Claire a grudge from
-the first day of her coming, because of their sisterhood in misfortune,
-which caused twice as many gibes to be levelled at her own club-foot,
-contrived to secrete a piece of silk, in order to accuse Claire of the
-theft. She declared stoutly she had taken the piece and hidden it inside
-her dress. In vain the poor girl, bursting into tears, swore she was
-innocent. The head of the shop ordered her to strip. She begged
-piteously for mercy, clasping her hands in supplication; but the cripple
-moved heaven and earth to set the others against her. Rough hands were
-laid on her; she was bruised and shaken and hurt; all she could do was
-to stammer out appeals to their compassion; she was nearly fainting, and
-the tears were streaming down her cheeks. No use; the poor back was
-bared, and while the mistress was searching her, the pretty,
-rosy-cheeked workgirls were feeling the deformity curiously, examining
-what like a hump exactly was.
-
-Claire had buried her face in her hands; her hair had fallen about her
-ears, and there she stood, quite still and helpless, terrified at the
-angry faces about her; her throat was dry and her whole body quivering
-with overmastering agitation. She wished she was dead.
-
-The mistress's hard voice dismissing her roused her at last; she got to
-her feet amidst the jeers of the workroom, buttoned her frock, collected
-her needles and scissors, and, shuddering and shaking, catching her feet
-in her skirts, she hurried to the door; there was a loud buzzing in her
-ears, and she seemed to see everything through a sort of mist.
-
-She dashed downstairs two steps at a time and reached the riverside
-quays, looking in her despair for an unfrequented bridge from which an
-unhappy hunchback might throw herself into the water and not be noticed.
-But everywhere she seemed to see mocking eyes pursuing her.
-
-By degrees she began to think of the dreadful publicity of such a death;
-she saw herself dragged from the river, laid on the crowded bank, under
-the eyes of a throng of curious onlookers, in the glaring light of day.
-
-No, what she craved was a quiet death in some dark corner, where she
-would be sheltered from prying looks.
-
-She retraced her steps, bought a supply of charcoal, which she hid in a
-fold of her gown, and made her way home. Her poor worn hands had helped
-her--how hardly!--to live, now they should help her to die.
-
-Possessed by these ideas, she pushed open the door of the room--and
-suddenly stopped....
-
-How, when, by what way had he got in, the little sparrow she saw beating
-his wings against the walls, looking so scared and frightened, trying in
-vain to find a way out of the garret he had invaded so impudently, like
-the little good-for-nothing scamp he was?
-
-Yes, she remembered; that morning, before leaving, she had left the
-window ajar; but no doubt the wind had blown it to, and after coming in
-unhindered, like a conquering hero taking possession of a new kingdom,
-the bird was now a prisoner.
-
-A prisoner? But why a prisoner? What had she and he in common? He only
-asked to live, to fly, to soar in the free air, while she, she was fain
-to die. Begone, little madcap! you shall have your freedom again.
-
-She went to the window; but as her hand touched the latch, she paused.
-The sparrow had stopped fluttering about the room; cowering in the
-corner of a cupboard, his little breast heaving with terror and
-breathlessness, he was looking at her with his frightened eyes.
-
-To see him shivering and shaking and ruffling his feathers in terror,
-she seemed to recognise a fellow-sufferer. _Her life_, from first to
-last, had it not been one long quaking agony of fear, exposed to
-never-ending uncertainties and disappointments? The similarity made a
-sort of common bond between them, and her heart stirred with a longing
-for a last touch of love and sympathy with the living creatures of this
-earth she was about to quit.
-
-She left the window, advanced a step, and held out her finger to beckon
-and encourage him. But the movement, gentle as it was, was misunderstood
-by the bird; he spread his wings and darted up to the ceiling. Then she
-spoke to him, and very humbly--she found it very easy to be
-humble--besought him--
-
-"Poor birdie, why should you be afraid of me? Do you think I want to
-hurt you? I only ask you one favour--to kiss you once, just once,
-before.... There, come, light there on my hand; let me just hold you;
-you shall fly away again directly after. Come, dear birdie, I know I am
-ugly to look at, but I am not cruel."
-
-And stepping softly, silently, she followed him about the room, with
-outstretched fingers and smiling lips, almost like a mother, as if she
-were talking to a little child. Then, as he would not come--
-
-"Come, now.... Does my back shock you--like the others? Why should you
-care if I _am_ hunchbacked, when you are so pretty? Come, pretty
-birdie--if only to give me the strength I need so badly."
-
-She crumbled some bread on the table. This made the bird hesitate; he
-did not come down at once, but, still perching aloft, gazed down at the
-white crumbs, craning his neck, his eyes glittering with greediness.
-
-Finally appetite overcame prudence. He darted down on to the table and
-began to peck--_tock, tock!_ at the food, stopping every now and then to
-shake out his feathers and cocking up his head to look about him.
-
-Presently she scattered more crumbs, first on the floor and then on the
-window-sill, and he soon came hopping up to them on his little pink
-toes, flirting his tail and looking as happy as a king, the glutton!
-
-What a darling he was, to be sure! She forgot all thoughts of death, to
-see him so alive and so handsome, coming and going, marching up and down
-with his mettlesome air, his rolling eye, his tossing head, his
-everlasting pickings and peckings and his fine look of swagger and
-impudence. He had a way of peeping at her askance, winking one eye with
-a merry, mocking glint in it, that seemed to say unmistakably: "I don't
-mind eating your bread, because it's downright good; but never you think
-I'm going to give up my freedom for you. I shall be off and away again
-just whenever I choose."
-
-Other times he would fix his little black beads of eyes meditatively
-upon her face, scrutinising her features as if bent on reading her
-inmost thoughts, but never missing a peck at the food for all that, or
-one crumb of this long, luxurious repast.
-
-When he had eaten up every scrap, she got some more and offered it him,
-this time in her palm.
-
-Up he fluttered, took his stand in front of her hand, examined it from
-every side, from above and from below, wishing but not daring; then
-suddenly caution carried the day, and he hopped away.
-
-"Pst! pst!" she chirped to him, but never stirred. Her stillness
-reassured him; with a determined air, feeling a sinking again in his
-insatiable little stomach--it was not every day he had such a chance of
-filling it--he hopped forward, then drew back again; finally, making up
-his mind once for all, he began to peck warily at the contents of the
-well-stored hand.
-
-She watched him with delight and admiration. The sight of him and his
-pretty ways stirred deep, unsuspected feelings within her. The blue sky
-seemed to have entered at her humble window, as if the bird had brought
-in along with him a fragment of space. Under his wing he hid, Claire
-thought, all the gaiety and brightness of the spring.
-
-Memories awoke in her heart; she dreamed of the woodlands, the fields of
-golden grain, the water-springs, all the glories of kindly Mother
-Nature. Three or four times in her colourless life she had been taken
-into the country; she had heard the birds sing, the great trees swaying
-and rustling in the breeze and the prattling of the brooks. One day--it
-was fifteen years ago at least--she had actually dropped asleep on the
-moss in the warm shadow of the woods, and when she awoke the old oaks
-seemed to be smiling down on her.
-
-Her black thoughts fled before this memory of rosy hours.
-
-Besides, after days of gloom do not happier days follow? Had not he,
-too, her little friend, had not he known the hardships of winter?
-Shivering with cold, he had endured frost and bitter wind; his nest
-battered by the hail, his plumage soaked by the rain, his wings stiff
-with pain--was not all this far harder to bear than the gibes and
-insults of a few silly girls, giddy-pated perhaps rather than really
-ill-natured? Twenty times, a hundred times over, death had hovered near,
-when the storms scattered the leaves and tore down the nests all round
-him; but he had kept a good heart, and when spring-time came back again,
-had he not been rewarded for his bravery by happy, happy days? As she
-thought of the stubborn courage of the little sparrow, she was ashamed
-of her own weakness.
-
-Who knows?--perhaps the bird had been sent to call her back to duty, to
-encourage her never to despair, to bring her a lesson straight from
-Mother Nature. Something of Nature's tender care for the weak and
-unprotected was in his coming to visit her garret; it was not for
-nothing he had chosen out the barest and poorest of them all, driving
-away with the rustle of his tiny wings those other dark, overshadowing
-wings--the wings of death. She found herself calling down blessings on
-him, thanking him for arriving so opportunely, weeping with joy to see
-his graceful gambols; for he was not frightened now, but bright and gay,
-and rather amused than otherwise at the four walls that had suddenly
-replaced the boundless plains of air.
-
-A new life began for the two.
-
-Monsieur Friquet--that was the name she had given him--seemed to be
-quite content to take his place as house-mate with the poor work-girl,
-whose heart was so full of affection, and who, to his partial eyes,
-looked as pretty as the prettiest things he had ever seen in the world
-outside. Did she not always wear a kind smile on her lips whenever she
-came home? And is not kindness, when all is said and done, the same
-thing as beauty?
-
-Monsieur Friquet had forgotten all about the distractions of the
-streets. Like a rakish younger son who has been living for years on his
-wits, he thoroughly enjoyed this life of slippered ease in a cosy house,
-where, it is true, the sun did not often penetrate, but then neither did
-the wind. Its quiet was unbroken all day long while his mistress was
-abroad, allowing him to doze and dream away the long hours till her
-return set stove and saucepans in activity again.
-
-He was a lazy loon, and nothing could have suited him better than to
-have a place at table laid out for him morning and evening, without his
-having so much as to put his head outside the door.
-
-He had known so many of his comrades who had perished miserably under a
-cat's claws, at the corner of a gutter-pipe or in the treacherous shadow
-of a chimney-stack; so many who, grown old and impotent, and unable to
-find themselves a warm lodging, had died a lonely death on some deserted
-housetop; in fact, he had witnessed so much disappointment and
-disillusion and misery that he was ready--some days, at any rate--to
-swear he would not exchange for all the spacious blue of heaven shining
-in through the windowpane the indigo-blue paper with white bunches of
-flowers that covered the garret walls.
-
-He had put on flesh, and his chirp had grown thick and fruity; nowadays
-the graceless fellow had nothing but ill to say of the freedom he had
-lost, but which, after all, was limited, in summer, to scolding and
-squabbling in the tree-tops, and, in winter, to freezing on a wretched
-perch.
-
-And _pr't! prr't! chirp! chirp!_ he went, in scorn of everything that
-could remind him of the old bad times of his life.
-
-How much better to sit soft and warm over a good feed of bird-seed, to
-sleep away his afternoons in slothful ease, never to soil his feathers
-scratching for doles in a dungheap, but to live like a gentleman on his
-means, among his own belongings, without even a thought of work or
-worry!
-
-Monsieur Friquet, you see, was a philosopher of an accommodating temper.
-
-Thank God! everybody does not think alike; for what would become of the
-sky and the woodland if all the race of sparrows forsook them like him
-for cosy quarters and a free table? He was one of those selfish folk who
-deem all is well directly all is well with them, and who only think of
-being on the best terms with the world and with themselves, without ever
-a care beyond.
-
-True, he was barely awake ere he saw his kind mistress bustling about in
-her room and filling up his bowl with new milk; true, she shared her
-loaf and her eggs with him, always giving him the best of everything and
-cheerfully keeping the crust and the white for herself; true, all day
-long the table was laid for him, and he had nothing to do but to eat and
-drink to his heart's content, like the regular glutton he was; but
-Monsieur Friquet never once thought at the cost of what painful
-sacrifices he enjoyed all these good things.
-
-Claire had resumed the cruel slavery of the workroom.
-
-Every morning, at seven o'clock, she set out, a meagre hunch of bread in
-her basket, and along the sleeping streets where the yawning passers-by
-were few and far between, half dozing herself, but brave and thinking of
-Monsieur Friquet, she would make her way to the dismal room where she
-was to be kept prisoner all day. Her companions never dreamed what
-strength to bear unhappiness a friend affords, a good friend you are
-sure to find at home on your return, who welcomes you with bright eyes
-of pleasure and who fills your thoughts even when he is not there.
-
-How he filled her thoughts, to be sure! What endless dialogues she had
-with him down in her own heart, just between the two of them.
-
-"Now then, Monsieur Friquet, what are we going to have for dinner? A
-couple of poached eggs? I've just bought them, new laid, at the
-green-grocer's. Oh! you can almost see through them; just you look. And
-not too dear either, thank God! There, the fire just burning up nicely.
-Well, have you made up your mind? Will you have them poached or boiled?
-Oh! never mind me. To begin with, I don't care which; I like one as well
-as the other. I've got some salad too--fine fresh salad. Ah! so you're
-laughing, Monsieur Friquet! You'll laugh better still directly. Boiled,
-then, it's to be, eh? You see, you bad boy, we only think of pleasing
-you."
-
-She was hardly home before the fire was crackling, the egg-boiler
-singing; in next to no time the eggs were on the table, and the two of
-them, Claire and the sparrow, were pecking away, she sitting in front of
-the cloth, he perched in front of her on the edge of a glass or else
-clinging to her fingers.
-
-At every mouthful he would give his wings a shake, looking saucily now
-at the food, now at Claire, with his head on one side.
-
-_Chirp! chirp! chirp!_ he would say in his shrill treble. It was at once
-an appeal to his mistress to give him more, and a way of thanking her
-for the trouble she took in feeding him.
-
-His impudent little beak would dive into every single thing--bread,
-salt, salad, the hollow of his mistress's hand, poking everywhere,
-filching bits from her very lips, never still for an instant. Teasing,
-defying, thieving, he was in perpetual motion, as his brethren are among
-the leaves of the forest trees.
-
-They drank out of the same cup, ate off the same plate. Ah! but Monsieur
-Friquet had his wilful moods too at times; _he_ was not the fellow to be
-satisfied with everything; now it was the bread he refused with a little
-decided peck that said as plain as words: "I won't have it!"--now it was
-the egg, or the salad, or something else. You see, he knew quite well,
-did Monsieur Friquet, there was a biscuit waiting for him in the
-cupboard, and he was inordinately fond of biscuit.
-
-Sunday was a special festival.
-
-Up betimes as usual, for workgirls are never lie-abeds, Claire would set
-to rights the disorder of the week, tripping on tip-toe about the room,
-not to wake Monsieur Friquet, who was snoring in a corner, a fat ball of
-feathers, with his head under his wing.
-
-"Monsieur Friquet won't be awake for another hour," she would think to
-herself. "I shall have time enough to set all straight"--and she would
-set to work, dusting, sweeping, washing the floor, happy in the prospect
-of the coming Sunday that would release her a while from her chain of
-servitude.
-
-At last the bird would wake up, and there would be quick cries of: "Good
-morning, Monsieur Friquet! How have you slept?"
-
-"Chirp! chirp!" would come the answer.
-
-And she would reply--
-
-"Oh! so have I--excellently, thank you."
-
-Then breakfast would be served at once. He would come to table still
-half asleep, with heavy eyes, to be scolded and fondled and chided.
-
-"Lazybones! why, it's close on eight o'clock!"
-
-But he would hop on her shoulder, and put his little round head to her
-lips as if to ask pardon.
-
-Then they would talk of serious matters.
-
-"Monsieur Friquet! I say, Monsieur Friquet!"
-
-"Chirp! chirp!"--which meant: "Well, what? I'm all attention!"
-
-"Monsieur Friquet, I want your advice. What shall we have to eat for
-Sunday?"
-
-"Chirp!"
-
-"I hear you! Biscuit! biscuit! But people can't live only on biscuit! We
-must have something else _to go with it_. Suppose we bought a couple of
-artichokes! Do you like artichokes, Monsieur Friquet? Yes? Ah! I knew an
-artichoke would please you. Wait here for me, and I'll run round to the
-greengrocer's."
-
-So the Sunday wore away in happy play and merry nonsense between the
-pair.
-
-What more was needed to transform the sharp thorns of pain into fragrant
-roses of content? She had invested the bold little chattering fellow
-with all the treasures of her tenderness; on him she lavished all her
-care and devotion; he was father and mother and family to her, and where
-he was, was home.
-
-They lived long and happily together, and their love was never
-interrupted.
-
-[Illustration: A LOST DOG]
-
-
-
-
- A Lost Dog
-
-
- I
-
-Have you ever noticed the melancholy pensive look masterless dogs assume
-at the hour when the press thins, and the passers-by slacken their pace
-on the side-walks, like waters from a tap running dry?
-
-As the silence deepens they appear from every side, these poor,
-friendless beasts, their meagre forms slinking through the fog and
-gloom; up and down the streets they prowl, noses to the ground, and
-tails drooping, like so many lost souls. Some have sound legs to run on,
-others can hardly drag themselves along; but all have hollow flanks and
-protruding ribs. They are out in search of food, nosing in the refuse
-heaps, scratching in the mud, filching from the scavengers bones as
-fleshless as themselves.
-
-What the world lets fall from its table is still a banquet for their
-starving bellies. They are not hard to please; till the wan light of
-dawn surprises them, they hunt the streets, rain-soaked and
-frost-bitten; then they creep back into mysterious holes and corners,
-where they curl themselves up in a round and sleep away the livelong
-day.
-
-Most of them are wild and shy, for they have only known the blackest
-side of life--cuffs and kicks, wretchedness and desertion. For them no
-hope survives the shipwreck of friendships betrayed; alone they live and
-alone they creep into a hole to die--creatures of the dunghill whose
-obsequies will be performed by the scavenger's cart.
-
-But if some are discouraged and disillusioned, there are bolder spirits
-too who will sometimes, when they hear the steps of a belated wayfarer,
-tear themselves from the heap they are foraging in and stand panting and
-eager in the dark street, with the desperate eye of a swimmer looking
-out across the raging foam in search of a port of safety. Hope is not
-yet dead in _them_; they still have faith in mankind, and each shadowy
-form that emerges in the light of the gas-lamps entices them as offering
-promise of a home. For hours they will trot, with a humble, gentle,
-deprecating gait, at the heels of a casual passer-by, a shadow among
-shadows, dogging his steps to the last, hoping against hope. It is a
-_friend_ they are fain to run to earth; but alas! the chase is one that
-is repeated night after night--and it is almost always unsuccessful.
-More often than not, the pursued has no inkling even of the dumb escort
-that attends him through the night.
-
-How _should_ he know? Behind his back the dog treads noiselessly, with
-paws of velvet and nose to earth, checking his pace when the stranger
-slackens his, stopping when he stops, bit by bit learning his walk and
-ways. At last, when he has journeyed far through the dark streets, when
-his legs ache with pursuing under the wayfarer's form a dream that is
-never to come true, a door will interpose, a ponderous, an impassable
-barrier between him and his fond hopes. Yet, who can tell? perhaps he
-will still linger on, shivering, till daylight, so unconquerable is his
-faith in man.
-
-It was one of these hopeful but unappreciated souls that encountered an
-old schoolmaster one night, when the latter had tarried late in the
-fields outside the fortifications, anxious to assist at the noble
-spectacle the sun gives gratuitously to one and all, as he sets in the
-glowing west.
-
-He was returning by the boulevards, his heart full of these glories no
-fireworks have ever yet been invented to match; as he jogged along, he
-was thinking of God's goodness, who every night lights up these ruddy
-lamps of the sky to make fine flame-coloured curtains for the slumbers
-of His creatures.
-
-A little black dog, the ugliest little dog you ever saw, without ears
-and without a tail, or as good as without, saw the solitary stranger.
-Did he divine perhaps beneath the man's easy, good-natured exterior a
-fellow-sufferer, the heart of a disappointed, disillusioned being like
-himself? Sometimes animals can see very far into things.
-
-At any rate he started off in pursuit.
-
-The stranger noticed nothing, but marched along, striding over gutters
-and stamping across pavements, knocking sometimes against benches and
-trees in his preoccupation. It had been raining for an hour past, as it
-does come down in spring, in floods of warm soaking rain and sudden
-showers that wetted man and dog to the skin, without either one or the
-other being much disturbed.
-
-Absent-minded as he was, the old man presently felt something rubbing
-softly against his leg, and, looking down, was surprised to see the
-wretched-looking cur beside him.
-
-It was crawling and cringing, and with little half-stifled barks seemed
-to be appealing to the generosity of this unknown friend, perhaps less
-hard-hearted than the generality of mankind.
-
-Many people, seeing what a hideous beast it was, would have said "No,
-no!" at once. But it was just the creature's hideousness that moved the
-worthy man's pity irresistibly. Touched by its repulsive looks, he
-guessed at the pitiful hardships the wretched animal must have borne in
-secret. He saw its sunken flanks, its mangy coat, its sharp-ridged back,
-and loved it with a sudden ardour of affection--the affection poor
-suffering folks feel for one another. All very well for happy people to
-test and try one another for ever so long to see if they suit each
-other, but they who have nothing to lose by mutual affection make no
-bones about clapping hand in hand straight away and swearing eternal
-friendship.
-
-And so it was with these two new comrades.
-
-Both were poor, and they fraternised at once. The dog was enchanted to
-have met a kind stranger to help him in his need, while his benefactor
-thought to himself how pleasant it would be to have the faithful
-creature to share his solitude. He stooped, patted the animal's
-streaming coat, tickled his ear, or as much of it as there was to
-tickle, and ended by taking him home to his garret.
-
-It was many a day since the poor beast had known the comfort of four
-walls and a roof--if indeed he ever had! For two whole days, barring
-meal times, he slept like a log; on the third he roused himself from his
-lethargy, trotted up and down the room, poked his nose into every
-corner, and showed every sign of being wide awake at last.
-
-The dog must have a name, and the good schoolmaster was not long in
-finding one. Azor and Faithful are names that never come amiss for poor
-folk's dogs; he chose Azor, perhaps keeping Faithful for himself--and he
-well deserved it! He had only to move his lips, pronouncing the two
-syllables "Az-or" below his breath, and the dog was instantly on the
-alert, looking up at him with roguish eyes, wondering what he was going
-to say next. No doubt of it, he was a very intelligent animal.
-
-It was a happy household. Not that bread was over and above plentiful;
-but people who have nothing are cheaply satisfied, and if stomachs were
-pinched some days, at any rate hearts were never chilled. The dog had
-come into the man's life like a special providence; henceforth his
-existence had an object; he had some one to love, some one besides
-himself to think of; poverty, so heavy a burden for a lonely man, seemed
-almost a boon now there were two to bear it--like a load of which each
-carries his half.
-
-He loved and indulged him like a child, and something of selfishness
-entering into all ardent affections, Azor soon came to represent all
-humanity in his eyes. One day, to make him look fine, he fastened in the
-coarse hair of his neck a pink bow a young girl had dropped in the
-street, and told himself the dog was the handsomest beast alive. Slender
-greyhound, fleet-footed pointer, sturdy Newfoundland, none were a patch,
-in the eye of this partial judge, on the little ragged-haired,
-undersized mongrel he had introduced to his hearth and home.
-
-Azor had just as great an admiration for his master. Sitting up on his
-haunches in front of him, he would gaze into his face for hours together
-in a sort of ecstasy.
-
-Did he see him transmuted into something other than he was, or did the
-rough face, scored with its network of heavy wrinkles, from amid which
-the nose shone like a beacon-fire, embody for the wee doggie the
-beau-ideal of manly beauty? For my part, I think Azor beheld in it a
-beauty of a higher sort than the perishable beauty of the features; the
-old man, to be sure, was goodness incarnate, and is not goodness the
-highest form of beauty?
-
-They lived for one another. Azor yapped, and the old man talked, and
-between them they had wonderful fine dialogues; beginning in the garret,
-these were resumed in the street the days they took the air together.
-
-The pair might be seen marching side by side, the old man laughing, the
-dog laughing, too, in a way he had of his own. And so they wandered
-through the streets, in search of quiet, both taking little short steps.
-True, Azor was young still, and would have liked to dart on ahead; but
-his friend could not have kept up, and that was quite enough to make him
-adopt the peaceful gait of a dog who has ceased to care for the
-distractions of the roadside.
-
-But out in the fields you may be sure this sedateness was exchanged for
-wild excitement. Intoxicated by the open air, Azor would dash away,
-gambolling and wheeling and leaping like a mad creature, and performing
-a hundred tricks that mightily amused his good old master.
-
-
- II
-
-Azor had his little ways. Every morning he used to go down into the
-street to inspect the gutters and pay a visit to the dogs of the
-neighbourhood. He was always back in a quarter of an hour or so.
-
-But one day he did not return.
-
-His master waited patiently for him till midday. Animals are like men,
-and love to linger; perhaps he had met friends--and the old schoolmaster
-smiled indulgently at the notion.
-
-However, when half the afternoon was gone, and still Azor did not
-appear, he began to get anxious. Had some accident befallen him? and he
-thought of carriage wheels and horses' hoofs and the rush and roar of
-the main streets.
-
-His first impulse was to rush to the stairs; but Azor might come back at
-any moment, so he stayed where he was, more dead than alive.
-
-The window opened on the roof; the old man took a chair, climbed on it
-and craned his head over the sill till he could see down over the edge
-of the rain-shoot. There he stood for ever so long watching the little
-black dots darting in and out among the legs of the passers-by. But not
-one of them was Azor.
-
-A cold sweat broke out on his forehead; he was obliged to get down off
-the chair.
-
-At last, as dusk was falling, a paw came scratching at the door, and he
-flew to open it.
-
-Yes, it was his old comrade--but in what a plight! dyed blue, with a
-rope's end still dangling round his neck! Some tragedy had befallen, no
-doubt, of which he had been the victim--and he patted the poor beast,
-his mind a prey to a hundred sinister apprehensions. Azor meantime
-fawned round him, looking as contrite as a culprit who cannot hope to be
-forgiven.
-
-The dye refused to be washed out; soap was of no avail, and they had to
-resort to caustics; but for all they could do, a tinge of blue remained.
-It lasted nearly a month, but at last the black reappeared. While his
-master was busy over these operations, Azor would lick his hands, only
-stopping to sneeze, when the strong fumes got up his nose. He seemed
-cured of all wish for adventures.
-
-Nevertheless, when a month was over, these prolonged absences began
-again. Sometimes he would stay away an hour; one Saturday he was abroad
-six hours. This irregular behaviour vexed his good master exceedingly.
-What could the mysterious attraction be that kept his faithful friend
-like this? He determined to find out.
-
-He had noticed that Azor, the better to elude his vigilance, apparently
-used always to loiter a bit in front of the house, not starting away
-before he felt certain no one was looking; then in one bound he would be
-at the end of the street and disappear.
-
-One day he followed the truant. Now and again the dog would stop, nose
-all along the pavement, then, reassured, set off again at a trot. He
-turned the corner, then down a broader street, and so eventually into a
-square. The clumps of rhododendrons hid him for a moment from his
-master, who came puffing up; but presently he caught sight of him in the
-middle of a group of children. He was barking joyously, leaping up at
-them, rolling on his back in the grass, in transports of delight. They
-were five little pale-faced things, and among them one face paler still
-and pinched with illness.
-
-The shock nailed the old man to the spot. Was it possible? Was Azor a
-traitor to his friend? And he gazed first at the dog and then at the
-children with the look a man wears who sees an edifice he has long been
-labouring at crumbling into ruin. He had put his trust in the animal; he
-esteemed him as well as loved him--and, lo! the ingrate was sharing his
-caresses with others. He hated duplicity, and his gorge rose at the
-thought.
-
-"Come here!" he shouted.
-
-Azor knew his voice instantly, and, crawling along the ground like a
-serpent, he crept up to his benefactor, his tail dragging in the dust.
-But the latter never so much as thought of punishing him, and patted him
-on the back gently. Their eyes met; the man's were full of sadness, the
-dog's besought forgiveness. Then, still in the same humble attitude, he
-tried to draw his master towards the little group of pale faces.
-
-The children had come forward--all except the little invalid, who stayed
-where he was; and all with one accord, their hands behind their backs,
-were staring at the new arrival.
-
-Was he going to take their dog from them? Their brows were puckered with
-anxiety, and as he watched them, he was amazed to think his anger had
-been so easily roused.
-
-What harm had Azor done after all? Ah! the blow would have been harder
-to bear if he had betrayed him for another man; but children! The
-piteous air of the little one who had remained behind touched him so
-that he took his hands with a smile and asked him if he loved Azor too.
-
-"Oh! yes," cried the child.
-
-His eyes moved languidly under drooping lids, and he wore the careworn
-look of an invalid. Azor laid his head on the child's knees, and he
-caressed him with his thin fingers long and lovingly.
-
-The others soon found their tongues. Azor, they said, used to come every
-morning, and they romped together. They had known him for a long time in
-fact; but he had been a month once without appearing, and they had
-believed he was dead. A dyer's apprentice, after tying a cord round his
-neck, had dragged him off, and as they never saw him any more, they had
-laid his death at the bad boy's door.
-
-"So that's the explanation!" the old man muttered, and remembered the
-long day of agonised suspense when he waited for him at the garret
-window, and then how he had come back dyed blue. It was a relief to know
-the truth.
-
-He went again at the same time next day, the dog careering gaily ahead
-as if he quite understood. Presently all found themselves in the square
-again, and all faces lit up with a common pleasure.
-
-They became fast friends; he learned their names, and that two of them
-were brothers of the pale-faced little fellow; their mother always sent
-them to look after him in the garden; they lived only a few steps away.
-His heart was filled with compassion for the frail-looking little lad.
-As Pierre could not walk, he got into the way by degrees of carrying him
-home in his arms as far as the door, Azor galloping after them, wagging
-his tail.
-
-One day the child's mother came down to thank the "kind gentleman," and
-they fell into talk. The boy's father was a workman on the railway,
-while she worked at fine sewing; the little one was a sore trouble to
-them; he had to be taken out for fresh air, and constantly looked after;
-and all hope of cure had had to be abandoned long ago.
-
-"And yet he's no fool either, sir; of the three he's the cleverest."
-
-He only nodded, his head full of a notion that still occupied him after
-he got home; Azor lay at his feet and watched him thinking, thinking all
-day long. At nightfall he took the dog's head between his hands.
-
-"There!" he cried merrily, "you'll be pleased with your old master this
-time."
-
-Three days later he bought a go-cart, in which he installed Pierre, and
-every morning they used to set out for the country, Azor scouting ahead
-and his master following with the child in tow.
-
-The old schoolmaster would explain all they saw to him--animals and
-things; he had made him a present of an alphabet with coloured pictures
-where a yacht stood for Y and a zebra for Z. And Pierre soon learnt to
-read.
-
-On Sundays, instead of three, they were seven; the whole family would
-join the expedition, and they would linger on till dark in the starlit
-fields.
-
-They were very happy, and their happiness lasted many long years.
-
-
-
-
- Misadventures of an Owl
-
-
-His plumage was glossy and abundant, his eye alert, his claws long and
-strong; in all points he was everything a handsome young owl should be.
-For two years he had slept snug under his mother's wing, the fond object
-of her jealous care; but when spring came round again, his father, who
-was a very sententious bird, addressed him in these terms--
-
-[Illustration: MISADVENTURES OF AN OWL]
-
-"You are grown up now, and the time is come when we must part. The nest
-would be too small to hold both you and those who will come after you.
-Moreover, no owl is ever happy save as head of a household. All sorts of
-trials and tribulations await us; men feel nothing but anger and
-contempt for our race. No matter for the watch and ward we keep over the
-orchards, the war of extermination we wage on the prolific broods that
-devastate the wheat, for all our well-meant efforts to aid the harvests
-to grow and the fruit-trees to bloom, our only guerdon is to be shot at
-with guns. Alas! the most of us end by being nailed up to a barn-door,
-with spread-eagled wings. A wife and family will console you under all
-this cruel injustice. Year by year your heart will grow green again amid
-the joys of domesticity, and you will attach a higher value to life when
-you no longer stand alone to bear its burden. So quit the nest, as I did
-before you; choose a good helpmeet of your own age, and may you be happy
-together, as we are, your mother and I."
-
-Accordingly the youngster took his departure. Gravity comes early to
-owls, and though only two years old, he already wore the severe air of
-an old philosopher. But the young lady owls, likewise brought up to
-scorn worldly pleasures, prefer this serious deportment to the gay
-exterior the other birds find so fascinating.
-
-He went methodically round the village, and was well received by the
-parents, while more than one young thing turned her head to look after
-him. But there was not one of them, he thought, like his mother, and as
-she was the paragon of all merit in his eyes, he had sworn only to
-choose a mate who should resemble her in mind if not in face. He was in
-despair, and on the point of returning to the paternal roof when, one
-evening, as he was hovering about an old church-steeple, he caught sight
-of a charming little head peeping out between the luffer-boards.
-
-Was he weary of the search perhaps, or did the little face really remind
-him of the adored image of his parent? He lingered long in admiration,
-never tired of watching her dainty ways, and little by little something
-began to thump inside him, something he had never felt before. She was
-busy crunching a mouse, pecking and worrying at it with her sharp beak,
-and had very soon left nothing but the bare bones. Then she wiped her
-beak and preened her feathers prettily, as every well-bred young lady
-owl should.
-
-Just as she was finished, she saw him sitting in the next tree, and,
-startled at being caught at her toilet, she hid her head under her wing;
-nor was he a whit less embarrassed, and each of them gazed at the other
-in equal confusion, without saying one word. At last he made up his mind
-and spoke to the parents, who both thought him a very charming fellow.
-
-It was a quiet wedding, as weddings always are among the owls. There was
-no music or nonsense; they were married at night, in the old steeple,
-and the moon lent her illumination. When all was over, the parents gave
-their blessing, and the young couple set out on their honeymoon.
-
-But it was not the sort of jaunt the sparrows indulge in, sailing away
-into the blue, so high, so high they seem as if they would never come
-back again; _they_ lighted sedately on the bough of an old oak, and,
-finding it a good place, stopped there for good. Besides, the oak, being
-decrepit with years, had not, as a younger tree would, a whole host of
-impudent little cock-sparrows for its denizens; a blackbird lodged on
-the first floor, and a magpie had selected the trunk as his residence,
-and though both were great chatterers, the owls did not find their
-company disagreeable.
-
-But it was not so with Father Blackbird and Mother Magpie; they were
-fond of gaiety, and the newcomers struck them as dismal neighbours to
-have. So they went off to see the tomtits, who are naturally very daring
-fellows, and told them about the hum-drum life the happy pair led; and
-between them they planned a fine _charivari_ for the benefit of their
-new neighbours in the early hours of the morning.
-
-Our friends were still fast asleep, snugly ensconced in the depths of a
-hollow bole, when the hostile band appeared. Suddenly an appalling
-uproar woke them with a start; screwing up their eyes, they tried to
-discover what was the matter, but they could not see a thing. Meantime
-dawn had broken, the sun was already shooting his beams like fireworks
-through the boughs, and great dragonflies were darting to and fro,
-glittering like emeralds. At last they made out a whirl of wings,
-looming like a black shadow in the clear morning air. Their assailants
-swept down and crowded every branch of the old oak, which hummed like a
-gigantic harp with the twittering of a thousand throats.
-
-The poor owls could make nothing of it; owls are simple-minded folk, and
-all they could think of was that another newly-married couple were
-celebrating their nuptials, and that the discordant noises they heard
-were the cries of transport to be expected under the circumstances. They
-shrunk away still deeper in their hole, not wishing to interrupt other
-people's enjoyment. But the tomtits were not satisfied--not they; it was
-nothing merely to have startled them in their slumbers; they meant to
-expel them from the old oak altogether. Prompted by the magpie, who sat
-screaming defiance from the foot of the tree, some of the bolder spirits
-poked in their heads at the entrance of the cavern. Inside it was dark
-as night, and from the depths four eyes blazed out like balls of fire.
-The champions took fright, and fell back hurriedly on the main body.
-
-"Cowards!" screeched their amiable ally, raising her harsh voice to its
-shrillest pitch; "d'ye mean to leave the villains in peace in their den?
-Think of the horrid carnage there will be in the woods every night! Not
-one of you will be safe in his nest any more. From time immemorial the
-owl tribe has been the scourge of the whole bird nation. Their heads are
-full of nothing but wile and wickedness, and the better to shed blood,
-they go to work like murderers in the dark! Worse still, they are all
-heretics. The witches use them in their incantations. They are birds of
-hell. Slay, slay the foes of Holy Church!"
-
-This speech rallied the waverers, and all together they forced a way
-into the dark, yawning cavern.
-
-In a moment a hundred beaks were pecking savagely at the two victims,
-who, blinded by the light, struck out wildly in self-defence. Two of the
-tomtits were left on the field, while the rest flew away in a panic,
-screaming in chorus--"Vengeance! vengeance on the rascally owls!"
-
-What had they done? What crime had they committed? Astounded as they
-were, and amazed to think what motive should have prompted the attack,
-they could no longer doubt that open war was declared upon them.
-
-So they went in search of another home, and as night was falling, found
-a safe retreat under the eaves of a lonely presbytery. "Here, at any
-rate," they thought, "no one will come to molest us. Alas! it is only
-too true--we are not made for the society of our fellow-creatures, and
-this deserted roof will hide us better than a prison."
-
-They had happy times; they reared a family of little ones, and lived a
-patriarchal life in the hollow under the roof. Everybody has his own way
-of being happy in this world of ours, and for all it was different from
-the general fashion, this was good enough for them. To begin with,
-dwelling by themselves, they knew nothing of envy, and no thought of
-ambition vexed them; their only wish was to live as long as possible,
-pariahs and outcasts as they were, and grow old together.
-
-Let others go in search of adventures; their desires were limited by the
-modest horizon they had before their eyes, and a secure abode, poor and
-bare though it might be, seemed to them preferable to all the treasures
-of Golconda. You see what reasonable, respectable people they were!
-
-Certainly their dun-coloured plumage was not of the sort to let them
-flaunt in the sunlight like other birds; after spending a luxurious
-morning dozing side by side, they would wake just when the linnets,
-goldfinches, and chaffinches were going to bed. A great silence brooded
-over nature; for the giddy-pates who had been playing truant all the
-day, and had left a feather or two of their plumage to dance in every
-sunbeam, it would have seemed as dull as death; but they thought
-otherwise, and for them the night was filled with infinite music. Did
-not the breeze blow soft in the leaves with a murmur as of running
-waters and prattling brooks? A wide peace fell upon the woodlands which
-from noon to twilight had throbbed under the golden beams of the sun,
-while the moon, the owl's sun, spread her white beams over the landscape
-like a river of milk.
-
-Then their keen ear, an instrument of extraordinary delicacy, being very
-large, and forming, as every bird-lover knows, a double spiral of
-enormous dimensions, and admirably adapted to catch the faintest sounds,
-noted from afar light rustlings and soft sighs, and a confused murmur of
-music, wherein the wind seemed, turn and turn about, to pipe through
-clarinet and oboe. Silent and awe-struck, the two outcasts felt the
-kindly beneficence of nature moving on the face of the world. At times
-louder sounds would mingle with the whisperings of the night, telling
-them of the fawns pushing through the matted undergrowth, of companies
-of woodland creatures sallying out to feed, lovers like themselves of
-the darkness--badgers, polecats, wild-cats, weasels, and rabbits, of a
-vast stir of life and activity down in the dim, intricate forest tracks.
-Cats were prowling, their yellow eyes flaming along the darkling ways,
-while from the homesteads rose rhythmically, pledge of security for all
-the host of fur and feathers, the heavy snoring of the sleepers within.
-
-Then they would come out and stand at the edge of the eaves, and gaze
-forth, as from a balcony, on all the moving spectacle of the kindly
-night. Sparkling gleams would flash along the ground like diamonds, and
-the slates glitter like so many mirrors on the house-roofs. They could
-see the stars reflected in the brook; mysterious eyes looked out from
-under the trees, vague shapes went gliding along the road, while high in
-the heavens, with a round face that seemed to laugh good-humouredly,
-sailed the lady moon.
-
-As long as they had no children, they enjoyed these hours of
-contemplation like true artists who grudge to miss one note of harmony
-or one gleam of beauty; they would never stir till dawn, hardly
-troubling themselves even to go in search of food. But when the brood of
-youngsters arrived, they had perforce to forgo these ecstasies. The
-little beaks were for ever crying for more, and Goodman Owl, who was the
-best of parents, became a mighty hunter.
-
-Scarce was evening fallen ere he had taken post on the roof, heedless
-now of the mysterious splendours of the night, the furtive comings and
-goings of his prey occupying all his thoughts; the music of the spheres
-was henceforth confined for him to the rustling of the field-mice
-climbing the espaliers and the house-mice scuttling along the walls;
-still as a statue he stood there watching and picking out the fattest
-victim. Before the little creature had time to turn its head, he held it
-in his terrible jaws, and was flying off with his prey, panting in
-mortal terror, to his young ones, who instantly made a meal of it.
-
-The poor little mouse saw nothing, heard nothing. A soft, fanning sound
-from the night-bird's velvety pinions was the only warning that anything
-untoward was near; but already the ravisher had seized his prey; there
-was a stifled squeal, and all was over!
-
-Every ten minutes--the same regular interval has been observed in all
-owls questing for food--he would bring fresh provender to the nest. The
-darkest night was no hindrance; his shining eyes, with their widely
-dilated pupils, pierced the blackest shadows as if they were
-transparent, and there was no hole or corner where the little night
-prowlers did not go in terror of their lives.
-
-Meanwhile the mother-bird was feeding her brood, sometimes when the
-mouse was particularly tough, tearing it piecemeal for her little ones
-to devour more easily.
-
-At other times father and mother together would guide the little family
-along the roofs, patiently teaching the inexperienced wings to fly, and
-giving a helping touch with beak or wing when they stumbled and tumbled
-in their attempts. At full moon they carried the youngsters to a
-neighbouring tree, he taking one, she another, and it was pretty to see
-their amazement when, craning their little necks, they watched the dim
-outlines of moving objects against the blue distance.
-
-But they were getting big now, and the old owl lectured them sagely, as
-his father had lectured him; he would tell them of the joys and sorrows
-of life, and advise them to marry. No, it was not callousness--far from
-it; he loved them tenderly, for by reason and instinct he was a pattern
-of all the domestic virtues. But he was a wise and far-seeing parent,
-who dreaded what their fate would be, should he and his mate one day
-meet the doom all owls are liable to. Perhaps one morning a yokel would
-climb to their hiding-hole and carry them off to kill them. True, the
-good Cur, whose house sheltered them, had forbidden their being
-molested; but he was an old man now, and nobody cared much what he said;
-then, with a ladder, it was so easy to reach the nest! The old owl
-always spoke like a philosopher; the future did not terrify him, and he
-seemed quite resigned to the cruel lot men mete out to his species. His
-words were without gall or bitterness; but a deep-seated melancholy gave
-them the gravity that ever marks creatures born to suffer.
-
-In younger days he had known rebellious thoughts, and the sense of human
-injustice had oppressed his spirit; he had even dreamt of flying his
-country for the lands the swallows in September told him of, and far
-away from cruel men, living in peace and quietness with the mate who had
-joined her life to his. But time had softened these resentments; he had
-bowed his head, recognising a higher power above him, and content to
-live on, harmless and obscure, asking only to repay good for evil.
-
-One morning the young birds deserted the nest.
-
-Then, alone once more, they resumed their former existence in the dark
-hollow of the old oak, so solitary and silent now; they bore their
-children's departure as only another of nature's inevitable necessities.
-They seldom stirred from home now, seeing hardly a soul except a couple
-of old friends sometimes on Sabbath days; as of old, they held long,
-long talks of nights with the moon. Perched side by side on the eaves,
-their dark shapes threw long black shadows across the roof; there they
-sat stiff and still, save when, from time to time, they spread their
-wings, swooped down on their prey, then resumed the same rigid attitude.
-These murderous assassins were at heart the most peaceable of good
-citizens. It was never their way, coming home at night, to wake the
-other birds asleep among the foliage; no one ever heard them quarrelling
-or shifting the furniture or pecking at the wall, as the cuckoos,
-linnets, and chaffinches are so fond of doing; only, six or eight times
-in the night, to advertise the country folk, they would cry _To-hoo!
-to-hoo!_ if next day was going to be fine, and _To-whit!_ if it was
-going to rain, at regular intervals, like talking barometers.
-
-A pair of young turtle-doves nesting on the next roof found this habit
-annoying, and went to the judge of the district to lodge a complaint.
-
-The judge was a very old raven, whom years had only made more sly and
-artful; he was said to be a hundred, and certainly his bald pate was as
-shiny as a polished stone. He lived in a crevice in the rocks, alone
-with his own thoughts. But these thoughts, unlike most old men's, were
-full of mockery for all created beings. This feathered Methuselah had
-seen so much in his day! and experience had only taught him to laugh at
-griefs and joys and everything else.
-
-While appreciating his usefulness, he did not like Mr. Owl, and was not
-sorry to make things unpleasant for him; he could always dismiss the
-case in the end, after getting his fun out of it, if the turtles proved,
-as he half suspected, to have been in the wrong after all.
-
-Three blackbirds he employed as constables arrived at break of day at
-the owls' front door and knocked. Three times they had to repeat the
-summons, so fast asleep was the worthy couple, till, roused at last, the
-latter poked out their heads in great alarm to ask what was wanted with
-them. Both looked so upset, he, poor fellow, in a nightcap, and she,
-good dame, in morning deshabille, that the blackbirds, who are always
-fond of a joke, burst into such a peal of laughter it took them ten
-minutes to recover their gravity.
-
-They laughed so heartily that the sparrows of the neighbourhood were
-attracted by the noise, and began to turn and wheel in flocks above the
-roof, while a horrid hubbub, a vile chirp! chirp! chirp! broke out,
-deafening and confusing the poor owls still more.
-
-The blackbirds, when they had done laughing, called for silence, which,
-however, it took some time to establish. Then they announced--
-
-"We, assistant officers of justice of this district, and by order of His
-Honour the Judge, do hereby summon you to appear this day before stroke
-of noon at his Court, situate, to wit, in the first crevice on the right
-hand, beginning from above, of the cliff bordering the Great Meadow."
-
-This order was promulgated in shrill, nasal tones amid the rustling of
-the wings of all present, who, the instant the last word was uttered,
-began to amuse themselves by screaming in frantic delight. On the
-blackbirds departing, a number of sparrows lingered on to enjoy the
-confusion of the two owls.
-
-These had shrunk away into the deepest recess of their lair, terrified
-yet resigned, and their inquisitive tormentors heard none of the
-lamentations they expected.
-
-What black deed had been laid to their charge? The blackbirds had given
-no indication, and they began mentally to review their past, searching
-in vain for any crime they could be accused of. They had not robbed
-other people's goods, nor slandered their neighbours; they had never,
-no, never caused any one's death, while they had honestly and honourably
-performed the duties Nature had given them to do. What more could be
-asked of them?
-
-The Judge was waiting--they must be off. It was a woeful pilgrimage. The
-bright daylight dazzled them, and they went along blindly, running
-against everything and perpetually losing their way; twenty times over
-they lost their bearings and had to retrace their steps, covered with
-confusion, while their dusky plumage made a dirty-looking blotch in the
-fresh morning air.
-
-"This way!" cried some tomtits, flying ahead of them--and, taking their
-word, they blundered into a nest of yellowhammers, which luckily
-happened to be empty.
-
-"Don't listen to them--come along with us," the chaffinches advised them
-next--and they went crash! head first into a wall.
-
-A cloud of small birds followed behind. They were clawed and scratched,
-and half-dazed, as they wandered about like phantoms of the night
-masquerading at high noon.
-
-When at last, after a thousand tribulations, with eyeballs starting from
-their heads, battered and beaten and jeered at, they reached the Court,
-another swarm of tormentors was waiting to receive them. There were at
-least eight hundred, and every second others kept coming up, who, after
-flying wildly about in search of places, lighted here and there and
-everywhere, chattering and squabbling. The rock was soon so crowded from
-top to bottom that a linnet, who had been detained at home feeding her
-chicks, could not find a perch anywhere, and fluttered up and down the
-tumultuous ranks, beseeching the audience in vain to sit a little
-closer. The ladies especially seemed determined not to give up a single
-inch of room, and all vied together in raising a hubbub, shrieking and
-laughing and chattering as if they would never stop.
-
-"Accused," ordered the raven suddenly, "stand up. Our Clerk of the Court
-will now read the statement of misdemeanours charged against you."
-
-For a little while the uproar still continued, mingled now with sharp
-calls to order and appeals for silence; then, diminishing gradually,
-died away into the light rustle of many wings. Then a magpie was seen to
-rise briskly to his feet; his dark eye rolled roguishly, as he unfolded
-with his beak a huge sheet of paper scribbled all over with writing and
-read out in a dry, rasping voice--
-
-"We, Clerk of the Court, &c., &c., do hereby certify that the
-appellants, to wit M. Narcisse Tourtereau and his consort, Mme. Virginie
-Tourtereau or Colombelle, have duly appeared before us and deponed that
-the said appellants, cohabiting near by the messuage whereat the Owls,
-man and wife, have taken up their abode, are nightly awakened by the
-clamours, complaints, moans, groans, and quarrels of the aforesaid Owls,
-who, instead of sleeping in their beds during the interval of time
-falling betwixt sunset and sunrise, as do all the other birds, do choose
-these selfsame hours, that are customarily devoted to repose, for
-robbing and murdering and maliciously and mischievously disturbing their
-neighbours' night's rest by reason of unseemly and uncouth noises.--I
-have spoken."
-
-The magpie flirted his tail four times in token of satisfaction at his
-own performance, snapped up a gnat to clear his throat, and, resuming
-his seat, devoted himself to an endless succession of smiles directed to
-the feminine portion of his audience. An approving murmur greeted the
-conclusion of the statement of accusation.
-
-Then, after a few moments of disorder, which was promptly checked, "Caw!
-caw!" went the raven, with a fine attempt at seriousness, his great
-round-eyed spectacles perched on his nose; then, turning to the owl, he
-lisped in an affected voice--
-
-"The word is with you; the Court will hear you in your own defence."
-
-Never, never had the birds enjoyed so laughable a spectacle before, as
-they beheld the fowl of night step forward, looking oh! so awkward and
-uncouth, with such a heavy hang-dog air! His great eyes rolled in his
-head, he stumbled at every step, while behind his back grimaced his
-shadow, mimicking every movement of his neck as it jerked in and out,
-first short, then long, like the barrels of an opera-glass.
-
-A wild spasm of merriment seized the vast concourse at sight of the
-grotesque creature, and tomtits, linnets, birds of every sort and kind,
-broke into a frantic peal of mirth.
-
-"Silence in the Court!" shrieked the magpie.
-
-But laughter is infectious. Quickly it extended to the lower ledges of
-the rock, where the spectators sat half hidden from each other in the
-semi-darkness, and the mighty cliff shook as if lashed by a hurricane.
-
-The contagion caught even the magpie, the blackbirds, the Judge himself,
-who began to sneeze again and again, in the effort to recover his
-dignity. By fits and starts, the laughter would die down, only to burst
-out afresh with redoubled vigour, and it was long before the excitement
-subsided and heads ceased to wag. When at last the audience had
-recovered something like composure, even then fans could be seen here
-and there waving to hide behind their shield a last dying echo of
-hilarity.
-
-Meanwhile, the poor buffoon, the butt of all this scathing opprobrium,
-stood silent and uncomplaining, humbly waiting his chance to speak.
-Finally, when quiet was restored, he said--
-
-"I am aware, your Honour, that men and birds all hold me and mine in
-detestation. There is no villainy they do not impute to us, no crime
-they do not charge us with, and when we have the misfortune to show
-ourselves, the howl of hate rises as high about us as a tower. But are
-we criminals? Do we lurk in the woods to rob our fellow-birds by night
-or day? Do we plunder the granaries? Do we go thieving in the hedges? Do
-we ever interfere with the livelihood of any of God's creatures with
-whom He has bidden us live in peace? Never, your Honour, never! All the
-day we lie quiet in our hole, loving our wives and children, and
-troubling nobody; then, when night is fallen, we win our nourishment by
-exterminating rats and mice, field-rats and field-mice. I would hurt no
-one's feelings, but it is well to make comparisons sometimes, and I ask
-myself--Which fulfils the more useful function, he who from dawn to dark
-scours the orchards, stealing cherries, plums, and pears, so that the
-countryman, when winter comes, has but the half of the crop he hoped
-for, or he who, seconding the farmer's toils with an incessant but
-unseen activity that wins no reward, secures him the proper reward of
-his pains?"
-
-Protests were heard at these words, the goldfinches and sparrows crying
-out indignantly--
-
-"Ah! he shifts the blame on us, the sly-boots! He knows he can say what
-he likes here, but outside the Court--why, he durst not so much as look
-us in the face."
-
-"Oh! but, my good gentlemen," retorted the orator quietly, "it is no
-fault of mine if I cannot look at you in the way you wish; a natural
-infirmity makes it impossible for us to see in daylight; such floods of
-light beat into the wide pupils of our eyes as would blind us if we had
-to face the sunshine long. That is the reason why you mocked at us just
-now, when you saw us disabled by this excess of light, whose rays
-pricked and pained our eyeballs like so many needles. Would you not feel
-yourselves at the same painful disadvantage if you were obliged to fly
-at night, when we owls come and go at our ease, our great pupils serving
-us as lamps to see by? You would very soon break your heads against a
-wall, let me tell you!
-
-"But let me come to the allegations that have brought me here, into the
-dock. Indeed, I have touched on them already; for is not the specific
-charge against us that we choose the night to come out of our holes and
-find our food? Why, what else could we do, when by daylight, by dint of
-seeing too much, we cease to see anything at all? Nature has given us
-the night, as she has given other birds the day, unwilling, in her
-kindly wisdom, to see the dark less useful than the light; she has
-appointed us her guardians to watch over the storehouses and orchards
-and granaries, which, above all in the night-time, become the prey of a
-host of pillagers.
-
-"They talk of robbery; why, what robbery can they reproach us with? Is
-it a malefactor's work to purge the earth of the creatures that pick and
-steal, and, like unnatural cannibals, would bring their mother to her
-death, if we and some others, our colleagues in the same beneficent
-task, did not put a check on their never-ending mischiefs? Just think if
-we folded our arms and left them a free field; they would end by
-devouring the trees, along with the bit of ground where they grow, and
-the very folks who can never satiate their spite against us, finding
-themselves deprived of shady leaves and luscious fruits alike, would
-very soon come begging and beseeching us to return to our never-ending
-task.
-
-"Yet the owls, as your Honour knows, win neither respect nor profit from
-their irksome labours. They are not proud; you will never hear them
-bragging of the services they render; but modest, as becomes good
-workers to be, they roost quietly at home all the time they do not
-devote to the chase. Scorned by their brethren the birds, and persecuted
-by mankind, they are victims of consistent ingratitude from the very
-creatures they benefit; if I say this, it is to have the fact known once
-for all, not to protest against a state of things established for all
-time. We are therefore compelled to find in ourselves a happiness which
-society refuses us, and, living in solitude, we rear our little ones for
-a lot like our own. There is the head and front of our offending.
-
-"There is yet another grievance against us; we disturb, so they allege,
-our neighbours' rest by our uproar. Surely the word is rather strong to
-apply to us who are lovers of silence, shunning noise in others as much
-as we avoid it in our own homes. If we make ourselves heard, it is not
-for the pleasure of listening to our own voices! We well know we are no
-sweet-voiced choristers, and when the nightingale sings, we have never
-dreamt of posing as his rivals. There are, so the migrants have told us,
-in the far-off cities of other lands, men who proclaim the hour from the
-tall minarets in the silence of the night. We do not announce the
-time--the cuckoo alone has this office to perform during daylight--but
-we instruct the swallows on the point of winging away, we inform the
-cricket, the bee, the ant, the ploughman, all to whom rain and sunshine
-are not matters of indifference, if they may count or not on a
-favourable morrow. So the kindly mother of man and beast has put two
-notes in our throats, deeming we needed no more, not to make us singing
-birds, but only birds of good help.
-
-"I have no more to say, for indeed we are no great talkers, and oratory
-is an art unknown to us. I will say no more, therefore, save only
-this--that if you are not satisfied with my pleas, I offer myself--and
-my companion here present will do the like--I offer myself a willing
-victim to your resentment, if so be the common good, which could not
-heretofore exist without our aid, is now only to be secured by the
-sacrifice of our lives."
-
-Not a little surprised at his own eloquence, the bird of night stepped
-back to his place with tottering limbs. Thereupon the jays and
-yellowhammers began a hoot of derision, which was quickly drowned by the
-protests of the mother birds trembling for their young; and then the old
-raven, rising slowly to his feet, folded up his glasses, coughed,
-croaked, and, inspired apparently by the general sense of justice,
-summed up as follows--
-
-"You, Sir Owl, you have done wrong in crying out over loud; but you,
-young Turtle-dove, you have done a far graver wrong by haling an
-innocent prisoner to the bar. You therefore will pay the fine to which
-you would have had your neighbours condemned, and the costs of the trial
-to boot. Moreover, I will take this opportunity to do an act of justice,
-and extend a hand of brotherly affection to our honoured friend the owl,
-who is henceforth to be treated with proper consideration and respect,
-or I will know the reason why."
-
-Little by little the audience dispersed, the swarm of birds scattered
-into space, and the raven's rock was left to its former solitude.
-
-
- Printed by Ballantyne, Hanson & Co.
- Edinburgh & London
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber's Notes
-
-
---Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook
- is public-domain in the country of publication.
-
---Corrected a few palpable typos.
-
---In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by
- _underscores_.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Birds and Beasts, by Camille Lemonnier
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Birds and Beasts
-
-Author: Camille Lemonnier
-
-Illustrator: E. J. Detmold
-
-Translator: A. R. Allinson
-
-Release Date: April 24, 2016 [EBook #51847]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BIRDS AND BEASTS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Suzanne Shell, Stephen Hutcheson, and the
-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-(This file was produced from images generously made
-available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
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-
-
-</pre>
-
-<div class="img">
-<img id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Birds and Beasts" width="500" height="732" />
-</div>
-<div class="box">
-<h1>Birds and Beasts</h1>
-<p class="center"><i>Translated by</i> A. R. Allinson <i>from the French of</i> Camille Lemonnier</p>
-<p class="center"><i>Illustrated by</i>
-<br />E. J. Detmold</p>
-<div class="img" id="illus00">
-<img src="images/illus00.jpg" alt="(uncaptioned)" width="300" height="302" />
-</div>
-<p class="center"><span class="small">London: George Allen &amp; Company, Ltd.
-<br /><i>Ruskin House</i>, Rathbone Place. Mcmxi</span></p>
-<p class="center"><span class="smaller">[All rights reserved]</span></p>
-</div>
-<p class="center smaller">Printed by <span class="sc">Ballantyne, Hanson &amp; Co.</span>
-<br />At the Ballantyne Press, Edinburgh</p>
-<h2>Contents and Illustrations</h2>
-<dl class="toc">
-<dt class="jr"><span class="small">PAGE</span></dt>
-<dt><a href="#c1">Jack and Murph</a> 1</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c2">The Captive Goldfinch</a> 53</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c3">Strange Adventures of a Little White Rabbit</a> 91</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c4">&ldquo;Monsieur Friquet&rdquo;</a> 106</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c5">A Lost Dog</a> 133</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c6">Misadventures of an Owl</a> 156</dt>
-</dl>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_1">1</div>
-<h1 title="">Birds and Beasts</h1>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/illus01.jpg" alt="JACK AND MURPH" width="538" height="800" />
-<p class="caption">JACK AND MURPH</p>
-</div>
-<h2 id="c1">Jack and Murph</h2>
-<h3 title="">I</h3>
-<p>Jack and Murph were friends, old
-friends, trusty and tried.</p>
-<p>It was now nearly six years since the
-day chance had brought them together
-as members of the same company.
-Jack had come straight from the
-African forests; he had crossed the
-seas, and set foot on the continent
-of Europe for the first time; his
-amazement knew no bounds.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_2">2</div>
-<p>It is not for nothing a little fellow
-of his sort is torn from the freedom
-of his vagabond life in the woods and
-surrendered to the tender mercies of
-a showman of performing animals.
-He learned to know the cruel tedium
-of captivity; shut up in a cage, he
-thought sadly of his merry gambols
-in the tree-tops; his little face grew
-wan and withered, and he came near
-pining to death. But time damped
-the keenness of his grief; by dint of
-seeing around him other little creatures
-that, like himself, had wearied for their
-native wilds, then little by little had
-grown reconciled to their fate, and now
-seemed to get a prodigious amount
-of fun out of their new life, he made
-the best of the bars, the tainted air of
-the booth, and the clown&rsquo;s grimaces,
-rehearsing his drolleries before the
-animals&rsquo; cages.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_3">3</div>
-<p>At the same time he could never
-quite share the gaiety of his companions
-in misfortune. While they
-were enjoying everlasting games of
-hide-and-seek, scuffling, squabbling,
-pelting each other with nuts, he would
-cower timidly in a corner, too sad at
-heart to join in their noisy merriment.
-Sometimes, when his feelings grew too
-much for him, he would break out in
-a series of sharp, shrill outcries, or
-wail like a new-born babe in his doleful
-despair.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_4">4</div>
-<p>The master was very fond of him,
-for he was both intelligent and teachable.
-In a very short time he learned
-to do his musket drill, to walk the
-slack-rope, and use the spring-board.
-But these accomplishments only earned
-him the ill-will of the other pupils.
-There was never a prank they did not
-play him. No sooner had he cracked
-a nut, to eat the kernel, than a hand
-would dart over his shoulder and
-snatch the morsel just as he was putting
-it between his teeth. They slapped
-his face, pinched his tail, scarified his
-head with their nails, jumped upon
-him, or half strangled him in a corner,
-till a day came at last when his master,
-noticing how he was bullied, put him
-in a separate cage all by himself. But
-this loneliness only made him more
-unhappy still; he spent his life in
-lamentation, sitting stock-still all day
-long, with his arms hanging limp, and
-his eyes fixed on vacancy, refusing either
-to eat or drink. This would never do;
-so they left him at liberty to wander at
-will in the house.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_5">5</div>
-<h3 title="">II</h3>
-<p>Oh! but this house was not a bit
-like mine or yours; yet it had doors
-and windows like any other house,
-but so tiny these doors and windows
-were, they were hardly worth mentioning.
-Imagine a house on four wheels,
-and no higher than a man of middle
-size, with three little windows high up
-admitting light and air from outside;
-you entered by a wooden staircase that
-looked more like the ladder of a windmill
-than anything else.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_6">6</div>
-<p>This queer construction rolled most
-part of the year along the high roads,
-jolting, gee-wo, gee-hup! in and out
-of the ruts, and carting about in its interior
-men and animals, to say nothing
-of household stuff&mdash;beds, cooking-stoves,
-chests crammed with clothes,
-and a whole heap of other things. An
-old horse, who was little better than
-a bag of bones, was in the shafts;
-when a halt was called, they let him
-crop the grass alongside the hedgerows.</p>
-<p>It was the funniest thing, being
-hauled along like this, tossing and
-tumbling in this box on wheels where
-the furniture seemed to be always just
-on the point of starting a polka. The
-table would throw up its legs in the
-air, and the chairs turn head over
-heels, while the pots and pans knocked
-together in the corners, making the
-quaintest music, sharp or flat in key
-according to the jolts.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_7">7</div>
-<p>Jack, perched atop of a big press,
-held on tooth and nail to save a
-tumble. More often than not he
-found himself under the table along
-with his good friend Murph, a Stoic
-philosopher, who let nothing ever disturb
-his equanimity, but calmly went
-on beating the bush of his thick woolly
-coat in search of the game that lived
-there. All the while the caravan, bumping
-and thumping with a terrific rattle,
-was tacking and luffing over the rolling
-billows of the stony roads.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_8">8</div>
-<h3 title="">III</h3>
-<p>It is high time to tell you that Jack
-was a dear, pretty little monkey of the
-chimpanzee kind, with tiny, delicate
-hands, nervous and semi-transparent, almost
-like a sick child&rsquo;s. He was no
-bigger, the whole body of him, than
-a pocket-handkerchief, and you could
-have easily hidden him inside your hat.
-He was slim and slender, daintily made,
-with narrow chest and sloping shoulders&mdash;a
-creature all nerves, with a wonderful
-little pale phiz of his own, puckered
-and wrinkled, and long, drooping eyelids,
-greyish-white, and as thin as an
-onion skin, that slowly, rhythmically,
-opened and closed over brown eyes
-ringed with yellow. He bore the
-solemn, serious look of those who
-suffer; his eyes seemed fixed on something
-beyond the visible world, and
-now and again he would pass his long,
-dry fingers across his eyes as if to wipe
-away a tear. He seldom gambolled,
-and never indulged in the grotesque
-contortions of other apes; their restless,
-ceaseless activity seemed foreign to
-his nature, and even his grimaces had
-nothing in common with theirs.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_9">9</div>
-<p>Noise scared him; he was never angry,
-but habitually silent and thoughtful.
-He preferred to lurk alone in dark
-corners, where he would spend long
-hours, squatted on his tail, almost motionless,
-dreaming sadly of some mysterious,
-unattainable future. But, for all
-his unlikeness to his colleagues and their
-comicality, his queer little crumpled,
-wrinkled face never failed to produce
-its effect on the spectators. Jack was
-perfectly irresistible; no one <i>could</i> look
-at him for any length of time without
-bursting out laughing. His aspect was
-at once so piteous and so ridiculous,
-his gaze so pathetic and so grotesque,
-his deadly earnestness so side-splitting,
-while his eyelids would droop suddenly
-ever and anon in so anxious and appealing
-a wink, that the result was comic
-beyond belief. An old, old man&rsquo;s head
-on a baby&rsquo;s body, a mask that was for
-ever changing, twitching, wrinkling,
-with eyes that looked out grave,
-intense, solemn, from beneath a low,
-flat brow crowned by what looked for
-all the world like a wig!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_10">10</div>
-<p>The louder the merriment he excited,
-the more serious Jack became. On show
-days, while the audience was convulsed
-with mirth, the gravity of his mien, the
-careworn look in his eyes, over which
-the lids dropped mechanically at regular
-intervals, as if weighed down with their
-load of melancholy, reached the acme of
-fantastic absurdity.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_11">11</div>
-<p>Alas! men cannot tell what monkeys
-are thinking of. If they knew, they
-would not always laugh. Jack was
-dreaming of the sun, the vast green
-forests, the friends he had left behind;
-he was dreaming of the delights of
-swinging high in the air, cradled in the
-leafy hammocks of the boughs, dreaming
-of the trailing lianas, of the romps
-and games with his fellows throwing
-cocoanuts at one another&rsquo;s heads, and of
-the endless chivyings and chasings from
-tree-top to tree-top above the rolling
-billows of the wind-tossed jungles,
-through which the wild beasts&mdash;elephants,
-panthers, and lions&mdash;plough
-their way like ships on the high seas,
-leaving in their wake a broad furrow of
-floating odours and deep-toned sounds.</p>
-<h3 title="">IV</h3>
-<p>But Jack had a friend, and he never
-embarked on his voyages into the far-away
-dreamland without calling on his
-old chum Murph to join him.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_12">12</div>
-<p>Yes, Murph gambolled with him in
-the tropical jungles, Murph frolicked
-with him in the tall grasses, Murph
-and he amused themselves together at
-never-ending games of play; if ever
-it was granted him to see his native
-land again, he fully hoped to take
-Murph along with him.</p>
-<p>Poor Jack! he did not understand
-that the worthy Murph, acrobat as he
-was, would have found it hard to follow
-him in the lofty regions where his congeners
-are wont to disport themselves,
-nearer to the stars than the earth. Not
-a doubt of it, Murph would have had
-to kick his heels at the foot of a tree,
-while his friend was off and away aloft;
-and the smallest of his perils would have
-been to find himself, on looking round,
-face to face with a python-snake, just
-uncoiling his folds to spring, or else,
-on the river-banks, confronted with the
-gaping jaws of a crocodile.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_13">13</div>
-<p>Murph could play dominoes, tell
-fortunes, hunt for a handkerchief in
-a spectator&rsquo;s pocket, read the paper.
-Murph had many other accomplishments
-besides, but it is far from certain
-that he would have extricated himself
-successfully from a <i>t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te</i> of this sort
-with beasts that could boast neither his
-education nor his manners.</p>
-<p>The liking was reciprocal. From the
-very first Jack had taken a fancy to the
-big woolly-coated dog, as woolly as a
-sheep, who never barked or growled or
-grumbled or showed his teeth&mdash;so unlike
-the other dogs in the menagerie;
-in the same way Murph, the big dog,
-had formed an affection for the well-behaved,
-sad-faced little ape, who never
-pulled his tail and never tried to scratch
-out his eyes.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_14">14</div>
-<p>As it happened, the showman had
-made up his mind to make them perform
-together. Murph was the best
-runner in the troupe; there was nobody
-like him for a round trot or a swinging
-gallop, for wheeling suddenly round
-and dropping to his knees just before
-making his exit, nobody to match
-Murph, always good-tempered and imperturbable,
-always on the look-out,
-with his bright eyes half hid under the
-bushy eyebrows, for a bit of sugar and
-a round of applause.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_15">15</div>
-<p>Jack, for his part, had very soon
-become a brilliant horseman, lissom and
-fearless, an adept at leaping through the
-hoops and vaulting the bars. Thus the
-two seemed made for each other, both
-in body and mind. They bore the
-hardships of the life together, and they
-shared its successes; by dint of standing
-so often back against back and
-muzzle against muzzle, they found
-their hearts brought close together too,
-and became fast friends. Murph was
-never to be seen without Jack; wherever
-Jack was, Murph was there as well;
-they lived curled up on the same rug,
-in the same corner, under the same
-table, Murph licking Jack in the neck,
-and Jack stroking Murph&rsquo;s nose, each
-bound to each in perfect trust and
-amity.</p>
-<h3 title="">V</h3>
-<p>Murph was older than Jack by nearly
-nine years, and his years made him
-nearly as serious-minded as his friend.
-But it was a different sort of gravity.
-Murph was neither morose nor disillusioned;
-his was the gentle seriousness
-of old age. He had seen many things
-since he had been in the world, but life
-did not appear to have left only its
-dregs in him. He still believed in
-springtide, in friendship, in the master&rsquo;s
-kind heart; then he had neither family
-nor native land to regret, for he had
-been born in the menagerie of a father
-and mother broken in like himself to
-circle the trapeze and leap through the
-hoop.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_16">16</div>
-<p>His horizon was bounded by the four
-walls of the caravan in which, as a
-puppy still sucking at his mother&rsquo;s
-breast, he had been carted from fair to
-fair. Day by day he had watched from
-behind the window-panes the long procession
-of cities and countries filing past; he
-had visited most parts of Europe, in company
-with the strange <i>omnium-gatherum</i> of
-apes, goats, parrots, and dogs that at
-each halting-place was the delight of
-the infant population. But he had
-never taken it upon him to covet the
-kingdom of this world; he had never
-craved to roam at liberty through the
-streets; never, in one word, had he
-so much as dreamt of playing truant.
-He was a very learned dog, and, like
-other learned people, he lived absorbed
-in his own thoughts, self-centred within
-the circle of his meditations, seeking
-nothing of things outside.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_17">17</div>
-<h3 title="">VI</h3>
-<p>Murph was a poodle by breed, and
-you might have searched long before
-you found a bigger or better-built one.
-Standing well on his legs, with a good,
-strong, supple back of his own, he
-carried his head high, as a self-respecting
-poodle should. I mean, of course,
-in the days when Murph was still young,
-for since age had crept on him, it <i>would</i>
-droop more or less; but even so, there
-was something proud and dignified
-about its carriage that always attracted
-attention. He walked slowly and sedately,
-as if intent on the solution of
-an ever-insoluble problem. His thick,
-curly fleece clothed his neck like a mane,
-while a stout pair of long drooping
-moustaches gave him the look of an
-old cavalry officer; his skin was smooth
-and polished where the coat had been
-cut very close; he wore heavy ruffles
-round his ankles, and his tail ended in
-a woolly tuft.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_18">18</div>
-<p>Thus accoutred, Murph was a fine-looking
-dog; the curs of low degree
-that came prowling round the van, and
-caught a glimpse of him through the
-crack of the door, gazed at him with
-admiration. He had the majestic port
-of beings destined to greatness; it was
-easy to see he might have been a
-diplomatist, or a great general, if nature,
-in fashioning his lot, had not chosen
-rather to give him the shape of a poodle;
-nor was Murph slow to appreciate and
-enjoy the impression he produced.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_19">19</div>
-<p>Fine fellow as he was, he was not altogether
-free from vanity; the humblest
-animal with which Murph compared
-himself was the lion; he had seen one
-once in a travelling menagerie, and been
-struck by his own likeness to the king
-of beasts. Why, had he not, like the
-lion, a mane about his neck, a tuft to
-his tail, and bracelets of hair about his
-ankles? Had he not likewise his Olympian
-look and superb carriage? By
-dint of a little imagination, Murph had
-come to believe the lion a degenerated
-type of poodle dog.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_20">20</div>
-<p>But let us pass lightly over his
-foibles; every one has his little weaknesses.
-Time, moreover, that damps
-the foolish ardour of mankind and dogkind,
-had tamed our friend&rsquo;s ambitions.
-He was by now as contemplative and
-calm as some wise philosopher satiated
-with the glories of this world. More
-often on his back than on his feet,
-he would watch the younger dogs, his
-juniors in the profession, capering and
-giving themselves the airs of a drum-major
-heading his regiment, without
-any other feeling towards them but
-one of kindly indulgence; and if any
-one else was disposed to rebuke them,
-he would shake his head, as much as
-to say, &ldquo;There, there, we have all of
-us done the like in our day!&rdquo;</p>
-<h3 title="">VII</h3>
-<p>Jack had come as a solace to his
-old age; he had loved him as a friend,
-almost as a son, with a truly fatherly
-affection.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_21">21</div>
-<p>This little suffering, delicate creature,
-so morbidly nervous and excitable, had
-roused in him some mysterious instinct
-of protection, that had grown little by
-little and ended by forming an unbreakable
-bond of brotherhood. Ceaselessly
-he watched over his prot&eacute;g&eacute;, sheltered
-him, defended him, kept for him the
-best of his bodily heat and his warm
-heart. If a bullying animal ran after
-Jack, in one bound the latter was beside
-Murph, who would show a determined
-front, that soon sent the would-be tormentor
-to the right-about. One day,
-indeed, Murph, usually so good-tempered,
-showed his teeth to the master
-himself, who, for some small fault, had
-thought good to lift his whip at the
-little monkey. If Jack was a-cold&mdash;and
-he was always shivering, blow the
-wind from what quarter it might&mdash;quick
-he would slip between Murph&rsquo;s
-paws and cuddle against his breast in
-the warm, cosy place. Murph was
-Jack&rsquo;s special providence.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_22">22</div>
-<p>Thus they had been living for nearly
-half-a-dozen years. Never a cloud had
-dimmed their good accord; never an
-angry snap of the teeth&mdash;never a pettish
-fit; mankind might have taken a lesson
-in the art of friendship from them.
-Thus they had grown old, loving, fondling,
-helping each other, making between
-them the prettiest happy family ever
-known in the world, never weary one
-of the other, but realising the ideal of
-the most perfect union.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_23">23</div>
-<p>Mutual esteem further increased
-their affection. Murph had never seen
-an ape more alert and clever, more
-intelligent and active than Jack; he
-would gladly have stood for hours
-watching him performing his tricks,
-clinging to the cords with his delicate,
-dry little hands, then hurling himself
-into space to alight again on his feet,
-or else holding on by his tail and
-swinging from earth to heaven on the
-trapeze.</p>
-<p>On his side Jack&mdash;Jack the cynic,
-whose lack-lustre eyes seemed incapable
-of any curiosity&mdash;admired his friend
-Murph as a creature of extraordinary
-gifts.</p>
-<p>And what wonderful things the good
-dog could do, to be sure! I have mentioned
-some of them; I could tell of
-many others. Murph could climb a
-ladder; Murph could walk along a line
-of bottle necks; Murph could nose out
-the prettiest lady in the audience;
-Murph could play the cornet-&agrave;-piston;
-Murph could smoke a pipe; Murph
-was almost a man.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_24">24</div>
-<h3 title="">VIII</h3>
-<p>It did one good to see him &ldquo;come
-on,&rdquo; a big pink bow knotted in the
-tufts that adorned his tail. He would
-enter gravely, bow politely to right and
-left, then cast a questioning look at his
-master, quite motionless the while, except
-for a slight quiver of the tail, waiting
-for the conclusion of the introductory
-remarks which the &ldquo;old man&rdquo; never
-failed to address to the audience. At
-last came the loud &ldquo;Hi, Murph!&rdquo;&mdash;and
-the good dog began his evening&rsquo;s
-work.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_25">25</div>
-<p>He could have given points to the
-most experienced actors by his aplomb,
-his punctiliousness, his patient and
-never-flagging attention. Nothing ever
-distracted him from his part. Wags
-would amuse themselves sometimes by
-offering him a lump of sugar, or even
-pitch a sausage or a cake right between
-his paws; but Murph was adamant
-against such temptations. How the
-crowd cheered and clapped hands and
-stamped feet when he went bounding
-from hoop to hoop, so supple and
-nimble and self-possessed, never losing
-step or missing a spring, striking the
-paper with his head fair and square
-in the middle every time, crashing
-through and landing again on his feet,
-gravely and yet so elegantly.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_26">26</div>
-<p>His tricks finished, he would repeat
-his bows to right and left, still quite
-sedate and unintoxicated by the thunders
-of applause. The fact is, Murph
-respected both his audience and himself;
-he knew how to keep his feelings to
-himself&mdash;how different from those ill-trained
-dogs that yelp and bark and
-lose their heads in the hurly-burly,
-quite forgetting that the finest thing
-on earth is to take one&rsquo;s triumph
-modestly.</p>
-<h3 title="">IX</h3>
-<p>But Murph was particularly admirable
-in the tricks he went through with Jack.
-Each of the two friends seemed made
-to help out the other, and each vied
-with the other in sacrificing himself to
-enhance the general effect. Now it
-was &ldquo;Mazeppa&rsquo;s ride&rdquo;; you know&mdash;Mazeppa
-bound on the back of his
-fiery charger and borne on and on in
-wild career over the steppes in a whirlwind
-of flying stones and smothering
-dust. Now it was a <i>powder-play</i> of
-Bedouins, pursuing, retreating, prancing,
-curvetting, rising in their stirrups and
-brandishing their muskets; or else a
-mortal combat between two troops of
-horse, firing at each other, reloading
-and firing again. The spectacle, whatever
-it was, was always thrilling.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_27">27</div>
-<p>Murph would stand waiting in the
-side-scenes for his cue. Suddenly he
-would give a spring, a tremendous
-spring, and like a bomb-shell he was on
-the stage, with mane erect and flashing
-eyes; clearing every obstacle, upsetting
-everything he encountered, animate or
-inanimate, he hurled himself on to the
-boards; on his back, clinging to his
-woolly coat, shaking and shivering,
-teeth hard set and mouth awry, rode a
-little black figure wrapped in a voluminous
-burnous that flapped in the wind.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_28">28</div>
-<p>And bing! bang! bang! as his steed
-dashed by, with all the flash and dazzle
-of red saddle braided with gold, scarlet
-bridle, and red, green, blue spangles,
-shaking the boards, rattling the lustres,
-rustling the curtain, to reiterated cries
-of &ldquo;Hi! hip! hurrah, hurrah!&rdquo; and the
-crack of the whip going off like pistol-shots
-behind, Jack would fire off his
-gun over and over again, till he was
-shrouded in a cloud of smoke, through
-which he could be discerned still tireless,
-still indefatigable, bestriding Murph in
-every possible position, now perched on
-the neck, now on the crupper. He
-seemed made of iron, the frail little
-being! Murph might prance and jib
-and shy, buck-jump and leap fences&mdash;nothing
-could unseat Jack. The performance
-over, the latter would shake
-his little head under its jockey-cap two
-or three times, by way of bow, and so
-exit, as his friend the poodle gave one
-last tremendous bound that carried him
-and his rider out of sight.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_29">29</div>
-<p>The enthusiasm of the spectators
-followed him behind the scenes, and
-the floor trembled and shook under the
-drumming of heavy boots. The applause
-grew deafening, and suddenly
-Jack and Murph made a final whirlwind
-dash across the stage, executed a last
-frantic <i>fantasia</i>&mdash;and retired for good
-and all.</p>
-<h3 title="">X</h3>
-<p>But, alas! Murph was getting old.
-His exertions tired him dreadfully;
-after each performance he had to be
-rubbed down and attended to, or he
-would have lain moaning and groaning
-for an hour.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_30">30</div>
-<p>His master was sorry for him, and
-with deep regret&mdash;for he saw no glimpse
-among his troupe of any talent to take
-the place of the &ldquo;falling star&rdquo;&mdash;he set
-him to do his more quiet tricks&mdash;playing
-dominoes, finding handkerchiefs,
-walking on bottles.</p>
-<p>At the same time he resolved to
-try a young poodle to fill the hole in
-the receipts his good, faithful Murph&rsquo;s
-retirement was bound to make. He
-trained the animal to run in circles, to
-leap through hoops, to clear obstacles,
-and one fine day clapped Jack on his
-back.</p>
-<p>Banco&mdash;that was the poodle&rsquo;s name&mdash;had
-not gone three steps before he was
-bitten, beaten, garrotted, and left blinded
-and bleeding. The master punished
-Jack severely, and presently made a
-fresh attempt. But, no&mdash;Jack <i>would</i>
-not obey; he tore Banco&rsquo;s ear in two, and
-then sprang from the saddle and hid
-himself in a dark corner.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_31">31</div>
-<p>Much the same thing happened at
-every new trial. The whip was no sort
-of use; Jack was not to be moved. At
-last, wearied out, the showman gave in,
-and Jack and Murph remained inseparable,
-living and working together as
-before.</p>
-<p>One night Murph came in from
-his performance utterly worn out, his
-tongue hanging out of his mouth and
-his strength exhausted; his midday
-meal had proved indigestible, and, to
-cap all, the applause to-night had been
-faint and feeble.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_32">32</div>
-<p>Ah! few of us know how actors live
-on that elusive thing, the favour of the
-public, and what renewed force, when
-they are grown old and have one foot
-in the grave already, what fresh vigour
-the smiles of a delighted audience instil
-in their veins, when the blood is beginning
-to run feeble!</p>
-<p>No, the thankless audience did not
-for once acknowledge Murph as their
-old favourite, the veteran of the boards,
-the good and gallant beast that had
-so often been their darling and their
-delight. Under his outward show of
-indifference Murph hid a vast fund of
-sensibility, and the coldness of his audience
-cut him to the quick, coming so
-soon after his late successes. He
-thought the dark night of public neglect
-was beginning for him; he realised his
-loss of vigour, his waning energies, and,
-like other old players, he saw himself
-superannuated, out of date, unknown,
-and misunderstood by a new public,
-become a mere shadow on the scene of
-his former triumphs. Add to this his
-master&rsquo;s evident ill-humour, as he foresaw
-the inevitable moment when his
-old servant would be a mere pensioner
-on his bounty.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_33">33</div>
-<p>Murph staggered off, and fell panting
-on the rug that formed his bed.</p>
-<p>Then Jack came to help him; but,
-alas! even Jack could not console him
-just at first. Murph rejected his
-friend&rsquo;s ministrations, so bitter was his
-rancour against mankind. But his
-pique was soon over, and his wounded
-heart found healing under the gentle
-hand of his lifelong companion.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_34">34</div>
-<h3 title="">XI</h3>
-<p>But the fatal hour had struck; old
-age was upon him. Murph had grown
-infirm; he would take a dozen steps,
-crawling from one corner to another,
-and then sink down helplessly. His
-legs, once so prodigiously strong and
-active, tottered and stumbled from
-sheer weakness. In vain his master&rsquo;s
-voice called him to show his tricks; he
-would struggle to his feet, for an instant
-his head would recover its proud
-carriage of old days; then suddenly,
-his momentary strength exhausted, his
-limbs tingling with rheumatic pains
-that cut like whip-lashes, he would
-slink away to fall back again into the
-lifeless attitude of an aged invalid.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_35">35</div>
-<p>A cloud floated before his eyes, he
-could no longer see things clearly, and
-a growing deafness filled his head with
-a buzz-buzzing that never stopped.
-Life was slowly dying down in the
-old body. He would lie torpid for
-hours and doze away the time in dark
-corners, under tables, where nothing
-would wake him, neither the yapping
-of the other dogs nor the chattering of
-the monkeys, neither the noise of footsteps
-coming and going nor the shrill
-trumpetings of the clown&rsquo;s cornet-&agrave;-piston
-playing &ldquo;Malbrouck s&rsquo;en va-t-en
-guerre!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It was a deep, dreamless sleep. Jack
-did not like it, and would crouch down
-beside him, watching him with sad
-eyes, like a friend at a sick man&rsquo;s bedside.
-Poor beast, he could make
-nothing of this new state of affairs.
-Some change he could not comprehend
-had come over his chum and laid him
-low. He seemed to be mutely questioning
-him, asking him why he never
-nowadays trotted about behind the
-scenes. But it was all Murph could
-do to see his little anxious, sorrowful
-face; he could only view him as if
-through a fog, an indistinct shape of
-sympathy hardly distinguishable from
-surrounding objects.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_36">36</div>
-<p>Nevertheless, he still tried hard to
-make out in the dusk of his blindness
-his kindly comrade of yore; he would
-raise his palsied head, and from the
-depths of his dim eyes, veiled by a
-milky film, dart a pale look of infinite
-gentleness.</p>
-<p>Sometimes the two bushy tufts on
-his forehead dropped right over his
-eyes and further confused his vision.
-But Jack would put them back lightly
-with the tips of his delicate fingers.
-Indeed he never left his side, tickling
-his ears to amuse him, tapping and
-stroking him, ever on the watch, a
-tender-hearted nurse of inexhaustible
-care and foresight.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_37">37</div>
-<p>This lowly being had learnt to love
-like a mother; his little dim soul had
-emerged from its darkness to answer
-his dying comrade&rsquo;s need, and now,
-shining bright in the light of day, was
-working deeds of charity.</p>
-<h3 title="">XII</h3>
-<p>One evening the show pitched on the
-outskirts of a big town. The booth
-was raised, the trestles fixed, the boards
-laid, and the costume-chests emptied of
-their miscellaneous finery.</p>
-<p>Murph lay curled up by himself behind
-the stove; all round him reigned
-a deafening uproar, a rush and scurry of
-feet, a perfect hurricane of noise. The
-master was shouting and scolding; the
-Jack-pudding with his hoarse voice was
-yelping like a dog, mewing like a cat,
-crowing like a cock, getting into trim
-for the patter-speech with which to
-tickle the ears of the groundlings, while
-the general hands were bustling about,
-nailing and hammering, stimulated by
-copious libations of wine.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_38">38</div>
-<p>The monkeys, too, bore their part;
-hearing all this uproar, they joined in
-with a will. Their shrill scolding rose
-above the hammering, and they chattered
-incessantly and shook the bars of their
-cages. The dogs barked, a solemn-faced
-parrot repeated a bad word over
-and over again, while the musicians hired
-for the evening performance drew lugubrious
-notes from their instruments by
-way of keeping their hand in.</p>
-<p>Hurrah! the stage was set up at
-last.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_39">39</div>
-<p>Then the dogs were dressed, the seats
-given a last wipe-down&mdash;and suddenly
-boom! boom! the big drum, furiously
-beaten, rolled out its deep-toned summons.
-Instantly a perfect hurricane of
-discordant, ear-splitting noises was let
-loose in front of the show-tent. Answering
-the deafening rumble of the big
-drum, the fifes and ophicleide awoke,
-the kettledrum began its rub-a-dub, the
-cymbals clashed, and the whole booth
-shivered and shook from floor to roof-tree.</p>
-<p>Shouts, yells, bursts of ribald laughter,
-combined in one deep-toned, incessant
-roar to form the bass, while cat-calls,
-cries of vituperation and repartee, the
-trampling of many feet marking time
-before the doors, the clown&rsquo;s voice rising
-and falling amid a tempest of scuffling
-and kicking, all met and mingled in
-the air above the red glow of the pitch-pine
-torches flaring in the wind, and
-punctuating the general din one never-ceasing
-refrain&mdash;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_40">40</div>
-<p>&ldquo;First seats one franc; second seats
-half a franc; third places twenty centimes&mdash;<i>only</i>
-twenty centimes. Walk up, ladies
-and gentlemen; just about to begin!
-Citizens and soldiers, walk up, walk
-up!&rdquo;</p>
-<h3 title="">XIII</h3>
-<p>A torrent of humanity surged up the
-steps, pushing, shoving, shouting; then,
-suddenly released, poured tumultuously
-over the seats of the auditorium. Then
-the big drum redoubled its efforts, the
-fife blew its shrillest, the ophicleide lost
-all control of its keys, tom-toms and
-hand-bells, frantically beaten, added their
-quota to the din, the kettledrums made
-a terrific rub-a-dub, and the whole force
-of the company, a mad whirl of startling
-colours and flashing spangles, danced a
-fandango on the platform.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_41">41</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Walk up, gentlemen, walk up!&rdquo;
-the master-showman kept yelling; &ldquo;here
-you shall see what you <i>shall</i> see&mdash;marvels
-and miracles you&rsquo;ve never seen the like
-of before! Look at me! I am the
-world-famous Brinzipoff, director-in-chief
-to the Royal Theatre of St. Petersburg
-and to all the crowned heads of
-Europe! Hi! ho! hup! <i>only</i> twenty
-centimes the back seats! Halloa! ha!
-hurrah! here you are, here you are,
-ladies and gentlemen, <i>this</i> way for the
-front seats!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A pause of comparative calm succeeded
-this grand chorus of ear-splitting
-noises.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_42">42</div>
-<p>The close-packed audience was waiting,
-stamping with impatience, for the
-curtain to rise. Then Jack-pudding
-came on, pulled his funny faces, and
-let off his jokes amidst a dropping
-fire of jeers and bravos, and presently
-made way for Esmeralda, the performing
-goat, &ldquo;the unique, the incomparable
-Esmeralda, the very same identical
-animal described by the immortal
-<i>Alexandre</i> Hugo!&rdquo; The musicians
-struck up an appropriate air, mostly
-made up of the vigorous thumping of
-drumsticks on drumheads.</p>
-<h3 title="">XIV</h3>
-<p>Murph had never budged from his
-corner; he was quite insensible as yet
-to the din that had once had such power
-to excite him. His head resting on his
-outstretched paws, he lay asleep, stolid
-and stupid, callous to all external things.
-Round his neck, buried in the dirty,
-matted fleece, now long untouched by
-the curry-comb, were wound Jack&rsquo;s
-arms; for Jack never left his side.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_43">43</div>
-<p>Esmeralda made her exit, and then
-suddenly bombarding the audience with
-a tornado of sound, the big drum rolled
-again, as if to announce some special
-and extraordinary turn.</p>
-<p>Murph knew this furious, frantic
-prelude well; this was always the way
-Mazeppa&rsquo;s headlong ride began. Yes,
-next moment, fifes, drums, bells, tom-toms
-struck up together in a mad concert
-of all the instruments combined,
-whereby the bandsmen strove to depict
-poor Mazeppa&rsquo;s terrors as his galloping
-steed bore him off to be the prey of all
-the fiends of hell!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_44">44</div>
-<h3 title="">XV</h3>
-<p>Then something stirred in the old
-dog&rsquo;s brain. Did he recall his former
-triumphs, the shouts of excited audiences,
-the encores, all the intoxicating
-successes of his life on the boards?
-Did some vision of an applauding multitude,
-of arms outstretched, and voices
-raised in gratitude, amid the crash of
-trumpet and drum, in the hot air thick
-with men&rsquo;s breath and the fumes of
-powder&mdash;did some vision of all this
-pass before the poodle&rsquo;s dying eyes?</p>
-<p>It was a strange awakening, at any
-rate. Murph sprang suddenly to his
-feet, took a leap, and bounded on the
-stage, tail proudly swinging, and head
-erect, Jack hanging on to his woolly coat.
-Delighted, entranced, amazed, the poor
-little beast kept craning over to peer into
-his comrade&rsquo;s face, to see if it was really
-true, and watch the light of life dawning
-and brightening in his deep-set eyes.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_45">45</div>
-<p>So his friend was himself again at
-last! So they were to begin the old
-merry life again, to gallop and leap,
-and risk their necks as in the dear, daredevil
-days of yore! Jack danced and
-pranced on the poodle&rsquo;s back, as if drunk
-with the delight of this miraculous transformation.</p>
-<p>At sight of this great, hollow-flanked,
-unkempt beast, with his dirty, greasy,
-tangled fleece, standing there stark and
-stiff, his legs tottering under him, his
-body shaken from head to foot by a
-nervous tremor, paws sprawling, back
-bending, a few scanty hairs bristling in
-his tail&mdash;when the crowd beheld this
-pitiful ruin, to which Jack, alert and
-debonair, Jack and his grimaces and
-contortions, Jack and his caresses, the
-tender eyes he made, and the close, loving
-embrace he cast about his comrade&rsquo;s
-neck, all added a touch of comedy, at
-once sad and irresistibly ludicrous, a
-mighty shout of laughter arose.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_46">46</div>
-<p>It burst like a rocket, then spread
-from row to row of the spectators, till
-it ended in a tempest of merriment that
-from the audience extended to the stage,
-and burst on the dying comedian who
-stood there.</p>
-<p>Suddenly the dog&rsquo;s legs gave way
-beneath him, and Murph fell over on
-his side. His supreme effort had killed
-him; he had succumbed, as great men
-sometimes will, at the very moment of
-their greatness.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_47">47</div>
-<p>He lay there, the death-rattle in his
-throat, the death-agony shaking his poor
-body in a last, dreadful spasm. He
-opened his eyes wide, unnaturally wide,
-in a stony, sightless stare, as empty as the
-heads of the thoughtless crowd in front.</p>
-<p>Then they came and dragged him
-off the scene.</p>
-<h3 title="">XVI</h3>
-<p>Jack was farther from understanding
-things than ever; his wonder had only
-increased.</p>
-<p>Why had his friend stopped short
-when so well under way? He could
-not tell; he could only gaze at him
-with questioning eyes, his eyelids winking
-very fast in a startled way.</p>
-<p>He pressed closer and closer to
-Murph, and felt a shock as of something
-snapping, a shudder, the quiver
-of a breaking chain. A deeper darkness
-still crept over poor Murph&rsquo;s senses;
-he was dying!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_48">48</div>
-<p>Jack crouched over him, gazing down
-at his friend.</p>
-<p>Just then Murph made a supreme
-effort, half turned his head and peered
-up in his friend&rsquo;s face, while a look of
-tender affection passed over his glazing
-eyeballs, mingled with the reflection of
-the objects he had known all his life.</p>
-<p>The tip of a white, dry tongue came
-out between his teeth, and lengthening
-out like a slender riband, licked Jack&rsquo;s
-paw. It was not drawn back again;
-Murph was dead.</p>
-<p>Close by in the slips the fifes were
-shrilling, the drums beating, the audience
-in front clapping hands and stamping.</p>
-<p>Jack watched beside his friend all
-night. At first he had crept in between
-his paws, as he had always done; but
-the chill of the cold, rigid limbs had
-forced him to abandon his position.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_49">49</div>
-<p>His little brain was sorely exercised,
-you may take my word for that. What
-was this icy chill, like the coldest winter&rsquo;s
-frost, that drove him from his dear
-comrade&rsquo;s bosom, generally so warm a
-refuge? He lay there by Murph&rsquo;s side,
-dozing with one eye open; then, suddenly
-starting wide awake in a panic, he
-would touch his friend with exploring
-fingers to see if he was still asleep.</p>
-<p>Finally, he lost all patience at the
-other&rsquo;s prolonged slumbers; he shook
-him, he plucked at the tufts of his
-woolly coat, he tickled his nose&mdash;gently
-at first, then more roughly. But it
-was all no use.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_50">50</div>
-<p>Then he took Murph&rsquo;s head in his
-little arms; it was as heavy as lead and
-dragged him down all sideways. But
-he would not let it go, holding it hard
-against his breast, examining it all the
-while with surprise and consternation.
-Presently, recalling what he had seen
-his master&rsquo;s wife do, he began to rock
-it to and fro, cradling it softly and
-swaying it slowly, unceasingly from side
-to side, his queer little head swaying in
-time, like an old man&rsquo;s crooning over
-an infant.</p>
-<p>The dawn filtered in through the
-shutters of the van, and a sunbeam
-trembled for an instant in the dead
-poodle&rsquo;s eyes.</p>
-<h3 title="">XVII</h3>
-<p>Jack absolutely refused to be parted
-from Murph. He fell into a fury, and
-bit the men who tried to separate them
-on face and hands. He had to be
-dragged away and shut up in a cage.
-There he lived for three days, whimpering
-like an old man fallen into the
-imbecility of dotage, his haggard eyes
-looking out despairingly from between
-his wrinkled temples, his little
-face all shrivelled like a medlar, his lips
-as pale as wax, and an expression of
-utter life-weariness in every feature.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_51">51</div>
-<p>He would eat nothing, leaving untasted
-the carrots he was once so fond
-of, and refusing to touch either sugar
-or milk. All day long he cowered
-motionless in a corner, moaning, his
-eyes fixed on something invisible to
-others, outside the cage, far away.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_52">52</div>
-<h3 title="">XVIII</h3>
-<p>On the morning of the third day
-they found him stark and cold, his
-angular little skeleton almost piercing
-through the skin. His long, dry hands
-were closed convulsively; the lips were
-drawn back and showed the small,
-white teeth; two deep, moist furrows
-were visible on either side his nose,
-as if, before he died, the ape had been
-weeping for his friend.</p>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/illus02.jpg" alt="THE CAPTIVE GOLDFINCH" width="529" height="800" />
-<p class="caption">THE CAPTIVE GOLDFINCH</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_53">53</div>
-<h2 id="c2">The Captive Goldfinch</h2>
-<h3 title="">I</h3>
-<p>Once upon a time, far away in the
-depths of a great orchard, there lived a
-goldfinch. He was born in the spring,
-amid the fragrance of the fresh leaves,
-and there was not a prettier, sweeter
-little fellow to be found in any of the
-nests round about. His mother longed
-to keep him near her always, she loved
-him so dearly; but then, there is
-nothing so tempting as a pair of wings,
-and once July was come, the month of
-daring flights and dashing enterprises,
-light and agile as only young birds are,
-he left the maternal nest in search of
-distant adventures.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_54">54</div>
-<p>Oh! but it is enough to turn any
-goldfinch&rsquo;s head, this flying free over
-the blue expanse of the skies! Hardly
-had he passed the limits of the orchard
-where he was born ere he clean forgot
-all about his fond mother, her warm
-breast, and her dark eye so full of tender
-solicitude.</p>
-<p>A sort of frenzy seized him. Thinking
-the leaves were as eternal as the
-springtide, he boldly took his flight, and
-away across the sky; soaring ever higher
-and higher, he rose into the heat and
-glory of the sun, into the regions
-where the larks sing and the swallows
-dart, where all the wild wings make a
-sound as of a mighty fan opening and
-shutting.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_55">55</div>
-<p>Wonder of wonders! now the earth
-below him looked round and shining
-like a ball of flowers floating in an
-enveloping cloud of gold-dust; and
-bathed in splendour, he saw the sun
-rise and set in the glory of limitless
-horizons.</p>
-<p>Oh! what glorious flights he had in
-the blue depths of the clouds! what
-games of hide-and-seek among the
-flickering leaves, what cries and songs
-and dartings after gnats, and all the
-delights known only to the little winged
-souls we call birds!</p>
-<p>The nightingales lulled him to sleep
-with the melody of their concerts, the
-cock woke him with the shrill clarion-call
-of his crowing; all the day long he
-flitted and flew amid the endless twittering
-and warbling of linnets, tomtits,
-bullfinches, sparrows, and chaffinches,
-taking <i>his</i> part too in the orchestra, and
-near bursting his little throat to produce
-his finest notes, with that vanity that
-makes us one, and believe Nature has
-implanted in us the soul of an artist&mdash;a
-great, mysterious, unappreciated artist.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_56">56</div>
-<h3 title="">II</h3>
-<p>But the summer passed into autumn,
-and drenching rains succeeded the sunny
-days; the poor goldfinch had to perch
-of nights in rain-soaked trees, where he
-had to sit cold and shivering, feeling his
-feathers getting wet and draggled one
-by one. Furious winds tore away the
-leaves, and lo! one morning when he
-opened his eyes, he saw a new and
-strange world&mdash;the ground was covered
-with snow, and far as sight could reach
-were only white roofs, white hedges,
-and white trees. Winter was come!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_57">57</div>
-<p>Then oh! how bitterly he regretted
-his mother&rsquo;s warm breast! How gladly
-would he have given the joys of the
-past summer to find himself once more
-pressed close to her side and feel her
-heart beating against his in the cosy
-nest! But all summer the wind had
-been busy confusing the pathways of
-the air, so that it was now impossible
-to discover the one that should have led
-him back to the nest; nay, a more
-blighting wind than all the rest blew
-out of the skies; the wind of forgetfulness
-had breathed upon his spirit,
-carrying away the memory of that happy
-road&mdash;the first that young folks forget.
-And now winter grew fierce and fell,
-devastating the orchards, bombarding
-the cottages with hailstones, driving
-hope from all breasts and killing the
-little birds in the nests&mdash;the young
-birds that are the hope of the verdant
-springtide and happy days to come.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_58">58</div>
-<p>The little goldfinch was quite sure
-this horror would never end, that the
-trees would never grow green again,
-that never more would the harvest
-clothe the fields in green, that gaiety,
-sunshine, and youth were vanished away
-for good and all.</p>
-<p>Cowering in the hollow of an old
-branch, he watched the days go by like
-a procession of white phantoms, each
-uglier than the other, and his little feet
-all stiff with cold, his feathers frozen
-together with hoar-frost, sad and shivering,
-he thought many and many a time
-his last hour was come.</p>
-<p>In vain the old birds told him of a
-re-birth; he could not believe in the
-resurrection of things when this dreary
-time of mourning should be over.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_59">59</div>
-<h3 title="">III</h3>
-<p>Little by little, however, the snowstorms
-grew rarer, stray sunbeams
-pierced the murkiness of the heavens,
-and a verdant down, at first light as
-a vapour, but which presently grew
-denser and soon took on the solidity
-and sheen of satin, hemmed round the
-sombre garment of the fields. A mildness
-filled the air&mdash;something restful,
-calm, and kindly, that was like a benediction,
-something the winds distilled,
-the sun diffused, the growing grass and
-humming insects and fragrant violets
-spread abroad, something which, like a
-river fed by a myriad rippling rills,
-gushed forth along the torrent-bed of
-creation.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_60">60</div>
-<p>A door seemed to open in the sooty
-firmament of winter, and this portal,
-rolling back on golden hinges, suddenly
-revealed the sun in his splendour, like a
-king stepping forth to bring peace to
-the peoples. Then sounded the first
-chord in the plain-song of the woods;
-waters, sky, and earth joined in the
-harmony with a deep, long-drawn note
-that rose and swelled, sobbed and sighed,
-grew louder and louder, assumed the
-majestic breadth of an orchestral symphony,
-and waxing gradually, ended by
-filling the depths and heights of air with
-a mighty diapason, as if all mouths, all
-voices, all breaths were raised together
-in one vast unison.</p>
-<p>I leave you to guess if the goldfinch
-lifted up <i>his</i> voice in this universal hymn
-of praise!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_61">61</div>
-<p>So it was true, then! The sun had
-indeed returned! A fine lacework of
-filmy greenery began to clothe the tree
-boles, and the water-springs to sparkle
-in the shy recesses of the forest; the air
-was free; once more he and his comrades
-could laugh and sing, flit idly to
-and fro, pilfer and steal, plunder the
-orchards, peck the flowers, drink in from
-a drop of dew intoxication to last the
-livelong day, and revel in that twice-blessed
-existence that is full of a fine
-frenzy of delight to make the thrushes
-envious.</p>
-<p>Good-bye to the winter covert, the
-crevice in the protecting bough, the
-moss that still keeps the impress of his
-little body! Nothing will satisfy him
-now but the wild fields of space; and
-with a bold sweep of wing the masterful
-goldfinch has left his dolorous refuge,
-never to return. A second piece of
-ingratitude, another act of forgetfulness!
-Yes, it must be allowed a little bird&rsquo;s
-head has small room in it for remembrance.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_62">62</div>
-<h3 title="">IV</h3>
-<p>Good times began again. White and
-pink, the orchards blossomed like bridal
-bouquets. It snowed butterflies&rsquo; wings
-and flower stamens in the tall grass;
-lilacs hung in clusters over the walls;
-like a good priest saying mass, the earth
-donned a golden cope, and all Nature
-trembled and loved.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_63">63</div>
-<p>Then was the time for our pretty bird
-to abandon himself to endless idle wanderings
-and loiterings, hopping hither
-and thither, always on one leg, barely
-lighting and then off again, shaking the
-leaves with an incessant flutter of wings,
-twittering and chirping, flirting with the
-daisies, ruffling the hawthorn, hooting
-the holly. At peep of dawn he never
-failed, when the harebells rang their
-morning summons, to come down to
-attend the good God&rsquo;s church whither
-the flies and sparrows assemble, still
-half asleep and blundering against the
-pillars; next the beetles get under way
-along the roads, teased and tormented
-by the butterflies and ladybirds; then
-the linnet leaves her bough and flies off
-to where the bells tinkle, but of a sudden
-darts back again, finding she has left
-something behind, lost something&mdash;more
-often than not her head&mdash;for the
-poor lady generally wears it wrong side
-before! Thither fly the chaffinches too,
-and the grave-faced oriole, the pretty
-bullfinch, and the chattering cock-sparrow.
-Then the cockchafers come,
-too, too often, alas! trailing after them
-the thread of captivity clinging to them&mdash;the
-burly cockchafers that, with the
-bumble-bee, are the bass voices of the
-underwoods. Plain and woodland are
-all alive, for there is never a creature at
-this fair hour of daybreak, while the
-skies are brightening, but is eager to
-come and make its orison to God in
-His temple.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_64">64</div>
-<p>So the little goldfinch followed their
-example; he preened his feathers, looking
-at himself admiringly in a dewdrop
-the while. Then, his toilet done, like
-all the rest of the world, he bustled off
-to his business and his pleasures.</p>
-<h3 title="">V</h3>
-<p>Goldfinches&rsquo; hearts are made much
-the same as men&rsquo;s; the spring awakes
-both to thoughts of love.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_65">65</div>
-<p>Our hero had remarked in his neighbourhood
-a sweet little hen-goldfinch.
-She lived with her parents in the tall
-branches of an apple-tree; more than
-once, coming home at evening, he had
-admired the fascinating smile of her beak
-at the window, embowered in foliage,
-where she sat watching for his going-by.</p>
-<p>Was it his fancy? Was it really and
-truly a modest blush, or only the rosy
-reflection cast by the setting sun? Yes,
-sure&mdash;he had seen her redden. It needed
-no more to decide him to ask her hand
-in marriage.</p>
-<p>One morning he made his bravest
-toilet, scented himself with lavender and
-thyme, polished up his little claws, and
-in this gallant array he set out, with a
-shining face but an anxious heart, to see
-the parents. They received him politely,
-but could not make up their minds, and
-begged him to come again.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_66">66</div>
-<p>He came again and again, and the
-more he saw of his little sweetheart, the
-deeper he fell in love. She was as pretty
-as seven in her little brown mantle with
-yellow facings, and her dainty head in its
-red hood was poised on her neck with
-an incomparable grace. Saucy and alert,
-she was as slight and slim as a flower
-waving in the breeze, as bright as a
-sunbeam piercing through the leaves, as
-agile as the wind. Dewdrops seemed to
-sparkle in the depths of her little round
-pupils. She was a vision of the spring-tide
-made into a bird!</p>
-<p>True, our hero was no less brave to
-see. Gallant and gay, he cocked his
-beak boldly and carried the colours of
-his race with becoming pride.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_67">67</div>
-<p>At last the wedding-day was fixed;
-but the bride&rsquo;s trousseau was still to
-seek. No doubt birds are able to start
-housekeeping at small cost, neither
-needing tables and chairs nor pots and
-pans; still, there must be some little
-fitting-out to be done.</p>
-<p>And so thought the bride&rsquo;s parents,
-who were prudent people, and loved
-their daughter.</p>
-<p>A fine to-do there was, to be sure, on
-the bough where the old couple had
-their home; a stir that never ceased all
-day long kept the green hangings of
-the house shaking, and the doors banging;
-everlasting comings and goings
-turned the stairways upside down. Pale
-and eager-eyed, the little hen-goldfinch
-awaited the happy hour when she could
-fly away with her mate.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_68">68</div>
-<h3 title="">VI</h3>
-<p>Soon the news of the betrothal spread
-amongst the neighbours. The nearest
-trees were all agog; nothing was to be
-heard but twitterings and whisperings,
-not to mention backbitings, for envy is
-to be found everywhere in this world.
-The tomtits above all took a delight
-in saying evil of the bride, calling her
-a silly, insipid little thing; they chirped
-and chattered, whistled and whispered,
-pecking and pulling to pieces the poor
-innocent child&rsquo;s good name. In vain
-the bullfinches, good, decent bodies, tried
-to interfere: the tomtits&rsquo; cackle quite
-drowned their grave remonstrances. The
-critics had enlisted a naughty grisette, a
-chaffinch, a minx who had kicked over
-the traces in her day, and was renowned
-for her spiteful tongue; a blackbird too
-had joined the conspiracy, and now,
-perched all together on a high branch,
-from which they could spy upon the
-comings and goings of the goldfinch
-household, they kept up a famous
-uproar.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_69">69</div>
-<p>The Master of Ceremonies of the
-birds&rsquo; parish arrived in the afternoon;
-he had come to inquire the hour at
-which the young folks were to be married,
-and if they wanted choristers to
-attend. It was agreed to engage a lark
-and a chaffinch; nightingales were too
-expensive. A pretty carpet of green
-would be laid down, as green as on the
-finest summer&rsquo;s day; the porch was to
-be decorated with anemones, and the
-chancel with daisies; the sun would be
-ordered for five o&rsquo;clock, to make a grand
-show of purple and gold. Of course
-the drones would be at the organ, and
-they would ask the wind to give them
-a helping hand by roaring in the pipes.
-The harebells would strike up a merry
-peal at peep of day, and ring till the
-bridal pair arrived. The holy-water
-stoup would be filled with dew. As
-for incense, the violets would see the
-censers were well filled, and the bees
-would keep them swinging all through
-the ceremony.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_70">70</div>
-<p>I forgot to tell you that a wedding
-breakfast had been ordered, at which,
-besides flies and worms galore, they
-were to regale themselves on a cricket
-and a locust&mdash;a magnificent spread indeed.
-The nearest spring would supply
-the wine; they were to have corn-berries
-for dessert, and the table would be laid
-in the thickest of an apple-tree in full
-blossom, where a cloud of gnats was
-always buzzing and making beautiful
-music. A yellowhammer was invited;
-he was a rollicking blade, and there was
-nobody to match him at singing a comic
-song.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_71">71</div>
-<p>All was going as well as could be;
-yet how long seemed the hours of waiting
-to the little bridegroom! To and
-fro he flitted, up and down the roads
-he sauntered, trying to cheat his impatience
-by incessant movement; presently
-he would light on a bough and
-fall a-dreaming, while his little heart
-beat fast and furiously.</p>
-<p>Every minute he kept glancing up
-at the great dial God has set in the sky,
-and which only the birds can read; but
-the sunbeam which is the hand of this
-aerial clock would <i>not</i> move fast enough
-for his impatience. He could only bewail
-his lot, and force himself to drop
-asleep to kill the lagging time. He
-even went to see the village clockmaker,
-an old cuckoo, a greybeard bird with
-a nid-nodding head, who all day
-long used to strike the hours with
-exasperating punctuality, and besought
-him to quicken up the evening a bit.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_72">72</div>
-<p>But the cuckoo shook his head.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Little madcap,&rdquo; he told him, &ldquo;am
-I to put out all the folk of the countryside
-for you? Don&rsquo;t you know everything
-goes on by rule and regulation
-among your neighbours, and that each
-hour brings its own tasks? Why, whatever
-would they think if I rang vespers
-before the great timepiece of the heavens
-had indicated the time of twilight?
-What would the mole say if I brought
-him out of his underground house,
-looking black as a collier, before nightfall,
-and if suddenly the sun dazzled
-him with its light&mdash;poor purblind fellow
-who had never in his life dared look at
-anything but the moon?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>So, the cuckoo having shown him
-the door, he wandered off again, flitting
-from hedgerow to hedgerow, burning
-with impatience.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_73">73</div>
-<h3 title="">VII</h3>
-<p>A heap of little white grubs lay under
-the hedge of an orchard. More for lack
-of anything else to do than because he
-was hungry, the goldfinch flew up and
-fell upon it.</p>
-<p>Ah! have a care, pretty birdie. A
-man was busy thereabouts just now.</p>
-<p>But, alas, it is too late; a whole life
-of happiness is ruined by a moment&rsquo;s
-curiosity. Hardly had the poor fellow
-plunged his beak in the mass when a
-string pulled the catch; down comes the
-trap, and he is a prisoner. Then the
-shape crouching behind a tree comes out
-from its hiding-place; it approaches,
-looms larger and larger, turns into a big
-bearded man, who opens enormous great
-hands, seizes the poor bird, and claps it
-in a cage, grinning a broad grin of satisfaction.
-Good-bye, little bride! Good-bye,
-marriage-feast and wedding-march!
-Good-bye, woods and orchards, gardens
-and flowers! Good-bye, twittering nests!
-Good-bye, life and love!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_74">74</div>
-<p>Consternation nailed our little hero
-to the spot; something had befallen
-him he could make nothing of; he
-gazed at the cage with haggard eyes,
-too scared to think.</p>
-<p>Ah! if only he had lost his memory!
-But this consolation was denied him.
-He shook himself, dashed at the bars,
-pecked and bit at them, thinking maybe
-they would open and leave him free as
-air again.</p>
-<p>But no; the bars would <i>not</i> give
-way.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_75">75</div>
-<p>Then he shuddered from head to
-foot. Anger and terror frenzied his
-little brain. He flew wildly at the
-bars; but all in vain&mdash;the cage was
-solid and strong.</p>
-<p>Suddenly he realised his calamity,
-and, filled with a perfect frenzy of despair,
-with panting breath and trembling,
-shuddering limbs, he hurled himself
-at the bars, beat his head against the
-wires, tearing and lacerating beak and
-claws, flew madly up and down, breaking
-his wings, till, battered and bruised, his
-feathers all dripping with blood, exhausted
-and out of breath, he rolled half-dead
-into a corner.</p>
-<p>It was all over!</p>
-<p>While joy was paramount yonder in
-his bride&rsquo;s home, while song and laughter
-were the order of the day, while preparations
-for the wedding&mdash;bitter mockery!&mdash;were
-completing, and all things, leaves
-and butterflies and nests, were a-flutter,
-the poor bridegroom lay in his agony
-amid the silence of a prison.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_76">76</div>
-<h3 title="">VIII</h3>
-<p>Evening lit up the sky with its gleaming
-tints of copper; little by little the
-chattering family groups fell silent, and
-the darkling trees assumed the look of
-long-drawn, solemn colonnades. Alas!
-it was not under this familiar aspect that
-night fell for our captive goldfinch. A
-dirty whitewashed wall, on which hung
-strangely shaped objects, replaced the
-sable curtain spangled with stars that
-twilight spreads over the countryside.
-A guttering, flaring candle smoked on
-the table, bearing how faint a resemblance
-to the silver moon! and by its
-sordid light the hard-hearted wretch
-who had robbed him of his liberty was
-moving to and fro.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_77">77</div>
-<p>Ah! what right had he, this miserable
-birdcatcher, this highway robber, to tear
-him from the free air, the hedgerows
-and the green fields? Tiny though he
-be, is the bird therefore of no import to
-the leaves, the winds, the trees, which
-without him would be voiceless? Has
-the blue sky no need of his outspread
-wings, his echoing song, the flutter of
-his plumage?</p>
-<p>What use the pool glittering in the
-woodland, if he was not there to dip his
-beak in it and absorb in a drop of water
-the red of dawn, the gold of noon, the
-deep shadow of the quivering leaves?
-Is not a little bird the less a disaster in
-the forests and orchard-closes, a voice
-silenced in the symphony of nature, a
-furrow left barren in the fields of space,
-a bright point vanished from the azure
-sky? Is not the universe disturbed for
-the loss of a little creature wherein all
-nature is summed up and glorified?</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_78">78</div>
-<p>The man blew out the taper, and a
-moonbeam shot in at the garret-window
-and fell on the poor captive.</p>
-<p>It formed, as it were, a luminous rail
-on which his thoughts glided; and
-they always travelled in one direction&mdash;to
-his little <i>fianc&eacute;e</i>, who at that
-moment, softly cradled by the night
-wind, was fast asleep and dreaming of
-the great to-morrow.</p>
-<p>The moon paled and daylight appeared.</p>
-<p>Yonder no doubt all was ready; the
-harebells were ringing their peal, the
-drones were organing their deep music,
-while the trembling bride, white as the
-lilies, was asking herself why her bridegroom
-did not come.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_79">79</div>
-<p>The cuckoo clanged out the hour
-of dawn. One and all were ready for
-the f&ecirc;te; only <i>his</i> arrival was waited
-for.</p>
-<p>The hours slipped by without his
-appearing, and little by little the murmuring
-and muttering, low at first, grew
-louder and louder, and rose into a
-perfect tempest of cries and jeers and
-gibes. The chaffinches were jubilant, the
-parents disconsolate. And what of her,
-the poor, despairing bride? Her pretty
-innocent eyes could not bear the light
-of day; stricken to the heart by this
-unaccountable desertion, she was borne
-away fainting, half dead with shame and
-sorrow.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_80">80</div>
-<h3 title="">IX</h3>
-<p>Dark days followed. At first only
-a prisoner, his cruel master now made
-him into a galley-slave. He put a
-chain round his foot, and condemned
-him to the servitude of the car and
-cord. So drag your weight, work your
-pulley, haul in your little car, poor
-outcast! Who has not seen the monstrous
-spectacle&mdash;one of God&rsquo;s creatures,
-created to fly free in the realms of air,
-coming and going on a toy platform,
-a ring about its leg? Who has not
-seen the unhappy captive, to win meat
-and drink, drawing up by little laborious
-jerks the water-jar and car, its
-eye gleaming with pitiful longing, gaining
-its subsistence by a never-ending
-useless martyrdom? Only he who
-has seen the cruel sight knows to
-what lengths the cruelty of bad men
-can go.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_81">81</div>
-<p>This was the fate of the poor goldfinch.</p>
-<p>The man had given him a cage to
-imitate a Swiss ch&acirc;let, in front of which
-was a little terrace. On the terrace
-was fixed a post, with a pulley attached
-worked by a thread. This thread the
-captive had to pull in with his beak,
-little by little, till the little drinking-bucket
-hooked to the other end rose to
-the level of the platform; then putting
-his foot on the cord, he had to hold
-it in place and so drink a drop, bitter
-as a tear, hurriedly and fearfully, lest
-the thread should slip from under his
-claw and suddenly let the bucket run
-down again.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_82">82</div>
-<p>More often than not the bucket
-upset in its descent, and then he had to
-go without water for the rest of the
-day.</p>
-<p>A second thread made it possible for
-him to haul to the edge of the platform
-a miniature car running on an
-inclined plane outside the cage; this
-held his bird-seed. What a struggle it
-was to drag it up! At each snap of
-the beak the car would ascend, but oh!
-so slowly. By successive jerks, never
-tiring, never stopping, with straining
-neck, working with the adroitness of a
-galley-slave, and clapping his foot on
-the cord after each pull, he had to drag
-up the accursed car, which would sometimes
-elude him and dash down the
-incline again, spilling the seed and
-mocking all his laborious efforts!</p>
-<p>A hundred times a day he was forced
-to begin the horrid task again.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_83">83</div>
-<p>Many a time the goldfinch resolved
-to give in and die of hunger; but
-hunger is a terrible thing, and no
-sooner did its pangs begin to pinch his
-little stomach than he would seize the
-cord afresh and pull for dear life.</p>
-<h3 title="">X</h3>
-<p>So passed the hours for the once
-happy bridegroom. Never a chirp
-now, never a flirt of the tail! Disconsolate
-and draggled, every feather of
-his little body betraying the misery of
-his broken life, he seemed an embodiment
-of the bitter protest of the winged
-creation against the cruelty of man.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_84">84</div>
-<p>A feeble ray of sunshine used to
-flicker on the garret walls towards
-midday; he would watch for it, and
-when it came at last, shooting a slender
-pencil of gold, in which the dust-motes
-danced athwart the gloom of his prison-house,
-it was like a brief instant of
-recovered freedom; for a moment he
-forgot his chain, his car, his slavery, and
-away he flew in fancy to the great
-orchards that showed their black masses
-of shadow on the horizon. Alas! the
-sunbeam slid along the wall and disappeared,
-and the appalling reality came
-home to him again.</p>
-<p>What had he done to deserve this
-cruel fate? To filch a grain of corn
-here and there, to forage in the kitchen-gardens,
-to play the truant, to make
-the most of life, all day long to fly
-hither and thither, the free denizen of
-air&mdash;was this a crime? He never
-reflected how he had forgotten his
-mother, and that this crime alone
-deserved the sternest expiation.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_85">85</div>
-<p>His master was one of those good-for-nothing
-workmen who make the
-whole week a series of Sundays. One
-night he forgot to come home at all;
-next morning the ill-starred captive
-found bucket and car both empty. No
-use hauling them up to him and pecking
-about in every corner; never a
-grain of seed was to be found, never a
-drop of water! Then indeed he knew
-the torments of hunger and thirst. In
-vain he toiled at his cruel, slavish task;
-the car ascended, the bucket rose, but
-without bringing solace to his famished
-cravings. His tools refused their office;
-with pale eyes of consternation the poor
-prisoner gazed at them, and could not
-understand.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_86">86</div>
-<p>As if by the irony of fate, the window
-had been left wide open, and
-he could plainly see the green of the
-nearest trees, in which the birds, his
-more fortunate brethren, were squabbling.
-He saw the sun slowly sink and
-the shadows of the house-roofs lengthen.
-Then a frenzy of madness seized him;
-with quick, frantic pecks he tore at the
-chain riveted round his leg, and by sheer
-fury burst its rings.</p>
-<p>To dart to the window, to sail away
-for the paling blue of the sky, was the
-work of an instant; but next minute he
-fell to earth again, so weak was he with
-hunger. Luckily, not far from the
-foot of the tree where he had dropped,
-a flock of pigeons was enjoying a feast
-of oats at the door of a stable. He
-joined the band, and in a very short
-while had plumped his crop to such
-good purpose that he felt his full strength
-come back to him.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_87">87</div>
-<p>A long time had passed since he had
-quitted his bonny bride, and he trembled
-to think what changes the days might
-have brought with them in her life.
-Still the longing to see her again
-grew so irresistible after he had been
-free an hour that, even if she had
-forgotten him, he was fain to bid her
-farewell.</p>
-<p>And pr-r-r-rt! he was off like the
-wind.</p>
-<p>All the world was asleep when he
-arrived&mdash;even the tomtits, those inveterate
-gossips, who love to loiter at their
-doors long after dark, talking scandal
-of their neighbours.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Little bride! little bride!&rdquo; he
-breathed softly.</p>
-<p>A yellowhammer answered him in a
-cross voice&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Third tree to the left in the next
-orchard!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_88">88</div>
-<p>Why, actually the goldfinches had
-removed! He hurried to the tree indicated,
-and once again, &ldquo;Little bride!&rdquo;
-he whispered.</p>
-<p>A faint cry answered, and next moment
-his sweetheart appeared.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I was waiting for you,&rdquo; she cried.</p>
-<p>Ah! these were happy moments that
-made up for all their sufferings. He
-told her all his adventures; she told
-him how her faith in him had never
-faltered. They woke the parents,
-who warmly welcomed the returned
-prodigal.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Just think,&rdquo; said the mother, &ldquo;those
-odious chaffinches positively forced us
-to leave the neighbourhood. Life was
-become unbearable; morning, noon,
-and night it was nothing but insulting
-remarks. But now you are come back
-again! So these spiteful folks will be
-finely confounded.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_89">89</div>
-<p>Another old hen-goldfinch was there,
-who was gazing at him with wet eyes
-and wings all a-tremble.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; cried our hero, &ldquo;why, it
-is mamma, my poor mother I had forgotten
-so long!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Yes, it was his mother indeed: his
-little bride, after his disappearance, had
-never wearied till she found her, telling
-herself that, with her for company, there
-would be two of them to wait for his
-return.</p>
-<p>Their happiness was complete.</p>
-<p>Two days after, but soberly this time,
-without drum or trumpet, the wedding
-was solemnised.</p>
-<p>The story has its moral, as every
-story should. It was the goldfinch&rsquo;s
-father-in-law who undertook
-to draw it for his young friend&rsquo;s
-benefit.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_90">90</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Son-in-law,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I hope you
-will teach your little ones two lessons.
-The first is&mdash;never forget your mother;
-the second&mdash;beware of traps in the
-hedgerows.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/illus03.jpg" alt="STRANGE ADVENTURES OF A LITTLE WHITE RABBIT" width="549" height="800" />
-<p class="caption">STRANGE ADVENTURES OF A LITTLE WHITE RABBIT</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_91">91</div>
-<h2 id="c3">Strange Adventures of a Little White Rabbit</h2>
-<p>Four little rabbits had seen the light
-in a hutch snugly stuffed with straw,
-where they lived cosy and warm by
-their mother&rsquo;s side.</p>
-<p>They were pretty, plump little things,
-all four as fat as butter, and just as
-well-liking one as the other; but while
-three of them had white bellies and
-dappled backs, one was white all over
-from head to foot, and his mother was
-mighty proud of his beauty, you may
-be sure.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_92">92</div>
-<p>You could not have found so exquisite
-a rabbit, no, not for three leagues
-round, and every day he grew handsomer
-and handsomer, like a king&rsquo;s son.
-Two great rubies glittered in his fine
-eyes, and his teeth were just like the
-edge of a saw; yes, and he had a
-moustache&mdash;three hairs, which made
-him, oh! so conceited.</p>
-<p>Mother Rabbit loved them all tenderly;
-but she loved Jannot, her firstborn,
-best of all.</p>
-<p>To begin with, he was the eldest;
-then she had had more trouble to rear
-him, and ill-health always draws a
-closer bond between mother and child;
-besides, she was inordinately proud of
-his white coat, and dreamt he was
-destined for greatness. What form
-would it take? This she could not
-tell. Perhaps he would take first prize
-at a show&mdash;perhaps he would found a
-breed of white rabbits like himself. She
-lavished every delicacy upon her darling,
-and his prospective honours consoled
-her for the triviality of everyday
-existence.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_93">93</div>
-<p>They would soon be two months old,
-and that is the age when young bunnies
-are taken from their mothers. She
-dreaded the moment of parting; Jannot
-would have to go with the rest.</p>
-<p>In fact, all four were weaned by this
-time; they were beginning to gnaw at
-carrots now, and would often try to get
-out through any gaps they could find,
-for they longed to see the great world.
-The hutch had open bars, and they could
-look out into a kitchen-garden with
-lettuce-beds, and beyond that see a flock
-of ducks paddling about beside a brook.
-There was an apple-tree to the right,
-with a cloud of sparrows always squabbling
-round it. To the left an outhouse
-door gave a glimpse of cows and horses,
-dimly outlined in the gloom of the
-interior. There were cats, too, stretching
-themselves in the sun or stalking
-sedately up and down.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_94">94</div>
-<p>At peep of day the whole farmyard
-woke up; noon brought a momentary
-silence; then, as the sun grew hotter,
-sparrows chirped, ducks quacked, cows
-lowed, and the din went on uninterruptedly
-till dusk.</p>
-<p>The little bunnies would fain have
-joined the other animals; they would
-gaze wistfully at the birds flying high
-in the air, and the sight of the cattle
-marching off cheerfully for the pastures
-gave them a craving for the green
-fields.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_95">95</div>
-<p>How big the farmyard seemed, to be
-sure! and how amazed they were when
-Mother Rabbit told them there were
-other places bigger still which they
-could not see. She described the woods
-and ravines and burrows, for she knew
-these well enough from hearsay; why,
-they could not have travelled round the
-world in a whole day, so enormous it
-was! Squatted round their mother, the
-youngsters listened to all this, and their
-hearts almost failed them.</p>
-<p>But not so Jannot; <i>his</i> imagination
-was stimulated by what he heard.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; he would cry, &ldquo;will they
-never let me out, that I may have <i>my</i>
-chance of seeing all these wonderful
-things?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Then his mother was alarmed; but
-he would kiss her and promise he would
-come back again directly, once he had
-seen the world. But she only shook
-her head, and could not make up her
-mind to let him go.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_96">96</div>
-<p>&ldquo;The world is full of cruel beasts;
-you will never, never escape its
-dangers.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I have teeth and claws.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So have they, child; but their teeth
-are longer and their claws sharper than
-yours. Restrain your eagerness; time
-enough yet to go forth into the wide,
-wide world.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He would shake his head impatiently
-and fall to gnawing at the woodwork of
-the hutch; in fact his mind was full of
-guilty thoughts of escape. At last, one
-fine morning, when his mother was tidying
-the litter, he made a bolt for it.</p>
-<p>Scarcely had he gone a hundred steps
-when he was arrested by a startling
-sight. He beheld half-a-dozen hairy
-brown skins nailed up in a row. They
-still retained the shape of the bodies
-they had once clothed, and little trickles
-of blood ran down the wall where they
-hung. There was no mistaking; they
-had belonged to rabbits like himself.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_97">97</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, dear!&rdquo; he thought, &ldquo;so they
-kill rabbits, do they?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But this sinister sight was quickly forgotten
-in the variety of new wonders he
-encountered. A pig was grunting on a
-dunghill, with a young foal kicking at
-him and destroying his peace of mind,
-and a goat gambolling near by; one
-after the other he saw a rat, a dog, a
-calf, and a flock of pigeons that suddenly
-took wing.</p>
-<p>They rose in the warm morning air,
-glittering in the sun, flying so high
-he soon lost sight of them altogether.
-Looking down again, he noticed a cat
-watching him, and remembered he had
-seen her in the garden, prowling among
-the lettuces.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_98">98</div>
-<p>The width of the yard was between
-them, and he had a barn behind him.
-The cat lay crouched on the kitchen
-steps; she never moved, but her eyes
-were wide open and glittered cruelly.
-Then she got up slowly.</p>
-<p>Jannot believed his last hour was
-come; he thought of his mother, and
-shut his eyes. A furious barking made
-him open them again. The cat was
-gone; with one bound Jannot sprang
-into a cart round which a bull-dog was
-racing with his mouth wide open, and
-leapt from there into the barn.</p>
-<p>Inside the straw was piled up mountains
-high, so close to the wall he had
-some difficulty in forcing a passage;
-still, it was only betwixt the wall and
-the straw he could hope to find a safe
-refuge. He durst not come out again,
-and stayed there in hiding till nightfall.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_99">99</div>
-<p>Then he plucked up spirit, took a
-step or two in the dark, and came upon
-a hole close down to the floor through
-which he could slip.</p>
-<p>What a sight met him outside! The
-country lay white in the moonlight,
-house-roofs, pools, watercourses glittering
-in the beams. The leaves quivered
-restlessly in the night wind, and the
-distant clumps of brushwood stood out
-in clear-cut outline. It was very
-beautiful; but look! suddenly, close
-to him, two long, black, moving
-shadows scared him out of his seven
-senses.</p>
-<p>The cat!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_100">100</div>
-<p>Jannot never stopped till he reached
-the woods, after darting across the
-garden, leaping a brook, scurrying over
-the fields, breathless and exhausted.
-Vague shadows loomed around him;
-flying footsteps sounded about his
-path; suddenly, by the startled cry that
-escaped a little creature which halted
-right before his nose, he knew he was
-in presence of another rabbit.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I am Jannot,&rdquo; he said, in a low
-voice; &ldquo;perhaps we are relations.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>From the first moment the rabbit saw
-him, he loaded him with polite attentions,
-declared he loved him already,
-and offered him the hospitality of his
-house; so the two of them jogged off
-in company. But after a moment or
-two Goodman Rabbit stopped dead,
-saying&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;d best go by the clearing, and
-I through the scrub; it will never do
-to let the polecat see us. We will meet
-at the foot of a great oak you can&rsquo;t
-help seeing.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_101">101</div>
-<p>Jannot followed his companion&rsquo;s
-advice; but no sooner were they together
-again than the rabbit, after fifty yards
-or so, cried out once more&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The place we&rsquo;re in now is just as
-dangerous as the other. A wild-cat
-lurks hereabouts, and slaughters whatever
-comes under his claws. You go
-that way; I&rsquo;ll go this. A rock you
-will see will serve as rendezvous.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They reached the rock at the same
-moment, and then trotted off again.
-They were just coming to a coppice of
-young trees with narrow winding paths
-through it when his experienced friend
-called a halt for the third time, crying&mdash;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_102">102</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, we did well not to travel side
-by side. My advice is that we go each
-his own way again, without bothering
-about one another, till we come to the
-crossroads you&rsquo;ll find down yonder.
-Ah! d&rsquo;ye see those snares? Mind you
-don&rsquo;t get into them, for if the polecat
-and the wild-cat are lords of the lands
-we have just been through, the poacher
-rules here as monarch paramount.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The advice was good, but its giver
-had no time to finish it; he was caught
-by the foot in one of the gins, and the
-more he struggled to get free, the
-tighter the dreadful noose was drawn.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Help! help!&rdquo; he clamoured.</p>
-<p>But already Jannot was off and away,
-panic-stricken; he ran on and on, never
-once stopping till he won back as quick
-as ever he could to the edge of the
-woodland where he and Master Rabbit
-had first met.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If the world is so strewn with
-dangers,&rdquo; he thought to himself, &ldquo;better
-to live in peace and quietness in a hutch.
-What use in roaming the woods, when
-death is at the journey&rsquo;s end?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_103">103</div>
-<p>Then in his mind&rsquo;s eye he saw his
-mother again and his brothers; and the
-safe shelter where they awaited his
-return seemed a far-off, happy refuge he
-could hardly hope to reach.</p>
-<p>Field-mice and weasels and martens
-were stirring in the dark underwood and
-shaking the leaves. Suddenly a new
-terror, more appalling than all the rest,
-gripped him; he thought he was being
-pursued. Then he dashed out into the
-plain that lay clear in the moonlight,
-and, with ears pricked, thinking all the
-while he could hear at his heels the unwearying,
-unflagging trot, trot of the
-fell creatures that were on his track, he
-pushed through hedges, leapt ditches,
-climbed banks.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_104">104</div>
-<p>He had his back to the moon, and
-two black shadows, the same he had
-seen at the outset of his escapade,
-stretched out before him; this time
-they went in front, never leaving him,
-and sometimes lengthening out to portentous
-proportions.</p>
-<p>No doubt about it, a whole host of
-enemies was after him!</p>
-<p>At last his breath failed him and he
-sank down in despair, waiting for death;
-but as it was a long time coming, he
-began to recover a little courage, and,
-turning round, stared hard into the
-night.</p>
-<p>Not a thing was visible amid the loneliness
-of the fields, and the moon seemed
-to be grinning down at him from the
-sky.</p>
-<p>Then he discovered that the two
-shadows that had terrified him so were
-only the shadows of his own two ears.
-This was mortifying!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_105">105</div>
-<p>Day dawned by slow degrees; and
-presently he found himself back by the
-brook, the ducks, the cow-shed and the
-kitchen-garden.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mind this,&rdquo; his mother told him,
-&ldquo;there&rsquo;s no adventures so fine as to
-match the pleasure of being safe at
-home, among the folks who love you.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_106">106</div>
-<h2 id="c4">&ldquo;Monsieur Friquet&rdquo;</h2>
-<p>Nature had not been generous to the
-poor thing; Claire was born a hunchback,
-and a hunchback she had grown
-up&mdash;if indeed she can be said ever to
-have grown up&mdash;an undersized, sickly,
-suffering creature, who at thirty was
-not as high, from head to heels, as a
-little girl of nine.</p>
-<p>She had been left an orphan when
-quite a child; first her mother died,
-and her father had not survived her
-long. So Claire had had to face the
-world alone, with her own ten fingers
-for all her fortune. Her parents had
-never spoilt her with overmuch indulgence.
-They were poor, hardworking
-folks, who hardly knew what it was to
-smile. Even when they were alive, she
-had led a lonely enough existence. Still,
-after their death, she missed the life
-lived in common, the destitution shared
-with others, the bustle of the hugger-mugger
-household, where scolding and
-grumbling were by no means unknown.
-Her parents were her parents after all;
-with them life had its happy moments,
-now and then.</p>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/illus04.jpg" alt="&ldquo;MONSIEUR FRIQUET&rdquo;" width="570" height="800" />
-<p class="caption">&ldquo;MONSIEUR FRIQUET&rdquo;</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_107">107</div>
-<p>They were hard times now for Claire.
-Shut up all day long in the unhealthy
-air of workrooms, she seemed to grow
-more and more emaciated, and smaller
-and smaller every day. Nobody ever
-thought of pitying the poor, uncouth
-being who sat sewing apart from the
-rest, who, with a gentle humility,
-always sought the shade, where her
-deformity was less noticeable; nobody
-ever dreamed of asking if there was a
-soul within that misshapen body, and
-her great eyes&mdash;light blue, sickly-looking
-eyes, which she would raise slowly
-and languidly, as if afraid of the light&mdash;encountered
-only mockery and indifference
-from all about her.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_108">108</div>
-<p>The tall, handsome girls who sat
-round the sewing-table had nothing but
-hard words for her; scarcely knowing
-why, yielding to a cruel impulse which
-a little thought, if nothing better, would
-have checked, they treated her vilely.</p>
-<p>Little by little she had become the
-general butt of the workroom; one
-dismal day in December a last outrage
-was added to all the rest.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_109">109</div>
-<p>An ill-conditioned cripple, a girl who
-had borne Claire a grudge from the
-first day of her coming, because of their
-sisterhood in misfortune, which caused
-twice as many gibes to be levelled at
-her own club-foot, contrived to secrete
-a piece of silk, in order to accuse Claire
-of the theft. She declared stoutly she
-had taken the piece and hidden it inside
-her dress. In vain the poor girl,
-bursting into tears, swore she was innocent.
-The head of the shop ordered
-her to strip. She begged piteously for
-mercy, clasping her hands in supplication;
-but the cripple moved heaven
-and earth to set the others against her.
-Rough hands were laid on her; she
-was bruised and shaken and hurt; all
-she could do was to stammer out
-appeals to their compassion; she was
-nearly fainting, and the tears were
-streaming down her cheeks. No use;
-the poor back was bared, and while the
-mistress was searching her, the pretty,
-rosy-cheeked workgirls were feeling the
-deformity curiously, examining what
-like a hump exactly was.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_110">110</div>
-<p>Claire had buried her face in her
-hands; her hair had fallen about her
-ears, and there she stood, quite still
-and helpless, terrified at the angry faces
-about her; her throat was dry and her
-whole body quivering with overmastering
-agitation. She wished she was dead.</p>
-<p>The mistress&rsquo;s hard voice dismissing
-her roused her at last; she got to her
-feet amidst the jeers of the workroom,
-buttoned her frock, collected
-her needles and scissors, and, shuddering
-and shaking, catching her feet in
-her skirts, she hurried to the door;
-there was a loud buzzing in her ears,
-and she seemed to see everything through
-a sort of mist.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_111">111</div>
-<p>She dashed downstairs two steps at a
-time and reached the riverside quays,
-looking in her despair for an unfrequented
-bridge from which an unhappy
-hunchback might throw herself into the
-water and not be noticed. But everywhere
-she seemed to see mocking eyes
-pursuing her.</p>
-<p>By degrees she began to think of the
-dreadful publicity of such a death; she
-saw herself dragged from the river, laid
-on the crowded bank, under the eyes of
-a throng of curious onlookers, in the
-glaring light of day.</p>
-<p>No, what she craved was a quiet death
-in some dark corner, where she would
-be sheltered from prying looks.</p>
-<p>She retraced her steps, bought a supply
-of charcoal, which she hid in a fold of
-her gown, and made her way home. Her
-poor worn hands had helped her&mdash;how
-hardly!&mdash;to live, now they should help
-her to die.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_112">112</div>
-<p>Possessed by these ideas, she pushed
-open the door of the room&mdash;and suddenly
-stopped....</p>
-<p>How, when, by what way had he got
-in, the little sparrow she saw beating his
-wings against the walls, looking so scared
-and frightened, trying in vain to find a
-way out of the garret he had invaded
-so impudently, like the little good-for-nothing
-scamp he was?</p>
-<p>Yes, she remembered; that morning,
-before leaving, she had left the window
-ajar; but no doubt the wind had blown
-it to, and after coming in unhindered,
-like a conquering hero taking possession
-of a new kingdom, the bird was now a
-prisoner.</p>
-<p>A prisoner? But why a prisoner?
-What had she and he in common? He
-only asked to live, to fly, to soar in the
-free air, while she, she was fain to die.
-Begone, little madcap! you shall have
-your freedom again.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_113">113</div>
-<p>She went to the window; but as her
-hand touched the latch, she paused. The
-sparrow had stopped fluttering about the
-room; cowering in the corner of a cupboard,
-his little breast heaving with terror
-and breathlessness, he was looking at her
-with his frightened eyes.</p>
-<p>To see him shivering and shaking and
-ruffling his feathers in terror, she seemed
-to recognise a fellow-sufferer. <i>Her life</i>,
-from first to last, had it not been one
-long quaking agony of fear, exposed
-to never-ending uncertainties and disappointments?
-The similarity made a
-sort of common bond between them,
-and her heart stirred with a longing
-for a last touch of love and sympathy
-with the living creatures of this earth
-she was about to quit.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_114">114</div>
-<p>She left the window, advanced a step,
-and held out her finger to beckon and
-encourage him. But the movement,
-gentle as it was, was misunderstood
-by the bird; he spread his wings and
-darted up to the ceiling. Then she
-spoke to him, and very humbly&mdash;she
-found it very easy to be humble&mdash;besought
-him&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Poor birdie, why should you be
-afraid of me? Do you think I want to
-hurt you? I only ask you one favour&mdash;to
-kiss you once, just once, before....
-There, come, light there on my
-hand; let me just hold you; you shall
-fly away again directly after. Come,
-dear birdie, I know I am ugly to look
-at, but I am not cruel.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_115">115</div>
-<p>And stepping softly, silently, she
-followed him about the room, with
-outstretched fingers and smiling lips,
-almost like a mother, as if she were
-talking to a little child. Then, as he
-would not come&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Come, now.... Does my back shock
-you&mdash;like the others? Why should you
-care if I <i>am</i> hunchbacked, when you
-are so pretty? Come, pretty birdie&mdash;if
-only to give me the strength I need so
-badly.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She crumbled some bread on the
-table. This made the bird hesitate;
-he did not come down at once, but,
-still perching aloft, gazed down at the
-white crumbs, craning his neck, his eyes
-glittering with greediness.</p>
-<p>Finally appetite overcame prudence.
-He darted down on to the table and
-began to peck&mdash;<i>tock, tock!</i> at the food,
-stopping every now and then to shake
-out his feathers and cocking up his
-head to look about him.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_116">116</div>
-<p>Presently she scattered more crumbs,
-first on the floor and then on the window-sill,
-and he soon came hopping up to them
-on his little pink toes, flirting his tail and
-looking as happy as a king, the glutton!</p>
-<p>What a darling he was, to be sure!
-She forgot all thoughts of death, to see
-him so alive and so handsome, coming
-and going, marching up and down with
-his mettlesome air, his rolling eye, his
-tossing head, his everlasting pickings
-and peckings and his fine look of
-swagger and impudence. He had a
-way of peeping at her askance, winking
-one eye with a merry, mocking
-glint in it, that seemed to say unmistakably:
-&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t mind eating your
-bread, because it&rsquo;s downright good; but
-never you think I&rsquo;m going to give up
-my freedom for you. I shall be off and
-away again just whenever I choose.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_117">117</div>
-<p>Other times he would fix his little
-black beads of eyes meditatively upon
-her face, scrutinising her features as if
-bent on reading her inmost thoughts,
-but never missing a peck at the food
-for all that, or one crumb of this long,
-luxurious repast.</p>
-<p>When he had eaten up every scrap,
-she got some more and offered it him,
-this time in her palm.</p>
-<p>Up he fluttered, took his stand in
-front of her hand, examined it from
-every side, from above and from below,
-wishing but not daring; then suddenly
-caution carried the day, and he hopped
-away.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_118">118</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Pst! pst!&rdquo; she chirped to him, but
-never stirred. Her stillness reassured
-him; with a determined air, feeling a
-sinking again in his insatiable little
-stomach&mdash;it was not every day he had
-such a chance of filling it&mdash;he hopped
-forward, then drew back again; finally,
-making up his mind once for all, he
-began to peck warily at the contents of
-the well-stored hand.</p>
-<p>She watched him with delight and
-admiration. The sight of him and his
-pretty ways stirred deep, unsuspected
-feelings within her. The blue sky
-seemed to have entered at her humble
-window, as if the bird had brought in
-along with him a fragment of space.
-Under his wing he hid, Claire thought, all
-the gaiety and brightness of the spring.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_119">119</div>
-<p>Memories awoke in her heart; she
-dreamed of the woodlands, the fields of
-golden grain, the water-springs, all the
-glories of kindly Mother Nature. Three
-or four times in her colourless life she
-had been taken into the country; she
-had heard the birds sing, the great trees
-swaying and rustling in the breeze and
-the prattling of the brooks. One day&mdash;it
-was fifteen years ago at least&mdash;she
-had actually dropped asleep on the moss
-in the warm shadow of the woods, and
-when she awoke the old oaks seemed to
-be smiling down on her.</p>
-<p>Her black thoughts fled before this
-memory of rosy hours.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_120">120</div>
-<p>Besides, after days of gloom do not
-happier days follow? Had not he, too,
-her little friend, had not he known the
-hardships of winter? Shivering with
-cold, he had endured frost and bitter
-wind; his nest battered by the hail, his
-plumage soaked by the rain, his wings
-stiff with pain&mdash;was not all this far
-harder to bear than the gibes and insults
-of a few silly girls, giddy-pated perhaps
-rather than really ill-natured? Twenty
-times, a hundred times over, death had
-hovered near, when the storms scattered
-the leaves and tore down the nests all
-round him; but he had kept a good
-heart, and when spring-time came back
-again, had he not been rewarded for his
-bravery by happy, happy days? As she
-thought of the stubborn courage of the
-little sparrow, she was ashamed of her
-own weakness.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_121">121</div>
-<p>Who knows?&mdash;perhaps the bird had
-been sent to call her back to duty, to
-encourage her never to despair, to bring
-her a lesson straight from Mother
-Nature. Something of Nature&rsquo;s tender
-care for the weak and unprotected was
-in his coming to visit her garret; it was
-not for nothing he had chosen out the
-barest and poorest of them all, driving
-away with the rustle of his tiny wings
-those other dark, overshadowing wings&mdash;the
-wings of death. She found
-herself calling down blessings on him,
-thanking him for arriving so opportunely,
-weeping with joy to see his
-graceful gambols; for he was not
-frightened now, but bright and gay,
-and rather amused than otherwise at
-the four walls that had suddenly replaced
-the boundless plains of air.</p>
-<p>A new life began for the two.</p>
-<p>Monsieur Friquet&mdash;that was the
-name she had given him&mdash;seemed to
-be quite content to take his place as
-house-mate with the poor work-girl,
-whose heart was so full of affection,
-and who, to his partial eyes, looked as
-pretty as the prettiest things he had
-ever seen in the world outside. Did
-she not always wear a kind smile on
-her lips whenever she came home?
-And is not kindness, when all is said
-and done, the same thing as beauty?</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_122">122</div>
-<p>Monsieur Friquet had forgotten all
-about the distractions of the streets.
-Like a rakish younger son who has
-been living for years on his wits, he
-thoroughly enjoyed this life of slippered
-ease in a cosy house, where, it
-is true, the sun did not often penetrate,
-but then neither did the wind.
-Its quiet was unbroken all day long
-while his mistress was abroad, allowing
-him to doze and dream away the
-long hours till her return set stove and
-saucepans in activity again.</p>
-<p>He was a lazy loon, and nothing
-could have suited him better than to
-have a place at table laid out for him
-morning and evening, without his having
-so much as to put his head outside the
-door.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_123">123</div>
-<p>He had known so many of his comrades
-who had perished miserably under
-a cat&rsquo;s claws, at the corner of a gutter-pipe
-or in the treacherous shadow of a
-chimney-stack; so many who, grown
-old and impotent, and unable to find
-themselves a warm lodging, had died a
-lonely death on some deserted housetop;
-in fact, he had witnessed so much
-disappointment and disillusion and
-misery that he was ready&mdash;some days,
-at any rate&mdash;to swear he would not
-exchange for all the spacious blue of
-heaven shining in through the windowpane
-the indigo-blue paper with white
-bunches of flowers that covered the
-garret walls.</p>
-<p>He had put on flesh, and his chirp
-had grown thick and fruity; nowadays
-the graceless fellow had nothing but ill
-to say of the freedom he had lost, but
-which, after all, was limited, in summer,
-to scolding and squabbling in the
-tree-tops, and, in winter, to freezing
-on a wretched perch.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_124">124</div>
-<p>And <i>pr&rsquo;t! prr&rsquo;t! chirp! chirp!</i> he
-went, in scorn of everything that could
-remind him of the old bad times of his
-life.</p>
-<p>How much better to sit soft and
-warm over a good feed of bird-seed, to
-sleep away his afternoons in slothful
-ease, never to soil his feathers scratching
-for doles in a dungheap, but to live
-like a gentleman on his means, among
-his own belongings, without even a
-thought of work or worry!</p>
-<p>Monsieur Friquet, you see, was a
-philosopher of an accommodating
-temper.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_125">125</div>
-<p>Thank God! everybody does not
-think alike; for what would become
-of the sky and the woodland if all the
-race of sparrows forsook them like him
-for cosy quarters and a free table? He
-was one of those selfish folk who deem
-all is well directly all is well with them,
-and who only think of being on the
-best terms with the world and with
-themselves, without ever a care beyond.</p>
-<p>True, he was barely awake ere he
-saw his kind mistress bustling about
-in her room and filling up his bowl
-with new milk; true, she shared her
-loaf and her eggs with him, always
-giving him the best of everything and
-cheerfully keeping the crust and the
-white for herself; true, all day long the
-table was laid for him, and he had
-nothing to do but to eat and drink to
-his heart&rsquo;s content, like the regular
-glutton he was; but Monsieur Friquet
-never once thought at the cost of what
-painful sacrifices he enjoyed all these
-good things.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_126">126</div>
-<p>Claire had resumed the cruel slavery
-of the workroom.</p>
-<p>Every morning, at seven o&rsquo;clock, she
-set out, a meagre hunch of bread in
-her basket, and along the sleeping
-streets where the yawning passers-by
-were few and far between, half dozing
-herself, but brave and thinking of Monsieur
-Friquet, she would make her way
-to the dismal room where she was to be
-kept prisoner all day. Her companions
-never dreamed what strength to bear
-unhappiness a friend affords, a good
-friend you are sure to find at home on
-your return, who welcomes you with
-bright eyes of pleasure and who fills your
-thoughts even when he is not there.</p>
-<p>How he filled her thoughts, to be
-sure! What endless dialogues she had
-with him down in her own heart, just
-between the two of them.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_127">127</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Now then, Monsieur Friquet, what
-are we going to have for dinner? A
-couple of poached eggs? I&rsquo;ve just
-bought them, new laid, at the green-grocer&rsquo;s.
-Oh! you can almost see
-through them; just you look. And
-not too dear either, thank God! There,
-the fire just burning up nicely. Well,
-have you made up your mind? Will
-you have them poached or boiled?
-Oh! never mind me. To begin with,
-I don&rsquo;t care which; I like one as well
-as the other. I&rsquo;ve got some salad too&mdash;fine
-fresh salad. Ah! so you&rsquo;re laughing,
-Monsieur Friquet! You&rsquo;ll laugh
-better still directly. Boiled, then, it&rsquo;s
-to be, eh? You see, you bad boy, we
-only think of pleasing you.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_128">128</div>
-<p>She was hardly home before the fire
-was crackling, the egg-boiler singing;
-in next to no time the eggs were on the
-table, and the two of them, Claire and
-the sparrow, were pecking away, she
-sitting in front of the cloth, he perched
-in front of her on the edge of a glass
-or else clinging to her fingers.</p>
-<p>At every mouthful he would give
-his wings a shake, looking saucily now
-at the food, now at Claire, with his
-head on one side.</p>
-<p><i>Chirp! chirp! chirp!</i> he would say in
-his shrill treble. It was at once an
-appeal to his mistress to give him
-more, and a way of thanking her
-for the trouble she took in feeding
-him.</p>
-<p>His impudent little beak would dive
-into every single thing&mdash;bread, salt,
-salad, the hollow of his mistress&rsquo;s hand,
-poking everywhere, filching bits from
-her very lips, never still for an instant.
-Teasing, defying, thieving, he was in
-perpetual motion, as his brethren are
-among the leaves of the forest trees.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_129">129</div>
-<p>They drank out of the same cup, ate
-off the same plate. Ah! but Monsieur
-Friquet had his wilful moods too at
-times; <i>he</i> was not the fellow to be satisfied
-with everything; now it was the
-bread he refused with a little decided
-peck that said as plain as words: &ldquo;I
-won&rsquo;t have it!&rdquo;&mdash;now it was the egg,
-or the salad, or something else. You
-see, he knew quite well, did Monsieur
-Friquet, there was a biscuit waiting for
-him in the cupboard, and he was inordinately
-fond of biscuit.</p>
-<p>Sunday was a special festival.</p>
-<p>Up betimes as usual, for workgirls
-are never lie-abeds, Claire would set to
-rights the disorder of the week, tripping
-on tip-toe about the room, not to wake
-Monsieur Friquet, who was snoring in
-a corner, a fat ball of feathers, with his
-head under his wing.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_130">130</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Monsieur Friquet won&rsquo;t be awake
-for another hour,&rdquo; she would think to
-herself. &ldquo;I shall have time enough to
-set all straight&rdquo;&mdash;and she would set
-to work, dusting, sweeping, washing the
-floor, happy in the prospect of the
-coming Sunday that would release her
-a while from her chain of servitude.</p>
-<p>At last the bird would wake up, and
-there would be quick cries of: &ldquo;Good
-morning, Monsieur Friquet! How
-have you slept?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Chirp! chirp!&rdquo; would come the
-answer.</p>
-<p>And she would reply&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh! so have I&mdash;excellently, thank
-you.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_131">131</div>
-<p>Then breakfast would be served at
-once. He would come to table still
-half asleep, with heavy eyes, to be
-scolded and fondled and chided.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Lazybones! why, it&rsquo;s close on eight
-o&rsquo;clock!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But he would hop on her shoulder,
-and put his little round head to her lips
-as if to ask pardon.</p>
-<p>Then they would talk of serious
-matters.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Monsieur Friquet! I say, Monsieur
-Friquet!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Chirp! chirp!&rdquo;&mdash;which meant:
-&ldquo;Well, what? I&rsquo;m all attention!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Monsieur Friquet, I want your
-advice. What shall we have to eat for
-Sunday?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Chirp!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_132">132</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I hear you! Biscuit! biscuit!
-But people can&rsquo;t live only on biscuit!
-We must have something else <i>to go
-with it</i>. Suppose we bought a couple
-of artichokes! Do you like artichokes,
-Monsieur Friquet? Yes? Ah! I knew
-an artichoke would please you. Wait
-here for me, and I&rsquo;ll run round to the
-greengrocer&rsquo;s.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>So the Sunday wore away in happy
-play and merry nonsense between the
-pair.</p>
-<p>What more was needed to transform
-the sharp thorns of pain into fragrant
-roses of content? She had invested the
-bold little chattering fellow with all the
-treasures of her tenderness; on him she
-lavished all her care and devotion; he
-was father and mother and family to
-her, and where he was, was home.</p>
-<p>They lived long and happily together,
-and their love was never interrupted.</p>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/illus05.jpg" alt="A LOST DOG" width="542" height="799" />
-<p class="caption">A LOST DOG</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_133">133</div>
-<h2 id="c5">A Lost Dog</h2>
-<h3 title="">I</h3>
-<p>Have you ever noticed the melancholy
-pensive look masterless dogs assume at
-the hour when the press thins, and
-the passers-by slacken their pace on
-the side-walks, like waters from a tap
-running dry?</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_134">134</div>
-<p>As the silence deepens they appear
-from every side, these poor, friendless
-beasts, their meagre forms slinking
-through the fog and gloom; up and
-down the streets they prowl, noses to
-the ground, and tails drooping, like so
-many lost souls. Some have sound legs
-to run on, others can hardly drag themselves
-along; but all have hollow flanks
-and protruding ribs. They are out in
-search of food, nosing in the refuse
-heaps, scratching in the mud, filching
-from the scavengers bones as fleshless
-as themselves.</p>
-<p>What the world lets fall from its
-table is still a banquet for their starving
-bellies. They are not hard to please;
-till the wan light of dawn surprises
-them, they hunt the streets, rain-soaked
-and frost-bitten; then they creep back
-into mysterious holes and corners,
-where they curl themselves up in a
-round and sleep away the livelong day.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_135">135</div>
-<p>Most of them are wild and shy, for
-they have only known the blackest side
-of life&mdash;cuffs and kicks, wretchedness
-and desertion. For them no hope
-survives the shipwreck of friendships
-betrayed; alone they live and alone
-they creep into a hole to die&mdash;creatures
-of the dunghill whose obsequies will be
-performed by the scavenger&rsquo;s cart.</p>
-<p>But if some are discouraged and disillusioned,
-there are bolder spirits too
-who will sometimes, when they hear the
-steps of a belated wayfarer, tear themselves
-from the heap they are foraging
-in and stand panting and eager in the
-dark street, with the desperate eye of a
-swimmer looking out across the raging
-foam in search of a port of safety.
-Hope is not yet dead in <i>them</i>; they still
-have faith in mankind, and each shadowy
-form that emerges in the light of the
-gas-lamps entices them as offering promise
-of a home. For hours they will
-trot, with a humble, gentle, deprecating
-gait, at the heels of a casual passer-by,
-a shadow among shadows, dogging his
-steps to the last, hoping against hope.
-It is a <i>friend</i> they are fain to run to
-earth; but alas! the chase is one that
-is repeated night after night&mdash;and it
-is almost always unsuccessful. More
-often than not, the pursued has no
-inkling even of the dumb escort that
-attends him through the night.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_136">136</div>
-<p>How <i>should</i> he know? Behind his
-back the dog treads noiselessly, with
-paws of velvet and nose to earth, checking
-his pace when the stranger slackens
-his, stopping when he stops, bit by bit
-learning his walk and ways. At last,
-when he has journeyed far through the
-dark streets, when his legs ache with
-pursuing under the wayfarer&rsquo;s form
-a dream that is never to come true, a
-door will interpose, a ponderous, an
-impassable barrier between him and his
-fond hopes. Yet, who can tell? perhaps
-he will still linger on, shivering, till
-daylight, so unconquerable is his faith
-in man.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_137">137</div>
-<p>It was one of these hopeful but unappreciated
-souls that encountered an
-old schoolmaster one night, when the
-latter had tarried late in the fields outside
-the fortifications, anxious to assist
-at the noble spectacle the sun gives
-gratuitously to one and all, as he sets
-in the glowing west.</p>
-<p>He was returning by the boulevards,
-his heart full of these glories no fireworks
-have ever yet been invented to
-match; as he jogged along, he was
-thinking of God&rsquo;s goodness, who every
-night lights up these ruddy lamps of
-the sky to make fine flame-coloured
-curtains for the slumbers of His
-creatures.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_138">138</div>
-<p>A little black dog, the ugliest little
-dog you ever saw, without ears and
-without a tail, or as good as without,
-saw the solitary stranger. Did he divine
-perhaps beneath the man&rsquo;s easy, good-natured
-exterior a fellow-sufferer, the
-heart of a disappointed, disillusioned
-being like himself? Sometimes animals
-can see very far into things.</p>
-<p>At any rate he started off in pursuit.</p>
-<p>The stranger noticed nothing, but
-marched along, striding over gutters
-and stamping across pavements, knocking
-sometimes against benches and trees
-in his preoccupation. It had been raining
-for an hour past, as it does come
-down in spring, in floods of warm
-soaking rain and sudden showers that
-wetted man and dog to the skin, without
-either one or the other being much
-disturbed.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_139">139</div>
-<p>Absent-minded as he was, the old
-man presently felt something rubbing
-softly against his leg, and, looking down,
-was surprised to see the wretched-looking
-cur beside him.</p>
-<p>It was crawling and cringing, and with
-little half-stifled barks seemed to be appealing
-to the generosity of this unknown
-friend, perhaps less hard-hearted than
-the generality of mankind.</p>
-<p>Many people, seeing what a hideous
-beast it was, would have said &ldquo;No,
-no!&rdquo; at once. But it was just the
-creature&rsquo;s hideousness that moved the
-worthy man&rsquo;s pity irresistibly. Touched
-by its repulsive looks, he guessed at the
-pitiful hardships the wretched animal
-must have borne in secret. He saw
-its sunken flanks, its mangy coat, its
-sharp-ridged back, and loved it with a
-sudden ardour of affection&mdash;the affection
-poor suffering folks feel for one another.
-All very well for happy people to test
-and try one another for ever so long to
-see if they suit each other, but they
-who have nothing to lose by mutual
-affection make no bones about clapping
-hand in hand straight away and swearing
-eternal friendship.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_140">140</div>
-<p>And so it was with these two new
-comrades.</p>
-<p>Both were poor, and they fraternised
-at once. The dog was enchanted to
-have met a kind stranger to help him
-in his need, while his benefactor thought
-to himself how pleasant it would be
-to have the faithful creature to share
-his solitude. He stooped, patted the
-animal&rsquo;s streaming coat, tickled his ear,
-or as much of it as there was to tickle,
-and ended by taking him home to his
-garret.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_141">141</div>
-<p>It was many a day since the poor
-beast had known the comfort of four
-walls and a roof&mdash;if indeed he ever
-had! For two whole days, barring
-meal times, he slept like a log; on the
-third he roused himself from his lethargy,
-trotted up and down the room,
-poked his nose into every corner, and
-showed every sign of being wide awake
-at last.</p>
-<p>The dog must have a name, and the
-good schoolmaster was not long in finding
-one. Azor and Faithful are names
-that never come amiss for poor folk&rsquo;s
-dogs; he chose Azor, perhaps keeping
-Faithful for himself&mdash;and he well deserved
-it! He had only to move his
-lips, pronouncing the two syllables
-&ldquo;Az-or&rdquo; below his breath, and the
-dog was instantly on the alert, looking
-up at him with roguish eyes, wondering
-what he was going to say next.
-No doubt of it, he was a very intelligent
-animal.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_142">142</div>
-<p>It was a happy household. Not that
-bread was over and above plentiful;
-but people who have nothing are cheaply
-satisfied, and if stomachs were pinched
-some days, at any rate hearts were never
-chilled. The dog had come into the
-man&rsquo;s life like a special providence;
-henceforth his existence had an object;
-he had some one to love, some one besides
-himself to think of; poverty, so
-heavy a burden for a lonely man, seemed
-almost a boon now there were two to
-bear it&mdash;like a load of which each carries
-his half.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_143">143</div>
-<p>He loved and indulged him like a
-child, and something of selfishness entering
-into all ardent affections, Azor
-soon came to represent all humanity
-in his eyes. One day, to make him
-look fine, he fastened in the coarse hair
-of his neck a pink bow a young girl had
-dropped in the street, and told himself
-the dog was the handsomest beast alive.
-Slender greyhound, fleet-footed pointer,
-sturdy Newfoundland, none were a patch,
-in the eye of this partial judge, on the
-little ragged-haired, undersized mongrel
-he had introduced to his hearth and
-home.</p>
-<p>Azor had just as great an admiration
-for his master. Sitting up on his
-haunches in front of him, he would
-gaze into his face for hours together
-in a sort of ecstasy.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_144">144</div>
-<p>Did he see him transmuted into
-something other than he was, or did
-the rough face, scored with its network
-of heavy wrinkles, from amid which the
-nose shone like a beacon-fire, embody
-for the wee doggie the beau-ideal of
-manly beauty? For my part, I think
-Azor beheld in it a beauty of a higher
-sort than the perishable beauty of the
-features; the old man, to be sure, was
-goodness incarnate, and is not goodness
-the highest form of beauty?</p>
-<p>They lived for one another. Azor
-yapped, and the old man talked, and
-between them they had wonderful fine
-dialogues; beginning in the garret, these
-were resumed in the street the days they
-took the air together.</p>
-<p>The pair might be seen marching side
-by side, the old man laughing, the dog
-laughing, too, in a way he had of his
-own. And so they wandered through
-the streets, in search of quiet, both
-taking little short steps. True, Azor
-was young still, and would have liked
-to dart on ahead; but his friend could
-not have kept up, and that was quite
-enough to make him adopt the peaceful
-gait of a dog who has ceased to care for
-the distractions of the roadside.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_145">145</div>
-<p>But out in the fields you may be sure
-this sedateness was exchanged for wild
-excitement. Intoxicated by the open
-air, Azor would dash away, gambolling
-and wheeling and leaping like a mad
-creature, and performing a hundred
-tricks that mightily amused his good
-old master.</p>
-<h3 title="">II</h3>
-<p>Azor had his little ways. Every morning
-he used to go down into the street
-to inspect the gutters and pay a visit to
-the dogs of the neighbourhood. He
-was always back in a quarter of an hour
-or so.</p>
-<p>But one day he did not return.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_146">146</div>
-<p>His master waited patiently for him
-till midday. Animals are like men,
-and love to linger; perhaps he had
-met friends&mdash;and the old schoolmaster
-smiled indulgently at the notion.</p>
-<p>However, when half the afternoon
-was gone, and still Azor did not appear,
-he began to get anxious. Had some
-accident befallen him? and he thought
-of carriage wheels and horses&rsquo; hoofs
-and the rush and roar of the main
-streets.</p>
-<p>His first impulse was to rush to the
-stairs; but Azor might come back at
-any moment, so he stayed where he
-was, more dead than alive.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_147">147</div>
-<p>The window opened on the roof;
-the old man took a chair, climbed on
-it and craned his head over the sill
-till he could see down over the edge
-of the rain-shoot. There he stood for
-ever so long watching the little black
-dots darting in and out among the legs
-of the passers-by. But not one of them
-was Azor.</p>
-<p>A cold sweat broke out on his forehead;
-he was obliged to get down off
-the chair.</p>
-<p>At last, as dusk was falling, a paw
-came scratching at the door, and he
-flew to open it.</p>
-<p>Yes, it was his old comrade&mdash;but in
-what a plight! dyed blue, with a rope&rsquo;s
-end still dangling round his neck!
-Some tragedy had befallen, no doubt,
-of which he had been the victim&mdash;and
-he patted the poor beast, his mind a
-prey to a hundred sinister apprehensions.
-Azor meantime fawned round
-him, looking as contrite as a culprit
-who cannot hope to be forgiven.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_148">148</div>
-<p>The dye refused to be washed out;
-soap was of no avail, and they had to
-resort to caustics; but for all they
-could do, a tinge of blue remained. It
-lasted nearly a month, but at last the
-black reappeared. While his master
-was busy over these operations, Azor
-would lick his hands, only stopping to
-sneeze, when the strong fumes got up
-his nose. He seemed cured of all wish
-for adventures.</p>
-<p>Nevertheless, when a month was
-over, these prolonged absences began
-again. Sometimes he would stay away
-an hour; one Saturday he was abroad
-six hours. This irregular behaviour
-vexed his good master exceedingly.
-What could the mysterious attraction
-be that kept his faithful friend like this?
-He determined to find out.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_149">149</div>
-<p>He had noticed that Azor, the better
-to elude his vigilance, apparently used
-always to loiter a bit in front of the
-house, not starting away before he felt
-certain no one was looking; then in
-one bound he would be at the end of
-the street and disappear.</p>
-<p>One day he followed the truant.
-Now and again the dog would stop,
-nose all along the pavement, then, reassured,
-set off again at a trot. He
-turned the corner, then down a broader
-street, and so eventually into a square.
-The clumps of rhododendrons hid him
-for a moment from his master, who
-came puffing up; but presently he
-caught sight of him in the middle of a
-group of children. He was barking
-joyously, leaping up at them, rolling
-on his back in the grass, in transports
-of delight. They were five little pale-faced
-things, and among them one face
-paler still and pinched with illness.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_150">150</div>
-<p>The shock nailed the old man to the
-spot. Was it possible? Was Azor a
-traitor to his friend? And he gazed
-first at the dog and then at the children
-with the look a man wears who sees an
-edifice he has long been labouring at
-crumbling into ruin. He had put his
-trust in the animal; he esteemed him
-as well as loved him&mdash;and, lo! the
-ingrate was sharing his caresses with
-others. He hated duplicity, and his
-gorge rose at the thought.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Come here!&rdquo; he shouted.</p>
-<p>Azor knew his voice instantly, and,
-crawling along the ground like a serpent,
-he crept up to his benefactor, his tail
-dragging in the dust. But the latter
-never so much as thought of punishing
-him, and patted him on the back gently.
-Their eyes met; the man&rsquo;s were full
-of sadness, the dog&rsquo;s besought forgiveness.
-Then, still in the same humble
-attitude, he tried to draw his master
-towards the little group of pale faces.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_151">151</div>
-<p>The children had come forward&mdash;all
-except the little invalid, who stayed
-where he was; and all with one accord,
-their hands behind their backs, were
-staring at the new arrival.</p>
-<p>Was he going to take their dog from
-them? Their brows were puckered
-with anxiety, and as he watched them,
-he was amazed to think his anger had
-been so easily roused.</p>
-<p>What harm had Azor done after all?
-Ah! the blow would have been harder
-to bear if he had betrayed him for
-another man; but children! The
-piteous air of the little one who had
-remained behind touched him so that
-he took his hands with a smile and
-asked him if he loved Azor too.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh! yes,&rdquo; cried the child.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_152">152</div>
-<p>His eyes moved languidly under
-drooping lids, and he wore the careworn
-look of an invalid. Azor laid his head
-on the child&rsquo;s knees, and he caressed
-him with his thin fingers long and
-lovingly.</p>
-<p>The others soon found their tongues.
-Azor, they said, used to come every
-morning, and they romped together.
-They had known him for a long time
-in fact; but he had been a month once
-without appearing, and they had believed
-he was dead. A dyer&rsquo;s apprentice,
-after tying a cord round his neck,
-had dragged him off, and as they never
-saw him any more, they had laid his
-death at the bad boy&rsquo;s door.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_153">153</div>
-<p>&ldquo;So that&rsquo;s the explanation!&rdquo; the old
-man muttered, and remembered the
-long day of agonised suspense when he
-waited for him at the garret window,
-and then how he had come back dyed
-blue. It was a relief to know the
-truth.</p>
-<p>He went again at the same time next
-day, the dog careering gaily ahead as
-if he quite understood. Presently all
-found themselves in the square again,
-and all faces lit up with a common
-pleasure.</p>
-<p>They became fast friends; he learned
-their names, and that two of them were
-brothers of the pale-faced little fellow;
-their mother always sent them to look
-after him in the garden; they lived
-only a few steps away. His heart was
-filled with compassion for the frail-looking
-little lad. As Pierre could not
-walk, he got into the way by degrees of
-carrying him home in his arms as far as
-the door, Azor galloping after them,
-wagging his tail.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_154">154</div>
-<p>One day the child&rsquo;s mother came
-down to thank the &ldquo;kind gentleman,&rdquo;
-and they fell into talk. The boy&rsquo;s
-father was a workman on the railway,
-while she worked at fine sewing; the
-little one was a sore trouble to them;
-he had to be taken out for fresh air,
-and constantly looked after; and all
-hope of cure had had to be abandoned
-long ago.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And yet he&rsquo;s no fool either, sir; of
-the three he&rsquo;s the cleverest.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He only nodded, his head full of a
-notion that still occupied him after he got
-home; Azor lay at his feet and watched
-him thinking, thinking all day long.
-At nightfall he took the dog&rsquo;s head
-between his hands.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There!&rdquo; he cried merrily, &ldquo;you&rsquo;ll be
-pleased with your old master this time.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_155">155</div>
-<p>Three days later he bought a go-cart,
-in which he installed Pierre, and every
-morning they used to set out for the
-country, Azor scouting ahead and his
-master following with the child in tow.</p>
-<p>The old schoolmaster would explain
-all they saw to him&mdash;animals and
-things; he had made him a present
-of an alphabet with coloured pictures
-where a yacht stood for Y and a zebra
-for Z. And Pierre soon learnt to read.</p>
-<p>On Sundays, instead of three, they
-were seven; the whole family would
-join the expedition, and they would
-linger on till dark in the starlit fields.</p>
-<p>They were very happy, and their
-happiness lasted many long years.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_156">156</div>
-<h2 id="c6">Misadventures of an Owl</h2>
-<p>His plumage was glossy and abundant,
-his eye alert, his claws long and strong;
-in all points he was everything a handsome
-young owl should be. For two
-years he had slept snug under his
-mother&rsquo;s wing, the fond object of her
-jealous care; but when spring came
-round again, his father, who was a very
-sententious bird, addressed him in these
-terms&mdash;</p>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/illus06.jpg" alt="MISADVENTURES OF AN OWL" width="576" height="800" />
-<p class="caption">MISADVENTURES OF AN OWL</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_157">157</div>
-<p>&ldquo;You are grown up now, and the
-time is come when we must part. The
-nest would be too small to hold both
-you and those who will come after you.
-Moreover, no owl is ever happy save as
-head of a household. All sorts of trials
-and tribulations await us; men feel
-nothing but anger and contempt for our
-race. No matter for the watch and
-ward we keep over the orchards, the
-war of extermination we wage on the
-prolific broods that devastate the wheat,
-for all our well-meant efforts to aid the
-harvests to grow and the fruit-trees to
-bloom, our only guerdon is to be shot
-at with guns. Alas! the most of us
-end by being nailed up to a barn-door,
-with spread-eagled wings. A wife and
-family will console you under all this
-cruel injustice. Year by year your
-heart will grow green again amid the
-joys of domesticity, and you will attach
-a higher value to life when you no
-longer stand alone to bear its burden.
-So quit the nest, as I did before you;
-choose a good helpmeet of your own
-age, and may you be happy together,
-as we are, your mother and I.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_158">158</div>
-<p>Accordingly the youngster took his
-departure. Gravity comes early to
-owls, and though only two years old,
-he already wore the severe air of an old
-philosopher. But the young lady owls,
-likewise brought up to scorn worldly
-pleasures, prefer this serious deportment
-to the gay exterior the other birds find
-so fascinating.</p>
-<p>He went methodically round the
-village, and was well received by the
-parents, while more than one young
-thing turned her head to look after
-him. But there was not one of them,
-he thought, like his mother, and as she
-was the paragon of all merit in his eyes,
-he had sworn only to choose a mate who
-should resemble her in mind if not in
-face. He was in despair, and on the
-point of returning to the paternal roof
-when, one evening, as he was hovering
-about an old church-steeple, he caught
-sight of a charming little head peeping
-out between the luffer-boards.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_159">159</div>
-<p>Was he weary of the search perhaps,
-or did the little face really remind him
-of the adored image of his parent? He
-lingered long in admiration, never tired
-of watching her dainty ways, and little
-by little something began to thump inside
-him, something he had never felt
-before. She was busy crunching a
-mouse, pecking and worrying at it
-with her sharp beak, and had very
-soon left nothing but the bare bones.
-Then she wiped her beak and preened
-her feathers prettily, as every well-bred
-young lady owl should.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_160">160</div>
-<p>Just as she was finished, she saw him
-sitting in the next tree, and, startled at
-being caught at her toilet, she hid her
-head under her wing; nor was he a whit
-less embarrassed, and each of them gazed
-at the other in equal confusion, without
-saying one word. At last he made up
-his mind and spoke to the parents, who
-both thought him a very charming
-fellow.</p>
-<p>It was a quiet wedding, as weddings
-always are among the owls. There was
-no music or nonsense; they were married
-at night, in the old steeple, and the
-moon lent her illumination. When all
-was over, the parents gave their blessing,
-and the young couple set out on their
-honeymoon.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_161">161</div>
-<p>But it was not the sort of jaunt the
-sparrows indulge in, sailing away into
-the blue, so high, so high they seem
-as if they would never come back
-again; <i>they</i> lighted sedately on the
-bough of an old oak, and, finding it
-a good place, stopped there for good.
-Besides, the oak, being decrepit with
-years, had not, as a younger tree would,
-a whole host of impudent little cock-sparrows
-for its denizens; a blackbird
-lodged on the first floor, and a magpie
-had selected the trunk as his residence,
-and though both were great chatterers,
-the owls did not find their company
-disagreeable.</p>
-<p>But it was not so with Father Blackbird
-and Mother Magpie; they were
-fond of gaiety, and the newcomers
-struck them as dismal neighbours to
-have. So they went off to see the
-tomtits, who are naturally very daring
-fellows, and told them about the hum-drum
-life the happy pair led; and
-between them they planned a fine
-<i>charivari</i> for the benefit of their new
-neighbours in the early hours of the
-morning.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_162">162</div>
-<p>Our friends were still fast asleep,
-snugly ensconced in the depths of a
-hollow bole, when the hostile band
-appeared. Suddenly an appalling uproar
-woke them with a start; screwing
-up their eyes, they tried to discover
-what was the matter, but they could
-not see a thing. Meantime dawn had
-broken, the sun was already shooting
-his beams like fireworks through the
-boughs, and great dragonflies were darting
-to and fro, glittering like emeralds.
-At last they made out a whirl of wings,
-looming like a black shadow in the clear
-morning air. Their assailants swept
-down and crowded every branch of the
-old oak, which hummed like a gigantic
-harp with the twittering of a thousand
-throats.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_163">163</div>
-<p>The poor owls could make nothing
-of it; owls are simple-minded folk, and
-all they could think of was that another
-newly-married couple were celebrating
-their nuptials, and that the discordant
-noises they heard were the cries of transport
-to be expected under the circumstances.
-They shrunk away still deeper
-in their hole, not wishing to interrupt
-other people&rsquo;s enjoyment. But the
-tomtits were not satisfied&mdash;not they;
-it was nothing merely to have startled
-them in their slumbers; they meant to
-expel them from the old oak altogether.
-Prompted by the magpie, who sat
-screaming defiance from the foot of the
-tree, some of the bolder spirits poked
-in their heads at the entrance of the
-cavern. Inside it was dark as night,
-and from the depths four eyes blazed
-out like balls of fire. The champions
-took fright, and fell back hurriedly on
-the main body.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_164">164</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Cowards!&rdquo; screeched their amiable
-ally, raising her harsh voice to its shrillest
-pitch; &ldquo;d&rsquo;ye mean to leave the
-villains in peace in their den? Think
-of the horrid carnage there will be in
-the woods every night! Not one of
-you will be safe in his nest any more.
-From time immemorial the owl tribe has
-been the scourge of the whole bird nation.
-Their heads are full of nothing but wile
-and wickedness, and the better to shed
-blood, they go to work like murderers
-in the dark! Worse still, they are all
-heretics. The witches use them in their
-incantations. They are birds of hell.
-Slay, slay the foes of Holy Church!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>This speech rallied the waverers, and
-all together they forced a way into the
-dark, yawning cavern.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_165">165</div>
-<p>In a moment a hundred beaks were
-pecking savagely at the two victims,
-who, blinded by the light, struck out
-wildly in self-defence. Two of the
-tomtits were left on the field, while
-the rest flew away in a panic, screaming
-in chorus&mdash;&ldquo;Vengeance! vengeance on
-the rascally owls!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>What had they done? What crime
-had they committed? Astounded as
-they were, and amazed to think what
-motive should have prompted the attack,
-they could no longer doubt that open
-war was declared upon them.</p>
-<p>So they went in search of another
-home, and as night was falling, found
-a safe retreat under the eaves of a
-lonely presbytery. &ldquo;Here, at any rate,&rdquo;
-they thought, &ldquo;no one will come to
-molest us. Alas! it is only too true&mdash;we
-are not made for the society of our
-fellow-creatures, and this deserted roof
-will hide us better than a prison.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_166">166</div>
-<p>They had happy times; they reared
-a family of little ones, and lived a patriarchal
-life in the hollow under the roof.
-Everybody has his own way of being
-happy in this world of ours, and for all
-it was different from the general fashion,
-this was good enough for them. To
-begin with, dwelling by themselves, they
-knew nothing of envy, and no thought
-of ambition vexed them; their only wish
-was to live as long as possible, pariahs
-and outcasts as they were, and grow old
-together.</p>
-<p>Let others go in search of adventures;
-their desires were limited by the
-modest horizon they had before their
-eyes, and a secure abode, poor and
-bare though it might be, seemed to
-them preferable to all the treasures of
-Golconda. You see what reasonable,
-respectable people they were!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_167">167</div>
-<p>Certainly their dun-coloured plumage
-was not of the sort to let them flaunt
-in the sunlight like other birds; after
-spending a luxurious morning dozing
-side by side, they would wake just when
-the linnets, goldfinches, and chaffinches
-were going to bed. A great silence
-brooded over nature; for the giddy-pates
-who had been playing truant all
-the day, and had left a feather or two
-of their plumage to dance in every sunbeam,
-it would have seemed as dull as
-death; but they thought otherwise, and
-for them the night was filled with infinite
-music. Did not the breeze blow
-soft in the leaves with a murmur as of
-running waters and prattling brooks?
-A wide peace fell upon the woodlands
-which from noon to twilight had
-throbbed under the golden beams of the
-sun, while the moon, the owl&rsquo;s sun,
-spread her white beams over the landscape
-like a river of milk.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_168">168</div>
-<p>Then their keen ear, an instrument
-of extraordinary delicacy, being very
-large, and forming, as every bird-lover
-knows, a double spiral of enormous
-dimensions, and admirably adapted to
-catch the faintest sounds, noted from
-afar light rustlings and soft sighs, and
-a confused murmur of music, wherein
-the wind seemed, turn and turn about,
-to pipe through clarinet and oboe.
-Silent and awe-struck, the two outcasts
-felt the kindly beneficence of nature
-moving on the face of the world. At
-times louder sounds would mingle with
-the whisperings of the night, telling
-them of the fawns pushing through the
-matted undergrowth, of companies of
-woodland creatures sallying out to feed,
-lovers like themselves of the darkness&mdash;badgers,
-polecats, wild-cats, weasels,
-and rabbits, of a vast stir of life and
-activity down in the dim, intricate
-forest tracks. Cats were prowling,
-their yellow eyes flaming along the
-darkling ways, while from the homesteads
-rose rhythmically, pledge of
-security for all the host of fur and
-feathers, the heavy snoring of the
-sleepers within.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_169">169</div>
-<p>Then they would come out and stand
-at the edge of the eaves, and gaze
-forth, as from a balcony, on all the
-moving spectacle of the kindly night.
-Sparkling gleams would flash along the
-ground like diamonds, and the slates
-glitter like so many mirrors on the
-house-roofs. They could see the stars
-reflected in the brook; mysterious eyes
-looked out from under the trees, vague
-shapes went gliding along the road,
-while high in the heavens, with a
-round face that seemed to laugh good-humouredly,
-sailed the lady moon.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_170">170</div>
-<p>As long as they had no children, they
-enjoyed these hours of contemplation
-like true artists who grudge to miss
-one note of harmony or one gleam of
-beauty; they would never stir till
-dawn, hardly troubling themselves even
-to go in search of food. But when the
-brood of youngsters arrived, they had
-perforce to forgo these ecstasies. The
-little beaks were for ever crying for
-more, and Goodman Owl, who was
-the best of parents, became a mighty
-hunter.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_171">171</div>
-<p>Scarce was evening fallen ere he had
-taken post on the roof, heedless now
-of the mysterious splendours of the
-night, the furtive comings and goings
-of his prey occupying all his thoughts;
-the music of the spheres was henceforth
-confined for him to the rustling of the
-field-mice climbing the espaliers and
-the house-mice scuttling along the walls;
-still as a statue he stood there watching
-and picking out the fattest victim.
-Before the little creature had time to
-turn its head, he held it in his terrible
-jaws, and was flying off with his prey,
-panting in mortal terror, to his young
-ones, who instantly made a meal of it.</p>
-<p>The poor little mouse saw nothing,
-heard nothing. A soft, fanning sound
-from the night-bird&rsquo;s velvety pinions
-was the only warning that anything
-untoward was near; but already the
-ravisher had seized his prey; there was
-a stifled squeal, and all was over!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_172">172</div>
-<p>Every ten minutes&mdash;the same regular
-interval has been observed in all owls
-questing for food&mdash;he would bring
-fresh provender to the nest. The
-darkest night was no hindrance; his
-shining eyes, with their widely dilated
-pupils, pierced the blackest shadows as
-if they were transparent, and there was
-no hole or corner where the little night
-prowlers did not go in terror of their
-lives.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile the mother-bird was feeding
-her brood, sometimes when the
-mouse was particularly tough, tearing
-it piecemeal for her little ones to devour
-more easily.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_173">173</div>
-<p>At other times father and mother
-together would guide the little family
-along the roofs, patiently teaching the
-inexperienced wings to fly, and giving a
-helping touch with beak or wing when
-they stumbled and tumbled in their
-attempts. At full moon they carried
-the youngsters to a neighbouring tree,
-he taking one, she another, and it was
-pretty to see their amazement when,
-craning their little necks, they watched
-the dim outlines of moving objects
-against the blue distance.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_174">174</div>
-<p>But they were getting big now, and
-the old owl lectured them sagely, as his
-father had lectured him; he would tell
-them of the joys and sorrows of life,
-and advise them to marry. No, it was
-not callousness&mdash;far from it; he loved
-them tenderly, for by reason and instinct
-he was a pattern of all the domestic
-virtues. But he was a wise and
-far-seeing parent, who dreaded what
-their fate would be, should he and his
-mate one day meet the doom all owls
-are liable to. Perhaps one morning a
-yokel would climb to their hiding-hole
-and carry them off to kill them. True,
-the good Cur&eacute;, whose house sheltered
-them, had forbidden their being molested;
-but he was an old man now, and
-nobody cared much what he said; then,
-with a ladder, it was so easy to reach
-the nest! The old owl always spoke
-like a philosopher; the future did not
-terrify him, and he seemed quite resigned
-to the cruel lot men mete out
-to his species. His words were without
-gall or bitterness; but a deep-seated
-melancholy gave them the gravity that
-ever marks creatures born to suffer.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_175">175</div>
-<p>In younger days he had known rebellious
-thoughts, and the sense of
-human injustice had oppressed his spirit;
-he had even dreamt of flying his country
-for the lands the swallows in
-September told him of, and far away
-from cruel men, living in peace and
-quietness with the mate who had joined
-her life to his. But time had softened
-these resentments; he had bowed his
-head, recognising a higher power above
-him, and content to live on, harmless
-and obscure, asking only to repay good
-for evil.</p>
-<p>One morning the young birds deserted
-the nest.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_176">176</div>
-<p>Then, alone once more, they resumed
-their former existence in the dark hollow
-of the old oak, so solitary and silent
-now; they bore their children&rsquo;s departure
-as only another of nature&rsquo;s inevitable
-necessities. They seldom stirred
-from home now, seeing hardly a soul
-except a couple of old friends sometimes
-on Sabbath days; as of old, they held
-long, long talks of nights with the
-moon. Perched side by side on the
-eaves, their dark shapes threw long
-black shadows across the roof; there
-they sat stiff and still, save when, from
-time to time, they spread their wings,
-swooped down on their prey, then resumed
-the same rigid attitude. These
-murderous assassins were at heart the
-most peaceable of good citizens. It
-was never their way, coming home at
-night, to wake the other birds asleep
-among the foliage; no one ever heard
-them quarrelling or shifting the furniture
-or pecking at the wall, as the
-cuckoos, linnets, and chaffinches are so
-fond of doing; only, six or eight times
-in the night, to advertise the country
-folk, they would cry <i>To-hoo! to-hoo!</i>
-if next day was going to be fine,
-and <i>To-whit!</i> if it was going to
-rain, at regular intervals, like talking
-barometers.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_177">177</div>
-<p>A pair of young turtle-doves nesting
-on the next roof found this habit annoying,
-and went to the judge of the
-district to lodge a complaint.</p>
-<p>The judge was a very old raven,
-whom years had only made more sly
-and artful; he was said to be a hundred,
-and certainly his bald pate was as
-shiny as a polished stone. He lived in
-a crevice in the rocks, alone with his
-own thoughts. But these thoughts,
-unlike most old men&rsquo;s, were full of
-mockery for all created beings. This
-feathered Methuselah had seen so much
-in his day! and experience had only
-taught him to laugh at griefs and joys
-and everything else.</p>
-<p>While appreciating his usefulness, he
-did not like Mr. Owl, and was not sorry
-to make things unpleasant for him; he
-could always dismiss the case in the end,
-after getting his fun out of it, if the
-turtles proved, as he half suspected, to
-have been in the wrong after all.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_178">178</div>
-<p>Three blackbirds he employed as constables
-arrived at break of day at the
-owls&rsquo; front door and knocked. Three
-times they had to repeat the summons,
-so fast asleep was the worthy couple,
-till, roused at last, the latter poked out
-their heads in great alarm to ask what
-was wanted with them. Both looked so
-upset, he, poor fellow, in a nightcap,
-and she, good dame, in morning deshabille,
-that the blackbirds, who are always
-fond of a joke, burst into such a peal of
-laughter it took them ten minutes to
-recover their gravity.</p>
-<p>They laughed so heartily that the
-sparrows of the neighbourhood were
-attracted by the noise, and began to
-turn and wheel in flocks above the
-roof, while a horrid hubbub, a vile
-chirp! chirp! chirp! broke out, deafening
-and confusing the poor owls still
-more.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_179">179</div>
-<p>The blackbirds, when they had done
-laughing, called for silence, which, however,
-it took some time to establish.
-Then they announced&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We, assistant officers of justice of
-this district, and by order of His
-Honour the Judge, do hereby summon
-you to appear this day before stroke of
-noon at his Court, situate, to wit, in
-the first crevice on the right hand,
-beginning from above, of the cliff
-bordering the Great Meadow.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>This order was promulgated in shrill,
-nasal tones amid the rustling of the
-wings of all present, who, the instant the
-last word was uttered, began to amuse
-themselves by screaming in frantic
-delight. On the blackbirds departing,
-a number of sparrows lingered on to
-enjoy the confusion of the two owls.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_180">180</div>
-<p>These had shrunk away into the
-deepest recess of their lair, terrified yet
-resigned, and their inquisitive tormentors
-heard none of the lamentations they
-expected.</p>
-<p>What black deed had been laid to
-their charge? The blackbirds had
-given no indication, and they began
-mentally to review their past, searching
-in vain for any crime they could be
-accused of. They had not robbed
-other people&rsquo;s goods, nor slandered
-their neighbours; they had never, no,
-never caused any one&rsquo;s death, while
-they had honestly and honourably performed
-the duties Nature had given
-them to do. What more could be
-asked of them?</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_181">181</div>
-<p>The Judge was waiting&mdash;they must
-be off. It was a woeful pilgrimage.
-The bright daylight dazzled them, and
-they went along blindly, running against
-everything and perpetually losing their
-way; twenty times over they lost
-their bearings and had to retrace their
-steps, covered with confusion, while
-their dusky plumage made a dirty-looking
-blotch in the fresh morning
-air.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This way!&rdquo; cried some tomtits,
-flying ahead of them&mdash;and, taking their
-word, they blundered into a nest of
-yellowhammers, which luckily happened
-to be empty.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t listen to them&mdash;come along
-with us,&rdquo; the chaffinches advised them
-next&mdash;and they went crash! head first
-into a wall.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_182">182</div>
-<p>A cloud of small birds followed behind.
-They were clawed and scratched,
-and half-dazed, as they wandered about
-like phantoms of the night masquerading
-at high noon.</p>
-<p>When at last, after a thousand tribulations,
-with eyeballs starting from their
-heads, battered and beaten and jeered at,
-they reached the Court, another swarm
-of tormentors was waiting to receive
-them. There were at least eight hundred,
-and every second others kept
-coming up, who, after flying wildly
-about in search of places, lighted here
-and there and everywhere, chattering
-and squabbling. The rock was soon
-so crowded from top to bottom that
-a linnet, who had been detained at
-home feeding her chicks, could not
-find a perch anywhere, and fluttered
-up and down the tumultuous ranks,
-beseeching the audience in vain to sit
-a little closer. The ladies especially
-seemed determined not to give up a
-single inch of room, and all vied together
-in raising a hubbub, shrieking
-and laughing and chattering as if they
-would never stop.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_183">183</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Accused,&rdquo; ordered the raven suddenly,
-&ldquo;stand up. Our Clerk of the
-Court will now read the statement of
-misdemeanours charged against you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>For a little while the uproar still
-continued, mingled now with sharp
-calls to order and appeals for silence;
-then, diminishing gradually, died away
-into the light rustle of many wings.
-Then a magpie was seen to rise briskly
-to his feet; his dark eye rolled
-roguishly, as he unfolded with his
-beak a huge sheet of paper scribbled
-all over with writing and read out in
-a dry, rasping voice&mdash;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_184">184</div>
-<p>&ldquo;We, Clerk of the Court, &amp;c., &amp;c.,
-do hereby certify that the appellants,
-to wit M. Narcisse Tourtereau and his
-consort, Mme. Virginie Tourtereau or
-Colombelle, have duly appeared before
-us and deponed that the said appellants,
-cohabiting near by the messuage whereat
-the Owls, man and wife, have taken up
-their abode, are nightly awakened by
-the clamours, complaints, moans, groans,
-and quarrels of the aforesaid Owls, who,
-instead of sleeping in their beds during
-the interval of time falling betwixt sunset
-and sunrise, as do all the other birds, do
-choose these selfsame hours, that are customarily
-devoted to repose, for robbing
-and murdering and maliciously and mischievously
-disturbing their neighbours&rsquo;
-night&rsquo;s rest by reason of unseemly and
-uncouth noises.&mdash;I have spoken.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_185">185</div>
-<p>The magpie flirted his tail four times
-in token of satisfaction at his own
-performance, snapped up a gnat to clear
-his throat, and, resuming his seat, devoted
-himself to an endless succession
-of smiles directed to the feminine portion
-of his audience. An approving
-murmur greeted the conclusion of the
-statement of accusation.</p>
-<p>Then, after a few moments of disorder,
-which was promptly checked,
-&ldquo;Caw! caw!&rdquo; went the raven, with a
-fine attempt at seriousness, his great
-round-eyed spectacles perched on his
-nose; then, turning to the owl, he
-lisped in an affected voice&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The word is with you; the Court
-will hear you in your own defence.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_186">186</div>
-<p>Never, never had the birds enjoyed
-so laughable a spectacle before, as they
-beheld the fowl of night step forward,
-looking oh! so awkward and uncouth,
-with such a heavy hang-dog air! His
-great eyes rolled in his head, he stumbled
-at every step, while behind his back
-grimaced his shadow, mimicking every
-movement of his neck as it jerked in
-and out, first short, then long, like
-the barrels of an opera-glass.</p>
-<p>A wild spasm of merriment seized the
-vast concourse at sight of the grotesque
-creature, and tomtits, linnets, birds of
-every sort and kind, broke into a frantic
-peal of mirth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Silence in the Court!&rdquo; shrieked the
-magpie.</p>
-<p>But laughter is infectious. Quickly
-it extended to the lower ledges of the
-rock, where the spectators sat half
-hidden from each other in the semi-darkness,
-and the mighty cliff shook as
-if lashed by a hurricane.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_187">187</div>
-<p>The contagion caught even the magpie,
-the blackbirds, the Judge himself,
-who began to sneeze again and again,
-in the effort to recover his dignity. By
-fits and starts, the laughter would die
-down, only to burst out afresh with
-redoubled vigour, and it was long before
-the excitement subsided and heads
-ceased to wag. When at last the audience
-had recovered something like composure,
-even then fans could be seen
-here and there waving to hide behind
-their shield a last dying echo of hilarity.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile, the poor buffoon, the
-butt of all this scathing opprobrium,
-stood silent and uncomplaining, humbly
-waiting his chance to speak. Finally,
-when quiet was restored, he said&mdash;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_188">188</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I am aware, your Honour, that
-men and birds all hold me and mine
-in detestation. There is no villainy
-they do not impute to us, no crime they
-do not charge us with, and when we
-have the misfortune to show ourselves,
-the howl of hate rises as high about us
-as a tower. But are we criminals? Do
-we lurk in the woods to rob our fellow-birds
-by night or day? Do we plunder
-the granaries? Do we go thieving in
-the hedges? Do we ever interfere with
-the livelihood of any of God&rsquo;s creatures
-with whom He has bidden us live in
-peace? Never, your Honour, never!
-All the day we lie quiet in our hole,
-loving our wives and children, and
-troubling nobody; then, when night is
-fallen, we win our nourishment by exterminating
-rats and mice, field-rats and
-field-mice. I would hurt no one&rsquo;s feelings,
-but it is well to make comparisons
-sometimes, and I ask myself&mdash;Which
-fulfils the more useful function, he who
-from dawn to dark scours the orchards,
-stealing cherries, plums, and pears, so
-that the countryman, when winter comes,
-has but the half of the crop he hoped for,
-or he who, seconding the farmer&rsquo;s toils
-with an incessant but unseen activity
-that wins no reward, secures him the
-proper reward of his pains?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_189">189</div>
-<p>Protests were heard at these words,
-the goldfinches and sparrows crying
-out indignantly&mdash;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ah! he shifts the blame on us, the
-sly-boots! He knows he can say what
-he likes here, but outside the Court&mdash;why,
-he durst not so much as look us
-in the face.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh! but, my good gentlemen,&rdquo;
-retorted the orator quietly, &ldquo;it is no
-fault of mine if I cannot look at you in
-the way you wish; a natural infirmity
-makes it impossible for us to see in
-daylight; such floods of light beat into
-the wide pupils of our eyes as would
-blind us if we had to face the sunshine
-long. That is the reason why you
-mocked at us just now, when you saw
-us disabled by this excess of light,
-whose rays pricked and pained our eyeballs
-like so many needles. Would you
-not feel yourselves at the same painful
-disadvantage if you were obliged to fly
-at night, when we owls come and go at
-our ease, our great pupils serving us as
-lamps to see by? You would very
-soon break your heads against a wall,
-let me tell you!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_190">190</div>
-<p>&ldquo;But let me come to the allegations
-that have brought me here, into the
-dock. Indeed, I have touched on them
-already; for is not the specific charge
-against us that we choose the night to
-come out of our holes and find our
-food? Why, what else could we do,
-when by daylight, by dint of seeing too
-much, we cease to see anything at all?
-Nature has given us the night, as she
-has given other birds the day, unwilling,
-in her kindly wisdom, to see the dark
-less useful than the light; she has appointed
-us her guardians to watch over
-the storehouses and orchards and granaries,
-which, above all in the night-time,
-become the prey of a host of pillagers.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_191">191</div>
-<p>&ldquo;They talk of robbery; why, what
-robbery can they reproach us with? Is
-it a malefactor&rsquo;s work to purge the
-earth of the creatures that pick and
-steal, and, like unnatural cannibals,
-would bring their mother to her
-death, if we and some others, our
-colleagues in the same beneficent task,
-did not put a check on their never-ending
-mischiefs? Just think if we
-folded our arms and left them a free
-field; they would end by devouring
-the trees, along with the bit of ground
-where they grow, and the very folks
-who can never satiate their spite against
-us, finding themselves deprived of
-shady leaves and luscious fruits alike,
-would very soon come begging and beseeching
-us to return to our never-ending
-task.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_192">192</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Yet the owls, as your Honour
-knows, win neither respect nor profit
-from their irksome labours. They are
-not proud; you will never hear them
-bragging of the services they render;
-but modest, as becomes good workers to
-be, they roost quietly at home all the
-time they do not devote to the chase.
-Scorned by their brethren the birds, and
-persecuted by mankind, they are victims
-of consistent ingratitude from the very
-creatures they benefit; if I say this, it
-is to have the fact known once for all,
-not to protest against a state of things
-established for all time. We are therefore
-compelled to find in ourselves a
-happiness which society refuses us, and,
-living in solitude, we rear our little
-ones for a lot like our own. There is
-the head and front of our offending.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_193">193</div>
-<p>&ldquo;There is yet another grievance
-against us; we disturb, so they allege,
-our neighbours&rsquo; rest by our uproar.
-Surely the word is rather strong to
-apply to us who are lovers of silence,
-shunning noise in others as much as
-we avoid it in our own homes. If we
-make ourselves heard, it is not for the
-pleasure of listening to our own voices!
-We well know we are no sweet-voiced
-choristers, and when the nightingale
-sings, we have never dreamt of posing
-as his rivals. There are, so the migrants
-have told us, in the far-off cities of
-other lands, men who proclaim the hour
-from the tall minarets in the silence of
-the night. We do not announce the time&mdash;the
-cuckoo alone has this office to perform
-during daylight&mdash;but we instruct
-the swallows on the point of winging
-away, we inform the cricket, the bee,
-the ant, the ploughman, all to whom
-rain and sunshine are not matters of
-indifference, if they may count or not
-on a favourable morrow. So the kindly
-mother of man and beast has put
-two notes in our throats, deeming we
-needed no more, not to make us singing
-birds, but only birds of good help.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_194">194</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I have no more to say, for indeed we
-are no great talkers, and oratory is
-an art unknown to us. I will say no
-more, therefore, save only this&mdash;that if
-you are not satisfied with my pleas, I
-offer myself&mdash;and my companion here
-present will do the like&mdash;I offer myself
-a willing victim to your resentment, if
-so be the common good, which could
-not heretofore exist without our aid, is
-now only to be secured by the sacrifice
-of our lives.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_195">195</div>
-<p>Not a little surprised at his own
-eloquence, the bird of night stepped
-back to his place with tottering limbs.
-Thereupon the jays and yellowhammers
-began a hoot of derision, which was
-quickly drowned by the protests of the
-mother birds trembling for their young;
-and then the old raven, rising slowly to
-his feet, folded up his glasses, coughed,
-croaked, and, inspired apparently by
-the general sense of justice, summed up
-as follows&mdash;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_196">196</div>
-<p>&ldquo;You, Sir Owl, you have done wrong
-in crying out over loud; but you,
-young Turtle-dove, you have done a
-far graver wrong by haling an innocent
-prisoner to the bar. You therefore will
-pay the fine to which you would have
-had your neighbours condemned, and
-the costs of the trial to boot. Moreover,
-I will take this opportunity to do
-an act of justice, and extend a hand
-of brotherly affection to our honoured
-friend the owl, who is henceforth to
-be treated with proper consideration
-and respect, or I will know the reason
-why.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Little by little the audience dispersed,
-the swarm of birds scattered into space,
-and the raven&rsquo;s rock was left to its
-former solitude.</p>
-<p class="tbcenter"><span class="smaller">Printed by <span class="sc">Ballantyne, Hanson &amp; Co.</span>
-<br />Edinburgh &amp; London</span></p>
-<h2 id="tn">Transcriber&rsquo;s Notes</h2><ul><li>Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook is public-domain in the country of publication.</li>
-<li>Corrected a few palpable typos.</li>
-<li>In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by _underscores_.</li></ul>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
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-
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