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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Concerning Cats, by Helen M. Winslow
+
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+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
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+**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: Concerning Cats
+ My Own and Some Others
+
+Author: Helen M. Winslow
+
+Release Date: December, 2005 [EBook #9501]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on October 6, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CONCERNING CATS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Dr. Dwight Holden, Ted Garvin, David Garcia
+and PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+CONCERNING CATS
+
+My Own and Some Others
+
+By Helen M. Winslow
+
+Editor of "The Club Woman"
+
+
+
+To the
+
+"PRETTY LADY"
+
+WHO NEVER BETRAYED A SECRET, BROKE A PROMISE, OR
+PROVED AN UNFAITHFUL FRIEND; WHO HAD
+ALL THE VIRTUES AND NONE OF
+THE FAILINGS OF HER SEX
+
+I Dedicate this Volume
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+CHAPTER
+
+ I. CONCERNING THE PRETTY LADY.
+ II. CONCERNING MY OTHER CATS.
+ III. CONCERNING OTHER PEOPLE'S CATS.
+ IV. CONCERNING STILL OTHER PEOPLE'S CATS.
+ V. CONCERNING SOME HISTORIC CATS.
+ VI. CONCERNING CATS IN ENGLAND.
+ VII. CONCERNING CAT CLUBS AND CAT SHOWS.
+ VIII. CONCERNING HIGH-BRED CATS IN AMERICA.
+ IX. CONCERNING CATS IN POETRY.
+ X. CONCERNING CAT ARTISTS.
+ XI. CONCERNING CAT HOSPITALS AND REFUGES.
+ XII. CONCERNING THE ORIGIN OF CATS.
+ XIII. CONCERNING VARIETIES OF CATS.
+ XIV. CONCERNING CAT LANGUAGE.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+_Concerning Cats_
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+CONCERNING THE "PRETTY LADY"
+
+
+She was such a Pretty Lady, and gentle withal; so quiet and eminently
+ladylike in her behavior, and yet dignified and haughtily reserved as a
+duchess. Still it is better, under certain circumstances, to be a cat
+than to be a duchess. And no duchess of the realm ever had more faithful
+retainers or half so abject subjects.
+
+Do not tell me that cats never love people; that only places have real
+hold upon their affections. The Pretty Lady was contented wherever I,
+her most humble slave, went with her. She migrated with me from
+boarding-house to sea-shore cottage; then to regular housekeeping; up to
+the mountains for a summer, and back home, a long day's journey on the
+railway; and her attitude was always "Wheresoever thou goest I will go,
+and thy people shall be my people."
+
+I have known, and loved, and studied many cats, but my knowledge of her
+alone would convince me that cats love people--in their dignified,
+reserved way, and when they feel that their love is not wasted; that
+they reason, and that they seldom act from impulse.
+
+I do not remember that I was born with an inordinate fondness for cats;
+or that I cried for them as an infant. I do not know, even, that my
+childhood was marked by an overweening pride in them; this, perhaps, was
+because my cruel parents established a decree, rigid and unbending as
+the laws of the Medes and Persians, that we must never have more than
+one cat at a time. Although this very law may argue that predilection,
+at an early age, for harboring everything feline which came in my way,
+which has since become at once a source of comfort and distraction.
+
+After a succession of feline dynasties, the kings and queens of which
+were handsome, ugly, sleek, forlorn, black, white, deaf, spotted, and
+otherwise marked, I remember fastening my affections securely upon one
+kitten who grew up to be the ugliest, gauntest, and dingiest specimen I
+ever have seen. In the days of his kittenhood I christened him "Tassie"
+after his mother; but as time sped on, and the name hardly comported
+with masculine dignity, this was changed to Tacitus, as more befitting
+his sex. He had a habit of dodging in and out of the front door, which
+was heavy, and which sometimes swung together before he was well out of
+it. As a consequence, a caudal appendage with two broken joints was one
+of his distinguishing features. Besides a broken tail, he had ears which
+bore the marks of many a hard-fought battle, and an expression which for
+general "lone and lorn"-ness would have discouraged even Mrs. Gummidge.
+But I loved him, and judging from the disconsolate and long-continued
+wailing with which he rilled the house whenever I was away, my affection
+was not unrequited.
+
+But my real thraldom did not begin until I took the Pretty Lady's
+mother. We had not been a week in our first house before a handsomely
+striped tabby, with eyes like beautiful emeralds, who had been the pet
+and pride of the next-door neighbor for five years, came over and
+domiciled herself. In due course of time she proudly presented us with
+five kittens. Educated in the belief that one cat was all that was
+compatible with respectability, I had four immediately disposed of,
+keeping the prettiest one, which grew up into the beautiful,
+fascinating, and seductive maltese "Pretty Lady," with white trimmings
+to her coat. The mother of Pretty Lady used to catch two mice at a time,
+and bringing them in together, lay one at my feet and say as plainly as
+cat language can say, "There, you eat that one, and I'll eat this," and
+then seem much surprised and disgusted that I had not devoured mine when
+she had finished her meal.
+
+We were occupying a furnished house for the summer, however, and as we
+were to board through the winter, I took only the kitten back to town,
+thinking the mother would return to her former home, just over the
+fence. But no. For two weeks she refused all food and would not once
+enter the other house. Then I went out for her, and hearing my voice she
+came in and sat down before me, literally scolding me for a quarter of
+an hour. I shall be laughed at, but actual tears stood in her lovely
+green eyes and ran down her aristocratic nose, attesting her grief and
+accusing me, louder than her wailing, of perfidy.
+
+I could not keep her. She would not return to her old home. I finally
+compromised by carrying her in a covered basket a mile and a half and
+bestowing her upon a friend who loves cats nearly as well as I. But
+although she was petted, and praised, and fed on the choicest of
+delicacies, she would not be resigned. After six weeks of mourning, she
+disappeared, and never was heard of more. Whether she sought a new and
+more constant mistress, or whether, in her grief at my shameless
+abandonment of her, she went to some lonely pier and threw herself off
+the dock, will never be known. But her reproachful gaze and tearful
+emerald eyes haunted me all winter. Many a restless night did I have to
+reproach myself for abandoning a creature who so truly loved me; and in
+many a dream did she return to heap shame and ignominy upon my repentant
+head.
+
+This experience determined me to cherish her daughter, whom, rather, I
+cherished as her son, until there were three little new-born kittens,
+which in a moment of ignorance I "disposed of" at once. Naturally, the
+young mother fell exceedingly ill. In the most pathetic way she dragged
+herself after me, moaning and beseeching for help. Finally, I succumbed,
+went to a neighbor's where several superfluous kittens had arrived the
+night before, and begged one. It was a little black fellow, cold and
+half dead; but the Pretty Lady was beside herself with joy when I
+bestowed it upon her. For two days she would not leave the box where I
+established their headquarters, and for months she refused to wean it,
+or to look upon it as less than absolutely perfect. I may say that the
+Pretty Lady lived to be nine years old, and had, during that brief
+period, no less than ninety-three kittens, besides two adopted ones; but
+never did she bestow upon any of her own offspring that wealth of pride
+and affection which was showered upon black Bobbie.
+
+When the first child of her adoption was two weeks old, I was ill one
+morning, and did not appear at breakfast. It had always been her custom
+to wait for my coming down in the morning, evidently considering it a
+not unimportant part of her duty to see me well launched for the day.
+Usually she sat at the head of the stairs and waited patiently until she
+heard me moving about. Sometimes she came in and sat on a chair at the
+head of my bed, or gently touched my face with her nose or paw. Although
+she knew she was at liberty to sleep in my room, she seldom did so,
+except when she had an infant on her hands. At first she invariably kept
+him in a lower drawer of my bureau. When he was large enough, she
+removed him to the foot of the bed, where for a week or two her maternal
+solicitude and sociable habits of nocturnal conversation with her
+progeny interfered seriously with my night's rest. If my friends used to
+notice a wild and haggard appearance of unrest about me at certain
+periods of the year, the reason stands here confessed.
+
+I was ill when black Bobbie was two weeks old. The Pretty Lady waited
+until breakfast was over, and as I did not appear, came up and jumped on
+the bed, where she manifested some curiosity as to my lack of active
+interest in the world's affairs.
+
+"Now, pussy," I said, putting out my hand and stroking her back, "I'm
+sick this morning. When you were sick, I went and got you a kitten.
+Can't you get me one?"
+
+This was all. My sister came in then and spoke to me, and the Pretty
+Lady left us at once; but in less than two minutes she came back with
+her cherished kitten in her mouth. Depositing him in my neck, she stood
+and looked at me, as much as to say:--
+
+"There, you can take him awhile. He cured me and I won't be selfish; I
+will share him with you."
+
+I was ill for three days, and all that time the kitten was kept with me.
+When his mother wanted him, she kept him on the foot of the bed, where
+she nursed, and lapped, and scrubbed him until it seemed as if she must
+wear even his stolid nerves completely out. But whenever she felt like
+going out she brought him up and tucked him away in the hollow of my
+neck, with a little guttural noise that, interpreted, meant:--
+
+"There, now you take care of him awhile. I'm all tired out. Don't wake
+him up."
+
+But when the infant had dropped soundly asleep, she invariably came back
+and demanded him; and not only demanded, but dragged him forth from his
+lair by the nape of the neck, shrieking and protesting, to the foot of
+the bed again, where he was obliged to go through another course of
+scrubbing and vigorous maternal attentions that actually kept his fur
+from growing as fast as the coats of less devotedly cared-for kittens
+grow.
+
+When I was well enough to leave my room, she transferred him to my lower
+bureau drawer, and then to a vantage-point behind an old lounge. But she
+never doubted, apparently, that it was the loan of that kitten that
+rescued me from an untimely grave.
+
+I have lost many an hour of much-needed sleep from my cat's habit of
+coming upstairs at four A.M. and jumping suddenly upon the bed; perhaps
+landing on the pit of my stomach. Waking in that fashion, unsympathetic
+persons would have pardoned me if I had indulged in injudicious
+language, or had even thrown the cat violently from my otherwise
+peaceful couch. But conscience has not to upbraid me with any of these
+things. I flatter myself that I bear even this patiently; I remember to
+have often made sleepy but pleasant remarks to the faithful little
+friend whose affection for me and whose desire to behold my countenance
+was too great to permit her to wait till breakfast time.
+
+If I lay awake for hours afterward, perhaps getting nothing more than
+literal "cat-naps," I consoled myself with remembering how Richelieu,
+and Wellington, and Mohammed, and otherwise great as well as
+discriminating persons, loved cats; I remembered, with some stirrings of
+secret pride, that it is only the artistic nature, the truly aesthetic
+soul that appreciates poetry, and grace, and all refined beauty, who
+truly loves cats; and thus meditating with closed eyes, I courted
+slumber again, throughout the breaking dawn, while the cat purred in
+delight close at hand.
+
+The Pretty Lady was evidently of Angora or coon descent, as her fur was
+always longer and silkier than that of ordinary cats. She was fond of
+all the family. When we boarded in Boston, we kept her in a front room,
+two flights from the ground. Whenever any of us came in the front door,
+she knew it. No human being could have told, sitting in a closed room in
+winter, two flights up, the identity of a person coming up the steps and
+opening the door. But the Pretty Lady, then only six months old, used to
+rouse from her nap in a big chair, or from the top of a folding bed,
+jump down, and be at the hall door ready to greet the incomer, before
+she was halfway up the stairs. The cat never got down for the wrong
+person, and she never neglected to meet any and every member of our
+family who might be entering. The irreverent scoffer may call it
+"instinct," or talk about the "sense of smell." I call it sagacity.
+
+One summer we all went up to the farm in northern Vermont, and decided
+to take her and her son, "Mr. McGinty," with us. We put them both in a
+large market-basket and tied the cover securely. On the train Mr.
+McGinty manifested a desire to get out, and was allowed to do so, a
+stout cord having been secured to his collar first, and the other end
+tied to the car seat. He had a delightful journey, once used to the
+noise and motion of the train. He sat on our laps, curled up on the seat
+and took naps, or looked out of the windows with evident puzzlement at
+the way things had suddenly taken to flying; he even made friends with
+the passengers, and in general amused himself as any other traveller
+would on an all-day's journey by rail, except that he did not risk his
+eyesight by reading newspapers. But the Pretty Lady had not travelled
+for some years, and did not enjoy the trip as well as formerly; on the
+contrary she curled herself into a round tight ball in one corner of the
+basket till the journey's end was reached.
+
+Once at the farm she seemed contented as long as I remained with her.
+There was plenty of milk and cream, and she caught a great many mice.
+She was far too dainty to eat them, but she had an inherent pleasure in
+catching mice, just like her more plebeian sisters; and she enjoyed
+presenting them to Mr. McGinty or me, or some other worthy object of her
+solicitude.
+
+She was at first afraid of "the big outdoors." The wide, wind-blown
+spaces, the broad, sunshiny sky, the silence and the roominess of it
+all, were quite different from her suburban experiences; and the farm
+animals, too, were in her opinion curiously dangerous objects. Big Dan,
+the horse, was truly a horrible creature; the rooster was a new and
+suspicious species of biped, and the bleating calves objects of her
+direst hatred.
+
+The pig in his pen possessed for her the most horrid fascination. Again
+and again would she steal out and place herself where she could see that
+dreadful, strange, pink, fat creature inside his own quarters. She would
+fix her round eyes widely upon him in blended fear and admiration. If
+the pig uttered the characteristic grunt of his race, the Pretty Lady at
+first ran swiftly away; but afterward she used to turn and gaze
+anxiously at us, as if to say:--
+
+"Do you hear that? Isn't this a truly horrible creature?" and in other
+ways evince the same sort of surprise that a professor in the Peabody
+Museum might, were the skeleton of the megatherium suddenly to accost
+him after the manner peculiar to its kind.
+
+It was funnier, even, to see Mr. McGinty on the morning after his
+arrival at the farm, as he sallied forth and made acquaintance with
+other of God's creatures than humans and cats, and the natural enemy of
+his kind, the dog. In his suburban home he had caught rats and captured
+on the sly many an English sparrow. When he first investigated his new
+quarters on the farm, he discovered a beautiful flock of very large
+birds led by one of truly gorgeous plumage.
+
+"Ah!" thought Mr. McGinty, "this is a great and glorious country, where
+I can have such birds as these for the catching. Tame, too. I'll have
+one for breakfast."
+
+So he crouched down, tiger-like, and crept carefully along to a
+convenient distance and was preparing to spring, when the large and
+gorgeous bird looked up from his worm and remarked:--
+
+"Cut-cut-cut, ca-dah-cut!" and, taking his wives, withdrew toward the
+barn.
+
+Mr. McGinty drew back amazed. "This is a queer bird," he seemed to say;
+"saucy, too. However, I'll soon have him," and he crept more carefully
+than before up to springing distance, when again this most gorgeous bird
+drew up and exclaimed, with a note of annoyance:--
+
+"Cut-cut-cut, ca-dah-cut! What ails that old cat, anyway?" And again he
+led his various wives barn-ward.
+
+Mr. McGinty drew up with a surprised air, and apparently made a cursory
+study of the leading anatomical features of this strange bird; but he
+did not like to give up, and soon crouched and prepared for another
+onslaught. This time Mr. Chanticleer allowed the cat to come up close to
+his flock, when he turned and remarked in the most amicable manner,
+"Cut-cut-cut-cut!" which interpreted seemed to mean: "Come now; that's
+all right. You're evidently new here; but you'd better take my advice
+and not fool with me."
+
+Anyhow, with this, down went McGinty's hope of a bird breakfast "to the
+bottom of the sea," and he gave up the hunt. He soon made friends,
+however, with every animal on the place, and so endeared himself to the
+owners that he lived out his days there with a hundred acres and more as
+his own happy hunting-ground.
+
+Not so, the Pretty Lady. I went away on a short visit after a few weeks,
+leaving her behind. From the moment of my disappearance she was uneasy
+and unhappy. On the fifth day she disappeared. When I returned and found
+her not, I am not ashamed to say that I hunted and called her
+everywhere, nor even that I shed a few tears when days rolled into weeks
+and she did not appear, as I realized that she might be starving, or
+have suffered tortures from some larger animal.
+
+There are many remarkable stories of cats who find their way home across
+almost impossible roads and enormous distances. There is a saying,
+believed by many people, "You can't lose a cat," which can be proved by
+hundreds of remarkable returns. But the Pretty Lady had absolutely no
+sense of locality. She had always lived indoors and had never been
+allowed to roam the neighborhood. It was five weeks before we found
+trace of her, and then only by accident. My sister was passing a field
+of grain, and caught a glimpse of a small creature which she at first
+thought to be a woodchuck. She turned and looked at it, and called
+"Pussy, pussy," when with a heart-breaking little cry of utter delight
+and surprise, our beloved cat came toward her. From the first, the wide
+expanse of the country had confused her; she had evidently "lost her
+bearings" and was probably all the time within fifteen minutes' walk of
+the farm-house.
+
+When found, she was only a shadow of herself, and for the first and only
+time in her life we could count her ribs. She was wild with delight, and
+clung to my sister's arms as though fearing to lose her; and in all the
+fuss that was made over her return, no human being could have showed
+more affection, or more satisfaction at finding her old friends again.
+
+That she really was lost, and had no sense of locality to guide her
+home, was proven by her conduct after she returned to her Boston home. I
+had preceded my sister, and was at the theatre on the evening when she
+arrived with the Pretty Lady. The latter was carried into the kitchen,
+taken from her basket, and fed. Then, instead of going around the house
+and settling herself in her old home, she went into the front hall which
+she had left four months before, and seated herself on the spot where
+she always watched and waited when I was out. When I came home at
+eleven, I saw through the screen door her "that was lost and is found."
+She had been waiting to welcome me for three mortal hours.
+
+I wish those people who believe cats have no affection for people could
+have seen her then. She would not leave me for an instant, and
+manifested her love in every possible way; and when I retired for the
+night, she curled up on my pillow and purred herself contentedly to
+sleep, only rising when I did. After breakfast that first morning after
+her return, she asked to be let out of the back door, and made me
+understand that I must go with her. I did so, and she explored every
+part of the back yard, entreating me in the same way she called her
+kittens to keep close by her. She investigated our own premises
+thoroughly and then crept carefully under the fences on either side into
+the neighbor's precincts where she had formerly visited in friendly
+fashion; then she came timidly back, all the time keeping watch that she
+did not lose me. Having finished her tour of inspection, she went in and
+led me on an investigating trip all through the house, smelling of every
+corner and base-board, and insisting that every closet door should be
+opened, so that she might smell each closet through in the same way.
+When this was done, she settled herself in one of her old nooks for a
+nap and allowed me to leave.
+
+But never again did she go out of sight of the house. For more than a
+year she would not go even into a neighbor's yard, and when she finally
+decided that it might be safe to crawl under the fences on to other
+territory, she invariably turned about to sit facing the house, as
+though living up to a firm determination never to lose sight of it
+again. This practice she kept up until at the close of her last mortal
+sickness, when she crawled into a dark place under a neighboring barn
+and said good-by to earthly fears and worries forever.
+
+_Requiescat in pace_, my Pretty Lady. I wish all your sex had your
+gentle dignity, and grace, and beauty, to say nothing of your
+faithfulness and affection. Like Mother Michel's "Monmouth," it may be
+said of you:--
+
+ "She was merely a cat,
+ But her Sublime Virtues place her on a level with
+ The Most Celebrated Mortals,
+ and
+ In Ancient Egypt
+ Altars would have been Erected to her
+ Memory."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+CONCERNING MY OTHER CATS
+
+
+"Oh, what a lovely cat!" is a frequent expression from visitors or
+passers-by at our house. And from the Pretty Lady down through her
+various sons and daughters to the present family protector and head,
+"Thomas Erastus," and the Angora, "Lady Betty," there have been some
+beautiful creatures.
+
+Mr. McGinty was a solid-color maltese, with fur like a seal for
+closeness and softness, and with the disposition of an angel. He used to
+be seized with sudden spasms of affection and run from one to another of
+the family, rubbing his soft cheeks against ours, and kissing us
+repeatedly. This he did by taking gentle little affectionate nips with
+his teeth. I used to give him a certain caress, which he took as an
+expression of affection. After leaving him at the farm I did not see him
+again for two years. Then on a short visit, I asked for Mr. McGinty and
+was told that he was in a shed chamber. I found him asleep in a box of
+grain and took him out; he looked at me through sleepy eyes, turned
+himself over and stretched up for the old caress. As nobody ever gave
+him that but me, I take this as conclusive proof that he not only knew
+me, but remembered my one peculiarity.
+
+Then there was old Pomp, called "old" to distinguish him from the young
+Pomp of to-day, or "Pompanita." He died of pneumonia at the age of three
+years; but he was the handsomest black cat--and the blackest--I have
+ever seen. He had half a dozen white hairs under his chin; but his
+blackness was literally like the raven's wing. Many handsome black cats
+show brown in the strong sunlight, or when their fur is parted. But old
+Pomp's fur was jet black clear through, and in the sunshine looked as if
+he had been made up of the richest black silk velvet, his eyes,
+meanwhile, being large and of the purest amber. He weighed some fifteen
+pounds, and that somebody envied us the possession of him was evident,
+as he was stolen two or three times during the last summer of his life.
+But he came home every time; only when Death finally stole him, we had
+no redress.
+
+"Bobinette," the black kitten referred to in the previous chapter, also
+had remarkably beautiful eyes. We used to keep him in ribbons to match,
+and he knew color, too, perfectly well. For instance, if we offered him
+a blue or a red ribbon, he would not be quiet long enough to have it
+tied on; but show him a yellow one, and he would prance across the room,
+and not only stand still to have it put on, but purr and evince the
+greatest pride in it.
+
+Bobinette had another very pretty trick of playing with the
+tape-measure. He used to bring it to us and have it wound several times
+around his body; then he would "chase himself" until he got it off, when
+he would bring it back and ask plainly to have it wound round him again.
+After a little we noticed he was wearing the tape-measure out, and so we
+tried to substitute it with an old ribbon or piece of cotton tape. But
+Bobinette would have none of them. On the contrary, he repeatedly
+climbed on to the table and to the work-basket, and hunted patiently for
+his tape-measure, and even if it were hidden in a pocket, he kept up the
+search until he unearthed it; and he would invariably end by dragging
+forth that particular tape-measure and bringing it to us. I need not say
+that his intelligence was rewarded.
+
+Speaking of colors, a friend has a cat that is devoted to blue. When she
+puts on a particularly pretty blue gown, the cat hastens to get into her
+lap, put her face down to the material, purr, and manifest the greatest
+delight; but let the same lady put on a black dress, and the cat will
+not come near her.
+
+"Pompanita," the second Pomp in our dynasty, is a fat and billowy black
+fellow, now five years old and weighing nineteen pounds. He was the last
+of the Pretty Lady's ninety-three children. Only a few of this vast
+progeny, however, grew to cat-hood, as she was never allowed to keep
+more than one each season. The Pretty Lady, in fact, came to regard this
+as the only proper method. On one occasion I had been away all day. When
+I got home at night the housekeeper said, "Pussy has had five kittens,
+but she won't go near them." When the Pretty Lady heard my voice, she
+came and led the way to the back room where the kittens were in the
+lower drawer of an unused bureau, and uttered one or two funny little
+noises, intimating that matters were not altogether as they should be,
+according to established rules of propriety. I understood, abstracted
+four of the five kittens, and disappeared. When I came back she had
+settled herself contentedly with the remaining kitten, and from that
+time on was a model mother.
+
+Pompanita the Good has all the virtues of a good cat, and absolutely no
+vices. He loves us all and loves all other cats as well. As for
+fighting, he emulates the example of that veteran who boasts that during
+the war he might always be found where the shot and shell were the
+thickest,--under the ammunition wagon. Like most cats he has a decided
+streak of vanity. My sister cut a wide, fancy collar, or ruff, of white
+paper one day, and put it on Pompanita. At first he felt much abashed
+and found it almost impossible to walk with it. But a few words of
+praise and encouragement changed all that.
+
+"Oh, what a pretty Pomp he is now!" exclaimed one and another, until he
+sat up coyly and cocked his head one side as if to say:--
+
+"Oh, now, do you really think I look pretty?" and after a few more
+assurances he got down and strutted as proudly as any peacock; much to
+the discomfiture of the kitten, who wanted to play with him. And now he
+will cross the yard any time to have one of those collars on.
+
+But Thomas Erastus is the prince of our cats to-day. He weighs seventeen
+pounds, and is a soft, grayish-maltese with white paws and breast. One
+Saturday night ten years ago, as we were partaking of our regular Boston
+baked beans, I heard a faint mew. Looking down I saw beside me the
+thinnest kitten I ever beheld. The Irish girl who presided over our
+fortunes at the time used to place the palms of her hands together and
+say of Thomas's appearance, "Why, mum, the two sides of 'im were just
+like that." I picked him up, and he crawled pathetically into my neck
+and cuddled down.
+
+"There," said a friend who was sitting opposite, "he's fixed himself
+now. You'll keep him."
+
+"No, I shall not," I said, "but I will feed him a few days and give him
+to my cousin." Inside half an hour, however, Thomas Erastus had assumed
+the paternal air toward us that soon made us fear to lose him. Living
+without Thomas now would be like a young girl's going out without a
+chaperone. After that first half-hour, when he had been fed, he chased
+every foreign cat off the premises, and assumed the part of a watch-dog.
+To this day he will sit on the front porch or the window-sill and growl
+if he sees a tramp or suspicious character approaching. He always goes
+into the kitchen when the market-man calls, and orders his meat; and at
+exactly five o'clock in the afternoon, when the meat is cut up and
+distributed, leads the feline portion of the family into the kitchen.
+
+Thomas knows the time of day. For six months he waked up one housekeeper
+at exactly seven o'clock in the morning, never varying two minutes. He
+did this by seating himself on her chest and gazing steadfastly in her
+face. Usually this waked her, but if she did not yield promptly to that
+treatment he would poke her cheeks with the most velvety of paws until
+she awoke. He has a habit now of going upstairs and sitting opposite the
+closed door of the young man who has to rise hours before the rest of us
+do, and waiting until the door is opened for him. How he knows at what
+particular moment each member of the family will wake up and come forth
+is a mystery, but he does.
+
+How do cats tell the hour of day, anyway? The old Chinese theory that
+they are living clocks is, in a way, borne out by their own conduct. Not
+only have my cats shown repeatedly that they know the hour of rising of
+every member of the family, but they gather with as much regularity as
+the ebbing of the tides, or the setting of the sun, at exactly five
+o'clock in the afternoon for their supper. They are given a hearty
+breakfast as soon as the kitchen fire is started in the morning. This
+theoretically lasts them until five. I say theoretically, because if
+they wake from their invariable naps at one, and smell lunch, they
+individually wheedle some one into feeding them. But this is only
+individually. Collectively they are fed at five.
+
+They are the most methodical creatures in the world. They go to bed
+regularly at night when the family does. They are waiting in the kitchen
+for breakfast when the fire is started in the morning. Then they go out
+of doors and play, or hunt, or ruminate until ten o'clock, when they
+come in, seek their favorite resting-places, and sleep until four.
+Evidently, from four to five is a play hour, and the one who wakes first
+is expected to stir up the others. But at exactly five, no matter where
+they may have strayed to, every one of the three, five, or seven (as the
+number may happen to be) will be sitting in his own particular place in
+the kitchen, waiting with patient eagerness for supper. For each has a
+particular place for eating, just as bigger folk have their places at
+the dining table. Thomas Erastus sits in a corner; the space under the
+table is reserved especially for Jane. Pompanita is at his mistress's
+feet, and Lady Betty, the Angora, bounds to her shoulder when their meat
+appears. Their table manners are quite irreproachable also. It is
+considered quite unpardonable to snatch at another's piece of meat, and
+a breach of the best cat-etiquette to show impatience while another is
+being fed.
+
+I do not pretend to say that this is entirely natural. They are taught
+these things as kittens, and since cats are as great sticklers for
+propriety and gentle manners as any human beings can be, they never
+forget it. Doubtless, this is easier because they are always well fed,
+but Thomas Erastus or Jane would have to be on the verge of starvation,
+I am sure, before they would "grab" from one of the other cats. And as
+for the Pretty Lady, it was always necessary to see that she was
+properly served. She would not eat from a dish with other cats, or,
+except in extreme cases, from one they had left. Indeed, she was
+remarkable in this respect. I have seen her sit on the edge of a table
+where chickens were being dressed and wait patiently for a tidbit; I
+have seen her left alone in the room, while on that table was a piece of
+raw steak, but no temptation was ever great enough to make her touch any
+of these forbidden things. She actually seemed to have a conscience.
+
+Only one thing on the dining table would she touch. When she was two or
+three months old, she somehow got hold of the table-napkins done up in
+their rings. These were always to her the most delightful playthings in
+the world. As a kitten, she would play with them by the hour, if not
+taken away, and go to sleep cuddled affectionately around them. She got
+over this as she grew older; but when her first kitten was two or three
+months old, remembering the jolly times she used to have, she would
+sneak into the dining room and get the rolled napkins, carry them in her
+mouth to her infant, and endeavor with patient anxiety to show him how
+to play with them. Throughout nine years of motherhood she went through
+the same performance with every kitten she had. They never knew what to
+do with the napkins, or cared to know, and would have none of them. But
+she never got discouraged. She would climb up on the sideboard, or into
+the china closet, and even try to get into drawers where the napkins
+were laid away in their rings. If she could get hold of one, she would
+carry it with literal groans and evident travail of spirit to her
+kitten, and by further groans and admonitions seem to say:--
+
+"Child, see this beautiful plaything I have brought you. This is a part
+of your education; it is just as necessary for you to know how to play
+with this as to poke your paw under the closet door properly. Wake up,
+now, and play with it."
+
+Sometimes, when the table was laid over night, we used to hear her
+anguished groans in the stillness of the night. In the morning every
+napkin belonging to the family would be found in a different part of the
+house, and perhaps a ring would be missing. These periods, however, only
+lasted as long, in each new kitten's training, as the few weeks that she
+had amused herself with them at their age. Then she would drop the
+subject, and napkins had no further interest than the man in the moon
+until another kitten arrived at the age when she considered them a
+necessary part of his education.
+
+Professor Shaler in his interesting book on the intelligence of animals
+gives the cat only the merest mention, intimating that he considers them
+below par in this respect, and showing little real knowledge of them. I
+wish he might have known the Pretty Lady.
+
+Once our Lady Betty had four little Angora kittens. She was probably the
+most aristocratic cat in the country, for she kept a wet nurse. Poor
+Jane, of commoner strain, had two small kittens the day after the Angora
+family appeared. Jane's plebeian infants promptly disappeared, but she
+took just as promptly to the more aristocratic family and fulfilled the
+duties of nurse and maid. Both cats and four kittens occupied the same
+bureau drawer, and when either cat wanted the fresh air she left the
+other in charge; and there was a tacit understanding between them that
+the fluffy, fat babies must never be left alone one instant. Four small
+and lively kittens in the house are indeed things of beauty, and a joy
+as long as they last. Four fluffy little Angora balls they were Chin,
+Chilla, Buffie, and Orange Pekoe, names that explain their color. And
+Jane, wet nurse and waiting-maid, had to keep as busy as the old woman
+that lived in a shoe. Jane it was who must look after the infants when
+Lady Betty wished to leave the house. Jane it was who must scrub the
+furry quartet until their silky fur stood up in bunches the wrong way
+all over their chubby little sides; Jane must sleep with them nights,
+and be ready to furnish sustenance at any moment of day or night; and
+above all, Jane must watch them anxiously and incessantly in waking
+hours, uttering those little protesting murmurs of admonition which
+mother cats deem so necessary toward the proper training of kittens.
+And, poor Jane! As lady's maid she must bathe Lady Betty's brow every
+now and then, as the more finely strung Angora succumbed to the nervous
+strain of kitten-rearing, and she turned affectionately to Jane for
+comfort. A prettier sight, or a more profitable study of the love of
+animals for each other was never seen than Lady Betty, her infants, and
+her nurse-maid. And yet, there are people who pronounce cats stupid.
+
+One evening I returned from the theatre late and roused up the four
+fluffy kittens, who, seeing the gas turned on, started in for a frolic.
+The lady mother did not approve of midnight carousals on the part of
+infants, and protested with mild wails against their joyful caperings.
+Finally, Orange Pekoe got into the closet and Lady Betty pursued him.
+But suddenly a strange odor was detected. Sitting on her haunches she
+smelled all over the bottom of the skirt which had just been hung up,
+stopping every few seconds to utter a little worried note of warning to
+the kittens. The infants, however, displayed a quite human disregard of
+parental authority and gambolled on unconcernedly under the skirt;
+reminding one of the old New England primer style of tales, showing how
+disobedient children flaunt themselves in the face of danger, despite
+the judicious advice of their elders. Lady Betty could do nothing with
+them, and grew more nervous and worried every minute in consequence.
+Suddenly she bethought herself of that never-failing source of strength
+and comfort, Jane. She went into the next room, and, although I had not
+heard a sound, returned in a moment with the maltese. Jane was ushered
+into the closet, and soon scented out the skirt. Then she too sat on her
+haunches and gave a long, careful sniff, turned round and uttered one
+"purr-t-t," and took the Angora off with her. Jane had discovered that
+there was no element of danger in the closet, and had imparted her
+knowledge to the finely strung Angora in an instant. And so, taking her
+back to bed, she "bathed her brow" with gentle lappings until Lady Betty
+sank off to quiet sleep, soothed and comforted.
+
+It is not easy to study a cat. They are like sensitive plants, and shut
+themselves instinctively away from the human being who does not care for
+them. They know when a man or a woman loves them, almost before they
+come into the human presence; and it is almost useless for the
+unsympathetic person to try to study a cat. But the thousands who do
+love cats know that they are the most individual animals in the world.
+Dogs are much alike in their love for mankind, their obedience,
+faithfulness, and, in different degrees, their sagacity. But there is as
+much individuality in cats as in people.
+
+Dogs and horses are our slaves; cats never. This does not prove them
+without affection, as some people seem to think; on the contrary, it
+proves their peculiar and characteristic dignity and self-respect.
+Women, poets, and especially artists, like cats; delicate natures only
+can realize their sensitive nervous systems.
+
+The Pretty Lady's mother talked almost incessantly when she was in the
+house. One of her habits was to get on the window-seat outside and
+demand to be let in. If she was not waited upon immediately, she would,
+when the door was finally opened, stop when halfway in and scold
+vigorously. The tones of her voice and the expression of her face were
+so exactly like those of a scolding, vixenish woman that she caused many
+a hearty laugh by her tirades.
+
+Thomas Erastus, however, seldom utters a sound, and at the rare
+intervals when he condescends to purr, he can only be heard by holding
+one's ear close to his great, soft sides. But he has the most remarkable
+ways. He will open every door in the house from the inside; he will even
+open blinds, getting his paw under the fastening and working patiently
+at it, with his body on the blind itself, until the hook flies back and
+it finally opens. One housekeeper trained him to eat his meat close up
+in one corner of the kitchen. This custom he kept up after she went
+away, until new and uncommonly frisky kittens annoyed him so that his
+place was transferred to the top of an old table. When he got hungry in
+those days, however, he used to go and crowd close up in his corner and
+look so pathetically famished that food was generally forthcoming at
+once. Thomas was formerly very much devoted to the lady who lived next
+door, and was as much at home in her house as in ours. Her family rose
+an hour or two earlier than ours in the morning, and their breakfast
+hour came first. I should attribute Thomas's devotion to Mrs. T. to this
+fact, since he invariably presented himself at her dining-room window
+and wheedled her into feeding him, were it not that his affection seemed
+just as strong throughout the day. It was interesting to see him go over
+and rattle her screen doors, front, back, or side, knowing perfectly
+well that he would bring some one to open and let him in.
+
+Thomas has a really paternal air toward the rest of the family. One
+spring night, as usual on retiring, I went to the back door to call in
+the cats. Thomas Erastus was in my sister's room, but none of the others
+were to be seen; nor did they come at once, evidently having strayed in
+their play beyond the sound of my voice. Thomas, upstairs, heard my
+continued call and tried for some time to get out. M. had shut her door,
+thinking to keep in the one already safe. But the more I called, the
+more persistently determined he became to get out. At last M. opened her
+window and let him on to the sloping roof of the "L," from which he
+could descend through a gnarled old apple tree. Meanwhile I left the
+back door and went on with my preparations for the night. About ten
+minutes later I went and called the cats again. It was a moonlight night
+and I saw six delinquent cats coming in a flock across the open field
+behind the house,--all marshalled by Mr. Thomas. He evidently hunted
+them up and called them in himself; then he sat on the back porch and
+waited until the last kit was safely in, before he stalked gravely in
+with an air which said as plainly as words:--
+
+"There, it takes _me_ to do anything with this family."
+
+None of my cats would think of responding to the call of "Kitty, Kitty,"
+or "Puss, Puss." They are early taught their names and answer to them.
+Neither would one answer to the name of another, except in occasional
+instances where jealousy prompts them to do so. We have to be most
+careful when we go out of an evening, not to let Thomas Erastus get out
+at the same time. In case he does, he will follow us either to the
+railroad station or to the electric cars and wait in some near-by nook
+until we come back. I have known him to sit out from seven until
+midnight of a cold, snowy winter evening, awaiting our return from the
+theatre. When we alight from the cars he is nowhere to be seen. But
+before we have gone many steps, lo! Thomas Erastus is behind or beside
+us, proudly escorting his mistresses home, but looking neither at them,
+nor to the right or left. Not until he reaches the porch does he allow
+himself to be petted. But on our way to the cars his attitude is
+different. He is as frisky as a kitten. In vain do we try to "shoo" him
+back, or catch him. He prances along, just out of reach, but
+tantalizingly close; when we get aboard our car, we know he is safe in
+some corner gazing sadly after us, and that no danger can drive him home
+until we reappear.
+
+Both Thomas and Pompanita take a deep interest in all household affairs,
+although in this respect they do not begin to show the curiosity of the
+Pretty Lady. Never a piece of furniture was changed in he house that she
+did not immediately notice, the first time she came into the room
+afterward; and she invariably jumped up on the article and thoroughly
+investigated affairs before settling down again. Every parcel that came
+in must be examined, and afterward she must lie on the paper or inside
+the box that it came in, always doing this with great solemnity and
+gazing earnestly out of her large, intelligent dark eyes. Toward the
+close of her life she was greatly troubled at any unusual stir in the
+household. She liked to have company, but nothing disturbed her more
+than to have a man working in the cellar, putting in coal, cutting wood,
+or doing such work. She used then to follow us uneasily about and look
+earnestly up into our faces, as if to say:--
+
+"Girls, this is not right. Everything is all upset here and 'a' the
+world's gang agley.' Why don't you fix it?"
+
+She was the politest creature, too. That was the reason of her name. In
+her youth she was christened "Pansy"; then "Cleopatra," "Susan," "Lady
+Jane Grey" and the "Duchess." But her manners were so punctiliously
+perfect, and she was such a "pretty lady" always and everywhere;
+moreover she had such a habit of sitting with her hands folded politely
+across her gentle, lace-vandyked bosom that the only sobriquet that ever
+clung was the one that expressed herself the most perfectly. She was in
+every sense a "Pretty Lady." For years she ate with us at the table. Her
+chair was placed next to mine, and no matter where she was or how
+soundly she had been sleeping, when the dinner bell rang she was the
+first to get to her seat. Then she sat patiently until I fixed a dainty
+meal in a saucer and placed it in the chair beside her, when she ate it
+in the same well-bred way she did everything.
+
+Thomas Erastus hurt his foot one day. Rather he got it hurt during a
+matutinal combat at which he was forced, being the head of the family,
+to be present, although he is far above the midnight carousals of his
+kind. Thomas Erastus sometimes loves to consider himself an invalid.
+When his doting mistress was not looking, he managed to step off on that
+foot quite lively, especially if his mortal enemy, a disreputable black
+tramp, skulked across the yard. But let Thomas Erastus see a feminine
+eye gazing anxiously at him through an open window, and he immediately
+hobbled on three legs; then he would stop and sit down and assume so
+pathetic an expression of patient suffering that the mistress's heart
+would melt, and Thomas Erastus would find himself being borne into the
+house and placed on the softest sofa. Once she caught him down cellar.
+There is a window to which he has easy access, and where he can go in
+and out a hundred times a day. Evidently he had planned to do so at that
+moment. But seeing his fond mistress, he sat down on the cellar floor,
+and with his most fetching expression gazed wistfully back and forth
+from her to the window. And of course she picked him up carefully and
+put him on the window ledge. Thomas Erastus has all the innocent guile
+of a successful politician. He could manage things slicker than the
+political bosses, an' he would.
+
+One summer Thomas Erastus moved--an event of considerable importance in
+his placid existence. He had to travel a short distance on the
+steam-cars; and worse, he needs must endure the indignity of travelling
+that distance in a covered basket. But his dignity would not suffer him
+to do more than send forth one or two mournful wails of protest. After
+being kept in his new house for a couple of days, he was allowed to go
+out and become familiar with his surroundings--not without fear and
+trepidation on the part of his doting mistress that he might make a bold
+strike for his former home. But Thomas Erastus felt he had a mission to
+perform for his race. He would disprove that mistaken theory that a cat,
+no matter how kindly he is treated, cares more for places than for
+people. Consequently he would not dream of going back to his old haunts.
+
+No; he sat down in the front yard and took a long look at his
+surroundings, the neighboring lots, a field of grass, a waving
+corn-field. He had already convinced himself that the new house was
+home, because in it were all the old familiar things, and he had been
+allowed to investigate every bit of it and to realize what had happened.
+So after looking well about him he made a series of tours of
+investigation. First, he took a bee-line for the farthest end of the
+nearest vacant lot; then he chose the corn-field; then the beautiful
+broad grounds of the neighbor below; then across the street; but between
+each of these little journeys he took a bee-line back to his
+starting-point, sat down in front of the new house, and "got his
+bearings," just as evidently as though he could have said out loud,
+"This is my home and I mustn't lose it." In this way he convinced
+himself that where he lives is the centre of the universe, and that the
+world revolves around him. And he has since been as happy as a
+cricket,--yea, happier, for death and destruction await the unfortunate
+cricket where Thomas Erastus thrives.
+
+But don't say a cat can't or won't be moved. It's your own fault if he
+won't.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+CONCERNING OTHER PEOPLE'S CATS
+
+
+Every observing reader of Mrs. Harriet Prescott Spofford's stories knows
+that she is fond of cats and understands them. Her heroines usually
+have, among other feminine belongings and accessories, one or more cats.
+"Four great Persian cats haunted her every footstep," she says of Honor,
+in the "Composite Wife." "A sleepy, snowy creature like some
+half-animated ostrich plume; a satanic thing with fiery eyes that to Mr.
+Chipperley's perception were informed with the very bottomless flames;
+another like a golden fleece, caressing, half human; and a little
+mouse-colored imp whose bounds and springs and feathery tail-lashings
+not only did infinite damage among the Venetian and Dresden
+knick-knackerie, but among Mr. Chipperley's nerves."
+
+In her beautiful, old-fashioned home at Newburyport, Mass., she has two
+beloved cats. But I will not attempt to improve on her own account of
+them:--
+
+"As for my own cats,--their name has been legion, although a few remain
+preeminent. There was Miss Spot who came to us already named, preferring
+our domicile to the neighboring one she had. Her only son was so black
+that he was known as Ink Spot, but her only daughter was so altogether
+ideal and black, too, that she was known as Beauty Spot. Beauty Spot led
+a sorrowful life, and was fortunately born clothed in black or her
+mourning would have been expensive, as she was always in a bereaved
+condition, her drowned offspring making a shoal in the Merrimac,
+although she had always plenty left. She solaced herself with music. She
+would never sit in any one's lap but mine, and in mine only when I sang;
+and then only when I sang 'The Last Rose of Summer.' This is really
+true. But she would spring into my husband's lap if he whistled. She
+would leave her sleep reluctantly, start a little way, and retreat,
+start and retreat again, and then give one bound and light on his knee
+or his arm and reach up one paw and push it repeatedly across his mouth
+like one playing the jew's-harp; I suppose to get at the sound. She
+always went to walk with us and followed us wherever we went about the
+island.
+
+"Lucifer and Phosphor have been our cats for the last ten years:
+Lucifer, entirely black, Phosphor, as yellow as saffron, a real golden
+fleece. My sister lived in town and going away for the summer left her
+cat in a neighbor's care, and the neighbor moved away meanwhile and left
+the cat to shift for herself. She went down to the apothecary's, two
+blocks away or more. There she had a family of kittens, but apparently
+came up to reconnoitre, for on my sister's return, she appeared with one
+kitten and laid it down at Kate's feet; ran off, and in time came with
+another which she left also, and so on until she had brought up the
+whole household. Lucifer was one of them.
+
+"He was as black as an imp and as mischievous as one. His bounds have
+always been tremendous: from the floor to the high mantel, or to the top
+of a tall buffet close under the ceiling. And these bounds of his,
+together with a way he has of gazing into space with his soulful and
+enormous yellow eyes, have led to a thousand tales as to his nightly
+journeyings among the stars; hurting his foot slumping through the
+nebula in Andromeda; getting his supper at a place in the milky way,
+hunting all night with Orion, and having awful fights with Sirius. He
+got his throat cut by alighting on the North Pole one night, coming down
+from the stars. The reason he slumps through the nebula is on account of
+his big feet; he has six toes (like the foot in George Augustus Sala's
+drawing) and when he walks on the top of the piazza you would think it
+was a burglar.
+
+"Lucifer's Mephistophelian aspect is increased not only by those feet,
+but by an arrow-pointed tail. He sucks his tail,--alas, and alas! In
+vain have we peppered it, and pepper-sauced it, and dipped it in
+Worcestershire sauce and in aloes, and done it up in curl papers, and
+glued on it the fingers of old gloves. At last we gave it up in despair,
+and I took him and put his tail in his mouth and told him to take his
+pleasure,--and that is the reason, I suppose, that he attaches himself
+particularly to me. He is very near-sighted with those magnificent orbs,
+for he will jump into any one's lap, who wears a black gown, but jump
+down instantly, and when he finds my lap curl down for a brief season.
+But he is not much of a lap-loving cat. He puts up his nose and smells
+my face all over in what he means for a caress, and is off. He is not a
+large eater, although he has been known to help himself to a whole steak
+at the table, being alone in the dining room; and when poultry are in
+the larder he is insistent till satisfied. But he wants his breakfast
+early. If the second girl, whose charge he is, does not rise in season,
+he mounts two flights of stairs and seats himself on her chest until she
+does rise. Then if she does not wait on him at once, he goes into the
+drawing-room, and springs to the top of the upright piano, and
+deliberately knocks off the bric-a-brac, particularly loving to
+encounter and floor a brass dragon candlestick. Then he springs to the
+mantel-shelf if he has not been seized and appeased, and repeats
+operations, and has even carried his work of destruction around the room
+to the top of a low bookcase and has proved himself altogether the wrong
+sort of person in a china-shop.
+
+"However, it is conceded in the family that Phosphor is not a cat
+merely: he is a person, and Lucifer is a spirit. Lucifer seldom purrs--I
+wonder if that is a characteristic of black cats?" [No; my black cats
+fairly roar.] "A little thread of sound, and only now and then, when
+very happy and loving, a rich, full strain. But Phosphor purrs like a
+windmill, like an electric car, like a tea-kettle, like a whole boiled
+dinner. When Phosphor came, Lucifer, six weeks her senior (Phosphor's
+excellencies always incline one to say 'she' of him), thought the little
+live yellow ball was made only for him to play with, and he cuffed and
+tossed him around for all he was worth, licked him all over twenty times
+a day, and slept with his arms about him. During those early years
+Phosphor never washed himself, Lucifer took such care of him, and they
+were a lovely sight in each other's arms asleep. But of late years a
+coolness has intervened, and now they never speak as they pass by. They
+sometimes go fishing together, Lucifer walking off majestically alone,
+always dark, mysterious, reticent, intent on his own affairs, making you
+feel that he has a sort of lofty contempt for yours. Sometimes, the mice
+depositing a dead fish in the crannies of the rocks, Lucifer appears
+with it in the twilight, gleaming silver-white in his jaws, and the
+great eyes gleaming like fire-balls above it. Phosphor is, however, a
+mighty hunter: mice, rats by the score, chipmunks,--all is game that
+comes to his net. He has cleaned out whole colonies of catbirds (for
+their insolence), and eaten every golden robin on the island.
+
+"It used to be very pretty to see them, when they were little, as El
+Mahdi, the peacock, spread his great tail, dart and spring upon it, and
+go whirling round with it as El Mahdi, fairly frantic with the little
+demons that had hold of him, went skipping and springing round and
+round. But although so fierce a fighter, so inhospitable to every other
+cat, Phosphor is the most affectionate little soul. He is still very
+playful, though so large, and last summer to see him bounding on the
+grass, playing with his tail, turning somersaults all by himself, was
+quite worth while. When we first happened to go away in his early years
+he wouldn't speak to us when we came back, he felt so neglected. I went
+away for five months once, before Lucifer was more than a year old. He
+got into no one's lap while I was gone, but the moment I sat down on my
+return, he jumped into mine, saluted me, and curled himself down for a
+nap, showing the plainest recognition. Now when one comes back, Phosphor
+is wild with joy--always in a well-bred way. He will get into your arms
+and on your shoulder and rub his face around, and before you know it his
+little mouth is in the middle of your mouth as much like a kiss as
+anything can be. Perhaps it isn't so well bred, but his motions are so
+quick and perfect it seems so. When you let him in he curls into heaps
+of joy, and fairly stands on his head sometimes. He is the most
+responsive creature, always ready for a caress, and his wild, great
+amber eyes beam love, if ever love had manifestation. His beauty is
+really extraordinary; his tail a real wonder. Lucifer, I grieve to say,
+looks very moth-eaten. Phosphor wore a bell for a short time once--a
+little Inch-Cape Rock bell--but he left it to toll all winter in a tall
+tree near the drawing-room window.
+
+"A charm of cats is that they seem to live in a world of their own, just
+as much as if it were a real dimension of space; and speaking of a
+fourth dimension, I am living in the expectation that the new
+discoveries in the matter of radiant energy will presently be revealing
+to all our senses the fact that there is no death.
+
+"We had some barn kittens once that lived in the hen-house, ate with the
+hens, and quarrelled with them for any tidbit. They curled up in the egg
+boxes and didn't move when the hens came to lay, and evidently had no
+idea that they were not hens.
+
+"Oh, there is no end to the cat situation. It began with the old fellow
+who put his hand under the cat to lift her up, and she arched her back
+higher and higher until he found it was the serpent Asgard, and it won't
+end with you and me. I don't know but she _is_ the serpent Asgard.
+I don't know if you have hypnotized or magnetized me, but I am writing
+as if I had known you intimately all my life, and feel as though I had.
+It is the freemasonry of cats. I always said they were possessed of
+spirits, and they use white magic to bring their friends together."
+
+Mrs. Spofford's "barn kittens" bring to mind an incident related by Mrs.
+Wood, the beautiful wife of Professor C.G. Wood, of the Harvard Medical
+School. At their summer place on Buzzard's Bay she has fifteen cats,
+mostly Angoras, Persians, and coons, with several dogs. These cats
+follow her all about the place in a regular troop, and a very handsome
+troop they are, with their waving, plumy tails tipped gracefully over at
+the ends as if saluting their superior officer. Among the dogs is a
+spaniel named Gyp that is particularly friendly with the cats. There are
+plenty of hens on the farm, and one spring a couple of bantams were
+added to the stock. The cats immediately took a great fancy to these
+diminutive bipeds, and watched them with the greatest interest. Finally
+the little hen had a flock of chickens. As the weather was still cold,
+the farmer put them upstairs in one of the barns, and every day Gyp
+would take seven or eight of those cats up there to see the fluffy
+little things. Dog and cats would seat themselves around the bantam and
+her brood and watch them by the hour, never offering to touch the
+chickens except when the little things were tired and went for a nap
+under their mother's wings; and then some cat--first one and then
+another--would softly poke its paw under the hen and stir up the family,
+making them all run out in consternation, and keeping things lively once
+more. The cats didn't dream of catching the chickens, only wanting,
+evidently, that they should emulate Joey and keep moving on.
+
+A writer in the _London Spectator_ tells of a favorite bantam hen
+with which the house cat has long been accustomed to play. This bantam
+has increased and multiplied, and keeps her family in a "coop" on the
+ground,--into which rats easily enter. At bedtime, however, pussy takes
+up her residence there, and bantam, the brood of chickens, and pussy
+sleep in happy harmony nightly. If any rats arrive, their experience
+must be sad and sharp. Another writer in the same number tells of a cat
+in Huddersfield, England, belonging to Canon Beardsley, who helps
+himself to a reel of cotton from the work-basket, takes it on the floor,
+and plays with it as long as he likes, and then jumps up and puts the
+reel back in its place again; just as our Bobinette used to get his
+tape-measure, although the latter never was known to put it away.
+
+Miss Sarah Orne Jewett is a cat-lover, too, and the dear old
+countrywomen "down in Maine," with whom one gets acquainted through her
+books, usually keep a cat also. Says she:--
+
+"I look back over so long a line of family cats, from a certain poor
+Spotty who died an awful death in a fit on the flagstones under the
+library window when I was less than five years old, to a lawless,
+fluffy, yellow and white coon cat now in my possession, that I find it
+hard to single out the most interesting pussy of all. I shall have to
+speak of two cats at least, one being the enemy and the other the friend
+of my dog Joe. Joe and I grew up together and were fond companions,
+until he died of far too early old age and left me to take my country
+walks alone.
+
+"Polly, the enemy, was the best mouser of all: quite the best business
+cat we ever had, with an astonishing intellect and a shrewd way of
+gaining her ends. She caught birds and mice as if she foraged for our
+whole family: she had an air of responsibility and a certain impatience
+of interruption and interference such as I have never seen in any other
+cat, and a scornful way of sitting before a person with fierce eyes and
+a quick, ominous twitching of her tail. She seemed to be measuring one's
+incompetence as a mouse-catcher in these moments, or to be saying to
+herself, 'What a clumsy, stupid person; how little she knows, and how I
+should like to scratch her and hear her squeak.' I sometimes felt as if
+I were a larger sort of helpless mouse in these moments, but sometimes
+Polly would be more friendly, and even jump into our laps, when it was a
+pleasure to pat her hard little head with its exquisitely soft, dark
+tortoise-shell fur. No matter if she almost always turned and caught the
+caressing hand with teeth and claws, when she was tired of its touch,
+you would always be ready to pat her next time; there was such a
+fascination about her that any attention on her part gave a thrill of
+pride and pleasure. Every guest and stranger admired her and tried to
+win her favor: while we of the household hid our wounds and delighted in
+her cleverness and beauty.
+
+"Polly was but a small cat to have a mind. She looked quite round and
+kittenish as she sat before the fire in a rare moment of leisure, with
+her black paws tucked under her white breast and her sleek back looking
+as if it caught flickers of firelight in some yellow streaks among the
+shiny black fur. But when she walked abroad she stretched out long and
+thin like a little tiger, and held her head high to look over the grass
+as if she were threading the jungle. She lashed her tail to and fro, and
+one turned out of her way instantly. You opened a door for her if she
+crossed the room and gave you a look. She made you know what she meant
+as if she had the gift of speech: at most inconvenient moments you would
+go out through the house to find her a bit of fish or to open the cellar
+door. You recognized her right to appear at night on your bed with one
+of her long-suffering kittens, which she had brought in the rain, out of
+a cellar window and up a lofty ladder, over the wet, steep roofs and
+down through a scuttle into the garret, and still down into warm
+shelter. Here she would leave it and with one or two loud, admonishing
+purrs would scurry away upon some errand that must have been like one of
+the border frays of old.
+
+"She used to treat Joe, the dog, with sad cruelty, giving him a sharp
+blow on his honest nose that made him meekly stand back and see her add
+his supper to her own. A child visitor once rightly complained that
+Polly had pins in her toes, and nobody knew this better than poor Joe.
+At last, in despair, he sought revenge. I was writing at my desk one
+day, when he suddenly appeared, grinning in a funny way he had, and
+wagging his tail, until he enticed me out to the kitchen. There I found
+Polly, who had an air of calling everything in the house her own. She
+was on the cook's table, gobbling away at some chickens which were being
+made ready for the oven and had been left unguarded. I caught her and
+cuffed her, and she fled through the garden door, for once tamed and
+vanquished, though usually she was so quick that nobody could administer
+justice upon these depredations of a well-fed cat. Then I turned and saw
+poor old Joe dancing about the kitchen in perfect delight. He had been
+afraid to touch Polly himself, but he knew the difference between right
+and wrong, and had called me to see what a wicked cat she was, and to
+give him the joy of looking on at the flogging.
+
+"It was the same dog who used sometimes to be found under a table where
+his master had sent him for punishment in his young days of lawless
+puppy-hood for chasing the neighbor's chickens. These faults had long
+been overcome, but sometimes, in later years, Joe's conscience would
+trouble him, we never knew why, and he would go under the table of his
+own accord, and look repentant and crestfallen until some forgiving and
+sympathetic friend would think he had suffered enough and bid him come
+out to be patted and consoled.
+
+"After such a house-mate as Polly, Joe had great amends in our next cat,
+yellow Danny, the most amiable and friendly pussy that ever walked on
+four paws. He took Danny to his heart at once: they used to lie in the
+sun together with Danny's head on the dog's big paws, and I sometimes
+used to meet them walking as coy as lovers, side by side, up one of the
+garden walks. When I could not help laughing at their sentimental and
+conscious air, they would turn aside into the bushes for shelter. They
+respected each other's suppers, and ate together on the kitchen hearth,
+and took great comfort in close companionship. Danny always answered if
+you spoke to him, but he made no sound while always opening his mouth
+wide to mew whenever he had anything to say, and looking up into your
+face with all his heart expressed. These affectations of speech were
+most amusing, especially in so large a person as yellow Danny. He was
+much beloved by me and by all his family, especially poor Joe, who must
+sometimes have had the worst of dreams about old Polly, and her sharp,
+unsparing claws."
+
+Miss Mary E. Wilkins is also a great admirer of cats. "I adore cats,"
+she says. "I don't love them as well as dogs, because my own nature is
+more after the lines of a dog's; but I adore them. No matter how tired
+or wretched I am, a pussy-cat sitting in a doorway can divert my mind.
+Cats love one so much: more than they will allow; but they have so much
+wisdom they keep it to themselves."
+
+Miss Wilkins's "Augustus" was moved with her from Brattleboro, Vt.,
+after her father's death and when she went to Randolph, Mass., to live.
+He had been the pet of the family for a long time, but he came to an
+untimely end.
+
+"I hope," says Miss Wilkins, "people's unintentional cruelty will not be
+remembered against them." Since living in Randolph she has had two
+lovely yellow and white cats, "Punch and Judy." The latter was shot by a
+neighbor, but Punch, the right-hand cat with the angelic expression,
+still survives.
+
+"I am quite sure," says his mistress, "he loves me better than anybody
+else, although he is so very close about it. Punch Wilkins has one
+accomplishment. He can open a door with an old-fashioned latch: but he
+cannot shut it."
+
+Louise Imogen Guiney is famous for her love and good comradeship with
+dogs, especially her setters and St. Bernards, but she is too thoroughly
+a poet not to be captivated by the grace and beauty of a cat.
+
+"I love the unsubmissive race," she says, "and have had much edification
+out of the charming friendships between our St. Bernards and our cats.
+Annie Clarke [the actress] once gave me two exquisite Angoras, little
+persons of character equal to their looks; but they died young and we
+have not since had the heart to replace them. I once had another coon, a
+small, spry, gray fellow named Scot, the tamest and most endearing of
+pets, always on your shoulder and a' that, who suddenly, on no
+provocation whatever, turned wild, lived for a year or more in the woods
+next our garden, hunting and fishing, although ceaselessly chased, and
+called, and implored to revisit his afflicted family. He associated
+sometimes with the neighbor's cat, but never, never more with humanity,
+until finally we found his pathetic little frozen body one Christmas
+near the barn. Do you remember Arnold's Scholar Gypsy? Our Scot was his
+feline equivalent.... Have you counted in Prosper Merimee among the
+confirmed lovers of cats? I remember a delightful little paragraph out
+of one of his letters about _un vieux chat noir, parfaitement laid,
+mais plein d'esprit et de discretion. Seulement il n'a eu que des gens
+vulgaires et manque d'usage._"
+
+Mrs. A.D.T. Whitney, who has written so many helpful stories for girls,
+is another lover of cats. Cats do not lie curled up on cushions
+everywhere in her books, as they do in Mrs. Spofford's. But in "Zerub
+Throop's Experiment" there is an amusing cat story, which, she declares,
+got so much mixed up with a ghost story that nobody ever knew which was
+which. And the incident is true in every particular, except the finding
+of a will or codicil, or something at the end, which is attached for
+purposes of fiction.
+
+A great deal has been written about the New York _Sun's_ famous
+cats. At my request, Mr. Dana furnished the following description of the
+interesting _Sun_ family. I can only vouch for its veracity by
+quoting the famous phrase, "If you see it in the _Sun_, it is so."
+
+"_Sun_ office cat (_Felis Domestica; var. Journalistica_).
+This is a variation of the common domestic cat, of which but one family
+is known to science. The habitat of the species is in Newspaper Row; its
+lair is in the _Sun_ building, its habits are nocturnal, and it
+feeds on discarded copy and anything else of a pseudo-literary nature
+upon which it can pounce. In dull times it can subsist upon a meagre
+diet of telegraphic brevities, police court paragraphs, and city
+jottings; but when the universe is agog with news, it will exhibit the
+insatiable appetite which is its chief distinguishing mark of difference
+from the common _felis domestica_. A single member of this family
+has been known, on a 'rush' night, to devour three and a half columns of
+presidential possibilities, seven columns of general politics, pretty
+much all but the head of a large and able-bodied railroad accident, and
+a full page of miscellaneous news, and then claw the nether garments of
+the managing editor, and call attention to an appetite still in good
+working order.
+
+"The progenitrix of the family arrived in the _Sun_ office many
+years ago, and installed herself in a comfortable corner, and within a
+few short months she had noticeably raised the literary tone of the
+paper, as well as a large and vociferous family of kittens. These
+kittens were weaned on reports from country correspondents, and the
+sight of the six children and the mother cat sitting in a semicircle was
+one which attracted visitors from all parts of the nation. Just before
+her death--immediately before, in fact--the mother cat developed a
+literary taste of her own and drank the contents of an ink-bottle. She
+was buried with literary honors, and one of her progeny was advanced to
+the duties and honors of office cat. From this time the line came down,
+each cat taking the 'laurel greener from the brows of him that uttered
+nothing base,' upon the death of his predecessor. There is but one blot
+upon the escutcheon of the family, put there by a recent incumbent who
+developed a mania at once cannibalistic and infanticidal, and set about
+making a free lunch of her offspring, in direct violation of the Raines
+law and the maternal instinct. She died of an overdose of chloroform,
+and her place was taken by one of the rescued kittens.
+
+"It is the son of this kitten who is the present proud incumbent of the
+office. Grown to cat-hood, he is a creditable specimen of his family,
+with beryl eyes, beautiful striped fur, showing fine mottlings of
+mucilage and ink, a graceful and aspiring tail, an appetite for copy
+unsurpassed in the annals of his race, and a power and perseverance in
+vocality, chiefly exercised in the small hours of the morning, that,
+together with the appetite referred to, have earned for him the name of
+the Mutilator. The picture herewith given was taken when the animal was
+a year and a half old. Up to the age of one year the Mutilator made its
+lair in the inside office with the Snake Editor, until a tragic ending
+came to their friendship. During a fortnight's absence of the office cat
+upon important business, the Snake Editor cultivated the friendship of
+three cockroaches, whom he debauched by teaching them to drink beer
+spilled upon his desk for that purpose. On the night of the cat's
+return, the three bugs had become disgracefully intoxicated, and were
+reeling around the desk beating time with their legs to a rollicking
+catch sung by the Snake Editor. Before the muddled insects could crawl
+into a crack, the Mutilator was upon them, and had bolted every one.
+Then with a look of reproach at the Snake Editor, he drew three
+perpendicular red lines across that gentleman's features with his claws
+and departed in high scorn, nor could he ever thereafter be lured into
+the inner office where the serpent-sharp was laying for him with a space
+measure. Since that time he has lived in the room occupied by the
+reporters and news editors.
+
+"Many hundreds of stories, some of them slanderous have been told about
+the various _Sun_ office cats, but we have admitted here none of
+these false tales. The short sketch given here is beyond suspicion in
+all its details, as can be vouched for by many men of high position who
+ought to know better."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+CONCERNING STILL OTHER PEOPLE'S CATS
+
+
+The nearest approach to the real French Salon in America is said to be
+found in Mrs. Louise Chandler Moulton's Boston drawing-room. In former
+days, at her weekly Fridays, Sir Richard Coeur de Lion was always
+present, sitting on the square piano amidst a lot of other celebrities.
+The autographed photographs of Paderewski, John Drew, and distinguished
+litterateurs, however, used to lose nothing from the proximity of Mrs.
+Moulton's favorite maltese friend, who was on the most intimate terms
+with her for twelve years, and hobnobbed familiarly with most of the
+lions of one sort or another who have visited Boston and who invariably
+find their way into this room. If there were flowers on the piano,
+Richard's nose hovered near them in a perfect abandon of delight.
+Indeed, his fondness for flowers was a source of constant contention
+between him and his mistress, who feared lest he knock the souvenirs of
+foreign countries to the floor in his eagerness to climb wherever
+flowers were put. He was as dainty about his eating as in his taste for
+the beautiful, scorning beef and mutton as fit only for coarser mortals,
+and choosing, like any _gourmet_, to eat only the breast of
+chicken, or certain portions of fish or lobster. He was not proof
+against the flavor of liver, at any time; but recognized in it his one
+weakness,--as the delicate lady may who takes snuff or chews gum on the
+sly. When Mrs. Moulton first had him, she had also a little dog, and the
+two, as usual when a kitten is brought up with a dog, became the
+greatest of friends.
+
+That Richard was a close observer was proved by the way he used to wag
+his tail, in the same fashion and apparently for the same reasons as the
+dog. This went on for several years, but when the dog died, the fashion
+of wagging tails went out, so far as Richard Coeur de Lion was
+concerned.
+
+He had a fashion of getting up on mantels, the tops of bookcases, or on
+shelves; and his mistress, fearing demolition of her household Lares and
+Penates, insisted on his getting down, whereupon Richard would look
+reproachfully at her, apparently resenting this treatment for days
+afterward, refusing to come near her and edging off if she tried to make
+up with him.
+
+When Richard was getting old, a black cat came to Mrs. Moulton, who kept
+him "for luck," and named him the Black Prince. The older cat was always
+jealous of the newcomer, and treated him with lofty scorn. When he
+caught Mrs. Moulton petting the Black Prince, who is a very affectionate
+fellow Richard fiercely resented it and sometimes refused to have
+anything to do with her for days afterward, but finally came around and
+made up in shamefaced fashion.
+
+Mrs. Moulton goes to London usually in the summer, leaving the cats in
+the care of a faithful maid whom she has had for years. After she
+sailed, Richard used to come to her door for several mornings, and not
+being let in as usual, understood that his beloved mistress had left him
+again, whereupon he kept up a prolonged wailing for some time. He was
+correspondingly glad to see her on her return in October.
+
+Mrs. Moulton tells the following remarkable cat story:--
+
+"My mother had a cat that lived to be twenty-five years old. He was
+faithful and fond, and a great pet in the family, of course. About two
+years before his death, a new kitten was added to the family. This
+kitten, named Jim, immediately conceived the greatest affection for old
+Jack, and as the old fellow's senses of sight and smell failed so that
+he could not go hunting himself, Jim used to do it for both. Every day
+he brought Jack mice and squirrels and other game as long as he lived.
+Then, too, he used to wash Jack, lapping him all over as a mother cat
+does her kitten. He did this, too, as long as he lived. The feebler old
+Jack grew the more Jim did for him, and when Jack finally died of old
+age, Jim was inconsolable."
+
+Twenty-five years might certainly be termed a ripe old age for a cat,
+their average life extending only to ten or twelve years. But I have
+heard of one who seems to have attained even greater age. The mother of
+Jane Andrews, the writer on educational and juvenile subjects, had one
+who lived with them twenty-four years. He had peculiar markings and
+certain ways of his own about the house quite different from other cats.
+He disappeared one day when he was twenty-four, and was mourned as dead.
+But one day, some six or seven years later, an old cat came to their
+door and asked to be let in. He had the same markings, and on being let
+in, went directly to his favorite sleeping-places and lay down. He
+seemed perfectly familiar with the whole place, and went on with his
+life from that time, just as though he had never been away, showing all
+his old peculiarities. When he finally died, he must have been
+thirty-three years old.
+
+Although in other days a great many noted men have been devoted to cats,
+I do not find that our men of letters to-day know so much about cats.
+Mr. William Dean Howells says: "I never had a cat, pet or otherwise. I
+like them, but know nothing of them." Judge Robert Grant says, "My
+feelings toward cats are kindly and considerate, but not ardent."
+
+Thomas Bailey Aldrich says, "The only cat I ever had any experience with
+was the one I translated from the French of Emile de La Bedollierre many
+years ago for the entertainment of my children." [Footnote: "Mother
+Michel's Cat."] Brander Matthews loves them not. George W. Cable answers,
+when asked if he loves the "harmless, necessary cat," by the Yankee method,
+and says, "If you had three or four acres of beautiful woods in which were
+little red squirrels and chipmunks and fifty or more kinds of nesting
+birds, and every abutting neighbor kept a cat, and none of them kept their
+cat out of those woods--_would you like cats?_" which is, indeed,
+something of a poser.
+
+Colonel Thomas W. Higginson, however, confesses to a great fondness for
+cats, although he has had no remarkable cats of his own. He tells a
+story told him by an old sailor at Pigeon Cove, Mass., of a cat which
+he, the sailor, tried in vain to get rid of. After trying several
+methods he finally put the cat in a bag, walked a mile to Lane's Cove,
+tied the cat to a big stone with a firm sailor's knot, took it out in a
+dory some distance from the shore, and dropped the cat overboard. Then
+he went back home to find the cat purring on the doorstep.
+
+Those who are familiar with Charles Dudley Warner's "My Summer in a
+Garden" will not need to be reminded of Calvin and his interesting
+traits. Mr. Warner says: "I never had but one cat, and he was rather a
+friend and companion than a cat. When he departed this life I did not
+care to do as many men do when their partners die, take a 'second.'" The
+sketch of him in that delightful book is vouched for as correct.
+
+Mr. Edmund Clarence Stedman, too, is a genuine admirer of cats and
+evidently knows how to appreciate them at their true value. At his home
+near New York, he and Mrs. Stedman have one who rejoices in the name
+"Babylon," having originated in Babylon, Long Island. He is a fine large
+maltese, and attracted a great deal of attention at the New York Cat
+Show in 1895. "We look upon him as an important member of our family,"
+says Mrs. Stedman, "and think he knows as much as any of us. He despises
+our two other cats, but he is very fond of human beings and makes
+friends readily with strangers. He is always present at the family
+dinner table at meal-time and expects to have his share handed to him
+carefully. He has a favorite corner in the study and has superintended a
+great deal of literary work." Mrs. Stedman's long-haired, blue Kelpie
+took a prize in the show of '95.
+
+Gail Hamilton was naturally a lover of cats, although in her crowded
+life there was not much time to devote to them. In the last year of her
+noble life she wrote to a friend as follows: "My two hands were eager to
+lighten the burden-bearing of a burdened world--but the brush fell from
+my hand. Now I can only sit in a nook of November sunshine, playing with
+two little black and white kittens. Well, I never before had time to
+play with kittens as much as I wished, and when I come outdoors and see
+them bounding toward me in long, light leaps, I am glad that they leap
+toward me and not away from me, little soft, fierce sparks of infinite
+energy holding a mystery of their own as inscrutable as life. And I
+remember that with all our high art, the common daily sun searches a man
+for one revealing moment, and makes a truer portrait than the most
+laborious painter. The divine face of our Saviour, reflected in the pure
+and noble traits of humanity, will not fail from the earth because my
+hand has failed in cunning."
+
+One would expect a poet of Ella Wheeler Wilcox's temperament to be
+passionately fond of cats, just as she is. One would expect, too, that
+only the most beautiful and luxurious of Persians and Angoras would
+satisfy her demand for a pet. This is also justifiable, as she has
+several magnificent cats, about whom she has published a number of
+interesting stories. Her Madame Ref is quite a noted cat, but Mrs.
+Wilcox's favorite and the handsomest of all is named Banjo, a gorgeous
+chinchilla and white Angora, with a silken coat that almost touches the
+floor and a ruff, or "lord mayor's chain," that is a finger wide. His
+father was Ajax, his mother was Madame Ref, and Mrs. Wilcox raised him.
+She has taught him many cunning tricks. He will sit up like a bear, and
+when his mistress says, "Hug me, Banjo," he puts both white paws around
+her neck and hugs her tight. Then she says, "Turn the other cheek," and
+he turns his furry chops for her to kiss. He also plays "dead," and
+rolls over at command. He, too, is fond of literary work, and
+superintends his mistress's writing from a drawer of her desk. Goody
+Two-eyes is another of Mrs. Wilcox's pets, and has one blue and one
+topaz eye.
+
+Who has not read Agnes Repplier's fascinating essays on "Agrippina" and
+"A Kitten"? I cannot quite believe she gives cats credit for the
+capacity for affection which they really possess, but her description of
+"Agrippina" is charming:--
+
+"Agrippina's beautifully ringed tail flapping across my copy distracts
+my attention and imperils the neatness of my penmanship. Even when she
+is disposed to be affable, turns the light of her countenance upon me,
+watches with attentive curiosity every stroke I make, and softly, with
+curved paw, pats my pen as it travels over the paper, even in these
+halcyon moments, though my self-love is flattered by her condescension,
+I am aware that I should work better and more rapidly if I denied myself
+this charming companionship. But, in truth, it is impossible for a lover
+of cats to banish these alert, gentle, and discriminating little
+friends, who give us just enough of their regard and complaisance to
+make us hunger for more. M. Fee, the naturalist, who has written so
+admirably about animals, and who understands, as only a Frenchman can
+understand, the delicate and subtle organization of a cat, frankly
+admits that the keynote of its character is independence. It dwells
+under our roofs, sleeps by our fire, endures our blandishments, and
+apparently enjoys our society, without for one moment forfeiting its
+sense of absolute freedom, without acknowledging any servile relation to
+the human creature who shelters it.
+
+"Rude and masterful souls resent this fine self-sufficiency in a
+domestic animal, and require that it shall have no will but theirs, no
+pleasure that does not emanate from them.
+
+"Yet there are people, less magisterial, perhaps, or less exacting, who
+believe that true friendship, even with an animal, may be built up on
+mutual esteem and independence; that to demand gratitude is to be
+unworthy of it; and that obedience is not essential to agreeable and
+healthy intercourse. A man who owns a dog is, in every sense of the
+word, its master: the term expresses accurately their mutual relations.
+But it is ridiculous when applied to the limited possession of a cat. I
+am certainly not Agrippina's mistress, and the assumption of authority
+on my part would be a mere empty dignity, like those swelling titles
+which afford such innocent delight to the Freemasons of our severe
+republic.
+
+"How many times have I rested tired eyes on her graceful little body,
+curled up in a ball and wrapped round with her tail like a parcel; or
+stretched out luxuriously on my bed, one paw coyly covering her face,
+the other curved gently inwards, as though clasping an invisible
+treasure. Asleep or awake, in rest or in motion, grave or gay, Agrippina
+is always beautiful; and it is better to be beautiful than to fetch and
+carry from the rising to the setting of the sun.
+
+"But when Agrippina has breakfasted and washed, and sits in the sunlight
+blinking at me with affectionate contempt, I feel soothed by her
+absolute and unqualified enjoyment. I know how full my day will be of
+things that I don't want particularly to do, and that are not
+particularly worth doing; but for her, time and the world hold only this
+brief moment of contentment. Slowly the eyes close, gently the little
+body is relaxed. Oh, you who strive to relieve your overwrought nerves
+and cultivate power through repose, watch the exquisite languor of a
+drowsy cat, and despair of imitating such perfect and restful grace.
+There is a gradual yielding of every muscle to the soft persuasiveness
+of slumber: the flexible frame is curved into tender lines, the head
+nestles lower, the paws are tucked out of sight: no convulsive throb or
+start betrays a rebellious alertness: only a faint quiver of unconscious
+satisfaction, a faint heaving of the tawny sides, a faint gleam of the
+half-shut yellow eyes, and Agrippina is asleep. I look at her for one
+wistful moment and then turn resolutely to my work. It were ignoble to
+wish myself in her place: and yet how charming to be able to settle down
+to a nap, _sans peur et sans reproche_, at ten o'clock in the
+morning."
+
+And again: "When I am told that Agrippina is disobedient, ungrateful,
+cold-hearted, perverse, stupid, treacherous, and cruel, I no longer
+strive to check the torrent of abuse. I know that Buffon said all this,
+and much more, about cats, and that people have gone on repeating it
+ever since, principally because these spirited little beasts have
+remained just what it pleased Providence to make them, have preserved
+their primitive freedom through centuries of effete and demoralizing
+civilization. Why, I wonder, should a great many good men and women
+cherish an unreasonable grudge against one animal because it does not
+chance to possess the precise qualities of another? 'My dog fetches my
+slippers for me every night,' said a friend, triumphantly, not long ago.
+'He puts them first to warm by the fire, and then brings them over to my
+chair, wagging his tail, and as proud as Punch. Would your cat do as
+much for you, I'd like to know?' Assuredly not. If I waited for
+Agrippina to fetch me shoes or slippers, I should have no other resource
+save to join as speedily as possible one of the barefooted religious
+orders of Italy. But after all, fetching slippers is not the whole duty
+of domestic pets.
+
+"As for curiosity, that vice which the Abbe Galiani held to be unknown
+to animals, but which the more astute Voltaire detected in every little
+dog that he saw peering out of the window of its master's coach, it is
+the ruling passion of the feline breast. A closet door left ajar, a box
+with half-closed lid, an open bureau drawer,--these are the objects that
+fill a cat with the liveliest interest and delight. Agrippina watches
+breathlessly the unfastening of a parcel, and tries to hasten matters by
+clutching actively at the string. When its contents are shown to her,
+she examines them gravely, and then, with a sigh of relief, settles down
+to repose. The slightest noise disturbs and irritates her until she
+discovers its cause. If she hears a footstep in the hall, she runs out
+to see whose it is, and, like certain troublesome little people I have
+known, she dearly loves to go to the front door every time the bell is
+rung. From my window she surveys the street with tranquil scrutiny, and
+if the boys are playing below, she follows their games with a steady,
+scornful stare, very different from the wistful eagerness of a friendly
+dog, quivering to join in the sport. Sometimes the boys catch sight of
+her, and shout up rudely at her window; and I can never sufficiently
+admire Agrippina's conduct upon these trying occasions, the well-bred
+composure with which she affects neither to see nor to hear them, nor to
+be aware that there are such objectionable creatures as children in the
+world. Sometimes, too, the terrier that lives next door comes out to sun
+himself in the street, and, beholding my cat sitting well out of reach,
+he dances madly up and down the pavement, barking with all his might,
+and rearing himself on his short legs, in a futile attempt to dislodge
+her. Then the spirit of evil enters Agrippina's little heart. The window
+is open and she creeps to the extreme edge of the stone sill, stretches
+herself at full length, peers down smilingly at the frenzied dog,
+dangles one paw enticingly in the air, and exerts herself with quiet
+malice to drive him to desperation. Her sense of humor is awakened by
+his frantic efforts and by her own absolute security; and not until he
+is spent with exertion, and lies panting and exhausted on the bricks,
+does she arch her graceful back, stretch her limbs lazily in the sun,
+and with one light bound spring from the window to my desk."
+
+And what more delightful word did ever Miss Repplier write than her
+description of a kitten? It, she says, "is the most irresistible
+comedian in the world. Its wide-open eyes gleam with wonder and mirth.
+It darts madly at nothing at all, and then, as though suddenly checked
+in the pursuit, prances sideways on its hind legs with ridiculous
+agility and zeal. It makes a vast pretence of climbing the rounds of a
+chair, and swings by the curtains like an acrobat. It scrambles up a
+table leg, and is seized with comic horror at finding itself full two
+feet from the floor. If you hasten to its rescue, it clutches you
+nervously, its little heart thumping against its furry sides, while its
+soft paws expand and contract with agitation and relief:--
+
+ "'And all their harmless claws disclose,
+ Like prickles of an early rose.'
+
+
+"Yet the instant it is back on the carpet it feigns to be suspicious of
+your interference, peers at you out of 'the tail o' its e'e,' and
+scampers for protection under the sofa, from which asylum it presently
+emerges with cautious, trailing steps as though encompassed by fearful
+dangers and alarms."
+
+Nobody can sympathize with her in the following description better than
+I, who for years was compelled by the insistence of my Pretty Lady to
+aid in the bringing up of infants:--
+
+"I own that when Agrippina brought her first-born son--aged two
+days--and established him in my bedroom closet, the plan struck me at
+the start as inconvenient. I had prepared another nursery for the little
+Claudius Nero, and I endeavored for a while to convince his mother that
+my arrangements were best. But Agrippina was inflexible. The closet
+suited her in every respect; and, with charming and irresistible
+flattery, she gave me to understand, in the mute language I knew so
+well, that she wished her baby boy to be under my immediate protection.
+
+"'I bring him to you because I trust you,' she said as plainly as looks
+can speak. 'Downstairs they handle him all the time, and it is not good
+for kittens to be handled. Here he is safe from harm, and here he shall
+remain,' After a few weak remonstrances, the futility of which I too
+clearly understood, her persistence carried the day. I removed my
+clothing from the closet, spread a shawl upon the floor, had the door
+taken from its hinges, and resigned myself, for the first time in my
+life, to the daily and hourly companionship of an infant.
+
+"I was amply rewarded. People who require the household cat to rear her
+offspring in some remote attic or dark corner of the cellar have no idea
+of all the diversion and pleasure that they lose. It is delightful to
+watch the little, blind, sprawling, feeble, helpless things develop
+swiftly into the grace and agility of kittenhood. It is delightful to
+see the mingled pride and anxiety of the mother, whose parental love
+increases with every hour of care, and who exhibits her young family as
+if they were infant Gracchi, the hope of all their race. During Nero's
+extreme youth, there were times when Agrippina wearied both of his
+companionship and of her own maternal duties. Once or twice she
+abandoned him at night for the greater luxury of my bed, where she slept
+tranquilly by my side, unmindful of the little wailing cries with which
+Nero lamented her desertion. Once or twice the heat of early summer
+tempted her to spend the evening on the porch roof which lay beneath my
+windows, and I have passed some anxious hours awaiting her return, and
+wondering what would happen if she never came back, and I were left to
+bring up the baby by hand.
+
+"But as the days sped on, and Nero grew rapidly in beauty and
+intelligence, Agrippina's affection for him knew no bounds. She could
+hardly bear to leave him even for a little while, and always came
+hurrying back to him with a loud, frightened mew, as if fearing he might
+have been stolen in her absence. At night she purred over him for hours,
+or made little gurgling noises expressive of ineffable content. She
+resented the careless curiosity of strangers, and was a trifle
+supercilious when the cook stole softly in to give vent to her fervent
+admiration. But from first to last she shared with me her pride and
+pleasure; and the joy in her beautiful eyes, as she raised them to mine,
+was frankly confiding and sympathetic. When the infant Claudius rolled
+for the first time over the ledge of the closet and lay sprawling on the
+bedroom floor, it would have been hard to say which of us was the more
+elated at his prowess."
+
+What became of these most interesting cats, is only hinted at; Miss
+Repplier's sincere grief at their loss is evident in the following:--
+
+"Every night they retired at the same time and slept upon the same
+cushion, curled up inextricably into one soft, furry ball. Many times I
+have knelt by their chair to bid them both good night; and always when I
+did so, Agrippina would lift her charming head, purr drowsily for a few
+seconds, and then nestle closer still to her first-born, with sighs of
+supreme satisfaction. The zenith of her life had been reached. Her cup
+of contentment was full.
+
+"It is a rude world, even for little cats, and evil chances lie in wait
+for the petted creatures we strive to shield from harm. Remembering the
+pangs of separation, the possibilities of unkindness or neglect, the
+troubles that hide in ambush on every unturned page, I am sometimes glad
+that the same cruel and selfish blow struck both mother and son, and
+that they lie together, safe from hurt or hazard, sleeping tranquilly
+and always, under the shadow of the friendly pines."
+
+Probably no modern cat has been more written about than Miss Mary L.
+Booth's Muff. There was a "Tippet," but he was early lost. Miss Booth,
+as the editor of _Harper's Bazar_, was the centre of a large circle
+of literary and musical people. Her Saturday evenings were to New York
+what Mrs. Moulton's Fridays are to Boston, the nearest approach to the
+French salon possible in America. At these Saturday evenings Muff always
+figured prominently, being dressed in a real lace collar (brought him
+from Yucatan by Madame la Plongeon, and elaborate and expensive enough
+for the most fastidious lady), and apparently enjoying the company of
+noted intellectual people as well as the best of them. And who knows, if
+he had spoken, what light he might have shed on what seemed to mere
+mortals as mysterious, abstruse, and occult problems? Perhaps, after
+all, he liked that "salon" because in reality he found so much to amuse
+him in the conversation; and perhaps he was, under that guise of
+friendly interest in noted scientists, reformers, poets, musicians, and
+litterateurs, only whispering to himself, "O Lord, what fools these
+mortals be!"
+
+"For when I play with my cat," says Montaigne, "how do I know whether
+she does not make a jest of me?"
+
+But Muff was a real nobleman among cats, and extraordinarily handsome.
+He was a great soft gray maltese with white paws and breast--mild,
+amiable, and uncommonly intelligent. He felt it his duty to help
+entertain Miss Booth's guests, always; and he more than once, at the
+beginning of a reception, came into the drawing-room with a mouse in his
+mouth as his offering to the occasion. Naturally enough "he caused the
+stampede," as Mrs. Spofford puts it, "that Mr. Gilbert forgot to put
+into 'Princess Ida' when her Amazons wild demonstrate their courage."
+
+As one of Miss Booth's intimate friends, Mrs. Spofford was much at her
+house and became early a devoted admirer of Muff's.
+
+"His latter days," she says, "were rendered miserable by a little silky,
+gray creature, an Angora named Vashti, who was a spark of the fire of
+the lower regions wrapped round in long silky fur, and who never let him
+alone one moment: who was full of tail-lashings and racings and leapings
+and fury, and of the most demonstrative love for her mistress. Once I
+made them collars with breastplates of tiny dangling bells, nine or ten;
+it excited them nearly to madness, and they flew up and down stairs like
+unchained lightning till the trinkets were taken off."
+
+In a house full of birds Muff never touched one, although he was an
+excellent mouser (who says cats have no conscience?). He was, although
+so socially inclined toward his mistress's guests, a timid person, and
+the wild back-yard cats filled him with terror.
+
+"But as one must see something of the world," continues Mrs. Spofford,
+"he used to jump from lintel to lintel of the windows of the block, if
+by chance his own were left open, and return when he pleased."
+
+Muff died soon after the death of Miss Booth. Vashti, who was very much
+admired by all her mistress's literary friends, was given to Miss Juliet
+Corson.
+
+Miss Edna Dean Proctor, the poet, is another admirer of fine cats. Her
+favorite, however, was the friend of her childhood called Beauty.
+
+"Beauty was my grandmother's cat," says Miss Proctor, "and the delight
+of my childhood. To this far-off day I remember her as distinctly as I
+do my aunt and cousins of that household, and even my dear grandmother
+herself. I know nothing of her ancestry and am not at all sure that she
+was royally bred, for she came, one chill night, a little wanderer to
+the door. But a shred of blue ribbon was clinging to her neck, and she
+was so pretty, and silky, and winsome that we children at once called
+her Beauty, and fancied she had strayed from some elegant home where she
+had been the pet of the household, lapping her milk from finest china
+and sleeping on a cushion of down. When we had warmed, and fed, and
+caressed her, we made her bed in a flannel-lined box among our dolls,
+and the next morning were up before the sun to see her, fearing her
+owners would appear and carry her away. But no one arrived to claim her,
+and she soon became an important member of the family, and grew
+handsomer, we thought, day by day. Her coat was gray with tiger
+markings, but paws and throat and nose were snowy white, and in spite of
+her excursions to barns and cellars her constant care kept them
+spotless--indeed, she was the very Venus of cats for daintiness and
+grace of pose and movement. To my grandmother her various attitudes had
+an undoubted meaning. If in a rainy day Beauty washed her face toward
+the west, her observant mistress would exclaim: 'See, kitty is washing
+her face to the west. It will clear.' Or, even when the sky was blue, if
+Beauty turned eastward for her toilet, the comment would be: 'Kitty is
+washing her face to the east. The wind must be getting "out" (from the
+sea), and a storm brewing.' And when in the dusk of autumn or winter
+evenings Beauty ran about the room, chasing her tail or frolicking with
+her kittens instead of sleeping quietly by the fire as was her wont, my
+grandmother would look up and say: 'Kitty is wild to-night. The wind
+will blow hard before morning.' If I sometimes asked how she knew these
+things, the reply would be, 'My mother told me when I was a little
+girl.' Now her mother, my great-grandmother, was a distinguished
+personage in my eyes, having been the daughter of Captain Jonathan
+Prescott who commanded a company under Sir William Pepperell at the
+siege of Louisburg and lost his life there; and I could not question the
+wisdom of colonial times. Indeed, to this hour I have a lingering belief
+that cats can foretell the weather.
+
+"And what a mouser she was! Before her time we often heard the rats and
+mice in the walls, but with her presence not one dared to peep, and
+cupboard and pantry were unmolested. Now and then she carried her forays
+to hedge and orchard, and I remember one sad summer twilight that saw
+her bring in a slender brown bird which my grandmother said was the
+cuckoo we had delighted to hear in the still mornings among the alders
+by the river. She was scolded and had no milk that night, and we never
+knew her to catch a bird again.
+
+"O to see her with her kittens! She always hid them in the haymows, and
+hunting and finding them brought us no end of excitement and pleasure.
+Twice a day, at least, she would come to the house to be fed, and then
+how we watched her returning steps, stealing cautiously along the path
+and waiting behind stack or door the better to observe her--for pussy
+knew perfectly well that we were eager to see her darlings, and enjoyed
+misleading and piquing us, we imagined, by taking devious ways. How well
+I recall that summer afternoon when, soft-footed and alone, I followed
+her to the floor of the barn. Just as she was about to spring to the mow
+she espied me, and, turning back, cunningly settled herself as if for a
+quiet nap in the sunny open door. Determined not to lose sight of her, I
+threw myself upon the fragrant hay; but in the stillness, the faint
+sighing of the wind, the far-off ripple of the river, the hazy outline
+of the hills, the wheeling swallows overhead, were blended at length in
+an indistinct dream, and I slept, oblivious of all. When I woke, pussy
+had disappeared, the sun was setting, the cows were coming from the
+pastures, and I could only return to the house discomfited. That
+particular family of kittens we never saw till a fortnight later, when
+the proud mother brought them in one by one, and laid them at my
+grandmother's feet.
+
+"What became of Beauty is as mysterious as the fate of the Dauphin. To
+our grief, she disappeared one November day, and we never saw her more.
+Sometimes we fancied she had been carried off by an admiring traveller:
+at others we tortured ourselves with the belief that the traditional
+wildcat of the north woods had devoured her. All we knew was that she
+had vanished; but when memory pictures that pleasant country home and
+the dear circle there, white-throated Beauty is always sleeping by the
+fire."
+
+Miss Fidelia Bridges, the artist, is another devoted cat lover, and at
+her home at Canaan, Ct., has had several interesting specimens.
+
+"Among my many generations of pet cats," says Miss Bridges, "one
+aristocratic maltese lady stands out in prominence before all the rest.
+She was a cat of great personal beauty and independence of character--a
+remarkable huntress, bringing in game almost as large as herself,
+holding her beautiful head aloft to keep the great wings of pigeons from
+trailing on the ground. She and her mother were fast friends from birth
+to death. When the young maltese had her first brood of kittens, her
+mother had also a family in another barrel in the cellar. When we went
+to see the just-arrived family, we found our Lady Malty's bed empty, and
+there in her mother's barrel were both families and both mothers. A
+delightful arrangement for the young mother, who could leave her
+children in the grandmother's care and enjoy her liberty when it pleased
+her to roam abroad. The young lady had an indomitable will, and when she
+decided to do a thing nothing would turn her aside. She found a favorite
+resting-place on a pile of blankets in a dark attic room. This being
+disapproved of by the elders, the door was kept carefully closed. She
+then found entrance through a stove-pipe hole, high up on the wall of an
+adjoining room. A cover was hung over the hole. She sprang up and
+knocked it off. Then, as a last resort, the hole was papered over like
+the wall-paper of the room. She looked, made a leap, and crashed through
+the paper with as merry an air as a circus-rider through his papered
+hoop. She had a habit of manoeuvring to be shut out of doors at
+bed-time, and then, when all was still, climbing up to my window by
+means of a porch over a door beneath it, to pass the night on my bed. In
+some alterations of the house, the porch was taken away. She looked with
+dismay for a moment at the destruction of her ladder, then calmly ran up
+the side of the house to my window, which she always after continued to
+do.
+
+"Next in importance, perhaps, is my present intimate companion, now ten
+years old and absolutely deaf, so that we communicate with signs. If I
+want to attract his attention I step on the floor: if to go to his
+dinner, I show him a certain blue plate: to call him in at night, I take
+a lantern outside the door, and the flash of light attracts his
+attention from a great distance. On one occasion he lived nine months
+alone in the house while I made a trip to Europe, absolutely refusing
+all the neighbors' invitations to enter any other house. A friend's
+gardener brought him his daily rations. As warm weather came, he spent
+his days in the fields, returning in the night for his food, so that at
+my return it was two or three days before he discovered that the house
+was open. The third evening he entered the open door, looked wildly
+about for a moment, but when I put my hand on him suddenly recognized me
+and overwhelmed me with affectionate caresses, and for two days and
+nights would not allow me out of his sight, unable to eat or sleep
+unless I was close at hand, and following me from room to room and chair
+to chair. And people say that cats have no affection!"
+
+At the Quincy House in Boston may be seen in the office an oil painting
+of an immense yellow cat. The first time I noticed the picture, I was
+proceeding into the dining room, and while waiting for dinner, was
+amused at seeing the original of the picture walk sedately in, all
+alone, and going to an empty table, seat himself with majestic grace in
+a chair. The waiter, seeing him, came forward and pushed up the chair as
+he would do for any other guest. The cat then waited patiently without
+putting his paws on the table, or violating any other law of table
+etiquette, until a plate of meat came, cut up to suit his taste (I did
+not hear him give his order), and then, placing his front paws on the
+edge of the table, he ate from his plate. When he had finished, he
+descended from his table and stalked out of the room with much dignity.
+He was always regular at his meals, and although he picked out a good
+seat, did not always sit at the same table. He was in appearance
+something like the famous orange cats of Venice, and attracted much
+attention, as might be expected, up to his death, at a ripe old age.
+
+Miss Frances Willard was a cat-lover, too, and had a beautiful cat which
+is known to all her friends.
+
+"Tootsie" went to Rest Cottage, the home of Frances Willard, when only a
+kitten, and there he lived, the pet of the household and its guests,
+until several years ago, when Miss Willard prepared to go abroad. Then
+she took Tootsie in her arms, carried him to the Drexel kennels in
+Chicago, and asked their owner, Mrs. Leland Norton, to admit him as a
+member of her large cat family, where he still lives. To his praise be
+it spoken, he has never forgotten his old friends at Rest Cottage. To
+this day, whenever any of them come to call upon him, he honors them
+with instant and hearty recognition. Miss Willard was sometimes forced
+to be separated from him more than a year at a time, but neither time
+nor change had any effect upon Tootsie. At the first sound of her voice
+he would spring to her side. He is a magnificent Angora, weighing
+twenty-four pounds, with the long, silky hair, the frill, or lord
+mayor's chain, the superb curling tail, and the large, full eyes of the
+thoroughbred. Then he has proved himself of aristocratic tendencies, has
+beautiful manners, is endowed with the human qualities of memory and
+discrimination, and is aesthetic in his tastes.
+
+Being the privileged character that he is, Tootsie always eats at the
+table with the family. He has his own chair and bib, and his manners are
+said to be exquisite.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+CONCERNING SOME HISTORIC CATS
+
+
+It is quite common for writers on the cat to say, "The story of
+Theophile Gautier's cats is too familiar to need comment." On the
+contrary, I do not believe it is familiar to the average reader, and
+that only those who know Gautier's "Menagerie In-time" in the original,
+recall the particulars of his "White and Black Dynasties." For this
+reason they shall be repeated in these pages. I use Mrs. Cashel-Hoey's
+translation, partly in a selfish desire to save myself time and labor,
+but principally because she has preserved so successfully the
+sympathetic and appreciative spirit of M. Gautier himself.
+
+"Dynasties of cats, as numerous as those of the Egyptian kings,
+succeeded each other in my dwelling," says he. "One after another they
+were swept away by accident, by flight, by death. All were loved and
+regretted: but life is made up of oblivion, and the memory of cats dies
+out like the memory of men." After making mention of an old gray cat who
+always took his part against his parents, and used to bite Madame
+Gautier's legs when she presumed to reprove her son, he passes on at
+once to the romantic period, and the commemoration of Childebrand.
+
+"This name at once reveals a deep design of flouting Boileau, whom I did
+not like then, but have since become reconciled to. Has not Nicholas
+said:--
+
+ "'O le plaisant projet d'un poete ignorant
+ Que de tant de heros va choisir Childebrant!'
+
+
+"Now I considered Childebrand a very fine name indeed, Merovingian,
+mediaeval, and Gothic, and vastly preferable to Agamemnon, Achilles,
+Ulysses, or any Greek name whatsoever. Romanticism was the fashion of my
+early days: I have no doubt the people of classical times called their
+cats Hector, Ajax, or Patroclus. Childebrand was a splendid cat of
+common kind, tawny and striped with black, like the hose of Saltabadil
+in 'Le Rois' Amuse.' With his large, green, almond-shaped eyes, and his
+symmetrical stripes, there was something tigerlike about him that
+pleased me. Childebrand had the honor of figuring in some verses that I
+wrote to 'flout' Boileau:--
+
+ "Puis je te decrirai ce tableau de Rembrandt
+ Que me fait tant plaisir: et mon chat Childebrand,
+ Sur mes genoux pose selon son habitude,
+ Levant sur moi la tete avec inquietude,
+ Suivra les mouvements de mon doigt qui dans l'air
+ Esquisse mon recit pour le rendre plus clair.
+
+
+"Childebrand was brought in there to make a good rhyme for Rembrandt,
+the piece being a kind of confession of the romantic faith made to a
+friend, who was then as enthusiastic as myself about Victor Hugo, Sainte
+Beuve, and Alfred de Musset.... I come next to Madame Theophile, a 'red'
+cat, with a white breast, a pink nose, and blue eyes, whom I called by
+that name because we were on terms of the closest intimacy. She slept at
+the foot of my bed: she sat on the arm of my chair while I wrote: she
+came down into the garden and gravely walked about with me: she was
+present at all my meals, and frequently intercepted a choice morsel on
+its way from my plate to my mouth. One day a friend who was going away
+for a short time, brought me his parrot, to be taken care of during his
+absence. The bird, finding itself in a strange place, climbed up to the
+top of its perch by the aid of its beak, and rolled its eyes (as yellow
+as the nails in my arm-chair) in a rather frightened manner, also moving
+the white membranes that formed its eyelids. Madame Theophile had never
+seen a parrot, and she regarded the creature with manifest surprise.
+While remaining as motionless as a cat mummy from Egypt in its swathing
+bands, she fixed her eyes upon the bird with a look of profound
+meditation, summoning up all the notions of natural history that she had
+picked up in the yard, in the garden, and on the roof. The shadow of her
+thoughts passed over her changing eyes, and we could plainly read in
+them the conclusion to which her scrutiny led, 'Decidedly this is a
+green chicken.'
+
+"This result attained, the next proceeding of Madame Theophile was to
+jump off the table from which she had made her observations, and lay
+herself flat on the ground in a corner of the room, exactly in the
+attitude of the panther in Gerome's picture watching the gazelles as
+they come down to drink at a lake. The parrot followed the movements of
+the cat with feverish anxiety: it ruffled its feathers, rattled its
+chain, lifted one of its feet and shook the claws, and rubbed its beak
+against the edge of its trough. Instinct told it that the cat was an
+enemy and meant mischief. The cat's eyes were now fixed upon the bird
+with fascinating intensity, and they said in perfectly intelligible
+language, which the poor parrot distinctly understood, 'This chicken
+ought to be good to eat, although it is green.' We watched the scene
+with great interest, ready to interfere at need. Madame Theophile was
+creeping nearer and nearer almost imperceptibly; her pink nose quivered,
+her eyes were half closed, her contractile claws moved in and out of
+their velvet sheaths, slight thrills of pleasure ran along her backbone
+at the idea of the meal she was about to make. Such novel and exotic
+food excited her appetite.
+
+"All in an instant her back took the shape of a bent bow, and with a
+vigorous and elastic bound she sprang upon the perch. The parrot, seeing
+its danger, said in a bass voice as grave and deep as M. Prudhomme's
+own, 'As tu dejeune, Jacquot?'
+
+"This utterance so terrified the cat that she sprang backwards. The
+blare of a trumpet, the crash and smash of a pile of plates flung to the
+ground, a pistol shot fired off at her ear, could not have frightened
+her more thoroughly. All her ornithological ideas were overthrown.
+
+"'Et de quoi? Du roti du roi?' continued the parrot.
+
+"Then might we, the observers, read in the physiognomy of Madame
+Theophile, 'This is not a bird, it is a gentleman; it talks.'
+
+ "'Quand j'ai bu du vin clairet,
+ Tout tourne, tout tourne an cabaret,'
+
+shrieked the parrot in a deafening voice, for it had perceived that its
+best means of defence was the terror aroused by its speech. The cat cast
+a glance at me which was full of questioning, but as my response was not
+satisfactory, she promptly hid herself under the bed, and from that
+refuge she could not be induced to stir during the whole of the day.
+People who are not accustomed to live with animals, and who, like
+Descartes, regard them as mere machines, will think that I lend
+unauthorized meanings to the acts of the 'volatile' and the 'quadruped,'
+but I have only faithfully translated their ideas into human language.
+The next day Madame Theophile plucked up courage and made another
+attempt, which was similarly repulsed. From that moment she gave it up,
+accepting the bird as a variety of man.
+
+"This dainty and charming animal was extremely fond of perfumes,
+especially of patchouli and the scent exhaled by India shawls. She was
+also very fond of music, and would listen, sitting on a pile of
+music-books, while the fair singers who came to try the critic's piano
+filled his room with melody. All the time Madame Theophile would evince
+great pleasure. She was, however, made nervous by certain notes, and at
+the high _la_ she would tap the singer's mouth with her paw. This
+was very amusing, and my visitors delighted in making the experiment. It
+never failed; the dilettante in fun was not to be deceived.
+
+"The rule of the 'White Dynasty' belonged to a later epoch, and was
+inaugurated in the person of a pretty little kitten as white as a powder
+puff, who came from Havana. On account of his spotless whiteness he was
+called Pierrot; but when he grew up this name was very properly
+magnified into Don-Pierrot-de-Navarre, which was far more majestic, and
+suggested 'grandee-ism.' [M. Theophile Gautier lays it down as a dogma
+that all animals with whom one is much taken up, and who are 'spoiled,'
+become delightfully good and amiable. Don-Pierrot-de-Navarre
+successfully supported his master's theory; perhaps he suggested it.]
+
+"He shared in the life of the household with the enjoyment of quiet
+fireside friendship that is characteristic of cats. He had his own place
+near the fire, and there he would sit with a convincing air of
+comprehension of all that was talked of and of interest in it; he
+followed the looks of the speakers, and uttered little sounds toward
+them as though he, too, had objections to make and opinions to give upon
+the literary subjects which were most frequently discussed. He was very
+fond of books, and when he found one open on a table he would lie down
+on it, turn over the edges of the leaves with his paws, and after a
+while fall asleep, for all the world as if he had been reading a
+fashionable novel. He was deeply interested in my writing, too; the
+moment I took up my pen he would jump upon the desk, and follow the
+movement of the penholder with the gravest attention, making a little
+movement with his head at the beginning of each line. Sometimes he would
+try to take the pen out of my hand.
+
+"Don-Pierrot-de-Navarre never went to bed until I had come in. He would
+wait for me just inside the outer door and rub himself to my legs, his
+back in an arch, with a glad and friendly purring. Then he would go on
+before me, preceding me with a page-like air, and I have no doubt, if I
+had asked him, he would have carried the candlestick. Having thus
+conducted me to my bedroom, he would wait quietly while I undressed, and
+then jump on my bed, take my neck between his paws, gently rub my nose
+with his own, and lick me with his small, pink tongue, as rough as a
+file, uttering all the time little inarticulate cries, which expressed
+as clearly as any words could do his perfect satisfaction at having me
+with him again. After these caresses he would perch himself on the back
+of the bedstead and sleep there, carefully balanced, like a bird on a
+branch. When I awoke, he would come down and lie beside me until I got
+up.
+
+"Pierrot was as strict as a concierge in his notions of the proper hour
+for all good people to return to their homes. He did not approve of
+anything later than midnight. In those days we had a little society
+among friends, which we called 'The Four Candles,'--the light in our
+place of meeting being restricted to four candles in silver
+candlesticks, placed at the four corners of the tables. Sometimes the
+talk became so animated that I forgot all about time, and twice or three
+times Pierrot sat up for me until two o'clock in the morning. After a
+while, however, my conduct in this respect displeased him, and he
+retired to rest without me. I was touched by this mute protest against
+my innocent dissipation, and thenceforth came home regularly at twelve
+o'clock. Nevertheless, Pierrot cherished the memory of my offence for
+some time; he waited to test the reality of my repentance, but when he
+was convinced that my conversion was sincere, he deigned to restore me
+to his good graces, and resumed his nocturnal post in the anteroom.
+
+"To gain the friendship of a cat is a difficult thing. The cat is a
+philosophical, methodical, quiet animal, tenacious of its own habits,
+fond of order and cleanliness, and it does not lightly confer its
+friendship. If you are worthy of its affection, a cat will be your
+friend, but never your slave. He keeps his free will, though he loves,
+and he will not do for you what he thinks unreasonable; but if he once
+gives himself to you, it is with such absolute confidence, such fidelity
+of affection. He makes himself the companion of your hours of solitude,
+melancholy, and toil. He remains for whole evenings on your knee,
+uttering his contented purr, happy to be with you, and forsaking the
+company of animals of his own species. In vain do melodious mewings on
+the roof invite him to one of those cat parties in which fish bones play
+the part of tea and cakes; he is not to be tempted away from you. Put
+him down and he will jump up again, with a sort of cooing sound that is
+like a gentle reproach; and sometimes he will sit upon the carpet in
+front of you, looking at you with eyes so melting, so caressing, and so
+human, that they almost frighten you, for it is impossible to believe
+that a soul is not there.
+
+"Don-Pierrot-de-Navarre had a sweetheart of the same race and of as
+snowy a whiteness as himself. The ermine would have looked yellow by the
+side of Seraphita, for so this lovely creature was named, in honor of
+Balzac's Swedenborgian romance. Seraphita was of a dreamy and
+contemplative disposition. She would sit on a cushion for hours
+together, quite motionless, not asleep, and following with her eyes, in
+a rapture of attention, sights invisible to mere mortals. Caresses were
+agreeable to her, but she returned them in a very reserved manner, and
+only in the case of persons whom she favored with her rarely accorded
+esteem. She was fond of luxury, and it was always upon the handsomest
+easy-chair, or the rug that would best show off her snowy fur, that she
+would surely be found. She devoted a great deal of time to her toilet,
+her glossy coat was carefully smoothed every morning. She washed herself
+with her paw, and licked every atom of her fur with her pink tongue
+until it shone like new silver. When any one touched her, she instantly
+effaced all trace of the contact; she could not endure to be tumbled. An
+idea of aristocracy was suggested by her elegance and distinction, and
+among her own people she was a duchess at least. She delighted in
+perfumes, would stick her nose into bouquets, bite scented handkerchiefs
+with little spasms of pleasure, and walk about among the scent bottles
+on the toilet table, smelling at their stoppers; no doubt, she would
+have used the powder puff if she had been permitted. Such was Seraphita,
+and never did cat more amply justify a poetic name. I must mention here
+that, in the days of the White Dynasty, I was also the happy possessor
+of a family of white rats, and that the cats, always supposed to be
+their natural, invariable, and irreconcilable enemies, lived in perfect
+harmony with my pet rodents. The rats never showed the slightest
+distrust of the cats, nor did the cats ever betray their confidence.
+Don-Pierrot-de-Navarre was very much attached to them. He would sit
+close to their cage and observe their gambols for hours together, and if
+by any chance the door of the room in which they were left was shut, he
+would scratch and mew gently until some one came to open it and allow
+him to rejoin his little white friends, who would often come out of the
+cage and sleep close to him. Seraphita, who was of a more reserved and
+disdainful temper, and who disliked the musky odor of the white rats,
+took no part in their games; but she never did them any harm, and would
+let them pass before her without putting out a claw.
+
+"Don-Pierrot-de-Navarre, who came from Havana, required a hothouse
+temperature: and this he always had in his own apartments. The house
+was, however, surrounded by extensive gardens, divided by railings,
+through and over which cats could easily climb, and in those gardens
+were trees inhabited by a great number of birds. Pierrot would
+frequently take advantage of an open door to get out of an evening and
+go a-hunting through the wet grass and flower-beds: and, as his mewing
+under the windows when he wanted to get in again did not always awaken
+the sleepers in the house, he frequently had to stay out until morning.
+His chest was delicate, and one very chilly night he caught a cold which
+rapidly developed into phthisis. At the end of a year of coughing, poor
+Don Pierrot had wasted to a skeleton, and his coat, once so silky, was a
+dull, harsh white. His large, transparent eyes looked unnaturally large
+in his shrunken face: the pink of his little nose had faded, and he
+dragged himself slowly along the sunny side of the wall with a
+melancholy air, looking at the yellow autumnal leaves as they danced and
+whirled in the wind. Nothing is so touching as a sick animal: it submits
+to suffering with such gentle and sad resignation. We did all in our
+power to save Pierrot: a skilful doctor came to see him, felt his pulse,
+sounded his lungs, and ordered him ass's milk. He drank the prescribed
+beverage very readily out of his own especial china saucer. For hours
+together he lay stretched upon my knee, like the shadow of a sphinx. I
+felt his spine under my finger tips like the beads of a rosary, and he
+tried to respond to my caresses by a feeble purr that resembled a
+death-rattle. On the day of his death he was lying on his side panting,
+and suddenly, with a supreme effort, he rose and came to me. His large
+eyes were opened wide, and he gazed at me with a look of intense
+supplication, a look that seemed to say, 'Save me, save me, you, who are
+a man.' Then he made a few faltering steps, his eyes became glassy, and
+he fell down, uttering so lamentable a cry, so dreadful and full of
+anguish, that I was struck dumb and motionless with horror. He was
+buried at the bottom of the garden under a white rose tree, which still
+marks the place of his sepulture. Three years later Seraphita died, and
+was buried by the side of Don Pierrot. With her the White Dynasty became
+extinct, but not the family. This snow-white couple had three children,
+who were as black as ink. Let any one explain that mystery who can. The
+kittens were born in the early days of the great renown of Victor Hugo's
+'Les Miserables,' when everybody was talking of the new masterpiece, and
+the names of the personages in it were in every mouth. The two little
+male creatures were called Enjolras and Gavroche, and their sister
+received the name of Eponine. They were very pretty, and I trained them
+to run after a little ball of paper and bring it back to me when I threw
+it into the corner of the room. In time they would follow the ball up to
+the top of the bookcase, or fish for it behind boxes or in the bottom of
+china vases with their dainty little paws. As they grew up they came to
+disdain those frivolous amusements, and assumed the philosophical and
+meditative quiet which is the true temperament of the cat.
+
+"To the eyes of the careless and indifferent observer, three black cats
+are just three black cats, but those who are really acquainted with
+animals know that their physiognomy is as various as that of the human
+race. I was perfectly well able to distinguish between these little
+faces, as black as Harlequin's mask, and lighted up by disks of emerald
+with golden gleams. Enjolras, who was much the handsomest of the three,
+was remarkable for his broad, leonine head and full whiskers, strong
+shoulders, and a superb feathery tail. There was something theatrical
+and pretentious in his air, like the posing of a popular actor. His
+movements were slow, undulatory, and majestic: so circumspect was he
+about where he set his feet down that he always seemed to be walking
+among glass and china. His disposition was by no means stoical, and he
+was much too fond of food to have been approved of by his namesake. The
+temperate and austere Enjolras would certainly have said to him, as the
+angel said to Swedenborg, 'You eat too much.' I encouraged his
+gastronomical tastes, and Enjolras attained a very unusual size and
+weight.
+
+"Gavroche was a remarkably knowing cat, and looked it. He was
+wonderfully active, and his twists, twirls, and tumbles were very comic.
+He was of a Bohemian temperament, and fond of low company. Thus he would
+occasionally compromise the dignity of his descent from the illustrious
+Don-Pierrot-de-Navarre, grandee of Spain of the first class, and the
+Marquesa Dona Seraphita, of aristocratic and disdainful bearing. He
+would sometimes return from his expeditions to the street, accompanied
+by gaunt, starved companions, whom he had picked up in his wanderings,
+and he would stand complacently by while they bolted the contents of his
+plate of food in a violent hurry and in dread of dispersion by a
+broomstick or a shower of water. I was sometimes tempted to say to
+Gavroche, 'A nice lot of friends you pick up,' but I refrained, for,
+after all, it was an amiable weakness: he might have eaten his dinner
+all by himself.
+
+"The interesting Eponine was more slender and graceful than her
+brothers, and she was an extraordinarily sensitive, nervous, and
+electric animal. She was passionately attached to me, and she would do
+the honors of my hermitage with perfect grace and propriety. When the
+bell rang, she hastened to the door, received the visitors, conducted
+them to the salon, made them take seats, talked to them--yes, talked,
+with little coos, murmurs, and cries quite unlike the language which
+cats use among themselves, and which bordered on the articulate speech
+of man. What did she say? She said quite plainly: 'Don't be impatient:
+look at the pictures, or talk with me, if I amuse you. My master is
+coming down.' On my appearing she would retire discreetly to an
+arm-chair or the corner of the piano, and listen to the conversation
+without interrupting it, like a well-bred animal accustomed to good
+society.
+
+"Eponine's intelligence, fine disposition, and sociability led to her
+being elevated by common consent to the dignity of a person, for reason,
+superior instinct, plainly governed her conduct. That dignity conferred
+on her the right to eat at table like a person, and not in a corner on
+the floor, from a saucer, like an animal. Eponine had a chair by my side
+at breakfast and dinner, but in consideration of her size she was
+privileged to place her fore paws on the table. Her place was laid,
+without a knife and fork, indeed, but with a glass, and she went
+regularly through dinner, from soup to dessert, awaiting her turn to be
+helped, and behaving with a quiet propriety which most children might
+imitate with advantage. At the first stroke of the bell she would
+appear, and when I came into the dining room she would be at her post,
+upright in her chair, her fore paws on the edge of the tablecloth, and
+she would present her smooth forehead to be kissed, like a well-bred
+little girl who was affectionately polite to relatives and old people.
+When we had friends to dine with us, Eponine always knew that company
+was expected. She would look at her place, and if a knife, fork, and
+spoon lay near her plate she would immediately turn away and seat
+herself on the piano-stool, her invariable refuge. Let those who deny
+the possession of reason to animals explain, if they can, this little
+fact, apparently so simple, but which contains a world of induction.
+From the presence near her plate of those implements which only man can
+use, the observant and judicious cat concluded that she ought on this
+occasion to give way to a guest, and she hastened to do so. She was
+never mistaken: only, when the visitor was a person whom she knew and
+liked, she would jump on his knee and coax him for a bit off his plate
+by her graceful caresses. She survived her brothers, and was my dear
+companion for several years.... Such is the chronicle of the Black
+Dynasty."
+
+Although cats have no place in the Bible, neither can their enemies who
+sing the praise of the dog, find much advantage there: for that most
+excellent animal is referred to in anything but a complimentary
+fashion--"For without are dogs and sorcerers."
+
+The great prophet of Allah, however, knew a good cat when he saw it.
+"Muezza" even contributed her small share to the development of the
+Mahometan system: for did she not sit curled up in her master's sleeve,
+and by her soft purring soothe and deepen his meditations? And did she
+not keep him dreaming so long that she finally became exhausted herself,
+and fell asleep in his flowing sleeve; whereupon did not Mahomet, rather
+than disturb her, and feeling that he must be about his Allah's
+business, cut off his sleeve rather than disturb the much loved Muezza?
+The nurses of Cairo tell this story to their young charges to this day.
+
+Cardinal Richelieu had many a kitten, too; and morose and ill-tempered
+as he was, found in them much amusement. His love for them, however, was
+not that unselfish love which led Mahomet to cut off his sleeve; but
+simply a selfish desire for passing amusement. He cared nothing for that
+most interesting process, the development of a kitten into a cat, and
+the study of its individuality which is known only to the real lover of
+cats. For it is recorded of him that as soon as his pets were three
+months old he sent them away, evidently not caring where, and procured
+new ones.
+
+M. Champfleury, however, thinks it possible that there may not be any
+real foundation for this story about Richelieu. He refers to the fact
+that Moncrif says not a word about the celebrated cardinal's passion for
+those creatures; but he does say, "Everybody knows that one of the
+greatest ministers France ever possessed, M. Colbert, always had a
+number of kittens playing about that same cabinet in which so many
+institutions, both honorable and useful to the nation, had their
+origin." Can it be that Richelieu has been given credit for Colbert's
+virtues?
+
+In various parts of Chateaubriand's "Memoires" may be found eulogiums on
+the cat. So well known was his fondness for them, that even when his
+other feelings and interests faded with age and decay, his affections
+for cats remained strong to the end. This love became well known to all
+his compeers, and once on an embassy to Rome the Pope gave him a cat. He
+was called "Micetto." According to Chateaubriand's biographer, M. de
+Marcellus, "Pope Leo XII's cat could not fail to reappear in the
+description of that domestic hearth where I have so often seen him
+basking. In fact, Chateaubriand has immortalized his favorite in the
+sketch which begins, 'My companion is a big cat, of a greyish red.'"
+This ecclesiastical pet was always dignified and imposing in manners,
+ever conscious that he had been the gift of a sovereign pontiff, and had
+a tremendous weight of reputation to maintain. He used to stroke his
+tail when he desired Madame Recamier to know that he was tired.
+
+"I love in the cat," said Chateaubriand to M. de Marcellus, "that
+independent and almost ungrateful temper which prevents it from
+attaching itself to any one: the indifference with which it passes from
+the salon to the house-top. When you caress it, it stretches itself out
+and arches its back, indeed: but that is caused by physical pleasure,
+not, as in the case of the dog, by a silly satisfaction in loving and
+being faithful to a master who returns thanks in kicks. The cat lives
+alone, has no need of society, does not obey except when it likes, and
+pretends to sleep that it may see the more clearly, and scratches
+everything that it can scratch. Buffon has belied the cat: I am laboring
+at its rehabilitation, and hope to make of it a tolerably good sort of
+animal, as times go."
+
+Cardinal Wolsey, Lord High Chancellor of England, was another cat-lover,
+and his superb cat sat in a cushioned arm-chair by his side in the
+zenith of his pride and power, the only one in that select circle who
+was not obliged to don a wig and robe while acting in a judicial
+capacity. Then there was Bouhaki, the proud Theban cat that used to wear
+gold earrings as he sat at the feet of King Hana, his owner, perhaps,
+but not his master, and whose reproduction in the tomb of Hana in the
+Necropolis at Thebes, between his master's feet in a statue, is one of
+the most ancient reproductions of a cat. And Sainte-Beuve, whose cat
+used to roam at will over his desk and sit or lie on the precious
+manuscripts no other person was allowed to touch; it is flattering to
+know that the great Frenchman and I have one habit in common; and Miss
+Repplier owns to it too. "But Sainte-Beuve," says she, "probably had
+sufficient space reserved for his own comfort and convenience. I have
+not; and Agrippina's beautifully ringed tail flapping across my copy
+distracts my attention and imperils the neatness of my penmanship." And
+even as I write these pages, does the Pretty Lady's daughter Jane lie on
+my copy and gaze lovingly at me as I work.
+
+Julian Hawthorne is another writer whose cat is an accompaniment of his
+working hours. In this connection we must not forget M. Brasseur
+Wirtgen, a student of natural history who writes of his cat: "My habit
+of reading," he says, "which divided us from each other in our
+respective thoughts, prejudiced my cat very strongly against my books.
+Sometimes her little head would project its profile on the page which I
+was perusing, as though she were trying to discover what it was that
+thus absorbed me: doubtless, she did not understand why I should look
+for my happiness beyond the presence of a devoted heart. Her solicitude
+was no less manifest when she brought me rats or mice. She acted in this
+case exactly as if I had been her son: dragging enormous rats, still in
+the throes of death, to my feet: and she was evidently guided by logic
+in offering me a prey commensurate with my size, for she never presented
+any such large game to her kittens. Her affectionate attention
+invariably caused her a severe disappointment. Having laid the product
+of her hunting expedition at my feet, she would appear to be greatly
+hurt by my indifference to such delicious fare."
+
+That Tasso had a cat we know because he wrote a sonnet to her. Alfred de
+Musset's cats are apostrophized in his verses. Dr. Johnson's Hodge held
+a soft place for many years in the gruff old scholar's breast. And has
+not every one heard how the famous Dr. Johnson fetched oysters for his
+beloved Hodge, lest the servants should object to the trouble, and vent
+their displeasure on his favorite?
+
+Nor can one forget Sir Isaac Newton and his cats: for is it not alleged
+that the great man had two holes cut in his barn door, one for the
+mother, and a smaller one for the kitten?
+
+Byron was fond of cats: in his establishment at Ravenna he had five of
+them. Daniel Maclise's famous portrait of Harriet Martineau represents
+that estimable woman sitting in front of a fireplace and turning her
+face to receive the caress of her pet cat crawling to a resting-place
+upon her mistress's shoulder.
+
+Although La Fontaine in his fables shows such a delicate appreciation of
+their character and ways, it is doubtful whether he honestly loved cats.
+But his friend and patron, the Duchess of Bouillon, was so devoted to
+them that she requested the poet to make her a copy with his own hand of
+all his fables in which pussy appears. The exercise-book in which they
+were written was discovered a few years ago among the Bouillon papers.
+
+Baudelaire, it is said, could never pass a cat in the street without
+stopping to stroke and fondle it. "Many a time," said Champfleury, "when
+he and I have been walking together, have we stopped to look at a cat
+curled luxuriously in a pile of fresh white linen, revelling in the
+cleanliness of the newly ironed fabrics. Into what fits of contemplation
+have we fallen before such windows, while the coquettish laundresses
+struck attitudes at the ironing boards, under the mistaken impression
+that we were admiring them." It was also related of Baudelaire that,
+"going for the first time to a house, he is restless and uneasy until he
+has seen the household cat. But when he sees it, he takes it up, kisses
+and strokes it, and is so completely absorbed in it, that he makes no
+answer to what is said to him."
+
+Professor Huxley's notorious fondness for cats was a fad which he shared
+with Paul de Koch, the novelist, who, at one time, kept as many as
+thirty cats in his house. Many descriptions of them are to be found
+scattered through his novels. His chief favorite, Fromentin, lived
+eleven years with him.
+
+Pierre Loti has written a charming and most touching history of two of
+his cats--Moumette Blanche and Moumette Chinoise--which all true
+cat-lovers should make a point of reading.
+
+Algernon Swinburne, the poet, is devoted to cats. His favorite is named
+Atossa. Robert Southey was an ardent lover of cats. Most people have
+read his letter to his friend Bedford, announcing the death of one.
+"Alas, Grosvenor," he wrote, "this day poor Rumpel was found dead, after
+as long and happy a life as cat could wish for, if cats form wishes on
+that subject. His full titles were: The Most Noble, the Archduke
+Rumpelstiltzchen, Marcus Macbum, Earl Tomlefnagne, Baron Raticide,
+Waowhler and Scratch. There should be a court-mourning in Catland, and
+if the Dragon (your pet cat) wear a black ribbon round his neck, or a
+band of crape _a la militaire_ round one of his fore paws it will
+be but a becoming mark of respect." Then the poet-laureate adds, "I
+believe we are each and all, servants included, more sorry for his loss,
+or, rather, more affected by it, than any of us would like to confess."
+
+Josh Billings called his favorite cat William, because he considered no
+shorter name fitted to the dignity of his character. "Poor old man," he
+remarked one day, to a friend, "he has fits now, so I call him
+Fitz-William."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+CONCERNING CATS IN ENGLAND
+
+
+If the growing fancy for cats in this country is benefiting the feline
+race as a whole, they have to thank the English people for it. For
+certain cats in England are held at a value that seems preposterous to
+unsophisticated Americans. At one cat and bird show, held at the Crystal
+Palace, near London, some of the cats were valued at thirty-five hundred
+pounds sterling ($17,500)--as much as the price of a first-class
+race-horse.
+
+For more than a quarter of a century National Cat Shows have been held
+at Crystal Palace and the Westminster Aquarium, which have given great
+stimulus to the breeding of fine cats, and "catteries" where high-priced
+cats and kittens are raised are common throughout the country.
+
+England was the first, too, to care for lost and deserted cats and dogs.
+At Battersea there is a Temporary Home for both these unfortunates,
+where between twenty and twenty-five thousand dogs and cats are
+sheltered and fed. The objects of this home, which is supported entirely
+by voluntary subscriptions, are to restore lost pets to their owners, to
+find suitable homes for unclaimed cats and dogs, and to painlessly
+destroy useless and diseased ones. There is a commodious cat's house
+where pets may be boarded during their owner's absence; and a separate
+house where lost and deserted felines are sheltered, fed, and kindly
+tended.
+
+Since long before Whittington became Lord Mayor of London, indeed, cats
+have been popular in England: for did not the law protect them? As to
+the truth of the story of Whittington's cat, there has been much earnest
+discussion. Although Whittington lived from about 1360 to 1425, the
+story seems to have been pretty generally accepted for three hundred
+years after his death. A portrait still exists of him, with one hand
+holding a cat, and when his old house was remodelled in recent times, a
+carved stone was found in it showing a boy with a cat in his arms.
+Several similar tales have been found, it is argued, in which the heroes
+in different countries have started to make a fortune by selling a cat.
+But as rats and mice were extremely common then, and it has been shown
+that a single pair of rats will in three years multiply into over six
+hundred thousand, which will eat as much as sixty-four thousand men, why
+shouldn't a cat be deemed a luxury even for a king's palace? The
+argument that the cat of Whittington was a "cat," or boat used for
+carrying coal, is disproved by the fact that no account of such vessels
+in Whittington's time can be found, and also that the trade in coal did
+not begin in Europe for some time afterward. And there really seems
+nothing improbable in the story that at a time when a kitten big enough
+to kill mice brought fourpence in England, such an animal, taken to a
+rat-infested, catless country, might not be sold for a sum large enough
+to start an enterprising youth in trade. Surely, the beginnings of some
+of our own railroad kings and financiers may as well look doubtful to
+future generations.
+
+It is a pretty story--that of Whittington; how he rose from being a mere
+scullion at fourteen, to being "thrice Lord Mayor of London." According
+to what are claimed to be authentic documents, the story is something
+more than a nursery tale, and runs thus: Poor Dick Whittington was born
+at Shropshire, of such very poor parents that the boy, being of an
+ambitious nature, left home at fourteen, and walked to London, where he
+was taken into the hospital of St. John at Clerkenwell, in a menial
+capacity. The prior, noticing his good behavior and diligent conduct,
+took a fancy to him, and obtained him a position in a Mr. Fitzwarren's
+household on Tower Hill. For some time at this place his prospects did
+not improve; he was nothing but a scullion, ridiculed and disliked by
+the cook and other servants. Add to this the fact that an incredible
+swarm of mice and rats infested the miserable room in which he slept,
+and it would seem that he was indeed a "poor Richard." One fortunate
+day, however, he conceived the idea of buying a cat, and as good luck
+would have it, he was enabled within a few days to earn a penny or two
+by blacking the boots of a guest at the house. That day he met a woman
+with a cat for sale, and after some dickering (for she asked more money
+for it than the boy possessed in the world), Dick Whittington carried
+home his cat and put it in a cupboard or closet opening from his room.
+That night when he retired he let the cat out of the cupboard, and she
+evidently had "no end of fun"; for, according to these authentic
+accounts, "she destroyed all the vermin which ventured to make their
+appearance." For some time after that she passed her days in the
+cupboard (in hiding from the cook) and her nights in catching mice.
+
+And then came the change. Mr. Fitzwarren was fitting out a vessel for
+Algiers, and kindly offered all his servants a chance to send something
+to barter with the natives. Poor Dick had nothing but his cat, but the
+commercial instinct was even then strong within him, and with an
+enterprise worthy of the early efforts of any of our self-made men, he
+decided to send that, and accordingly placed it, "while the tears run
+plentifully down his cheeks," in the hands of the master of the vessel.
+She must have been a most exemplary cat, for by the time they had
+reached Algiers, the captain was so fond of her that he allowed no one
+to handle her but himself. Not even he, however, expected to turn her
+into money; but the opportunity soon came.
+
+At a state banquet, given by the Dey, the captain and his officers were
+astonished to notice that rats and mice ran freely in and out, stealing
+half the choice food, which was spread on the carpet; and this was a
+common, every-day occurrence. The captain saw his, or Whittington's,
+opportunity, and stated that he knew a certain remedy for this state of
+affairs; whereupon he was invited to dinner next day, to which he
+carried the cat, and the natural consequence ensued. This sudden and
+swift extermination of the pests drove the Dey and his court half
+frantic with delight; and the captain, who must have been the original
+progenitor of the Yankee race, drove a sharp bargain by assuming to be
+unwilling to part with the cat, so that the Dey finally "sent on board
+his ship the choicest commodities, consisting of gold, jewels, and
+silks."
+
+Meanwhile, things had gone from bad to worse with the youth, destined to
+become not only Lord Mayor of London, but the envy and admiration of
+future generations of youths; and he made up his mind to run away from
+his place. This he did, but while he was on his way to more rural
+scenes, he sat down on a stone at the foot of Highgate Hill (a stone
+that still remains marked as "Whittington's Stone") and paused to
+reflect on his prospects. His thoughts turned back to the home he had
+left, where he had at least plenty to eat, and, although the "authentic
+reports" use a great many words to tell us so, the boy was homesick.
+Just then the sound of Bow Bells reached him, and to his youthful fancy
+seemed to call him back:--
+
+ "Return, return, Whittington;
+ Thrice Lord Mayor of London."
+
+
+Thus the old tale hath it. At any rate, the boy gave up the idea of
+flight and went back to Mr. Fitzwarren's house. The second night after,
+his master sent for him in the midst of one of the cook's tirades, and
+going to the "parlour" he was apprised of his sudden wealth; because,
+added to the rest of his good luck, that captain happened to be an
+honest man. And then he went into trade and married the daughter of Mr.
+Fitzwarren and became Lord Mayor of London, and lived even happier ever
+after than they do in most fairy tales. And everybody, even the cook,
+admired and loved him after he had money and position, as has been known
+to happen outside of fairy tales.
+
+Whether or not cats in England owe anything of their position to-day to
+the Whittington story, it is certain that they have more really
+appreciating friends there than in any other country. The older we grow
+in the refinements of civilization, the more we value the finely bred
+cat. In England it has long been the custom to register the pedigree of
+cats as carefully as dog-fanciers in this country do with their fancy
+pets. Some account of the Cat Club Stud Book and Register will be found
+in the next chapter. Queen Victoria, and the Princess of Wales, and
+indeed many members of the nobility are cat-lovers, and doubtless this
+fact influences the general sentiment in England.
+
+Among the most devoted of Pussy's English admirers is the Hon. Mrs.
+McLaren Morrison, who is the happy possessor of some of the most perfect
+dogs and cats that have graced the bench. She lives at Kepwick Park, in
+her stately home in Yorkshire--a lovely spot, commanding a delightful
+view of picturesque Westmoreland on one side and on the other three
+surrounded and sheltered by hills and moors. Some of her pets go with
+her, however, to her flat in Queen Anne's Mansions, and even to her
+residence in Calcutta. It is at Kepwick Park that Mrs. McLaren Morrison
+has her celebrated "catteries." Here there are magnificent blue, black
+and silver and red Persians; snowy white, blue-eyed beauties; grandly
+marked English tabbies; handsome blue Russians, with their gleaming
+yellow-topaz eyes; some Chinese cats, with their long, edge-shaped heads,
+bright golden eyes, and shiny, short-haired black fur; and a pair of
+Japanese pussies, pure white and absolutely without tails. One of the
+handsomest specimens of the feline race ever seen is her blue Persian,
+Champion Monarch, who, as a kitten in 1893, won the gold medal at the
+Crystal Palace given for the best pair of kittens in the show, and the
+next year the Beresford Challenge Cup at Cruft's Show, for the best
+long-haired cat, besides taking many other honors. Among other well-known
+prize winners are the champions Snowball and Forget-me-not, both pure
+white, with lovely turquoise-blue eyes. Of Champion Nizam (now dead) that
+well-known English authority on cats, Mr. A.A. Clark, said his was the
+grandest head of any cat he had ever seen. Nizam was a perfect specimen
+of that rare and delicate breed of cats, a pure chinchilla. The numberless
+kittens sporting all day long are worthy of the art of Madame Henriette
+Ronner, and one could linger for hours in these delightful and most
+comfortable catteries watching their gambols. The gentle mistress of this
+fair and most interesting domain, the Hon. Mrs. McLaren Morrison herself,
+is one of the most attractive and fascinating women of the day--one who
+adds to great personal beauty all the charm of mental culture and much
+travel. She has made Kepwick Park a veritable House Beautiful with the
+rare curios and art treasures collected with her perfect taste in the
+many lands she has visited, and it is as interesting and enjoyable to a
+virtuoso as it is to an animal lover. Mrs. McLaren Morrison exhibits at
+all the cat shows, often entering as many as twenty-five cats. Other
+English ladies who exhibit largely are Mrs. Herring, of Lestock House,
+and Miss Cockburn Dickinson, of Surrey. Mrs. Herring's Champion Jimmy
+is very well known as a first prize-winner in many shows. He is a
+short-haired, exquisitely marked silver tabby valued at two thousand
+pounds ($10,000).
+
+Another feline celebrity also well known to frequenters of English cat
+shows, is Madame L. Portier's magnificent and colossal Blue Boy, whose
+first appearance into this world was made on the day sacred to St.
+Patrick, 1895. He has a fine pedigree, and was raised by Madame Portier
+herself. Blue Boy commenced his career as a show cat, or rather kitten,
+at three months old, when he was awarded a first prize, and when the
+judge told his mistress that if he fulfilled his early promise he would
+make a grand cat. This he has done, and is now one of the finest
+specimens of his kind in England. He weighs over seventeen pounds, and
+always has affixed to his cage on the show-bench this request, "Please
+do not lift this cat by the neck; he is too heavy." He has long dark
+blue fur, with a ruff of a lighter shade and brilliant topaz eyes.
+Already Blue Boy has taken many prizes. He is a gelded cat and one of
+the fortunate cats who have "Not for Sale" after their names in the show
+catalogues.
+
+To Mrs. C. Hill's beautiful long-haired Patrick Blue fell the honor, at
+the Crystal Palace Show in 1896, of a signed and framed photograph of
+the Prince of Wales, presented by his Royal Highness for the best
+long-haired cat in the show, irrespective of sex or nationality. Besides
+the prize given by the Prince, Patrick Blue was the proud winner of the
+Beresford Challenge Cup for the best blue long-haired cat, and the India
+Silver Bowl for the best Persian. He also was born on St. Patrick's Day,
+hence his name. He was bred by Mrs. Blair Maconochie, his father, Blue
+Ruin I, being a celebrated gold medallist. His mother, Sylvia, who
+belongs to Mrs. Maconochie, has never been shown, her strong point being
+her lovely color, which is most happily reproduced in her perfect son.
+Patrick Blue has all the many charms of a petted cat, and was
+undoubtedly one of the prominent attractions of the first Championship
+Show of the National Cat Club in 1896.
+
+Silver Lambkin is another very famous English cat, owned by Miss
+Gresham, of Surrey. Princess Ranee, owned by Miss Freeland, of
+Mottisfont, near Romney; Champion Southsea Hector, owned by Miss
+Sangster, at Southsea; champions Prince Victor and Shelly, of Kingswood
+(both of whom have taken no end of prizes), are other famous English
+cats.
+
+Topso, a magnificent silver tabby male, belonging to Miss Anderson
+Leake, of Dingley Hill, was at one time the best long-haired silver
+tabby in England, and took the prize on that account in 1887; his sons,
+daughters, grandsons, and granddaughters, have all taken prizes at
+Crystal Palace in the silver tabby classes, since that time.
+
+Lady Marcus Beresford has for the last fifteen years made quite a
+business of the breeding and rearing of cats. At Bishopsgate, near
+Egham, she has what is without doubt the finest cattery. "I have
+applications from all parts of the world for my cats and kittens," said
+Lady Marcus, in a talk about her hobby, "and I may tell you that it is
+largely because of this that I founded the Cat Club, which has for its
+object the general welfare of the cat and the improvement of the breed.
+My catteries were established in 1890, and at one time I had as many as
+150 cats and kittens. Some of my pets live in a pretty cottage covered
+with creepers, which might well be called Cat Cottage. No expense has
+been spared in the fittings of the rooms, and every provision is made
+for warmth and ventilation. One room is set apart for the girl who takes
+entire charge of and feeds the pussies. She has a boy who works with her
+and performs the rougher tasks. There is a small kitchen for cooking the
+meals for the cats, and this is fitted with every requisite. On the
+walls are racks to hold the white enamelled bowls and plates used for
+the food. There is a medicine chest, which contains everything that is
+needful for prompt and efficacious treatment in case pussy becomes sick.
+On the wall are a list of the names and a full description of all the
+inmates of the cattery, and a set of rules to be observed by both the
+cats and their attendants. These rules are not ignored, and it is a
+tribute to the intelligence of the cat to see how carefully pussy can
+become amenable to discipline, if once given to understand of what that
+discipline consists.
+
+"Then there is a garden cattery. I think this is the prettiest of all.
+It is covered with roses and ivy. In this there are three rooms,
+provided with shelves and all other conveniences which can add to the
+cats' comfort and amusement. The residences of the male cats are most
+complete, for I have given them every attention possible. Each male cat
+has his separate sleeping apartments, closed with wire and with a 'run'
+attached. Close at hand is a large, square grass 'run,' and in this each
+gentleman takes his daily but solitary exercise. One of the stringent
+rules of the cattery is that no two males shall ever be left together,
+and I know that with my cats if this rule were not observed, both in
+letter and precept, it would be a case of 'when Greek meets Greek.'
+
+"I vary the food for my cats as much as possible. One day we will have
+most appetizing bowls of fish and rice. At the proper time you can see
+these standing in the cat kitchen ready to be distributed. Another day
+these bowls will be filled with minced meat. In the very hot weather a
+good deal of vegetable matter is mixed with the food. Swiss milk is
+given, so there is no fear of its turning sour. For some time I have
+kept a goat on the premises, the milk from which is given to the
+delicate or younger kittens.
+
+"I have started many of my poorer friends in cat breeding, and they have
+proved conclusively how easily an addition to their income can be made,
+not only by breeding good Persian kittens and selling them, but by
+exhibiting them at the various shows and taking prizes. But of course
+there is a fashion in cats, as in everything else. When I started
+breeding blue Persians about fifteen years ago they were very scarce,
+and I could easily get twenty-five dollars apiece for my kittens. Now
+this variety is less sought after, and self-silvers, commonly called
+chinchillas, are in demand."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+CONCERNING CAT CLUBS AND CAT SHOWS
+
+
+The annual cat shows in England, which have been held successively for
+more than a quarter of a century, led to the establishment in 1887 of a
+National Cat Club, which has steadily grown in membership and interest,
+and by the establishment of the National Stud Book and Register has
+greatly raised the standard of felines in the mother country. It has
+many well-known people as members, life members, or associates; and from
+time to time people distinguished in the cat world have been added as
+honorary members.
+
+The officers of the National Cat Club of England, since its
+reconstruction in March, 1898, are as follows:--
+
+_Presidents._--Her Grace the Duchess of Bedford; Lord Marcus
+Beresford.
+
+_Vice-presidents._--Lily, Duchess of Marlborough, now Lady Wm.
+Beresford; the Countess of Warwick; Lady Granville Gordon; Hon. Mrs.
+McL. Morrison; Madame Ronner; Mr. Isaac Woodiwiss; the Countess of
+Sefton; Lady Hothfield; the Hon. Mrs. Brett; Mr. Sam Woodiwiss; Mr.
+H.W. Bullock.
+
+_President of Committee._--Mr. Louis Wain.
+
+_Committee_.--Lady Marcus Beresford; Mrs. Balding; Mr. Sidney
+Woodiwiss; Mr. Hawkins; Mrs. Blair Maconochie; Mrs. Vallance; Mr.
+Brackett; Mr. F. Gresham.
+
+_Hon. Secretary and Hon. Treasurer_.--Mrs. Stennard Robinson.
+
+This club has a seal and a motto: "Beauty lives by kindness." It
+publishes a stud book in which are registered pedigrees and championship
+wins which are eligible for it. Only wins obtained from shows held under
+N.C.C. rules are recorded free of charge. The fee for ordinary
+registration is one shilling per cat, and the stud book is published
+annually. There are over two thousand cats now entered in this National
+Cat Club Stud Book, the form of entry being as follows (L.F. means
+long-haired female; C.P., Crystal Palace):--
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No. 1593, Mimidatzi, L.F. Silver Tabby.
+
+Miss Anna F. Gardner, Hamswell House, near Bath, shown as Mimi.
+
+Bred by Miss How, Bridgeyate, near Bristol. Born April, 1893. Alive.
+
+Sire, Blue Boy the Great of Islington, 1090 (Mrs H.B. Thompson).
+
+Dam, Boots of Bridgeyate, 1225 (Miss How).
+
+Prizes won--1st Bilton, 2nd, C.P. 1893, Kitten Class.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No. 1225, Boots of Bridgeyate. L.F. Silver Tabby.
+
+Miss E. How, Bridgeyate House, Warmly, Bristol.
+
+Former owner, Mrs. Foote, 43 Palace Gardens, Kensington.
+
+Born March, 1892. Alive.
+
+Some of the cats entered have records of prizes covering nearly half a
+page of the book. The advantage of such a book to cat owners can be
+readily seen. A cat once entered never changes its number, no matter how
+many owners he may have, and his name cannot be changed after December
+31 of the year in which he is registered.
+
+The more important rules of the English National Cat Club are given in
+condensed form as follows:--
+
+The name is "The National Cat Club."
+
+_Objects_: To promote honesty in the breeding of cats, so as to
+insure purity in each distinct breed or variety; to determine the
+classification required, and to insure the adoption of such
+classification by breeders, exhibitors, judges, and the committees of
+all cat shows; to encourage showing and breeding by giving championship
+and other prizes, and otherwise doing all in its power to protect and
+advance the interest of cats and their owners. The National Cat Club
+shall frame a separate set of rules for cat shows to be called "National
+Cat Club Rules," and the committees of those cat shows to which the
+rules are given, shall be called upon to sign a guarantee to the
+National Cat Club binding them to provide good penning and effectual
+sanitation, also to the punctual payment of prize money and to the
+proper adjudication of prizes.
+
+_Stud Book_: The National Cat Club shall keep a stud book.
+
+_Neuter Classes_.--For gelded cats.
+
+_Kitten Classes_.--Single entries over three and under eight months.
+
+_Kitten Brace_.--Kittens of any age.
+
+_Brace_.--For two cats of any age.
+
+_Team_.--For three or more cats, any age.
+
+
+In Paris, although cats have not been commonly appreciated as in
+England, there is an increasing interest in them, and cat shows are now
+a regular feature of the Jardin d'Acclimation. This suggests the subject
+of the cat's social position in France. Since the Revolution the animal
+has conquered in this country "_toutes les liberties_," excepting
+that of wearing an entire tail, for in many districts it is the fashion
+to cut the caudal appendage short.
+
+In Paris cats are much cherished wherever they can be without causing
+too much unpleasantness with the landlord. The system of living in flats
+is not favorable to cat culture, for the animal, not having access
+either to the tiles above or to the gutter below, is apt to pine for
+fresh air, and the society of its congeners. Probably in no other city
+do these creatures lie in shop windows and on counters with such an
+arrogant air of proprietorship. In restaurants, a very large and fat cat
+is kept as an advertisement of the good feeding to be obtained on the
+premises. There is invariably a cat in a _charbonnier's_ shop, and
+the animal is generally one that was originally white, but long ago came
+to the conclusion that all attempts to keep itself clean were hopeless.
+Its only consolation is that it is never blacker than its master. It is
+well known that the Persians and Angoras are much esteemed in Paris and
+are, to some extent, bred for sale. In the provinces, French cats are
+usually low-bred animals, with plebeian heads and tails, the stringlike
+appearance of the latter not being improved by cropping. Although not
+generally esteemed as an article of food in France, there are still many
+people scattered throughout the country who maintain that a _civet de
+chat_ is as good, or better, than a _civet de lievre_.
+
+M. Francois Coppee's fondness for cats as pets is so well known that
+there was great fitness in placing his name first upon the jury of
+awards at the 1896 cat show in Paris. Such other well-known men as Emile
+Zola, Andre Theuriet, and Catulle Mendes, also figured on the list.
+There is now an annual "Exposition Feline Internationale."
+
+In this country the first cat show of general interest was held at
+Madison Square Garden, New York, in May, 1895. Some years before, there
+had been a cat show under the auspices of private parties in Boston, and
+several minor shows had been held at Newburgh, N.Y., and other places.
+But the New York shows were the first to attract general attention. One
+hundred and seventy-six cats were exhibited by one hundred and
+twenty-five owners, besides several ocelots, wild cats, and civets. For
+some reason the show at Madison Square Garden in March, 1896, catalogued
+only one hundred and thirty-two cats and eighty-two owners. Since that
+time there have been no large cat shows in New York.
+
+There have been several cat shows in Boston since 1896, but these are so
+far only adjuncts to poultry and pigeon shows. Great interest has been
+manifest in them, however, and the entries have each year run above a
+hundred. Some magnificent cats are exhibited, although as a rule the
+animals shown are somewhat small, many kittens being placed there for
+sale by breeders.
+
+Several attempts to start successful cat clubs in this country have been
+made. At the close of the New York show in 1896, an American Cat Club
+was organized for the purpose "of investigating, ascertaining, and
+keeping a record of the pedigrees of cats, and of instituting,
+maintaining, controlling, and publishing a stud book, or book of
+registry of such kind of domestic animals in the United States of
+America and Canada, and of promoting and holding exhibitions of such
+animals, and generally for the purpose of improving the breed thereof,
+and educating the public in its knowledge of the various breeds and
+varieties of cats."
+
+The officers were as follows:--
+
+_President_.--Rush S. Huidekoper, 154 E. 57th St., New York City.
+
+_Vice-presidents_.--W.D. Mann, 208 Fifth Ave., New York City; Mrs.
+E.N. Barker, Newburgh, N.Y.
+
+_Secretary-treasurer_.--James T. Hyde, 16 E. 23d St., New York City.
+
+_Executive Committee_.--T. Farrar Rackham, E. Orange, N.J.; Miss
+Edith Newbold, Southampton, L.I.; Mrs. Harriet C. Clarke, 154 W. 82d
+St., New York City; Charles R. Pratt, St. James Hotel, New York City;
+Joseph W. Stray, 229 Division St., Brooklyn, N.Y.
+
+More successful than this club, however, is the Beresford Cat Club
+formed in Chicago in the winter of 1899. The president is Mrs. Clinton
+Locke, who is a member of the English cat clubs, and whose kennel in
+Chicago contains some of the finest cats in America. The Beresford Cat
+Club has the sanction of John G. Shortall, of the American Humane
+Society, and on its honorary list are Miss Agnes Repplier, Madame
+Ronner, Lady Marcus Beresford, Miss Helen Winslow, and Mr. Louis Wain.
+
+At their cat shows, which are held annually, prizes are offered for all
+classes of cats, from the common feline of the back alley up to the
+aristocratic resident of milady's boudoir.
+
+The Beresford Club Cat shows are the most successful of any yet given in
+America. One hundred and seventy-eight prizes were awarded in the show
+of January, 1900, and some magnificent cats were shown. It is said by
+those who are in a position to know that there are no better cats shown
+in England now than can be seen at the Beresford Show in Chicago. The
+exhibits cover short and long haired cats of all colors, sizes, and
+ages, with Siamese cats, Manx cats, and Russian cats. At the show in
+January, 1900, Mrs. Clinton Locke exhibited fourteen cats of one color,
+and Mrs. Josiah Cratty five white cats. This club numbers one hundred
+and seventy members and has a social position and consequent strength
+second to none in America. It is a fine, honorable club, which has for
+its objects the protection of the Humane Society and the caring for all
+cats reported as homeless or in distress. It aims also to establish
+straightforward and honest dealings among the catteries and to do away
+with the humbuggery which prevails in some quarters about the sales and
+valuation of high-bred cats. This club cannot fail to be of great
+benefit to such as want to carry on an honest industry by the raising
+and sale of fine cats. It will also improve the breeding of cats in this
+country, and thereby raise the standard and promote a more general
+intelligence among the people with regard to cats. Some of the best
+people in the United States belong to the Beresford Club, the membership
+of which is by no means confined to Chicago; on the contrary, the club
+is a national one and the officers and board of directors are:--
+
+_President._--Mrs. Clinton Locke.
+
+_1st Vice-president._--Mrs W. Eames Colburn.
+
+_2d Vice-president._--Mrs. F.A. Howe.
+
+_Corresponding Secretary._--Mrs. Henry C. Clark.
+
+_Recording Secretary_.--Miss Lucy Claire Johnstone.
+
+_Treasurer_.--Mrs. Charles Hampton Lane.
+
+Mrs. Elwood H. Tolman.
+
+Mrs. J.H. Pratt.
+
+Mrs. Mattie Fisk Green.
+
+Mrs. F.A. Story.
+
+Miss Louise L. Fergus.
+
+The club is anxious to have members all over the United States, just as
+the English cat clubs do. The non-resident annual fees are only one
+dollar, and a member has to be proposed by one and endorsed by two other
+members. The register cats for the stud book are entered at one dollar
+each, and it is proposed to give shows once a year. The main objects of
+the club are to improve the breeds of fancy cats in America, to awaken a
+more general interest in them, and to secure better treatment for the
+ordinary common cat. The shows will be given for the benefit of the
+Humane Society.
+
+The Chicago Cat Club has done excellent work also, having established a
+cat home, or refuge, for stray, homeless, or diseased cats, with a
+department for boarding pet cats during the absence of their owners. It
+is under the personal care and direction of Dr. C.A. White, 78 E. 26th
+Street. The first cat to be admitted there was one from Cleveland, Ohio,
+which was to be boarded for three months during the absence of its owner
+in Europe and also to be treated for disease. This club was incorporated
+under the state laws of Illinois, on January 26, 1899. In connection
+with it is a children's cat club, which has for its primary object the
+teaching of kindness to animals by awakening in the young people an
+appreciative love for cats. At the show of the Chicago Cat Club, small
+dogs and cavies are exhibited also, the Cavy Club and the Pet Dog Club
+having affiliated with the Chicago Cat Club.
+
+The president of the Chicago Cat Club is Mrs. Leland Norton, of the
+Drexel Kennels, at 4011 Drexel Boulevard, Chicago. The corresponding
+secretary is Mrs. Laura Daunty Pelham, 315 Interocean Building, and the
+other officers are: Vice-president, Miss Gertrude Estabrooks; recording
+secretary, Miss Jennie Van Allen; and treasurer, Mrs. Ella B. Shepard.
+Membership is only one dollar a year, and the registration fee in the
+Chicago stud book fifty cents for each cat.
+
+The cat shows already held and the flourishing state of our cat clubs
+have proved that America has as fine, if not finer, cats than can be
+found in England, and that interest in finely bred cats is on the
+increase in this country. The effect of the successful cat clubs and cat
+shows must be to train intelligent judges and to raise the standard of
+cats in this country. It will also tend to make the cat shows of such a
+character that kind-hearted owners need not hesitate to enter their
+choicest cats. As yet, however, the judging at cat shows is not so well
+managed as in England. It should be a rule that the judges of cats
+should not only understand their fine points, but should be in sympathy
+with the little pets.
+
+Cat dealers who have a number of cats entered for competition, should
+not be allowed on the board of judges. In England, the cats to be judged
+are taken by classes into a tent for the purpose, and the door is
+fastened against all but the judges; whereas over here the cats are too
+often taken out of their cages in the presence of a crowd of spectators
+and judged on a table or some public place, thereby frightening the
+timid ones and bringing annoyance to the owners.
+
+Again, there should be several judges. In England there are seven,
+including two or three women, and these are assigned to different
+classes: Mr. Harrison Weir, F.R.H.S., the well-known authority on cats,
+and Louis Wain, the well-known cat artist, are among them. In this
+country there are a number of women who are not dealers, but who are
+fully posted in the necessary qualifications for a high-bred cat.
+American cat shows should have at least three judges, one of whom, at
+least, should be a woman. A cat should be handled gently and kept as
+calm as possible during the judging. Women are naturally more gentle in
+their methods, and more tenderhearted. When my pets are entered for
+competition, may some wise, kind woman have the judging of them!
+
+In judging a cat the quality and quantity of its fur is the first thing
+considered. In a long-haired cat this includes the "lord mayor's chain,"
+or frill, the tail, and, most important of all, the ear-tufts. The tufts
+between the toes and the flexibility of the tail are other important
+points. The shape of head, eyes, and body are also carefully noted. A
+short-haired cat is judged first for color, then for eyes, head,
+symmetry, and ears.
+
+In all cats the head should show breadth between the eyes. The eyes
+should be round and open. White cats to be really valuable should have
+blue eyes (without deafness); black cats should have yellow eyes; other
+cats should have pea-green eyes, or in some cases, as in the brown,
+self-colored eyes. The nose should be short and tapering. The teeth
+should be good, and the claws flat. The lower leg should be straight,
+and the upper hind leg lie at closed angles. The foot should be small
+and round (in the maltese, pointed). A good cat has a light frame, but a
+deep chest; a slim, graceful, and fine neck; medium-sized ears with
+rounded tips. The croup should be square and high; the tail of a
+short-haired cat long and tapering, and of a long-haired cat broad and
+bent over at the end.
+
+The good results of a cat show are best told in a few words by one who
+has acted as judge at an American exhibition.
+
+"One year," he said, "people have to learn that there is such a thing as
+a cat; the next they come to the show and learn to tell the different
+breeds; another year they learn the difference between a good cat and a
+poor one; and the next year they become exhibitors, and tell the judges
+how to award the premiums."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+CONCERNING HIGH-BRED CATS IN AMERICA
+
+
+One of the first American women to start a "cattery" in this country was
+Mrs. Clinton Locke, wife of the rector of Grace Church, Chicago. As a
+clergyman's wife she has done a great deal of good among the various
+charities of her city simply from the income derived from her kennels.
+She has been very generous in gifts of her kittens to other women who
+have made the raising of fine cats a means to add to a slender income,
+and has sent beautiful cats all over the United States, to Mexico, and
+even to Germany. Under her hospitable roof at 2825 Indiana Avenue is a
+cat family of great distinction. First, there is The Beadle, a splendid
+blue male with amber eyes, whose long pedigree appears in the third
+volume of the N.C.C.S.B. under the number 1872, sired by Glaucus,
+and his dam was Hawthorne Bounce. His pedigree is traced for many
+generations. He was bred by Mrs. Dean of Hawthornedene, Slough, England.
+The Beadle took first prize at the cat show held in Chicago in 1896. He
+also had honorable mention at two cat shows in England when a kitten,
+under the name of Bumble Bee. Lord Gwynne is a noble specimen, a
+long-haired white cat with wonderful blue eyes. He was bred from
+Champion Bundle, and his mother was out of The Masher, No. 1027, winner
+of many championships. His former owner was Mrs. Davies, of Upper
+Cattesham. Mrs. Locke purchased him from A.A. Clarke, one of the best
+judges of cats in England. Lord Gwynne took a prize at the Brighton Cat
+Show in England in 1895, as a kitten. The father of The Beadle's mate,
+Rosalys, was the famous "Bluebeard."
+
+Mrs. Locke's chinchillas are the finest ones in this country. Atossa,
+the mother cat, has a wonderful litter of kittens. She was bred to Lord
+Argent, one of the three celebrated stud chinchillas in England. She
+arrived in this country in July, and ten days after gave birth to her
+foreign kittens. One of the kittens has been sold to Mrs. Dr.
+Forsheimer, of Cincinnati, and another to Mrs. W.E. Colburn, of South
+Chicago. The others Mrs. Locke will not part with at any price.
+
+Smerdis, the grand chinchilla male brought over as a future mate for
+Atossa, is a royal cat. He looks as though he had run away from Bengal,
+but, like all of Mrs. Locke's cats, he is gentle and loving. He is the son
+of Lord Southampton, the lightest chinchilla stud in England (N.C.C.S.B.
+1690), and his mother is Silver Spray, No. 1542. His maternal grandparents
+are Silver King and Harebell, and his great-grandparents Perso and
+Beauty,--all registered cats. On his father's side a pedigree of three
+generations can be traced. One of her more recent importations is Lord
+Gwynne's mate, Lady Mertice, a beautiful long-haired cat with blue eyes.
+Other famous cats of hers have been Bettina, Nora, Doc, Vashti, Marigold,
+Grover, and Wendell.
+
+One of Mrs Locke's treasures is a _bona fide_ cat mummy, brought by
+Mrs. Locke from Egypt. It has been verified at the Gizeh Museum to be
+four thousand years old.
+
+It is fully twenty-five years since Mrs. Locke began to turn her
+attention to fine cats, and when she imported her first cat to Chicago
+there was only one other in the United States. That one was Mrs. Edwin
+Brainard's Madam, a wonderful black, imported from Spain. Her first
+long-haired cat was Wendell, named for the friend who brought him from
+Persia, and his descendants are now in the Lockehaven Cattery. Queen
+Wendella is one of the most famous cats in America to-day, and mother of
+the beautiful Lockehaven Quartette. These are all descended from the
+first Wendell. The kittens in the Lockehaven Quartette went to Mrs. S.S.
+Leach, Bonny Lea, New London, Ct.; Miss Lucy Nichols, Ben Mahr Cattery,
+Waterbury, Ct.; Miss Olive Watson, Warrensburg, Pa.; and Mrs. B.M.
+Gladding, at Memphis, Tenn, Mrs. Locke's Lord Argent, descended from
+Atossa and the famous Lord Argent, of England, is a magnificent cat,
+while her Smerdis is the son of the greatest chinchillas in the world.
+Rosalys II, now owned by Mr. C.H. Jones, of Palmyra, N.Y., was once her
+cat, and was the daughter of Rosalys (owned by Miss Nichols, of
+Waterbury, Ct), who was a granddaughter of the famous Bluebeard, of
+England. These, with the beautiful brown tabby, Crystal, owned by Mr.
+Jones, have all been prize winners. Lucy Claire is a recent importation,
+who won second and third prizes in England under the name of Baby
+Flossie. She is the daughter of Duke of Kent and Topso, of Merevale. Her
+paternal grandparents are Mrs. Herring's well-known champion, Blue Jack,
+and Marney. The maternal grandparents are King Harry, a prize winner at
+Clifton and Brighton, and Fluff.
+
+Mrs. Locke's cats are all imported. She has sometimes purchased cats
+from Maine or elsewhere for people who did not care to pay the price
+demanded for her fine kittens, but she has never had in her own cattery
+any cats of American origin. Her stock, therefore, is probably the
+choicest in America. She always has from twenty to twenty-five cats, and
+the cat-lover who obtains one of her kittens is fortunate indeed. A
+beautiful pair of blacks in Mrs. Locke's cattery have the most desirable
+shade of amber eyes, and are named "Blackbird" and "St. Tudno"; she has
+also a choice pair of Siamese cats called "Siam" and "Sally Ward."
+
+Mrs. Josiah Cratty, of Oak Park, has a cattery called the "Jungfrau
+Katterie," and her cats are remarkably beautiful. Her Bartimaeus and
+True Blue are magnificent white cats, sired by Mrs. Locke's Lord Gwynne.
+
+Miss L.C. Johnstone, of Chicago, has some of the handsomest cats in the
+country. Cherie is a wonderful blue shaded cat; Lord Humm is a splendid
+brown tabby; while Beauty Belle is an exceedingly handsome white cat.
+Miss Johnstone takes great pains with her cats, and is rewarded by
+having them rated among the best in America.
+
+Some of the beautiful cats which have been sent from Chicago to homes
+elsewhere are Teddy Roosevelt, a magnificent white, sired by Mrs. W.E.
+Colburn's Paris, and belonging to Mrs. L. Kemp, of Huron, S. Dak.;
+Silver Dick, a gorgeous buff and white, whose grandmother was Mrs.
+Colburn's Caprice, and who is owned by Mrs. Porter L. Evans, of East St.
+Louis; Toby, a pure white with green eyes, owned by Mrs. Elbert W.
+Shirk, of Indianapolis; and Amytis, a chinchilla belonging to Mrs. S.S.
+Leach, of New London, sired by Mrs. Locke's Smerdis, and the daughter of
+Rosalys II.
+
+Miss Cora Wallace, of East Brady, Pa., has Lord Ruffles, son of the
+first Rosalys and The Beadle, formerly Bumble Bee. Mrs. Fisk Greene, of
+Chicago, now owns a beautiful cat in Bumble Bee, and another in Miss
+Merrylegs, a blue with golden eyes, the daughter of Bumble Bee and Black
+Sapho. The Misses Peacock, of Topeka, have a pair of whites called
+Prince Hilo and Rosebud, the latter having blue eyes. Mrs. Frederick
+Monroe, of Riverside, Ill., owns a remarkable specimen of a genuine
+Russian cat, a perfect blue of extraordinary size. Miss Elizabeth
+Knight, of Milwaukee, has a beautiful silver tabby, Winifred, the
+daughter of Whychwood, Miss Kate Loraine Gage's celebrated silver tabby,
+of Brewster, N.Y. The most perfect "lavender blue" cat belongs to Miss
+Lucy E. Nichols, of Waterbury, Ct., and is named Roscal. He has
+beautiful long fur, with a splendid ruff and tail, and is a son of
+Rosalys and The Beadle.
+
+Mrs. Leland Norton has a number of magnificent cats. It was she who
+adopted Miss Frances Willard's "Tootsie," the famous cat which made two
+thousand dollars for the temperance cause. Miss Nella B. Wheatley has
+very fine kennels, and raises some beautiful cats. Her Taffy is a
+beautiful buff and white Angora, which has been very much admired. Her
+cats have been sold to go to many other cities. Speaking from her own
+experience Miss Wheatley says, "Raising Angoras is one of the most
+fascinating of employments, and I have found, when properly taken care
+of, they are among the most beautiful, strong, intelligent, and playful
+of all animals."
+
+Mrs. W.E. Colburn is another very successful owner of cat kennels. She
+has had some of the handsomest cats in this country, among which are
+"Paris," a magnificent white cat with blue eyes, and his mother,
+"Caprice," who has borne a number of wonderfully fine pure white Angoras
+with the most approved shade of blue eyes. Her cattery is known as the
+"Calumet Kennel," and there is no better judge of cats in the country
+than Mrs. Colburn.
+
+So much has been said of the cats which were "mascots" on the ships
+during the Cuban War that it is hardly necessary to speak of them. Tom,
+the mascot of the _Maine_, and Christobal have been shown in
+several cities of the Union since the war.
+
+The most beautiful collection of brown tabbies is owned by Mr. C.H.
+Jones, of Palmyra, N.Y., who has the "Crystal Cattery." Crystal, the son
+of Mrs. E.M. Barker's "King Humbert," is the champion brown tabby of
+America, and is a magnificent creature, of excellent disposition and
+greatly admired by cat fanciers everywhere. Mona Liza, his mate, and
+Goozie and Bubbles make up as handsome a quartet of this variety as one
+could wish to see. Goozie's tail is now over twelve inches in
+circumference. Mr. Jones keeps about twenty fine cats in stock all the
+time.
+
+The most highly valued cat in America is Napoleon the Great, whose owner
+has refused four thousand dollars for him. A magnificent fellow he is
+too, with his bushy orange fur and lionlike head. He is ten years old
+and weighs twenty-three pounds, which is a remarkable weight in a male
+cat, only gelded ones ordinarily running above fifteen pounds. Napoleon
+was bred by a French nobleman, and was born at the Chateau
+Fontainebleau, near Paris, in 1888. He is a pure French Angora, which is
+shown by his long crinkly hair--so long that it has to be frequently
+clipped to preserve the health and comfort of the beautiful creature.
+This clipping is what causes the uneven quality of fur which appears in
+his picture. His mother was a famous cat, and his grandmother was one of
+the grandest dams of France (no pun intended). The latter lived to be
+nineteen years old, and consequently Napoleon the Great is regarded by
+his owners as a mere youth. He has taken first prizes and medals
+wherever he has been exhibited, and at Boston, 1897, won the silver cup
+offered for the best cat in the exhibition.
+
+Another fine cat belonging to Mrs. Weed, is Marguerite, mother of Le
+Noir, a beautiful black Angora, sired by Napoleon the Great and owned by
+Mrs. Weed. Juno is Napoleon's daughter, born in 1894, and is valued at
+fifteen hundred dollars. When she was seven months old her owners
+refused two hundred dollars for her. She is a tortoise-shell and white
+French Angora, and a remarkably beautiful creature. All these cats are
+great pets, and are allowed the freedom of the house and barns, although
+when they run about the grounds there is always a man in attendance. Six
+or seven thousand dollars' worth of cats sporting on the lawn together
+is a rich sight, but not altogether without risk.
+
+Mrs. Fabius M. Clarke's "Persia," a beautiful dark chinchilla, is one of
+the finest cats in this country. She began her career by taking special
+and first prizes at Fastmay's Cat Show in England, as the best long-haired
+kitten. She also took the first prize as a kitten at Lancashire, and at
+the National Cat Show in New York in 1895. She was bred in England; sire,
+King of Uhn; dam, Brunette, of pure imported Persian stock. Mrs. Clarke
+brought her home in January, 1895, and she is still worshipped as a family
+pet at her New York home. "Sylvio" was also brought over at the same time.
+He was a beautiful long-haired male silver tabby, and bred by Mrs. A.F.
+Gardner. Sylvio was sired by the famous Topso of Dingley (owned by Miss
+Leake), famous as the best long-haired tabby in England. Sylvio's mother
+was Mimidatzi, whose pedigree is given in the previous chapter. "Mimi's"
+sire was the champion Blue Boy the Great, whose mother was Boots of
+Bridgeyate, whose pedigree is also given in the extract from the stud
+book. Sylvio took a first prize at the New York Show, 1895, but
+unfortunately was poisoned before he was a year old. This seems the
+greater pity, because he had a remarkably fine pedigree, and gave promise
+of being one of the best cats America has yet seen.
+
+Persia is a handsome specimen of the fine blue chinchilla class. She is
+quiet, amiable, and shows her high breeding in her good manners and
+intelligence. Her tail is like a fox's brush, and her ruff gladdens the
+heart of every cat fancier that beholds her. She is an aristocratic
+little creature, and seems to feel that she comes of famous foreign
+ancestry. Mrs. Clarke makes great pets of her beautiful cats, and trains
+them to do many a cunning trick.
+
+Another cat which has won several prizes, and took the silver bowl
+offered for the best cat and litter of kittens in the 1895 cat show of
+New York is Ellen Terry, a handsome orange and white, exhibited by Mrs.
+Fabius M. Clarke. At that show she had seven beautiful kittens, and they
+all reposed in a dainty white and yellow basket with the mother,
+delighting the hearts of all beholders. She now belongs to Mrs. Brian
+Brown, of Brooklyn. She is a well-bred animal, with a pretty face and
+fine feathering. One of the kittens who won the silver bowl in 1895 took
+the second prize for long-haired white female in New York, in March,
+1896. She is a beautiful creature, known as Princess Dinazarde, and
+belongs to Mrs. James S.H. Umsted, of New York.
+
+Sylvia is still in Mrs. Clarke's possession, and is a beautiful
+creature, dainty, refined, and very jealous of her mistress's affection.
+Mrs. Clarke also owns a real Manx cat, brought from the Isle of Man by
+Captain McKenzie. It acts like a monkey, climbing up on mantels and
+throwing down pictures and other small objects, in the regular monkey
+spirit of mischief. It has many queer attributes, and hops about like a
+rabbit. She also owns Sapho, who was bred by Ella Wheeler Wilcox from
+her Madame Ref and Mr. Stevens's Ajax, an uncommonly handsome white
+Angora.
+
+The sire of Topso and Sylvia was Musjah, owned by Mr. Ferdinand Danton,
+a New York artist. He was a magnificent creature, imported from Algiers
+in 1894; a pure blue Persian of uncommon size and beautiful coloring.
+Musjah was valued at two hundred dollars, but has been stolen from Mr.
+Danton. Probably his present owner will not exhibit him at future cat
+shows.
+
+Ajax is one of the finest white Angoras in this country. His owner, Mr.
+D.W. Stevens, of West-field, Mass., has refused five hundred dollars for
+him, and would not consider one thousand dollars as a fair exchange for
+the majestic creature. He was born in 1893, and is valued, not only for
+his fine points, but because he is a family pet, with a fine disposition
+and uncommon intelligence. At the New York show in 1895, and at several
+other shows, he has won first prizes.
+
+One of his sons bids fair to be as fine a cat as Ajax. This is Sampson,
+bred by Ella Wheeler Wilcox, from Madame Ref, and owned by Mrs. Brian
+Brown. Mr. Stevens has a number of other high-bred cats, one of whom is
+Raby, a reddish black female, with a red ruff. Another is Lady, who is
+pure white; and then there are Monkey and Midget, who are black and
+white Angoras. All of these cats are kept in a pen, half of which is
+within the barn, and the other half out of doors and enclosed by wire
+netting. Ajax roams over the house at will, and the others pass some of
+the time there, but the entire collection, sometimes numbering
+twenty-five, is too valuable to be given the freedom of all outdoors.
+Both Mr. and Mrs. Stevens are very fond of cats, and have made a study
+of them in sickness and health. Some years ago, a malicious raid was
+made on the pen, and every cat poisoned with the exception of Raby,
+whose life was saved only by frequent and generous doses of skunk's oil
+and milk.
+
+At the first New York show, Miss Ethel Nesmith Anderson's Chico, an
+imported Persian, took the second prize, after Ajax, in the pure white,
+longhaired class. The third prize was won by Snow, another imported
+Angora, belonging to Mr. George A. Rawson, of Newton, Mass. Snow had
+already taken a prize at Crystal Palace. He is a magnificent animal. Mr.
+Rawson owns a number of beautiful cats, which are the pride of his
+family, and bring visitors from all parts of the country. His
+orange-colored, long-haired Dandy won first prizes at the Boston shows
+of 1896 and 1897 in the gelded class. He is beautifully marked, and has
+a disposition as "childlike and bland" as the most exacting owner could
+wish. Miss Puff is also owned by Mr. Rawson, and presents him with
+beautiful white Angora kittens every year. The group of ten white
+kittens, raised by him in 1896, gives some idea of the beauty of these
+kittens: although the picture was taken with a high wind blowing in
+their faces, causing one white beauty to conceal all marks of
+identification except an ear, and another to hide completely behind his
+playmates.
+
+Mustapha was entered by Dr. Huidekoper in the first New York show, but
+not for competition. He was a magnificent brindled Persian gelded cat,
+six years old, who enjoyed the plaudits of the multitude just as well as
+though he had taken first prize. He was very fond of his master, but
+very shy with strangers when at home. He slept on the library desk, or a
+cushion next his master's bed whenever he could be alone with the
+doctor, but at other times preferred his own company or that of the
+cook.
+
+Another cat that attracted a great deal of attention was Master Pettet's
+Tommy, a white Persian, imported in 1889 and valued at five hundred
+dollars, although no money consideration could induce his owners to part
+with him. He was brought from the interior of Persia, where he was
+captured in a wild state. He was kept caged for over a year, and would
+not be tamed; but at last he became domesticated, and is now one of the
+dearest pets imaginable. His fur is extremely long and soft, without a
+colored hair. His tail is broad and carried proudly aloft, curling over
+toward his back when walking. His face is full of intelligence: his ears
+well-tipped and feathered, and his ruff a thing of beauty and a joy
+forever.
+
+King Max, a long-haired, black male, weighing thirteen pounds at the age
+of one year, and valued at one thousand dollars, took first prizes in
+Boston in January, 1897, '98, and '99. He is owned by Mrs. E.R. Taylor,
+of Medford, Mass., and attracts constant attention during shows. His fur
+is without a single white hair and is a finger deep; his ruff encircles
+his head like a great aureole. He is not only one of the most beautiful
+cats I have ever seen, but one of the best-natured: as his reputation
+for beauty spreads among visitors at the show, everybody wants to see
+him, and he has no chance at all for naps. Generally he is brought
+forward and taken from his cage a hundred times a day; but not once does
+he show the least sign of ill-temper, and even on the last day of the
+show he keeps up a continual low purr of content and happiness. Perhaps
+he knows how handsome he is.
+
+Grover B., the Mascotte, is a Philadelphia cat who took the twenty-five
+dollar gold medal in 1895, at the New York show, as the heaviest white
+cat exhibited. He belongs to Mr. and Mrs. W.P. Buchanan, and weighs over
+twenty pounds. He is a thoroughbred, and is valued at one thousand
+dollars, having been brought from the Isle of Malta, and he wears a
+one-hundred-dollar gold collar. He is a remarkable cat, noted
+particularly for his intelligence and amiability. He is very dainty in
+his choice of food, and prefers to eat his dinners in his high chair at
+the table. He has a fascinating habit of feeding himself with his paws.
+He is very talkative just before meal-times, and is versed in all the
+feline arts of making one's self understood. He waits at the front door
+for his master every night, and will not leave him all the evening. He
+sleeps in a bed of his own, snugly wrapped up in blankets, and he is
+admired by all who know him, not more for his beauty than for his
+excellent deportment. He furnishes one more proof that a properly
+trained and well-cared-for cat has a large amount of common sense and
+appreciation.
+
+Mrs. Frances Hodgson Burnett's tiger cat Dick attracted a great deal of
+attention at the first New York show. He weighs twenty-two pounds and is
+three feet long, with a girth of twenty-four inches; and he has attained
+some degree of prominence in her writings.
+
+A trio of cats that were a centre of attraction at that first show
+belonged to Colonel Mann, of _Town Topics_. They were jet black,
+and rejoiced in the names of Taffy, The Laird, and Little Billee. They
+took a first prize, but two of them have since come to an untimely end.
+Colonel Mann is a devoted lover of animals, and has given a standing
+order that none of his employees shall, if they see a starving kitten on
+the street, leave it to suffer and die. Accordingly his office is a sort
+of refuge for unfortunate cats, and one may always see a number of
+happy-looking creatures there, who seem to appreciate the kindness which
+surrounds them. The office is in a fifth story overlooking Fifth Avenue:
+and the cats used to crawl out on the wide window-ledge in summer-time
+and enjoy the air and the view of Madison Square. But alas! The Laird
+and Little Billee came to their deaths by jumping from their high perch
+after sparrows and falling to the pavement below. Now there is a strong
+wire grating across the windows, and Taffy, a monstrous, shiny black
+fellow, is the leader in the "_Town Topics_ Colony."
+
+Dr. H.L. Hammond, of Killingly, Ct., makes a speciality of the rare
+Australian cats, and has taken numerous prizes with them at every cat
+show in this country, where they are universally admired. His Columbia
+is valued at six hundred dollars, and his Tricksey at five hundred
+dollars. They are, indeed, beautiful creatures, though somewhat unique
+in the cat world, as we see it. They are very sleek cats, with fur so
+short, glossy, and fine that it looks like the finest satin. Their heads
+are small and narrow, with noses that seem pointed when compared with
+other cats. They are very intelligent and affectionate little creatures,
+and make the loveliest of pets. Dr. and Mrs. Hammond are extremely fond
+of their unusual and valuable cat family,--and tell the most interesting
+tales of their antics and habits. His Columbia was an imported cat, and
+the doctor has reason to believe that she with her mate are originally
+from the Siamese cat imported from Siam to Australia. They are all very
+delicate as kittens, the mother rarely having more than one at a time.
+With two exceptions, these cats have never had more than two kittens at
+a litter. They are very partial to heat, but cannot stand cold weather.
+They have spells of sleeping when nothing has power to disturb them, but
+when they do wake up they have a "high time," running and playing. They
+are affectionate, being very fond of their owner, but rather shy with
+strangers. They are uncommonly intelligent, too, and are very teachable
+when young. They are such beautiful creatures, besides being rare in
+this part of the world, that it is altogether probable that they will be
+much sought after as pets.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+CONCERNING CATS IN POETRY
+
+
+As far back as the ninth century, a poem on a cat was written, which has
+come down to us from the Arabic. Its author was Ibn Alalaf Alnaharwany,
+of Bagdad, who died in 318 A.H. or A.D. 930. He was one of the better
+known poets of the khalifate, and his work may still be found in the
+original. The following verses, which were translated by Dr. Carlyle,
+are confessedly a paraphrase rather than a strict translation; but, of
+course, the sense is the same. Commentators differ on the question as to
+whether the poet really meant anything more in this poem than to sing of
+the death of a pet, and some have tried to ascribe to it a hidden
+meaning which implies beautiful slaves, lovers, and assignations; just
+as the wise Browning student discovers meanings in that great poet's
+works of which he never dreamed. Nevertheless, we who love cats are fain
+to believe that this follower of Mahomet meant only to celebrate the
+merits--perhaps it would hardly do to call them virtues--of his beloved
+cat.
+
+The lines are inscribed,--
+
+ ON A CAT
+
+ THAT WAS KILLED AS SHE WAS ATTEMPTING TO ROB A DOVE-HOUSE
+
+ BY IBN ALALAF ALNAHARWANY
+
+
+ Poor Puss is gone!--'tis Fate's decree--
+ Yet I must still her loss deplore;
+ For dearer than a child was she,
+ And ne'er shall I behold her more!
+
+ With many a sad, presaging tear,
+ This morn I saw her steal away,
+ While she went on without a fear,
+ Except that she should miss her prey.
+
+ I saw her to the dove-house climb,
+ With cautious feet and slow she stept,
+ Resolved to balance loss of time
+ By eating faster than she crept.
+
+ Her subtle foes were on the watch,
+ And marked her course, with fury fraught;
+ And while she hoped the birds to catch,
+ An arrow's point the huntress caught.
+
+ In fancy she had got them all,
+ And drunk their blood and sucked their breath;
+ Alas! she only got a fall,
+ And only drank the draught of death.
+
+ Why, why was pigeon's flesh so nice,
+ That thoughtless cats should love it thus?
+ Hadst thou but lived on rats and mice,
+ Thou hadst been living still, poor Puss!
+
+ Cursed be the taste, howe'er refined,
+ That prompts us for such joys to wish;
+ And cursed the dainty where we find
+ Destruction lurking in the dish.
+
+
+Among the poets, Pussy has always found plenty of friends. Her feline
+grace and softness has inspired some of the greatest, and, from Tasso
+and Petrarch down, her quiet and dignified demeanor have been celebrated
+in verse. Mr. Swinburne, within a few years, has written a charming poem
+which was published in the _Athenaeum_, and which places the writer
+among the select inner circle of true cat-lovers. He calls his verses--
+
+ TO A CAT
+
+ Stately, kindly, lordly friend,
+ Condescend
+ Here to sit by me, and turn
+ Glorious eyes that smile and burn,
+ Golden eyes, love's lustrous meed,
+ On the golden page I read.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Dogs may fawn on all and some
+ As they come:
+ You a friend of loftier mind,
+ Answer friends alone in kind.
+ Just your foot upon my hand
+ Softly bids it understand.
+
+
+Thomas Gray's poem on the death of Robert Walpole's cat, which was
+drowned in a bowl of goldfish, was greatly prized by the latter; after
+the death of the poet the bowl was placed on a pedestal at Strawberry
+Hill, with a few lines from the poem as an inscription. In a letter
+dated March 1, 1747, accompanying it, Mr. Gray says:--
+
+"As one ought to be particularly careful to avoid blunders in a
+compliment of condolence, it would be a sensible satisfaction to me
+(before I testify my sorrow and the sincere part I take in your
+misfortune) to know for certain who it is I lament. [Note the 'Who.'] I
+knew Zara and Selima (Selima was it, or Fatima?), or rather I knew them
+both together, for I cannot justly say which was which. Then, as to your
+handsome cat, the name you distinguish her by, I am no less at a loss,
+as well knowing one's handsome cat is always the cat one likes best; or
+if one be alive and the other dead, it is usually the latter that is the
+handsomest. Besides, if the point were never so clear, I hope you do not
+think me so ill bred or so imprudent as to forfeit all my interest in
+the survivor. Oh, no; I would rather seem to mistake and imagine, to be
+sure, it must be the tabby one that had met with this sad accident. Till
+this affair is a little better determined, you will excuse me if I do
+not cry, 'Tempus inane peto, requiem, spatiumque doloris.'"
+
+He closes the letter by saying, "There's a poem for you; it is rather
+too long for an epitaph." And then the familiar--
+
+ "'Twas on a lofty vase's side,
+ Where China's gayest art had dy'd
+ The azure flowers that blow:
+ Demurest of the tabby kind,
+ The pensive Selima, reclined,
+ Gazed on the lake below."
+
+
+Wordsworth's "Kitten and the Falling Leaves," is in the high, moralizing
+style.
+
+ "That way look, my Infant, lo!
+ What a pretty baby show.
+ See the kitten on the wall,
+ Sporting with the leaves that fall,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "But the kitten, how she starts,
+ Crouches, stretches, paws, and darts
+ First at one and then its fellow,
+ Just as light and just as yellow:
+ There are many now--now one,
+ Now they stop, and there are none.
+ What intentness of desire
+ In her upward eye of fire!
+ With a tiger-leap halfway
+ Now she meets the coming prey,
+ Lets it go as fast, and then
+ Has it in her power again:
+ Now she works with three or four.
+ Like an Indian conjuror:
+ Quick as he in feats of art,
+ Far beyond in joy of heart.
+ Were her antics played in the eye
+ Of a thousand standers-by,
+ Clapping hands with shout and stare,
+ What would little Tabby care
+ For the plaudits of the crowd?
+ Over happy to be proud,
+ Over wealthy in the treasure
+ Of her own exceeding pleasure.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Pleased by any random toy:
+ By a kitten's busy joy,
+ Or an infant's laughing eye
+ Sharing in the ecstacy:
+ I would fain like that or this
+ Find my wisdom in my bliss:
+ Keep the sprightly soul awake,
+ And have faculties to take,
+ Even from things by sorrow wrought,
+ Matter for a jocund thought,
+ Spite of care and spite of grief,
+ To gambol with life's falling leaf."
+
+
+Cowper's love for animals was well known. At one time, according to Lady
+Hesketh, he had besides two dogs, two goldfinches, and two canaries,
+five rabbits, three hares, two guinea-pigs, a squirrel, a magpie, a jay,
+and a starling. In addition he had, at least, one cat, for Lady Hesketh
+says, "One evening the cat giving one of the hares a sound box on the
+ear, the hare ran after her, and having caught her, punished her by
+drumming on her back with her two feet hard as drumsticks, till the
+creature would actually have been killed had not Mrs. Unwin rescued
+her." It might have been this very cat that was the inspiration of
+Cowper's poem, "To a Retired Cat," which had as a moral the familiar
+stanza:--
+
+ "Beware of too sublime a sense
+ Of your own worth and consequence:
+ The man who dreams himself so great
+ And his importance of such weight,
+ That all around, in all that's done,
+ Must move and act for him alone,
+ Will learn in school of tribulation
+ The folly of his expectation."
+
+
+Baudelaire wrote:--
+
+ "Come, beauty, rest upon my loving heart,
+ But cease thy paws' sharp-nailed play,
+ And let me peer into those eyes that dart
+ Mixed agate and metallic ray."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Grave scholars and mad lovers all admire
+ And love, and each alike, at his full tide
+ Those suave and puissant cats, the fireside's pride,
+ Who like the sedentary life and glow of fire."
+
+
+Goldsmith also wrote of the kitten:--
+
+ "Around in sympathetic mirth
+ Its tricks the kitten tries:
+ The cricket chirrups in the hearth,
+ The crackling fagot flies."
+
+
+Does this not suggest a charming glimpse of the poet's English home?
+
+Keats was evidently not acquainted with the best and sleekest pet cat,
+and his "Sonnet to a Cat" does not indicate that he fully appreciated
+their higher qualities.
+
+Mr. Whittier, our good Quaker poet, while not attempting an elaborate
+sonnet or stilted elegiac, shows a most appreciative spirit in the lines
+he wrote for a little girl who asked him one day, with tears in her
+eyes, to write an epitaph for her lost Bathsheba.
+
+ "Bathsheba: To whom none ever said scat,
+ No worthier cat
+ Ever sat on a mat
+ Or caught a rat:
+ _Requies-cat_."
+
+
+Clinton Scollard, however, has given us an epitaph that many
+sympathizing admirers would gladly inscribe on the tombstones of their
+lost pets, if it were only the popular fashion to put tombstones over
+their graves. This is Mr. Scollard's tribute, the best ever written:--
+
+ GRIMALKIN
+
+ AN ELEGY ON PETER, AGED TWELVE
+
+ In vain the kindly call: in vain
+ The plate for which thou once wast fain
+ At morn and noon and daylight's wane,
+ O King of mousers.
+ No more I hear thee purr and purr
+ As in the frolic days that were,
+ When thou didst rub thy velvet fur
+ Against my trousers.
+
+ How empty are the places where
+ Thou erst wert frankly debonair,
+ Nor dreamed a dream of feline care,
+ A capering kitten.
+ The sunny haunts where, grown a cat,
+ You pondered this, considered that,
+ The cushioned chair, the rug, the mat,
+ By firelight smitten.
+
+ Although of few thou stoodst in dread,
+ How well thou knew a friendly tread,
+ And what upon thy back and head
+ The stroking hand meant.
+ A passing scent could keenly wake
+ Thy eagerness for chop or steak,
+ Yet, Puss, how rarely didst thou break
+ The eighth commandment.
+
+ Though brief thy life, a little span
+ Of days compared with that of man,
+ The time allotted to thee ran
+ In smoother metre.
+ Now with the warm earth o'er thy breast,
+ O wisest of thy kind and best,
+ Forever mayst thou softly rest,
+ _In pace_, Peter.
+
+
+One only has to read this poem to feel that Mr. Scollard knew what it is
+to love a gentle, intelligent, affectionate cat--made so by kind
+treatment.
+
+To Francois Coppee the cat is as sacred as it was to the Egyptians of
+old. The society of his feline pets is to him ever delightful and
+consoling, and it may have inspired him to write some of his most
+melodious verses. Nevertheless he is not the cat's poet. It was Charles
+Cros who wrote:--
+
+ "Chatte blanche, chatte sans tache,
+ Je te demande dans ces vers
+ Quel secret dort dans tes yeux verts,
+ Quel sarcasme sous ta moustache?"
+
+
+Here is a version in verse of the famous "Kilkenny Cats":--
+
+ "O'Flynn, she was an Irishman, as very well was known,
+ And she lived down in Kilkenny, and she lived there all alone,
+ With only six great large tom-cats that knowed their ways about;
+ And everybody else besides she scrupulously shut out."
+
+ "Oh, very fond of cats was she, and whiskey, too, 'tis said,
+ She didn't feed 'em very much, but she combed 'em well instead:
+ As may be guessed, these large tom-cats did not get very sleek
+ Upon a combing once a day and a 'haporth' once a week.
+
+ "Now, on one dreary winter's night O'Flynn she went to bed
+ With a whiskey bottle under her arm, the whiskey in her head.
+ The six great large tom-cats they all sat in a dismal row,
+ And horridly glared their hazy eyes, their tails wagged to and fro.
+
+ "At last one grim graymalkin spoke, in accents dire to tell,
+ And dreadful were the words which in his horrid whisper fell:
+ And all the six large tom-cats in answer loud did squall,
+ 'Let's kill her, and let's eat her, body, bones, and all.'
+
+ "Oh, horrible! Oh, terrible! Oh, deadly tale to tell!
+ When the sun shone through the window-hole all seemed still and well:
+ The cats they sat and licked their paws all in a merry ring.
+ But nothing else in all the house looked like a living thing.
+
+ "Anon they quarrelled savagely--they spit, they swore, they hollered:
+ At last these six great large tom-cats they one another swallered:
+ And naught but one long tail was left in that once peaceful dwelling,
+ And a very tough one, too, it was--it's the same that I've been telling."
+
+
+By far more artistic is the version for which I am indebted to Miss
+Katharine Eleanor Conway, herself a poet of high order and a lover of
+cats.
+
+THE KILKENNY CATS
+
+ There wanst was two cats in Kilkenny,
+ Aitch thought there was one cat too many;
+ So they quarrelled and fit,
+ They scratched and they bit,
+ Till, excepting their nails,
+ And the tips of their tails,
+ Instead of two cats, there wasn't any.
+
+
+This version comes from Ireland, and is doubtless the correct original.
+
+"Note," says Miss Conway, "the more than Greek delicacy with which the
+tragedy is told. No mutilation, no gore; just an effacement--prompt and
+absolute--'there wasn't any.' It would be hard to overpraise that fine
+touch."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+CONCERNING CAT ARTISTS
+
+
+While thousands of artists, first and last, have undertaken to paint
+cats, there are but few who have been able to do them justice. Artists
+who have possessed the technical skill requisite to such delicate work
+have rarely been willing to give to what they have regarded as
+unimportant subjects the necessary study; and those who have been
+willing to study cats seriously have possessed but seldom the skill
+requisite to paint them well.
+
+Thomas Janvier, whose judgment on such matters is unquestioned, declares
+that not a dozen have succeeded in painting thoroughly good cat
+portraits, portraits so true to nature as to satisfy--if they could
+express their feelings in the premises--the cat subjects and their cat
+friends. Only four painters, he says, ever painted cats habitually and
+always well.
+
+Two members of this small but highly distinguished company flourished
+about a century ago in widely separated parts of the world, and without
+either of them knowing that the other existed.
+
+One was a Japanese artist, named Ho-Kou-Say, whose method of painting,
+of course, was quite unlike that to which we are accustomed in this
+western part of the world, but who had a wonderful faculty for making
+his queer little cat figures seem intensely alive.
+
+The other was a Swiss artist, named Gottfried Mind, whose cat pictures
+are so perfect in their way that he came to be honorably known as "the
+Cat Raphael."
+
+The other two members of the cat quartet are the French artist, Monsieur
+Louis Eugene Lambert, whose pictures are almost as well known in this
+country as they are in France; and the Dutch artist, Madame Henriette
+Ronner, whose delightful cat pictures are known even better, as she
+catches the softer and sweeter graces of the cat more truly than
+Lambert.
+
+A thoroughly good picture of a cat is hard to paint, from a technical
+standpoint, because the artist must represent not only the soft surface
+of fur, but the underlying hard lines of muscle: and his studies must be
+made under conditions of cat perversity which are at times quite enough
+to drive him wild. If he is to represent the cat in repose, he must wait
+for her to take that position of her own accord; and then, just as his
+sketch is well under way, she is liable to rise, stretch herself, and
+walk off. If his picture is to represent action, he must wait for the
+cat to do what he wants her to do, and that many times before he can be
+quite sure that his drawing is correct. With these severe limitations
+upon cat painting, it is not surprising that very few good pictures of
+cats have been painted.
+
+Gottfried Mind has left innumerable pen sketches to prove his intimate
+knowledge of the beauty and charm of the cat. He was born at Berne in
+1768. He had a special taste for drawing animals even when very young,
+bears and cats being his favorite subjects. As he grew older he obtained
+a wonderful proficiency, and his cat pictures appeared with every
+variety of expression. Their silky coats, their graceful attitudes,
+their firm shape beneath the undulating fur, were treated so as to make
+Mind's cats seem alive.
+
+It was Madame Lebrun who named him the "Raphael of Cats," and many a
+royal personage bought his pictures. He, like most cat painters, kept
+his cats constantly with him, knowing that only by persistent and never
+tiring study could he ever hope to master their infinite variety. His
+favorite mother cat kept closely at his side when he worked, or perhaps
+in his lap; while her kittens ran over him as fearlessly as they played
+with their mother's tail. When a terrible epidemic broke out among the
+cats of Berne in 1809, he hid his Minette safely from the police, but he
+never quite recovered from the horror of the massacre of the eight
+hundred that had to be sacrificed for the general safety of the people.
+He died in 1814, and in poverty, although a few years afterward his
+pictures brought extravagant prices.
+
+Burbank, the English painter, has done some good things in cat pictures.
+The expression of the face and the peculiar light in the cat's eye made
+up the realism of Burbank's pictures, which were reproductions of sleek
+and handsome drawing-room pets, whose shining coats he brings out with
+remarkable precision.
+
+The ill-fated Swiss artist Cornelius Wisscher's marvellous tom-cat has
+become typical.
+
+Delacroix, the painter of tigers, was a man of highly nervous
+temperament, but his cat sketches bring out too strongly the tigerish
+element to be altogether successful.
+
+Louis Eugene Lambert was a pupil of Delacroix. He was born in Paris,
+September 25, 1825, and the chief event of his youth was, perhaps, the
+great friendship which existed between him and Maurice Sands. Entomology
+was a fad with him for a time, but he finally took up his serious
+life-work in 1854, when he began illustrating for the _Journal of
+Agriculture_. In connection with his work, he began to study animals
+carefully, making dogs his specialty. In 1862 he illustrated an edition
+of La Fontaine, and in 1865 he obtained his first medal for a painting
+of dogs. In 1866 his painting of cats, "L'Horloge qui avance," won
+another medal, and brought his first fame as a cat painter. In 1874 he
+was made a Chevalier of the Legion of Honor. His "Envoi" in 1874, "Les
+Chats du Cardinal," and "Grandeur Decline" brought more medals. Although
+he has painted hosts of excellent dog pictures, cats are his favorites,
+on account, as he says, of "les formes fines et gracieux; mouvements,
+souple et subtil."
+
+In the Luxembourg Gallery, Mr. Lambert's "Family of Cats" is considered
+one of the finest cat pictures in the world. In this painting the mother
+sits upon a table watching the antics of her four frivolous kittens.
+There is a wonderful smoothness of touch and refinement of treatment
+that have never yet been excelled. "After the Banquet" is another
+excellent example of the same smoothness of execution, with fulness of
+action instead of repose. And yet there is an undeniable lack of the
+softer attributes which should be evident in the faces of the group.
+
+It is here that Madame Ronner excels all other cat painters, living or
+dead. She not only infuses a wonderful degree of life into her little
+figures, but reproduces the shades of expression, shifting and variable
+as the sands of the sea, as no other artist of the brush has done.
+Asleep or awake, her cats look exactly to the "felinarian" like cats
+with whom he or she is familiar. Curiosity, drowsiness, indifference,
+alertness, love, hate, anxiety, temper, innocence, cunning, fear,
+confidence, mischief, earnestness, dignity, helplessness,--they are all
+in Madame Ronner's cats' faces, just as we see them in our own cats.
+
+Madame Ronner is the daughter of Josephus Augustus Knip, a landscape
+painter of some celebrity sixty years ago, and from her father she
+received her first art education. She is now over seventy years old, and
+for nearly fifty years has made her home in Brussels. There, she and her
+happy cats, a big black Newfoundland dog named Priam, with a pert
+cockatoo named Coco, dwell together in a roomy house in its own grounds,
+back a little from the Charleroi Road. Madame Ronner has a good son to
+care for her, and she loves the animals, who are both her servants and
+her friends. Every day she spends three good hours of the morning in her
+studio, painting her delightful cat pictures with the energy of a young
+artist and the expert precision which we know so well. She was sixteen
+when she succeeded in painting a picture which was accepted and sold at
+a public exhibition at Dusseldorf. This was a study of a cat seated in a
+window and examining with great curiosity a bumblebee; while it would
+not compare with her later work, there must have been good quality in
+it, or it would not have got into a Dusseldorf picture exhibition at
+all. At any rate, it was the beginning of her successful career as an
+artist. From that time she managed to support herself and her father by
+painting pictures of animals. For many years, however, she confined
+herself to painting dogs. Her most famous picture, "The Friend of Man,"
+belongs to this period--a pathetic group composed of a sorrowing old
+sand-seller looking down upon a dying dog still harnessed to the little
+sand-wagon, with the two other dogs standing by with wistful looks of
+sympathy. When this picture was exhibited, in 1860, Madame Ronner's fame
+was established permanently.
+
+But it so happened that in the same year a friendly kitten came to live
+in her home, wandering in through the open doorway from no one knew
+where, and deciding, after sniffing about the place in cat fashion, to
+remain there for the remainder of its days. And it also happened that
+Madame Ronner was lured by this small stranger, who so coolly quartered
+himself upon her, to change the whole current of her artistic life, and
+to paint cats instead of dogs. Of course, this change could not be made
+in a moment; but after that the pictures which she painted to please
+herself were cat pictures, and as these were exhibited and her
+reputation as a cat painter became established, cat orders took the
+place of dog orders more and more, until at last her time was given
+wholly to cat painting. Her success in painting cat action has been due
+as much to her tireless patience as to her skill; a patience that gave
+her strength to spend hours upon hours in carefully watching the quick
+movements of the lithe little creatures, and in correcting again and
+again her rapidly made sketches.
+
+Every cat-lover knows that a cat cannot be induced, either by reason or
+by affection, to act in accordance with any wishes save its own. Also
+that cats find malicious amusement in doing what they know they are not
+wanted to do, and that with an affectation of innocence that materially
+aggravates their deliberate offence.
+
+But Madame Ronner, through her long experience, has evolved a way to get
+them to pose as models. Her plan is the simple one of keeping her models
+prisoners in a glass box, enclosed in a wire cage, while she is painting
+them. Inside the prison she cannot always command their actions, but her
+knowledge of cat character enables her to a certain extent to persuade
+them to take the pose which she requires. By placing a comfortable
+cushion in the cage she can tempt her model to lie down; some object of
+great interest, like a live mouse, for instance, exhibited just outside
+the cage is sure to create the eager look that she has shown so well on
+cat faces; and to induce her kittens to indulge in the leaps and bounds
+which she has succeeded so wonderfully in transferring to canvas, she
+keeps hanging from the top of the cage a most seductive "bob."
+
+Madame Ronner's favorite models are "Jem" and "Monmouth," cats of rare
+sweetness of temper, whose conduct in all relations of life is above
+reproach. The name of "Monmouth," as many will recall, was made famous
+by the hero of Monsieur La Bedolierre's classic, "Mother Michel and her
+Cat," [Footnote: Translated into English by Thomas Bailey Aldrich.] and
+therefore has clustering about it traditions so glorious that its wearers
+in modern times must be upheld always by lofty hopes and high resolves.
+Doubtless Monmouth Ronner feels the responsibility entailed upon him by
+his name.
+
+In the European galleries are several noted paintings in which the cat
+appears more or less unsuccessfully. Breughel and Teniers made their
+grotesque "Cat Concerts" famous, but one can scarcely see why, since the
+drawing is poor and there is no real insight into cat character evident.
+The sleeping cat, in Breughel's "Paradise Lost" in the Louvre, is
+better, being well drawn, but so small as to leave no chance for
+expression. Lebrun's "Sleep of the Infant Jesus," in the Louvre, has a
+slumbering cat under the stove, and in Barocci's "La Madonna del Gatto"
+the cat is the centre of interest. Holman Hunt's "The Awakening
+Conscience" and Murillo's Holy Family "del Pajarito" give the cat as a
+type of cruelty, but have failed egregiously in accuracy of form or
+expression. Paul Veronese's cat in "The Marriage at Cana" is fearfully
+and wonderfully made, and even Rembrandt failed when he tried to
+introduce a cat into his pictures.
+
+Rosa Bonheur has been wise enough not to attempt cat pictures, knowing
+that special study, for which she had not the time or the inclination,
+is necessary to fit an artist to excel with the feline character.
+Landseer, too, after trying twice, once in 1819 with "The Cat Disturbed"
+and once in 1824 with "The Cat's Paw," gave up all attempts at dealing
+with Grimalkin. Indeed, most artists who have attempted it, have found
+that to be a wholly successful cat artist such whole-hearted devotion to
+the subject as Madame Ronner's is the invariable price of distinction.
+
+Of late, however, more artists are found who are willing to pay this
+price, who are giving time and study not only to the subtle shadings of
+the delicate fur, but to the varying facial expression and sinuous
+movements of the cat. Margaret Stocks, of Munich, for example, is
+rapidly coming to the front as a cat painter, and some predict for her
+(she is still a young woman) a future equal to Madame Ronner's. Gambier
+Bolton's "Day Dreams" shows admirably the quality and "tumbled-ness" of
+an Angora kitten's fur, while the expression and drawing are equally
+good. Miss Cecilia Beaux's "Brighton Cats" is famous, and every student
+of cats recognizes its truthfulness at once.
+
+Angora and Persian kittens find another loving and faithful student in
+J. Adam, whose paintings have been photographed and reproduced in this
+country times without number. "Puss in Boots" is another foreign picture
+which has been photographed and sold extensively in this country.
+"Little Milksop" by the same artist, Mr. Frank Paton, gives fairly
+faithful drawing and expression of two kittens who have broken a milk
+pitcher and are eagerly lapping up the contents.
+
+In the Munich Gallery there is a painting by Claus Meyer, "Bose Zungen,"
+which has become quite noted. His three old cats and three young cats
+show three gossiping old crones by the side of whom are three small and
+awkward kittens.
+
+Of course, there are no artists whose painting of the cat is to be
+compared with Madame Ronner's. Mr. J.L. Dolph, of New York City, has
+painted hundreds of cat pieces which have found a ready sale, and Mr.
+Sid L. Brackett, of Boston, is doing very creditable work. A successful
+cat painter of the younger school is Mr. N.N. Bickford, of New York,
+whose "Peek-a-Boo" hangs in a Chicago gallery side by side with cats of
+Madame Ronner and Monsieur Lambert. "Miss Kitty's Birthday" shows that
+he has genuine understanding of cat character, and is mastering the
+subtleties of long white fur.
+
+Mr. Bickford is a pupil of Jules Lefebvre Boulanger and Miralles. It was
+by chance that he became a painter of cats. Mademoiselle Marie Engle,
+the prima-donna, owned a beautiful white Angora cat which she prized
+very highly, and as her engagements abroad compelled her to part with
+the cat for a short time, she left Mizzi with the artist until her
+return. One day Mr. Bickford thought he would try painting the white,
+silken fur of Mizzi: the result not only surprised him but also his
+artist friends, who said, "Lambert himself could not have done better."
+
+Upon Miss Engle's return, seeing what an inspiration her cat had been,
+she gave her to Mr. Bickford, and it is needless to add that he has
+become deeply attached to his beautiful model. Mizzi is a pure white
+Angora, with beautiful blue eyes, and silky fur. She won first prize at
+the National Cat Show of 1895, but no longer attends cat shows, on
+account of her engagements as professional model.
+
+Ben Austrian, who has made a success in painting other animals, has done
+a cat picture of considerable merit. The subject was Tix, a beautiful
+tiger-gray, belonging to Mr. Mahlon W. Newton, of Philadelphia. The cat
+is noted, not only in Philadelphia, but among travelling men, as he
+resides at a hotel, and is quite a prominent member of the office force.
+He weighs fifteen pounds and is of a very affectionate nature, following
+his master to the park and about the establishment like a dog. During
+the day he lives in the office, lying on the counter or the key-rack,
+but at night he retires with his master at eleven or twelve o'clock,
+sleeping in his own basket in the bathroom, and waking his master
+promptly at seven every morning. Tix's picture hangs in the office of
+his hotel, and is becoming as famous as the cat.
+
+Elizabeth Bonsall is a young American artist who has exhibited some good
+cat pictures, and whose work promises to make her famous some day, if
+she does not "weary in well-doing"; and Mr. Jean Paul Selinger's
+"Kittens" are quite well known.
+
+The good cat illustrator is even more rare than the cat painters.
+Thousands of readers recall those wonderfully lifelike cats and kittens
+which were a feature of the _St. Nicholas_ a few years ago,
+accompanied by "nonsense rhymes" or "jingles." They were the work of
+Joseph G. Francis, of Brookline, Mass., and brought him no little fame.
+He was, and is still, a broker on State Street, Boston, and in his busy
+life these inimitable cat sketches were but an incident. Mr. Francis is
+a devoted admirer of all cats, and had for many years loved and studied
+one cat in particular. It was by accident that he discovered his own
+possibilities in the line of cat drawing, as he began making little
+pen-and-ink sketches for his own amusement and then for that of his
+friends. The latter persuaded him to send some of these drawings to the
+_St. Nicholas_ and the _Wide-Awake_ magazines, and, rather to
+his surprise, they were promptly accepted, and the "Francis cats" became
+famous. Mr. Francis does but little artistic work, nowadays, more
+important business keeping him well occupied; besides, he says, he "is
+not in the mood for it."
+
+Who does not know Louis Wain's cats?--that prince of English
+illustrators. Mr. Wain's home, when not in London, is at Bendigo Lodge,
+Westgate, Kent. He began his artistic career at nineteen, after a
+training in the best London schools. He was not a hard worker over his
+books, but his fondness for nature led him to an artist's career.
+American Indian stories were his delight, and accounts of the wandering
+outdoor life of our aborigines were instrumental in developing his
+powers of observation regarding the details of nature. Always fond of
+dumb animals, he began life by making sketches for sporting papers at
+agricultural shows all over England. It was his own cat "Peter" who
+first suggested to Louis Wain the fanciful cat creations which have made
+his name famous. Watching Peter's antics one evening, he was tempted to
+do a small study of kittens, which was promptly accepted by a magazine
+editor in London. Then he trained Peter to become a model and the
+starting-point of his success. Peter has done more to wipe out of
+England the contempt in which the cat was formerly held there, than any
+other feline in the world. He has done his race a service in raising
+their status from neglected, forlorn creatures on the one hand, or the
+pampered, overfed object of old maids' affections on the other, to a
+dignified place in the English house.
+
+The double-page picture of the "Cat's Christmas Dance" in the _London
+Illustrated News_ of December 6, 1890, contains a hundred and fifty
+cats, with as many varying facial expressions and attitudes. It occupied
+eleven working days of Mr. Wain's time, but it caught the public fancy
+and made a tremendous hit all over the world. Louis Wain's cats
+immediately became famous, and he has had more orders than he can fill
+ever since. He works eight hours a day, and then lays aside his brush to
+study physical science, or write a humorous story. He has written and
+illustrated a comic book, and spent a great deal of time over a more
+serious one.
+
+Among the best known of his cat pictures, after the "Christmas Party,"
+is his "Cats' Rights Meeting," which not even the most ardent suffragist
+can study without laughter. From a desk an ardent tabby is expounding,
+loud and long, on the rights of her kind. In front of her is a double
+row of felines, sitting with folded arms, and listening with absorbed
+attention. The expressions of these cats' faces, some ardent, some
+indignant, some placid, but all interested, form a ridiculous contrast
+to a row of "Toms" in the rear, who evidently disagree with the
+lecturer, and are prepared to hiss at her more "advanced" ideas.
+"Returning Thanks" is nearly as amusing, with its thirteen cats seated
+at table over their wine, while one offers thanks, and the remainder
+wear varying expressions of devotion, indifference, or irreverence.
+"Bringing Home the Yule Log" gives twenty-one cats, and as many
+individual expressions of joy or discomfort; and the "Snowball Match"
+shows a scene almost as hilarious as the "Christmas Dance."
+
+Mr. Wain believes there is a great future for black and white work if a
+man is careful to keep abreast of the times. "A man should first of all
+create his public and draw upon his own fund of originality to sustain
+it," he says, "taking care not to pander to the degenerate tendencies
+which would prevent his work from elevating the finer instincts of the
+people." Says a recent visitor to the Wain household: "I wonder if Peter
+realizes that he has done more good than most human beings, who are
+endowed not only with sense but with brains? if in the firelight, he
+sees the faces of many a suffering child whose hours of pain have been
+shortened by the recital of his tricks, and the pictures of himself
+arrayed in white cravat, or gayly disporting himself on a 'see-saw'? I
+feel inclined to wake him up, and whisper how, one cold winter's night,
+I met a party of five little children, hatless and bootless, hurrying
+along an East-end slum, and saying encouragingly to the youngest, who
+was crying with cold and hunger, 'Come along: we'll get there soon.' I
+followed them down the lighted street till they paused in front of a
+barber's shop, and I heard their voices change to a shout of merriment:
+for in the window was a crumpled Christmas supplement, and Peter, in a
+frolicsome mood, was represented entertaining at a large cats'
+tea-party. Hunger, and cold, and misery were all dispelled. Who would
+not be a cat of Louis Wain's, capable of creating ten minutes' sunshine
+in a childish heart?"
+
+Mr. Wain announces a discovery in relation to cats which corroborates a
+theory of my own, adopted from long observation and experience.
+
+"I have found," he says, "as a result of many years of inquiry and
+study, that people who keep cats and are in the habit of petting them,
+do not suffer from those petty ailments which all flesh is heir to.
+Rheumatism and nervous complaints are uncommon with them, and Pussy's
+lovers are of the sweetest temperament. I have often felt the benefit,
+after a long spell of mental effort, of having my cats sitting across my
+shoulders, or of half an hour's chat with Peter."
+
+This is a frequent experience of my own. Nothing is more restful and
+soothing after a busy day than sitting with my hands buried in the soft
+sides of one of my cats.
+
+"Do you know," said one of my neighbors, recently, "when I am troubled
+with insomnia, lately, I get up and get Bingo from his bed, and take him
+to mine. I can go to sleep with my hands on him."
+
+There is a powerful magnetic influence which emanates from a sleepy or
+even a quiet cat, that many an invalid has experienced without realizing
+it. If physicians were to investigate this feature of the cat's
+electrical and magnetic influence, in place of anatomical research after
+death, or the horrible practice of vivisection, they might be doing a
+real service to humanity.
+
+Mr. Wain's success as an illustrator brought him great prominence in the
+National Cat Club of England, and he has been for a number of years its
+president, doing much to raise the condition and quality of cats and the
+status of the club. He has a number of beautiful and high-bred cats at
+Bendigo Lodge.
+
+With regard to the painting of cats Champfleury said, "The lines are so
+delicate, the eyes are distinguished by such remarkable qualities, the
+movements are due to such sudden impulses, that to succeed in the
+portrayal of such a subject, one must be feline one's self." And Mr.
+Spielman gives the following advice to those who would paint cats:--
+
+"You must love them, as Mahomet and Chesterfield loved them: be as fond
+of their company as Wolsley and Richelieu, Mazarin and Colbert, who
+retained them even during their most impressive audiences: as Petrarch,
+and Dr. Johnson, and Canon Liddon, and Ludovic Halevy, who wrote with
+them at their elbow: and Tasso and Gray, who celebrated them in verse:
+as sympathetic as Carlyle, whom Mrs. Allingham painted in the company of
+his beloved 'Tib' in the garden at Chelsea, or as Whittington, the hero
+of our milk-and-water days: think of El Daher Beybars, who fed all
+feline comers, or 'La Belle Stewart,' Duchess of Richmond, who, in the
+words of the poet, 'endowed a college' for her little friends: you must
+be as approbative of their character, their amenableness to education,
+their inconstancy, not to say indifference and their general lack of
+principle, as Madame de Custine: and as appreciative of their daintiness
+and grace as Alfred de Musset. Then, and not till then, can you consider
+yourself sentimentally equipped for studying the art of cat painting."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+CONCERNING CAT HOSPITALS AND REFUGES
+
+
+At comparatively frequent intervals we read of some woman, historic or
+modern, who has left an annuity (as the Duchess of Richmond, "La Belle
+Stewart") for the care of her pet cats; now and then a man provides for
+them in his will, as Lord Chesterfield, for instance, who left a
+permanent pension for his cats and their descendants. But I find only
+one who has endowed a home for them and given it sufficient means to
+support the strays and waifs who reach its shelter.
+
+Early in the eighties, Captain Nathan Appleton, of Boston (a brother of
+the poet Longfellow's wife, and of Thomas Appleton, the celebrated wit),
+returned from a stay in London with a new idea, that of founding some
+sort of a refuge, or hospital, for sick or stray cats and dogs. He had
+visited Battersea, and been deeply impressed with the need of a shelter
+for small and friendless domestic animals.
+
+At Battersea there is an institution similar to the one the Society for
+Prevention of Cruelty to Animals in New York have at East 120th Street,
+where stray animals may be sent and kept for a few days awaiting the
+possible appearance of a claimant or owner; at the end of which time the
+animals are placed in the "lethal chamber," where they die instantly and
+painlessly by asphyxiation. In Boston, the Society of Prevention of
+Cruelty to Animals have no such refuge or pound, but in place of it keep
+one or two men whose business it is to go wherever sent and "mercifully
+put to death" the superfluous, maimed, or sick animals that shall be
+given them.
+
+Captain Appleton's idea, however, was something entirely different from
+this. These creatures, he argued, have a right to their lives and the
+pursuit of happiness after their own fashion, and he proposed to help
+them to enjoy that right. He appealed to a few sympathetic friends and
+gave two or three acres of land from his own estate, near "Nonantum
+Hill," where the Apostle Eliot preached to the Indians, and where his
+iodine springs are located. He had raised a thousand or two dollars and
+planned a structure of some kind to shelter stray dogs and cats, when
+the good angel that attends our household pets guided him to the lawyer
+who had charge of the estates of Miss Ellen M. Gifford, of New Haven,
+Ct. "I think I can help you," said the lawyer. But he would say nothing
+more at that time. A few weeks later, Captain Appleton was sent for.
+Miss Gifford had become deeply interested in the project, and after
+making more inquiries, gave the proposed home some twenty-five thousand
+dollars, adding to this amount afterward and providing for the
+institution in her will. It has already had over one hundred thousand
+dollars from Miss Gifford's estates, and it is so well endowed and well
+managed that it is self-supporting.
+
+The Ellen M. Gifford Sheltering Home for Animals is situated near the
+Brookline edge of the Brighton district in Boston. In fact, the
+residential portion of aristocratic Brookline is so fast creeping up to
+it that the whole six acres of the institution will doubtless soon be
+disposed of at a very handsome profit, while the dogs and cats will
+retire to a more remote district to "live on the interest of their
+money."
+
+The main building is a small but handsome brick affair, facing on Lake
+Street. This is the home of the superintendent, and contains, besides,
+the offices of the establishment. Over the office is a tablet with this
+inscription, taken from a letter of Miss Gifford's about the time the
+home was opened:--
+
+"If only the waifs, the strays, the sick, the abused, would be sure to
+get entrance to the home, and anybody could feel at liberty to bring in
+a starved or ill-treated animal and have it cared for without pay, my
+object would be obtained. March 27, 1884."
+
+The superintendent is a lover of animals as well as a good business
+manager, and his work is in line with the sentence just quoted. Any one
+wanting a cat or a dog, and who can promise it a good home, may apply
+there. But Mr. Perkins does not take the word of a stranger at random.
+He investigates their circumstances and character, and never gives away
+an animal unless he can be reasonably sure of its going to a good home.
+For instance, he once received an application from one man for six cats.
+The wholesale element in the order made him slightly suspicious, and he
+immediately drove to Boston, where he found that his would-be customer
+owned a big granary overrun with mice. He sent the six cats, and two
+weeks later went to see how they were getting on, when he found them
+living happily in a big grain-loft, fat and contented as the most
+devoted Sultan of Egypt could have asked. None but street cats and stray
+dogs, homeless waifs, ill-treated and half starved, are received at this
+home. Occasionally, some family desiring to get rid of the animal they
+have petted for months, perhaps years, will send it over to the
+Sheltering Home. But if Mr. Perkins can find where it came from he
+promptly returns it, for even this place, capable of comfortably housing
+a hundred cats and as many dogs, cannot accommodate all the unfortunates
+that are picked up in the streets of Boston. The accommodations, too,
+while they are comfortable and even luxurious for the poor creatures
+that have hitherto slept on ash-barrels and stone flaggings, are unfit
+for household pets that have slept on cushions, soft rugs, and milady's
+bed.
+
+There is a dog-house and a cat-house, sufficiently far apart that the
+occupants of one need not be disturbed by those of the other. In the
+dog-house there are rows of pens on each side of the middle aisle, in
+which from one to four or five dogs, according to size, are kept when
+indoors. These are of all sorts, colors, dispositions, and sizes,
+ranging from pugs to St. Bernards, terriers to mastiffs. There are few
+purely bred dogs, although there are many intelligent and really
+handsome ones. The dogs are allowed to run in the big yard that opens
+out from their house at certain hours of the day; but the cats' yards
+are open to them all day and night. All yards and runs are enclosed with
+wire netting, and the cat-house has partitions of the same. All around
+the sides of the cat-house are shelves or bunks, which are kept supplied
+with clean hay, for their beds. Here one may see cats of every color and
+assorted sizes, contentedly curled up in their nests, while their
+companions sit blinking in the sun, or run out in the yards. Cooked
+meat, crackers and milk, and dishes of fresh water are kept where they
+can get at them. The cats all look plump and well fed, and, indeed, the
+ordinary street cat must feel that his lines have fallen in pleasant
+places.
+
+Not so, however, with pet cats who may be housed there. They miss the
+companionship of people, and the household belongings to which they have
+been accustomed. Sometimes it is really pathetic to see one of these
+cast-off pets climb up the wire netting and plainly beg the visitor to
+take him away from that strange place, and give him such a home as he
+has been used to. In the superintendent's house there is usually a good
+cat or two of this sort, as he is apt to test a well-bred cat before
+giving him away.
+
+Somewhat similar, and even older than the Ellen Gifford Sheltering Home,
+is the Morris Refuge of Philadelphia. This institution, whose motto is
+"The Lord is good to all: and his tender mercies are over all his
+works," was first established in May, 1874, by Miss Elizabeth Morris and
+other ladies who took an interest in the protection of suffering
+animals. It does not limit its tender mercies to cats and dogs, but
+cares for every suffering animal. It differs from the Ellen Gifford Home
+chiefly in the fact that, while the latter is a _home_ for stray
+cats and dogs, the Morris Refuge has for its object the care for and
+disposal of suffering animals of all sorts. In a word, it brings relief
+to most of these unfortunate creatures by means of a swift and painless
+death.
+
+It was first known as the City Refuge, although it was never maintained
+by the city. In January, 1889, it was reorganized and incorporated as
+the "Morris Refuge for Homeless and Suffering Animals." It is supported
+by private contributions, and is under the supervision of Miss Morris
+and a corps of kind-hearted ladies of Philadelphia. A wagon is kept at
+the home to respond to calls, and visits any residence where suffering
+animals may need attention. The agent of the society lives at the refuge
+with his family, and receives animals at any time. When notice is
+received of an animal hurt or suffering, he sends after it. Chloroform
+is invariably taken along, in order that, if expedient, the creature may
+be put out of its agony at once. This refuge is at 1242 Lombard Street,
+and there is a temporary home where dogs are boarded at 923 South 11th
+Street.
+
+In 1895, out of 23,067 animals coming under the care of the association,
+19,672 were cats. In 1896, there were 24,037 animals relieved and
+disposed of, while the superintendent answered 230 police calls. Good
+homes are found for both dogs and cats, but not until the agent is sure
+that they will be kindly treated.
+
+In Miss Morris's eighth annual report she says: "Looking back to the
+formation of the first society for the prevention of cruelty to animals,
+we find since that time a gradual awakening to the duties man owes to
+those below him in the scale of animal creation. The titles of those
+societies and their objects, as defined by their charters, show that at
+first it was considered sufficient to protect animals from cruel
+treatment: very few people gave thought to the care of those that were
+without homes. Now many are beginning to think of the evil of being
+overrun with numbers of homeless creatures, whose sufferings appeal to
+the sympathies of the humane, and whose noise and depredations provoke
+the cruelty of the hard-hearted: hence the efforts that are being made
+in different cities to establish refuges. A request has lately been
+received from Montreal asking for our reports, as it is proposed to
+found a home for animals in that city, and information is being
+collected in relation to such institutions."
+
+Lady Marcus Beresford has succeeded in establishing and endowing a home
+for cats in Englefield Green, Windsor Park. She has made a specialty of
+Angoras, and her collection is famous. Queen Victoria and her daughters
+take a deep interest, not alone in finely bred cats, but in poor and
+homeless waifs as well. Her Royal Highness, in fact, took pains to write
+the London S.P.C.A. some years ago, saying she would be very glad to
+have them do something for the safety and protection of cats, "_which
+are so generally misunderstood and grossly ill-treated_." She herself
+sets a good example in this respect, and when her courts remove from one
+royal residence to another, her cats are taken with her.
+
+There is a movement in Paris, too, to provide for sick and homeless cats
+as well as dogs. Two English ladies have founded a hospital near
+Asnieres, where ailing pets can be tended in illness, or boarded for
+about ten cents a day; and very well cared for their pensioners are.
+There is also a charity ward where pauper patients are received and
+tended carefully, and afterward sold or given away to reliable people.
+Oddly, this sort of charity was begun by Mademoiselle Claude Bernard,
+the daughter of the great scientist who, it is said, tortured more
+living creatures to death than any other. Vivisection became a passion
+with him, but Mademoiselle Bernard is atoning for her father's cruelty
+by a singular devotion to animals, and none are turned from her gates.
+
+This is the way they do it in Cairo even now, according to Monsieur
+Prisse d'Avennes, the distinguished Egyptologist:--
+
+"The Sultan, El Daher Beybars, who reigned in Egypt and Syria toward 658
+of the Hegira (1260 A.D.) and is compared by William of Tripoli to Nero
+in wickedness, and to Caesar in bravery, had a peculiar affection for
+cats. At his death, he left a garden, 'Gheyt-el-Quoltah' (the cats'
+orchard), situated near his mosque outside Cairo, for the support of
+homeless cats. Subsequently the field was sold and resold several times
+by the administrator and purchasers. In consequence of a series of
+dilapidations it now produces a nominal rent of fifteen piastres a year,
+which with certain other legacies is appropriated to the maintenance of
+cats. The Kadi, who is the official administrator of all pious and
+charitable bequests, ordains that at the hour of afternoon prayer,
+between noon and sunset, a daily distribution of animals' entrails and
+refuse meat from the butchers' stalls, chopped up together, shall be
+made to the cats of the neighborhood. This takes place in the outer
+court of the 'Mehkemeh,' or tribunal, and a curious spectacle may then
+be seen. At this hour all the terraces near the Mehkemeh are crowded
+with cats: they come jumping from house to house across the narrow Cairo
+streets, hurrying for their share: they slide down walls and glide into
+the court, where they dispute, with great tenacity and much growling,
+the scanty meal so sadly out of proportion to the number of guests. The
+old ones clear the food in a moment: the young ones and the newcomers,
+too timid to fight for their chance, must content themselves with
+licking the ground. Those wanting to get rid of cats take them there and
+deposit them. I have seen whole baskets of kittens deposited in the
+court, greatly to the annoyance of the neighbors."
+
+There are similar customs in Italy and Switzerland. In Geneva cats prowl
+about the streets like dogs at Constantinople. The people charge
+themselves with their maintenance, and feed the cats who come to their
+doors at the same hour every day for their meals.
+
+In Florence, a cloister near St. Lorenzo's Church serves as a refuge for
+cats. It is an ancient and curious institution, but I am unable to find
+whether it is maintained by the city or by private charities. There are
+specimens of all colors, sizes, and kinds, and any one who wants a cat
+has but to go there and ask for it. On the other hand, the owner of a
+cat who is unable or unwilling to keep it may take it there, where it is
+fed and well treated.
+
+In Rome, they have a commendable system of caring for their cats. At a
+certain hour butchers' men drive through the city, with carts well
+stocked with cat's meat. They utter a peculiar cry which the cats
+recognize, and come hurrying out of the houses for their allowances,
+which are paid for by the owners at a certain rate per month.
+
+In Boston, during the summer of 1895, a firm of butchers took
+subscriptions from philanthropic citizens, and raised enough to defray
+the expenses of feeding the cats on the Back Bay,--where, in spite of
+the fact that the citizens are all wealthy and supposedly humane, there
+are more starving cats than elsewhere in the city. But the experiment
+has not been repeated.
+
+Hospitals for sick animals are no new thing, but a really comfortable
+home for cats is an enterprise in which many a woman who now asks
+despondently what she can do in this overcrowded world to earn a living,
+might find pleasant and profitable.
+
+A most worthy charity is that of the Animal Rescue League in Boston,
+which was started by Mrs. Anna Harris Smith in 1899. She put a call in
+the newspapers, asking those who were interested in the subject to
+attend a meeting and form a league for the protection and care of lost
+or deserted pets. The response was immediate and generous. The Animal
+Rescue League was formed with several hundred members, and in a short
+time the house at 68 Carver Street was rented, and a man and his wife
+put in charge. Here are brought both cats and dogs from all parts of
+Boston and the suburbs, where they are sure of kind treatment and care.
+If they are diseased they are immediately put out of existence by means
+of the lethal chamber; otherwise they are kept for a few days in order
+that they may be claimed by their owners if lost, or have homes found
+for them whenever it is possible. During the first year over two
+thousand cats were cared for, and several hundred dogs. This home is
+maintained by voluntary contributions and by the annual dues of
+subscribers. These are one dollar a year for associate members and five
+dollars for active members. It is an excellent charity, and one that may
+well be emulated in other cities.
+
+There are several cat asylums and refuges in the Far West, and certainly
+a few more such institutions as the Sheltering Home at Brighton, Mass.,
+or the Morris Refuge would be a credit to a country. How better than by
+applying it to our cats can we demonstrate the truth of Solomon's maxim,
+"A merciful man is merciful to his beast"?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+CONCERNING THE ORIGIN OF CATS
+
+
+If any of my readers hunger and thirst for information concerning the
+descent of the cat through marsupial ancestors and mesozoic mammals to
+the generalized placental or monodelphous carnivora of to-day, let them
+consult St. George Mivart, who gives altogether the most comprehensive
+and exhaustive scientific study to the cat ever published, and whose
+book on the cat is an excellent work for the earnest beginner in the
+study of biological science. He says no more complete example can be
+found of a perfectly organized living being than that supplied by the
+highest mammalian family--_Felidae_.
+
+"On the whole," he sums up, "it seems probable that the mammalia, and
+therefore the cat, descends from some highly developed, somewhat
+reptile-like batrachian of which no trace has been found."
+
+Away back in the eighth century of the Hegira, an Arab naturalist gives
+this account of the creation of the cat: "When, as the Arab relates,
+Noah made a couple of each animal to enter the ark, his companions and
+family asked, 'What security can you give us and the other animals, so
+long as the lion dwells with us on this narrow vessel?' Then Noah betook
+himself to prayer, and entreated the Lord God. Immediately fever came
+down from heaven and seized upon the king of beasts." This was the
+origin of fever. But constituents in Noah's time, as now, were
+ungrateful; and no sooner was the lion disposed of, than the mouse was
+discovered to be an object of suspicion. They complained that there
+would be no safety for provisions or clothing. "And so Noah renewed his
+supplication to the Most High, the lion sneezed, and a cat ran out of
+his nostrils. From that time the mouse has been timid and has hidden in
+holes."
+
+In the Egyptian gallery of the British Museum there is an excellent
+painting of a tabby cat assisting a man to capture birds. Hieroglyphic
+inscriptions as far back as 1684 B.C. mention the cat, and there is at
+Leyden a tablet of the eighteenth or nineteenth dynasty with a cat
+seated under a chair. A temple at Beni-Hassan is dedicated to Pasht or
+Bubastis, the goddess of cats, which is as old as Thothmes IV of the
+eighteenth dynasty, 1500 B.C.; and the cat appears in written rituals of
+that dynasty. Herodotus tells of the almost superstitious reverence
+which dwellers along the Nile felt for the cat, and gravely states that
+when one died a natural death in any house, the inmates shaved their
+eyebrows as a token of grief; also, that in case of a fire the first
+thing they saved was the household cat. Fortunate pussies!
+
+It is thought that cats were introduced into Greece from Egypt, although
+Professor Rolleston, of Cambridge University, believes the Grecian pet
+cat to have been the white-breasted marten. Yet why should he? Is not a
+soft, white-breasted maltese or tabby as attractive? The idea that cats
+were domesticated in Western Europe by the Crusaders is thought to be
+erroneous; but pet cats were often found in nunneries in the Middle
+Ages, and Pope Gregory the Great, toward the end of the sixth century,
+had a pet cat of which he was very fond.
+
+An old writer says, "A favorite cat sometimes accompanied the Egyptians
+on these occasions [of sport], and the artist of that day intends to
+show us by the exactness with which he represents her seizing her prey,
+that cats were trained to hunt and carry water-fowl." There are old
+Egyptian paintings representing sporting scenes along the Nile, where
+the cats plunge into the water of the marshes to retrieve and carry
+game; while plenty of mural paintings show them sitting under the
+arm-chair of the mistress of the house. Modern naturalists, however,
+claim a radical difference between those old Egyptian retrieving cats
+and our water-hating pussies. There are no records of cats between that
+period in Egypt, about 1630 B.C., and 260 B.C., when they seem to have
+become acclimated in Greece and Rome. There is in the Bordeaux Museum an
+ancient picture of a young girl holding a cat, on a tomb of the
+Gallo-Roman Epoch, and cats appeared in the heraldry of that date; but
+writers of those ages speak rather slightingly of them. Then for
+centuries the cat was looked upon as a diabolic creature, fit company
+for witches.
+
+"Why," says Balthazar Bekker in the seventeenth century, "is a cat
+always found among the belongings of witches, when according to the
+Sacred Book, and Apocalypse in particular, it is the dog, not a feline
+animal, that consorts with the sorcerers?"
+
+In Russia even yet the common people believe that black cats become
+devils at the end of seven years, and in many parts of Southern Europe
+they are still supposed to be serving apprenticeship as witches. In
+Sicily the peasants are sure that if a black cat lives with seven
+masters, the soul of the seventh will surely accompany him back to the
+dominion of Hades. In Brittany there is a dreadful tale of cats that
+dance with unholy glee around the crucifix while their King is being put
+to death. Cats figure in Norwegian folk-lore, too, as witches and
+picturesque incumbents of ghost-haunted houses and nocturnal revels. And
+even to-day there is a legend in Westminster to the effect that the
+dissipated cats of that region indulge in a most disreputable revel in
+some country house, and that is why they look so forlorn and altogether
+undone by daylight.
+
+A canon enacted in England in 1127 forbade any abbess or nun to use more
+costly fur than that of lambs or cats, and it is proved that cat-fur was
+at that time commonly used for trimming dresses. The cat was, probably
+for that reason, an object of chase in royal forests, and a license is
+still in existence from Richard II to the Abbot of Peterborough, and
+dated 1239, granting liberty to hunt cats. This was probably the wild
+cat, however, which was not the same as the domestic.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1:
+
+These are among the laws supposedly enacted by Hoel Dha (Howell the
+Good) sometime between 915 and 948 A.D.
+
+The Vendotian Code XI.
+
+The worth of a cat and her teithi (qualities) this is:--
+
+1st. The worth of a kitten from the night it is kittened until it shall
+open its eyes, is one penny.
+
+2d. And from that time until it shall kill mice, two pence.
+
+3d. And after it shall kill mice, four legal pence; and so it shall
+always remain.
+
+4th. Her teithe are to see, to hear, to kill mice, and to have her claws.
+
+This is the "Dimentian Code." XXXII. Of Cats.
+
+1st. The worth of a cat that is killed or stolen. Its head to be put
+downward upon a clean, even floor, with its tail lifted upward and thus
+suspended, whilst wheat is poured about it until the top of its tail be
+covered and that is to be its worth. If the corn cannot be had, then a
+milch sheep with a lamb and its wool is its value, if it be a cat that
+guards the king's barn.
+
+2d. The worth of a common cat is four legal pence.
+
+3d. The teithi of a cat, and of every animal upon the milk of which
+people do not feed, is the third part of its worth or the worth of its
+litter.
+
+4th. Whosoever shall sell a cat (cath) is to answer that she devour not
+her kittens, and that she have ears, teeth, eyes, and nails, and be a
+good mouser.
+
+The "Gwentian Code" begins in the same way, but says:--
+
+3d. That it be perfect of ear, perfect of eye, perfect of teeth, perfect
+of tail, perfect of claw, and without marks of fire. And if the cat fall
+short in any of these particulars, a third of her price had to be
+refunded. As to the fire, in case her fur had been singed the rats could
+detect her by the odor, and her qualities as a mouser were thus injured.
+And then it goes on to say:--
+
+4th. That the teithi and the legal worth of a cat are coequal.
+
+5th. A pound is the worth of a pet animal of the king.
+
+6th. The pet animal of a breyer (brewer) is six score pence in value.
+
+7th. The pet animal of a taoog is a curt penny in value.
+
+In the 39th chapter, 53d section, we find that "there are three animals
+whose tails, eyes, and lives are of the same value--a calf, a filly for
+common work, and a cat, except the cat which shall watch the king's
+barn," in which case she was more valuable.
+
+Another old Welsh law says: "Three animals reach their worth in a year:
+a sheep, a cat, and a cur. This is a complement of the legal hamlet;
+nine buildings, one plough, one kiln, one churn, and one cat, one cock,
+one bull, and one herdsman."
+
+In order that there might be no mistake in regard to the cat, a rough
+sketch of Puss is given in the Mss. of the laws.]
+
+That cats, even in the Middle Ages, were thought much more highly of in
+Great Britain than on the Continent is proved by the fact that the laws
+there imposed a heavy fine on cat-killers, the fine being as much wheat
+as would serve to bury the cat when he was held up by the tip of the
+tail with his nose on the ground. So that pet cats stood a fairly good
+chance in those days.
+
+One of the good things remembered of Louis XIII is that he interceded as
+Dauphin with Henri IV for the lives of the cats about to be burned at
+the festival on St. John's Day.
+
+Nowadays, there is a current superstition that a black cat brings good
+luck to a house; but in the Middle Ages they believed that the devil
+borrowed the form of a black cat when he wanted to torment or get
+control of his victims. There are plenty of old traditions about cats
+having spoken to human beings, and been kicked, or struck, or burned by
+them in return; and invariably, these tales tell us, those who are so
+bespoken meet some one the next day with plain marks of the injury they
+had inflicted on the froward cat,--which was sure evidence of witchery
+and sorcery. Doubtless full many a human being has been put to death, in
+times past, on no stronger evidence of being a witch. Humanity did not
+come to the rescue of the cat and bring her out from the shadow of
+ignominy that hung over her in mediaeval times until 1618, when an
+interdict was issued in Flanders prohibiting the festive ceremony of
+throwing cats from the high tower of Ypres on Wednesdays of the second
+week in Lent. And from that time Pussy's fortunes began to look up.
+
+To-day, travellers on the edge of the Pyrenees know a little old man,
+Martre Tolosan, who makes and sells replicas of the original models of
+cats found among the Roman remains at a small town near Toulouse. These
+are made in blue and white earthenware and each one is numbered. Mine,
+bought by a friend in 1895, is marked 5000. They are not exact models of
+our cats of to-day, to be sure, but they express all the snug content
+and inscrutable calm of our modern pets.
+
+The Chinese reproduce cats in their ceramics in white, turquoise blue,
+and old violet. One that once belonged to Madame de Mazarin sold for
+eight hundred livres. In Japan, cats are reproduced in common ware,
+daubed with paint, but the Chinese make them of finer ware, enamelling
+the commoner kinds of porcelain and using the cat in conventional forms
+as flower-vases and lamps.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+CONCERNING VARIETIES OF CATS
+
+
+Few people realize how many kinds of cats there are. The fashionable
+world begins to discuss cats technically and understand their various
+points of excellence. The "lord mayor's chain," the "Dutch rabbit
+markings," and similar features are understood by more cat fanciers than
+a few years ago; but, until within that time, it is doubtful if the
+number of people who knew the difference between the Angora and the
+Persian in this country amounted to a hundred. It is but a few years
+since the craze for the Angora cat started. These cats have been
+fashionable pets in England for some years back, and now America begins
+to understand their value and the principles of breeding them. Today,
+there are as handsome, well-bred animals in the United States as can be
+found abroad. The demand for high-bred animals with a pedigree is
+greatly increasing, and society people are beginning to understand the
+fine points of the thoroughbred.
+
+The Angora cat, as its name indicates, comes from Angora in Western
+Asia, the province that is celebrated for its goats with long hair of
+fine quality. In fact, the hair under the Angora cat's body often
+resembles the finest of the Angora goatskins. Angora cats are favorites
+with the Turks and Armenians, and exist in many colors, especially since
+they have been more carefully bred. They vary in form, color, and
+disposition, and also in the quality of their hair. The standard calls
+for a small head, with not too long a nose, large eyes that should
+harmonize in color with the fur, small, pointed ears with a tuft of hair
+at the apex, and a very full, fluffy mane around the neck. This mane is
+known as the "lord mayor's chain." The body is longer than that of the
+ordinary cat in proportion to its size, and is extremely graceful, and
+covered with long, silky hair, which is crinkly like that of the Angora
+goat. This hair should be as fine as possible, and not woolly. The legs
+are of a moderate length, but look short on account of the length of
+hair on the body. Little tufts of hair growing between the toes indicate
+high breeding. The Angora cat, in good condition, is one of the most
+beautiful and elegant creatures in the world, and few can resist its
+charm. The tail is long and like an ostrich plume. It is usually
+carried, when the cat is in good spirits, straight up, with the end
+waving over toward one side. The tail of the Angora serves as a
+barometer of its bodily and mental condition. If the cat is ill or
+frightened, the tail droops, and sometimes trails on the ground; but
+when she is in good spirits, playing about the house or grounds, it
+waves like a great plume, and is exceedingly handsome. The suppleness of
+the Angora's tail is also a mark of fine breeding. A highbred Angora
+will allow its tail to be doubled or twisted without apparent notice of
+the performance.
+
+The Angora does not reach its prime until about two years. Before that
+time its head and body are not sufficiently developed to give the full
+beauty and grace of the animal. As a rule, the Angora is of good
+disposition, although the females are apt to be exceedingly nervous.
+They are sociable and docile, although fond of roaming about, especially
+if allowed to run loose. As a rule, they do not possess the keen
+intelligence of the ordinary short-haired family cat, but their great
+beauty and their cleanly and affectionate habits make them favorites
+with fashionable people. The proper breeding of the Angora cat is a
+regular science. Of the colors of the Angoras, the blue or maltese is a
+favorite, and rather common, especially when mixed with white.
+
+The white Angora is extraordinarily beautiful, and brings a high price
+when it has blue eyes and all its points are equally good. The orange,
+or yellow, and the black with amber eyes are also prize winners. There
+are the tigers also, the brown tabby, and the orange and white. Mixed
+colors are more common than solid ones; the tortoise-shell cat of three
+colors and well mottled being considered particularly desirable.
+
+The Persian cat differs from the Angora in the quality of its fur,
+although the ordinary observer sees little difference between them. All
+the long-haired cats originated from the Indian Bengalese, Thibetan,
+and other wild cats of Asia and Russia. The Persian cat of very great
+value is all black, with a very fluffy frill, or lord mayor's chain, and
+orange eyes. Next to him comes a light slate or blue Persian, with
+yellow eyes. The fur of the Persian cat is much more woolly than that of
+the Angora, and sometimes in hot weather mats badly. The difference
+between a Persian and an Angora can usually be told by an amateur, by
+drawing the tail between the thumb and first finger. The Angora's tail
+comes out thin, silky, and narrow, although it immediately "fluffs" up.
+The Persian's tail does not compress itself readily into a small space.
+The Persian cat's head is larger, its ears are less pointed, although it
+should have the tuft at the end and the long hair inside. It is usually
+larger in body and apparently stronger made, although slender and
+elegant in appearance, with small bones and graceful in movement. The
+colors vary, as with the Angora, except that the tortoise-shell and the
+dark-marked tabby do not so frequently appear. The temper is usually
+less reliable and the intelligence less keen than the Angora.
+
+The Russian long-haired pet is much less common even than the Persian
+and Angora. It is fond of cold weather, and its fur is denser,
+indicating that it has been used to colder regions. Many of the cats
+that we see are crosses of Angora and Persian, or Angora and Russian, so
+that it is extremely difficult for the amateur to know a thoroughbred
+cat which has not been mixed with other varieties.
+
+There is also a fine short-haired cat coming from Russia, usually
+self-colored. Mrs. Frederick Monroe, of Chicago, owns a very handsome
+blue and white one.
+
+In Pegu, Siam, and Burmah, there is a race of cats known as the Malay
+cat, with tails only half the ordinary length and often contorted into a
+sort of a knot that cannot be straightened, after the fashion of the pug
+dog or ordinary pig.
+
+There is another cat known as the Mombas, a native of the west coast of
+Africa and covered with stiff, bristling hair. Paraguay cats are only
+one-quarter as big as our ordinary cat, and are found along the western
+coast of South America, even as far north as Mexico.
+
+The royal cat of Siam is a short-haired cat, yet widely different from
+other short-haired varieties. They are extremely pretty, with blue or
+amber-colored eyes by day which grow brilliant at night. These cats also
+frequently have the kink in the tail, and sometimes a strong animal
+odor, although this is not disagreeable. The head is rather longer than
+the ordinary cat's, tapering off sharply toward the muzzle, the forehead
+flat and receding, and the eyes more slanting toward the nose than the
+American cat's. The form should be slender, graceful, and delicately
+made; the body long; the tail very thin and rather short; the legs short
+and slender, and the feet oval. The body is of a bright, uniform color,
+and the legs, feet, and tail are usually black.
+
+The Manx cat is considered by many people as a natural curiosity. It
+differs from the ordinary domestic cat but little, except in the absence
+of a tail, or even an apology for one. The hind legs are thicker and
+rather longer than the ordinary cat's, and it runs more like a hare. It
+is not a graceful object when seen from behind, but it is an
+affectionate, home-loving creature with considerable intelligence. The
+Manx cat came from the Isle of Man originally, and is a distinct breed.
+So-called Manx cats have tails from one to a few inches long, but these
+are crosses of the Manx and the ordinary cat. In the Crimea is found
+another kind of cat which has no tail. The cats known as the "celebrated
+orange cats of Venice," are probably descendants of the old Egyptian
+cat, and are of varying shades of yellow, sometimes deepening into a
+sandy color which is almost red. There are obscure stripes on the body,
+which become more distinct on the limbs. The tail is more or less ringed
+toward its termination.
+
+There has been a newspaper paragraph floating about stating that a prize
+of several thousand dollars had been offered in England for a male
+tortoise-shell cat. This is probably not true, as a Mr. Smith exhibited
+a tortoise-shell he-cat at the Crystal Palace Show of 1871. Several
+tortoise-shell and white toms have been exhibited since, and one of
+these has taken nine first prizes at the Crystal Palace Show; but the
+tortoise-shell he-cat is extremely rare. The real tortoise-shell is not
+a striped tiger nor a tabby. It has three colors usually, black, yellow,
+and red or brown; but these appear in patches rather than stripes. It is
+said that the tortoise-shell cat is common in Egypt and the south of
+Europe. It comes from a different stock than the ordinary short-haired
+cat, the texture of the hair being different, as well as the color. The
+tortoise-shell and white cat is much more common, and is the product of
+a cross between a tortoise shell and a solid color cat. In this case the
+hair is usually coarser and the tail thicker than in the ordinary cat.
+
+Among cat fanciers there is a distinctive variety known as the
+tortoise-shell tabby. As the tabby cat is one of the varieties of
+striped or spotted cats having markings, broad or narrow, of bands of
+black on a dark tan or gray ground, the tortoise-shell cat would have
+both stripes and patches of color.
+
+Of the tabbies, there are brown tabbies, silver tabbies, and red
+tabbies. It is said that the red tabby she-cat is as scarce as the
+tortoise-shell he-cat. The ordinary observer considers the brown tabby
+with white markings as much the handsomest of the tabbies. But fanciers
+and judges do not agree with him, the cats having narrow bands and spots
+being the ones to take prizes. The word "tabby," according to Harrison
+Weir, was derived from a kind of taffeta or ribbed silk which used to be
+called tabby silk. Other authorities state that tabby cats got their
+name from Atab, a street in Bagdad; but as this street was famous for
+its watered silks perhaps the same reason holds. The tortoise-shell used
+to be called, in England, the Calimanco. In America, it is sometimes
+called the calico cat.
+
+The red tabby is of a deep reddish or yellow brown, with a well-ringed
+tail, orange or yellow eyes, and pink cushions to the feet. The brown
+tabby is orange brown, with black lips, brown whiskers, black feet,
+black pads, long tail, greenish orange eyes, and red nose bordered with
+black. The spotted tabby must have no bands at all. It must be brown,
+red, or yellow, with black spots. In the brown tabby the feet and pads
+are black; in the yellow and red, the feet and pads are pink. The
+spotted cat sometimes resembles a leopard, while the banded tabby
+resembles more the tiger. Some of the spotted tabbies are extremely
+handsome, and came originally from a cross between the ordinary cat and
+the wild cat.
+
+"Self-colored cats" are entirely of one color, which may vary in
+different cats, but must never be mixed in the same cat, nor even shaded
+into a lighter tone on the animal; and whether this color be black,
+blue, red, or yellow, the self-colored cat should have a rich deep tint.
+Of course the short-haired white cat is the handsomest of all. One of
+the peculiarities of this white cat is that it is apt to be deaf. The
+most valuable white cats, whether long or short haired, have blue eyes.
+Sometimes they have one blue eye and one green or yellow, which gives a
+comical effect, and detracts from their value. By the way, cross-eyed
+cats are not unknown. The best white cats have a yellowish white tint
+instead of grayish white, as the latter have a coarser quality of fur.
+
+The jet-black cat is thought by many to be the most desirable. The true
+black cat should have a uniform, intensely black coat, velvety and
+extremely glossy; the eyes should be round and full, and of a brilliant
+amber; the nose and pads of the feet should be jet-black, and the tail
+long and tapering. It is difficult to find a black cat without a white
+hair, as usually there are a few under the chin or on the belly.
+
+The blue cat is the one ordinarily known in this country as the dark
+maltese. There is a tradition that it came from the Island of Malta.
+Many people do not consider it a distinct breed, but think it a
+light-colored variety of the black cat. It is known sometimes as the
+Archangel, sometimes as the Russian blue, the Spanish blue, the
+Chartreuse blue, but more commonly in this country as the maltese. When
+it is of a deep bluish color, or of the soft silver-gray maltese without
+stripes, it is extremely handsome. The most desirable are the bluish
+lilac-colored ones, with soft fur like sealskin. The nose and pads of
+the feet are dark, and the eyes are orange yellow. The maltese and white
+cat when well marked is extremely handsome, and there is no prettier
+kitten than the maltese and white.
+
+The black and white, yellow and white, blue and white, and in fact, any
+self-colored and white cat is a mixture of the other breeds. If well
+marked they are extremely handsome and are usually bright and
+intelligent.
+
+The solid gray cat is very rare. It is, in fact, a tabby without the
+black stripes or spots.
+
+In Australia, New Zealand, and New Guinea there used to be no cat of any
+kind. The Siamese cat has been imported to Australia, and some
+authorities claim that the cats known in this country as Australian cats
+are of Siamese origin. Madagascar is a catless region.
+
+There is in this country a variety known as the "coon cat," which is
+handsome, especially in the solid black. Its native home is in Maine,
+and it is thought by many to have originated with the ordinary cat and
+the raccoon. It grows somewhat larger than the ordinary cat, with thick,
+woolly fur and an extremely bushy tail. It is fond of outdoor life, and
+when kept as a pet must be allowed to run out of doors or it is apt to
+become so savage and disagreeable that nothing can be done with it. When
+it is allowed its freedom, however, it becomes affectionate,
+intelligent, and is usually a handsome cat.
+
+The term "Dutch rabbit markings" refers to the white markings on the cat
+of two or three colors. Evidently, the cats themselves understand the
+value of Dutch rabbit markings, as one which has them is invariably
+proud of them. A cat that has white mittens, for instance, is often
+inordinately vain, and keeps them in the most immaculate state of
+cleanliness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+CONCERNING CAT LANGUAGE
+
+
+Montaigne it was who said: "We have some intelligence of their senses:
+so have also the beasts of ours in much the same measure. They flatter
+us, menace us, need us, and we them. It is manifestly evident that there
+is among them a full and entire communication, and that they understand
+each other."
+
+That this applies to cats is certainly true. Did you ever notice how a
+mother cat talks to her children, and simply by the utterances of her
+voice induces them to abandon their play and go with her, sometimes with
+the greatest reluctance, to some place that suited her whim--or her
+wisdom?
+
+Dupont de Nemours, a naturalist of the eighteenth century, made himself
+ridiculous in the eyes of his compatriots by seeking to penetrate the
+mysteries of animal language. "Those who utter sounds," he affirmed,
+"attach significance to them; their fellows do the same, and those
+sounds originally inspired by passion and repeated under similar
+recurrent circumstances, become the abiding expressions of the passions
+that gave rise to them."
+
+Fortified by this theory he devoted a couple of years to the study of
+crow language, and made himself ridiculous in the eyes of his
+adversaries by attempting to translate a nightingale's song.
+
+Chateaubriand was much interested in Dupont de Nemours's researches into
+the language of cats. "Its claws," says the latter, "and the power of
+climbing trees which its claws give it, furnish the cat with resources
+of experience and ideas denied the dog. The cat, also, has the advantage
+of a language which has the same vowels as pronounced by the dog,
+and with six consonants in addition, _m, n, g, h, v_, and _f_.
+Consequently the cat has a greater number of words. These two causes,
+the finer structure of its paws, and the larger scope of oral language,
+endow the solitary cat with greater cunning and skill as a hunter than
+the dog."
+
+Abbe Galiani also says: "For centuries cats have been reared, but I do
+not find they have ever been really studied. I have a male and a female
+cat. I have cut them off from all communication with cats outside the
+house, and closely observe their proceedings. During their courtship
+they never once miowed: the miow, therefore, is not the language of
+love, but rather the call of the absent. Another positive discovery I
+have made is that the voice of the male is entirely different from that
+of the female, as it should be. I am sure there are more than twenty
+different inflections in the language of cats, and there is really a
+'tongue' for they always employ the same sound to express the same
+thing."
+
+I heartily concur with him, and in addition have often noticed the wide
+difference between the voice and manner of expression of the gelded cat
+and the ordinary tom. The former has a thin, high voice with much
+smaller vocabulary. As a rule, the gelded cat does not "mew" to make
+known his wants, but employs his voice for conversational purposes. A
+mother cat "talks" much more than any other, and more when she has small
+kittens than at other times.
+
+Cat language has been reduced to etymology in several tongues. In Arabia
+their speech is called naoua; in Chinese, ming; in Greek, larungizein;
+in Sanscrit, madj, vid, bid; in German, miauen; in French miauler; and
+in English, mew or "miaouw."
+
+Perhaps, if Professor Garner had turned his attention to cat language
+instead of monkeys we would know more about it. But a French professor,
+Alphonse Leon Grimaldi, of Paris, claims that cats can talk as readily
+as human beings, and that he has learned their language so as to be able
+to converse with them to some extent. Grimaldi goes even further: he not
+only says that he knows such a language, but he states definitely that
+there are about six hundred words in it, that it is more like modern
+Chinese than anything else, and to prove this contention, gives a small
+vocabulary.
+
+Most of us would prefer to accept St. George Mivart's conclusions, that
+the difference between all animals and human beings is that while they
+have some means of communication, or language, we only have the gift of
+speech. Among the eighteen distinct active powers which he attributes to
+the cat, he quotes: "16th, powers of pleasurable or painful excitement
+on the occurrence of sense-perceptions with imaginations,
+_emotions_;" and "17th, a power of expressing feelings by sounds or
+gestures which may affect other individuals,--_emotional
+language_."
+
+Again he says: "The cat has a language of sounds and gestures to express
+its feelings and emotions. So have we. But we have further--which
+neither the cat, nor the bird, nor the beast has--a language and
+gestures to express our thoughts." The sum of his conclusions seems to
+be that while the cat has a most highly developed nervous system, and
+much of what is known as "animal intelligence," it is not a human
+intelligence--not consciousness, but "con-sentience."
+
+Elsewhere St. George Mivart doubts if a cat distinguishes odors as such.
+Perhaps a cat starts for the kitchen the instant he smells meat because
+of the mental association of the scent with the gratification of hunger;
+but why, pray tell, do some cats evince such delight in delicate
+perfumes? Our own Pomp the First, for instance, had a most demonstrative
+fondness for violets, and liked the scent of all flowers. One winter I
+used to bring home a bunch of Parma or Russian violets every day or two,
+and put them in a small glass bowl of water. It soon became necessary to
+put them on the highest shelf in the room, and even then Pompey would
+find them. Often have I placed them on the piano, and a few minutes
+later seen him enter the room, lift his nose, give a few sniffs, and
+then go straight to the piano, bury his nose in the violets, and hold it
+there in perfect ecstacy. And usually, wherever they were placed, the
+bunch was found the next morning on the floor, where Pompey had carried
+the violets, and holding them between his paws for a time, had surfeited
+himself with their delicious fragrance.
+
+Still, I am not prepared to say that Pompey had any word for violets, or
+for anything else that ministered to his delight. It was enough for him
+to be happy; and he had better ways of expressing it.
+
+Cats do have the power of making people understand what they want done,
+but so far as my knowledge of them goes, some of the most intelligent
+ones "talk" the least. Thomas Erastus, whose intelligence sometimes
+amounts to a knowledge that seems almost uncanny, seldom utters a sound.
+
+There is--or was--a black cat belonging to the city jail of a
+Californian town, named "Inspector Byrnes," because of his remarkable
+assistance to the police force. When, one night, a prisoner in the jail
+had stuffed the cracks to his cell with straw, and turned on the gas in
+an attempt to commit suicide, "Inspector Byrnes" hurried off and
+notified the night keeper that something was wrong, and induced him to
+go to the cell in time to save the prisoner's life. He once notified the
+police when a fire broke out on the premises, and at another time made
+such a fuss that they followed him--to discover a woman trying to hang
+herself. Again, some of the prisoners plotted to escape, and the cat
+crawled through the hole they had filed and called the warden's
+attention to it. In fact, there was no doubt that "Inspector Byrnes"
+considered himself assistant warden at the jail, and he did not waste
+much time in talk either.
+
+The Pretty Lady had ways of her own to make us know when things were
+wrong in the household, although she used to utter a great many sounds,
+either of pleasure or perturbation, which we came to understand. I
+remember one morning, when my sister was ill upstairs, that I had
+breakfasted and sat down to read my morning's mail, when the Pretty Lady
+came, uttering sounds that denoted dissatisfaction with matters
+somewhere. I was busy, and at first paid no attention to her; but she
+grew more persistent, so that I finally laid down my letters and asked:
+"What is it, Puss? Haven't you had breakfast enough?" I went out to the
+kitchen, and she followed, all the time protesting articulately. She
+would not touch the meat I offered, but evidently wanted something
+entirely different. Just then my sister came down and said:--
+
+"I wish you would go up and see H. She is suffering terribly, and I
+don't know what to do for her."
+
+At that the Pretty Lady led the way into the hall and up the stairs,
+pausing at every third step to make sure I was following, and leading me
+straight to my sister. Then she settled herself calmly on the foot-board
+and closed her eyes, as though the whole affair was no concern of hers.
+Afterward, my sister said that when the pain became almost unendurable,
+so that she tossed about and groaned, the Pretty Lady came close to her
+face and talked to her, just as she did to her kittens when they were in
+distress, showing plainly that she sympathized with and would help her.
+When she found it impossible to do this, she hurried down to me. And
+then having got me actually up to my sister's bedside, she threw off her
+own burden of anxiety and settled into her usual calm content.
+
+"My Goliath is at the helm now," she expressed by her attitude, "and the
+world is sure to go right a little longer while I take a nap."
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Concerning Cats, by Helen M. Winslow
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Concerning Cats, by Helen M. Winslow
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
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+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: Concerning Cats
+ My Own and Some Others
+
+Author: Helen M. Winslow
+
+Release Date: December, 2005 [EBook #9501]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on October 6, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CONCERNING CATS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Dr. Dwight Holden, Ted Garvin, David Garcia
+and PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+CONCERNING CATS
+
+My Own and Some Others
+
+By Helen M. Winslow
+
+Editor of "The Club Woman"
+
+
+
+To the
+
+"PRETTY LADY"
+
+WHO NEVER BETRAYED A SECRET, BROKE A PROMISE, OR
+PROVED AN UNFAITHFUL FRIEND; WHO HAD
+ALL THE VIRTUES AND NONE OF
+THE FAILINGS OF HER SEX
+
+I Dedicate this Volume
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+CHAPTER
+
+ I. CONCERNING THE PRETTY LADY.
+ II. CONCERNING MY OTHER CATS.
+ III. CONCERNING OTHER PEOPLE'S CATS.
+ IV. CONCERNING STILL OTHER PEOPLE'S CATS.
+ V. CONCERNING SOME HISTORIC CATS.
+ VI. CONCERNING CATS IN ENGLAND.
+ VII. CONCERNING CAT CLUBS AND CAT SHOWS.
+ VIII. CONCERNING HIGH-BRED CATS IN AMERICA.
+ IX. CONCERNING CATS IN POETRY.
+ X. CONCERNING CAT ARTISTS.
+ XI. CONCERNING CAT HOSPITALS AND REFUGES.
+ XII. CONCERNING THE ORIGIN OF CATS.
+ XIII. CONCERNING VARIETIES OF CATS.
+ XIV. CONCERNING CAT LANGUAGE.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+_Concerning Cats_
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+CONCERNING THE "PRETTY LADY"
+
+
+She was such a Pretty Lady, and gentle withal; so quiet and eminently
+ladylike in her behavior, and yet dignified and haughtily reserved as a
+duchess. Still it is better, under certain circumstances, to be a cat
+than to be a duchess. And no duchess of the realm ever had more faithful
+retainers or half so abject subjects.
+
+Do not tell me that cats never love people; that only places have real
+hold upon their affections. The Pretty Lady was contented wherever I,
+her most humble slave, went with her. She migrated with me from
+boarding-house to sea-shore cottage; then to regular housekeeping; up to
+the mountains for a summer, and back home, a long day's journey on the
+railway; and her attitude was always "Wheresoever thou goest I will go,
+and thy people shall be my people."
+
+I have known, and loved, and studied many cats, but my knowledge of her
+alone would convince me that cats love people--in their dignified,
+reserved way, and when they feel that their love is not wasted; that
+they reason, and that they seldom act from impulse.
+
+I do not remember that I was born with an inordinate fondness for cats;
+or that I cried for them as an infant. I do not know, even, that my
+childhood was marked by an overweening pride in them; this, perhaps, was
+because my cruel parents established a decree, rigid and unbending as
+the laws of the Medes and Persians, that we must never have more than
+one cat at a time. Although this very law may argue that predilection,
+at an early age, for harboring everything feline which came in my way,
+which has since become at once a source of comfort and distraction.
+
+After a succession of feline dynasties, the kings and queens of which
+were handsome, ugly, sleek, forlorn, black, white, deaf, spotted, and
+otherwise marked, I remember fastening my affections securely upon one
+kitten who grew up to be the ugliest, gauntest, and dingiest specimen I
+ever have seen. In the days of his kittenhood I christened him "Tassie"
+after his mother; but as time sped on, and the name hardly comported
+with masculine dignity, this was changed to Tacitus, as more befitting
+his sex. He had a habit of dodging in and out of the front door, which
+was heavy, and which sometimes swung together before he was well out of
+it. As a consequence, a caudal appendage with two broken joints was one
+of his distinguishing features. Besides a broken tail, he had ears which
+bore the marks of many a hard-fought battle, and an expression which for
+general "lone and lorn"-ness would have discouraged even Mrs. Gummidge.
+But I loved him, and judging from the disconsolate and long-continued
+wailing with which he rilled the house whenever I was away, my affection
+was not unrequited.
+
+But my real thraldom did not begin until I took the Pretty Lady's
+mother. We had not been a week in our first house before a handsomely
+striped tabby, with eyes like beautiful emeralds, who had been the pet
+and pride of the next-door neighbor for five years, came over and
+domiciled herself. In due course of time she proudly presented us with
+five kittens. Educated in the belief that one cat was all that was
+compatible with respectability, I had four immediately disposed of,
+keeping the prettiest one, which grew up into the beautiful,
+fascinating, and seductive maltese "Pretty Lady," with white trimmings
+to her coat. The mother of Pretty Lady used to catch two mice at a time,
+and bringing them in together, lay one at my feet and say as plainly as
+cat language can say, "There, you eat that one, and I'll eat this," and
+then seem much surprised and disgusted that I had not devoured mine when
+she had finished her meal.
+
+We were occupying a furnished house for the summer, however, and as we
+were to board through the winter, I took only the kitten back to town,
+thinking the mother would return to her former home, just over the
+fence. But no. For two weeks she refused all food and would not once
+enter the other house. Then I went out for her, and hearing my voice she
+came in and sat down before me, literally scolding me for a quarter of
+an hour. I shall be laughed at, but actual tears stood in her lovely
+green eyes and ran down her aristocratic nose, attesting her grief and
+accusing me, louder than her wailing, of perfidy.
+
+I could not keep her. She would not return to her old home. I finally
+compromised by carrying her in a covered basket a mile and a half and
+bestowing her upon a friend who loves cats nearly as well as I. But
+although she was petted, and praised, and fed on the choicest of
+delicacies, she would not be resigned. After six weeks of mourning, she
+disappeared, and never was heard of more. Whether she sought a new and
+more constant mistress, or whether, in her grief at my shameless
+abandonment of her, she went to some lonely pier and threw herself off
+the dock, will never be known. But her reproachful gaze and tearful
+emerald eyes haunted me all winter. Many a restless night did I have to
+reproach myself for abandoning a creature who so truly loved me; and in
+many a dream did she return to heap shame and ignominy upon my repentant
+head.
+
+This experience determined me to cherish her daughter, whom, rather, I
+cherished as her son, until there were three little new-born kittens,
+which in a moment of ignorance I "disposed of" at once. Naturally, the
+young mother fell exceedingly ill. In the most pathetic way she dragged
+herself after me, moaning and beseeching for help. Finally, I succumbed,
+went to a neighbor's where several superfluous kittens had arrived the
+night before, and begged one. It was a little black fellow, cold and
+half dead; but the Pretty Lady was beside herself with joy when I
+bestowed it upon her. For two days she would not leave the box where I
+established their headquarters, and for months she refused to wean it,
+or to look upon it as less than absolutely perfect. I may say that the
+Pretty Lady lived to be nine years old, and had, during that brief
+period, no less than ninety-three kittens, besides two adopted ones; but
+never did she bestow upon any of her own offspring that wealth of pride
+and affection which was showered upon black Bobbie.
+
+When the first child of her adoption was two weeks old, I was ill one
+morning, and did not appear at breakfast. It had always been her custom
+to wait for my coming down in the morning, evidently considering it a
+not unimportant part of her duty to see me well launched for the day.
+Usually she sat at the head of the stairs and waited patiently until she
+heard me moving about. Sometimes she came in and sat on a chair at the
+head of my bed, or gently touched my face with her nose or paw. Although
+she knew she was at liberty to sleep in my room, she seldom did so,
+except when she had an infant on her hands. At first she invariably kept
+him in a lower drawer of my bureau. When he was large enough, she
+removed him to the foot of the bed, where for a week or two her maternal
+solicitude and sociable habits of nocturnal conversation with her
+progeny interfered seriously with my night's rest. If my friends used to
+notice a wild and haggard appearance of unrest about me at certain
+periods of the year, the reason stands here confessed.
+
+I was ill when black Bobbie was two weeks old. The Pretty Lady waited
+until breakfast was over, and as I did not appear, came up and jumped on
+the bed, where she manifested some curiosity as to my lack of active
+interest in the world's affairs.
+
+"Now, pussy," I said, putting out my hand and stroking her back, "I'm
+sick this morning. When you were sick, I went and got you a kitten.
+Can't you get me one?"
+
+This was all. My sister came in then and spoke to me, and the Pretty
+Lady left us at once; but in less than two minutes she came back with
+her cherished kitten in her mouth. Depositing him in my neck, she stood
+and looked at me, as much as to say:--
+
+"There, you can take him awhile. He cured me and I won't be selfish; I
+will share him with you."
+
+I was ill for three days, and all that time the kitten was kept with me.
+When his mother wanted him, she kept him on the foot of the bed, where
+she nursed, and lapped, and scrubbed him until it seemed as if she must
+wear even his stolid nerves completely out. But whenever she felt like
+going out she brought him up and tucked him away in the hollow of my
+neck, with a little guttural noise that, interpreted, meant:--
+
+"There, now you take care of him awhile. I'm all tired out. Don't wake
+him up."
+
+But when the infant had dropped soundly asleep, she invariably came back
+and demanded him; and not only demanded, but dragged him forth from his
+lair by the nape of the neck, shrieking and protesting, to the foot of
+the bed again, where he was obliged to go through another course of
+scrubbing and vigorous maternal attentions that actually kept his fur
+from growing as fast as the coats of less devotedly cared-for kittens
+grow.
+
+When I was well enough to leave my room, she transferred him to my lower
+bureau drawer, and then to a vantage-point behind an old lounge. But she
+never doubted, apparently, that it was the loan of that kitten that
+rescued me from an untimely grave.
+
+I have lost many an hour of much-needed sleep from my cat's habit of
+coming upstairs at four A.M. and jumping suddenly upon the bed; perhaps
+landing on the pit of my stomach. Waking in that fashion, unsympathetic
+persons would have pardoned me if I had indulged in injudicious
+language, or had even thrown the cat violently from my otherwise
+peaceful couch. But conscience has not to upbraid me with any of these
+things. I flatter myself that I bear even this patiently; I remember to
+have often made sleepy but pleasant remarks to the faithful little
+friend whose affection for me and whose desire to behold my countenance
+was too great to permit her to wait till breakfast time.
+
+If I lay awake for hours afterward, perhaps getting nothing more than
+literal "cat-naps," I consoled myself with remembering how Richelieu,
+and Wellington, and Mohammed, and otherwise great as well as
+discriminating persons, loved cats; I remembered, with some stirrings of
+secret pride, that it is only the artistic nature, the truly aesthetic
+soul that appreciates poetry, and grace, and all refined beauty, who
+truly loves cats; and thus meditating with closed eyes, I courted
+slumber again, throughout the breaking dawn, while the cat purred in
+delight close at hand.
+
+The Pretty Lady was evidently of Angora or coon descent, as her fur was
+always longer and silkier than that of ordinary cats. She was fond of
+all the family. When we boarded in Boston, we kept her in a front room,
+two flights from the ground. Whenever any of us came in the front door,
+she knew it. No human being could have told, sitting in a closed room in
+winter, two flights up, the identity of a person coming up the steps and
+opening the door. But the Pretty Lady, then only six months old, used to
+rouse from her nap in a big chair, or from the top of a folding bed,
+jump down, and be at the hall door ready to greet the incomer, before
+she was halfway up the stairs. The cat never got down for the wrong
+person, and she never neglected to meet any and every member of our
+family who might be entering. The irreverent scoffer may call it
+"instinct," or talk about the "sense of smell." I call it sagacity.
+
+One summer we all went up to the farm in northern Vermont, and decided
+to take her and her son, "Mr. McGinty," with us. We put them both in a
+large market-basket and tied the cover securely. On the train Mr.
+McGinty manifested a desire to get out, and was allowed to do so, a
+stout cord having been secured to his collar first, and the other end
+tied to the car seat. He had a delightful journey, once used to the
+noise and motion of the train. He sat on our laps, curled up on the seat
+and took naps, or looked out of the windows with evident puzzlement at
+the way things had suddenly taken to flying; he even made friends with
+the passengers, and in general amused himself as any other traveller
+would on an all-day's journey by rail, except that he did not risk his
+eyesight by reading newspapers. But the Pretty Lady had not travelled
+for some years, and did not enjoy the trip as well as formerly; on the
+contrary she curled herself into a round tight ball in one corner of the
+basket till the journey's end was reached.
+
+Once at the farm she seemed contented as long as I remained with her.
+There was plenty of milk and cream, and she caught a great many mice.
+She was far too dainty to eat them, but she had an inherent pleasure in
+catching mice, just like her more plebeian sisters; and she enjoyed
+presenting them to Mr. McGinty or me, or some other worthy object of her
+solicitude.
+
+She was at first afraid of "the big outdoors." The wide, wind-blown
+spaces, the broad, sunshiny sky, the silence and the roominess of it
+all, were quite different from her suburban experiences; and the farm
+animals, too, were in her opinion curiously dangerous objects. Big Dan,
+the horse, was truly a horrible creature; the rooster was a new and
+suspicious species of biped, and the bleating calves objects of her
+direst hatred.
+
+The pig in his pen possessed for her the most horrid fascination. Again
+and again would she steal out and place herself where she could see that
+dreadful, strange, pink, fat creature inside his own quarters. She would
+fix her round eyes widely upon him in blended fear and admiration. If
+the pig uttered the characteristic grunt of his race, the Pretty Lady at
+first ran swiftly away; but afterward she used to turn and gaze
+anxiously at us, as if to say:--
+
+"Do you hear that? Isn't this a truly horrible creature?" and in other
+ways evince the same sort of surprise that a professor in the Peabody
+Museum might, were the skeleton of the megatherium suddenly to accost
+him after the manner peculiar to its kind.
+
+It was funnier, even, to see Mr. McGinty on the morning after his
+arrival at the farm, as he sallied forth and made acquaintance with
+other of God's creatures than humans and cats, and the natural enemy of
+his kind, the dog. In his suburban home he had caught rats and captured
+on the sly many an English sparrow. When he first investigated his new
+quarters on the farm, he discovered a beautiful flock of very large
+birds led by one of truly gorgeous plumage.
+
+"Ah!" thought Mr. McGinty, "this is a great and glorious country, where
+I can have such birds as these for the catching. Tame, too. I'll have
+one for breakfast."
+
+So he crouched down, tiger-like, and crept carefully along to a
+convenient distance and was preparing to spring, when the large and
+gorgeous bird looked up from his worm and remarked:--
+
+"Cut-cut-cut, ca-dah-cut!" and, taking his wives, withdrew toward the
+barn.
+
+Mr. McGinty drew back amazed. "This is a queer bird," he seemed to say;
+"saucy, too. However, I'll soon have him," and he crept more carefully
+than before up to springing distance, when again this most gorgeous bird
+drew up and exclaimed, with a note of annoyance:--
+
+"Cut-cut-cut, ca-dah-cut! What ails that old cat, anyway?" And again he
+led his various wives barn-ward.
+
+Mr. McGinty drew up with a surprised air, and apparently made a cursory
+study of the leading anatomical features of this strange bird; but he
+did not like to give up, and soon crouched and prepared for another
+onslaught. This time Mr. Chanticleer allowed the cat to come up close to
+his flock, when he turned and remarked in the most amicable manner,
+"Cut-cut-cut-cut!" which interpreted seemed to mean: "Come now; that's
+all right. You're evidently new here; but you'd better take my advice
+and not fool with me."
+
+Anyhow, with this, down went McGinty's hope of a bird breakfast "to the
+bottom of the sea," and he gave up the hunt. He soon made friends,
+however, with every animal on the place, and so endeared himself to the
+owners that he lived out his days there with a hundred acres and more as
+his own happy hunting-ground.
+
+Not so, the Pretty Lady. I went away on a short visit after a few weeks,
+leaving her behind. From the moment of my disappearance she was uneasy
+and unhappy. On the fifth day she disappeared. When I returned and found
+her not, I am not ashamed to say that I hunted and called her
+everywhere, nor even that I shed a few tears when days rolled into weeks
+and she did not appear, as I realized that she might be starving, or
+have suffered tortures from some larger animal.
+
+There are many remarkable stories of cats who find their way home across
+almost impossible roads and enormous distances. There is a saying,
+believed by many people, "You can't lose a cat," which can be proved by
+hundreds of remarkable returns. But the Pretty Lady had absolutely no
+sense of locality. She had always lived indoors and had never been
+allowed to roam the neighborhood. It was five weeks before we found
+trace of her, and then only by accident. My sister was passing a field
+of grain, and caught a glimpse of a small creature which she at first
+thought to be a woodchuck. She turned and looked at it, and called
+"Pussy, pussy," when with a heart-breaking little cry of utter delight
+and surprise, our beloved cat came toward her. From the first, the wide
+expanse of the country had confused her; she had evidently "lost her
+bearings" and was probably all the time within fifteen minutes' walk of
+the farm-house.
+
+When found, she was only a shadow of herself, and for the first and only
+time in her life we could count her ribs. She was wild with delight, and
+clung to my sister's arms as though fearing to lose her; and in all the
+fuss that was made over her return, no human being could have showed
+more affection, or more satisfaction at finding her old friends again.
+
+That she really was lost, and had no sense of locality to guide her
+home, was proven by her conduct after she returned to her Boston home. I
+had preceded my sister, and was at the theatre on the evening when she
+arrived with the Pretty Lady. The latter was carried into the kitchen,
+taken from her basket, and fed. Then, instead of going around the house
+and settling herself in her old home, she went into the front hall which
+she had left four months before, and seated herself on the spot where
+she always watched and waited when I was out. When I came home at
+eleven, I saw through the screen door her "that was lost and is found."
+She had been waiting to welcome me for three mortal hours.
+
+I wish those people who believe cats have no affection for people could
+have seen her then. She would not leave me for an instant, and
+manifested her love in every possible way; and when I retired for the
+night, she curled up on my pillow and purred herself contentedly to
+sleep, only rising when I did. After breakfast that first morning after
+her return, she asked to be let out of the back door, and made me
+understand that I must go with her. I did so, and she explored every
+part of the back yard, entreating me in the same way she called her
+kittens to keep close by her. She investigated our own premises
+thoroughly and then crept carefully under the fences on either side into
+the neighbor's precincts where she had formerly visited in friendly
+fashion; then she came timidly back, all the time keeping watch that she
+did not lose me. Having finished her tour of inspection, she went in and
+led me on an investigating trip all through the house, smelling of every
+corner and base-board, and insisting that every closet door should be
+opened, so that she might smell each closet through in the same way.
+When this was done, she settled herself in one of her old nooks for a
+nap and allowed me to leave.
+
+But never again did she go out of sight of the house. For more than a
+year she would not go even into a neighbor's yard, and when she finally
+decided that it might be safe to crawl under the fences on to other
+territory, she invariably turned about to sit facing the house, as
+though living up to a firm determination never to lose sight of it
+again. This practice she kept up until at the close of her last mortal
+sickness, when she crawled into a dark place under a neighboring barn
+and said good-by to earthly fears and worries forever.
+
+_Requiescat in pace_, my Pretty Lady. I wish all your sex had your
+gentle dignity, and grace, and beauty, to say nothing of your
+faithfulness and affection. Like Mother Michel's "Monmouth," it may be
+said of you:--
+
+ "She was merely a cat,
+ But her Sublime Virtues place her on a level with
+ The Most Celebrated Mortals,
+ and
+ In Ancient Egypt
+ Altars would have been Erected to her
+ Memory."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+CONCERNING MY OTHER CATS
+
+
+"Oh, what a lovely cat!" is a frequent expression from visitors or
+passers-by at our house. And from the Pretty Lady down through her
+various sons and daughters to the present family protector and head,
+"Thomas Erastus," and the Angora, "Lady Betty," there have been some
+beautiful creatures.
+
+Mr. McGinty was a solid-color maltese, with fur like a seal for
+closeness and softness, and with the disposition of an angel. He used to
+be seized with sudden spasms of affection and run from one to another of
+the family, rubbing his soft cheeks against ours, and kissing us
+repeatedly. This he did by taking gentle little affectionate nips with
+his teeth. I used to give him a certain caress, which he took as an
+expression of affection. After leaving him at the farm I did not see him
+again for two years. Then on a short visit, I asked for Mr. McGinty and
+was told that he was in a shed chamber. I found him asleep in a box of
+grain and took him out; he looked at me through sleepy eyes, turned
+himself over and stretched up for the old caress. As nobody ever gave
+him that but me, I take this as conclusive proof that he not only knew
+me, but remembered my one peculiarity.
+
+Then there was old Pomp, called "old" to distinguish him from the young
+Pomp of to-day, or "Pompanita." He died of pneumonia at the age of three
+years; but he was the handsomest black cat--and the blackest--I have
+ever seen. He had half a dozen white hairs under his chin; but his
+blackness was literally like the raven's wing. Many handsome black cats
+show brown in the strong sunlight, or when their fur is parted. But old
+Pomp's fur was jet black clear through, and in the sunshine looked as if
+he had been made up of the richest black silk velvet, his eyes,
+meanwhile, being large and of the purest amber. He weighed some fifteen
+pounds, and that somebody envied us the possession of him was evident,
+as he was stolen two or three times during the last summer of his life.
+But he came home every time; only when Death finally stole him, we had
+no redress.
+
+"Bobinette," the black kitten referred to in the previous chapter, also
+had remarkably beautiful eyes. We used to keep him in ribbons to match,
+and he knew color, too, perfectly well. For instance, if we offered him
+a blue or a red ribbon, he would not be quiet long enough to have it
+tied on; but show him a yellow one, and he would prance across the room,
+and not only stand still to have it put on, but purr and evince the
+greatest pride in it.
+
+Bobinette had another very pretty trick of playing with the
+tape-measure. He used to bring it to us and have it wound several times
+around his body; then he would "chase himself" until he got it off, when
+he would bring it back and ask plainly to have it wound round him again.
+After a little we noticed he was wearing the tape-measure out, and so we
+tried to substitute it with an old ribbon or piece of cotton tape. But
+Bobinette would have none of them. On the contrary, he repeatedly
+climbed on to the table and to the work-basket, and hunted patiently for
+his tape-measure, and even if it were hidden in a pocket, he kept up the
+search until he unearthed it; and he would invariably end by dragging
+forth that particular tape-measure and bringing it to us. I need not say
+that his intelligence was rewarded.
+
+Speaking of colors, a friend has a cat that is devoted to blue. When she
+puts on a particularly pretty blue gown, the cat hastens to get into her
+lap, put her face down to the material, purr, and manifest the greatest
+delight; but let the same lady put on a black dress, and the cat will
+not come near her.
+
+"Pompanita," the second Pomp in our dynasty, is a fat and billowy black
+fellow, now five years old and weighing nineteen pounds. He was the last
+of the Pretty Lady's ninety-three children. Only a few of this vast
+progeny, however, grew to cat-hood, as she was never allowed to keep
+more than one each season. The Pretty Lady, in fact, came to regard this
+as the only proper method. On one occasion I had been away all day. When
+I got home at night the housekeeper said, "Pussy has had five kittens,
+but she won't go near them." When the Pretty Lady heard my voice, she
+came and led the way to the back room where the kittens were in the
+lower drawer of an unused bureau, and uttered one or two funny little
+noises, intimating that matters were not altogether as they should be,
+according to established rules of propriety. I understood, abstracted
+four of the five kittens, and disappeared. When I came back she had
+settled herself contentedly with the remaining kitten, and from that
+time on was a model mother.
+
+Pompanita the Good has all the virtues of a good cat, and absolutely no
+vices. He loves us all and loves all other cats as well. As for
+fighting, he emulates the example of that veteran who boasts that during
+the war he might always be found where the shot and shell were the
+thickest,--under the ammunition wagon. Like most cats he has a decided
+streak of vanity. My sister cut a wide, fancy collar, or ruff, of white
+paper one day, and put it on Pompanita. At first he felt much abashed
+and found it almost impossible to walk with it. But a few words of
+praise and encouragement changed all that.
+
+"Oh, what a pretty Pomp he is now!" exclaimed one and another, until he
+sat up coyly and cocked his head one side as if to say:--
+
+"Oh, now, do you really think I look pretty?" and after a few more
+assurances he got down and strutted as proudly as any peacock; much to
+the discomfiture of the kitten, who wanted to play with him. And now he
+will cross the yard any time to have one of those collars on.
+
+But Thomas Erastus is the prince of our cats to-day. He weighs seventeen
+pounds, and is a soft, grayish-maltese with white paws and breast. One
+Saturday night ten years ago, as we were partaking of our regular Boston
+baked beans, I heard a faint mew. Looking down I saw beside me the
+thinnest kitten I ever beheld. The Irish girl who presided over our
+fortunes at the time used to place the palms of her hands together and
+say of Thomas's appearance, "Why, mum, the two sides of 'im were just
+like that." I picked him up, and he crawled pathetically into my neck
+and cuddled down.
+
+"There," said a friend who was sitting opposite, "he's fixed himself
+now. You'll keep him."
+
+"No, I shall not," I said, "but I will feed him a few days and give him
+to my cousin." Inside half an hour, however, Thomas Erastus had assumed
+the paternal air toward us that soon made us fear to lose him. Living
+without Thomas now would be like a young girl's going out without a
+chaperone. After that first half-hour, when he had been fed, he chased
+every foreign cat off the premises, and assumed the part of a watch-dog.
+To this day he will sit on the front porch or the window-sill and growl
+if he sees a tramp or suspicious character approaching. He always goes
+into the kitchen when the market-man calls, and orders his meat; and at
+exactly five o'clock in the afternoon, when the meat is cut up and
+distributed, leads the feline portion of the family into the kitchen.
+
+Thomas knows the time of day. For six months he waked up one housekeeper
+at exactly seven o'clock in the morning, never varying two minutes. He
+did this by seating himself on her chest and gazing steadfastly in her
+face. Usually this waked her, but if she did not yield promptly to that
+treatment he would poke her cheeks with the most velvety of paws until
+she awoke. He has a habit now of going upstairs and sitting opposite the
+closed door of the young man who has to rise hours before the rest of us
+do, and waiting until the door is opened for him. How he knows at what
+particular moment each member of the family will wake up and come forth
+is a mystery, but he does.
+
+How do cats tell the hour of day, anyway? The old Chinese theory that
+they are living clocks is, in a way, borne out by their own conduct. Not
+only have my cats shown repeatedly that they know the hour of rising of
+every member of the family, but they gather with as much regularity as
+the ebbing of the tides, or the setting of the sun, at exactly five
+o'clock in the afternoon for their supper. They are given a hearty
+breakfast as soon as the kitchen fire is started in the morning. This
+theoretically lasts them until five. I say theoretically, because if
+they wake from their invariable naps at one, and smell lunch, they
+individually wheedle some one into feeding them. But this is only
+individually. Collectively they are fed at five.
+
+They are the most methodical creatures in the world. They go to bed
+regularly at night when the family does. They are waiting in the kitchen
+for breakfast when the fire is started in the morning. Then they go out
+of doors and play, or hunt, or ruminate until ten o'clock, when they
+come in, seek their favorite resting-places, and sleep until four.
+Evidently, from four to five is a play hour, and the one who wakes first
+is expected to stir up the others. But at exactly five, no matter where
+they may have strayed to, every one of the three, five, or seven (as the
+number may happen to be) will be sitting in his own particular place in
+the kitchen, waiting with patient eagerness for supper. For each has a
+particular place for eating, just as bigger folk have their places at
+the dining table. Thomas Erastus sits in a corner; the space under the
+table is reserved especially for Jane. Pompanita is at his mistress's
+feet, and Lady Betty, the Angora, bounds to her shoulder when their meat
+appears. Their table manners are quite irreproachable also. It is
+considered quite unpardonable to snatch at another's piece of meat, and
+a breach of the best cat-etiquette to show impatience while another is
+being fed.
+
+I do not pretend to say that this is entirely natural. They are taught
+these things as kittens, and since cats are as great sticklers for
+propriety and gentle manners as any human beings can be, they never
+forget it. Doubtless, this is easier because they are always well fed,
+but Thomas Erastus or Jane would have to be on the verge of starvation,
+I am sure, before they would "grab" from one of the other cats. And as
+for the Pretty Lady, it was always necessary to see that she was
+properly served. She would not eat from a dish with other cats, or,
+except in extreme cases, from one they had left. Indeed, she was
+remarkable in this respect. I have seen her sit on the edge of a table
+where chickens were being dressed and wait patiently for a tidbit; I
+have seen her left alone in the room, while on that table was a piece of
+raw steak, but no temptation was ever great enough to make her touch any
+of these forbidden things. She actually seemed to have a conscience.
+
+Only one thing on the dining table would she touch. When she was two or
+three months old, she somehow got hold of the table-napkins done up in
+their rings. These were always to her the most delightful playthings in
+the world. As a kitten, she would play with them by the hour, if not
+taken away, and go to sleep cuddled affectionately around them. She got
+over this as she grew older; but when her first kitten was two or three
+months old, remembering the jolly times she used to have, she would
+sneak into the dining room and get the rolled napkins, carry them in her
+mouth to her infant, and endeavor with patient anxiety to show him how
+to play with them. Throughout nine years of motherhood she went through
+the same performance with every kitten she had. They never knew what to
+do with the napkins, or cared to know, and would have none of them. But
+she never got discouraged. She would climb up on the sideboard, or into
+the china closet, and even try to get into drawers where the napkins
+were laid away in their rings. If she could get hold of one, she would
+carry it with literal groans and evident travail of spirit to her
+kitten, and by further groans and admonitions seem to say:--
+
+"Child, see this beautiful plaything I have brought you. This is a part
+of your education; it is just as necessary for you to know how to play
+with this as to poke your paw under the closet door properly. Wake up,
+now, and play with it."
+
+Sometimes, when the table was laid over night, we used to hear her
+anguished groans in the stillness of the night. In the morning every
+napkin belonging to the family would be found in a different part of the
+house, and perhaps a ring would be missing. These periods, however, only
+lasted as long, in each new kitten's training, as the few weeks that she
+had amused herself with them at their age. Then she would drop the
+subject, and napkins had no further interest than the man in the moon
+until another kitten arrived at the age when she considered them a
+necessary part of his education.
+
+Professor Shaler in his interesting book on the intelligence of animals
+gives the cat only the merest mention, intimating that he considers them
+below par in this respect, and showing little real knowledge of them. I
+wish he might have known the Pretty Lady.
+
+Once our Lady Betty had four little Angora kittens. She was probably the
+most aristocratic cat in the country, for she kept a wet nurse. Poor
+Jane, of commoner strain, had two small kittens the day after the Angora
+family appeared. Jane's plebeian infants promptly disappeared, but she
+took just as promptly to the more aristocratic family and fulfilled the
+duties of nurse and maid. Both cats and four kittens occupied the same
+bureau drawer, and when either cat wanted the fresh air she left the
+other in charge; and there was a tacit understanding between them that
+the fluffy, fat babies must never be left alone one instant. Four small
+and lively kittens in the house are indeed things of beauty, and a joy
+as long as they last. Four fluffy little Angora balls they were Chin,
+Chilla, Buffie, and Orange Pekoe, names that explain their color. And
+Jane, wet nurse and waiting-maid, had to keep as busy as the old woman
+that lived in a shoe. Jane it was who must look after the infants when
+Lady Betty wished to leave the house. Jane it was who must scrub the
+furry quartet until their silky fur stood up in bunches the wrong way
+all over their chubby little sides; Jane must sleep with them nights,
+and be ready to furnish sustenance at any moment of day or night; and
+above all, Jane must watch them anxiously and incessantly in waking
+hours, uttering those little protesting murmurs of admonition which
+mother cats deem so necessary toward the proper training of kittens.
+And, poor Jane! As lady's maid she must bathe Lady Betty's brow every
+now and then, as the more finely strung Angora succumbed to the nervous
+strain of kitten-rearing, and she turned affectionately to Jane for
+comfort. A prettier sight, or a more profitable study of the love of
+animals for each other was never seen than Lady Betty, her infants, and
+her nurse-maid. And yet, there are people who pronounce cats stupid.
+
+One evening I returned from the theatre late and roused up the four
+fluffy kittens, who, seeing the gas turned on, started in for a frolic.
+The lady mother did not approve of midnight carousals on the part of
+infants, and protested with mild wails against their joyful caperings.
+Finally, Orange Pekoe got into the closet and Lady Betty pursued him.
+But suddenly a strange odor was detected. Sitting on her haunches she
+smelled all over the bottom of the skirt which had just been hung up,
+stopping every few seconds to utter a little worried note of warning to
+the kittens. The infants, however, displayed a quite human disregard of
+parental authority and gambolled on unconcernedly under the skirt;
+reminding one of the old New England primer style of tales, showing how
+disobedient children flaunt themselves in the face of danger, despite
+the judicious advice of their elders. Lady Betty could do nothing with
+them, and grew more nervous and worried every minute in consequence.
+Suddenly she bethought herself of that never-failing source of strength
+and comfort, Jane. She went into the next room, and, although I had not
+heard a sound, returned in a moment with the maltese. Jane was ushered
+into the closet, and soon scented out the skirt. Then she too sat on her
+haunches and gave a long, careful sniff, turned round and uttered one
+"purr-t-t," and took the Angora off with her. Jane had discovered that
+there was no element of danger in the closet, and had imparted her
+knowledge to the finely strung Angora in an instant. And so, taking her
+back to bed, she "bathed her brow" with gentle lappings until Lady Betty
+sank off to quiet sleep, soothed and comforted.
+
+It is not easy to study a cat. They are like sensitive plants, and shut
+themselves instinctively away from the human being who does not care for
+them. They know when a man or a woman loves them, almost before they
+come into the human presence; and it is almost useless for the
+unsympathetic person to try to study a cat. But the thousands who do
+love cats know that they are the most individual animals in the world.
+Dogs are much alike in their love for mankind, their obedience,
+faithfulness, and, in different degrees, their sagacity. But there is as
+much individuality in cats as in people.
+
+Dogs and horses are our slaves; cats never. This does not prove them
+without affection, as some people seem to think; on the contrary, it
+proves their peculiar and characteristic dignity and self-respect.
+Women, poets, and especially artists, like cats; delicate natures only
+can realize their sensitive nervous systems.
+
+The Pretty Lady's mother talked almost incessantly when she was in the
+house. One of her habits was to get on the window-seat outside and
+demand to be let in. If she was not waited upon immediately, she would,
+when the door was finally opened, stop when halfway in and scold
+vigorously. The tones of her voice and the expression of her face were
+so exactly like those of a scolding, vixenish woman that she caused many
+a hearty laugh by her tirades.
+
+Thomas Erastus, however, seldom utters a sound, and at the rare
+intervals when he condescends to purr, he can only be heard by holding
+one's ear close to his great, soft sides. But he has the most remarkable
+ways. He will open every door in the house from the inside; he will even
+open blinds, getting his paw under the fastening and working patiently
+at it, with his body on the blind itself, until the hook flies back and
+it finally opens. One housekeeper trained him to eat his meat close up
+in one corner of the kitchen. This custom he kept up after she went
+away, until new and uncommonly frisky kittens annoyed him so that his
+place was transferred to the top of an old table. When he got hungry in
+those days, however, he used to go and crowd close up in his corner and
+look so pathetically famished that food was generally forthcoming at
+once. Thomas was formerly very much devoted to the lady who lived next
+door, and was as much at home in her house as in ours. Her family rose
+an hour or two earlier than ours in the morning, and their breakfast
+hour came first. I should attribute Thomas's devotion to Mrs. T. to this
+fact, since he invariably presented himself at her dining-room window
+and wheedled her into feeding him, were it not that his affection seemed
+just as strong throughout the day. It was interesting to see him go over
+and rattle her screen doors, front, back, or side, knowing perfectly
+well that he would bring some one to open and let him in.
+
+Thomas has a really paternal air toward the rest of the family. One
+spring night, as usual on retiring, I went to the back door to call in
+the cats. Thomas Erastus was in my sister's room, but none of the others
+were to be seen; nor did they come at once, evidently having strayed in
+their play beyond the sound of my voice. Thomas, upstairs, heard my
+continued call and tried for some time to get out. M. had shut her door,
+thinking to keep in the one already safe. But the more I called, the
+more persistently determined he became to get out. At last M. opened her
+window and let him on to the sloping roof of the "L," from which he
+could descend through a gnarled old apple tree. Meanwhile I left the
+back door and went on with my preparations for the night. About ten
+minutes later I went and called the cats again. It was a moonlight night
+and I saw six delinquent cats coming in a flock across the open field
+behind the house,--all marshalled by Mr. Thomas. He evidently hunted
+them up and called them in himself; then he sat on the back porch and
+waited until the last kit was safely in, before he stalked gravely in
+with an air which said as plainly as words:--
+
+"There, it takes _me_ to do anything with this family."
+
+None of my cats would think of responding to the call of "Kitty, Kitty,"
+or "Puss, Puss." They are early taught their names and answer to them.
+Neither would one answer to the name of another, except in occasional
+instances where jealousy prompts them to do so. We have to be most
+careful when we go out of an evening, not to let Thomas Erastus get out
+at the same time. In case he does, he will follow us either to the
+railroad station or to the electric cars and wait in some near-by nook
+until we come back. I have known him to sit out from seven until
+midnight of a cold, snowy winter evening, awaiting our return from the
+theatre. When we alight from the cars he is nowhere to be seen. But
+before we have gone many steps, lo! Thomas Erastus is behind or beside
+us, proudly escorting his mistresses home, but looking neither at them,
+nor to the right or left. Not until he reaches the porch does he allow
+himself to be petted. But on our way to the cars his attitude is
+different. He is as frisky as a kitten. In vain do we try to "shoo" him
+back, or catch him. He prances along, just out of reach, but
+tantalizingly close; when we get aboard our car, we know he is safe in
+some corner gazing sadly after us, and that no danger can drive him home
+until we reappear.
+
+Both Thomas and Pompanita take a deep interest in all household affairs,
+although in this respect they do not begin to show the curiosity of the
+Pretty Lady. Never a piece of furniture was changed in he house that she
+did not immediately notice, the first time she came into the room
+afterward; and she invariably jumped up on the article and thoroughly
+investigated affairs before settling down again. Every parcel that came
+in must be examined, and afterward she must lie on the paper or inside
+the box that it came in, always doing this with great solemnity and
+gazing earnestly out of her large, intelligent dark eyes. Toward the
+close of her life she was greatly troubled at any unusual stir in the
+household. She liked to have company, but nothing disturbed her more
+than to have a man working in the cellar, putting in coal, cutting wood,
+or doing such work. She used then to follow us uneasily about and look
+earnestly up into our faces, as if to say:--
+
+"Girls, this is not right. Everything is all upset here and 'a' the
+world's gang agley.' Why don't you fix it?"
+
+She was the politest creature, too. That was the reason of her name. In
+her youth she was christened "Pansy"; then "Cleopatra," "Susan," "Lady
+Jane Grey" and the "Duchess." But her manners were so punctiliously
+perfect, and she was such a "pretty lady" always and everywhere;
+moreover she had such a habit of sitting with her hands folded politely
+across her gentle, lace-vandyked bosom that the only sobriquet that ever
+clung was the one that expressed herself the most perfectly. She was in
+every sense a "Pretty Lady." For years she ate with us at the table. Her
+chair was placed next to mine, and no matter where she was or how
+soundly she had been sleeping, when the dinner bell rang she was the
+first to get to her seat. Then she sat patiently until I fixed a dainty
+meal in a saucer and placed it in the chair beside her, when she ate it
+in the same well-bred way she did everything.
+
+Thomas Erastus hurt his foot one day. Rather he got it hurt during a
+matutinal combat at which he was forced, being the head of the family,
+to be present, although he is far above the midnight carousals of his
+kind. Thomas Erastus sometimes loves to consider himself an invalid.
+When his doting mistress was not looking, he managed to step off on that
+foot quite lively, especially if his mortal enemy, a disreputable black
+tramp, skulked across the yard. But let Thomas Erastus see a feminine
+eye gazing anxiously at him through an open window, and he immediately
+hobbled on three legs; then he would stop and sit down and assume so
+pathetic an expression of patient suffering that the mistress's heart
+would melt, and Thomas Erastus would find himself being borne into the
+house and placed on the softest sofa. Once she caught him down cellar.
+There is a window to which he has easy access, and where he can go in
+and out a hundred times a day. Evidently he had planned to do so at that
+moment. But seeing his fond mistress, he sat down on the cellar floor,
+and with his most fetching expression gazed wistfully back and forth
+from her to the window. And of course she picked him up carefully and
+put him on the window ledge. Thomas Erastus has all the innocent guile
+of a successful politician. He could manage things slicker than the
+political bosses, an' he would.
+
+One summer Thomas Erastus moved--an event of considerable importance in
+his placid existence. He had to travel a short distance on the
+steam-cars; and worse, he needs must endure the indignity of travelling
+that distance in a covered basket. But his dignity would not suffer him
+to do more than send forth one or two mournful wails of protest. After
+being kept in his new house for a couple of days, he was allowed to go
+out and become familiar with his surroundings--not without fear and
+trepidation on the part of his doting mistress that he might make a bold
+strike for his former home. But Thomas Erastus felt he had a mission to
+perform for his race. He would disprove that mistaken theory that a cat,
+no matter how kindly he is treated, cares more for places than for
+people. Consequently he would not dream of going back to his old haunts.
+
+No; he sat down in the front yard and took a long look at his
+surroundings, the neighboring lots, a field of grass, a waving
+corn-field. He had already convinced himself that the new house was
+home, because in it were all the old familiar things, and he had been
+allowed to investigate every bit of it and to realize what had happened.
+So after looking well about him he made a series of tours of
+investigation. First, he took a bee-line for the farthest end of the
+nearest vacant lot; then he chose the corn-field; then the beautiful
+broad grounds of the neighbor below; then across the street; but between
+each of these little journeys he took a bee-line back to his
+starting-point, sat down in front of the new house, and "got his
+bearings," just as evidently as though he could have said out loud,
+"This is my home and I mustn't lose it." In this way he convinced
+himself that where he lives is the centre of the universe, and that the
+world revolves around him. And he has since been as happy as a
+cricket,--yea, happier, for death and destruction await the unfortunate
+cricket where Thomas Erastus thrives.
+
+But don't say a cat can't or won't be moved. It's your own fault if he
+won't.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+CONCERNING OTHER PEOPLE'S CATS
+
+
+Every observing reader of Mrs. Harriet Prescott Spofford's stories knows
+that she is fond of cats and understands them. Her heroines usually
+have, among other feminine belongings and accessories, one or more cats.
+"Four great Persian cats haunted her every footstep," she says of Honor,
+in the "Composite Wife." "A sleepy, snowy creature like some
+half-animated ostrich plume; a satanic thing with fiery eyes that to Mr.
+Chipperley's perception were informed with the very bottomless flames;
+another like a golden fleece, caressing, half human; and a little
+mouse-colored imp whose bounds and springs and feathery tail-lashings
+not only did infinite damage among the Venetian and Dresden
+knick-knackerie, but among Mr. Chipperley's nerves."
+
+In her beautiful, old-fashioned home at Newburyport, Mass., she has two
+beloved cats. But I will not attempt to improve on her own account of
+them:--
+
+"As for my own cats,--their name has been legion, although a few remain
+preeminent. There was Miss Spot who came to us already named, preferring
+our domicile to the neighboring one she had. Her only son was so black
+that he was known as Ink Spot, but her only daughter was so altogether
+ideal and black, too, that she was known as Beauty Spot. Beauty Spot led
+a sorrowful life, and was fortunately born clothed in black or her
+mourning would have been expensive, as she was always in a bereaved
+condition, her drowned offspring making a shoal in the Merrimac,
+although she had always plenty left. She solaced herself with music. She
+would never sit in any one's lap but mine, and in mine only when I sang;
+and then only when I sang 'The Last Rose of Summer.' This is really
+true. But she would spring into my husband's lap if he whistled. She
+would leave her sleep reluctantly, start a little way, and retreat,
+start and retreat again, and then give one bound and light on his knee
+or his arm and reach up one paw and push it repeatedly across his mouth
+like one playing the jew's-harp; I suppose to get at the sound. She
+always went to walk with us and followed us wherever we went about the
+island.
+
+"Lucifer and Phosphor have been our cats for the last ten years:
+Lucifer, entirely black, Phosphor, as yellow as saffron, a real golden
+fleece. My sister lived in town and going away for the summer left her
+cat in a neighbor's care, and the neighbor moved away meanwhile and left
+the cat to shift for herself. She went down to the apothecary's, two
+blocks away or more. There she had a family of kittens, but apparently
+came up to reconnoitre, for on my sister's return, she appeared with one
+kitten and laid it down at Kate's feet; ran off, and in time came with
+another which she left also, and so on until she had brought up the
+whole household. Lucifer was one of them.
+
+"He was as black as an imp and as mischievous as one. His bounds have
+always been tremendous: from the floor to the high mantel, or to the top
+of a tall buffet close under the ceiling. And these bounds of his,
+together with a way he has of gazing into space with his soulful and
+enormous yellow eyes, have led to a thousand tales as to his nightly
+journeyings among the stars; hurting his foot slumping through the
+nebula in Andromeda; getting his supper at a place in the milky way,
+hunting all night with Orion, and having awful fights with Sirius. He
+got his throat cut by alighting on the North Pole one night, coming down
+from the stars. The reason he slumps through the nebula is on account of
+his big feet; he has six toes (like the foot in George Augustus Sala's
+drawing) and when he walks on the top of the piazza you would think it
+was a burglar.
+
+"Lucifer's Mephistophelian aspect is increased not only by those feet,
+but by an arrow-pointed tail. He sucks his tail,--alas, and alas! In
+vain have we peppered it, and pepper-sauced it, and dipped it in
+Worcestershire sauce and in aloes, and done it up in curl papers, and
+glued on it the fingers of old gloves. At last we gave it up in despair,
+and I took him and put his tail in his mouth and told him to take his
+pleasure,--and that is the reason, I suppose, that he attaches himself
+particularly to me. He is very near-sighted with those magnificent orbs,
+for he will jump into any one's lap, who wears a black gown, but jump
+down instantly, and when he finds my lap curl down for a brief season.
+But he is not much of a lap-loving cat. He puts up his nose and smells
+my face all over in what he means for a caress, and is off. He is not a
+large eater, although he has been known to help himself to a whole steak
+at the table, being alone in the dining room; and when poultry are in
+the larder he is insistent till satisfied. But he wants his breakfast
+early. If the second girl, whose charge he is, does not rise in season,
+he mounts two flights of stairs and seats himself on her chest until she
+does rise. Then if she does not wait on him at once, he goes into the
+drawing-room, and springs to the top of the upright piano, and
+deliberately knocks off the bric-a-brac, particularly loving to
+encounter and floor a brass dragon candlestick. Then he springs to the
+mantel-shelf if he has not been seized and appeased, and repeats
+operations, and has even carried his work of destruction around the room
+to the top of a low bookcase and has proved himself altogether the wrong
+sort of person in a china-shop.
+
+"However, it is conceded in the family that Phosphor is not a cat
+merely: he is a person, and Lucifer is a spirit. Lucifer seldom purrs--I
+wonder if that is a characteristic of black cats?" [No; my black cats
+fairly roar.] "A little thread of sound, and only now and then, when
+very happy and loving, a rich, full strain. But Phosphor purrs like a
+windmill, like an electric car, like a tea-kettle, like a whole boiled
+dinner. When Phosphor came, Lucifer, six weeks her senior (Phosphor's
+excellencies always incline one to say 'she' of him), thought the little
+live yellow ball was made only for him to play with, and he cuffed and
+tossed him around for all he was worth, licked him all over twenty times
+a day, and slept with his arms about him. During those early years
+Phosphor never washed himself, Lucifer took such care of him, and they
+were a lovely sight in each other's arms asleep. But of late years a
+coolness has intervened, and now they never speak as they pass by. They
+sometimes go fishing together, Lucifer walking off majestically alone,
+always dark, mysterious, reticent, intent on his own affairs, making you
+feel that he has a sort of lofty contempt for yours. Sometimes, the mice
+depositing a dead fish in the crannies of the rocks, Lucifer appears
+with it in the twilight, gleaming silver-white in his jaws, and the
+great eyes gleaming like fire-balls above it. Phosphor is, however, a
+mighty hunter: mice, rats by the score, chipmunks,--all is game that
+comes to his net. He has cleaned out whole colonies of catbirds (for
+their insolence), and eaten every golden robin on the island.
+
+"It used to be very pretty to see them, when they were little, as El
+Mahdi, the peacock, spread his great tail, dart and spring upon it, and
+go whirling round with it as El Mahdi, fairly frantic with the little
+demons that had hold of him, went skipping and springing round and
+round. But although so fierce a fighter, so inhospitable to every other
+cat, Phosphor is the most affectionate little soul. He is still very
+playful, though so large, and last summer to see him bounding on the
+grass, playing with his tail, turning somersaults all by himself, was
+quite worth while. When we first happened to go away in his early years
+he wouldn't speak to us when we came back, he felt so neglected. I went
+away for five months once, before Lucifer was more than a year old. He
+got into no one's lap while I was gone, but the moment I sat down on my
+return, he jumped into mine, saluted me, and curled himself down for a
+nap, showing the plainest recognition. Now when one comes back, Phosphor
+is wild with joy--always in a well-bred way. He will get into your arms
+and on your shoulder and rub his face around, and before you know it his
+little mouth is in the middle of your mouth as much like a kiss as
+anything can be. Perhaps it isn't so well bred, but his motions are so
+quick and perfect it seems so. When you let him in he curls into heaps
+of joy, and fairly stands on his head sometimes. He is the most
+responsive creature, always ready for a caress, and his wild, great
+amber eyes beam love, if ever love had manifestation. His beauty is
+really extraordinary; his tail a real wonder. Lucifer, I grieve to say,
+looks very moth-eaten. Phosphor wore a bell for a short time once--a
+little Inch-Cape Rock bell--but he left it to toll all winter in a tall
+tree near the drawing-room window.
+
+"A charm of cats is that they seem to live in a world of their own, just
+as much as if it were a real dimension of space; and speaking of a
+fourth dimension, I am living in the expectation that the new
+discoveries in the matter of radiant energy will presently be revealing
+to all our senses the fact that there is no death.
+
+"We had some barn kittens once that lived in the hen-house, ate with the
+hens, and quarrelled with them for any tidbit. They curled up in the egg
+boxes and didn't move when the hens came to lay, and evidently had no
+idea that they were not hens.
+
+"Oh, there is no end to the cat situation. It began with the old fellow
+who put his hand under the cat to lift her up, and she arched her back
+higher and higher until he found it was the serpent Asgard, and it won't
+end with you and me. I don't know but she _is_ the serpent Asgard.
+I don't know if you have hypnotized or magnetized me, but I am writing
+as if I had known you intimately all my life, and feel as though I had.
+It is the freemasonry of cats. I always said they were possessed of
+spirits, and they use white magic to bring their friends together."
+
+Mrs. Spofford's "barn kittens" bring to mind an incident related by Mrs.
+Wood, the beautiful wife of Professor C.G. Wood, of the Harvard Medical
+School. At their summer place on Buzzard's Bay she has fifteen cats,
+mostly Angoras, Persians, and coons, with several dogs. These cats
+follow her all about the place in a regular troop, and a very handsome
+troop they are, with their waving, plumy tails tipped gracefully over at
+the ends as if saluting their superior officer. Among the dogs is a
+spaniel named Gyp that is particularly friendly with the cats. There are
+plenty of hens on the farm, and one spring a couple of bantams were
+added to the stock. The cats immediately took a great fancy to these
+diminutive bipeds, and watched them with the greatest interest. Finally
+the little hen had a flock of chickens. As the weather was still cold,
+the farmer put them upstairs in one of the barns, and every day Gyp
+would take seven or eight of those cats up there to see the fluffy
+little things. Dog and cats would seat themselves around the bantam and
+her brood and watch them by the hour, never offering to touch the
+chickens except when the little things were tired and went for a nap
+under their mother's wings; and then some cat--first one and then
+another--would softly poke its paw under the hen and stir up the family,
+making them all run out in consternation, and keeping things lively once
+more. The cats didn't dream of catching the chickens, only wanting,
+evidently, that they should emulate Joey and keep moving on.
+
+A writer in the _London Spectator_ tells of a favorite bantam hen
+with which the house cat has long been accustomed to play. This bantam
+has increased and multiplied, and keeps her family in a "coop" on the
+ground,--into which rats easily enter. At bedtime, however, pussy takes
+up her residence there, and bantam, the brood of chickens, and pussy
+sleep in happy harmony nightly. If any rats arrive, their experience
+must be sad and sharp. Another writer in the same number tells of a cat
+in Huddersfield, England, belonging to Canon Beardsley, who helps
+himself to a reel of cotton from the work-basket, takes it on the floor,
+and plays with it as long as he likes, and then jumps up and puts the
+reel back in its place again; just as our Bobinette used to get his
+tape-measure, although the latter never was known to put it away.
+
+Miss Sarah Orne Jewett is a cat-lover, too, and the dear old
+countrywomen "down in Maine," with whom one gets acquainted through her
+books, usually keep a cat also. Says she:--
+
+"I look back over so long a line of family cats, from a certain poor
+Spotty who died an awful death in a fit on the flagstones under the
+library window when I was less than five years old, to a lawless,
+fluffy, yellow and white coon cat now in my possession, that I find it
+hard to single out the most interesting pussy of all. I shall have to
+speak of two cats at least, one being the enemy and the other the friend
+of my dog Joe. Joe and I grew up together and were fond companions,
+until he died of far too early old age and left me to take my country
+walks alone.
+
+"Polly, the enemy, was the best mouser of all: quite the best business
+cat we ever had, with an astonishing intellect and a shrewd way of
+gaining her ends. She caught birds and mice as if she foraged for our
+whole family: she had an air of responsibility and a certain impatience
+of interruption and interference such as I have never seen in any other
+cat, and a scornful way of sitting before a person with fierce eyes and
+a quick, ominous twitching of her tail. She seemed to be measuring one's
+incompetence as a mouse-catcher in these moments, or to be saying to
+herself, 'What a clumsy, stupid person; how little she knows, and how I
+should like to scratch her and hear her squeak.' I sometimes felt as if
+I were a larger sort of helpless mouse in these moments, but sometimes
+Polly would be more friendly, and even jump into our laps, when it was a
+pleasure to pat her hard little head with its exquisitely soft, dark
+tortoise-shell fur. No matter if she almost always turned and caught the
+caressing hand with teeth and claws, when she was tired of its touch,
+you would always be ready to pat her next time; there was such a
+fascination about her that any attention on her part gave a thrill of
+pride and pleasure. Every guest and stranger admired her and tried to
+win her favor: while we of the household hid our wounds and delighted in
+her cleverness and beauty.
+
+"Polly was but a small cat to have a mind. She looked quite round and
+kittenish as she sat before the fire in a rare moment of leisure, with
+her black paws tucked under her white breast and her sleek back looking
+as if it caught flickers of firelight in some yellow streaks among the
+shiny black fur. But when she walked abroad she stretched out long and
+thin like a little tiger, and held her head high to look over the grass
+as if she were threading the jungle. She lashed her tail to and fro, and
+one turned out of her way instantly. You opened a door for her if she
+crossed the room and gave you a look. She made you know what she meant
+as if she had the gift of speech: at most inconvenient moments you would
+go out through the house to find her a bit of fish or to open the cellar
+door. You recognized her right to appear at night on your bed with one
+of her long-suffering kittens, which she had brought in the rain, out of
+a cellar window and up a lofty ladder, over the wet, steep roofs and
+down through a scuttle into the garret, and still down into warm
+shelter. Here she would leave it and with one or two loud, admonishing
+purrs would scurry away upon some errand that must have been like one of
+the border frays of old.
+
+"She used to treat Joe, the dog, with sad cruelty, giving him a sharp
+blow on his honest nose that made him meekly stand back and see her add
+his supper to her own. A child visitor once rightly complained that
+Polly had pins in her toes, and nobody knew this better than poor Joe.
+At last, in despair, he sought revenge. I was writing at my desk one
+day, when he suddenly appeared, grinning in a funny way he had, and
+wagging his tail, until he enticed me out to the kitchen. There I found
+Polly, who had an air of calling everything in the house her own. She
+was on the cook's table, gobbling away at some chickens which were being
+made ready for the oven and had been left unguarded. I caught her and
+cuffed her, and she fled through the garden door, for once tamed and
+vanquished, though usually she was so quick that nobody could administer
+justice upon these depredations of a well-fed cat. Then I turned and saw
+poor old Joe dancing about the kitchen in perfect delight. He had been
+afraid to touch Polly himself, but he knew the difference between right
+and wrong, and had called me to see what a wicked cat she was, and to
+give him the joy of looking on at the flogging.
+
+"It was the same dog who used sometimes to be found under a table where
+his master had sent him for punishment in his young days of lawless
+puppy-hood for chasing the neighbor's chickens. These faults had long
+been overcome, but sometimes, in later years, Joe's conscience would
+trouble him, we never knew why, and he would go under the table of his
+own accord, and look repentant and crestfallen until some forgiving and
+sympathetic friend would think he had suffered enough and bid him come
+out to be patted and consoled.
+
+"After such a house-mate as Polly, Joe had great amends in our next cat,
+yellow Danny, the most amiable and friendly pussy that ever walked on
+four paws. He took Danny to his heart at once: they used to lie in the
+sun together with Danny's head on the dog's big paws, and I sometimes
+used to meet them walking as coy as lovers, side by side, up one of the
+garden walks. When I could not help laughing at their sentimental and
+conscious air, they would turn aside into the bushes for shelter. They
+respected each other's suppers, and ate together on the kitchen hearth,
+and took great comfort in close companionship. Danny always answered if
+you spoke to him, but he made no sound while always opening his mouth
+wide to mew whenever he had anything to say, and looking up into your
+face with all his heart expressed. These affectations of speech were
+most amusing, especially in so large a person as yellow Danny. He was
+much beloved by me and by all his family, especially poor Joe, who must
+sometimes have had the worst of dreams about old Polly, and her sharp,
+unsparing claws."
+
+Miss Mary E. Wilkins is also a great admirer of cats. "I adore cats,"
+she says. "I don't love them as well as dogs, because my own nature is
+more after the lines of a dog's; but I adore them. No matter how tired
+or wretched I am, a pussy-cat sitting in a doorway can divert my mind.
+Cats love one so much: more than they will allow; but they have so much
+wisdom they keep it to themselves."
+
+Miss Wilkins's "Augustus" was moved with her from Brattleboro, Vt.,
+after her father's death and when she went to Randolph, Mass., to live.
+He had been the pet of the family for a long time, but he came to an
+untimely end.
+
+"I hope," says Miss Wilkins, "people's unintentional cruelty will not be
+remembered against them." Since living in Randolph she has had two
+lovely yellow and white cats, "Punch and Judy." The latter was shot by a
+neighbor, but Punch, the right-hand cat with the angelic expression,
+still survives.
+
+"I am quite sure," says his mistress, "he loves me better than anybody
+else, although he is so very close about it. Punch Wilkins has one
+accomplishment. He can open a door with an old-fashioned latch: but he
+cannot shut it."
+
+Louise Imogen Guiney is famous for her love and good comradeship with
+dogs, especially her setters and St. Bernards, but she is too thoroughly
+a poet not to be captivated by the grace and beauty of a cat.
+
+"I love the unsubmissive race," she says, "and have had much edification
+out of the charming friendships between our St. Bernards and our cats.
+Annie Clarke [the actress] once gave me two exquisite Angoras, little
+persons of character equal to their looks; but they died young and we
+have not since had the heart to replace them. I once had another coon, a
+small, spry, gray fellow named Scot, the tamest and most endearing of
+pets, always on your shoulder and a' that, who suddenly, on no
+provocation whatever, turned wild, lived for a year or more in the woods
+next our garden, hunting and fishing, although ceaselessly chased, and
+called, and implored to revisit his afflicted family. He associated
+sometimes with the neighbor's cat, but never, never more with humanity,
+until finally we found his pathetic little frozen body one Christmas
+near the barn. Do you remember Arnold's Scholar Gypsy? Our Scot was his
+feline equivalent.... Have you counted in Prosper Merimée among the
+confirmed lovers of cats? I remember a delightful little paragraph out
+of one of his letters about _un vieux chat noir, parfaitement laid,
+mais plein d'ésprit et de discrétion. Seulement il n'a eu que des gens
+vulgaires et manque d'usage._"
+
+Mrs. A.D.T. Whitney, who has written so many helpful stories for girls,
+is another lover of cats. Cats do not lie curled up on cushions
+everywhere in her books, as they do in Mrs. Spofford's. But in "Zerub
+Throop's Experiment" there is an amusing cat story, which, she declares,
+got so much mixed up with a ghost story that nobody ever knew which was
+which. And the incident is true in every particular, except the finding
+of a will or codicil, or something at the end, which is attached for
+purposes of fiction.
+
+A great deal has been written about the New York _Sun's_ famous
+cats. At my request, Mr. Dana furnished the following description of the
+interesting _Sun_ family. I can only vouch for its veracity by
+quoting the famous phrase, "If you see it in the _Sun_, it is so."
+
+"_Sun_ office cat (_Felis Domestica; var. Journalistica_).
+This is a variation of the common domestic cat, of which but one family
+is known to science. The habitat of the species is in Newspaper Row; its
+lair is in the _Sun_ building, its habits are nocturnal, and it
+feeds on discarded copy and anything else of a pseudo-literary nature
+upon which it can pounce. In dull times it can subsist upon a meagre
+diet of telegraphic brevities, police court paragraphs, and city
+jottings; but when the universe is agog with news, it will exhibit the
+insatiable appetite which is its chief distinguishing mark of difference
+from the common _felis domestica_. A single member of this family
+has been known, on a 'rush' night, to devour three and a half columns of
+presidential possibilities, seven columns of general politics, pretty
+much all but the head of a large and able-bodied railroad accident, and
+a full page of miscellaneous news, and then claw the nether garments of
+the managing editor, and call attention to an appetite still in good
+working order.
+
+"The progenitrix of the family arrived in the _Sun_ office many
+years ago, and installed herself in a comfortable corner, and within a
+few short months she had noticeably raised the literary tone of the
+paper, as well as a large and vociferous family of kittens. These
+kittens were weaned on reports from country correspondents, and the
+sight of the six children and the mother cat sitting in a semicircle was
+one which attracted visitors from all parts of the nation. Just before
+her death--immediately before, in fact--the mother cat developed a
+literary taste of her own and drank the contents of an ink-bottle. She
+was buried with literary honors, and one of her progeny was advanced to
+the duties and honors of office cat. From this time the line came down,
+each cat taking the 'laurel greener from the brows of him that uttered
+nothing base,' upon the death of his predecessor. There is but one blot
+upon the escutcheon of the family, put there by a recent incumbent who
+developed a mania at once cannibalistic and infanticidal, and set about
+making a free lunch of her offspring, in direct violation of the Raines
+law and the maternal instinct. She died of an overdose of chloroform,
+and her place was taken by one of the rescued kittens.
+
+"It is the son of this kitten who is the present proud incumbent of the
+office. Grown to cat-hood, he is a creditable specimen of his family,
+with beryl eyes, beautiful striped fur, showing fine mottlings of
+mucilage and ink, a graceful and aspiring tail, an appetite for copy
+unsurpassed in the annals of his race, and a power and perseverance in
+vocality, chiefly exercised in the small hours of the morning, that,
+together with the appetite referred to, have earned for him the name of
+the Mutilator. The picture herewith given was taken when the animal was
+a year and a half old. Up to the age of one year the Mutilator made its
+lair in the inside office with the Snake Editor, until a tragic ending
+came to their friendship. During a fortnight's absence of the office cat
+upon important business, the Snake Editor cultivated the friendship of
+three cockroaches, whom he debauched by teaching them to drink beer
+spilled upon his desk for that purpose. On the night of the cat's
+return, the three bugs had become disgracefully intoxicated, and were
+reeling around the desk beating time with their legs to a rollicking
+catch sung by the Snake Editor. Before the muddled insects could crawl
+into a crack, the Mutilator was upon them, and had bolted every one.
+Then with a look of reproach at the Snake Editor, he drew three
+perpendicular red lines across that gentleman's features with his claws
+and departed in high scorn, nor could he ever thereafter be lured into
+the inner office where the serpent-sharp was laying for him with a space
+measure. Since that time he has lived in the room occupied by the
+reporters and news editors.
+
+"Many hundreds of stories, some of them slanderous have been told about
+the various _Sun_ office cats, but we have admitted here none of
+these false tales. The short sketch given here is beyond suspicion in
+all its details, as can be vouched for by many men of high position who
+ought to know better."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+CONCERNING STILL OTHER PEOPLE'S CATS
+
+
+The nearest approach to the real French Salon in America is said to be
+found in Mrs. Louise Chandler Moulton's Boston drawing-room. In former
+days, at her weekly Fridays, Sir Richard Coeur de Lion was always
+present, sitting on the square piano amidst a lot of other celebrities.
+The autographed photographs of Paderewski, John Drew, and distinguished
+litterateurs, however, used to lose nothing from the proximity of Mrs.
+Moulton's favorite maltese friend, who was on the most intimate terms
+with her for twelve years, and hobnobbed familiarly with most of the
+lions of one sort or another who have visited Boston and who invariably
+find their way into this room. If there were flowers on the piano,
+Richard's nose hovered near them in a perfect abandon of delight.
+Indeed, his fondness for flowers was a source of constant contention
+between him and his mistress, who feared lest he knock the souvenirs of
+foreign countries to the floor in his eagerness to climb wherever
+flowers were put. He was as dainty about his eating as in his taste for
+the beautiful, scorning beef and mutton as fit only for coarser mortals,
+and choosing, like any _gourmet_, to eat only the breast of
+chicken, or certain portions of fish or lobster. He was not proof
+against the flavor of liver, at any time; but recognized in it his one
+weakness,--as the delicate lady may who takes snuff or chews gum on the
+sly. When Mrs. Moulton first had him, she had also a little dog, and the
+two, as usual when a kitten is brought up with a dog, became the
+greatest of friends.
+
+That Richard was a close observer was proved by the way he used to wag
+his tail, in the same fashion and apparently for the same reasons as the
+dog. This went on for several years, but when the dog died, the fashion
+of wagging tails went out, so far as Richard Coeur de Lion was
+concerned.
+
+He had a fashion of getting up on mantels, the tops of bookcases, or on
+shelves; and his mistress, fearing demolition of her household Lares and
+Penates, insisted on his getting down, whereupon Richard would look
+reproachfully at her, apparently resenting this treatment for days
+afterward, refusing to come near her and edging off if she tried to make
+up with him.
+
+When Richard was getting old, a black cat came to Mrs. Moulton, who kept
+him "for luck," and named him the Black Prince. The older cat was always
+jealous of the newcomer, and treated him with lofty scorn. When he
+caught Mrs. Moulton petting the Black Prince, who is a very affectionate
+fellow Richard fiercely resented it and sometimes refused to have
+anything to do with her for days afterward, but finally came around and
+made up in shamefaced fashion.
+
+Mrs. Moulton goes to London usually in the summer, leaving the cats in
+the care of a faithful maid whom she has had for years. After she
+sailed, Richard used to come to her door for several mornings, and not
+being let in as usual, understood that his beloved mistress had left him
+again, whereupon he kept up a prolonged wailing for some time. He was
+correspondingly glad to see her on her return in October.
+
+Mrs. Moulton tells the following remarkable cat story:--
+
+"My mother had a cat that lived to be twenty-five years old. He was
+faithful and fond, and a great pet in the family, of course. About two
+years before his death, a new kitten was added to the family. This
+kitten, named Jim, immediately conceived the greatest affection for old
+Jack, and as the old fellow's senses of sight and smell failed so that
+he could not go hunting himself, Jim used to do it for both. Every day
+he brought Jack mice and squirrels and other game as long as he lived.
+Then, too, he used to wash Jack, lapping him all over as a mother cat
+does her kitten. He did this, too, as long as he lived. The feebler old
+Jack grew the more Jim did for him, and when Jack finally died of old
+age, Jim was inconsolable."
+
+Twenty-five years might certainly be termed a ripe old age for a cat,
+their average life extending only to ten or twelve years. But I have
+heard of one who seems to have attained even greater age. The mother of
+Jane Andrews, the writer on educational and juvenile subjects, had one
+who lived with them twenty-four years. He had peculiar markings and
+certain ways of his own about the house quite different from other cats.
+He disappeared one day when he was twenty-four, and was mourned as dead.
+But one day, some six or seven years later, an old cat came to their
+door and asked to be let in. He had the same markings, and on being let
+in, went directly to his favorite sleeping-places and lay down. He
+seemed perfectly familiar with the whole place, and went on with his
+life from that time, just as though he had never been away, showing all
+his old peculiarities. When he finally died, he must have been
+thirty-three years old.
+
+Although in other days a great many noted men have been devoted to cats,
+I do not find that our men of letters to-day know so much about cats.
+Mr. William Dean Howells says: "I never had a cat, pet or otherwise. I
+like them, but know nothing of them." Judge Robert Grant says, "My
+feelings toward cats are kindly and considerate, but not ardent."
+
+Thomas Bailey Aldrich says, "The only cat I ever had any experience with
+was the one I translated from the French of Émile de La Bédolliérre many
+years ago for the entertainment of my children." [Footnote: "Mother
+Michel's Cat."] Brander Matthews loves them not. George W. Cable answers,
+when asked if he loves the "harmless, necessary cat," by the Yankee method,
+and says, "If you had three or four acres of beautiful woods in which were
+little red squirrels and chipmunks and fifty or more kinds of nesting
+birds, and every abutting neighbor kept a cat, and none of them kept their
+cat out of those woods--_would you like cats?_" which is, indeed,
+something of a poser.
+
+Colonel Thomas W. Higginson, however, confesses to a great fondness for
+cats, although he has had no remarkable cats of his own. He tells a
+story told him by an old sailor at Pigeon Cove, Mass., of a cat which
+he, the sailor, tried in vain to get rid of. After trying several
+methods he finally put the cat in a bag, walked a mile to Lane's Cove,
+tied the cat to a big stone with a firm sailor's knot, took it out in a
+dory some distance from the shore, and dropped the cat overboard. Then
+he went back home to find the cat purring on the doorstep.
+
+Those who are familiar with Charles Dudley Warner's "My Summer in a
+Garden" will not need to be reminded of Calvin and his interesting
+traits. Mr. Warner says: "I never had but one cat, and he was rather a
+friend and companion than a cat. When he departed this life I did not
+care to do as many men do when their partners die, take a 'second.'" The
+sketch of him in that delightful book is vouched for as correct.
+
+Mr. Edmund Clarence Stedman, too, is a genuine admirer of cats and
+evidently knows how to appreciate them at their true value. At his home
+near New York, he and Mrs. Stedman have one who rejoices in the name
+"Babylon," having originated in Babylon, Long Island. He is a fine large
+maltese, and attracted a great deal of attention at the New York Cat
+Show in 1895. "We look upon him as an important member of our family,"
+says Mrs. Stedman, "and think he knows as much as any of us. He despises
+our two other cats, but he is very fond of human beings and makes
+friends readily with strangers. He is always present at the family
+dinner table at meal-time and expects to have his share handed to him
+carefully. He has a favorite corner in the study and has superintended a
+great deal of literary work." Mrs. Stedman's long-haired, blue Kelpie
+took a prize in the show of '95.
+
+Gail Hamilton was naturally a lover of cats, although in her crowded
+life there was not much time to devote to them. In the last year of her
+noble life she wrote to a friend as follows: "My two hands were eager to
+lighten the burden-bearing of a burdened world--but the brush fell from
+my hand. Now I can only sit in a nook of November sunshine, playing with
+two little black and white kittens. Well, I never before had time to
+play with kittens as much as I wished, and when I come outdoors and see
+them bounding toward me in long, light leaps, I am glad that they leap
+toward me and not away from me, little soft, fierce sparks of infinite
+energy holding a mystery of their own as inscrutable as life. And I
+remember that with all our high art, the common daily sun searches a man
+for one revealing moment, and makes a truer portrait than the most
+laborious painter. The divine face of our Saviour, reflected in the pure
+and noble traits of humanity, will not fail from the earth because my
+hand has failed in cunning."
+
+One would expect a poet of Ella Wheeler Wilcox's temperament to be
+passionately fond of cats, just as she is. One would expect, too, that
+only the most beautiful and luxurious of Persians and Angoras would
+satisfy her demand for a pet. This is also justifiable, as she has
+several magnificent cats, about whom she has published a number of
+interesting stories. Her Madame Ref is quite a noted cat, but Mrs.
+Wilcox's favorite and the handsomest of all is named Banjo, a gorgeous
+chinchilla and white Angora, with a silken coat that almost touches the
+floor and a ruff, or "lord mayor's chain," that is a finger wide. His
+father was Ajax, his mother was Madame Ref, and Mrs. Wilcox raised him.
+She has taught him many cunning tricks. He will sit up like a bear, and
+when his mistress says, "Hug me, Banjo," he puts both white paws around
+her neck and hugs her tight. Then she says, "Turn the other cheek," and
+he turns his furry chops for her to kiss. He also plays "dead," and
+rolls over at command. He, too, is fond of literary work, and
+superintends his mistress's writing from a drawer of her desk. Goody
+Two-eyes is another of Mrs. Wilcox's pets, and has one blue and one
+topaz eye.
+
+Who has not read Agnes Repplier's fascinating essays on "Agrippina" and
+"A Kitten"? I cannot quite believe she gives cats credit for the
+capacity for affection which they really possess, but her description of
+"Agrippina" is charming:--
+
+"Agrippina's beautifully ringed tail flapping across my copy distracts
+my attention and imperils the neatness of my penmanship. Even when she
+is disposed to be affable, turns the light of her countenance upon me,
+watches with attentive curiosity every stroke I make, and softly, with
+curved paw, pats my pen as it travels over the paper, even in these
+halcyon moments, though my self-love is flattered by her condescension,
+I am aware that I should work better and more rapidly if I denied myself
+this charming companionship. But, in truth, it is impossible for a lover
+of cats to banish these alert, gentle, and discriminating little
+friends, who give us just enough of their regard and complaisance to
+make us hunger for more. M. Fee, the naturalist, who has written so
+admirably about animals, and who understands, as only a Frenchman can
+understand, the delicate and subtle organization of a cat, frankly
+admits that the keynote of its character is independence. It dwells
+under our roofs, sleeps by our fire, endures our blandishments, and
+apparently enjoys our society, without for one moment forfeiting its
+sense of absolute freedom, without acknowledging any servile relation to
+the human creature who shelters it.
+
+"Rude and masterful souls resent this fine self-sufficiency in a
+domestic animal, and require that it shall have no will but theirs, no
+pleasure that does not emanate from them.
+
+"Yet there are people, less magisterial, perhaps, or less exacting, who
+believe that true friendship, even with an animal, may be built up on
+mutual esteem and independence; that to demand gratitude is to be
+unworthy of it; and that obedience is not essential to agreeable and
+healthy intercourse. A man who owns a dog is, in every sense of the
+word, its master: the term expresses accurately their mutual relations.
+But it is ridiculous when applied to the limited possession of a cat. I
+am certainly not Agrippina's mistress, and the assumption of authority
+on my part would be a mere empty dignity, like those swelling titles
+which afford such innocent delight to the Freemasons of our severe
+republic.
+
+"How many times have I rested tired eyes on her graceful little body,
+curled up in a ball and wrapped round with her tail like a parcel; or
+stretched out luxuriously on my bed, one paw coyly covering her face,
+the other curved gently inwards, as though clasping an invisible
+treasure. Asleep or awake, in rest or in motion, grave or gay, Agrippina
+is always beautiful; and it is better to be beautiful than to fetch and
+carry from the rising to the setting of the sun.
+
+"But when Agrippina has breakfasted and washed, and sits in the sunlight
+blinking at me with affectionate contempt, I feel soothed by her
+absolute and unqualified enjoyment. I know how full my day will be of
+things that I don't want particularly to do, and that are not
+particularly worth doing; but for her, time and the world hold only this
+brief moment of contentment. Slowly the eyes close, gently the little
+body is relaxed. Oh, you who strive to relieve your overwrought nerves
+and cultivate power through repose, watch the exquisite languor of a
+drowsy cat, and despair of imitating such perfect and restful grace.
+There is a gradual yielding of every muscle to the soft persuasiveness
+of slumber: the flexible frame is curved into tender lines, the head
+nestles lower, the paws are tucked out of sight: no convulsive throb or
+start betrays a rebellious alertness: only a faint quiver of unconscious
+satisfaction, a faint heaving of the tawny sides, a faint gleam of the
+half-shut yellow eyes, and Agrippina is asleep. I look at her for one
+wistful moment and then turn resolutely to my work. It were ignoble to
+wish myself in her place: and yet how charming to be able to settle down
+to a nap, _sans peur et sans reproche_, at ten o'clock in the
+morning."
+
+And again: "When I am told that Agrippina is disobedient, ungrateful,
+cold-hearted, perverse, stupid, treacherous, and cruel, I no longer
+strive to check the torrent of abuse. I know that Buffon said all this,
+and much more, about cats, and that people have gone on repeating it
+ever since, principally because these spirited little beasts have
+remained just what it pleased Providence to make them, have preserved
+their primitive freedom through centuries of effete and demoralizing
+civilization. Why, I wonder, should a great many good men and women
+cherish an unreasonable grudge against one animal because it does not
+chance to possess the precise qualities of another? 'My dog fetches my
+slippers for me every night,' said a friend, triumphantly, not long ago.
+'He puts them first to warm by the fire, and then brings them over to my
+chair, wagging his tail, and as proud as Punch. Would your cat do as
+much for you, I'd like to know?' Assuredly not. If I waited for
+Agrippina to fetch me shoes or slippers, I should have no other resource
+save to join as speedily as possible one of the barefooted religious
+orders of Italy. But after all, fetching slippers is not the whole duty
+of domestic pets.
+
+"As for curiosity, that vice which the Abbé Galiani held to be unknown
+to animals, but which the more astute Voltaire detected in every little
+dog that he saw peering out of the window of its master's coach, it is
+the ruling passion of the feline breast. A closet door left ajar, a box
+with half-closed lid, an open bureau drawer,--these are the objects that
+fill a cat with the liveliest interest and delight. Agrippina watches
+breathlessly the unfastening of a parcel, and tries to hasten matters by
+clutching actively at the string. When its contents are shown to her,
+she examines them gravely, and then, with a sigh of relief, settles down
+to repose. The slightest noise disturbs and irritates her until she
+discovers its cause. If she hears a footstep in the hall, she runs out
+to see whose it is, and, like certain troublesome little people I have
+known, she dearly loves to go to the front door every time the bell is
+rung. From my window she surveys the street with tranquil scrutiny, and
+if the boys are playing below, she follows their games with a steady,
+scornful stare, very different from the wistful eagerness of a friendly
+dog, quivering to join in the sport. Sometimes the boys catch sight of
+her, and shout up rudely at her window; and I can never sufficiently
+admire Agrippina's conduct upon these trying occasions, the well-bred
+composure with which she affects neither to see nor to hear them, nor to
+be aware that there are such objectionable creatures as children in the
+world. Sometimes, too, the terrier that lives next door comes out to sun
+himself in the street, and, beholding my cat sitting well out of reach,
+he dances madly up and down the pavement, barking with all his might,
+and rearing himself on his short legs, in a futile attempt to dislodge
+her. Then the spirit of evil enters Agrippina's little heart. The window
+is open and she creeps to the extreme edge of the stone sill, stretches
+herself at full length, peers down smilingly at the frenzied dog,
+dangles one paw enticingly in the air, and exerts herself with quiet
+malice to drive him to desperation. Her sense of humor is awakened by
+his frantic efforts and by her own absolute security; and not until he
+is spent with exertion, and lies panting and exhausted on the bricks,
+does she arch her graceful back, stretch her limbs lazily in the sun,
+and with one light bound spring from the window to my desk."
+
+And what more delightful word did ever Miss Repplier write than her
+description of a kitten? It, she says, "is the most irresistible
+comedian in the world. Its wide-open eyes gleam with wonder and mirth.
+It darts madly at nothing at all, and then, as though suddenly checked
+in the pursuit, prances sideways on its hind legs with ridiculous
+agility and zeal. It makes a vast pretence of climbing the rounds of a
+chair, and swings by the curtains like an acrobat. It scrambles up a
+table leg, and is seized with comic horror at finding itself full two
+feet from the floor. If you hasten to its rescue, it clutches you
+nervously, its little heart thumping against its furry sides, while its
+soft paws expand and contract with agitation and relief:--
+
+ "'And all their harmless claws disclose,
+ Like prickles of an early rose.'
+
+
+"Yet the instant it is back on the carpet it feigns to be suspicious of
+your interference, peers at you out of 'the tail o' its e'e,' and
+scampers for protection under the sofa, from which asylum it presently
+emerges with cautious, trailing steps as though encompassed by fearful
+dangers and alarms."
+
+Nobody can sympathize with her in the following description better than
+I, who for years was compelled by the insistence of my Pretty Lady to
+aid in the bringing up of infants:--
+
+"I own that when Agrippina brought her first-born son--aged two
+days--and established him in my bedroom closet, the plan struck me at
+the start as inconvenient. I had prepared another nursery for the little
+Claudius Nero, and I endeavored for a while to convince his mother that
+my arrangements were best. But Agrippina was inflexible. The closet
+suited her in every respect; and, with charming and irresistible
+flattery, she gave me to understand, in the mute language I knew so
+well, that she wished her baby boy to be under my immediate protection.
+
+"'I bring him to you because I trust you,' she said as plainly as looks
+can speak. 'Downstairs they handle him all the time, and it is not good
+for kittens to be handled. Here he is safe from harm, and here he shall
+remain,' After a few weak remonstrances, the futility of which I too
+clearly understood, her persistence carried the day. I removed my
+clothing from the closet, spread a shawl upon the floor, had the door
+taken from its hinges, and resigned myself, for the first time in my
+life, to the daily and hourly companionship of an infant.
+
+"I was amply rewarded. People who require the household cat to rear her
+offspring in some remote attic or dark corner of the cellar have no idea
+of all the diversion and pleasure that they lose. It is delightful to
+watch the little, blind, sprawling, feeble, helpless things develop
+swiftly into the grace and agility of kittenhood. It is delightful to
+see the mingled pride and anxiety of the mother, whose parental love
+increases with every hour of care, and who exhibits her young family as
+if they were infant Gracchi, the hope of all their race. During Nero's
+extreme youth, there were times when Agrippina wearied both of his
+companionship and of her own maternal duties. Once or twice she
+abandoned him at night for the greater luxury of my bed, where she slept
+tranquilly by my side, unmindful of the little wailing cries with which
+Nero lamented her desertion. Once or twice the heat of early summer
+tempted her to spend the evening on the porch roof which lay beneath my
+windows, and I have passed some anxious hours awaiting her return, and
+wondering what would happen if she never came back, and I were left to
+bring up the baby by hand.
+
+"But as the days sped on, and Nero grew rapidly in beauty and
+intelligence, Agrippina's affection for him knew no bounds. She could
+hardly bear to leave him even for a little while, and always came
+hurrying back to him with a loud, frightened mew, as if fearing he might
+have been stolen in her absence. At night she purred over him for hours,
+or made little gurgling noises expressive of ineffable content. She
+resented the careless curiosity of strangers, and was a trifle
+supercilious when the cook stole softly in to give vent to her fervent
+admiration. But from first to last she shared with me her pride and
+pleasure; and the joy in her beautiful eyes, as she raised them to mine,
+was frankly confiding and sympathetic. When the infant Claudius rolled
+for the first time over the ledge of the closet and lay sprawling on the
+bedroom floor, it would have been hard to say which of us was the more
+elated at his prowess."
+
+What became of these most interesting cats, is only hinted at; Miss
+Repplier's sincere grief at their loss is evident in the following:--
+
+"Every night they retired at the same time and slept upon the same
+cushion, curled up inextricably into one soft, furry ball. Many times I
+have knelt by their chair to bid them both good night; and always when I
+did so, Agrippina would lift her charming head, purr drowsily for a few
+seconds, and then nestle closer still to her first-born, with sighs of
+supreme satisfaction. The zenith of her life had been reached. Her cup
+of contentment was full.
+
+"It is a rude world, even for little cats, and evil chances lie in wait
+for the petted creatures we strive to shield from harm. Remembering the
+pangs of separation, the possibilities of unkindness or neglect, the
+troubles that hide in ambush on every unturned page, I am sometimes glad
+that the same cruel and selfish blow struck both mother and son, and
+that they lie together, safe from hurt or hazard, sleeping tranquilly
+and always, under the shadow of the friendly pines."
+
+Probably no modern cat has been more written about than Miss Mary L.
+Booth's Muff. There was a "Tippet," but he was early lost. Miss Booth,
+as the editor of _Harper's Bazar_, was the centre of a large circle
+of literary and musical people. Her Saturday evenings were to New York
+what Mrs. Moulton's Fridays are to Boston, the nearest approach to the
+French salon possible in America. At these Saturday evenings Muff always
+figured prominently, being dressed in a real lace collar (brought him
+from Yucatan by Madame la Plongeon, and elaborate and expensive enough
+for the most fastidious lady), and apparently enjoying the company of
+noted intellectual people as well as the best of them. And who knows, if
+he had spoken, what light he might have shed on what seemed to mere
+mortals as mysterious, abstruse, and occult problems? Perhaps, after
+all, he liked that "salon" because in reality he found so much to amuse
+him in the conversation; and perhaps he was, under that guise of
+friendly interest in noted scientists, reformers, poets, musicians, and
+litterateurs, only whispering to himself, "O Lord, what fools these
+mortals be!"
+
+"For when I play with my cat," says Montaigne, "how do I know whether
+she does not make a jest of me?"
+
+But Muff was a real nobleman among cats, and extraordinarily handsome.
+He was a great soft gray maltese with white paws and breast--mild,
+amiable, and uncommonly intelligent. He felt it his duty to help
+entertain Miss Booth's guests, always; and he more than once, at the
+beginning of a reception, came into the drawing-room with a mouse in his
+mouth as his offering to the occasion. Naturally enough "he caused the
+stampede," as Mrs. Spofford puts it, "that Mr. Gilbert forgot to put
+into 'Princess Ida' when her Amazons wild demonstrate their courage."
+
+As one of Miss Booth's intimate friends, Mrs. Spofford was much at her
+house and became early a devoted admirer of Muff's.
+
+"His latter days," she says, "were rendered miserable by a little silky,
+gray creature, an Angora named Vashti, who was a spark of the fire of
+the lower regions wrapped round in long silky fur, and who never let him
+alone one moment: who was full of tail-lashings and racings and leapings
+and fury, and of the most demonstrative love for her mistress. Once I
+made them collars with breastplates of tiny dangling bells, nine or ten;
+it excited them nearly to madness, and they flew up and down stairs like
+unchained lightning till the trinkets were taken off."
+
+In a house full of birds Muff never touched one, although he was an
+excellent mouser (who says cats have no conscience?). He was, although
+so socially inclined toward his mistress's guests, a timid person, and
+the wild back-yard cats filled him with terror.
+
+"But as one must see something of the world," continues Mrs. Spofford,
+"he used to jump from lintel to lintel of the windows of the block, if
+by chance his own were left open, and return when he pleased."
+
+Muff died soon after the death of Miss Booth. Vashti, who was very much
+admired by all her mistress's literary friends, was given to Miss Juliet
+Corson.
+
+Miss Edna Dean Proctor, the poet, is another admirer of fine cats. Her
+favorite, however, was the friend of her childhood called Beauty.
+
+"Beauty was my grandmother's cat," says Miss Proctor, "and the delight
+of my childhood. To this far-off day I remember her as distinctly as I
+do my aunt and cousins of that household, and even my dear grandmother
+herself. I know nothing of her ancestry and am not at all sure that she
+was royally bred, for she came, one chill night, a little wanderer to
+the door. But a shred of blue ribbon was clinging to her neck, and she
+was so pretty, and silky, and winsome that we children at once called
+her Beauty, and fancied she had strayed from some elegant home where she
+had been the pet of the household, lapping her milk from finest china
+and sleeping on a cushion of down. When we had warmed, and fed, and
+caressed her, we made her bed in a flannel-lined box among our dolls,
+and the next morning were up before the sun to see her, fearing her
+owners would appear and carry her away. But no one arrived to claim her,
+and she soon became an important member of the family, and grew
+handsomer, we thought, day by day. Her coat was gray with tiger
+markings, but paws and throat and nose were snowy white, and in spite of
+her excursions to barns and cellars her constant care kept them
+spotless--indeed, she was the very Venus of cats for daintiness and
+grace of pose and movement. To my grandmother her various attitudes had
+an undoubted meaning. If in a rainy day Beauty washed her face toward
+the west, her observant mistress would exclaim: 'See, kitty is washing
+her face to the west. It will clear.' Or, even when the sky was blue, if
+Beauty turned eastward for her toilet, the comment would be: 'Kitty is
+washing her face to the east. The wind must be getting "out" (from the
+sea), and a storm brewing.' And when in the dusk of autumn or winter
+evenings Beauty ran about the room, chasing her tail or frolicking with
+her kittens instead of sleeping quietly by the fire as was her wont, my
+grandmother would look up and say: 'Kitty is wild to-night. The wind
+will blow hard before morning.' If I sometimes asked how she knew these
+things, the reply would be, 'My mother told me when I was a little
+girl.' Now her mother, my great-grandmother, was a distinguished
+personage in my eyes, having been the daughter of Captain Jonathan
+Prescott who commanded a company under Sir William Pepperell at the
+siege of Louisburg and lost his life there; and I could not question the
+wisdom of colonial times. Indeed, to this hour I have a lingering belief
+that cats can foretell the weather.
+
+"And what a mouser she was! Before her time we often heard the rats and
+mice in the walls, but with her presence not one dared to peep, and
+cupboard and pantry were unmolested. Now and then she carried her forays
+to hedge and orchard, and I remember one sad summer twilight that saw
+her bring in a slender brown bird which my grandmother said was the
+cuckoo we had delighted to hear in the still mornings among the alders
+by the river. She was scolded and had no milk that night, and we never
+knew her to catch a bird again.
+
+"O to see her with her kittens! She always hid them in the haymows, and
+hunting and finding them brought us no end of excitement and pleasure.
+Twice a day, at least, she would come to the house to be fed, and then
+how we watched her returning steps, stealing cautiously along the path
+and waiting behind stack or door the better to observe her--for pussy
+knew perfectly well that we were eager to see her darlings, and enjoyed
+misleading and piquing us, we imagined, by taking devious ways. How well
+I recall that summer afternoon when, soft-footed and alone, I followed
+her to the floor of the barn. Just as she was about to spring to the mow
+she espied me, and, turning back, cunningly settled herself as if for a
+quiet nap in the sunny open door. Determined not to lose sight of her, I
+threw myself upon the fragrant hay; but in the stillness, the faint
+sighing of the wind, the far-off ripple of the river, the hazy outline
+of the hills, the wheeling swallows overhead, were blended at length in
+an indistinct dream, and I slept, oblivious of all. When I woke, pussy
+had disappeared, the sun was setting, the cows were coming from the
+pastures, and I could only return to the house discomfited. That
+particular family of kittens we never saw till a fortnight later, when
+the proud mother brought them in one by one, and laid them at my
+grandmother's feet.
+
+"What became of Beauty is as mysterious as the fate of the Dauphin. To
+our grief, she disappeared one November day, and we never saw her more.
+Sometimes we fancied she had been carried off by an admiring traveller:
+at others we tortured ourselves with the belief that the traditional
+wildcat of the north woods had devoured her. All we knew was that she
+had vanished; but when memory pictures that pleasant country home and
+the dear circle there, white-throated Beauty is always sleeping by the
+fire."
+
+Miss Fidelia Bridges, the artist, is another devoted cat lover, and at
+her home at Canaan, Ct., has had several interesting specimens.
+
+"Among my many generations of pet cats," says Miss Bridges, "one
+aristocratic maltese lady stands out in prominence before all the rest.
+She was a cat of great personal beauty and independence of character--a
+remarkable huntress, bringing in game almost as large as herself,
+holding her beautiful head aloft to keep the great wings of pigeons from
+trailing on the ground. She and her mother were fast friends from birth
+to death. When the young maltese had her first brood of kittens, her
+mother had also a family in another barrel in the cellar. When we went
+to see the just-arrived family, we found our Lady Malty's bed empty, and
+there in her mother's barrel were both families and both mothers. A
+delightful arrangement for the young mother, who could leave her
+children in the grandmother's care and enjoy her liberty when it pleased
+her to roam abroad. The young lady had an indomitable will, and when she
+decided to do a thing nothing would turn her aside. She found a favorite
+resting-place on a pile of blankets in a dark attic room. This being
+disapproved of by the elders, the door was kept carefully closed. She
+then found entrance through a stove-pipe hole, high up on the wall of an
+adjoining room. A cover was hung over the hole. She sprang up and
+knocked it off. Then, as a last resort, the hole was papered over like
+the wall-paper of the room. She looked, made a leap, and crashed through
+the paper with as merry an air as a circus-rider through his papered
+hoop. She had a habit of manoeuvring to be shut out of doors at
+bed-time, and then, when all was still, climbing up to my window by
+means of a porch over a door beneath it, to pass the night on my bed. In
+some alterations of the house, the porch was taken away. She looked with
+dismay for a moment at the destruction of her ladder, then calmly ran up
+the side of the house to my window, which she always after continued to
+do.
+
+"Next in importance, perhaps, is my present intimate companion, now ten
+years old and absolutely deaf, so that we communicate with signs. If I
+want to attract his attention I step on the floor: if to go to his
+dinner, I show him a certain blue plate: to call him in at night, I take
+a lantern outside the door, and the flash of light attracts his
+attention from a great distance. On one occasion he lived nine months
+alone in the house while I made a trip to Europe, absolutely refusing
+all the neighbors' invitations to enter any other house. A friend's
+gardener brought him his daily rations. As warm weather came, he spent
+his days in the fields, returning in the night for his food, so that at
+my return it was two or three days before he discovered that the house
+was open. The third evening he entered the open door, looked wildly
+about for a moment, but when I put my hand on him suddenly recognized me
+and overwhelmed me with affectionate caresses, and for two days and
+nights would not allow me out of his sight, unable to eat or sleep
+unless I was close at hand, and following me from room to room and chair
+to chair. And people say that cats have no affection!"
+
+At the Quincy House in Boston may be seen in the office an oil painting
+of an immense yellow cat. The first time I noticed the picture, I was
+proceeding into the dining room, and while waiting for dinner, was
+amused at seeing the original of the picture walk sedately in, all
+alone, and going to an empty table, seat himself with majestic grace in
+a chair. The waiter, seeing him, came forward and pushed up the chair as
+he would do for any other guest. The cat then waited patiently without
+putting his paws on the table, or violating any other law of table
+etiquette, until a plate of meat came, cut up to suit his taste (I did
+not hear him give his order), and then, placing his front paws on the
+edge of the table, he ate from his plate. When he had finished, he
+descended from his table and stalked out of the room with much dignity.
+He was always regular at his meals, and although he picked out a good
+seat, did not always sit at the same table. He was in appearance
+something like the famous orange cats of Venice, and attracted much
+attention, as might be expected, up to his death, at a ripe old age.
+
+Miss Frances Willard was a cat-lover, too, and had a beautiful cat which
+is known to all her friends.
+
+"Tootsie" went to Rest Cottage, the home of Frances Willard, when only a
+kitten, and there he lived, the pet of the household and its guests,
+until several years ago, when Miss Willard prepared to go abroad. Then
+she took Tootsie in her arms, carried him to the Drexel kennels in
+Chicago, and asked their owner, Mrs. Leland Norton, to admit him as a
+member of her large cat family, where he still lives. To his praise be
+it spoken, he has never forgotten his old friends at Rest Cottage. To
+this day, whenever any of them come to call upon him, he honors them
+with instant and hearty recognition. Miss Willard was sometimes forced
+to be separated from him more than a year at a time, but neither time
+nor change had any effect upon Tootsie. At the first sound of her voice
+he would spring to her side. He is a magnificent Angora, weighing
+twenty-four pounds, with the long, silky hair, the frill, or lord
+mayor's chain, the superb curling tail, and the large, full eyes of the
+thoroughbred. Then he has proved himself of aristocratic tendencies, has
+beautiful manners, is endowed with the human qualities of memory and
+discrimination, and is aesthetic in his tastes.
+
+Being the privileged character that he is, Tootsie always eats at the
+table with the family. He has his own chair and bib, and his manners are
+said to be exquisite.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+CONCERNING SOME HISTORIC CATS
+
+
+It is quite common for writers on the cat to say, "The story of
+Théophile Gautier's cats is too familiar to need comment." On the
+contrary, I do not believe it is familiar to the average reader, and
+that only those who know Gautier's "Ménagerie In-time" in the original,
+recall the particulars of his "White and Black Dynasties." For this
+reason they shall be repeated in these pages. I use Mrs. Cashel-Hoey's
+translation, partly in a selfish desire to save myself time and labor,
+but principally because she has preserved so successfully the
+sympathetic and appreciative spirit of M. Gautier himself.
+
+"Dynasties of cats, as numerous as those of the Egyptian kings,
+succeeded each other in my dwelling," says he. "One after another they
+were swept away by accident, by flight, by death. All were loved and
+regretted: but life is made up of oblivion, and the memory of cats dies
+out like the memory of men." After making mention of an old gray cat who
+always took his part against his parents, and used to bite Madame
+Gautier's legs when she presumed to reprove her son, he passes on at
+once to the romantic period, and the commemoration of Childebrand.
+
+"This name at once reveals a deep design of flouting Boileau, whom I did
+not like then, but have since become reconciled to. Has not Nicholas
+said:--
+
+ "'O le plaisant projet d'un poëte ignorant
+ Que de tant de héros va choisir Childebrant!'
+
+
+"Now I considered Childebrand a very fine name indeed, Merovingian,
+mediaeval, and Gothic, and vastly preferable to Agamemnon, Achilles,
+Ulysses, or any Greek name whatsoever. Romanticism was the fashion of my
+early days: I have no doubt the people of classical times called their
+cats Hector, Ajax, or Patroclus. Childebrand was a splendid cat of
+common kind, tawny and striped with black, like the hose of Saltabadil
+in 'Le Rois' Amuse.' With his large, green, almond-shaped eyes, and his
+symmetrical stripes, there was something tigerlike about him that
+pleased me. Childebrand had the honor of figuring in some verses that I
+wrote to 'flout' Boileau:--
+
+ "Puis je te décrirai ce tableau de Rembrandt
+ Que me fait tant plaisir: et mon chat Childebrand,
+ Sur mes genoux pose selon son habitude,
+ Levant sur moi la tête avec inquiétude,
+ Suivra les mouvements de mon doigt qui dans l'air
+ Esquisse mon récit pour le rendre plus clair.
+
+
+"Childebrand was brought in there to make a good rhyme for Rembrandt,
+the piece being a kind of confession of the romantic faith made to a
+friend, who was then as enthusiastic as myself about Victor Hugo, Sainte
+Beuve, and Alfred de Musset.... I come next to Madame Théophile, a 'red'
+cat, with a white breast, a pink nose, and blue eyes, whom I called by
+that name because we were on terms of the closest intimacy. She slept at
+the foot of my bed: she sat on the arm of my chair while I wrote: she
+came down into the garden and gravely walked about with me: she was
+present at all my meals, and frequently intercepted a choice morsel on
+its way from my plate to my mouth. One day a friend who was going away
+for a short time, brought me his parrot, to be taken care of during his
+absence. The bird, finding itself in a strange place, climbed up to the
+top of its perch by the aid of its beak, and rolled its eyes (as yellow
+as the nails in my arm-chair) in a rather frightened manner, also moving
+the white membranes that formed its eyelids. Madame Théophile had never
+seen a parrot, and she regarded the creature with manifest surprise.
+While remaining as motionless as a cat mummy from Egypt in its swathing
+bands, she fixed her eyes upon the bird with a look of profound
+meditation, summoning up all the notions of natural history that she had
+picked up in the yard, in the garden, and on the roof. The shadow of her
+thoughts passed over her changing eyes, and we could plainly read in
+them the conclusion to which her scrutiny led, 'Decidedly this is a
+green chicken.'
+
+"This result attained, the next proceeding of Madame Théophile was to
+jump off the table from which she had made her observations, and lay
+herself flat on the ground in a corner of the room, exactly in the
+attitude of the panther in Gérôme's picture watching the gazelles as
+they come down to drink at a lake. The parrot followed the movements of
+the cat with feverish anxiety: it ruffled its feathers, rattled its
+chain, lifted one of its feet and shook the claws, and rubbed its beak
+against the edge of its trough. Instinct told it that the cat was an
+enemy and meant mischief. The cat's eyes were now fixed upon the bird
+with fascinating intensity, and they said in perfectly intelligible
+language, which the poor parrot distinctly understood, 'This chicken
+ought to be good to eat, although it is green.' We watched the scene
+with great interest, ready to interfere at need. Madame Théophile was
+creeping nearer and nearer almost imperceptibly; her pink nose quivered,
+her eyes were half closed, her contractile claws moved in and out of
+their velvet sheaths, slight thrills of pleasure ran along her backbone
+at the idea of the meal she was about to make. Such novel and exotic
+food excited her appetite.
+
+"All in an instant her back took the shape of a bent bow, and with a
+vigorous and elastic bound she sprang upon the perch. The parrot, seeing
+its danger, said in a bass voice as grave and deep as M. Prudhomme's
+own, 'As tu déjeuné, Jacquot?'
+
+"This utterance so terrified the cat that she sprang backwards. The
+blare of a trumpet, the crash and smash of a pile of plates flung to the
+ground, a pistol shot fired off at her ear, could not have frightened
+her more thoroughly. All her ornithological ideas were overthrown.
+
+"'Et de quoi? Du rôti du roi?' continued the parrot.
+
+"Then might we, the observers, read in the physiognomy of Madame
+Théophile, 'This is not a bird, it is a gentleman; it talks.'
+
+ "'Quand j'ai bu du vin clairet,
+ Tout tourne, tout tourne an cabaret,'
+
+shrieked the parrot in a deafening voice, for it had perceived that its
+best means of defence was the terror aroused by its speech. The cat cast
+a glance at me which was full of questioning, but as my response was not
+satisfactory, she promptly hid herself under the bed, and from that
+refuge she could not be induced to stir during the whole of the day.
+People who are not accustomed to live with animals, and who, like
+Descartes, regard them as mere machines, will think that I lend
+unauthorized meanings to the acts of the 'volatile' and the 'quadruped,'
+but I have only faithfully translated their ideas into human language.
+The next day Madame Théophile plucked up courage and made another
+attempt, which was similarly repulsed. From that moment she gave it up,
+accepting the bird as a variety of man.
+
+"This dainty and charming animal was extremely fond of perfumes,
+especially of patchouli and the scent exhaled by India shawls. She was
+also very fond of music, and would listen, sitting on a pile of
+music-books, while the fair singers who came to try the critic's piano
+filled his room with melody. All the time Madame Théophile would evince
+great pleasure. She was, however, made nervous by certain notes, and at
+the high _la_ she would tap the singer's mouth with her paw. This
+was very amusing, and my visitors delighted in making the experiment. It
+never failed; the dilettante in fun was not to be deceived.
+
+"The rule of the 'White Dynasty' belonged to a later epoch, and was
+inaugurated in the person of a pretty little kitten as white as a powder
+puff, who came from Havana. On account of his spotless whiteness he was
+called Pierrot; but when he grew up this name was very properly
+magnified into Don-Pierrot-de-Navarre, which was far more majestic, and
+suggested 'grandee-ism.' [M. Théophile Gautier lays it down as a dogma
+that all animals with whom one is much taken up, and who are 'spoiled,'
+become delightfully good and amiable. Don-Pierrot-de-Navarre
+successfully supported his master's theory; perhaps he suggested it.]
+
+"He shared in the life of the household with the enjoyment of quiet
+fireside friendship that is characteristic of cats. He had his own place
+near the fire, and there he would sit with a convincing air of
+comprehension of all that was talked of and of interest in it; he
+followed the looks of the speakers, and uttered little sounds toward
+them as though he, too, had objections to make and opinions to give upon
+the literary subjects which were most frequently discussed. He was very
+fond of books, and when he found one open on a table he would lie down
+on it, turn over the edges of the leaves with his paws, and after a
+while fall asleep, for all the world as if he had been reading a
+fashionable novel. He was deeply interested in my writing, too; the
+moment I took up my pen he would jump upon the desk, and follow the
+movement of the penholder with the gravest attention, making a little
+movement with his head at the beginning of each line. Sometimes he would
+try to take the pen out of my hand.
+
+"Don-Pierrot-de-Navarre never went to bed until I had come in. He would
+wait for me just inside the outer door and rub himself to my legs, his
+back in an arch, with a glad and friendly purring. Then he would go on
+before me, preceding me with a page-like air, and I have no doubt, if I
+had asked him, he would have carried the candlestick. Having thus
+conducted me to my bedroom, he would wait quietly while I undressed, and
+then jump on my bed, take my neck between his paws, gently rub my nose
+with his own, and lick me with his small, pink tongue, as rough as a
+file, uttering all the time little inarticulate cries, which expressed
+as clearly as any words could do his perfect satisfaction at having me
+with him again. After these caresses he would perch himself on the back
+of the bedstead and sleep there, carefully balanced, like a bird on a
+branch. When I awoke, he would come down and lie beside me until I got
+up.
+
+"Pierrot was as strict as a concierge in his notions of the proper hour
+for all good people to return to their homes. He did not approve of
+anything later than midnight. In those days we had a little society
+among friends, which we called 'The Four Candles,'--the light in our
+place of meeting being restricted to four candles in silver
+candlesticks, placed at the four corners of the tables. Sometimes the
+talk became so animated that I forgot all about time, and twice or three
+times Pierrot sat up for me until two o'clock in the morning. After a
+while, however, my conduct in this respect displeased him, and he
+retired to rest without me. I was touched by this mute protest against
+my innocent dissipation, and thenceforth came home regularly at twelve
+o'clock. Nevertheless, Pierrot cherished the memory of my offence for
+some time; he waited to test the reality of my repentance, but when he
+was convinced that my conversion was sincere, he deigned to restore me
+to his good graces, and resumed his nocturnal post in the anteroom.
+
+"To gain the friendship of a cat is a difficult thing. The cat is a
+philosophical, methodical, quiet animal, tenacious of its own habits,
+fond of order and cleanliness, and it does not lightly confer its
+friendship. If you are worthy of its affection, a cat will be your
+friend, but never your slave. He keeps his free will, though he loves,
+and he will not do for you what he thinks unreasonable; but if he once
+gives himself to you, it is with such absolute confidence, such fidelity
+of affection. He makes himself the companion of your hours of solitude,
+melancholy, and toil. He remains for whole evenings on your knee,
+uttering his contented purr, happy to be with you, and forsaking the
+company of animals of his own species. In vain do melodious mewings on
+the roof invite him to one of those cat parties in which fish bones play
+the part of tea and cakes; he is not to be tempted away from you. Put
+him down and he will jump up again, with a sort of cooing sound that is
+like a gentle reproach; and sometimes he will sit upon the carpet in
+front of you, looking at you with eyes so melting, so caressing, and so
+human, that they almost frighten you, for it is impossible to believe
+that a soul is not there.
+
+"Don-Pierrot-de-Navarre had a sweetheart of the same race and of as
+snowy a whiteness as himself. The ermine would have looked yellow by the
+side of Seraphita, for so this lovely creature was named, in honor of
+Balzac's Swedenborgian romance. Seraphita was of a dreamy and
+contemplative disposition. She would sit on a cushion for hours
+together, quite motionless, not asleep, and following with her eyes, in
+a rapture of attention, sights invisible to mere mortals. Caresses were
+agreeable to her, but she returned them in a very reserved manner, and
+only in the case of persons whom she favored with her rarely accorded
+esteem. She was fond of luxury, and it was always upon the handsomest
+easy-chair, or the rug that would best show off her snowy fur, that she
+would surely be found. She devoted a great deal of time to her toilet,
+her glossy coat was carefully smoothed every morning. She washed herself
+with her paw, and licked every atom of her fur with her pink tongue
+until it shone like new silver. When any one touched her, she instantly
+effaced all trace of the contact; she could not endure to be tumbled. An
+idea of aristocracy was suggested by her elegance and distinction, and
+among her own people she was a duchess at least. She delighted in
+perfumes, would stick her nose into bouquets, bite scented handkerchiefs
+with little spasms of pleasure, and walk about among the scent bottles
+on the toilet table, smelling at their stoppers; no doubt, she would
+have used the powder puff if she had been permitted. Such was Seraphita,
+and never did cat more amply justify a poetic name. I must mention here
+that, in the days of the White Dynasty, I was also the happy possessor
+of a family of white rats, and that the cats, always supposed to be
+their natural, invariable, and irreconcilable enemies, lived in perfect
+harmony with my pet rodents. The rats never showed the slightest
+distrust of the cats, nor did the cats ever betray their confidence.
+Don-Pierrot-de-Navarre was very much attached to them. He would sit
+close to their cage and observe their gambols for hours together, and if
+by any chance the door of the room in which they were left was shut, he
+would scratch and mew gently until some one came to open it and allow
+him to rejoin his little white friends, who would often come out of the
+cage and sleep close to him. Seraphita, who was of a more reserved and
+disdainful temper, and who disliked the musky odor of the white rats,
+took no part in their games; but she never did them any harm, and would
+let them pass before her without putting out a claw.
+
+"Don-Pierrot-de-Navarre, who came from Havana, required a hothouse
+temperature: and this he always had in his own apartments. The house
+was, however, surrounded by extensive gardens, divided by railings,
+through and over which cats could easily climb, and in those gardens
+were trees inhabited by a great number of birds. Pierrot would
+frequently take advantage of an open door to get out of an evening and
+go a-hunting through the wet grass and flower-beds: and, as his mewing
+under the windows when he wanted to get in again did not always awaken
+the sleepers in the house, he frequently had to stay out until morning.
+His chest was delicate, and one very chilly night he caught a cold which
+rapidly developed into phthisis. At the end of a year of coughing, poor
+Don Pierrot had wasted to a skeleton, and his coat, once so silky, was a
+dull, harsh white. His large, transparent eyes looked unnaturally large
+in his shrunken face: the pink of his little nose had faded, and he
+dragged himself slowly along the sunny side of the wall with a
+melancholy air, looking at the yellow autumnal leaves as they danced and
+whirled in the wind. Nothing is so touching as a sick animal: it submits
+to suffering with such gentle and sad resignation. We did all in our
+power to save Pierrot: a skilful doctor came to see him, felt his pulse,
+sounded his lungs, and ordered him ass's milk. He drank the prescribed
+beverage very readily out of his own especial china saucer. For hours
+together he lay stretched upon my knee, like the shadow of a sphinx. I
+felt his spine under my finger tips like the beads of a rosary, and he
+tried to respond to my caresses by a feeble purr that resembled a
+death-rattle. On the day of his death he was lying on his side panting,
+and suddenly, with a supreme effort, he rose and came to me. His large
+eyes were opened wide, and he gazed at me with a look of intense
+supplication, a look that seemed to say, 'Save me, save me, you, who are
+a man.' Then he made a few faltering steps, his eyes became glassy, and
+he fell down, uttering so lamentable a cry, so dreadful and full of
+anguish, that I was struck dumb and motionless with horror. He was
+buried at the bottom of the garden under a white rose tree, which still
+marks the place of his sepulture. Three years later Seraphita died, and
+was buried by the side of Don Pierrot. With her the White Dynasty became
+extinct, but not the family. This snow-white couple had three children,
+who were as black as ink. Let any one explain that mystery who can. The
+kittens were born in the early days of the great renown of Victor Hugo's
+'Les Miserables,' when everybody was talking of the new masterpiece, and
+the names of the personages in it were in every mouth. The two little
+male creatures were called Enjolras and Gavroche, and their sister
+received the name of Eponine. They were very pretty, and I trained them
+to run after a little ball of paper and bring it back to me when I threw
+it into the corner of the room. In time they would follow the ball up to
+the top of the bookcase, or fish for it behind boxes or in the bottom of
+china vases with their dainty little paws. As they grew up they came to
+disdain those frivolous amusements, and assumed the philosophical and
+meditative quiet which is the true temperament of the cat.
+
+"To the eyes of the careless and indifferent observer, three black cats
+are just three black cats, but those who are really acquainted with
+animals know that their physiognomy is as various as that of the human
+race. I was perfectly well able to distinguish between these little
+faces, as black as Harlequin's mask, and lighted up by disks of emerald
+with golden gleams. Enjolras, who was much the handsomest of the three,
+was remarkable for his broad, leonine head and full whiskers, strong
+shoulders, and a superb feathery tail. There was something theatrical
+and pretentious in his air, like the posing of a popular actor. His
+movements were slow, undulatory, and majestic: so circumspect was he
+about where he set his feet down that he always seemed to be walking
+among glass and china. His disposition was by no means stoical, and he
+was much too fond of food to have been approved of by his namesake. The
+temperate and austere Enjolras would certainly have said to him, as the
+angel said to Swedenborg, 'You eat too much.' I encouraged his
+gastronomical tastes, and Enjolras attained a very unusual size and
+weight.
+
+"Gavroche was a remarkably knowing cat, and looked it. He was
+wonderfully active, and his twists, twirls, and tumbles were very comic.
+He was of a Bohemian temperament, and fond of low company. Thus he would
+occasionally compromise the dignity of his descent from the illustrious
+Don-Pierrot-de-Navarre, grandee of Spain of the first class, and the
+Marquesa Dona Seraphita, of aristocratic and disdainful bearing. He
+would sometimes return from his expeditions to the street, accompanied
+by gaunt, starved companions, whom he had picked up in his wanderings,
+and he would stand complacently by while they bolted the contents of his
+plate of food in a violent hurry and in dread of dispersion by a
+broomstick or a shower of water. I was sometimes tempted to say to
+Gavroche, 'A nice lot of friends you pick up,' but I refrained, for,
+after all, it was an amiable weakness: he might have eaten his dinner
+all by himself.
+
+"The interesting Eponine was more slender and graceful than her
+brothers, and she was an extraordinarily sensitive, nervous, and
+electric animal. She was passionately attached to me, and she would do
+the honors of my hermitage with perfect grace and propriety. When the
+bell rang, she hastened to the door, received the visitors, conducted
+them to the salon, made them take seats, talked to them--yes, talked,
+with little coos, murmurs, and cries quite unlike the language which
+cats use among themselves, and which bordered on the articulate speech
+of man. What did she say? She said quite plainly: 'Don't be impatient:
+look at the pictures, or talk with me, if I amuse you. My master is
+coming down.' On my appearing she would retire discreetly to an
+arm-chair or the corner of the piano, and listen to the conversation
+without interrupting it, like a well-bred animal accustomed to good
+society.
+
+"Eponine's intelligence, fine disposition, and sociability led to her
+being elevated by common consent to the dignity of a person, for reason,
+superior instinct, plainly governed her conduct. That dignity conferred
+on her the right to eat at table like a person, and not in a corner on
+the floor, from a saucer, like an animal. Eponine had a chair by my side
+at breakfast and dinner, but in consideration of her size she was
+privileged to place her fore paws on the table. Her place was laid,
+without a knife and fork, indeed, but with a glass, and she went
+regularly through dinner, from soup to dessert, awaiting her turn to be
+helped, and behaving with a quiet propriety which most children might
+imitate with advantage. At the first stroke of the bell she would
+appear, and when I came into the dining room she would be at her post,
+upright in her chair, her fore paws on the edge of the tablecloth, and
+she would present her smooth forehead to be kissed, like a well-bred
+little girl who was affectionately polite to relatives and old people.
+When we had friends to dine with us, Eponine always knew that company
+was expected. She would look at her place, and if a knife, fork, and
+spoon lay near her plate she would immediately turn away and seat
+herself on the piano-stool, her invariable refuge. Let those who deny
+the possession of reason to animals explain, if they can, this little
+fact, apparently so simple, but which contains a world of induction.
+From the presence near her plate of those implements which only man can
+use, the observant and judicious cat concluded that she ought on this
+occasion to give way to a guest, and she hastened to do so. She was
+never mistaken: only, when the visitor was a person whom she knew and
+liked, she would jump on his knee and coax him for a bit off his plate
+by her graceful caresses. She survived her brothers, and was my dear
+companion for several years.... Such is the chronicle of the Black
+Dynasty."
+
+Although cats have no place in the Bible, neither can their enemies who
+sing the praise of the dog, find much advantage there: for that most
+excellent animal is referred to in anything but a complimentary
+fashion--"For without are dogs and sorcerers."
+
+The great prophet of Allah, however, knew a good cat when he saw it.
+"Muezza" even contributed her small share to the development of the
+Mahometan system: for did she not sit curled up in her master's sleeve,
+and by her soft purring soothe and deepen his meditations? And did she
+not keep him dreaming so long that she finally became exhausted herself,
+and fell asleep in his flowing sleeve; whereupon did not Mahomet, rather
+than disturb her, and feeling that he must be about his Allah's
+business, cut off his sleeve rather than disturb the much loved Muezza?
+The nurses of Cairo tell this story to their young charges to this day.
+
+Cardinal Richelieu had many a kitten, too; and morose and ill-tempered
+as he was, found in them much amusement. His love for them, however, was
+not that unselfish love which led Mahomet to cut off his sleeve; but
+simply a selfish desire for passing amusement. He cared nothing for that
+most interesting process, the development of a kitten into a cat, and
+the study of its individuality which is known only to the real lover of
+cats. For it is recorded of him that as soon as his pets were three
+months old he sent them away, evidently not caring where, and procured
+new ones.
+
+M. Champfleury, however, thinks it possible that there may not be any
+real foundation for this story about Richelieu. He refers to the fact
+that Moncrif says not a word about the celebrated cardinal's passion for
+those creatures; but he does say, "Everybody knows that one of the
+greatest ministers France ever possessed, M. Colbert, always had a
+number of kittens playing about that same cabinet in which so many
+institutions, both honorable and useful to the nation, had their
+origin." Can it be that Richelieu has been given credit for Colbert's
+virtues?
+
+In various parts of Chateaubriand's "Memoires" may be found eulogiums on
+the cat. So well known was his fondness for them, that even when his
+other feelings and interests faded with age and decay, his affections
+for cats remained strong to the end. This love became well known to all
+his compeers, and once on an embassy to Rome the Pope gave him a cat. He
+was called "Micetto." According to Chateaubriand's biographer, M. de
+Marcellus, "Pope Leo XII's cat could not fail to reappear in the
+description of that domestic hearth where I have so often seen him
+basking. In fact, Chateaubriand has immortalized his favorite in the
+sketch which begins, 'My companion is a big cat, of a greyish red.'"
+This ecclesiastical pet was always dignified and imposing in manners,
+ever conscious that he had been the gift of a sovereign pontiff, and had
+a tremendous weight of reputation to maintain. He used to stroke his
+tail when he desired Madame Recamier to know that he was tired.
+
+"I love in the cat," said Chateaubriand to M. de Marcellus, "that
+independent and almost ungrateful temper which prevents it from
+attaching itself to any one: the indifference with which it passes from
+the salon to the house-top. When you caress it, it stretches itself out
+and arches its back, indeed: but that is caused by physical pleasure,
+not, as in the case of the dog, by a silly satisfaction in loving and
+being faithful to a master who returns thanks in kicks. The cat lives
+alone, has no need of society, does not obey except when it likes, and
+pretends to sleep that it may see the more clearly, and scratches
+everything that it can scratch. Buffon has belied the cat: I am laboring
+at its rehabilitation, and hope to make of it a tolerably good sort of
+animal, as times go."
+
+Cardinal Wolsey, Lord High Chancellor of England, was another cat-lover,
+and his superb cat sat in a cushioned arm-chair by his side in the
+zenith of his pride and power, the only one in that select circle who
+was not obliged to don a wig and robe while acting in a judicial
+capacity. Then there was Bouhaki, the proud Theban cat that used to wear
+gold earrings as he sat at the feet of King Hana, his owner, perhaps,
+but not his master, and whose reproduction in the tomb of Hana in the
+Necropolis at Thebes, between his master's feet in a statue, is one of
+the most ancient reproductions of a cat. And Sainte-Beuve, whose cat
+used to roam at will over his desk and sit or lie on the precious
+manuscripts no other person was allowed to touch; it is flattering to
+know that the great Frenchman and I have one habit in common; and Miss
+Repplier owns to it too. "But Sainte-Beuve," says she, "probably had
+sufficient space reserved for his own comfort and convenience. I have
+not; and Agrippina's beautifully ringed tail flapping across my copy
+distracts my attention and imperils the neatness of my penmanship." And
+even as I write these pages, does the Pretty Lady's daughter Jane lie on
+my copy and gaze lovingly at me as I work.
+
+Julian Hawthorne is another writer whose cat is an accompaniment of his
+working hours. In this connection we must not forget M. Brasseur
+Wirtgen, a student of natural history who writes of his cat: "My habit
+of reading," he says, "which divided us from each other in our
+respective thoughts, prejudiced my cat very strongly against my books.
+Sometimes her little head would project its profile on the page which I
+was perusing, as though she were trying to discover what it was that
+thus absorbed me: doubtless, she did not understand why I should look
+for my happiness beyond the presence of a devoted heart. Her solicitude
+was no less manifest when she brought me rats or mice. She acted in this
+case exactly as if I had been her son: dragging enormous rats, still in
+the throes of death, to my feet: and she was evidently guided by logic
+in offering me a prey commensurate with my size, for she never presented
+any such large game to her kittens. Her affectionate attention
+invariably caused her a severe disappointment. Having laid the product
+of her hunting expedition at my feet, she would appear to be greatly
+hurt by my indifference to such delicious fare."
+
+That Tasso had a cat we know because he wrote a sonnet to her. Alfred de
+Musset's cats are apostrophized in his verses. Dr. Johnson's Hodge held
+a soft place for many years in the gruff old scholar's breast. And has
+not every one heard how the famous Dr. Johnson fetched oysters for his
+beloved Hodge, lest the servants should object to the trouble, and vent
+their displeasure on his favorite?
+
+Nor can one forget Sir Isaac Newton and his cats: for is it not alleged
+that the great man had two holes cut in his barn door, one for the
+mother, and a smaller one for the kitten?
+
+Byron was fond of cats: in his establishment at Ravenna he had five of
+them. Daniel Maclise's famous portrait of Harriet Martineau represents
+that estimable woman sitting in front of a fireplace and turning her
+face to receive the caress of her pet cat crawling to a resting-place
+upon her mistress's shoulder.
+
+Although La Fontaine in his fables shows such a delicate appreciation of
+their character and ways, it is doubtful whether he honestly loved cats.
+But his friend and patron, the Duchess of Bouillon, was so devoted to
+them that she requested the poet to make her a copy with his own hand of
+all his fables in which pussy appears. The exercise-book in which they
+were written was discovered a few years ago among the Bouillon papers.
+
+Baudelaire, it is said, could never pass a cat in the street without
+stopping to stroke and fondle it. "Many a time," said Champfleury, "when
+he and I have been walking together, have we stopped to look at a cat
+curled luxuriously in a pile of fresh white linen, revelling in the
+cleanliness of the newly ironed fabrics. Into what fits of contemplation
+have we fallen before such windows, while the coquettish laundresses
+struck attitudes at the ironing boards, under the mistaken impression
+that we were admiring them." It was also related of Baudelaire that,
+"going for the first time to a house, he is restless and uneasy until he
+has seen the household cat. But when he sees it, he takes it up, kisses
+and strokes it, and is so completely absorbed in it, that he makes no
+answer to what is said to him."
+
+Professor Huxley's notorious fondness for cats was a fad which he shared
+with Paul de Koch, the novelist, who, at one time, kept as many as
+thirty cats in his house. Many descriptions of them are to be found
+scattered through his novels. His chief favorite, Fromentin, lived
+eleven years with him.
+
+Pierre Loti has written a charming and most touching history of two of
+his cats--Moumette Blanche and Moumette Chinoise--which all true
+cat-lovers should make a point of reading.
+
+Algernon Swinburne, the poet, is devoted to cats. His favorite is named
+Atossa. Robert Southey was an ardent lover of cats. Most people have
+read his letter to his friend Bedford, announcing the death of one.
+"Alas, Grosvenor," he wrote, "this day poor Rumpel was found dead, after
+as long and happy a life as cat could wish for, if cats form wishes on
+that subject. His full titles were: The Most Noble, the Archduke
+Rumpelstiltzchen, Marcus Macbum, Earl Tomlefnagne, Baron Raticide,
+Waowhler and Scratch. There should be a court-mourning in Catland, and
+if the Dragon (your pet cat) wear a black ribbon round his neck, or a
+band of crape _a la militaire_ round one of his fore paws it will
+be but a becoming mark of respect." Then the poet-laureate adds, "I
+believe we are each and all, servants included, more sorry for his loss,
+or, rather, more affected by it, than any of us would like to confess."
+
+Josh Billings called his favorite cat William, because he considered no
+shorter name fitted to the dignity of his character. "Poor old man," he
+remarked one day, to a friend, "he has fits now, so I call him
+Fitz-William."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+CONCERNING CATS IN ENGLAND
+
+
+If the growing fancy for cats in this country is benefiting the feline
+race as a whole, they have to thank the English people for it. For
+certain cats in England are held at a value that seems preposterous to
+unsophisticated Americans. At one cat and bird show, held at the Crystal
+Palace, near London, some of the cats were valued at thirty-five hundred
+pounds sterling ($17,500)--as much as the price of a first-class
+race-horse.
+
+For more than a quarter of a century National Cat Shows have been held
+at Crystal Palace and the Westminster Aquarium, which have given great
+stimulus to the breeding of fine cats, and "catteries" where high-priced
+cats and kittens are raised are common throughout the country.
+
+England was the first, too, to care for lost and deserted cats and dogs.
+At Battersea there is a Temporary Home for both these unfortunates,
+where between twenty and twenty-five thousand dogs and cats are
+sheltered and fed. The objects of this home, which is supported entirely
+by voluntary subscriptions, are to restore lost pets to their owners, to
+find suitable homes for unclaimed cats and dogs, and to painlessly
+destroy useless and diseased ones. There is a commodious cat's house
+where pets may be boarded during their owner's absence; and a separate
+house where lost and deserted felines are sheltered, fed, and kindly
+tended.
+
+Since long before Whittington became Lord Mayor of London, indeed, cats
+have been popular in England: for did not the law protect them? As to
+the truth of the story of Whittington's cat, there has been much earnest
+discussion. Although Whittington lived from about 1360 to 1425, the
+story seems to have been pretty generally accepted for three hundred
+years after his death. A portrait still exists of him, with one hand
+holding a cat, and when his old house was remodelled in recent times, a
+carved stone was found in it showing a boy with a cat in his arms.
+Several similar tales have been found, it is argued, in which the heroes
+in different countries have started to make a fortune by selling a cat.
+But as rats and mice were extremely common then, and it has been shown
+that a single pair of rats will in three years multiply into over six
+hundred thousand, which will eat as much as sixty-four thousand men, why
+shouldn't a cat be deemed a luxury even for a king's palace? The
+argument that the cat of Whittington was a "cat," or boat used for
+carrying coal, is disproved by the fact that no account of such vessels
+in Whittington's time can be found, and also that the trade in coal did
+not begin in Europe for some time afterward. And there really seems
+nothing improbable in the story that at a time when a kitten big enough
+to kill mice brought fourpence in England, such an animal, taken to a
+rat-infested, catless country, might not be sold for a sum large enough
+to start an enterprising youth in trade. Surely, the beginnings of some
+of our own railroad kings and financiers may as well look doubtful to
+future generations.
+
+It is a pretty story--that of Whittington; how he rose from being a mere
+scullion at fourteen, to being "thrice Lord Mayor of London." According
+to what are claimed to be authentic documents, the story is something
+more than a nursery tale, and runs thus: Poor Dick Whittington was born
+at Shropshire, of such very poor parents that the boy, being of an
+ambitious nature, left home at fourteen, and walked to London, where he
+was taken into the hospital of St. John at Clerkenwell, in a menial
+capacity. The prior, noticing his good behavior and diligent conduct,
+took a fancy to him, and obtained him a position in a Mr. Fitzwarren's
+household on Tower Hill. For some time at this place his prospects did
+not improve; he was nothing but a scullion, ridiculed and disliked by
+the cook and other servants. Add to this the fact that an incredible
+swarm of mice and rats infested the miserable room in which he slept,
+and it would seem that he was indeed a "poor Richard." One fortunate
+day, however, he conceived the idea of buying a cat, and as good luck
+would have it, he was enabled within a few days to earn a penny or two
+by blacking the boots of a guest at the house. That day he met a woman
+with a cat for sale, and after some dickering (for she asked more money
+for it than the boy possessed in the world), Dick Whittington carried
+home his cat and put it in a cupboard or closet opening from his room.
+That night when he retired he let the cat out of the cupboard, and she
+evidently had "no end of fun"; for, according to these authentic
+accounts, "she destroyed all the vermin which ventured to make their
+appearance." For some time after that she passed her days in the
+cupboard (in hiding from the cook) and her nights in catching mice.
+
+And then came the change. Mr. Fitzwarren was fitting out a vessel for
+Algiers, and kindly offered all his servants a chance to send something
+to barter with the natives. Poor Dick had nothing but his cat, but the
+commercial instinct was even then strong within him, and with an
+enterprise worthy of the early efforts of any of our self-made men, he
+decided to send that, and accordingly placed it, "while the tears run
+plentifully down his cheeks," in the hands of the master of the vessel.
+She must have been a most exemplary cat, for by the time they had
+reached Algiers, the captain was so fond of her that he allowed no one
+to handle her but himself. Not even he, however, expected to turn her
+into money; but the opportunity soon came.
+
+At a state banquet, given by the Dey, the captain and his officers were
+astonished to notice that rats and mice ran freely in and out, stealing
+half the choice food, which was spread on the carpet; and this was a
+common, every-day occurrence. The captain saw his, or Whittington's,
+opportunity, and stated that he knew a certain remedy for this state of
+affairs; whereupon he was invited to dinner next day, to which he
+carried the cat, and the natural consequence ensued. This sudden and
+swift extermination of the pests drove the Dey and his court half
+frantic with delight; and the captain, who must have been the original
+progenitor of the Yankee race, drove a sharp bargain by assuming to be
+unwilling to part with the cat, so that the Dey finally "sent on board
+his ship the choicest commodities, consisting of gold, jewels, and
+silks."
+
+Meanwhile, things had gone from bad to worse with the youth, destined to
+become not only Lord Mayor of London, but the envy and admiration of
+future generations of youths; and he made up his mind to run away from
+his place. This he did, but while he was on his way to more rural
+scenes, he sat down on a stone at the foot of Highgate Hill (a stone
+that still remains marked as "Whittington's Stone") and paused to
+reflect on his prospects. His thoughts turned back to the home he had
+left, where he had at least plenty to eat, and, although the "authentic
+reports" use a great many words to tell us so, the boy was homesick.
+Just then the sound of Bow Bells reached him, and to his youthful fancy
+seemed to call him back:--
+
+ "Return, return, Whittington;
+ Thrice Lord Mayor of London."
+
+
+Thus the old tale hath it. At any rate, the boy gave up the idea of
+flight and went back to Mr. Fitzwarren's house. The second night after,
+his master sent for him in the midst of one of the cook's tirades, and
+going to the "parlour" he was apprised of his sudden wealth; because,
+added to the rest of his good luck, that captain happened to be an
+honest man. And then he went into trade and married the daughter of Mr.
+Fitzwarren and became Lord Mayor of London, and lived even happier ever
+after than they do in most fairy tales. And everybody, even the cook,
+admired and loved him after he had money and position, as has been known
+to happen outside of fairy tales.
+
+Whether or not cats in England owe anything of their position to-day to
+the Whittington story, it is certain that they have more really
+appreciating friends there than in any other country. The older we grow
+in the refinements of civilization, the more we value the finely bred
+cat. In England it has long been the custom to register the pedigree of
+cats as carefully as dog-fanciers in this country do with their fancy
+pets. Some account of the Cat Club Stud Book and Register will be found
+in the next chapter. Queen Victoria, and the Princess of Wales, and
+indeed many members of the nobility are cat-lovers, and doubtless this
+fact influences the general sentiment in England.
+
+Among the most devoted of Pussy's English admirers is the Hon. Mrs.
+McLaren Morrison, who is the happy possessor of some of the most perfect
+dogs and cats that have graced the bench. She lives at Kepwick Park, in
+her stately home in Yorkshire--a lovely spot, commanding a delightful
+view of picturesque Westmoreland on one side and on the other three
+surrounded and sheltered by hills and moors. Some of her pets go with
+her, however, to her flat in Queen Anne's Mansions, and even to her
+residence in Calcutta. It is at Kepwick Park that Mrs. McLaren Morrison
+has her celebrated "catteries." Here there are magnificent blue, black
+and silver and red Persians; snowy white, blue-eyed beauties; grandly
+marked English tabbies; handsome blue Russians, with their gleaming
+yellow-topaz eyes; some Chinese cats, with their long, edge-shaped heads,
+bright golden eyes, and shiny, short-haired black fur; and a pair of
+Japanese pussies, pure white and absolutely without tails. One of the
+handsomest specimens of the feline race ever seen is her blue Persian,
+Champion Monarch, who, as a kitten in 1893, won the gold medal at the
+Crystal Palace given for the best pair of kittens in the show, and the
+next year the Beresford Challenge Cup at Cruft's Show, for the best
+long-haired cat, besides taking many other honors. Among other well-known
+prize winners are the champions Snowball and Forget-me-not, both pure
+white, with lovely turquoise-blue eyes. Of Champion Nizam (now dead) that
+well-known English authority on cats, Mr. A.A. Clark, said his was the
+grandest head of any cat he had ever seen. Nizam was a perfect specimen
+of that rare and delicate breed of cats, a pure chinchilla. The numberless
+kittens sporting all day long are worthy of the art of Madame Henriette
+Ronner, and one could linger for hours in these delightful and most
+comfortable catteries watching their gambols. The gentle mistress of this
+fair and most interesting domain, the Hon. Mrs. McLaren Morrison herself,
+is one of the most attractive and fascinating women of the day--one who
+adds to great personal beauty all the charm of mental culture and much
+travel. She has made Kepwick Park a veritable House Beautiful with the
+rare curios and art treasures collected with her perfect taste in the
+many lands she has visited, and it is as interesting and enjoyable to a
+virtuoso as it is to an animal lover. Mrs. McLaren Morrison exhibits at
+all the cat shows, often entering as many as twenty-five cats. Other
+English ladies who exhibit largely are Mrs. Herring, of Lestock House,
+and Miss Cockburn Dickinson, of Surrey. Mrs. Herring's Champion Jimmy
+is very well known as a first prize-winner in many shows. He is a
+short-haired, exquisitely marked silver tabby valued at two thousand
+pounds ($10,000).
+
+Another feline celebrity also well known to frequenters of English cat
+shows, is Madame L. Portier's magnificent and colossal Blue Boy, whose
+first appearance into this world was made on the day sacred to St.
+Patrick, 1895. He has a fine pedigree, and was raised by Madame Portier
+herself. Blue Boy commenced his career as a show cat, or rather kitten,
+at three months old, when he was awarded a first prize, and when the
+judge told his mistress that if he fulfilled his early promise he would
+make a grand cat. This he has done, and is now one of the finest
+specimens of his kind in England. He weighs over seventeen pounds, and
+always has affixed to his cage on the show-bench this request, "Please
+do not lift this cat by the neck; he is too heavy." He has long dark
+blue fur, with a ruff of a lighter shade and brilliant topaz eyes.
+Already Blue Boy has taken many prizes. He is a gelded cat and one of
+the fortunate cats who have "Not for Sale" after their names in the show
+catalogues.
+
+To Mrs. C. Hill's beautiful long-haired Patrick Blue fell the honor, at
+the Crystal Palace Show in 1896, of a signed and framed photograph of
+the Prince of Wales, presented by his Royal Highness for the best
+long-haired cat in the show, irrespective of sex or nationality. Besides
+the prize given by the Prince, Patrick Blue was the proud winner of the
+Beresford Challenge Cup for the best blue long-haired cat, and the India
+Silver Bowl for the best Persian. He also was born on St. Patrick's Day,
+hence his name. He was bred by Mrs. Blair Maconochie, his father, Blue
+Ruin I, being a celebrated gold medallist. His mother, Sylvia, who
+belongs to Mrs. Maconochie, has never been shown, her strong point being
+her lovely color, which is most happily reproduced in her perfect son.
+Patrick Blue has all the many charms of a petted cat, and was
+undoubtedly one of the prominent attractions of the first Championship
+Show of the National Cat Club in 1896.
+
+Silver Lambkin is another very famous English cat, owned by Miss
+Gresham, of Surrey. Princess Ranee, owned by Miss Freeland, of
+Mottisfont, near Romney; Champion Southsea Hector, owned by Miss
+Sangster, at Southsea; champions Prince Victor and Shelly, of Kingswood
+(both of whom have taken no end of prizes), are other famous English
+cats.
+
+Topso, a magnificent silver tabby male, belonging to Miss Anderson
+Leake, of Dingley Hill, was at one time the best long-haired silver
+tabby in England, and took the prize on that account in 1887; his sons,
+daughters, grandsons, and granddaughters, have all taken prizes at
+Crystal Palace in the silver tabby classes, since that time.
+
+Lady Marcus Beresford has for the last fifteen years made quite a
+business of the breeding and rearing of cats. At Bishopsgate, near
+Egham, she has what is without doubt the finest cattery. "I have
+applications from all parts of the world for my cats and kittens," said
+Lady Marcus, in a talk about her hobby, "and I may tell you that it is
+largely because of this that I founded the Cat Club, which has for its
+object the general welfare of the cat and the improvement of the breed.
+My catteries were established in 1890, and at one time I had as many as
+150 cats and kittens. Some of my pets live in a pretty cottage covered
+with creepers, which might well be called Cat Cottage. No expense has
+been spared in the fittings of the rooms, and every provision is made
+for warmth and ventilation. One room is set apart for the girl who takes
+entire charge of and feeds the pussies. She has a boy who works with her
+and performs the rougher tasks. There is a small kitchen for cooking the
+meals for the cats, and this is fitted with every requisite. On the
+walls are racks to hold the white enamelled bowls and plates used for
+the food. There is a medicine chest, which contains everything that is
+needful for prompt and efficacious treatment in case pussy becomes sick.
+On the wall are a list of the names and a full description of all the
+inmates of the cattery, and a set of rules to be observed by both the
+cats and their attendants. These rules are not ignored, and it is a
+tribute to the intelligence of the cat to see how carefully pussy can
+become amenable to discipline, if once given to understand of what that
+discipline consists.
+
+"Then there is a garden cattery. I think this is the prettiest of all.
+It is covered with roses and ivy. In this there are three rooms,
+provided with shelves and all other conveniences which can add to the
+cats' comfort and amusement. The residences of the male cats are most
+complete, for I have given them every attention possible. Each male cat
+has his separate sleeping apartments, closed with wire and with a 'run'
+attached. Close at hand is a large, square grass 'run,' and in this each
+gentleman takes his daily but solitary exercise. One of the stringent
+rules of the cattery is that no two males shall ever be left together,
+and I know that with my cats if this rule were not observed, both in
+letter and precept, it would be a case of 'when Greek meets Greek.'
+
+"I vary the food for my cats as much as possible. One day we will have
+most appetizing bowls of fish and rice. At the proper time you can see
+these standing in the cat kitchen ready to be distributed. Another day
+these bowls will be filled with minced meat. In the very hot weather a
+good deal of vegetable matter is mixed with the food. Swiss milk is
+given, so there is no fear of its turning sour. For some time I have
+kept a goat on the premises, the milk from which is given to the
+delicate or younger kittens.
+
+"I have started many of my poorer friends in cat breeding, and they have
+proved conclusively how easily an addition to their income can be made,
+not only by breeding good Persian kittens and selling them, but by
+exhibiting them at the various shows and taking prizes. But of course
+there is a fashion in cats, as in everything else. When I started
+breeding blue Persians about fifteen years ago they were very scarce,
+and I could easily get twenty-five dollars apiece for my kittens. Now
+this variety is less sought after, and self-silvers, commonly called
+chinchillas, are in demand."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+CONCERNING CAT CLUBS AND CAT SHOWS
+
+
+The annual cat shows in England, which have been held successively for
+more than a quarter of a century, led to the establishment in 1887 of a
+National Cat Club, which has steadily grown in membership and interest,
+and by the establishment of the National Stud Book and Register has
+greatly raised the standard of felines in the mother country. It has
+many well-known people as members, life members, or associates; and from
+time to time people distinguished in the cat world have been added as
+honorary members.
+
+The officers of the National Cat Club of England, since its
+reconstruction in March, 1898, are as follows:--
+
+_Presidents._--Her Grace the Duchess of Bedford; Lord Marcus
+Beresford.
+
+_Vice-presidents._--Lily, Duchess of Marlborough, now Lady Wm.
+Beresford; the Countess of Warwick; Lady Granville Gordon; Hon. Mrs.
+McL. Morrison; Madame Ronner; Mr. Isaac Woodiwiss; the Countess of
+Sefton; Lady Hothfield; the Hon. Mrs. Brett; Mr. Sam Woodiwiss; Mr.
+H.W. Bullock.
+
+_President of Committee._--Mr. Louis Wain.
+
+_Committee_.--Lady Marcus Beresford; Mrs. Balding; Mr. Sidney
+Woodiwiss; Mr. Hawkins; Mrs. Blair Maconochie; Mrs. Vallance; Mr.
+Brackett; Mr. F. Gresham.
+
+_Hon. Secretary and Hon. Treasurer_.--Mrs. Stennard Robinson.
+
+This club has a seal and a motto: "Beauty lives by kindness." It
+publishes a stud book in which are registered pedigrees and championship
+wins which are eligible for it. Only wins obtained from shows held under
+N.C.C. rules are recorded free of charge. The fee for ordinary
+registration is one shilling per cat, and the stud book is published
+annually. There are over two thousand cats now entered in this National
+Cat Club Stud Book, the form of entry being as follows (L.F. means
+long-haired female; C.P., Crystal Palace):--
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No. 1593, Mimidatzi, L.F. Silver Tabby.
+
+Miss Anna F. Gardner, Hamswell House, near Bath, shown as Mimi.
+
+Bred by Miss How, Bridgeyate, near Bristol. Born April, 1893. Alive.
+
+Sire, Blue Boy the Great of Islington, 1090 (Mrs H.B. Thompson).
+
+Dam, Boots of Bridgeyate, 1225 (Miss How).
+
+Prizes won--1st Bilton, 2nd, C.P. 1893, Kitten Class.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No. 1225, Boots of Bridgeyate. L.F. Silver Tabby.
+
+Miss E. How, Bridgeyate House, Warmly, Bristol.
+
+Former owner, Mrs. Foote, 43 Palace Gardens, Kensington.
+
+Born March, 1892. Alive.
+
+Some of the cats entered have records of prizes covering nearly half a
+page of the book. The advantage of such a book to cat owners can be
+readily seen. A cat once entered never changes its number, no matter how
+many owners he may have, and his name cannot be changed after December
+31 of the year in which he is registered.
+
+The more important rules of the English National Cat Club are given in
+condensed form as follows:--
+
+The name is "The National Cat Club."
+
+_Objects_: To promote honesty in the breeding of cats, so as to
+insure purity in each distinct breed or variety; to determine the
+classification required, and to insure the adoption of such
+classification by breeders, exhibitors, judges, and the committees of
+all cat shows; to encourage showing and breeding by giving championship
+and other prizes, and otherwise doing all in its power to protect and
+advance the interest of cats and their owners. The National Cat Club
+shall frame a separate set of rules for cat shows to be called "National
+Cat Club Rules," and the committees of those cat shows to which the
+rules are given, shall be called upon to sign a guarantee to the
+National Cat Club binding them to provide good penning and effectual
+sanitation, also to the punctual payment of prize money and to the
+proper adjudication of prizes.
+
+_Stud Book_: The National Cat Club shall keep a stud book.
+
+_Neuter Classes_.--For gelded cats.
+
+_Kitten Classes_.--Single entries over three and under eight months.
+
+_Kitten Brace_.--Kittens of any age.
+
+_Brace_.--For two cats of any age.
+
+_Team_.--For three or more cats, any age.
+
+
+In Paris, although cats have not been commonly appreciated as in
+England, there is an increasing interest in them, and cat shows are now
+a regular feature of the Jardin d'Acclimation. This suggests the subject
+of the cat's social position in France. Since the Revolution the animal
+has conquered in this country "_toutes les liberties_," excepting
+that of wearing an entire tail, for in many districts it is the fashion
+to cut the caudal appendage short.
+
+In Paris cats are much cherished wherever they can be without causing
+too much unpleasantness with the landlord. The system of living in flats
+is not favorable to cat culture, for the animal, not having access
+either to the tiles above or to the gutter below, is apt to pine for
+fresh air, and the society of its congeners. Probably in no other city
+do these creatures lie in shop windows and on counters with such an
+arrogant air of proprietorship. In restaurants, a very large and fat cat
+is kept as an advertisement of the good feeding to be obtained on the
+premises. There is invariably a cat in a _charbonnier's_ shop, and
+the animal is generally one that was originally white, but long ago came
+to the conclusion that all attempts to keep itself clean were hopeless.
+Its only consolation is that it is never blacker than its master. It is
+well known that the Persians and Angoras are much esteemed in Paris and
+are, to some extent, bred for sale. In the provinces, French cats are
+usually low-bred animals, with plebeian heads and tails, the stringlike
+appearance of the latter not being improved by cropping. Although not
+generally esteemed as an article of food in France, there are still many
+people scattered throughout the country who maintain that a _civet de
+chat_ is as good, or better, than a _civet de lievre_.
+
+M. François Coppée's fondness for cats as pets is so well known that
+there was great fitness in placing his name first upon the jury of
+awards at the 1896 cat show in Paris. Such other well-known men as Émile
+Zola, André Theuriet, and Catulle Mendes, also figured on the list.
+There is now an annual "Exposition Feline Internationale."
+
+In this country the first cat show of general interest was held at
+Madison Square Garden, New York, in May, 1895. Some years before, there
+had been a cat show under the auspices of private parties in Boston, and
+several minor shows had been held at Newburgh, N.Y., and other places.
+But the New York shows were the first to attract general attention. One
+hundred and seventy-six cats were exhibited by one hundred and
+twenty-five owners, besides several ocelots, wild cats, and civets. For
+some reason the show at Madison Square Garden in March, 1896, catalogued
+only one hundred and thirty-two cats and eighty-two owners. Since that
+time there have been no large cat shows in New York.
+
+There have been several cat shows in Boston since 1896, but these are so
+far only adjuncts to poultry and pigeon shows. Great interest has been
+manifest in them, however, and the entries have each year run above a
+hundred. Some magnificent cats are exhibited, although as a rule the
+animals shown are somewhat small, many kittens being placed there for
+sale by breeders.
+
+Several attempts to start successful cat clubs in this country have been
+made. At the close of the New York show in 1896, an American Cat Club
+was organized for the purpose "of investigating, ascertaining, and
+keeping a record of the pedigrees of cats, and of instituting,
+maintaining, controlling, and publishing a stud book, or book of
+registry of such kind of domestic animals in the United States of
+America and Canada, and of promoting and holding exhibitions of such
+animals, and generally for the purpose of improving the breed thereof,
+and educating the public in its knowledge of the various breeds and
+varieties of cats."
+
+The officers were as follows:--
+
+_President_.--Rush S. Huidekoper, 154 E. 57th St., New York City.
+
+_Vice-presidents_.--W.D. Mann, 208 Fifth Ave., New York City; Mrs.
+E.N. Barker, Newburgh, N.Y.
+
+_Secretary-treasurer_.--James T. Hyde, 16 E. 23d St., New York City.
+
+_Executive Committee_.--T. Farrar Rackham, E. Orange, N.J.; Miss
+Edith Newbold, Southampton, L.I.; Mrs. Harriet C. Clarke, 154 W. 82d
+St., New York City; Charles R. Pratt, St. James Hotel, New York City;
+Joseph W. Stray, 229 Division St., Brooklyn, N.Y.
+
+More successful than this club, however, is the Beresford Cat Club
+formed in Chicago in the winter of 1899. The president is Mrs. Clinton
+Locke, who is a member of the English cat clubs, and whose kennel in
+Chicago contains some of the finest cats in America. The Beresford Cat
+Club has the sanction of John G. Shortall, of the American Humane
+Society, and on its honorary list are Miss Agnes Repplier, Madame
+Ronner, Lady Marcus Beresford, Miss Helen Winslow, and Mr. Louis Wain.
+
+At their cat shows, which are held annually, prizes are offered for all
+classes of cats, from the common feline of the back alley up to the
+aristocratic resident of milady's boudoir.
+
+The Beresford Club Cat shows are the most successful of any yet given in
+America. One hundred and seventy-eight prizes were awarded in the show
+of January, 1900, and some magnificent cats were shown. It is said by
+those who are in a position to know that there are no better cats shown
+in England now than can be seen at the Beresford Show in Chicago. The
+exhibits cover short and long haired cats of all colors, sizes, and
+ages, with Siamese cats, Manx cats, and Russian cats. At the show in
+January, 1900, Mrs. Clinton Locke exhibited fourteen cats of one color,
+and Mrs. Josiah Cratty five white cats. This club numbers one hundred
+and seventy members and has a social position and consequent strength
+second to none in America. It is a fine, honorable club, which has for
+its objects the protection of the Humane Society and the caring for all
+cats reported as homeless or in distress. It aims also to establish
+straightforward and honest dealings among the catteries and to do away
+with the humbuggery which prevails in some quarters about the sales and
+valuation of high-bred cats. This club cannot fail to be of great
+benefit to such as want to carry on an honest industry by the raising
+and sale of fine cats. It will also improve the breeding of cats in this
+country, and thereby raise the standard and promote a more general
+intelligence among the people with regard to cats. Some of the best
+people in the United States belong to the Beresford Club, the membership
+of which is by no means confined to Chicago; on the contrary, the club
+is a national one and the officers and board of directors are:--
+
+_President._--Mrs. Clinton Locke.
+
+_1st Vice-president._--Mrs W. Eames Colburn.
+
+_2d Vice-president._--Mrs. F.A. Howe.
+
+_Corresponding Secretary._--Mrs. Henry C. Clark.
+
+_Recording Secretary_.--Miss Lucy Claire Johnstone.
+
+_Treasurer_.--Mrs. Charles Hampton Lane.
+
+Mrs. Elwood H. Tolman.
+
+Mrs. J.H. Pratt.
+
+Mrs. Mattie Fisk Green.
+
+Mrs. F.A. Story.
+
+Miss Louise L. Fergus.
+
+The club is anxious to have members all over the United States, just as
+the English cat clubs do. The non-resident annual fees are only one
+dollar, and a member has to be proposed by one and endorsed by two other
+members. The register cats for the stud book are entered at one dollar
+each, and it is proposed to give shows once a year. The main objects of
+the club are to improve the breeds of fancy cats in America, to awaken a
+more general interest in them, and to secure better treatment for the
+ordinary common cat. The shows will be given for the benefit of the
+Humane Society.
+
+The Chicago Cat Club has done excellent work also, having established a
+cat home, or refuge, for stray, homeless, or diseased cats, with a
+department for boarding pet cats during the absence of their owners. It
+is under the personal care and direction of Dr. C.A. White, 78 E. 26th
+Street. The first cat to be admitted there was one from Cleveland, Ohio,
+which was to be boarded for three months during the absence of its owner
+in Europe and also to be treated for disease. This club was incorporated
+under the state laws of Illinois, on January 26, 1899. In connection
+with it is a children's cat club, which has for its primary object the
+teaching of kindness to animals by awakening in the young people an
+appreciative love for cats. At the show of the Chicago Cat Club, small
+dogs and cavies are exhibited also, the Cavy Club and the Pet Dog Club
+having affiliated with the Chicago Cat Club.
+
+The president of the Chicago Cat Club is Mrs. Leland Norton, of the
+Drexel Kennels, at 4011 Drexel Boulevard, Chicago. The corresponding
+secretary is Mrs. Laura Daunty Pelham, 315 Interocean Building, and the
+other officers are: Vice-president, Miss Gertrude Estabrooks; recording
+secretary, Miss Jennie Van Allen; and treasurer, Mrs. Ella B. Shepard.
+Membership is only one dollar a year, and the registration fee in the
+Chicago stud book fifty cents for each cat.
+
+The cat shows already held and the flourishing state of our cat clubs
+have proved that America has as fine, if not finer, cats than can be
+found in England, and that interest in finely bred cats is on the
+increase in this country. The effect of the successful cat clubs and cat
+shows must be to train intelligent judges and to raise the standard of
+cats in this country. It will also tend to make the cat shows of such a
+character that kind-hearted owners need not hesitate to enter their
+choicest cats. As yet, however, the judging at cat shows is not so well
+managed as in England. It should be a rule that the judges of cats
+should not only understand their fine points, but should be in sympathy
+with the little pets.
+
+Cat dealers who have a number of cats entered for competition, should
+not be allowed on the board of judges. In England, the cats to be judged
+are taken by classes into a tent for the purpose, and the door is
+fastened against all but the judges; whereas over here the cats are too
+often taken out of their cages in the presence of a crowd of spectators
+and judged on a table or some public place, thereby frightening the
+timid ones and bringing annoyance to the owners.
+
+Again, there should be several judges. In England there are seven,
+including two or three women, and these are assigned to different
+classes: Mr. Harrison Weir, F.R.H.S., the well-known authority on cats,
+and Louis Wain, the well-known cat artist, are among them. In this
+country there are a number of women who are not dealers, but who are
+fully posted in the necessary qualifications for a high-bred cat.
+American cat shows should have at least three judges, one of whom, at
+least, should be a woman. A cat should be handled gently and kept as
+calm as possible during the judging. Women are naturally more gentle in
+their methods, and more tenderhearted. When my pets are entered for
+competition, may some wise, kind woman have the judging of them!
+
+In judging a cat the quality and quantity of its fur is the first thing
+considered. In a long-haired cat this includes the "lord mayor's chain,"
+or frill, the tail, and, most important of all, the ear-tufts. The tufts
+between the toes and the flexibility of the tail are other important
+points. The shape of head, eyes, and body are also carefully noted. A
+short-haired cat is judged first for color, then for eyes, head,
+symmetry, and ears.
+
+In all cats the head should show breadth between the eyes. The eyes
+should be round and open. White cats to be really valuable should have
+blue eyes (without deafness); black cats should have yellow eyes; other
+cats should have pea-green eyes, or in some cases, as in the brown,
+self-colored eyes. The nose should be short and tapering. The teeth
+should be good, and the claws flat. The lower leg should be straight,
+and the upper hind leg lie at closed angles. The foot should be small
+and round (in the maltese, pointed). A good cat has a light frame, but a
+deep chest; a slim, graceful, and fine neck; medium-sized ears with
+rounded tips. The croup should be square and high; the tail of a
+short-haired cat long and tapering, and of a long-haired cat broad and
+bent over at the end.
+
+The good results of a cat show are best told in a few words by one who
+has acted as judge at an American exhibition.
+
+"One year," he said, "people have to learn that there is such a thing as
+a cat; the next they come to the show and learn to tell the different
+breeds; another year they learn the difference between a good cat and a
+poor one; and the next year they become exhibitors, and tell the judges
+how to award the premiums."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+CONCERNING HIGH-BRED CATS IN AMERICA
+
+
+One of the first American women to start a "cattery" in this country was
+Mrs. Clinton Locke, wife of the rector of Grace Church, Chicago. As a
+clergyman's wife she has done a great deal of good among the various
+charities of her city simply from the income derived from her kennels.
+She has been very generous in gifts of her kittens to other women who
+have made the raising of fine cats a means to add to a slender income,
+and has sent beautiful cats all over the United States, to Mexico, and
+even to Germany. Under her hospitable roof at 2825 Indiana Avenue is a
+cat family of great distinction. First, there is The Beadle, a splendid
+blue male with amber eyes, whose long pedigree appears in the third
+volume of the N.C.C.S.B. under the number 1872, sired by Glaucus,
+and his dam was Hawthorne Bounce. His pedigree is traced for many
+generations. He was bred by Mrs. Dean of Hawthornedene, Slough, England.
+The Beadle took first prize at the cat show held in Chicago in 1896. He
+also had honorable mention at two cat shows in England when a kitten,
+under the name of Bumble Bee. Lord Gwynne is a noble specimen, a
+long-haired white cat with wonderful blue eyes. He was bred from
+Champion Bundle, and his mother was out of The Masher, No. 1027, winner
+of many championships. His former owner was Mrs. Davies, of Upper
+Cattesham. Mrs. Locke purchased him from A.A. Clarke, one of the best
+judges of cats in England. Lord Gwynne took a prize at the Brighton Cat
+Show in England in 1895, as a kitten. The father of The Beadle's mate,
+Rosalys, was the famous "Bluebeard."
+
+Mrs. Locke's chinchillas are the finest ones in this country. Atossa,
+the mother cat, has a wonderful litter of kittens. She was bred to Lord
+Argent, one of the three celebrated stud chinchillas in England. She
+arrived in this country in July, and ten days after gave birth to her
+foreign kittens. One of the kittens has been sold to Mrs. Dr.
+Forsheimer, of Cincinnati, and another to Mrs. W.E. Colburn, of South
+Chicago. The others Mrs. Locke will not part with at any price.
+
+Smerdis, the grand chinchilla male brought over as a future mate for
+Atossa, is a royal cat. He looks as though he had run away from Bengal,
+but, like all of Mrs. Locke's cats, he is gentle and loving. He is the son
+of Lord Southampton, the lightest chinchilla stud in England (N.C.C.S.B.
+1690), and his mother is Silver Spray, No. 1542. His maternal grandparents
+are Silver King and Harebell, and his great-grandparents Perso and
+Beauty,--all registered cats. On his father's side a pedigree of three
+generations can be traced. One of her more recent importations is Lord
+Gwynne's mate, Lady Mertice, a beautiful long-haired cat with blue eyes.
+Other famous cats of hers have been Bettina, Nora, Doc, Vashti, Marigold,
+Grover, and Wendell.
+
+One of Mrs Locke's treasures is a _bona fide_ cat mummy, brought by
+Mrs. Locke from Egypt. It has been verified at the Gizeh Museum to be
+four thousand years old.
+
+It is fully twenty-five years since Mrs. Locke began to turn her
+attention to fine cats, and when she imported her first cat to Chicago
+there was only one other in the United States. That one was Mrs. Edwin
+Brainard's Madam, a wonderful black, imported from Spain. Her first
+long-haired cat was Wendell, named for the friend who brought him from
+Persia, and his descendants are now in the Lockehaven Cattery. Queen
+Wendella is one of the most famous cats in America to-day, and mother of
+the beautiful Lockehaven Quartette. These are all descended from the
+first Wendell. The kittens in the Lockehaven Quartette went to Mrs. S.S.
+Leach, Bonny Lea, New London, Ct.; Miss Lucy Nichols, Ben Mahr Cattery,
+Waterbury, Ct.; Miss Olive Watson, Warrensburg, Pa.; and Mrs. B.M.
+Gladding, at Memphis, Tenn, Mrs. Locke's Lord Argent, descended from
+Atossa and the famous Lord Argent, of England, is a magnificent cat,
+while her Smerdis is the son of the greatest chinchillas in the world.
+Rosalys II, now owned by Mr. C.H. Jones, of Palmyra, N.Y., was once her
+cat, and was the daughter of Rosalys (owned by Miss Nichols, of
+Waterbury, Ct), who was a granddaughter of the famous Bluebeard, of
+England. These, with the beautiful brown tabby, Crystal, owned by Mr.
+Jones, have all been prize winners. Lucy Claire is a recent importation,
+who won second and third prizes in England under the name of Baby
+Flossie. She is the daughter of Duke of Kent and Topso, of Merevale. Her
+paternal grandparents are Mrs. Herring's well-known champion, Blue Jack,
+and Marney. The maternal grandparents are King Harry, a prize winner at
+Clifton and Brighton, and Fluff.
+
+Mrs. Locke's cats are all imported. She has sometimes purchased cats
+from Maine or elsewhere for people who did not care to pay the price
+demanded for her fine kittens, but she has never had in her own cattery
+any cats of American origin. Her stock, therefore, is probably the
+choicest in America. She always has from twenty to twenty-five cats, and
+the cat-lover who obtains one of her kittens is fortunate indeed. A
+beautiful pair of blacks in Mrs. Locke's cattery have the most desirable
+shade of amber eyes, and are named "Blackbird" and "St. Tudno"; she has
+also a choice pair of Siamese cats called "Siam" and "Sally Ward."
+
+Mrs. Josiah Cratty, of Oak Park, has a cattery called the "Jungfrau
+Katterie," and her cats are remarkably beautiful. Her Bartimaeus and
+True Blue are magnificent white cats, sired by Mrs. Locke's Lord Gwynne.
+
+Miss L.C. Johnstone, of Chicago, has some of the handsomest cats in the
+country. Cherie is a wonderful blue shaded cat; Lord Humm is a splendid
+brown tabby; while Beauty Belle is an exceedingly handsome white cat.
+Miss Johnstone takes great pains with her cats, and is rewarded by
+having them rated among the best in America.
+
+Some of the beautiful cats which have been sent from Chicago to homes
+elsewhere are Teddy Roosevelt, a magnificent white, sired by Mrs. W.E.
+Colburn's Paris, and belonging to Mrs. L. Kemp, of Huron, S. Dak.;
+Silver Dick, a gorgeous buff and white, whose grandmother was Mrs.
+Colburn's Caprice, and who is owned by Mrs. Porter L. Evans, of East St.
+Louis; Toby, a pure white with green eyes, owned by Mrs. Elbert W.
+Shirk, of Indianapolis; and Amytis, a chinchilla belonging to Mrs. S.S.
+Leach, of New London, sired by Mrs. Locke's Smerdis, and the daughter of
+Rosalys II.
+
+Miss Cora Wallace, of East Brady, Pa., has Lord Ruffles, son of the
+first Rosalys and The Beadle, formerly Bumble Bee. Mrs. Fisk Greene, of
+Chicago, now owns a beautiful cat in Bumble Bee, and another in Miss
+Merrylegs, a blue with golden eyes, the daughter of Bumble Bee and Black
+Sapho. The Misses Peacock, of Topeka, have a pair of whites called
+Prince Hilo and Rosebud, the latter having blue eyes. Mrs. Frederick
+Monroe, of Riverside, Ill., owns a remarkable specimen of a genuine
+Russian cat, a perfect blue of extraordinary size. Miss Elizabeth
+Knight, of Milwaukee, has a beautiful silver tabby, Winifred, the
+daughter of Whychwood, Miss Kate Loraine Gage's celebrated silver tabby,
+of Brewster, N.Y. The most perfect "lavender blue" cat belongs to Miss
+Lucy E. Nichols, of Waterbury, Ct., and is named Roscal. He has
+beautiful long fur, with a splendid ruff and tail, and is a son of
+Rosalys and The Beadle.
+
+Mrs. Leland Norton has a number of magnificent cats. It was she who
+adopted Miss Frances Willard's "Tootsie," the famous cat which made two
+thousand dollars for the temperance cause. Miss Nella B. Wheatley has
+very fine kennels, and raises some beautiful cats. Her Taffy is a
+beautiful buff and white Angora, which has been very much admired. Her
+cats have been sold to go to many other cities. Speaking from her own
+experience Miss Wheatley says, "Raising Angoras is one of the most
+fascinating of employments, and I have found, when properly taken care
+of, they are among the most beautiful, strong, intelligent, and playful
+of all animals."
+
+Mrs. W.E. Colburn is another very successful owner of cat kennels. She
+has had some of the handsomest cats in this country, among which are
+"Paris," a magnificent white cat with blue eyes, and his mother,
+"Caprice," who has borne a number of wonderfully fine pure white Angoras
+with the most approved shade of blue eyes. Her cattery is known as the
+"Calumet Kennel," and there is no better judge of cats in the country
+than Mrs. Colburn.
+
+So much has been said of the cats which were "mascots" on the ships
+during the Cuban War that it is hardly necessary to speak of them. Tom,
+the mascot of the _Maine_, and Christobal have been shown in
+several cities of the Union since the war.
+
+The most beautiful collection of brown tabbies is owned by Mr. C.H.
+Jones, of Palmyra, N.Y., who has the "Crystal Cattery." Crystal, the son
+of Mrs. E.M. Barker's "King Humbert," is the champion brown tabby of
+America, and is a magnificent creature, of excellent disposition and
+greatly admired by cat fanciers everywhere. Mona Liza, his mate, and
+Goozie and Bubbles make up as handsome a quartet of this variety as one
+could wish to see. Goozie's tail is now over twelve inches in
+circumference. Mr. Jones keeps about twenty fine cats in stock all the
+time.
+
+The most highly valued cat in America is Napoleon the Great, whose owner
+has refused four thousand dollars for him. A magnificent fellow he is
+too, with his bushy orange fur and lionlike head. He is ten years old
+and weighs twenty-three pounds, which is a remarkable weight in a male
+cat, only gelded ones ordinarily running above fifteen pounds. Napoleon
+was bred by a French nobleman, and was born at the Chateau
+Fontainebleau, near Paris, in 1888. He is a pure French Angora, which is
+shown by his long crinkly hair--so long that it has to be frequently
+clipped to preserve the health and comfort of the beautiful creature.
+This clipping is what causes the uneven quality of fur which appears in
+his picture. His mother was a famous cat, and his grandmother was one of
+the grandest dams of France (no pun intended). The latter lived to be
+nineteen years old, and consequently Napoleon the Great is regarded by
+his owners as a mere youth. He has taken first prizes and medals
+wherever he has been exhibited, and at Boston, 1897, won the silver cup
+offered for the best cat in the exhibition.
+
+Another fine cat belonging to Mrs. Weed, is Marguerite, mother of Le
+Noir, a beautiful black Angora, sired by Napoleon the Great and owned by
+Mrs. Weed. Juno is Napoleon's daughter, born in 1894, and is valued at
+fifteen hundred dollars. When she was seven months old her owners
+refused two hundred dollars for her. She is a tortoise-shell and white
+French Angora, and a remarkably beautiful creature. All these cats are
+great pets, and are allowed the freedom of the house and barns, although
+when they run about the grounds there is always a man in attendance. Six
+or seven thousand dollars' worth of cats sporting on the lawn together
+is a rich sight, but not altogether without risk.
+
+Mrs. Fabius M. Clarke's "Persia," a beautiful dark chinchilla, is one of
+the finest cats in this country. She began her career by taking special
+and first prizes at Fastmay's Cat Show in England, as the best long-haired
+kitten. She also took the first prize as a kitten at Lancashire, and at
+the National Cat Show in New York in 1895. She was bred in England; sire,
+King of Uhn; dam, Brunette, of pure imported Persian stock. Mrs. Clarke
+brought her home in January, 1895, and she is still worshipped as a family
+pet at her New York home. "Sylvio" was also brought over at the same time.
+He was a beautiful long-haired male silver tabby, and bred by Mrs. A.F.
+Gardner. Sylvio was sired by the famous Topso of Dingley (owned by Miss
+Leake), famous as the best long-haired tabby in England. Sylvio's mother
+was Mimidatzi, whose pedigree is given in the previous chapter. "Mimi's"
+sire was the champion Blue Boy the Great, whose mother was Boots of
+Bridgeyate, whose pedigree is also given in the extract from the stud
+book. Sylvio took a first prize at the New York Show, 1895, but
+unfortunately was poisoned before he was a year old. This seems the
+greater pity, because he had a remarkably fine pedigree, and gave promise
+of being one of the best cats America has yet seen.
+
+Persia is a handsome specimen of the fine blue chinchilla class. She is
+quiet, amiable, and shows her high breeding in her good manners and
+intelligence. Her tail is like a fox's brush, and her ruff gladdens the
+heart of every cat fancier that beholds her. She is an aristocratic
+little creature, and seems to feel that she comes of famous foreign
+ancestry. Mrs. Clarke makes great pets of her beautiful cats, and trains
+them to do many a cunning trick.
+
+Another cat which has won several prizes, and took the silver bowl
+offered for the best cat and litter of kittens in the 1895 cat show of
+New York is Ellen Terry, a handsome orange and white, exhibited by Mrs.
+Fabius M. Clarke. At that show she had seven beautiful kittens, and they
+all reposed in a dainty white and yellow basket with the mother,
+delighting the hearts of all beholders. She now belongs to Mrs. Brian
+Brown, of Brooklyn. She is a well-bred animal, with a pretty face and
+fine feathering. One of the kittens who won the silver bowl in 1895 took
+the second prize for long-haired white female in New York, in March,
+1896. She is a beautiful creature, known as Princess Dinazarde, and
+belongs to Mrs. James S.H. Umsted, of New York.
+
+Sylvia is still in Mrs. Clarke's possession, and is a beautiful
+creature, dainty, refined, and very jealous of her mistress's affection.
+Mrs. Clarke also owns a real Manx cat, brought from the Isle of Man by
+Captain McKenzie. It acts like a monkey, climbing up on mantels and
+throwing down pictures and other small objects, in the regular monkey
+spirit of mischief. It has many queer attributes, and hops about like a
+rabbit. She also owns Sapho, who was bred by Ella Wheeler Wilcox from
+her Madame Ref and Mr. Stevens's Ajax, an uncommonly handsome white
+Angora.
+
+The sire of Topso and Sylvia was Musjah, owned by Mr. Ferdinand Danton,
+a New York artist. He was a magnificent creature, imported from Algiers
+in 1894; a pure blue Persian of uncommon size and beautiful coloring.
+Musjah was valued at two hundred dollars, but has been stolen from Mr.
+Danton. Probably his present owner will not exhibit him at future cat
+shows.
+
+Ajax is one of the finest white Angoras in this country. His owner, Mr.
+D.W. Stevens, of West-field, Mass., has refused five hundred dollars for
+him, and would not consider one thousand dollars as a fair exchange for
+the majestic creature. He was born in 1893, and is valued, not only for
+his fine points, but because he is a family pet, with a fine disposition
+and uncommon intelligence. At the New York show in 1895, and at several
+other shows, he has won first prizes.
+
+One of his sons bids fair to be as fine a cat as Ajax. This is Sampson,
+bred by Ella Wheeler Wilcox, from Madame Ref, and owned by Mrs. Brian
+Brown. Mr. Stevens has a number of other high-bred cats, one of whom is
+Raby, a reddish black female, with a red ruff. Another is Lady, who is
+pure white; and then there are Monkey and Midget, who are black and
+white Angoras. All of these cats are kept in a pen, half of which is
+within the barn, and the other half out of doors and enclosed by wire
+netting. Ajax roams over the house at will, and the others pass some of
+the time there, but the entire collection, sometimes numbering
+twenty-five, is too valuable to be given the freedom of all outdoors.
+Both Mr. and Mrs. Stevens are very fond of cats, and have made a study
+of them in sickness and health. Some years ago, a malicious raid was
+made on the pen, and every cat poisoned with the exception of Raby,
+whose life was saved only by frequent and generous doses of skunk's oil
+and milk.
+
+At the first New York show, Miss Ethel Nesmith Anderson's Chico, an
+imported Persian, took the second prize, after Ajax, in the pure white,
+longhaired class. The third prize was won by Snow, another imported
+Angora, belonging to Mr. George A. Rawson, of Newton, Mass. Snow had
+already taken a prize at Crystal Palace. He is a magnificent animal. Mr.
+Rawson owns a number of beautiful cats, which are the pride of his
+family, and bring visitors from all parts of the country. His
+orange-colored, long-haired Dandy won first prizes at the Boston shows
+of 1896 and 1897 in the gelded class. He is beautifully marked, and has
+a disposition as "childlike and bland" as the most exacting owner could
+wish. Miss Puff is also owned by Mr. Rawson, and presents him with
+beautiful white Angora kittens every year. The group of ten white
+kittens, raised by him in 1896, gives some idea of the beauty of these
+kittens: although the picture was taken with a high wind blowing in
+their faces, causing one white beauty to conceal all marks of
+identification except an ear, and another to hide completely behind his
+playmates.
+
+Mustapha was entered by Dr. Huidekoper in the first New York show, but
+not for competition. He was a magnificent brindled Persian gelded cat,
+six years old, who enjoyed the plaudits of the multitude just as well as
+though he had taken first prize. He was very fond of his master, but
+very shy with strangers when at home. He slept on the library desk, or a
+cushion next his master's bed whenever he could be alone with the
+doctor, but at other times preferred his own company or that of the
+cook.
+
+Another cat that attracted a great deal of attention was Master Pettet's
+Tommy, a white Persian, imported in 1889 and valued at five hundred
+dollars, although no money consideration could induce his owners to part
+with him. He was brought from the interior of Persia, where he was
+captured in a wild state. He was kept caged for over a year, and would
+not be tamed; but at last he became domesticated, and is now one of the
+dearest pets imaginable. His fur is extremely long and soft, without a
+colored hair. His tail is broad and carried proudly aloft, curling over
+toward his back when walking. His face is full of intelligence: his ears
+well-tipped and feathered, and his ruff a thing of beauty and a joy
+forever.
+
+King Max, a long-haired, black male, weighing thirteen pounds at the age
+of one year, and valued at one thousand dollars, took first prizes in
+Boston in January, 1897, '98, and '99. He is owned by Mrs. E.R. Taylor,
+of Medford, Mass., and attracts constant attention during shows. His fur
+is without a single white hair and is a finger deep; his ruff encircles
+his head like a great aureole. He is not only one of the most beautiful
+cats I have ever seen, but one of the best-natured: as his reputation
+for beauty spreads among visitors at the show, everybody wants to see
+him, and he has no chance at all for naps. Generally he is brought
+forward and taken from his cage a hundred times a day; but not once does
+he show the least sign of ill-temper, and even on the last day of the
+show he keeps up a continual low purr of content and happiness. Perhaps
+he knows how handsome he is.
+
+Grover B., the Mascotte, is a Philadelphia cat who took the twenty-five
+dollar gold medal in 1895, at the New York show, as the heaviest white
+cat exhibited. He belongs to Mr. and Mrs. W.P. Buchanan, and weighs over
+twenty pounds. He is a thoroughbred, and is valued at one thousand
+dollars, having been brought from the Isle of Malta, and he wears a
+one-hundred-dollar gold collar. He is a remarkable cat, noted
+particularly for his intelligence and amiability. He is very dainty in
+his choice of food, and prefers to eat his dinners in his high chair at
+the table. He has a fascinating habit of feeding himself with his paws.
+He is very talkative just before meal-times, and is versed in all the
+feline arts of making one's self understood. He waits at the front door
+for his master every night, and will not leave him all the evening. He
+sleeps in a bed of his own, snugly wrapped up in blankets, and he is
+admired by all who know him, not more for his beauty than for his
+excellent deportment. He furnishes one more proof that a properly
+trained and well-cared-for cat has a large amount of common sense and
+appreciation.
+
+Mrs. Frances Hodgson Burnett's tiger cat Dick attracted a great deal of
+attention at the first New York show. He weighs twenty-two pounds and is
+three feet long, with a girth of twenty-four inches; and he has attained
+some degree of prominence in her writings.
+
+A trio of cats that were a centre of attraction at that first show
+belonged to Colonel Mann, of _Town Topics_. They were jet black,
+and rejoiced in the names of Taffy, The Laird, and Little Billee. They
+took a first prize, but two of them have since come to an untimely end.
+Colonel Mann is a devoted lover of animals, and has given a standing
+order that none of his employees shall, if they see a starving kitten on
+the street, leave it to suffer and die. Accordingly his office is a sort
+of refuge for unfortunate cats, and one may always see a number of
+happy-looking creatures there, who seem to appreciate the kindness which
+surrounds them. The office is in a fifth story overlooking Fifth Avenue:
+and the cats used to crawl out on the wide window-ledge in summer-time
+and enjoy the air and the view of Madison Square. But alas! The Laird
+and Little Billee came to their deaths by jumping from their high perch
+after sparrows and falling to the pavement below. Now there is a strong
+wire grating across the windows, and Taffy, a monstrous, shiny black
+fellow, is the leader in the "_Town Topics_ Colony."
+
+Dr. H.L. Hammond, of Killingly, Ct., makes a speciality of the rare
+Australian cats, and has taken numerous prizes with them at every cat
+show in this country, where they are universally admired. His Columbia
+is valued at six hundred dollars, and his Tricksey at five hundred
+dollars. They are, indeed, beautiful creatures, though somewhat unique
+in the cat world, as we see it. They are very sleek cats, with fur so
+short, glossy, and fine that it looks like the finest satin. Their heads
+are small and narrow, with noses that seem pointed when compared with
+other cats. They are very intelligent and affectionate little creatures,
+and make the loveliest of pets. Dr. and Mrs. Hammond are extremely fond
+of their unusual and valuable cat family,--and tell the most interesting
+tales of their antics and habits. His Columbia was an imported cat, and
+the doctor has reason to believe that she with her mate are originally
+from the Siamese cat imported from Siam to Australia. They are all very
+delicate as kittens, the mother rarely having more than one at a time.
+With two exceptions, these cats have never had more than two kittens at
+a litter. They are very partial to heat, but cannot stand cold weather.
+They have spells of sleeping when nothing has power to disturb them, but
+when they do wake up they have a "high time," running and playing. They
+are affectionate, being very fond of their owner, but rather shy with
+strangers. They are uncommonly intelligent, too, and are very teachable
+when young. They are such beautiful creatures, besides being rare in
+this part of the world, that it is altogether probable that they will be
+much sought after as pets.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+CONCERNING CATS IN POETRY
+
+
+As far back as the ninth century, a poem on a cat was written, which has
+come down to us from the Arabic. Its author was Ibn Alalaf Alnaharwany,
+of Bagdad, who died in 318 A.H. or A.D. 930. He was one of the better
+known poets of the khalifate, and his work may still be found in the
+original. The following verses, which were translated by Dr. Carlyle,
+are confessedly a paraphrase rather than a strict translation; but, of
+course, the sense is the same. Commentators differ on the question as to
+whether the poet really meant anything more in this poem than to sing of
+the death of a pet, and some have tried to ascribe to it a hidden
+meaning which implies beautiful slaves, lovers, and assignations; just
+as the wise Browning student discovers meanings in that great poet's
+works of which he never dreamed. Nevertheless, we who love cats are fain
+to believe that this follower of Mahomet meant only to celebrate the
+merits--perhaps it would hardly do to call them virtues--of his beloved
+cat.
+
+The lines are inscribed,--
+
+ ON A CAT
+
+ THAT WAS KILLED AS SHE WAS ATTEMPTING TO ROB A DOVE-HOUSE
+
+ BY IBN ALALAF ALNAHARWANY
+
+
+ Poor Puss is gone!--'tis Fate's decree--
+ Yet I must still her loss deplore;
+ For dearer than a child was she,
+ And ne'er shall I behold her more!
+
+ With many a sad, presaging tear,
+ This morn I saw her steal away,
+ While she went on without a fear,
+ Except that she should miss her prey.
+
+ I saw her to the dove-house climb,
+ With cautious feet and slow she stept,
+ Resolved to balance loss of time
+ By eating faster than she crept.
+
+ Her subtle foes were on the watch,
+ And marked her course, with fury fraught;
+ And while she hoped the birds to catch,
+ An arrow's point the huntress caught.
+
+ In fancy she had got them all,
+ And drunk their blood and sucked their breath;
+ Alas! she only got a fall,
+ And only drank the draught of death.
+
+ Why, why was pigeon's flesh so nice,
+ That thoughtless cats should love it thus?
+ Hadst thou but lived on rats and mice,
+ Thou hadst been living still, poor Puss!
+
+ Cursed be the taste, howe'er refined,
+ That prompts us for such joys to wish;
+ And cursed the dainty where we find
+ Destruction lurking in the dish.
+
+
+Among the poets, Pussy has always found plenty of friends. Her feline
+grace and softness has inspired some of the greatest, and, from Tasso
+and Petrarch down, her quiet and dignified demeanor have been celebrated
+in verse. Mr. Swinburne, within a few years, has written a charming poem
+which was published in the _Athenaeum_, and which places the writer
+among the select inner circle of true cat-lovers. He calls his verses--
+
+ TO A CAT
+
+ Stately, kindly, lordly friend,
+ Condescend
+ Here to sit by me, and turn
+ Glorious eyes that smile and burn,
+ Golden eyes, love's lustrous meed,
+ On the golden page I read.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Dogs may fawn on all and some
+ As they come:
+ You a friend of loftier mind,
+ Answer friends alone in kind.
+ Just your foot upon my hand
+ Softly bids it understand.
+
+
+Thomas Gray's poem on the death of Robert Walpole's cat, which was
+drowned in a bowl of goldfish, was greatly prized by the latter; after
+the death of the poet the bowl was placed on a pedestal at Strawberry
+Hill, with a few lines from the poem as an inscription. In a letter
+dated March 1, 1747, accompanying it, Mr. Gray says:--
+
+"As one ought to be particularly careful to avoid blunders in a
+compliment of condolence, it would be a sensible satisfaction to me
+(before I testify my sorrow and the sincere part I take in your
+misfortune) to know for certain who it is I lament. [Note the 'Who.'] I
+knew Zara and Selima (Selima was it, or Fatima?), or rather I knew them
+both together, for I cannot justly say which was which. Then, as to your
+handsome cat, the name you distinguish her by, I am no less at a loss,
+as well knowing one's handsome cat is always the cat one likes best; or
+if one be alive and the other dead, it is usually the latter that is the
+handsomest. Besides, if the point were never so clear, I hope you do not
+think me so ill bred or so imprudent as to forfeit all my interest in
+the survivor. Oh, no; I would rather seem to mistake and imagine, to be
+sure, it must be the tabby one that had met with this sad accident. Till
+this affair is a little better determined, you will excuse me if I do
+not cry, 'Tempus inane peto, requiem, spatiumque doloris.'"
+
+He closes the letter by saying, "There's a poem for you; it is rather
+too long for an epitaph." And then the familiar--
+
+ "'Twas on a lofty vase's side,
+ Where China's gayest art had dy'd
+ The azure flowers that blow:
+ Demurest of the tabby kind,
+ The pensive Selima, reclined,
+ Gazed on the lake below."
+
+
+Wordsworth's "Kitten and the Falling Leaves," is in the high, moralizing
+style.
+
+ "That way look, my Infant, lo!
+ What a pretty baby show.
+ See the kitten on the wall,
+ Sporting with the leaves that fall,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "But the kitten, how she starts,
+ Crouches, stretches, paws, and darts
+ First at one and then its fellow,
+ Just as light and just as yellow:
+ There are many now--now one,
+ Now they stop, and there are none.
+ What intentness of desire
+ In her upward eye of fire!
+ With a tiger-leap halfway
+ Now she meets the coming prey,
+ Lets it go as fast, and then
+ Has it in her power again:
+ Now she works with three or four.
+ Like an Indian conjuror:
+ Quick as he in feats of art,
+ Far beyond in joy of heart.
+ Were her antics played in the eye
+ Of a thousand standers-by,
+ Clapping hands with shout and stare,
+ What would little Tabby care
+ For the plaudits of the crowd?
+ Over happy to be proud,
+ Over wealthy in the treasure
+ Of her own exceeding pleasure.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Pleased by any random toy:
+ By a kitten's busy joy,
+ Or an infant's laughing eye
+ Sharing in the ecstacy:
+ I would fain like that or this
+ Find my wisdom in my bliss:
+ Keep the sprightly soul awake,
+ And have faculties to take,
+ Even from things by sorrow wrought,
+ Matter for a jocund thought,
+ Spite of care and spite of grief,
+ To gambol with life's falling leaf."
+
+
+Cowper's love for animals was well known. At one time, according to Lady
+Hesketh, he had besides two dogs, two goldfinches, and two canaries,
+five rabbits, three hares, two guinea-pigs, a squirrel, a magpie, a jay,
+and a starling. In addition he had, at least, one cat, for Lady Hesketh
+says, "One evening the cat giving one of the hares a sound box on the
+ear, the hare ran after her, and having caught her, punished her by
+drumming on her back with her two feet hard as drumsticks, till the
+creature would actually have been killed had not Mrs. Unwin rescued
+her." It might have been this very cat that was the inspiration of
+Cowper's poem, "To a Retired Cat," which had as a moral the familiar
+stanza:--
+
+ "Beware of too sublime a sense
+ Of your own worth and consequence:
+ The man who dreams himself so great
+ And his importance of such weight,
+ That all around, in all that's done,
+ Must move and act for him alone,
+ Will learn in school of tribulation
+ The folly of his expectation."
+
+
+Baudelaire wrote:--
+
+ "Come, beauty, rest upon my loving heart,
+ But cease thy paws' sharp-nailed play,
+ And let me peer into those eyes that dart
+ Mixed agate and metallic ray."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Grave scholars and mad lovers all admire
+ And love, and each alike, at his full tide
+ Those suave and puissant cats, the fireside's pride,
+ Who like the sedentary life and glow of fire."
+
+
+Goldsmith also wrote of the kitten:--
+
+ "Around in sympathetic mirth
+ Its tricks the kitten tries:
+ The cricket chirrups in the hearth,
+ The crackling fagot flies."
+
+
+Does this not suggest a charming glimpse of the poet's English home?
+
+Keats was evidently not acquainted with the best and sleekest pet cat,
+and his "Sonnet to a Cat" does not indicate that he fully appreciated
+their higher qualities.
+
+Mr. Whittier, our good Quaker poet, while not attempting an elaborate
+sonnet or stilted elegiac, shows a most appreciative spirit in the lines
+he wrote for a little girl who asked him one day, with tears in her
+eyes, to write an epitaph for her lost Bathsheba.
+
+ "Bathsheba: To whom none ever said scat,
+ No worthier cat
+ Ever sat on a mat
+ Or caught a rat:
+ _Requies-cat_."
+
+
+Clinton Scollard, however, has given us an epitaph that many
+sympathizing admirers would gladly inscribe on the tombstones of their
+lost pets, if it were only the popular fashion to put tombstones over
+their graves. This is Mr. Scollard's tribute, the best ever written:--
+
+ GRIMALKIN
+
+ AN ELEGY ON PETER, AGED TWELVE
+
+ In vain the kindly call: in vain
+ The plate for which thou once wast fain
+ At morn and noon and daylight's wane,
+ O King of mousers.
+ No more I hear thee purr and purr
+ As in the frolic days that were,
+ When thou didst rub thy velvet fur
+ Against my trousers.
+
+ How empty are the places where
+ Thou erst wert frankly debonair,
+ Nor dreamed a dream of feline care,
+ A capering kitten.
+ The sunny haunts where, grown a cat,
+ You pondered this, considered that,
+ The cushioned chair, the rug, the mat,
+ By firelight smitten.
+
+ Although of few thou stoodst in dread,
+ How well thou knew a friendly tread,
+ And what upon thy back and head
+ The stroking hand meant.
+ A passing scent could keenly wake
+ Thy eagerness for chop or steak,
+ Yet, Puss, how rarely didst thou break
+ The eighth commandment.
+
+ Though brief thy life, a little span
+ Of days compared with that of man,
+ The time allotted to thee ran
+ In smoother metre.
+ Now with the warm earth o'er thy breast,
+ O wisest of thy kind and best,
+ Forever mayst thou softly rest,
+ _In pace_, Peter.
+
+
+One only has to read this poem to feel that Mr. Scollard knew what it is
+to love a gentle, intelligent, affectionate cat--made so by kind
+treatment.
+
+To François Coppée the cat is as sacred as it was to the Egyptians of
+old. The society of his feline pets is to him ever delightful and
+consoling, and it may have inspired him to write some of his most
+melodious verses. Nevertheless he is not the cat's poet. It was Charles
+Cros who wrote:--
+
+ "Chatte blanche, chatte sans tache,
+ Je te demande dans ces vers
+ Quel secret dort dans tes yeux verts,
+ Quel sarcasme sous ta moustache?"
+
+
+Here is a version in verse of the famous "Kilkenny Cats":--
+
+ "O'Flynn, she was an Irishman, as very well was known,
+ And she lived down in Kilkenny, and she lived there all alone,
+ With only six great large tom-cats that knowed their ways about;
+ And everybody else besides she scrupulously shut out."
+
+ "Oh, very fond of cats was she, and whiskey, too, 'tis said,
+ She didn't feed 'em very much, but she combed 'em well instead:
+ As may be guessed, these large tom-cats did not get very sleek
+ Upon a combing once a day and a 'haporth' once a week.
+
+ "Now, on one dreary winter's night O'Flynn she went to bed
+ With a whiskey bottle under her arm, the whiskey in her head.
+ The six great large tom-cats they all sat in a dismal row,
+ And horridly glared their hazy eyes, their tails wagged to and fro.
+
+ "At last one grim graymalkin spoke, in accents dire to tell,
+ And dreadful were the words which in his horrid whisper fell:
+ And all the six large tom-cats in answer loud did squall,
+ 'Let's kill her, and let's eat her, body, bones, and all.'
+
+ "Oh, horrible! Oh, terrible! Oh, deadly tale to tell!
+ When the sun shone through the window-hole all seemed still and well:
+ The cats they sat and licked their paws all in a merry ring.
+ But nothing else in all the house looked like a living thing.
+
+ "Anon they quarrelled savagely--they spit, they swore, they hollered:
+ At last these six great large tom-cats they one another swallered:
+ And naught but one long tail was left in that once peaceful dwelling,
+ And a very tough one, too, it was--it's the same that I've been telling."
+
+
+By far more artistic is the version for which I am indebted to Miss
+Katharine Eleanor Conway, herself a poet of high order and a lover of
+cats.
+
+THE KILKENNY CATS
+
+ There wanst was two cats in Kilkenny,
+ Aitch thought there was one cat too many;
+ So they quarrelled and fit,
+ They scratched and they bit,
+ Till, excepting their nails,
+ And the tips of their tails,
+ Instead of two cats, there wasn't any.
+
+
+This version comes from Ireland, and is doubtless the correct original.
+
+"Note," says Miss Conway, "the more than Greek delicacy with which the
+tragedy is told. No mutilation, no gore; just an effacement--prompt and
+absolute--'there wasn't any.' It would be hard to overpraise that fine
+touch."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+CONCERNING CAT ARTISTS
+
+
+While thousands of artists, first and last, have undertaken to paint
+cats, there are but few who have been able to do them justice. Artists
+who have possessed the technical skill requisite to such delicate work
+have rarely been willing to give to what they have regarded as
+unimportant subjects the necessary study; and those who have been
+willing to study cats seriously have possessed but seldom the skill
+requisite to paint them well.
+
+Thomas Janvier, whose judgment on such matters is unquestioned, declares
+that not a dozen have succeeded in painting thoroughly good cat
+portraits, portraits so true to nature as to satisfy--if they could
+express their feelings in the premises--the cat subjects and their cat
+friends. Only four painters, he says, ever painted cats habitually and
+always well.
+
+Two members of this small but highly distinguished company flourished
+about a century ago in widely separated parts of the world, and without
+either of them knowing that the other existed.
+
+One was a Japanese artist, named Ho-Kou-Say, whose method of painting,
+of course, was quite unlike that to which we are accustomed in this
+western part of the world, but who had a wonderful faculty for making
+his queer little cat figures seem intensely alive.
+
+The other was a Swiss artist, named Gottfried Mind, whose cat pictures
+are so perfect in their way that he came to be honorably known as "the
+Cat Raphael."
+
+The other two members of the cat quartet are the French artist, Monsieur
+Louis Eugene Lambert, whose pictures are almost as well known in this
+country as they are in France; and the Dutch artist, Madame Henriette
+Ronner, whose delightful cat pictures are known even better, as she
+catches the softer and sweeter graces of the cat more truly than
+Lambert.
+
+A thoroughly good picture of a cat is hard to paint, from a technical
+standpoint, because the artist must represent not only the soft surface
+of fur, but the underlying hard lines of muscle: and his studies must be
+made under conditions of cat perversity which are at times quite enough
+to drive him wild. If he is to represent the cat in repose, he must wait
+for her to take that position of her own accord; and then, just as his
+sketch is well under way, she is liable to rise, stretch herself, and
+walk off. If his picture is to represent action, he must wait for the
+cat to do what he wants her to do, and that many times before he can be
+quite sure that his drawing is correct. With these severe limitations
+upon cat painting, it is not surprising that very few good pictures of
+cats have been painted.
+
+Gottfried Mind has left innumerable pen sketches to prove his intimate
+knowledge of the beauty and charm of the cat. He was born at Berne in
+1768. He had a special taste for drawing animals even when very young,
+bears and cats being his favorite subjects. As he grew older he obtained
+a wonderful proficiency, and his cat pictures appeared with every
+variety of expression. Their silky coats, their graceful attitudes,
+their firm shape beneath the undulating fur, were treated so as to make
+Mind's cats seem alive.
+
+It was Madame Lebrun who named him the "Raphael of Cats," and many a
+royal personage bought his pictures. He, like most cat painters, kept
+his cats constantly with him, knowing that only by persistent and never
+tiring study could he ever hope to master their infinite variety. His
+favorite mother cat kept closely at his side when he worked, or perhaps
+in his lap; while her kittens ran over him as fearlessly as they played
+with their mother's tail. When a terrible epidemic broke out among the
+cats of Berne in 1809, he hid his Minette safely from the police, but he
+never quite recovered from the horror of the massacre of the eight
+hundred that had to be sacrificed for the general safety of the people.
+He died in 1814, and in poverty, although a few years afterward his
+pictures brought extravagant prices.
+
+Burbank, the English painter, has done some good things in cat pictures.
+The expression of the face and the peculiar light in the cat's eye made
+up the realism of Burbank's pictures, which were reproductions of sleek
+and handsome drawing-room pets, whose shining coats he brings out with
+remarkable precision.
+
+The ill-fated Swiss artist Cornelius Wisscher's marvellous tom-cat has
+become typical.
+
+Delacroix, the painter of tigers, was a man of highly nervous
+temperament, but his cat sketches bring out too strongly the tigerish
+element to be altogether successful.
+
+Louis Eugene Lambert was a pupil of Delacroix. He was born in Paris,
+September 25, 1825, and the chief event of his youth was, perhaps, the
+great friendship which existed between him and Maurice Sands. Entomology
+was a fad with him for a time, but he finally took up his serious
+life-work in 1854, when he began illustrating for the _Journal of
+Agriculture_. In connection with his work, he began to study animals
+carefully, making dogs his specialty. In 1862 he illustrated an edition
+of La Fontaine, and in 1865 he obtained his first medal for a painting
+of dogs. In 1866 his painting of cats, "L'Horloge qui avance," won
+another medal, and brought his first fame as a cat painter. In 1874 he
+was made a Chevalier of the Legion of Honor. His "Envoi" in 1874, "Les
+Chats du Cardinal," and "Grandeur Decline" brought more medals. Although
+he has painted hosts of excellent dog pictures, cats are his favorites,
+on account, as he says, of "les formes fines et gracieux; mouvements,
+souple et subtil."
+
+In the Luxembourg Gallery, Mr. Lambert's "Family of Cats" is considered
+one of the finest cat pictures in the world. In this painting the mother
+sits upon a table watching the antics of her four frivolous kittens.
+There is a wonderful smoothness of touch and refinement of treatment
+that have never yet been excelled. "After the Banquet" is another
+excellent example of the same smoothness of execution, with fulness of
+action instead of repose. And yet there is an undeniable lack of the
+softer attributes which should be evident in the faces of the group.
+
+It is here that Madame Ronner excels all other cat painters, living or
+dead. She not only infuses a wonderful degree of life into her little
+figures, but reproduces the shades of expression, shifting and variable
+as the sands of the sea, as no other artist of the brush has done.
+Asleep or awake, her cats look exactly to the "felinarian" like cats
+with whom he or she is familiar. Curiosity, drowsiness, indifference,
+alertness, love, hate, anxiety, temper, innocence, cunning, fear,
+confidence, mischief, earnestness, dignity, helplessness,--they are all
+in Madame Ronner's cats' faces, just as we see them in our own cats.
+
+Madame Ronner is the daughter of Josephus Augustus Knip, a landscape
+painter of some celebrity sixty years ago, and from her father she
+received her first art education. She is now over seventy years old, and
+for nearly fifty years has made her home in Brussels. There, she and her
+happy cats, a big black Newfoundland dog named Priam, with a pert
+cockatoo named Coco, dwell together in a roomy house in its own grounds,
+back a little from the Charleroi Road. Madame Ronner has a good son to
+care for her, and she loves the animals, who are both her servants and
+her friends. Every day she spends three good hours of the morning in her
+studio, painting her delightful cat pictures with the energy of a young
+artist and the expert precision which we know so well. She was sixteen
+when she succeeded in painting a picture which was accepted and sold at
+a public exhibition at Dusseldorf. This was a study of a cat seated in a
+window and examining with great curiosity a bumblebee; while it would
+not compare with her later work, there must have been good quality in
+it, or it would not have got into a Dusseldorf picture exhibition at
+all. At any rate, it was the beginning of her successful career as an
+artist. From that time she managed to support herself and her father by
+painting pictures of animals. For many years, however, she confined
+herself to painting dogs. Her most famous picture, "The Friend of Man,"
+belongs to this period--a pathetic group composed of a sorrowing old
+sand-seller looking down upon a dying dog still harnessed to the little
+sand-wagon, with the two other dogs standing by with wistful looks of
+sympathy. When this picture was exhibited, in 1860, Madame Ronner's fame
+was established permanently.
+
+But it so happened that in the same year a friendly kitten came to live
+in her home, wandering in through the open doorway from no one knew
+where, and deciding, after sniffing about the place in cat fashion, to
+remain there for the remainder of its days. And it also happened that
+Madame Ronner was lured by this small stranger, who so coolly quartered
+himself upon her, to change the whole current of her artistic life, and
+to paint cats instead of dogs. Of course, this change could not be made
+in a moment; but after that the pictures which she painted to please
+herself were cat pictures, and as these were exhibited and her
+reputation as a cat painter became established, cat orders took the
+place of dog orders more and more, until at last her time was given
+wholly to cat painting. Her success in painting cat action has been due
+as much to her tireless patience as to her skill; a patience that gave
+her strength to spend hours upon hours in carefully watching the quick
+movements of the lithe little creatures, and in correcting again and
+again her rapidly made sketches.
+
+Every cat-lover knows that a cat cannot be induced, either by reason or
+by affection, to act in accordance with any wishes save its own. Also
+that cats find malicious amusement in doing what they know they are not
+wanted to do, and that with an affectation of innocence that materially
+aggravates their deliberate offence.
+
+But Madame Ronner, through her long experience, has evolved a way to get
+them to pose as models. Her plan is the simple one of keeping her models
+prisoners in a glass box, enclosed in a wire cage, while she is painting
+them. Inside the prison she cannot always command their actions, but her
+knowledge of cat character enables her to a certain extent to persuade
+them to take the pose which she requires. By placing a comfortable
+cushion in the cage she can tempt her model to lie down; some object of
+great interest, like a live mouse, for instance, exhibited just outside
+the cage is sure to create the eager look that she has shown so well on
+cat faces; and to induce her kittens to indulge in the leaps and bounds
+which she has succeeded so wonderfully in transferring to canvas, she
+keeps hanging from the top of the cage a most seductive "bob."
+
+Madame Ronner's favorite models are "Jem" and "Monmouth," cats of rare
+sweetness of temper, whose conduct in all relations of life is above
+reproach. The name of "Monmouth," as many will recall, was made famous
+by the hero of Monsieur La Bedolierre's classic, "Mother Michel and her
+Cat," [Footnote: Translated into English by Thomas Bailey Aldrich.] and
+therefore has clustering about it traditions so glorious that its wearers
+in modern times must be upheld always by lofty hopes and high resolves.
+Doubtless Monmouth Ronner feels the responsibility entailed upon him by
+his name.
+
+In the European galleries are several noted paintings in which the cat
+appears more or less unsuccessfully. Breughel and Teniers made their
+grotesque "Cat Concerts" famous, but one can scarcely see why, since the
+drawing is poor and there is no real insight into cat character evident.
+The sleeping cat, in Breughel's "Paradise Lost" in the Louvre, is
+better, being well drawn, but so small as to leave no chance for
+expression. Lebrun's "Sleep of the Infant Jesus," in the Louvre, has a
+slumbering cat under the stove, and in Barocci's "La Madonna del Gatto"
+the cat is the centre of interest. Holman Hunt's "The Awakening
+Conscience" and Murillo's Holy Family "del Pajarito" give the cat as a
+type of cruelty, but have failed egregiously in accuracy of form or
+expression. Paul Veronese's cat in "The Marriage at Cana" is fearfully
+and wonderfully made, and even Rembrandt failed when he tried to
+introduce a cat into his pictures.
+
+Rosa Bonheur has been wise enough not to attempt cat pictures, knowing
+that special study, for which she had not the time or the inclination,
+is necessary to fit an artist to excel with the feline character.
+Landseer, too, after trying twice, once in 1819 with "The Cat Disturbed"
+and once in 1824 with "The Cat's Paw," gave up all attempts at dealing
+with Grimalkin. Indeed, most artists who have attempted it, have found
+that to be a wholly successful cat artist such whole-hearted devotion to
+the subject as Madame Ronner's is the invariable price of distinction.
+
+Of late, however, more artists are found who are willing to pay this
+price, who are giving time and study not only to the subtle shadings of
+the delicate fur, but to the varying facial expression and sinuous
+movements of the cat. Margaret Stocks, of Munich, for example, is
+rapidly coming to the front as a cat painter, and some predict for her
+(she is still a young woman) a future equal to Madame Ronner's. Gambier
+Bolton's "Day Dreams" shows admirably the quality and "tumbled-ness" of
+an Angora kitten's fur, while the expression and drawing are equally
+good. Miss Cecilia Beaux's "Brighton Cats" is famous, and every student
+of cats recognizes its truthfulness at once.
+
+Angora and Persian kittens find another loving and faithful student in
+J. Adam, whose paintings have been photographed and reproduced in this
+country times without number. "Puss in Boots" is another foreign picture
+which has been photographed and sold extensively in this country.
+"Little Milksop" by the same artist, Mr. Frank Paton, gives fairly
+faithful drawing and expression of two kittens who have broken a milk
+pitcher and are eagerly lapping up the contents.
+
+In the Munich Gallery there is a painting by Claus Meyer, "Bose Zungen,"
+which has become quite noted. His three old cats and three young cats
+show three gossiping old crones by the side of whom are three small and
+awkward kittens.
+
+Of course, there are no artists whose painting of the cat is to be
+compared with Madame Ronner's. Mr. J.L. Dolph, of New York City, has
+painted hundreds of cat pieces which have found a ready sale, and Mr.
+Sid L. Brackett, of Boston, is doing very creditable work. A successful
+cat painter of the younger school is Mr. N.N. Bickford, of New York,
+whose "Peek-a-Boo" hangs in a Chicago gallery side by side with cats of
+Madame Ronner and Monsieur Lambert. "Miss Kitty's Birthday" shows that
+he has genuine understanding of cat character, and is mastering the
+subtleties of long white fur.
+
+Mr. Bickford is a pupil of Jules Lefèbvre Boulanger and Miralles. It was
+by chance that he became a painter of cats. Mademoiselle Marie Engle,
+the prima-donna, owned a beautiful white Angora cat which she prized
+very highly, and as her engagements abroad compelled her to part with
+the cat for a short time, she left Mizzi with the artist until her
+return. One day Mr. Bickford thought he would try painting the white,
+silken fur of Mizzi: the result not only surprised him but also his
+artist friends, who said, "Lambert himself could not have done better."
+
+Upon Miss Engle's return, seeing what an inspiration her cat had been,
+she gave her to Mr. Bickford, and it is needless to add that he has
+become deeply attached to his beautiful model. Mizzi is a pure white
+Angora, with beautiful blue eyes, and silky fur. She won first prize at
+the National Cat Show of 1895, but no longer attends cat shows, on
+account of her engagements as professional model.
+
+Ben Austrian, who has made a success in painting other animals, has done
+a cat picture of considerable merit. The subject was Tix, a beautiful
+tiger-gray, belonging to Mr. Mahlon W. Newton, of Philadelphia. The cat
+is noted, not only in Philadelphia, but among travelling men, as he
+resides at a hotel, and is quite a prominent member of the office force.
+He weighs fifteen pounds and is of a very affectionate nature, following
+his master to the park and about the establishment like a dog. During
+the day he lives in the office, lying on the counter or the key-rack,
+but at night he retires with his master at eleven or twelve o'clock,
+sleeping in his own basket in the bathroom, and waking his master
+promptly at seven every morning. Tix's picture hangs in the office of
+his hotel, and is becoming as famous as the cat.
+
+Elizabeth Bonsall is a young American artist who has exhibited some good
+cat pictures, and whose work promises to make her famous some day, if
+she does not "weary in well-doing"; and Mr. Jean Paul Selinger's
+"Kittens" are quite well known.
+
+The good cat illustrator is even more rare than the cat painters.
+Thousands of readers recall those wonderfully lifelike cats and kittens
+which were a feature of the _St. Nicholas_ a few years ago,
+accompanied by "nonsense rhymes" or "jingles." They were the work of
+Joseph G. Francis, of Brookline, Mass., and brought him no little fame.
+He was, and is still, a broker on State Street, Boston, and in his busy
+life these inimitable cat sketches were but an incident. Mr. Francis is
+a devoted admirer of all cats, and had for many years loved and studied
+one cat in particular. It was by accident that he discovered his own
+possibilities in the line of cat drawing, as he began making little
+pen-and-ink sketches for his own amusement and then for that of his
+friends. The latter persuaded him to send some of these drawings to the
+_St. Nicholas_ and the _Wide-Awake_ magazines, and, rather to
+his surprise, they were promptly accepted, and the "Francis cats" became
+famous. Mr. Francis does but little artistic work, nowadays, more
+important business keeping him well occupied; besides, he says, he "is
+not in the mood for it."
+
+Who does not know Louis Wain's cats?--that prince of English
+illustrators. Mr. Wain's home, when not in London, is at Bendigo Lodge,
+Westgate, Kent. He began his artistic career at nineteen, after a
+training in the best London schools. He was not a hard worker over his
+books, but his fondness for nature led him to an artist's career.
+American Indian stories were his delight, and accounts of the wandering
+outdoor life of our aborigines were instrumental in developing his
+powers of observation regarding the details of nature. Always fond of
+dumb animals, he began life by making sketches for sporting papers at
+agricultural shows all over England. It was his own cat "Peter" who
+first suggested to Louis Wain the fanciful cat creations which have made
+his name famous. Watching Peter's antics one evening, he was tempted to
+do a small study of kittens, which was promptly accepted by a magazine
+editor in London. Then he trained Peter to become a model and the
+starting-point of his success. Peter has done more to wipe out of
+England the contempt in which the cat was formerly held there, than any
+other feline in the world. He has done his race a service in raising
+their status from neglected, forlorn creatures on the one hand, or the
+pampered, overfed object of old maids' affections on the other, to a
+dignified place in the English house.
+
+The double-page picture of the "Cat's Christmas Dance" in the _London
+Illustrated News_ of December 6, 1890, contains a hundred and fifty
+cats, with as many varying facial expressions and attitudes. It occupied
+eleven working days of Mr. Wain's time, but it caught the public fancy
+and made a tremendous hit all over the world. Louis Wain's cats
+immediately became famous, and he has had more orders than he can fill
+ever since. He works eight hours a day, and then lays aside his brush to
+study physical science, or write a humorous story. He has written and
+illustrated a comic book, and spent a great deal of time over a more
+serious one.
+
+Among the best known of his cat pictures, after the "Christmas Party,"
+is his "Cats' Rights Meeting," which not even the most ardent suffragist
+can study without laughter. From a desk an ardent tabby is expounding,
+loud and long, on the rights of her kind. In front of her is a double
+row of felines, sitting with folded arms, and listening with absorbed
+attention. The expressions of these cats' faces, some ardent, some
+indignant, some placid, but all interested, form a ridiculous contrast
+to a row of "Toms" in the rear, who evidently disagree with the
+lecturer, and are prepared to hiss at her more "advanced" ideas.
+"Returning Thanks" is nearly as amusing, with its thirteen cats seated
+at table over their wine, while one offers thanks, and the remainder
+wear varying expressions of devotion, indifference, or irreverence.
+"Bringing Home the Yule Log" gives twenty-one cats, and as many
+individual expressions of joy or discomfort; and the "Snowball Match"
+shows a scene almost as hilarious as the "Christmas Dance."
+
+Mr. Wain believes there is a great future for black and white work if a
+man is careful to keep abreast of the times. "A man should first of all
+create his public and draw upon his own fund of originality to sustain
+it," he says, "taking care not to pander to the degenerate tendencies
+which would prevent his work from elevating the finer instincts of the
+people." Says a recent visitor to the Wain household: "I wonder if Peter
+realizes that he has done more good than most human beings, who are
+endowed not only with sense but with brains? if in the firelight, he
+sees the faces of many a suffering child whose hours of pain have been
+shortened by the recital of his tricks, and the pictures of himself
+arrayed in white cravat, or gayly disporting himself on a 'see-saw'? I
+feel inclined to wake him up, and whisper how, one cold winter's night,
+I met a party of five little children, hatless and bootless, hurrying
+along an East-end slum, and saying encouragingly to the youngest, who
+was crying with cold and hunger, 'Come along: we'll get there soon.' I
+followed them down the lighted street till they paused in front of a
+barber's shop, and I heard their voices change to a shout of merriment:
+for in the window was a crumpled Christmas supplement, and Peter, in a
+frolicsome mood, was represented entertaining at a large cats'
+tea-party. Hunger, and cold, and misery were all dispelled. Who would
+not be a cat of Louis Wain's, capable of creating ten minutes' sunshine
+in a childish heart?"
+
+Mr. Wain announces a discovery in relation to cats which corroborates a
+theory of my own, adopted from long observation and experience.
+
+"I have found," he says, "as a result of many years of inquiry and
+study, that people who keep cats and are in the habit of petting them,
+do not suffer from those petty ailments which all flesh is heir to.
+Rheumatism and nervous complaints are uncommon with them, and Pussy's
+lovers are of the sweetest temperament. I have often felt the benefit,
+after a long spell of mental effort, of having my cats sitting across my
+shoulders, or of half an hour's chat with Peter."
+
+This is a frequent experience of my own. Nothing is more restful and
+soothing after a busy day than sitting with my hands buried in the soft
+sides of one of my cats.
+
+"Do you know," said one of my neighbors, recently, "when I am troubled
+with insomnia, lately, I get up and get Bingo from his bed, and take him
+to mine. I can go to sleep with my hands on him."
+
+There is a powerful magnetic influence which emanates from a sleepy or
+even a quiet cat, that many an invalid has experienced without realizing
+it. If physicians were to investigate this feature of the cat's
+electrical and magnetic influence, in place of anatomical research after
+death, or the horrible practice of vivisection, they might be doing a
+real service to humanity.
+
+Mr. Wain's success as an illustrator brought him great prominence in the
+National Cat Club of England, and he has been for a number of years its
+president, doing much to raise the condition and quality of cats and the
+status of the club. He has a number of beautiful and high-bred cats at
+Bendigo Lodge.
+
+With regard to the painting of cats Champfleury said, "The lines are so
+delicate, the eyes are distinguished by such remarkable qualities, the
+movements are due to such sudden impulses, that to succeed in the
+portrayal of such a subject, one must be feline one's self." And Mr.
+Spielman gives the following advice to those who would paint cats:--
+
+"You must love them, as Mahomet and Chesterfield loved them: be as fond
+of their company as Wolsley and Richelieu, Mazarin and Colbert, who
+retained them even during their most impressive audiences: as Petrarch,
+and Dr. Johnson, and Canon Liddon, and Ludovic Halévy, who wrote with
+them at their elbow: and Tasso and Gray, who celebrated them in verse:
+as sympathetic as Carlyle, whom Mrs. Allingham painted in the company of
+his beloved 'Tib' in the garden at Chelsea, or as Whittington, the hero
+of our milk-and-water days: think of El Daher Beybars, who fed all
+feline comers, or 'La Belle Stewart,' Duchess of Richmond, who, in the
+words of the poet, 'endowed a college' for her little friends: you must
+be as approbative of their character, their amenableness to education,
+their inconstancy, not to say indifference and their general lack of
+principle, as Madame de Custine: and as appreciative of their daintiness
+and grace as Alfred de Musset. Then, and not till then, can you consider
+yourself sentimentally equipped for studying the art of cat painting."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+CONCERNING CAT HOSPITALS AND REFUGES
+
+
+At comparatively frequent intervals we read of some woman, historic or
+modern, who has left an annuity (as the Duchess of Richmond, "La Belle
+Stewart") for the care of her pet cats; now and then a man provides for
+them in his will, as Lord Chesterfield, for instance, who left a
+permanent pension for his cats and their descendants. But I find only
+one who has endowed a home for them and given it sufficient means to
+support the strays and waifs who reach its shelter.
+
+Early in the eighties, Captain Nathan Appleton, of Boston (a brother of
+the poet Longfellow's wife, and of Thomas Appleton, the celebrated wit),
+returned from a stay in London with a new idea, that of founding some
+sort of a refuge, or hospital, for sick or stray cats and dogs. He had
+visited Battersea, and been deeply impressed with the need of a shelter
+for small and friendless domestic animals.
+
+At Battersea there is an institution similar to the one the Society for
+Prevention of Cruelty to Animals in New York have at East 120th Street,
+where stray animals may be sent and kept for a few days awaiting the
+possible appearance of a claimant or owner; at the end of which time the
+animals are placed in the "lethal chamber," where they die instantly and
+painlessly by asphyxiation. In Boston, the Society of Prevention of
+Cruelty to Animals have no such refuge or pound, but in place of it keep
+one or two men whose business it is to go wherever sent and "mercifully
+put to death" the superfluous, maimed, or sick animals that shall be
+given them.
+
+Captain Appleton's idea, however, was something entirely different from
+this. These creatures, he argued, have a right to their lives and the
+pursuit of happiness after their own fashion, and he proposed to help
+them to enjoy that right. He appealed to a few sympathetic friends and
+gave two or three acres of land from his own estate, near "Nonantum
+Hill," where the Apostle Eliot preached to the Indians, and where his
+iodine springs are located. He had raised a thousand or two dollars and
+planned a structure of some kind to shelter stray dogs and cats, when
+the good angel that attends our household pets guided him to the lawyer
+who had charge of the estates of Miss Ellen M. Gifford, of New Haven,
+Ct. "I think I can help you," said the lawyer. But he would say nothing
+more at that time. A few weeks later, Captain Appleton was sent for.
+Miss Gifford had become deeply interested in the project, and after
+making more inquiries, gave the proposed home some twenty-five thousand
+dollars, adding to this amount afterward and providing for the
+institution in her will. It has already had over one hundred thousand
+dollars from Miss Gifford's estates, and it is so well endowed and well
+managed that it is self-supporting.
+
+The Ellen M. Gifford Sheltering Home for Animals is situated near the
+Brookline edge of the Brighton district in Boston. In fact, the
+residential portion of aristocratic Brookline is so fast creeping up to
+it that the whole six acres of the institution will doubtless soon be
+disposed of at a very handsome profit, while the dogs and cats will
+retire to a more remote district to "live on the interest of their
+money."
+
+The main building is a small but handsome brick affair, facing on Lake
+Street. This is the home of the superintendent, and contains, besides,
+the offices of the establishment. Over the office is a tablet with this
+inscription, taken from a letter of Miss Gifford's about the time the
+home was opened:--
+
+"If only the waifs, the strays, the sick, the abused, would be sure to
+get entrance to the home, and anybody could feel at liberty to bring in
+a starved or ill-treated animal and have it cared for without pay, my
+object would be obtained. March 27, 1884."
+
+The superintendent is a lover of animals as well as a good business
+manager, and his work is in line with the sentence just quoted. Any one
+wanting a cat or a dog, and who can promise it a good home, may apply
+there. But Mr. Perkins does not take the word of a stranger at random.
+He investigates their circumstances and character, and never gives away
+an animal unless he can be reasonably sure of its going to a good home.
+For instance, he once received an application from one man for six cats.
+The wholesale element in the order made him slightly suspicious, and he
+immediately drove to Boston, where he found that his would-be customer
+owned a big granary overrun with mice. He sent the six cats, and two
+weeks later went to see how they were getting on, when he found them
+living happily in a big grain-loft, fat and contented as the most
+devoted Sultan of Egypt could have asked. None but street cats and stray
+dogs, homeless waifs, ill-treated and half starved, are received at this
+home. Occasionally, some family desiring to get rid of the animal they
+have petted for months, perhaps years, will send it over to the
+Sheltering Home. But if Mr. Perkins can find where it came from he
+promptly returns it, for even this place, capable of comfortably housing
+a hundred cats and as many dogs, cannot accommodate all the unfortunates
+that are picked up in the streets of Boston. The accommodations, too,
+while they are comfortable and even luxurious for the poor creatures
+that have hitherto slept on ash-barrels and stone flaggings, are unfit
+for household pets that have slept on cushions, soft rugs, and milady's
+bed.
+
+There is a dog-house and a cat-house, sufficiently far apart that the
+occupants of one need not be disturbed by those of the other. In the
+dog-house there are rows of pens on each side of the middle aisle, in
+which from one to four or five dogs, according to size, are kept when
+indoors. These are of all sorts, colors, dispositions, and sizes,
+ranging from pugs to St. Bernards, terriers to mastiffs. There are few
+purely bred dogs, although there are many intelligent and really
+handsome ones. The dogs are allowed to run in the big yard that opens
+out from their house at certain hours of the day; but the cats' yards
+are open to them all day and night. All yards and runs are enclosed with
+wire netting, and the cat-house has partitions of the same. All around
+the sides of the cat-house are shelves or bunks, which are kept supplied
+with clean hay, for their beds. Here one may see cats of every color and
+assorted sizes, contentedly curled up in their nests, while their
+companions sit blinking in the sun, or run out in the yards. Cooked
+meat, crackers and milk, and dishes of fresh water are kept where they
+can get at them. The cats all look plump and well fed, and, indeed, the
+ordinary street cat must feel that his lines have fallen in pleasant
+places.
+
+Not so, however, with pet cats who may be housed there. They miss the
+companionship of people, and the household belongings to which they have
+been accustomed. Sometimes it is really pathetic to see one of these
+cast-off pets climb up the wire netting and plainly beg the visitor to
+take him away from that strange place, and give him such a home as he
+has been used to. In the superintendent's house there is usually a good
+cat or two of this sort, as he is apt to test a well-bred cat before
+giving him away.
+
+Somewhat similar, and even older than the Ellen Gifford Sheltering Home,
+is the Morris Refuge of Philadelphia. This institution, whose motto is
+"The Lord is good to all: and his tender mercies are over all his
+works," was first established in May, 1874, by Miss Elizabeth Morris and
+other ladies who took an interest in the protection of suffering
+animals. It does not limit its tender mercies to cats and dogs, but
+cares for every suffering animal. It differs from the Ellen Gifford Home
+chiefly in the fact that, while the latter is a _home_ for stray
+cats and dogs, the Morris Refuge has for its object the care for and
+disposal of suffering animals of all sorts. In a word, it brings relief
+to most of these unfortunate creatures by means of a swift and painless
+death.
+
+It was first known as the City Refuge, although it was never maintained
+by the city. In January, 1889, it was reorganized and incorporated as
+the "Morris Refuge for Homeless and Suffering Animals." It is supported
+by private contributions, and is under the supervision of Miss Morris
+and a corps of kind-hearted ladies of Philadelphia. A wagon is kept at
+the home to respond to calls, and visits any residence where suffering
+animals may need attention. The agent of the society lives at the refuge
+with his family, and receives animals at any time. When notice is
+received of an animal hurt or suffering, he sends after it. Chloroform
+is invariably taken along, in order that, if expedient, the creature may
+be put out of its agony at once. This refuge is at 1242 Lombard Street,
+and there is a temporary home where dogs are boarded at 923 South 11th
+Street.
+
+In 1895, out of 23,067 animals coming under the care of the association,
+19,672 were cats. In 1896, there were 24,037 animals relieved and
+disposed of, while the superintendent answered 230 police calls. Good
+homes are found for both dogs and cats, but not until the agent is sure
+that they will be kindly treated.
+
+In Miss Morris's eighth annual report she says: "Looking back to the
+formation of the first society for the prevention of cruelty to animals,
+we find since that time a gradual awakening to the duties man owes to
+those below him in the scale of animal creation. The titles of those
+societies and their objects, as defined by their charters, show that at
+first it was considered sufficient to protect animals from cruel
+treatment: very few people gave thought to the care of those that were
+without homes. Now many are beginning to think of the evil of being
+overrun with numbers of homeless creatures, whose sufferings appeal to
+the sympathies of the humane, and whose noise and depredations provoke
+the cruelty of the hard-hearted: hence the efforts that are being made
+in different cities to establish refuges. A request has lately been
+received from Montreal asking for our reports, as it is proposed to
+found a home for animals in that city, and information is being
+collected in relation to such institutions."
+
+Lady Marcus Beresford has succeeded in establishing and endowing a home
+for cats in Englefield Green, Windsor Park. She has made a specialty of
+Angoras, and her collection is famous. Queen Victoria and her daughters
+take a deep interest, not alone in finely bred cats, but in poor and
+homeless waifs as well. Her Royal Highness, in fact, took pains to write
+the London S.P.C.A. some years ago, saying she would be very glad to
+have them do something for the safety and protection of cats, "_which
+are so generally misunderstood and grossly ill-treated_." She herself
+sets a good example in this respect, and when her courts remove from one
+royal residence to another, her cats are taken with her.
+
+There is a movement in Paris, too, to provide for sick and homeless cats
+as well as dogs. Two English ladies have founded a hospital near
+Asnières, where ailing pets can be tended in illness, or boarded for
+about ten cents a day; and very well cared for their pensioners are.
+There is also a charity ward where pauper patients are received and
+tended carefully, and afterward sold or given away to reliable people.
+Oddly, this sort of charity was begun by Mademoiselle Claude Bernard,
+the daughter of the great scientist who, it is said, tortured more
+living creatures to death than any other. Vivisection became a passion
+with him, but Mademoiselle Bernard is atoning for her father's cruelty
+by a singular devotion to animals, and none are turned from her gates.
+
+This is the way they do it in Cairo even now, according to Monsieur
+Prisse d'Avennes, the distinguished Egyptologist:--
+
+"The Sultan, El Daher Beybars, who reigned in Egypt and Syria toward 658
+of the Hegira (1260 A.D.) and is compared by William of Tripoli to Nero
+in wickedness, and to Caesar in bravery, had a peculiar affection for
+cats. At his death, he left a garden, 'Gheyt-el-Quoltah' (the cats'
+orchard), situated near his mosque outside Cairo, for the support of
+homeless cats. Subsequently the field was sold and resold several times
+by the administrator and purchasers. In consequence of a series of
+dilapidations it now produces a nominal rent of fifteen piastres a year,
+which with certain other legacies is appropriated to the maintenance of
+cats. The Kadi, who is the official administrator of all pious and
+charitable bequests, ordains that at the hour of afternoon prayer,
+between noon and sunset, a daily distribution of animals' entrails and
+refuse meat from the butchers' stalls, chopped up together, shall be
+made to the cats of the neighborhood. This takes place in the outer
+court of the 'Mehkemeh,' or tribunal, and a curious spectacle may then
+be seen. At this hour all the terraces near the Mehkemeh are crowded
+with cats: they come jumping from house to house across the narrow Cairo
+streets, hurrying for their share: they slide down walls and glide into
+the court, where they dispute, with great tenacity and much growling,
+the scanty meal so sadly out of proportion to the number of guests. The
+old ones clear the food in a moment: the young ones and the newcomers,
+too timid to fight for their chance, must content themselves with
+licking the ground. Those wanting to get rid of cats take them there and
+deposit them. I have seen whole baskets of kittens deposited in the
+court, greatly to the annoyance of the neighbors."
+
+There are similar customs in Italy and Switzerland. In Geneva cats prowl
+about the streets like dogs at Constantinople. The people charge
+themselves with their maintenance, and feed the cats who come to their
+doors at the same hour every day for their meals.
+
+In Florence, a cloister near St. Lorenzo's Church serves as a refuge for
+cats. It is an ancient and curious institution, but I am unable to find
+whether it is maintained by the city or by private charities. There are
+specimens of all colors, sizes, and kinds, and any one who wants a cat
+has but to go there and ask for it. On the other hand, the owner of a
+cat who is unable or unwilling to keep it may take it there, where it is
+fed and well treated.
+
+In Rome, they have a commendable system of caring for their cats. At a
+certain hour butchers' men drive through the city, with carts well
+stocked with cat's meat. They utter a peculiar cry which the cats
+recognize, and come hurrying out of the houses for their allowances,
+which are paid for by the owners at a certain rate per month.
+
+In Boston, during the summer of 1895, a firm of butchers took
+subscriptions from philanthropic citizens, and raised enough to defray
+the expenses of feeding the cats on the Back Bay,--where, in spite of
+the fact that the citizens are all wealthy and supposedly humane, there
+are more starving cats than elsewhere in the city. But the experiment
+has not been repeated.
+
+Hospitals for sick animals are no new thing, but a really comfortable
+home for cats is an enterprise in which many a woman who now asks
+despondently what she can do in this overcrowded world to earn a living,
+might find pleasant and profitable.
+
+A most worthy charity is that of the Animal Rescue League in Boston,
+which was started by Mrs. Anna Harris Smith in 1899. She put a call in
+the newspapers, asking those who were interested in the subject to
+attend a meeting and form a league for the protection and care of lost
+or deserted pets. The response was immediate and generous. The Animal
+Rescue League was formed with several hundred members, and in a short
+time the house at 68 Carver Street was rented, and a man and his wife
+put in charge. Here are brought both cats and dogs from all parts of
+Boston and the suburbs, where they are sure of kind treatment and care.
+If they are diseased they are immediately put out of existence by means
+of the lethal chamber; otherwise they are kept for a few days in order
+that they may be claimed by their owners if lost, or have homes found
+for them whenever it is possible. During the first year over two
+thousand cats were cared for, and several hundred dogs. This home is
+maintained by voluntary contributions and by the annual dues of
+subscribers. These are one dollar a year for associate members and five
+dollars for active members. It is an excellent charity, and one that may
+well be emulated in other cities.
+
+There are several cat asylums and refuges in the Far West, and certainly
+a few more such institutions as the Sheltering Home at Brighton, Mass.,
+or the Morris Refuge would be a credit to a country. How better than by
+applying it to our cats can we demonstrate the truth of Solomon's maxim,
+"A merciful man is merciful to his beast"?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+CONCERNING THE ORIGIN OF CATS
+
+
+If any of my readers hunger and thirst for information concerning the
+descent of the cat through marsupial ancestors and mesozoic mammals to
+the generalized placental or monodelphous carnivora of to-day, let them
+consult St. George Mivart, who gives altogether the most comprehensive
+and exhaustive scientific study to the cat ever published, and whose
+book on the cat is an excellent work for the earnest beginner in the
+study of biological science. He says no more complete example can be
+found of a perfectly organized living being than that supplied by the
+highest mammalian family--_Felidae_.
+
+"On the whole," he sums up, "it seems probable that the mammalia, and
+therefore the cat, descends from some highly developed, somewhat
+reptile-like batrachian of which no trace has been found."
+
+Away back in the eighth century of the Hegira, an Arab naturalist gives
+this account of the creation of the cat: "When, as the Arab relates,
+Noah made a couple of each animal to enter the ark, his companions and
+family asked, 'What security can you give us and the other animals, so
+long as the lion dwells with us on this narrow vessel?' Then Noah betook
+himself to prayer, and entreated the Lord God. Immediately fever came
+down from heaven and seized upon the king of beasts." This was the
+origin of fever. But constituents in Noah's time, as now, were
+ungrateful; and no sooner was the lion disposed of, than the mouse was
+discovered to be an object of suspicion. They complained that there
+would be no safety for provisions or clothing. "And so Noah renewed his
+supplication to the Most High, the lion sneezed, and a cat ran out of
+his nostrils. From that time the mouse has been timid and has hidden in
+holes."
+
+In the Egyptian gallery of the British Museum there is an excellent
+painting of a tabby cat assisting a man to capture birds. Hieroglyphic
+inscriptions as far back as 1684 B.C. mention the cat, and there is at
+Leyden a tablet of the eighteenth or nineteenth dynasty with a cat
+seated under a chair. A temple at Beni-Hassan is dedicated to Pasht or
+Bubastis, the goddess of cats, which is as old as Thothmes IV of the
+eighteenth dynasty, 1500 B.C.; and the cat appears in written rituals of
+that dynasty. Herodotus tells of the almost superstitious reverence
+which dwellers along the Nile felt for the cat, and gravely states that
+when one died a natural death in any house, the inmates shaved their
+eyebrows as a token of grief; also, that in case of a fire the first
+thing they saved was the household cat. Fortunate pussies!
+
+It is thought that cats were introduced into Greece from Egypt, although
+Professor Rolleston, of Cambridge University, believes the Grecian pet
+cat to have been the white-breasted marten. Yet why should he? Is not a
+soft, white-breasted maltese or tabby as attractive? The idea that cats
+were domesticated in Western Europe by the Crusaders is thought to be
+erroneous; but pet cats were often found in nunneries in the Middle
+Ages, and Pope Gregory the Great, toward the end of the sixth century,
+had a pet cat of which he was very fond.
+
+An old writer says, "A favorite cat sometimes accompanied the Egyptians
+on these occasions [of sport], and the artist of that day intends to
+show us by the exactness with which he represents her seizing her prey,
+that cats were trained to hunt and carry water-fowl." There are old
+Egyptian paintings representing sporting scenes along the Nile, where
+the cats plunge into the water of the marshes to retrieve and carry
+game; while plenty of mural paintings show them sitting under the
+arm-chair of the mistress of the house. Modern naturalists, however,
+claim a radical difference between those old Egyptian retrieving cats
+and our water-hating pussies. There are no records of cats between that
+period in Egypt, about 1630 B.C., and 260 B.C., when they seem to have
+become acclimated in Greece and Rome. There is in the Bordeaux Museum an
+ancient picture of a young girl holding a cat, on a tomb of the
+Gallo-Roman Epoch, and cats appeared in the heraldry of that date; but
+writers of those ages speak rather slightingly of them. Then for
+centuries the cat was looked upon as a diabolic creature, fit company
+for witches.
+
+"Why," says Balthazar Bekker in the seventeenth century, "is a cat
+always found among the belongings of witches, when according to the
+Sacred Book, and Apocalypse in particular, it is the dog, not a feline
+animal, that consorts with the sorcerers?"
+
+In Russia even yet the common people believe that black cats become
+devils at the end of seven years, and in many parts of Southern Europe
+they are still supposed to be serving apprenticeship as witches. In
+Sicily the peasants are sure that if a black cat lives with seven
+masters, the soul of the seventh will surely accompany him back to the
+dominion of Hades. In Brittany there is a dreadful tale of cats that
+dance with unholy glee around the crucifix while their King is being put
+to death. Cats figure in Norwegian folk-lore, too, as witches and
+picturesque incumbents of ghost-haunted houses and nocturnal revels. And
+even to-day there is a legend in Westminster to the effect that the
+dissipated cats of that region indulge in a most disreputable revel in
+some country house, and that is why they look so forlorn and altogether
+undone by daylight.
+
+A canon enacted in England in 1127 forbade any abbess or nun to use more
+costly fur than that of lambs or cats, and it is proved that cat-fur was
+at that time commonly used for trimming dresses. The cat was, probably
+for that reason, an object of chase in royal forests, and a license is
+still in existence from Richard II to the Abbot of Peterborough, and
+dated 1239, granting liberty to hunt cats. This was probably the wild
+cat, however, which was not the same as the domestic.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1:
+
+These are among the laws supposedly enacted by Hoel Dha (Howell the
+Good) sometime between 915 and 948 A.D.
+
+The Vendotian Code XI.
+
+The worth of a cat and her teithi (qualities) this is:--
+
+1st. The worth of a kitten from the night it is kittened until it shall
+open its eyes, is one penny.
+
+2d. And from that time until it shall kill mice, two pence.
+
+3d. And after it shall kill mice, four legal pence; and so it shall
+always remain.
+
+4th. Her teithe are to see, to hear, to kill mice, and to have her claws.
+
+This is the "Dimentian Code." XXXII. Of Cats.
+
+1st. The worth of a cat that is killed or stolen. Its head to be put
+downward upon a clean, even floor, with its tail lifted upward and thus
+suspended, whilst wheat is poured about it until the top of its tail be
+covered and that is to be its worth. If the corn cannot be had, then a
+milch sheep with a lamb and its wool is its value, if it be a cat that
+guards the king's barn.
+
+2d. The worth of a common cat is four legal pence.
+
+3d. The teithi of a cat, and of every animal upon the milk of which
+people do not feed, is the third part of its worth or the worth of its
+litter.
+
+4th. Whosoever shall sell a cat (cath) is to answer that she devour not
+her kittens, and that she have ears, teeth, eyes, and nails, and be a
+good mouser.
+
+The "Gwentian Code" begins in the same way, but says:--
+
+3d. That it be perfect of ear, perfect of eye, perfect of teeth, perfect
+of tail, perfect of claw, and without marks of fire. And if the cat fall
+short in any of these particulars, a third of her price had to be
+refunded. As to the fire, in case her fur had been singed the rats could
+detect her by the odor, and her qualities as a mouser were thus injured.
+And then it goes on to say:--
+
+4th. That the teithi and the legal worth of a cat are coequal.
+
+5th. A pound is the worth of a pet animal of the king.
+
+6th. The pet animal of a breyer (brewer) is six score pence in value.
+
+7th. The pet animal of a taoog is a curt penny in value.
+
+In the 39th chapter, 53d section, we find that "there are three animals
+whose tails, eyes, and lives are of the same value--a calf, a filly for
+common work, and a cat, except the cat which shall watch the king's
+barn," in which case she was more valuable.
+
+Another old Welsh law says: "Three animals reach their worth in a year:
+a sheep, a cat, and a cur. This is a complement of the legal hamlet;
+nine buildings, one plough, one kiln, one churn, and one cat, one cock,
+one bull, and one herdsman."
+
+In order that there might be no mistake in regard to the cat, a rough
+sketch of Puss is given in the Mss. of the laws.]
+
+That cats, even in the Middle Ages, were thought much more highly of in
+Great Britain than on the Continent is proved by the fact that the laws
+there imposed a heavy fine on cat-killers, the fine being as much wheat
+as would serve to bury the cat when he was held up by the tip of the
+tail with his nose on the ground. So that pet cats stood a fairly good
+chance in those days.
+
+One of the good things remembered of Louis XIII is that he interceded as
+Dauphin with Henri IV for the lives of the cats about to be burned at
+the festival on St. John's Day.
+
+Nowadays, there is a current superstition that a black cat brings good
+luck to a house; but in the Middle Ages they believed that the devil
+borrowed the form of a black cat when he wanted to torment or get
+control of his victims. There are plenty of old traditions about cats
+having spoken to human beings, and been kicked, or struck, or burned by
+them in return; and invariably, these tales tell us, those who are so
+bespoken meet some one the next day with plain marks of the injury they
+had inflicted on the froward cat,--which was sure evidence of witchery
+and sorcery. Doubtless full many a human being has been put to death, in
+times past, on no stronger evidence of being a witch. Humanity did not
+come to the rescue of the cat and bring her out from the shadow of
+ignominy that hung over her in mediaeval times until 1618, when an
+interdict was issued in Flanders prohibiting the festive ceremony of
+throwing cats from the high tower of Ypres on Wednesdays of the second
+week in Lent. And from that time Pussy's fortunes began to look up.
+
+To-day, travellers on the edge of the Pyrenees know a little old man,
+Martre Tolosan, who makes and sells replicas of the original models of
+cats found among the Roman remains at a small town near Toulouse. These
+are made in blue and white earthenware and each one is numbered. Mine,
+bought by a friend in 1895, is marked 5000. They are not exact models of
+our cats of to-day, to be sure, but they express all the snug content
+and inscrutable calm of our modern pets.
+
+The Chinese reproduce cats in their ceramics in white, turquoise blue,
+and old violet. One that once belonged to Madame de Mazarin sold for
+eight hundred livres. In Japan, cats are reproduced in common ware,
+daubed with paint, but the Chinese make them of finer ware, enamelling
+the commoner kinds of porcelain and using the cat in conventional forms
+as flower-vases and lamps.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+CONCERNING VARIETIES OF CATS
+
+
+Few people realize how many kinds of cats there are. The fashionable
+world begins to discuss cats technically and understand their various
+points of excellence. The "lord mayor's chain," the "Dutch rabbit
+markings," and similar features are understood by more cat fanciers than
+a few years ago; but, until within that time, it is doubtful if the
+number of people who knew the difference between the Angora and the
+Persian in this country amounted to a hundred. It is but a few years
+since the craze for the Angora cat started. These cats have been
+fashionable pets in England for some years back, and now America begins
+to understand their value and the principles of breeding them. Today,
+there are as handsome, well-bred animals in the United States as can be
+found abroad. The demand for high-bred animals with a pedigree is
+greatly increasing, and society people are beginning to understand the
+fine points of the thoroughbred.
+
+The Angora cat, as its name indicates, comes from Angora in Western
+Asia, the province that is celebrated for its goats with long hair of
+fine quality. In fact, the hair under the Angora cat's body often
+resembles the finest of the Angora goatskins. Angora cats are favorites
+with the Turks and Armenians, and exist in many colors, especially since
+they have been more carefully bred. They vary in form, color, and
+disposition, and also in the quality of their hair. The standard calls
+for a small head, with not too long a nose, large eyes that should
+harmonize in color with the fur, small, pointed ears with a tuft of hair
+at the apex, and a very full, fluffy mane around the neck. This mane is
+known as the "lord mayor's chain." The body is longer than that of the
+ordinary cat in proportion to its size, and is extremely graceful, and
+covered with long, silky hair, which is crinkly like that of the Angora
+goat. This hair should be as fine as possible, and not woolly. The legs
+are of a moderate length, but look short on account of the length of
+hair on the body. Little tufts of hair growing between the toes indicate
+high breeding. The Angora cat, in good condition, is one of the most
+beautiful and elegant creatures in the world, and few can resist its
+charm. The tail is long and like an ostrich plume. It is usually
+carried, when the cat is in good spirits, straight up, with the end
+waving over toward one side. The tail of the Angora serves as a
+barometer of its bodily and mental condition. If the cat is ill or
+frightened, the tail droops, and sometimes trails on the ground; but
+when she is in good spirits, playing about the house or grounds, it
+waves like a great plume, and is exceedingly handsome. The suppleness of
+the Angora's tail is also a mark of fine breeding. A highbred Angora
+will allow its tail to be doubled or twisted without apparent notice of
+the performance.
+
+The Angora does not reach its prime until about two years. Before that
+time its head and body are not sufficiently developed to give the full
+beauty and grace of the animal. As a rule, the Angora is of good
+disposition, although the females are apt to be exceedingly nervous.
+They are sociable and docile, although fond of roaming about, especially
+if allowed to run loose. As a rule, they do not possess the keen
+intelligence of the ordinary short-haired family cat, but their great
+beauty and their cleanly and affectionate habits make them favorites
+with fashionable people. The proper breeding of the Angora cat is a
+regular science. Of the colors of the Angoras, the blue or maltese is a
+favorite, and rather common, especially when mixed with white.
+
+The white Angora is extraordinarily beautiful, and brings a high price
+when it has blue eyes and all its points are equally good. The orange,
+or yellow, and the black with amber eyes are also prize winners. There
+are the tigers also, the brown tabby, and the orange and white. Mixed
+colors are more common than solid ones; the tortoise-shell cat of three
+colors and well mottled being considered particularly desirable.
+
+The Persian cat differs from the Angora in the quality of its fur,
+although the ordinary observer sees little difference between them. All
+the long-haired cats originated from the Indian Bengalese, Thibetan,
+and other wild cats of Asia and Russia. The Persian cat of very great
+value is all black, with a very fluffy frill, or lord mayor's chain, and
+orange eyes. Next to him comes a light slate or blue Persian, with
+yellow eyes. The fur of the Persian cat is much more woolly than that of
+the Angora, and sometimes in hot weather mats badly. The difference
+between a Persian and an Angora can usually be told by an amateur, by
+drawing the tail between the thumb and first finger. The Angora's tail
+comes out thin, silky, and narrow, although it immediately "fluffs" up.
+The Persian's tail does not compress itself readily into a small space.
+The Persian cat's head is larger, its ears are less pointed, although it
+should have the tuft at the end and the long hair inside. It is usually
+larger in body and apparently stronger made, although slender and
+elegant in appearance, with small bones and graceful in movement. The
+colors vary, as with the Angora, except that the tortoise-shell and the
+dark-marked tabby do not so frequently appear. The temper is usually
+less reliable and the intelligence less keen than the Angora.
+
+The Russian long-haired pet is much less common even than the Persian
+and Angora. It is fond of cold weather, and its fur is denser,
+indicating that it has been used to colder regions. Many of the cats
+that we see are crosses of Angora and Persian, or Angora and Russian, so
+that it is extremely difficult for the amateur to know a thoroughbred
+cat which has not been mixed with other varieties.
+
+There is also a fine short-haired cat coming from Russia, usually
+self-colored. Mrs. Frederick Monroe, of Chicago, owns a very handsome
+blue and white one.
+
+In Pegu, Siam, and Burmah, there is a race of cats known as the Malay
+cat, with tails only half the ordinary length and often contorted into a
+sort of a knot that cannot be straightened, after the fashion of the pug
+dog or ordinary pig.
+
+There is another cat known as the Mombas, a native of the west coast of
+Africa and covered with stiff, bristling hair. Paraguay cats are only
+one-quarter as big as our ordinary cat, and are found along the western
+coast of South America, even as far north as Mexico.
+
+The royal cat of Siam is a short-haired cat, yet widely different from
+other short-haired varieties. They are extremely pretty, with blue or
+amber-colored eyes by day which grow brilliant at night. These cats also
+frequently have the kink in the tail, and sometimes a strong animal
+odor, although this is not disagreeable. The head is rather longer than
+the ordinary cat's, tapering off sharply toward the muzzle, the forehead
+flat and receding, and the eyes more slanting toward the nose than the
+American cat's. The form should be slender, graceful, and delicately
+made; the body long; the tail very thin and rather short; the legs short
+and slender, and the feet oval. The body is of a bright, uniform color,
+and the legs, feet, and tail are usually black.
+
+The Manx cat is considered by many people as a natural curiosity. It
+differs from the ordinary domestic cat but little, except in the absence
+of a tail, or even an apology for one. The hind legs are thicker and
+rather longer than the ordinary cat's, and it runs more like a hare. It
+is not a graceful object when seen from behind, but it is an
+affectionate, home-loving creature with considerable intelligence. The
+Manx cat came from the Isle of Man originally, and is a distinct breed.
+So-called Manx cats have tails from one to a few inches long, but these
+are crosses of the Manx and the ordinary cat. In the Crimea is found
+another kind of cat which has no tail. The cats known as the "celebrated
+orange cats of Venice," are probably descendants of the old Egyptian
+cat, and are of varying shades of yellow, sometimes deepening into a
+sandy color which is almost red. There are obscure stripes on the body,
+which become more distinct on the limbs. The tail is more or less ringed
+toward its termination.
+
+There has been a newspaper paragraph floating about stating that a prize
+of several thousand dollars had been offered in England for a male
+tortoise-shell cat. This is probably not true, as a Mr. Smith exhibited
+a tortoise-shell he-cat at the Crystal Palace Show of 1871. Several
+tortoise-shell and white toms have been exhibited since, and one of
+these has taken nine first prizes at the Crystal Palace Show; but the
+tortoise-shell he-cat is extremely rare. The real tortoise-shell is not
+a striped tiger nor a tabby. It has three colors usually, black, yellow,
+and red or brown; but these appear in patches rather than stripes. It is
+said that the tortoise-shell cat is common in Egypt and the south of
+Europe. It comes from a different stock than the ordinary short-haired
+cat, the texture of the hair being different, as well as the color. The
+tortoise-shell and white cat is much more common, and is the product of
+a cross between a tortoise shell and a solid color cat. In this case the
+hair is usually coarser and the tail thicker than in the ordinary cat.
+
+Among cat fanciers there is a distinctive variety known as the
+tortoise-shell tabby. As the tabby cat is one of the varieties of
+striped or spotted cats having markings, broad or narrow, of bands of
+black on a dark tan or gray ground, the tortoise-shell cat would have
+both stripes and patches of color.
+
+Of the tabbies, there are brown tabbies, silver tabbies, and red
+tabbies. It is said that the red tabby she-cat is as scarce as the
+tortoise-shell he-cat. The ordinary observer considers the brown tabby
+with white markings as much the handsomest of the tabbies. But fanciers
+and judges do not agree with him, the cats having narrow bands and spots
+being the ones to take prizes. The word "tabby," according to Harrison
+Weir, was derived from a kind of taffeta or ribbed silk which used to be
+called tabby silk. Other authorities state that tabby cats got their
+name from Atab, a street in Bagdad; but as this street was famous for
+its watered silks perhaps the same reason holds. The tortoise-shell used
+to be called, in England, the Calimanco. In America, it is sometimes
+called the calico cat.
+
+The red tabby is of a deep reddish or yellow brown, with a well-ringed
+tail, orange or yellow eyes, and pink cushions to the feet. The brown
+tabby is orange brown, with black lips, brown whiskers, black feet,
+black pads, long tail, greenish orange eyes, and red nose bordered with
+black. The spotted tabby must have no bands at all. It must be brown,
+red, or yellow, with black spots. In the brown tabby the feet and pads
+are black; in the yellow and red, the feet and pads are pink. The
+spotted cat sometimes resembles a leopard, while the banded tabby
+resembles more the tiger. Some of the spotted tabbies are extremely
+handsome, and came originally from a cross between the ordinary cat and
+the wild cat.
+
+"Self-colored cats" are entirely of one color, which may vary in
+different cats, but must never be mixed in the same cat, nor even shaded
+into a lighter tone on the animal; and whether this color be black,
+blue, red, or yellow, the self-colored cat should have a rich deep tint.
+Of course the short-haired white cat is the handsomest of all. One of
+the peculiarities of this white cat is that it is apt to be deaf. The
+most valuable white cats, whether long or short haired, have blue eyes.
+Sometimes they have one blue eye and one green or yellow, which gives a
+comical effect, and detracts from their value. By the way, cross-eyed
+cats are not unknown. The best white cats have a yellowish white tint
+instead of grayish white, as the latter have a coarser quality of fur.
+
+The jet-black cat is thought by many to be the most desirable. The true
+black cat should have a uniform, intensely black coat, velvety and
+extremely glossy; the eyes should be round and full, and of a brilliant
+amber; the nose and pads of the feet should be jet-black, and the tail
+long and tapering. It is difficult to find a black cat without a white
+hair, as usually there are a few under the chin or on the belly.
+
+The blue cat is the one ordinarily known in this country as the dark
+maltese. There is a tradition that it came from the Island of Malta.
+Many people do not consider it a distinct breed, but think it a
+light-colored variety of the black cat. It is known sometimes as the
+Archangel, sometimes as the Russian blue, the Spanish blue, the
+Chartreuse blue, but more commonly in this country as the maltese. When
+it is of a deep bluish color, or of the soft silver-gray maltese without
+stripes, it is extremely handsome. The most desirable are the bluish
+lilac-colored ones, with soft fur like sealskin. The nose and pads of
+the feet are dark, and the eyes are orange yellow. The maltese and white
+cat when well marked is extremely handsome, and there is no prettier
+kitten than the maltese and white.
+
+The black and white, yellow and white, blue and white, and in fact, any
+self-colored and white cat is a mixture of the other breeds. If well
+marked they are extremely handsome and are usually bright and
+intelligent.
+
+The solid gray cat is very rare. It is, in fact, a tabby without the
+black stripes or spots.
+
+In Australia, New Zealand, and New Guinea there used to be no cat of any
+kind. The Siamese cat has been imported to Australia, and some
+authorities claim that the cats known in this country as Australian cats
+are of Siamese origin. Madagascar is a catless region.
+
+There is in this country a variety known as the "coon cat," which is
+handsome, especially in the solid black. Its native home is in Maine,
+and it is thought by many to have originated with the ordinary cat and
+the raccoon. It grows somewhat larger than the ordinary cat, with thick,
+woolly fur and an extremely bushy tail. It is fond of outdoor life, and
+when kept as a pet must be allowed to run out of doors or it is apt to
+become so savage and disagreeable that nothing can be done with it. When
+it is allowed its freedom, however, it becomes affectionate,
+intelligent, and is usually a handsome cat.
+
+The term "Dutch rabbit markings" refers to the white markings on the cat
+of two or three colors. Evidently, the cats themselves understand the
+value of Dutch rabbit markings, as one which has them is invariably
+proud of them. A cat that has white mittens, for instance, is often
+inordinately vain, and keeps them in the most immaculate state of
+cleanliness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+CONCERNING CAT LANGUAGE
+
+
+Montaigne it was who said: "We have some intelligence of their senses:
+so have also the beasts of ours in much the same measure. They flatter
+us, menace us, need us, and we them. It is manifestly evident that there
+is among them a full and entire communication, and that they understand
+each other."
+
+That this applies to cats is certainly true. Did you ever notice how a
+mother cat talks to her children, and simply by the utterances of her
+voice induces them to abandon their play and go with her, sometimes with
+the greatest reluctance, to some place that suited her whim--or her
+wisdom?
+
+Dupont de Nemours, a naturalist of the eighteenth century, made himself
+ridiculous in the eyes of his compatriots by seeking to penetrate the
+mysteries of animal language. "Those who utter sounds," he affirmed,
+"attach significance to them; their fellows do the same, and those
+sounds originally inspired by passion and repeated under similar
+recurrent circumstances, become the abiding expressions of the passions
+that gave rise to them."
+
+Fortified by this theory he devoted a couple of years to the study of
+crow language, and made himself ridiculous in the eyes of his
+adversaries by attempting to translate a nightingale's song.
+
+Chateaubriand was much interested in Dupont de Nemours's researches into
+the language of cats. "Its claws," says the latter, "and the power of
+climbing trees which its claws give it, furnish the cat with resources
+of experience and ideas denied the dog. The cat, also, has the advantage
+of a language which has the same vowels as pronounced by the dog,
+and with six consonants in addition, _m, n, g, h, v_, and _f_.
+Consequently the cat has a greater number of words. These two causes,
+the finer structure of its paws, and the larger scope of oral language,
+endow the solitary cat with greater cunning and skill as a hunter than
+the dog."
+
+Abbé Galiani also says: "For centuries cats have been reared, but I do
+not find they have ever been really studied. I have a male and a female
+cat. I have cut them off from all communication with cats outside the
+house, and closely observe their proceedings. During their courtship
+they never once miowed: the miow, therefore, is not the language of
+love, but rather the call of the absent. Another positive discovery I
+have made is that the voice of the male is entirely different from that
+of the female, as it should be. I am sure there are more than twenty
+different inflections in the language of cats, and there is really a
+'tongue' for they always employ the same sound to express the same
+thing."
+
+I heartily concur with him, and in addition have often noticed the wide
+difference between the voice and manner of expression of the gelded cat
+and the ordinary tom. The former has a thin, high voice with much
+smaller vocabulary. As a rule, the gelded cat does not "mew" to make
+known his wants, but employs his voice for conversational purposes. A
+mother cat "talks" much more than any other, and more when she has small
+kittens than at other times.
+
+Cat language has been reduced to etymology in several tongues. In Arabia
+their speech is called naoua; in Chinese, ming; in Greek, larungizein;
+in Sanscrit, madj, vid, bid; in German, miauen; in French miauler; and
+in English, mew or "miaouw."
+
+Perhaps, if Professor Garner had turned his attention to cat language
+instead of monkeys we would know more about it. But a French professor,
+Alphonse Léon Grimaldi, of Paris, claims that cats can talk as readily
+as human beings, and that he has learned their language so as to be able
+to converse with them to some extent. Grimaldi goes even further: he not
+only says that he knows such a language, but he states definitely that
+there are about six hundred words in it, that it is more like modern
+Chinese than anything else, and to prove this contention, gives a small
+vocabulary.
+
+Most of us would prefer to accept St. George Mivart's conclusions, that
+the difference between all animals and human beings is that while they
+have some means of communication, or language, we only have the gift of
+speech. Among the eighteen distinct active powers which he attributes to
+the cat, he quotes: "16th, powers of pleasurable or painful excitement
+on the occurrence of sense-perceptions with imaginations,
+_emotions_;" and "17th, a power of expressing feelings by sounds or
+gestures which may affect other individuals,--_emotional
+language_."
+
+Again he says: "The cat has a language of sounds and gestures to express
+its feelings and emotions. So have we. But we have further--which
+neither the cat, nor the bird, nor the beast has--a language and
+gestures to express our thoughts." The sum of his conclusions seems to
+be that while the cat has a most highly developed nervous system, and
+much of what is known as "animal intelligence," it is not a human
+intelligence--not consciousness, but "con-sentience."
+
+Elsewhere St. George Mivart doubts if a cat distinguishes odors as such.
+Perhaps a cat starts for the kitchen the instant he smells meat because
+of the mental association of the scent with the gratification of hunger;
+but why, pray tell, do some cats evince such delight in delicate
+perfumes? Our own Pomp the First, for instance, had a most demonstrative
+fondness for violets, and liked the scent of all flowers. One winter I
+used to bring home a bunch of Parma or Russian violets every day or two,
+and put them in a small glass bowl of water. It soon became necessary to
+put them on the highest shelf in the room, and even then Pompey would
+find them. Often have I placed them on the piano, and a few minutes
+later seen him enter the room, lift his nose, give a few sniffs, and
+then go straight to the piano, bury his nose in the violets, and hold it
+there in perfect ecstacy. And usually, wherever they were placed, the
+bunch was found the next morning on the floor, where Pompey had carried
+the violets, and holding them between his paws for a time, had surfeited
+himself with their delicious fragrance.
+
+Still, I am not prepared to say that Pompey had any word for violets, or
+for anything else that ministered to his delight. It was enough for him
+to be happy; and he had better ways of expressing it.
+
+Cats do have the power of making people understand what they want done,
+but so far as my knowledge of them goes, some of the most intelligent
+ones "talk" the least. Thomas Erastus, whose intelligence sometimes
+amounts to a knowledge that seems almost uncanny, seldom utters a sound.
+
+There is--or was--a black cat belonging to the city jail of a
+Californian town, named "Inspector Byrnes," because of his remarkable
+assistance to the police force. When, one night, a prisoner in the jail
+had stuffed the cracks to his cell with straw, and turned on the gas in
+an attempt to commit suicide, "Inspector Byrnes" hurried off and
+notified the night keeper that something was wrong, and induced him to
+go to the cell in time to save the prisoner's life. He once notified the
+police when a fire broke out on the premises, and at another time made
+such a fuss that they followed him--to discover a woman trying to hang
+herself. Again, some of the prisoners plotted to escape, and the cat
+crawled through the hole they had filed and called the warden's
+attention to it. In fact, there was no doubt that "Inspector Byrnes"
+considered himself assistant warden at the jail, and he did not waste
+much time in talk either.
+
+The Pretty Lady had ways of her own to make us know when things were
+wrong in the household, although she used to utter a great many sounds,
+either of pleasure or perturbation, which we came to understand. I
+remember one morning, when my sister was ill upstairs, that I had
+breakfasted and sat down to read my morning's mail, when the Pretty Lady
+came, uttering sounds that denoted dissatisfaction with matters
+somewhere. I was busy, and at first paid no attention to her; but she
+grew more persistent, so that I finally laid down my letters and asked:
+"What is it, Puss? Haven't you had breakfast enough?" I went out to the
+kitchen, and she followed, all the time protesting articulately. She
+would not touch the meat I offered, but evidently wanted something
+entirely different. Just then my sister came down and said:--
+
+"I wish you would go up and see H. She is suffering terribly, and I
+don't know what to do for her."
+
+At that the Pretty Lady led the way into the hall and up the stairs,
+pausing at every third step to make sure I was following, and leading me
+straight to my sister. Then she settled herself calmly on the foot-board
+and closed her eyes, as though the whole affair was no concern of hers.
+Afterward, my sister said that when the pain became almost unendurable,
+so that she tossed about and groaned, the Pretty Lady came close to her
+face and talked to her, just as she did to her kittens when they were in
+distress, showing plainly that she sympathized with and would help her.
+When she found it impossible to do this, she hurried down to me. And
+then having got me actually up to my sister's bedside, she threw off her
+own burden of anxiety and settled into her usual calm content.
+
+"My Goliath is at the helm now," she expressed by her attitude, "and the
+world is sure to go right a little longer while I take a nap."
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Concerning Cats, by Helen M. Winslow
+
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+<html>
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content=
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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Concerning Cats, by Helen M.
+ Winslow.
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Concerning Cats, by Helen M. Winslow
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+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: Concerning Cats
+ My Own and Some Others
+
+Author: Helen M. Winslow
+
+Release Date: December, 2005 [EBook #9501]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on October 6, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CONCERNING CATS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Dr. Dwight Holden, Ted Garvin, David Garcia and PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ Concerning Cats
+ </h1>
+ <center>
+ My Own and Some Others
+ </center>
+ <center>
+ <b>By Helen M. Winslow</b>
+ </center>
+ <center>
+ Editor of "The Club Woman"
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ <b>To the</b><br>
+ <br>
+ &nbsp; <b>"PRETTY LADY"</b><br>
+ &nbsp;<br>
+ WHO NEVER BETRAYED A SECRET, BROKE A PROMISE, OR<br>
+ PROVED AN UNFAITHFUL FRIEND; WHO HAD<br>
+ ALL THE VIRTUES AND NONE OF<br>
+ THE FAILINGS OF HER SEX<br>
+ <br>
+ &nbsp; <b>I Dedicate this Volume</b>
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="TOC"><!-- TOC --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CONTENTS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH1">I. CONCERNING THE PRETTY LADY.</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH2">II. CONCERNING MY OTHER CATS.</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH3">III. CONCERNING OTHER PEOPLE'S CATS.</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH4">IV. CONCERNING STILL OTHER PEOPLE'S CATS.</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH5">V. CONCERNING SOME HISTORIC CATS.</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH6">VI. CONCERNING CATS IN ENGLAND.</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH7">VII. CONCERNING CAT CLUBS AND CAT SHOWS.</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH8">VIII. CONCERNING HIGH-BRED CATS IN
+ AMERICA.</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH9">IX. CONCERNING CATS IN POETRY.</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH10">X. CONCERNING CAT ARTISTS.</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH11">XI. CONCERNING CAT HOSPITALS AND REFUGES.</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH12">XII. CONCERNING THE ORIGIN OF CATS.</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH13">XIII. CONCERNING VARIETIES OF CATS.</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a href="#CH14">XIV. CONCERNING CAT LANGUAGE.</a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ <i>Concerning Cats</i>
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH1"><!-- CH1 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ CONCERNING THE "PRETTY LADY"
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ She was such a Pretty Lady, and gentle withal; so quiet and
+ eminently ladylike in her behavior, and yet dignified and
+ haughtily reserved as a duchess. Still it is better, under
+ certain circumstances, to be a cat than to be a duchess. And
+ no duchess of the realm ever had more faithful retainers or
+ half so abject subjects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Do not tell me that cats never love people; that only places
+ have real hold upon their affections. The Pretty Lady was
+ contented wherever I, her most humble slave, went with her.
+ She migrated with me from boarding-house to sea-shore
+ cottage; then to regular housekeeping; up to the mountains
+ for a summer, and back home, a long day's journey on the
+ railway; and her attitude was always "Wheresoever thou goest
+ I will go, and thy people shall be my people."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have known, and loved, and studied many cats, but my
+ knowledge of her alone would convince me that cats love
+ people&#8212;in their dignified, reserved way, and when they
+ feel that their love is not wasted; that they reason, and
+ that they seldom act from impulse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not remember that I was born with an inordinate fondness
+ for cats; or that I cried for them as an infant. I do not
+ know, even, that my childhood was marked by an overweening
+ pride in them; this, perhaps, was because my cruel parents
+ established a decree, rigid and unbending as the laws of the
+ Medes and Persians, that we must never have more than one cat
+ at a time. Although this very law may argue that
+ predilection, at an early age, for harboring everything
+ feline which came in my way, which has since become at once a
+ source of comfort and distraction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a succession of feline dynasties, the kings and queens
+ of which were handsome, ugly, sleek, forlorn, black, white,
+ deaf, spotted, and otherwise marked, I remember fastening my
+ affections securely upon one kitten who grew up to be the
+ ugliest, gauntest, and dingiest specimen I ever have seen. In
+ the days of his kittenhood I christened him "Tassie" after
+ his mother; but as time sped on, and the name hardly
+ comported with masculine dignity, this was changed to
+ Tacitus, as more befitting his sex. He had a habit of dodging
+ in and out of the front door, which was heavy, and which
+ sometimes swung together before he was well out of it. As a
+ consequence, a caudal appendage with two broken joints was
+ one of his distinguishing features. Besides a broken tail, he
+ had ears which bore the marks of many a hard-fought battle,
+ and an expression which for general "lone and lorn"-ness
+ would have discouraged even Mrs. Gummidge. But I loved him,
+ and judging from the disconsolate and long-continued wailing
+ with which he rilled the house whenever I was away, my
+ affection was not unrequited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But my real thraldom did not begin until I took the Pretty
+ Lady's mother. We had not been a week in our first house
+ before a handsomely striped tabby, with eyes like beautiful
+ emeralds, who had been the pet and pride of the next-door
+ neighbor for five years, came over and domiciled herself. In
+ due course of time she proudly presented us with five
+ kittens. Educated in the belief that one cat was all that was
+ compatible with respectability, I had four immediately
+ disposed of, keeping the prettiest one, which grew up into
+ the beautiful, fascinating, and seductive maltese "Pretty
+ Lady," with white trimmings to her coat. The mother of Pretty
+ Lady used to catch two mice at a time, and bringing them in
+ together, lay one at my feet and say as plainly as cat
+ language can say, "There, you eat that one, and I'll eat
+ this," and then seem much surprised and disgusted that I had
+ not devoured mine when she had finished her meal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were occupying a furnished house for the summer, however,
+ and as we were to board through the winter, I took only the
+ kitten back to town, thinking the mother would return to her
+ former home, just over the fence. But no. For two weeks she
+ refused all food and would not once enter the other house.
+ Then I went out for her, and hearing my voice she came in and
+ sat down before me, literally scolding me for a quarter of an
+ hour. I shall be laughed at, but actual tears stood in her
+ lovely green eyes and ran down her aristocratic nose,
+ attesting her grief and accusing me, louder than her wailing,
+ of perfidy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I could not keep her. She would not return to her old home. I
+ finally compromised by carrying her in a covered basket a
+ mile and a half and bestowing her upon a friend who loves
+ cats nearly as well as I. But although she was petted, and
+ praised, and fed on the choicest of delicacies, she would not
+ be resigned. After six weeks of mourning, she disappeared,
+ and never was heard of more. Whether she sought a new and
+ more constant mistress, or whether, in her grief at my
+ shameless abandonment of her, she went to some lonely pier
+ and threw herself off the dock, will never be known. But her
+ reproachful gaze and tearful emerald eyes haunted me all
+ winter. Many a restless night did I have to reproach myself
+ for abandoning a creature who so truly loved me; and in many
+ a dream did she return to heap shame and ignominy upon my
+ repentant head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This experience determined me to cherish her daughter, whom,
+ rather, I cherished as her son, until there were three little
+ new-born kittens, which in a moment of ignorance I "disposed
+ of" at once. Naturally, the young mother fell exceedingly
+ ill. In the most pathetic way she dragged herself after me,
+ moaning and beseeching for help. Finally, I succumbed, went
+ to a neighbor's where several superfluous kittens had arrived
+ the night before, and begged one. It was a little black
+ fellow, cold and half dead; but the Pretty Lady was beside
+ herself with joy when I bestowed it upon her. For two days
+ she would not leave the box where I established their
+ headquarters, and for months she refused to wean it, or to
+ look upon it as less than absolutely perfect. I may say that
+ the Pretty Lady lived to be nine years old, and had, during
+ that brief period, no less than ninety-three kittens, besides
+ two adopted ones; but never did she bestow upon any of her
+ own offspring that wealth of pride and affection which was
+ showered upon black Bobbie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the first child of her adoption was two weeks old, I was
+ ill one morning, and did not appear at breakfast. It had
+ always been her custom to wait for my coming down in the
+ morning, evidently considering it a not unimportant part of
+ her duty to see me well launched for the day. Usually she sat
+ at the head of the stairs and waited patiently until she
+ heard me moving about. Sometimes she came in and sat on a
+ chair at the head of my bed, or gently touched my face with
+ her nose or paw. Although she knew she was at liberty to
+ sleep in my room, she seldom did so, except when she had an
+ infant on her hands. At first she invariably kept him in a
+ lower drawer of my bureau. When he was large enough, she
+ removed him to the foot of the bed, where for a week or two
+ her maternal solicitude and sociable habits of nocturnal
+ conversation with her progeny interfered seriously with my
+ night's rest. If my friends used to notice a wild and haggard
+ appearance of unrest about me at certain periods of the year,
+ the reason stands here confessed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was ill when black Bobbie was two weeks old. The Pretty
+ Lady waited until breakfast was over, and as I did not
+ appear, came up and jumped on the bed, where she manifested
+ some curiosity as to my lack of active interest in the
+ world's affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, pussy," I said, putting out my hand and stroking her
+ back, "I'm sick this morning. When you were sick, I went and
+ got you a kitten. Can't you get me one?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was all. My sister came in then and spoke to me, and the
+ Pretty Lady left us at once; but in less than two minutes she
+ came back with her cherished kitten in her mouth. Depositing
+ him in my neck, she stood and looked at me, as much as to
+ say:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There, you can take him awhile. He cured me and I won't be
+ selfish; I will share him with you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was ill for three days, and all that time the kitten was
+ kept with me. When his mother wanted him, she kept him on the
+ foot of the bed, where she nursed, and lapped, and scrubbed
+ him until it seemed as if she must wear even his stolid
+ nerves completely out. But whenever she felt like going out
+ she brought him up and tucked him away in the hollow of my
+ neck, with a little guttural noise that, interpreted,
+ meant:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There, now you take care of him awhile. I'm all tired out.
+ Don't wake him up."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when the infant had dropped soundly asleep, she
+ invariably came back and demanded him; and not only demanded,
+ but dragged him forth from his lair by the nape of the neck,
+ shrieking and protesting, to the foot of the bed again, where
+ he was obliged to go through another course of scrubbing and
+ vigorous maternal attentions that actually kept his fur from
+ growing as fast as the coats of less devotedly cared-for
+ kittens grow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I was well enough to leave my room, she transferred him
+ to my lower bureau drawer, and then to a vantage-point behind
+ an old lounge. But she never doubted, apparently, that it was
+ the loan of that kitten that rescued me from an untimely
+ grave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have lost many an hour of much-needed sleep from my cat's
+ habit of coming upstairs at four A.M. and jumping suddenly
+ upon the bed; perhaps landing on the pit of my stomach.
+ Waking in that fashion, unsympathetic persons would have
+ pardoned me if I had indulged in injudicious language, or had
+ even thrown the cat violently from my otherwise peaceful
+ couch. But conscience has not to upbraid me with any of these
+ things. I flatter myself that I bear even this patiently; I
+ remember to have often made sleepy but pleasant remarks to
+ the faithful little friend whose affection for me and whose
+ desire to behold my countenance was too great to permit her
+ to wait till breakfast time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If I lay awake for hours afterward, perhaps getting nothing
+ more than literal "cat-naps," I consoled myself with
+ remembering how Richelieu, and Wellington, and Mohammed, and
+ otherwise great as well as discriminating persons, loved
+ cats; I remembered, with some stirrings of secret pride, that
+ it is only the artistic nature, the truly aesthetic soul that
+ appreciates poetry, and grace, and all refined beauty, who
+ truly loves cats; and thus meditating with closed eyes, I
+ courted slumber again, throughout the breaking dawn, while
+ the cat purred in delight close at hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pretty Lady was evidently of Angora or coon descent, as
+ her fur was always longer and silkier than that of ordinary
+ cats. She was fond of all the family. When we boarded in
+ Boston, we kept her in a front room, two flights from the
+ ground. Whenever any of us came in the front door, she knew
+ it. No human being could have told, sitting in a closed room
+ in winter, two flights up, the identity of a person coming up
+ the steps and opening the door. But the Pretty Lady, then
+ only six months old, used to rouse from her nap in a big
+ chair, or from the top of a folding bed, jump down, and be at
+ the hall door ready to greet the incomer, before she was
+ halfway up the stairs. The cat never got down for the wrong
+ person, and she never neglected to meet any and every member
+ of our family who might be entering. The irreverent scoffer
+ may call it "instinct," or talk about the "sense of smell." I
+ call it sagacity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One summer we all went up to the farm in northern Vermont,
+ and decided to take her and her son, "Mr. McGinty," with us.
+ We put them both in a large market-basket and tied the cover
+ securely. On the train Mr. McGinty manifested a desire to get
+ out, and was allowed to do so, a stout cord having been
+ secured to his collar first, and the other end tied to the
+ car seat. He had a delightful journey, once used to the noise
+ and motion of the train. He sat on our laps, curled up on the
+ seat and took naps, or looked out of the windows with evident
+ puzzlement at the way things had suddenly taken to flying; he
+ even made friends with the passengers, and in general amused
+ himself as any other traveller would on an all-day's journey
+ by rail, except that he did not risk his eyesight by reading
+ newspapers. But the Pretty Lady had not travelled for some
+ years, and did not enjoy the trip as well as formerly; on the
+ contrary she curled herself into a round tight ball in one
+ corner of the basket till the journey's end was reached.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once at the farm she seemed contented as long as I remained
+ with her. There was plenty of milk and cream, and she caught
+ a great many mice. She was far too dainty to eat them, but
+ she had an inherent pleasure in catching mice, just like her
+ more plebeian sisters; and she enjoyed presenting them to Mr.
+ McGinty or me, or some other worthy object of her solicitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was at first afraid of "the big outdoors." The wide,
+ wind-blown spaces, the broad, sunshiny sky, the silence and
+ the roominess of it all, were quite different from her
+ suburban experiences; and the farm animals, too, were in her
+ opinion curiously dangerous objects. Big Dan, the horse, was
+ truly a horrible creature; the rooster was a new and
+ suspicious species of biped, and the bleating calves objects
+ of her direst hatred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pig in his pen possessed for her the most horrid
+ fascination. Again and again would she steal out and place
+ herself where she could see that dreadful, strange, pink, fat
+ creature inside his own quarters. She would fix her round
+ eyes widely upon him in blended fear and admiration. If the
+ pig uttered the characteristic grunt of his race, the Pretty
+ Lady at first ran swiftly away; but afterward she used to
+ turn and gaze anxiously at us, as if to say:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you hear that? Isn't this a truly horrible creature?" and
+ in other ways evince the same sort of surprise that a
+ professor in the Peabody Museum might, were the skeleton of
+ the megatherium suddenly to accost him after the manner
+ peculiar to its kind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was funnier, even, to see Mr. McGinty on the morning after
+ his arrival at the farm, as he sallied forth and made
+ acquaintance with other of God's creatures than humans and
+ cats, and the natural enemy of his kind, the dog. In his
+ suburban home he had caught rats and captured on the sly many
+ an English sparrow. When he first investigated his new
+ quarters on the farm, he discovered a beautiful flock of very
+ large birds led by one of truly gorgeous plumage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" thought Mr. McGinty, "this is a great and glorious
+ country, where I can have such birds as these for the
+ catching. Tame, too. I'll have one for breakfast."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he crouched down, tiger-like, and crept carefully along to
+ a convenient distance and was preparing to spring, when the
+ large and gorgeous bird looked up from his worm and
+ remarked:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Cut-cut-cut, ca-dah-cut!" and, taking his wives, withdrew
+ toward the barn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. McGinty drew back amazed. "This is a queer bird," he
+ seemed to say; "saucy, too. However, I'll soon have him," and
+ he crept more carefully than before up to springing distance,
+ when again this most gorgeous bird drew up and exclaimed,
+ with a note of annoyance:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Cut-cut-cut, ca-dah-cut! What ails that old cat, anyway?"
+ And again he led his various wives barn-ward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. McGinty drew up with a surprised air, and apparently made
+ a cursory study of the leading anatomical features of this
+ strange bird; but he did not like to give up, and soon
+ crouched and prepared for another onslaught. This time Mr.
+ Chanticleer allowed the cat to come up close to his flock,
+ when he turned and remarked in the most amicable manner,
+ "Cut-cut-cut-cut!" which interpreted seemed to mean: "Come
+ now; that's all right. You're evidently new here; but you'd
+ better take my advice and not fool with me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anyhow, with this, down went McGinty's hope of a bird
+ breakfast "to the bottom of the sea," and he gave up the
+ hunt. He soon made friends, however, with every animal on the
+ place, and so endeared himself to the owners that he lived
+ out his days there with a hundred acres and more as his own
+ happy hunting-ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not so, the Pretty Lady. I went away on a short visit after a
+ few weeks, leaving her behind. From the moment of my
+ disappearance she was uneasy and unhappy. On the fifth day
+ she disappeared. When I returned and found her not, I am not
+ ashamed to say that I hunted and called her everywhere, nor
+ even that I shed a few tears when days rolled into weeks and
+ she did not appear, as I realized that she might be starving,
+ or have suffered tortures from some larger animal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are many remarkable stories of cats who find their way
+ home across almost impossible roads and enormous distances.
+ There is a saying, believed by many people, "You can't lose a
+ cat," which can be proved by hundreds of remarkable returns.
+ But the Pretty Lady had absolutely no sense of locality. She
+ had always lived indoors and had never been allowed to roam
+ the neighborhood. It was five weeks before we found trace of
+ her, and then only by accident. My sister was passing a field
+ of grain, and caught a glimpse of a small creature which she
+ at first thought to be a woodchuck. She turned and looked at
+ it, and called "Pussy, pussy," when with a heart-breaking
+ little cry of utter delight and surprise, our beloved cat
+ came toward her. From the first, the wide expanse of the
+ country had confused her; she had evidently "lost her
+ bearings" and was probably all the time within fifteen
+ minutes' walk of the farm-house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When found, she was only a shadow of herself, and for the
+ first and only time in her life we could count her ribs. She
+ was wild with delight, and clung to my sister's arms as
+ though fearing to lose her; and in all the fuss that was made
+ over her return, no human being could have showed more
+ affection, or more satisfaction at finding her old friends
+ again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That she really was lost, and had no sense of locality to
+ guide her home, was proven by her conduct after she returned
+ to her Boston home. I had preceded my sister, and was at the
+ theatre on the evening when she arrived with the Pretty Lady.
+ The latter was carried into the kitchen, taken from her
+ basket, and fed. Then, instead of going around the house and
+ settling herself in her old home, she went into the front
+ hall which she had left four months before, and seated
+ herself on the spot where she always watched and waited when
+ I was out. When I came home at eleven, I saw through the
+ screen door her "that was lost and is found." She had been
+ waiting to welcome me for three mortal hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I wish those people who believe cats have no affection for
+ people could have seen her then. She would not leave me for
+ an instant, and manifested her love in every possible way;
+ and when I retired for the night, she curled up on my pillow
+ and purred herself contentedly to sleep, only rising when I
+ did. After breakfast that first morning after her return, she
+ asked to be let out of the back door, and made me understand
+ that I must go with her. I did so, and she explored every
+ part of the back yard, entreating me in the same way she
+ called her kittens to keep close by her. She investigated our
+ own premises thoroughly and then crept carefully under the
+ fences on either side into the neighbor's precincts where she
+ had formerly visited in friendly fashion; then she came
+ timidly back, all the time keeping watch that she did not
+ lose me. Having finished her tour of inspection, she went in
+ and led me on an investigating trip all through the house,
+ smelling of every corner and base-board, and insisting that
+ every closet door should be opened, so that she might smell
+ each closet through in the same way. When this was done, she
+ settled herself in one of her old nooks for a nap and allowed
+ me to leave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But never again did she go out of sight of the house. For
+ more than a year she would not go even into a neighbor's
+ yard, and when she finally decided that it might be safe to
+ crawl under the fences on to other territory, she invariably
+ turned about to sit facing the house, as though living up to
+ a firm determination never to lose sight of it again. This
+ practice she kept up until at the close of her last mortal
+ sickness, when she crawled into a dark place under a
+ neighboring barn and said good-by to earthly fears and
+ worries forever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Requiescat in pace</i>, my Pretty Lady. I wish all your
+ sex had your gentle dignity, and grace, and beauty, to say
+ nothing of your faithfulness and affection. Like Mother
+ Michel's "Monmouth," it may be said of you:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <center>
+ "She was merely a cat,<br>
+ But her Sublime Virtues place her on a level with<br>
+ The Most Celebrated Mortals,<br>
+ and<br>
+ In Ancient Egypt<br>
+ Altars would have been Erected to her<br>
+ Memory."
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH2"><!-- CH2 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ CONCERNING MY OTHER CATS
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, what a lovely cat!" is a frequent expression from
+ visitors or passers-by at our house. And from the Pretty Lady
+ down through her various sons and daughters to the present
+ family protector and head, "Thomas Erastus," and the Angora,
+ "Lady Betty," there have been some beautiful creatures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. McGinty was a solid-color maltese, with fur like a seal
+ for closeness and softness, and with the disposition of an
+ angel. He used to be seized with sudden spasms of affection
+ and run from one to another of the family, rubbing his soft
+ cheeks against ours, and kissing us repeatedly. This he did
+ by taking gentle little affectionate nips with his teeth. I
+ used to give him a certain caress, which he took as an
+ expression of affection. After leaving him at the farm I did
+ not see him again for two years. Then on a short visit, I
+ asked for Mr. McGinty and was told that he was in a shed
+ chamber. I found him asleep in a box of grain and took him
+ out; he looked at me through sleepy eyes, turned himself over
+ and stretched up for the old caress. As nobody ever gave him
+ that but me, I take this as conclusive proof that he not only
+ knew me, but remembered my one peculiarity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then there was old Pomp, called "old" to distinguish him from
+ the young Pomp of to-day, or "Pompanita." He died of
+ pneumonia at the age of three years; but he was the
+ handsomest black cat&#8212;and the blackest&#8212;I have ever
+ seen. He had half a dozen white hairs under his chin; but his
+ blackness was literally like the raven's wing. Many handsome
+ black cats show brown in the strong sunlight, or when their
+ fur is parted. But old Pomp's fur was jet black clear
+ through, and in the sunshine looked as if he had been made up
+ of the richest black silk velvet, his eyes, meanwhile, being
+ large and of the purest amber. He weighed some fifteen
+ pounds, and that somebody envied us the possession of him was
+ evident, as he was stolen two or three times during the last
+ summer of his life. But he came home every time; only when
+ Death finally stole him, we had no redress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bobinette," the black kitten referred to in the previous
+ chapter, also had remarkably beautiful eyes. We used to keep
+ him in ribbons to match, and he knew color, too, perfectly
+ well. For instance, if we offered him a blue or a red ribbon,
+ he would not be quiet long enough to have it tied on; but
+ show him a yellow one, and he would prance across the room,
+ and not only stand still to have it put on, but purr and
+ evince the greatest pride in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bobinette had another very pretty trick of playing with the
+ tape-measure. He used to bring it to us and have it wound
+ several times around his body; then he would "chase himself"
+ until he got it off, when he would bring it back and ask
+ plainly to have it wound round him again. After a little we
+ noticed he was wearing the tape-measure out, and so we tried
+ to substitute it with an old ribbon or piece of cotton tape.
+ But Bobinette would have none of them. On the contrary, he
+ repeatedly climbed on to the table and to the work-basket,
+ and hunted patiently for his tape-measure, and even if it
+ were hidden in a pocket, he kept up the search until he
+ unearthed it; and he would invariably end by dragging forth
+ that particular tape-measure and bringing it to us. I need
+ not say that his intelligence was rewarded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Speaking of colors, a friend has a cat that is devoted to
+ blue. When she puts on a particularly pretty blue gown, the
+ cat hastens to get into her lap, put her face down to the
+ material, purr, and manifest the greatest delight; but let
+ the same lady put on a black dress, and the cat will not come
+ near her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pompanita," the second Pomp in our dynasty, is a fat and
+ billowy black fellow, now five years old and weighing
+ nineteen pounds. He was the last of the Pretty Lady's
+ ninety-three children. Only a few of this vast progeny,
+ however, grew to cat-hood, as she was never allowed to keep
+ more than one each season. The Pretty Lady, in fact, came to
+ regard this as the only proper method. On one occasion I had
+ been away all day. When I got home at night the housekeeper
+ said, "Pussy has had five kittens, but she won't go near
+ them." When the Pretty Lady heard my voice, she came and led
+ the way to the back room where the kittens were in the lower
+ drawer of an unused bureau, and uttered one or two funny
+ little noises, intimating that matters were not altogether as
+ they should be, according to established rules of propriety.
+ I understood, abstracted four of the five kittens, and
+ disappeared. When I came back she had settled herself
+ contentedly with the remaining kitten, and from that time on
+ was a model mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pompanita the Good has all the virtues of a good cat, and
+ absolutely no vices. He loves us all and loves all other cats
+ as well. As for fighting, he emulates the example of that
+ veteran who boasts that during the war he might always be
+ found where the shot and shell were the thickest,&#8212;under
+ the ammunition wagon. Like most cats he has a decided streak
+ of vanity. My sister cut a wide, fancy collar, or ruff, of
+ white paper one day, and put it on Pompanita. At first he
+ felt much abashed and found it almost impossible to walk with
+ it. But a few words of praise and encouragement changed all
+ that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, what a pretty Pomp he is now!" exclaimed one and
+ another, until he sat up coyly and cocked his head one side
+ as if to say:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, now, do you really think I look pretty?" and after a few
+ more assurances he got down and strutted as proudly as any
+ peacock; much to the discomfiture of the kitten, who wanted
+ to play with him. And now he will cross the yard any time to
+ have one of those collars on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Thomas Erastus is the prince of our cats to-day. He
+ weighs seventeen pounds, and is a soft, grayish-maltese with
+ white paws and breast. One Saturday night ten years ago, as
+ we were partaking of our regular Boston baked beans, I heard
+ a faint mew. Looking down I saw beside me the thinnest kitten
+ I ever beheld. The Irish girl who presided over our fortunes
+ at the time used to place the palms of her hands together and
+ say of Thomas's appearance, "Why, mum, the two sides of 'im
+ were just like that." I picked him up, and he crawled
+ pathetically into my neck and cuddled down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There," said a friend who was sitting opposite, "he's fixed
+ himself now. You'll keep him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, I shall not," I said, "but I will feed him a few days
+ and give him to my cousin." Inside half an hour, however,
+ Thomas Erastus had assumed the paternal air toward us that
+ soon made us fear to lose him. Living without Thomas now
+ would be like a young girl's going out without a chaperone.
+ After that first half-hour, when he had been fed, he chased
+ every foreign cat off the premises, and assumed the part of a
+ watch-dog. To this day he will sit on the front porch or the
+ window-sill and growl if he sees a tramp or suspicious
+ character approaching. He always goes into the kitchen when
+ the market-man calls, and orders his meat; and at exactly
+ five o'clock in the afternoon, when the meat is cut up and
+ distributed, leads the feline portion of the family into the
+ kitchen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thomas knows the time of day. For six months he waked up one
+ housekeeper at exactly seven o'clock in the morning, never
+ varying two minutes. He did this by seating himself on her
+ chest and gazing steadfastly in her face. Usually this waked
+ her, but if she did not yield promptly to that treatment he
+ would poke her cheeks with the most velvety of paws until she
+ awoke. He has a habit now of going upstairs and sitting
+ opposite the closed door of the young man who has to rise
+ hours before the rest of us do, and waiting until the door is
+ opened for him. How he knows at what particular moment each
+ member of the family will wake up and come forth is a
+ mystery, but he does.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How do cats tell the hour of day, anyway? The old Chinese
+ theory that they are living clocks is, in a way, borne out by
+ their own conduct. Not only have my cats shown repeatedly
+ that they know the hour of rising of every member of the
+ family, but they gather with as much regularity as the ebbing
+ of the tides, or the setting of the sun, at exactly five
+ o'clock in the afternoon for their supper. They are given a
+ hearty breakfast as soon as the kitchen fire is started in
+ the morning. This theoretically lasts them until five. I say
+ theoretically, because if they wake from their invariable
+ naps at one, and smell lunch, they individually wheedle some
+ one into feeding them. But this is only individually.
+ Collectively they are fed at five.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They are the most methodical creatures in the world. They go
+ to bed regularly at night when the family does. They are
+ waiting in the kitchen for breakfast when the fire is started
+ in the morning. Then they go out of doors and play, or hunt,
+ or ruminate until ten o'clock, when they come in, seek their
+ favorite resting-places, and sleep until four. Evidently,
+ from four to five is a play hour, and the one who wakes first
+ is expected to stir up the others. But at exactly five, no
+ matter where they may have strayed to, every one of the
+ three, five, or seven (as the number may happen to be) will
+ be sitting in his own particular place in the kitchen,
+ waiting with patient eagerness for supper. For each has a
+ particular place for eating, just as bigger folk have their
+ places at the dining table. Thomas Erastus sits in a corner;
+ the space under the table is reserved especially for Jane.
+ Pompanita is at his mistress's feet, and Lady Betty, the
+ Angora, bounds to her shoulder when their meat appears. Their
+ table manners are quite irreproachable also. It is considered
+ quite unpardonable to snatch at another's piece of meat, and
+ a breach of the best cat-etiquette to show impatience while
+ another is being fed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not pretend to say that this is entirely natural. They
+ are taught these things as kittens, and since cats are as
+ great sticklers for propriety and gentle manners as any human
+ beings can be, they never forget it. Doubtless, this is
+ easier because they are always well fed, but Thomas Erastus
+ or Jane would have to be on the verge of starvation, I am
+ sure, before they would "grab" from one of the other cats.
+ And as for the Pretty Lady, it was always necessary to see
+ that she was properly served. She would not eat from a dish
+ with other cats, or, except in extreme cases, from one they
+ had left. Indeed, she was remarkable in this respect. I have
+ seen her sit on the edge of a table where chickens were being
+ dressed and wait patiently for a tidbit; I have seen her left
+ alone in the room, while on that table was a piece of raw
+ steak, but no temptation was ever great enough to make her
+ touch any of these forbidden things. She actually seemed to
+ have a conscience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only one thing on the dining table would she touch. When she
+ was two or three months old, she somehow got hold of the
+ table-napkins done up in their rings. These were always to
+ her the most delightful playthings in the world. As a kitten,
+ she would play with them by the hour, if not taken away, and
+ go to sleep cuddled affectionately around them. She got over
+ this as she grew older; but when her first kitten was two or
+ three months old, remembering the jolly times she used to
+ have, she would sneak into the dining room and get the rolled
+ napkins, carry them in her mouth to her infant, and endeavor
+ with patient anxiety to show him how to play with them.
+ Throughout nine years of motherhood she went through the same
+ performance with every kitten she had. They never knew what
+ to do with the napkins, or cared to know, and would have none
+ of them. But she never got discouraged. She would climb up on
+ the sideboard, or into the china closet, and even try to get
+ into drawers where the napkins were laid away in their rings.
+ If she could get hold of one, she would carry it with literal
+ groans and evident travail of spirit to her kitten, and by
+ further groans and admonitions seem to say:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Child, see this beautiful plaything I have brought you. This
+ is a part of your education; it is just as necessary for you
+ to know how to play with this as to poke your paw under the
+ closet door properly. Wake up, now, and play with it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes, when the table was laid over night, we used to
+ hear her anguished groans in the stillness of the night. In
+ the morning every napkin belonging to the family would be
+ found in a different part of the house, and perhaps a ring
+ would be missing. These periods, however, only lasted as
+ long, in each new kitten's training, as the few weeks that
+ she had amused herself with them at their age. Then she would
+ drop the subject, and napkins had no further interest than
+ the man in the moon until another kitten arrived at the age
+ when she considered them a necessary part of his education.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Professor Shaler in his interesting book on the intelligence
+ of animals gives the cat only the merest mention, intimating
+ that he considers them below par in this respect, and showing
+ little real knowledge of them. I wish he might have known the
+ Pretty Lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once our Lady Betty had four little Angora kittens. She was
+ probably the most aristocratic cat in the country, for she
+ kept a wet nurse. Poor Jane, of commoner strain, had two
+ small kittens the day after the Angora family appeared.
+ Jane's plebeian infants promptly disappeared, but she took
+ just as promptly to the more aristocratic family and
+ fulfilled the duties of nurse and maid. Both cats and four
+ kittens occupied the same bureau drawer, and when either cat
+ wanted the fresh air she left the other in charge; and there
+ was a tacit understanding between them that the fluffy, fat
+ babies must never be left alone one instant. Four small and
+ lively kittens in the house are indeed things of beauty, and
+ a joy as long as they last. Four fluffy little Angora balls
+ they were Chin, Chilla, Buffie, and Orange Pekoe, names that
+ explain their color. And Jane, wet nurse and waiting-maid,
+ had to keep as busy as the old woman that lived in a shoe.
+ Jane it was who must look after the infants when Lady Betty
+ wished to leave the house. Jane it was who must scrub the
+ furry quartet until their silky fur stood up in bunches the
+ wrong way all over their chubby little sides; Jane must sleep
+ with them nights, and be ready to furnish sustenance at any
+ moment of day or night; and above all, Jane must watch them
+ anxiously and incessantly in waking hours, uttering those
+ little protesting murmurs of admonition which mother cats
+ deem so necessary toward the proper training of kittens. And,
+ poor Jane! As lady's maid she must bathe Lady Betty's brow
+ every now and then, as the more finely strung Angora
+ succumbed to the nervous strain of kitten-rearing, and she
+ turned affectionately to Jane for comfort. A prettier sight,
+ or a more profitable study of the love of animals for each
+ other was never seen than Lady Betty, her infants, and her
+ nurse-maid. And yet, there are people who pronounce cats
+ stupid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One evening I returned from the theatre late and roused up
+ the four fluffy kittens, who, seeing the gas turned on,
+ started in for a frolic. The lady mother did not approve of
+ midnight carousals on the part of infants, and protested with
+ mild wails against their joyful caperings. Finally, Orange
+ Pekoe got into the closet and Lady Betty pursued him. But
+ suddenly a strange odor was detected. Sitting on her haunches
+ she smelled all over the bottom of the skirt which had just
+ been hung up, stopping every few seconds to utter a little
+ worried note of warning to the kittens. The infants, however,
+ displayed a quite human disregard of parental authority and
+ gambolled on unconcernedly under the skirt; reminding one of
+ the old New England primer style of tales, showing how
+ disobedient children flaunt themselves in the face of danger,
+ despite the judicious advice of their elders. Lady Betty
+ could do nothing with them, and grew more nervous and worried
+ every minute in consequence. Suddenly she bethought herself
+ of that never-failing source of strength and comfort, Jane.
+ She went into the next room, and, although I had not heard a
+ sound, returned in a moment with the maltese. Jane was
+ ushered into the closet, and soon scented out the skirt. Then
+ she too sat on her haunches and gave a long, careful sniff,
+ turned round and uttered one "purr-t-t," and took the Angora
+ off with her. Jane had discovered that there was no element
+ of danger in the closet, and had imparted her knowledge to
+ the finely strung Angora in an instant. And so, taking her
+ back to bed, she "bathed her brow" with gentle lappings until
+ Lady Betty sank off to quiet sleep, soothed and comforted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not easy to study a cat. They are like sensitive
+ plants, and shut themselves instinctively away from the human
+ being who does not care for them. They know when a man or a
+ woman loves them, almost before they come into the human
+ presence; and it is almost useless for the unsympathetic
+ person to try to study a cat. But the thousands who do love
+ cats know that they are the most individual animals in the
+ world. Dogs are much alike in their love for mankind, their
+ obedience, faithfulness, and, in different degrees, their
+ sagacity. But there is as much individuality in cats as in
+ people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dogs and horses are our slaves; cats never. This does not
+ prove them without affection, as some people seem to think;
+ on the contrary, it proves their peculiar and characteristic
+ dignity and self-respect. Women, poets, and especially
+ artists, like cats; delicate natures only can realize their
+ sensitive nervous systems.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pretty Lady's mother talked almost incessantly when she
+ was in the house. One of her habits was to get on the
+ window-seat outside and demand to be let in. If she was not
+ waited upon immediately, she would, when the door was finally
+ opened, stop when halfway in and scold vigorously. The tones
+ of her voice and the expression of her face were so exactly
+ like those of a scolding, vixenish woman that she caused many
+ a hearty laugh by her tirades.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thomas Erastus, however, seldom utters a sound, and at the
+ rare intervals when he condescends to purr, he can only be
+ heard by holding one's ear close to his great, soft sides.
+ But he has the most remarkable ways. He will open every door
+ in the house from the inside; he will even open blinds,
+ getting his paw under the fastening and working patiently at
+ it, with his body on the blind itself, until the hook flies
+ back and it finally opens. One housekeeper trained him to eat
+ his meat close up in one corner of the kitchen. This custom
+ he kept up after she went away, until new and uncommonly
+ frisky kittens annoyed him so that his place was transferred
+ to the top of an old table. When he got hungry in those days,
+ however, he used to go and crowd close up in his corner and
+ look so pathetically famished that food was generally
+ forthcoming at once. Thomas was formerly very much devoted to
+ the lady who lived next door, and was as much at home in her
+ house as in ours. Her family rose an hour or two earlier than
+ ours in the morning, and their breakfast hour came first. I
+ should attribute Thomas's devotion to Mrs. T. to this fact,
+ since he invariably presented himself at her dining-room
+ window and wheedled her into feeding him, were it not that
+ his affection seemed just as strong throughout the day. It
+ was interesting to see him go over and rattle her screen
+ doors, front, back, or side, knowing perfectly well that he
+ would bring some one to open and let him in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thomas has a really paternal air toward the rest of the
+ family. One spring night, as usual on retiring, I went to the
+ back door to call in the cats. Thomas Erastus was in my
+ sister's room, but none of the others were to be seen; nor
+ did they come at once, evidently having strayed in their play
+ beyond the sound of my voice. Thomas, upstairs, heard my
+ continued call and tried for some time to get out. M. had
+ shut her door, thinking to keep in the one already safe. But
+ the more I called, the more persistently determined he became
+ to get out. At last M. opened her window and let him on to
+ the sloping roof of the "L," from which he could descend
+ through a gnarled old apple tree. Meanwhile I left the back
+ door and went on with my preparations for the night. About
+ ten minutes later I went and called the cats again. It was a
+ moonlight night and I saw six delinquent cats coming in a
+ flock across the open field behind the house,&#8212;all
+ marshalled by Mr. Thomas. He evidently hunted them up and
+ called them in himself; then he sat on the back porch and
+ waited until the last kit was safely in, before he stalked
+ gravely in with an air which said as plainly as words:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There, it takes <i>me</i> to do anything with this family."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ None of my cats would think of responding to the call of
+ "Kitty, Kitty," or "Puss, Puss." They are early taught their
+ names and answer to them. Neither would one answer to the
+ name of another, except in occasional instances where
+ jealousy prompts them to do so. We have to be most careful
+ when we go out of an evening, not to let Thomas Erastus get
+ out at the same time. In case he does, he will follow us
+ either to the railroad station or to the electric cars and
+ wait in some near-by nook until we come back. I have known
+ him to sit out from seven until midnight of a cold, snowy
+ winter evening, awaiting our return from the theatre. When we
+ alight from the cars he is nowhere to be seen. But before we
+ have gone many steps, lo! Thomas Erastus is behind or beside
+ us, proudly escorting his mistresses home, but looking
+ neither at them, nor to the right or left. Not until he
+ reaches the porch does he allow himself to be petted. But on
+ our way to the cars his attitude is different. He is as
+ frisky as a kitten. In vain do we try to "shoo" him back, or
+ catch him. He prances along, just out of reach, but
+ tantalizingly close; when we get aboard our car, we know he
+ is safe in some corner gazing sadly after us, and that no
+ danger can drive him home until we reappear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both Thomas and Pompanita take a deep interest in all
+ household affairs, although in this respect they do not begin
+ to show the curiosity of the Pretty Lady. Never a piece of
+ furniture was changed in he house that she did not
+ immediately notice, the first time she came into the room
+ afterward; and she invariably jumped up on the article and
+ thoroughly investigated affairs before settling down again.
+ Every parcel that came in must be examined, and afterward she
+ must lie on the paper or inside the box that it came in,
+ always doing this with great solemnity and gazing earnestly
+ out of her large, intelligent dark eyes. Toward the close of
+ her life she was greatly troubled at any unusual stir in the
+ household. She liked to have company, but nothing disturbed
+ her more than to have a man working in the cellar, putting in
+ coal, cutting wood, or doing such work. She used then to
+ follow us uneasily about and look earnestly up into our
+ faces, as if to say:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Girls, this is not right. Everything is all upset here and
+ 'a' the world's gang agley.' Why don't you fix it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was the politest creature, too. That was the reason of
+ her name. In her youth she was christened "Pansy"; then
+ "Cleopatra," "Susan," "Lady Jane Grey" and the "Duchess." But
+ her manners were so punctiliously perfect, and she was such a
+ "pretty lady" always and everywhere; moreover she had such a
+ habit of sitting with her hands folded politely across her
+ gentle, lace-vandyked bosom that the only sobriquet that ever
+ clung was the one that expressed herself the most perfectly.
+ She was in every sense a "Pretty Lady." For years she ate
+ with us at the table. Her chair was placed next to mine, and
+ no matter where she was or how soundly she had been sleeping,
+ when the dinner bell rang she was the first to get to her
+ seat. Then she sat patiently until I fixed a dainty meal in a
+ saucer and placed it in the chair beside her, when she ate it
+ in the same well-bred way she did everything.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thomas Erastus hurt his foot one day. Rather he got it hurt
+ during a matutinal combat at which he was forced, being the
+ head of the family, to be present, although he is far above
+ the midnight carousals of his kind. Thomas Erastus sometimes
+ loves to consider himself an invalid. When his doting
+ mistress was not looking, he managed to step off on that foot
+ quite lively, especially if his mortal enemy, a disreputable
+ black tramp, skulked across the yard. But let Thomas Erastus
+ see a feminine eye gazing anxiously at him through an open
+ window, and he immediately hobbled on three legs; then he
+ would stop and sit down and assume so pathetic an expression
+ of patient suffering that the mistress's heart would melt,
+ and Thomas Erastus would find himself being borne into the
+ house and placed on the softest sofa. Once she caught him
+ down cellar. There is a window to which he has easy access,
+ and where he can go in and out a hundred times a day.
+ Evidently he had planned to do so at that moment. But seeing
+ his fond mistress, he sat down on the cellar floor, and with
+ his most fetching expression gazed wistfully back and forth
+ from her to the window. And of course she picked him up
+ carefully and put him on the window ledge. Thomas Erastus has
+ all the innocent guile of a successful politician. He could
+ manage things slicker than the political bosses, an' he
+ would.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One summer Thomas Erastus moved&#8212;an event of
+ considerable importance in his placid existence. He had to
+ travel a short distance on the steam-cars; and worse, he
+ needs must endure the indignity of travelling that distance
+ in a covered basket. But his dignity would not suffer him to
+ do more than send forth one or two mournful wails of protest.
+ After being kept in his new house for a couple of days, he
+ was allowed to go out and become familiar with his
+ surroundings&#8212;not without fear and trepidation on the
+ part of his doting mistress that he might make a bold strike
+ for his former home. But Thomas Erastus felt he had a mission
+ to perform for his race. He would disprove that mistaken
+ theory that a cat, no matter how kindly he is treated, cares
+ more for places than for people. Consequently he would not
+ dream of going back to his old haunts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No; he sat down in the front yard and took a long look at his
+ surroundings, the neighboring lots, a field of grass, a
+ waving corn-field. He had already convinced himself that the
+ new house was home, because in it were all the old familiar
+ things, and he had been allowed to investigate every bit of
+ it and to realize what had happened. So after looking well
+ about him he made a series of tours of investigation. First,
+ he took a bee-line for the farthest end of the nearest vacant
+ lot; then he chose the corn-field; then the beautiful broad
+ grounds of the neighbor below; then across the street; but
+ between each of these little journeys he took a bee-line back
+ to his starting-point, sat down in front of the new house,
+ and "got his bearings," just as evidently as though he could
+ have said out loud, "This is my home and I mustn't lose it."
+ In this way he convinced himself that where he lives is the
+ centre of the universe, and that the world revolves around
+ him. And he has since been as happy as a cricket,&#8212;yea,
+ happier, for death and destruction await the unfortunate
+ cricket where Thomas Erastus thrives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But don't say a cat can't or won't be moved. It's your own
+ fault if he won't.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH3"><!-- CH3 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ CONCERNING OTHER PEOPLE'S CATS
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ Every observing reader of Mrs. Harriet Prescott Spofford's
+ stories knows that she is fond of cats and understands them.
+ Her heroines usually have, among other feminine belongings
+ and accessories, one or more cats. "Four great Persian cats
+ haunted her every footstep," she says of Honor, in the
+ "Composite Wife." "A sleepy, snowy creature like some
+ half-animated ostrich plume; a satanic thing with fiery eyes
+ that to Mr. Chipperley's perception were informed with the
+ very bottomless flames; another like a golden fleece,
+ caressing, half human; and a little mouse-colored imp whose
+ bounds and springs and feathery tail-lashings not only did
+ infinite damage among the Venetian and Dresden
+ knick-knackerie, but among Mr. Chipperley's nerves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In her beautiful, old-fashioned home at Newburyport, Mass.,
+ she has two beloved cats. But I will not attempt to improve
+ on her own account of them:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As for my own cats,&#8212;their name has been legion,
+ although a few remain preeminent. There was Miss Spot who
+ came to us already named, preferring our domicile to the
+ neighboring one she had. Her only son was so black that he
+ was known as Ink Spot, but her only daughter was so
+ altogether ideal and black, too, that she was known as Beauty
+ Spot. Beauty Spot led a sorrowful life, and was fortunately
+ born clothed in black or her mourning would have been
+ expensive, as she was always in a bereaved condition, her
+ drowned offspring making a shoal in the Merrimac, although
+ she had always plenty left. She solaced herself with music.
+ She would never sit in any one's lap but mine, and in mine
+ only when I sang; and then only when I sang 'The Last Rose of
+ Summer.' This is really true. But she would spring into my
+ husband's lap if he whistled. She would leave her sleep
+ reluctantly, start a little way, and retreat, start and
+ retreat again, and then give one bound and light on his knee
+ or his arm and reach up one paw and push it repeatedly across
+ his mouth like one playing the jew's-harp; I suppose to get
+ at the sound. She always went to walk with us and followed us
+ wherever we went about the island.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lucifer and Phosphor have been our cats for the last ten
+ years: Lucifer, entirely black, Phosphor, as yellow as
+ saffron, a real golden fleece. My sister lived in town and
+ going away for the summer left her cat in a neighbor's care,
+ and the neighbor moved away meanwhile and left the cat to
+ shift for herself. She went down to the apothecary's, two
+ blocks away or more. There she had a family of kittens, but
+ apparently came up to reconnoitre, for on my sister's return,
+ she appeared with one kitten and laid it down at Kate's feet;
+ ran off, and in time came with another which she left also,
+ and so on until she had brought up the whole household.
+ Lucifer was one of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He was as black as an imp and as mischievous as one. His
+ bounds have always been tremendous: from the floor to the
+ high mantel, or to the top of a tall buffet close under the
+ ceiling. And these bounds of his, together with a way he has
+ of gazing into space with his soulful and enormous yellow
+ eyes, have led to a thousand tales as to his nightly
+ journeyings among the stars; hurting his foot slumping
+ through the nebula in Andromeda; getting his supper at a
+ place in the milky way, hunting all night with Orion, and
+ having awful fights with Sirius. He got his throat cut by
+ alighting on the North Pole one night, coming down from the
+ stars. The reason he slumps through the nebula is on account
+ of his big feet; he has six toes (like the foot in George
+ Augustus Sala's drawing) and when he walks on the top of the
+ piazza you would think it was a burglar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lucifer's Mephistophelian aspect is increased not only by
+ those feet, but by an arrow-pointed tail. He sucks his
+ tail,&#8212;alas, and alas! In vain have we peppered it, and
+ pepper-sauced it, and dipped it in Worcestershire sauce and
+ in aloes, and done it up in curl papers, and glued on it the
+ fingers of old gloves. At last we gave it up in despair, and
+ I took him and put his tail in his mouth and told him to take
+ his pleasure,&#8212;and that is the reason, I suppose, that
+ he attaches himself particularly to me. He is very
+ near-sighted with those magnificent orbs, for he will jump
+ into any one's lap, who wears a black gown, but jump down
+ instantly, and when he finds my lap curl down for a brief
+ season. But he is not much of a lap-loving cat. He puts up
+ his nose and smells my face all over in what he means for a
+ caress, and is off. He is not a large eater, although he has
+ been known to help himself to a whole steak at the table,
+ being alone in the dining room; and when poultry are in the
+ larder he is insistent till satisfied. But he wants his
+ breakfast early. If the second girl, whose charge he is, does
+ not rise in season, he mounts two flights of stairs and seats
+ himself on her chest until she does rise. Then if she does
+ not wait on him at once, he goes into the drawing-room, and
+ springs to the top of the upright piano, and deliberately
+ knocks off the bric-a-brac, particularly loving to encounter
+ and floor a brass dragon candlestick. Then he springs to the
+ mantel-shelf if he has not been seized and appeased, and
+ repeats operations, and has even carried his work of
+ destruction around the room to the top of a low bookcase and
+ has proved himself altogether the wrong sort of person in a
+ china-shop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "However, it is conceded in the family that Phosphor is not a
+ cat merely: he is a person, and Lucifer is a spirit. Lucifer
+ seldom purrs&#8212;I wonder if that is a characteristic of
+ black cats?" [No; my black cats fairly roar.] "A little
+ thread of sound, and only now and then, when very happy and
+ loving, a rich, full strain. But Phosphor purrs like a
+ windmill, like an electric car, like a tea-kettle, like a
+ whole boiled dinner. When Phosphor came, Lucifer, six weeks
+ her senior (Phosphor's excellencies always incline one to say
+ 'she' of him), thought the little live yellow ball was made
+ only for him to play with, and he cuffed and tossed him
+ around for all he was worth, licked him all over twenty times
+ a day, and slept with his arms about him. During those early
+ years Phosphor never washed himself, Lucifer took such care
+ of him, and they were a lovely sight in each other's arms
+ asleep. But of late years a coolness has intervened, and now
+ they never speak as they pass by. They sometimes go fishing
+ together, Lucifer walking off majestically alone, always
+ dark, mysterious, reticent, intent on his own affairs, making
+ you feel that he has a sort of lofty contempt for yours.
+ Sometimes, the mice depositing a dead fish in the crannies of
+ the rocks, Lucifer appears with it in the twilight, gleaming
+ silver-white in his jaws, and the great eyes gleaming like
+ fire-balls above it. Phosphor is, however, a mighty hunter:
+ mice, rats by the score, chipmunks,&#8212;all is game that
+ comes to his net. He has cleaned out whole colonies of
+ catbirds (for their insolence), and eaten every golden robin
+ on the island.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It used to be very pretty to see them, when they were
+ little, as El Mahdi, the peacock, spread his great tail, dart
+ and spring upon it, and go whirling round with it as El
+ Mahdi, fairly frantic with the little demons that had hold of
+ him, went skipping and springing round and round. But
+ although so fierce a fighter, so inhospitable to every other
+ cat, Phosphor is the most affectionate little soul. He is
+ still very playful, though so large, and last summer to see
+ him bounding on the grass, playing with his tail, turning
+ somersaults all by himself, was quite worth while. When we
+ first happened to go away in his early years he wouldn't
+ speak to us when we came back, he felt so neglected. I went
+ away for five months once, before Lucifer was more than a
+ year old. He got into no one's lap while I was gone, but the
+ moment I sat down on my return, he jumped into mine, saluted
+ me, and curled himself down for a nap, showing the plainest
+ recognition. Now when one comes back, Phosphor is wild with
+ joy&#8212;always in a well-bred way. He will get into your
+ arms and on your shoulder and rub his face around, and before
+ you know it his little mouth is in the middle of your mouth
+ as much like a kiss as anything can be. Perhaps it isn't so
+ well bred, but his motions are so quick and perfect it seems
+ so. When you let him in he curls into heaps of joy, and
+ fairly stands on his head sometimes. He is the most
+ responsive creature, always ready for a caress, and his wild,
+ great amber eyes beam love, if ever love had manifestation.
+ His beauty is really extraordinary; his tail a real wonder.
+ Lucifer, I grieve to say, looks very moth-eaten. Phosphor
+ wore a bell for a short time once&#8212;a little Inch-Cape
+ Rock bell&#8212;but he left it to toll all winter in a tall
+ tree near the drawing-room window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A charm of cats is that they seem to live in a world of
+ their own, just as much as if it were a real dimension of
+ space; and speaking of a fourth dimension, I am living in the
+ expectation that the new discoveries in the matter of radiant
+ energy will presently be revealing to all our senses the fact
+ that there is no death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We had some barn kittens once that lived in the hen-house,
+ ate with the hens, and quarrelled with them for any tidbit.
+ They curled up in the egg boxes and didn't move when the hens
+ came to lay, and evidently had no idea that they were not
+ hens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, there is no end to the cat situation. It began with the
+ old fellow who put his hand under the cat to lift her up, and
+ she arched her back higher and higher until he found it was
+ the serpent Asgard, and it won't end with you and me. I don't
+ know but she <i>is</i> the serpent Asgard. I don't know if
+ you have hypnotized or magnetized me, but I am writing as if
+ I had known you intimately all my life, and feel as though I
+ had. It is the freemasonry of cats. I always said they were
+ possessed of spirits, and they use white magic to bring their
+ friends together."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Spofford's "barn kittens" bring to mind an incident
+ related by Mrs. Wood, the beautiful wife of Professor C.G.
+ Wood, of the Harvard Medical School. At their summer place on
+ Buzzard's Bay she has fifteen cats, mostly Angoras, Persians,
+ and coons, with several dogs. These cats follow her all about
+ the place in a regular troop, and a very handsome troop they
+ are, with their waving, plumy tails tipped gracefully over at
+ the ends as if saluting their superior officer. Among the
+ dogs is a spaniel named Gyp that is particularly friendly
+ with the cats. There are plenty of hens on the farm, and one
+ spring a couple of bantams were added to the stock. The cats
+ immediately took a great fancy to these diminutive bipeds,
+ and watched them with the greatest interest. Finally the
+ little hen had a flock of chickens. As the weather was still
+ cold, the farmer put them upstairs in one of the barns, and
+ every day Gyp would take seven or eight of those cats up
+ there to see the fluffy little things. Dog and cats would
+ seat themselves around the bantam and her brood and watch
+ them by the hour, never offering to touch the chickens except
+ when the little things were tired and went for a nap under
+ their mother's wings; and then some cat&#8212;first one and
+ then another&#8212;would softly poke its paw under the hen
+ and stir up the family, making them all run out in
+ consternation, and keeping things lively once more. The cats
+ didn't dream of catching the chickens, only wanting,
+ evidently, that they should emulate Joey and keep moving on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A writer in the <i>London Spectator</i> tells of a favorite
+ bantam hen with which the house cat has long been accustomed
+ to play. This bantam has increased and multiplied, and keeps
+ her family in a "coop" on the ground,&#8212;into which rats
+ easily enter. At bedtime, however, pussy takes up her
+ residence there, and bantam, the brood of chickens, and pussy
+ sleep in happy harmony nightly. If any rats arrive, their
+ experience must be sad and sharp. Another writer in the same
+ number tells of a cat in Huddersfield, England, belonging to
+ Canon Beardsley, who helps himself to a reel of cotton from
+ the work-basket, takes it on the floor, and plays with it as
+ long as he likes, and then jumps up and puts the reel back in
+ its place again; just as our Bobinette used to get his
+ tape-measure, although the latter never was known to put it
+ away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Sarah Orne Jewett is a cat-lover, too, and the dear old
+ countrywomen "down in Maine," with whom one gets acquainted
+ through her books, usually keep a cat also. Says she:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I look back over so long a line of family cats, from a
+ certain poor Spotty who died an awful death in a fit on the
+ flagstones under the library window when I was less than five
+ years old, to a lawless, fluffy, yellow and white coon cat
+ now in my possession, that I find it hard to single out the
+ most interesting pussy of all. I shall have to speak of two
+ cats at least, one being the enemy and the other the friend
+ of my dog Joe. Joe and I grew up together and were fond
+ companions, until he died of far too early old age and left
+ me to take my country walks alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Polly, the enemy, was the best mouser of all: quite the best
+ business cat we ever had, with an astonishing intellect and a
+ shrewd way of gaining her ends. She caught birds and mice as
+ if she foraged for our whole family: she had an air of
+ responsibility and a certain impatience of interruption and
+ interference such as I have never seen in any other cat, and
+ a scornful way of sitting before a person with fierce eyes
+ and a quick, ominous twitching of her tail. She seemed to be
+ measuring one's incompetence as a mouse-catcher in these
+ moments, or to be saying to herself, 'What a clumsy, stupid
+ person; how little she knows, and how I should like to
+ scratch her and hear her squeak.' I sometimes felt as if I
+ were a larger sort of helpless mouse in these moments, but
+ sometimes Polly would be more friendly, and even jump into
+ our laps, when it was a pleasure to pat her hard little head
+ with its exquisitely soft, dark tortoise-shell fur. No matter
+ if she almost always turned and caught the caressing hand
+ with teeth and claws, when she was tired of its touch, you
+ would always be ready to pat her next time; there was such a
+ fascination about her that any attention on her part gave a
+ thrill of pride and pleasure. Every guest and stranger
+ admired her and tried to win her favor: while we of the
+ household hid our wounds and delighted in her cleverness and
+ beauty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Polly was but a small cat to have a mind. She looked quite
+ round and kittenish as she sat before the fire in a rare
+ moment of leisure, with her black paws tucked under her white
+ breast and her sleek back looking as if it caught flickers of
+ firelight in some yellow streaks among the shiny black fur.
+ But when she walked abroad she stretched out long and thin
+ like a little tiger, and held her head high to look over the
+ grass as if she were threading the jungle. She lashed her
+ tail to and fro, and one turned out of her way instantly. You
+ opened a door for her if she crossed the room and gave you a
+ look. She made you know what she meant as if she had the gift
+ of speech: at most inconvenient moments you would go out
+ through the house to find her a bit of fish or to open the
+ cellar door. You recognized her right to appear at night on
+ your bed with one of her long-suffering kittens, which she
+ had brought in the rain, out of a cellar window and up a
+ lofty ladder, over the wet, steep roofs and down through a
+ scuttle into the garret, and still down into warm shelter.
+ Here she would leave it and with one or two loud, admonishing
+ purrs would scurry away upon some errand that must have been
+ like one of the border frays of old.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She used to treat Joe, the dog, with sad cruelty, giving him
+ a sharp blow on his honest nose that made him meekly stand
+ back and see her add his supper to her own. A child visitor
+ once rightly complained that Polly had pins in her toes, and
+ nobody knew this better than poor Joe. At last, in despair,
+ he sought revenge. I was writing at my desk one day, when he
+ suddenly appeared, grinning in a funny way he had, and
+ wagging his tail, until he enticed me out to the kitchen.
+ There I found Polly, who had an air of calling everything in
+ the house her own. She was on the cook's table, gobbling away
+ at some chickens which were being made ready for the oven and
+ had been left unguarded. I caught her and cuffed her, and she
+ fled through the garden door, for once tamed and vanquished,
+ though usually she was so quick that nobody could administer
+ justice upon these depredations of a well-fed cat. Then I
+ turned and saw poor old Joe dancing about the kitchen in
+ perfect delight. He had been afraid to touch Polly himself,
+ but he knew the difference between right and wrong, and had
+ called me to see what a wicked cat she was, and to give him
+ the joy of looking on at the flogging.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was the same dog who used sometimes to be found under a
+ table where his master had sent him for punishment in his
+ young days of lawless puppy-hood for chasing the neighbor's
+ chickens. These faults had long been overcome, but sometimes,
+ in later years, Joe's conscience would trouble him, we never
+ knew why, and he would go under the table of his own accord,
+ and look repentant and crestfallen until some forgiving and
+ sympathetic friend would think he had suffered enough and bid
+ him come out to be patted and consoled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "After such a house-mate as Polly, Joe had great amends in
+ our next cat, yellow Danny, the most amiable and friendly
+ pussy that ever walked on four paws. He took Danny to his
+ heart at once: they used to lie in the sun together with
+ Danny's head on the dog's big paws, and I sometimes used to
+ meet them walking as coy as lovers, side by side, up one of
+ the garden walks. When I could not help laughing at their
+ sentimental and conscious air, they would turn aside into the
+ bushes for shelter. They respected each other's suppers, and
+ ate together on the kitchen hearth, and took great comfort in
+ close companionship. Danny always answered if you spoke to
+ him, but he made no sound while always opening his mouth wide
+ to mew whenever he had anything to say, and looking up into
+ your face with all his heart expressed. These affectations of
+ speech were most amusing, especially in so large a person as
+ yellow Danny. He was much beloved by me and by all his
+ family, especially poor Joe, who must sometimes have had the
+ worst of dreams about old Polly, and her sharp, unsparing
+ claws."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Mary E. Wilkins is also a great admirer of cats. "I
+ adore cats," she says. "I don't love them as well as dogs,
+ because my own nature is more after the lines of a dog's; but
+ I adore them. No matter how tired or wretched I am, a
+ pussy-cat sitting in a doorway can divert my mind. Cats love
+ one so much: more than they will allow; but they have so much
+ wisdom they keep it to themselves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Wilkins's "Augustus" was moved with her from
+ Brattleboro, Vt., after her father's death and when she went
+ to Randolph, Mass., to live. He had been the pet of the
+ family for a long time, but he came to an untimely end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hope," says Miss Wilkins, "people's unintentional cruelty
+ will not be remembered against them." Since living in
+ Randolph she has had two lovely yellow and white cats, "Punch
+ and Judy." The latter was shot by a neighbor, but Punch, the
+ right-hand cat with the angelic expression, still survives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am quite sure," says his mistress, "he loves me better
+ than anybody else, although he is so very close about it.
+ Punch Wilkins has one accomplishment. He can open a door with
+ an old-fashioned latch: but he cannot shut it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Louise Imogen Guiney is famous for her love and good
+ comradeship with dogs, especially her setters and St.
+ Bernards, but she is too thoroughly a poet not to be
+ captivated by the grace and beauty of a cat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I love the unsubmissive race," she says, "and have had much
+ edification out of the charming friendships between our St.
+ Bernards and our cats. Annie Clarke [the actress] once gave
+ me two exquisite Angoras, little persons of character equal
+ to their looks; but they died young and we have not since had
+ the heart to replace them. I once had another coon, a small,
+ spry, gray fellow named Scot, the tamest and most endearing
+ of pets, always on your shoulder and a' that, who suddenly,
+ on no provocation whatever, turned wild, lived for a year or
+ more in the woods next our garden, hunting and fishing,
+ although ceaselessly chased, and called, and implored to
+ revisit his afflicted family. He associated sometimes with
+ the neighbor's cat, but never, never more with humanity,
+ until finally we found his pathetic little frozen body one
+ Christmas near the barn. Do you remember Arnold's Scholar
+ Gypsy? Our Scot was his feline equivalent.... Have you
+ counted in Prosper Merim&eacute;e among the confirmed lovers
+ of cats? I remember a delightful little paragraph out of one
+ of his letters about <i>un vieux chat noir, parfaitement
+ laid, mais plein d'&eacute;sprit et de discr&eacute;tion.
+ Seulement il n'a eu que des gens vulgaires et manque
+ d'usage.</i>"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. A.D.T. Whitney, who has written so many helpful stories
+ for girls, is another lover of cats. Cats do not lie curled
+ up on cushions everywhere in her books, as they do in Mrs.
+ Spofford's. But in "Zerub Throop's Experiment" there is an
+ amusing cat story, which, she declares, got so much mixed up
+ with a ghost story that nobody ever knew which was which. And
+ the incident is true in every particular, except the finding
+ of a will or codicil, or something at the end, which is
+ attached for purposes of fiction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A great deal has been written about the New York <i>Sun's</i>
+ famous cats. At my request, Mr. Dana furnished the following
+ description of the interesting <i>Sun</i> family. I can only
+ vouch for its veracity by quoting the famous phrase, "If you
+ see it in the <i>Sun</i>, it is so."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Sun</i> office cat (<i>Felis Domestica; var.
+ Journalistica</i>). This is a variation of the common
+ domestic cat, of which but one family is known to science.
+ The habitat of the species is in Newspaper Row; its lair is
+ in the <i>Sun</i> building, its habits are nocturnal, and it
+ feeds on discarded copy and anything else of a
+ pseudo-literary nature upon which it can pounce. In dull
+ times it can subsist upon a meagre diet of telegraphic
+ brevities, police court paragraphs, and city jottings; but
+ when the universe is agog with news, it will exhibit the
+ insatiable appetite which is its chief distinguishing mark of
+ difference from the common <i>felis domestica</i>. A single
+ member of this family has been known, on a 'rush' night, to
+ devour three and a half columns of presidential
+ possibilities, seven columns of general politics, pretty much
+ all but the head of a large and able-bodied railroad
+ accident, and a full page of miscellaneous news, and then
+ claw the nether garments of the managing editor, and call
+ attention to an appetite still in good working order.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The progenitrix of the family arrived in the <i>Sun</i>
+ office many years ago, and installed herself in a comfortable
+ corner, and within a few short months she had noticeably
+ raised the literary tone of the paper, as well as a large and
+ vociferous family of kittens. These kittens were weaned on
+ reports from country correspondents, and the sight of the six
+ children and the mother cat sitting in a semicircle was one
+ which attracted visitors from all parts of the nation. Just
+ before her death&#8212;immediately before, in fact&#8212;the
+ mother cat developed a literary taste of her own and drank
+ the contents of an ink-bottle. She was buried with literary
+ honors, and one of her progeny was advanced to the duties and
+ honors of office cat. From this time the line came down, each
+ cat taking the 'laurel greener from the brows of him that
+ uttered nothing base,' upon the death of his predecessor.
+ There is but one blot upon the escutcheon of the family, put
+ there by a recent incumbent who developed a mania at once
+ cannibalistic and infanticidal, and set about making a free
+ lunch of her offspring, in direct violation of the Raines law
+ and the maternal instinct. She died of an overdose of
+ chloroform, and her place was taken by one of the rescued
+ kittens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is the son of this kitten who is the present proud
+ incumbent of the office. Grown to cat-hood, he is a
+ creditable specimen of his family, with beryl eyes, beautiful
+ striped fur, showing fine mottlings of mucilage and ink, a
+ graceful and aspiring tail, an appetite for copy unsurpassed
+ in the annals of his race, and a power and perseverance in
+ vocality, chiefly exercised in the small hours of the
+ morning, that, together with the appetite referred to, have
+ earned for him the name of the Mutilator. The picture
+ herewith given was taken when the animal was a year and a
+ half old. Up to the age of one year the Mutilator made its
+ lair in the inside office with the Snake Editor, until a
+ tragic ending came to their friendship. During a fortnight's
+ absence of the office cat upon important business, the Snake
+ Editor cultivated the friendship of three cockroaches, whom
+ he debauched by teaching them to drink beer spilled upon his
+ desk for that purpose. On the night of the cat's return, the
+ three bugs had become disgracefully intoxicated, and were
+ reeling around the desk beating time with their legs to a
+ rollicking catch sung by the Snake Editor. Before the muddled
+ insects could crawl into a crack, the Mutilator was upon
+ them, and had bolted every one. Then with a look of reproach
+ at the Snake Editor, he drew three perpendicular red lines
+ across that gentleman's features with his claws and departed
+ in high scorn, nor could he ever thereafter be lured into the
+ inner office where the serpent-sharp was laying for him with
+ a space measure. Since that time he has lived in the room
+ occupied by the reporters and news editors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Many hundreds of stories, some of them slanderous have been
+ told about the various <i>Sun</i> office cats, but we have
+ admitted here none of these false tales. The short sketch
+ given here is beyond suspicion in all its details, as can be
+ vouched for by many men of high position who ought to know
+ better."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH4"><!-- CH4 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ CONCERNING STILL OTHER PEOPLE'S CATS
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ The nearest approach to the real French Salon in America is
+ said to be found in Mrs. Louise Chandler Moulton's Boston
+ drawing-room. In former days, at her weekly Fridays, Sir
+ Richard Coeur de Lion was always present, sitting on the
+ square piano amidst a lot of other celebrities. The
+ autographed photographs of Paderewski, John Drew, and
+ distinguished litterateurs, however, used to lose nothing
+ from the proximity of Mrs. Moulton's favorite maltese friend,
+ who was on the most intimate terms with her for twelve years,
+ and hobnobbed familiarly with most of the lions of one sort
+ or another who have visited Boston and who invariably find
+ their way into this room. If there were flowers on the piano,
+ Richard's nose hovered near them in a perfect abandon of
+ delight. Indeed, his fondness for flowers was a source of
+ constant contention between him and his mistress, who feared
+ lest he knock the souvenirs of foreign countries to the floor
+ in his eagerness to climb wherever flowers were put. He was
+ as dainty about his eating as in his taste for the beautiful,
+ scorning beef and mutton as fit only for coarser mortals, and
+ choosing, like any <i>gourmet</i>, to eat only the breast of
+ chicken, or certain portions of fish or lobster. He was not
+ proof against the flavor of liver, at any time; but
+ recognized in it his one weakness,&#8212;as the delicate lady
+ may who takes snuff or chews gum on the sly. When Mrs.
+ Moulton first had him, she had also a little dog, and the
+ two, as usual when a kitten is brought up with a dog, became
+ the greatest of friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That Richard was a close observer was proved by the way he
+ used to wag his tail, in the same fashion and apparently for
+ the same reasons as the dog. This went on for several years,
+ but when the dog died, the fashion of wagging tails went out,
+ so far as Richard Coeur de Lion was concerned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had a fashion of getting up on mantels, the tops of
+ bookcases, or on shelves; and his mistress, fearing
+ demolition of her household Lares and Penates, insisted on
+ his getting down, whereupon Richard would look reproachfully
+ at her, apparently resenting this treatment for days
+ afterward, refusing to come near her and edging off if she
+ tried to make up with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Richard was getting old, a black cat came to Mrs.
+ Moulton, who kept him "for luck," and named him the Black
+ Prince. The older cat was always jealous of the newcomer, and
+ treated him with lofty scorn. When he caught Mrs. Moulton
+ petting the Black Prince, who is a very affectionate fellow
+ Richard fiercely resented it and sometimes refused to have
+ anything to do with her for days afterward, but finally came
+ around and made up in shamefaced fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Moulton goes to London usually in the summer, leaving
+ the cats in the care of a faithful maid whom she has had for
+ years. After she sailed, Richard used to come to her door for
+ several mornings, and not being let in as usual, understood
+ that his beloved mistress had left him again, whereupon he
+ kept up a prolonged wailing for some time. He was
+ correspondingly glad to see her on her return in October.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Moulton tells the following remarkable cat story:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My mother had a cat that lived to be twenty-five years old.
+ He was faithful and fond, and a great pet in the family, of
+ course. About two years before his death, a new kitten was
+ added to the family. This kitten, named Jim, immediately
+ conceived the greatest affection for old Jack, and as the old
+ fellow's senses of sight and smell failed so that he could
+ not go hunting himself, Jim used to do it for both. Every day
+ he brought Jack mice and squirrels and other game as long as
+ he lived. Then, too, he used to wash Jack, lapping him all
+ over as a mother cat does her kitten. He did this, too, as
+ long as he lived. The feebler old Jack grew the more Jim did
+ for him, and when Jack finally died of old age, Jim was
+ inconsolable."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twenty-five years might certainly be termed a ripe old age
+ for a cat, their average life extending only to ten or twelve
+ years. But I have heard of one who seems to have attained
+ even greater age. The mother of Jane Andrews, the writer on
+ educational and juvenile subjects, had one who lived with
+ them twenty-four years. He had peculiar markings and certain
+ ways of his own about the house quite different from other
+ cats. He disappeared one day when he was twenty-four, and was
+ mourned as dead. But one day, some six or seven years later,
+ an old cat came to their door and asked to be let in. He had
+ the same markings, and on being let in, went directly to his
+ favorite sleeping-places and lay down. He seemed perfectly
+ familiar with the whole place, and went on with his life from
+ that time, just as though he had never been away, showing all
+ his old peculiarities. When he finally died, he must have
+ been thirty-three years old.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although in other days a great many noted men have been
+ devoted to cats, I do not find that our men of letters to-day
+ know so much about cats. Mr. William Dean Howells says: "I
+ never had a cat, pet or otherwise. I like them, but know
+ nothing of them." Judge Robert Grant says, "My feelings
+ toward cats are kindly and considerate, but not ardent."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thomas Bailey Aldrich says, "The only cat I ever had any
+ experience with was the one I translated from the French of
+ &Eacute;mile de La B&eacute;dolli&eacute;rre many years ago
+ for the entertainment of my children." [Footnote: "Mother
+ Michel's Cat."] Brander Matthews loves them not. George W.
+ Cable answers, when asked if he loves the "harmless,
+ necessary cat," by the Yankee method, and says, "If you had
+ three or four acres of beautiful woods in which were little
+ red squirrels and chipmunks and fifty or more kinds of
+ nesting birds, and every abutting neighbor kept a cat, and
+ none of them kept their cat out of those woods&#8212;<i>would
+ you like cats?</i>" which is, indeed, something of a poser.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Colonel Thomas W. Higginson, however, confesses to a great
+ fondness for cats, although he has had no remarkable cats of
+ his own. He tells a story told him by an old sailor at Pigeon
+ Cove, Mass., of a cat which he, the sailor, tried in vain to
+ get rid of. After trying several methods he finally put the
+ cat in a bag, walked a mile to Lane's Cove, tied the cat to a
+ big stone with a firm sailor's knot, took it out in a dory
+ some distance from the shore, and dropped the cat overboard.
+ Then he went back home to find the cat purring on the
+ doorstep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those who are familiar with Charles Dudley Warner's "My
+ Summer in a Garden" will not need to be reminded of Calvin
+ and his interesting traits. Mr. Warner says: "I never had but
+ one cat, and he was rather a friend and companion than a cat.
+ When he departed this life I did not care to do as many men
+ do when their partners die, take a 'second.'" The sketch of
+ him in that delightful book is vouched for as correct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Edmund Clarence Stedman, too, is a genuine admirer of
+ cats and evidently knows how to appreciate them at their true
+ value. At his home near New York, he and Mrs. Stedman have
+ one who rejoices in the name "Babylon," having originated in
+ Babylon, Long Island. He is a fine large maltese, and
+ attracted a great deal of attention at the New York Cat Show
+ in 1895. "We look upon him as an important member of our
+ family," says Mrs. Stedman, "and think he knows as much as
+ any of us. He despises our two other cats, but he is very
+ fond of human beings and makes friends readily with
+ strangers. He is always present at the family dinner table at
+ meal-time and expects to have his share handed to him
+ carefully. He has a favorite corner in the study and has
+ superintended a great deal of literary work." Mrs. Stedman's
+ long-haired, blue Kelpie took a prize in the show of '95.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gail Hamilton was naturally a lover of cats, although in her
+ crowded life there was not much time to devote to them. In
+ the last year of her noble life she wrote to a friend as
+ follows: "My two hands were eager to lighten the
+ burden-bearing of a burdened world&#8212;but the brush fell
+ from my hand. Now I can only sit in a nook of November
+ sunshine, playing with two little black and white kittens.
+ Well, I never before had time to play with kittens as much as
+ I wished, and when I come outdoors and see them bounding
+ toward me in long, light leaps, I am glad that they leap
+ toward me and not away from me, little soft, fierce sparks of
+ infinite energy holding a mystery of their own as inscrutable
+ as life. And I remember that with all our high art, the
+ common daily sun searches a man for one revealing moment, and
+ makes a truer portrait than the most laborious painter. The
+ divine face of our Saviour, reflected in the pure and noble
+ traits of humanity, will not fail from the earth because my
+ hand has failed in cunning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One would expect a poet of Ella Wheeler Wilcox's temperament
+ to be passionately fond of cats, just as she is. One would
+ expect, too, that only the most beautiful and luxurious of
+ Persians and Angoras would satisfy her demand for a pet. This
+ is also justifiable, as she has several magnificent cats,
+ about whom she has published a number of interesting stories.
+ Her Madame Ref is quite a noted cat, but Mrs. Wilcox's
+ favorite and the handsomest of all is named Banjo, a gorgeous
+ chinchilla and white Angora, with a silken coat that almost
+ touches the floor and a ruff, or "lord mayor's chain," that
+ is a finger wide. His father was Ajax, his mother was Madame
+ Ref, and Mrs. Wilcox raised him. She has taught him many
+ cunning tricks. He will sit up like a bear, and when his
+ mistress says, "Hug me, Banjo," he puts both white paws
+ around her neck and hugs her tight. Then she says, "Turn the
+ other cheek," and he turns his furry chops for her to kiss.
+ He also plays "dead," and rolls over at command. He, too, is
+ fond of literary work, and superintends his mistress's
+ writing from a drawer of her desk. Goody Two-eyes is another
+ of Mrs. Wilcox's pets, and has one blue and one topaz eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who has not read Agnes Repplier's fascinating essays on
+ "Agrippina" and "A Kitten"? I cannot quite believe she gives
+ cats credit for the capacity for affection which they really
+ possess, but her description of "Agrippina" is
+ charming:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Agrippina's beautifully ringed tail flapping across my copy
+ distracts my attention and imperils the neatness of my
+ penmanship. Even when she is disposed to be affable, turns
+ the light of her countenance upon me, watches with attentive
+ curiosity every stroke I make, and softly, with curved paw,
+ pats my pen as it travels over the paper, even in these
+ halcyon moments, though my self-love is flattered by her
+ condescension, I am aware that I should work better and more
+ rapidly if I denied myself this charming companionship. But,
+ in truth, it is impossible for a lover of cats to banish
+ these alert, gentle, and discriminating little friends, who
+ give us just enough of their regard and complaisance to make
+ us hunger for more. M. Fee, the naturalist, who has written
+ so admirably about animals, and who understands, as only a
+ Frenchman can understand, the delicate and subtle
+ organization of a cat, frankly admits that the keynote of its
+ character is independence. It dwells under our roofs, sleeps
+ by our fire, endures our blandishments, and apparently enjoys
+ our society, without for one moment forfeiting its sense of
+ absolute freedom, without acknowledging any servile relation
+ to the human creature who shelters it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Rude and masterful souls resent this fine self-sufficiency
+ in a domestic animal, and require that it shall have no will
+ but theirs, no pleasure that does not emanate from them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yet there are people, less magisterial, perhaps, or less
+ exacting, who believe that true friendship, even with an
+ animal, may be built up on mutual esteem and independence;
+ that to demand gratitude is to be unworthy of it; and that
+ obedience is not essential to agreeable and healthy
+ intercourse. A man who owns a dog is, in every sense of the
+ word, its master: the term expresses accurately their mutual
+ relations. But it is ridiculous when applied to the limited
+ possession of a cat. I am certainly not Agrippina's mistress,
+ and the assumption of authority on my part would be a mere
+ empty dignity, like those swelling titles which afford such
+ innocent delight to the Freemasons of our severe republic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How many times have I rested tired eyes on her graceful
+ little body, curled up in a ball and wrapped round with her
+ tail like a parcel; or stretched out luxuriously on my bed,
+ one paw coyly covering her face, the other curved gently
+ inwards, as though clasping an invisible treasure. Asleep or
+ awake, in rest or in motion, grave or gay, Agrippina is
+ always beautiful; and it is better to be beautiful than to
+ fetch and carry from the rising to the setting of the sun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But when Agrippina has breakfasted and washed, and sits in
+ the sunlight blinking at me with affectionate contempt, I
+ feel soothed by her absolute and unqualified enjoyment. I
+ know how full my day will be of things that I don't want
+ particularly to do, and that are not particularly worth
+ doing; but for her, time and the world hold only this brief
+ moment of contentment. Slowly the eyes close, gently the
+ little body is relaxed. Oh, you who strive to relieve your
+ overwrought nerves and cultivate power through repose, watch
+ the exquisite languor of a drowsy cat, and despair of
+ imitating such perfect and restful grace. There is a gradual
+ yielding of every muscle to the soft persuasiveness of
+ slumber: the flexible frame is curved into tender lines, the
+ head nestles lower, the paws are tucked out of sight: no
+ convulsive throb or start betrays a rebellious alertness:
+ only a faint quiver of unconscious satisfaction, a faint
+ heaving of the tawny sides, a faint gleam of the half-shut
+ yellow eyes, and Agrippina is asleep. I look at her for one
+ wistful moment and then turn resolutely to my work. It were
+ ignoble to wish myself in her place: and yet how charming to
+ be able to settle down to a nap, <i>sans peur et sans
+ reproche</i>, at ten o'clock in the morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And again: "When I am told that Agrippina is disobedient,
+ ungrateful, cold-hearted, perverse, stupid, treacherous, and
+ cruel, I no longer strive to check the torrent of abuse. I
+ know that Buffon said all this, and much more, about cats,
+ and that people have gone on repeating it ever since,
+ principally because these spirited little beasts have
+ remained just what it pleased Providence to make them, have
+ preserved their primitive freedom through centuries of effete
+ and demoralizing civilization. Why, I wonder, should a great
+ many good men and women cherish an unreasonable grudge
+ against one animal because it does not chance to possess the
+ precise qualities of another? 'My dog fetches my slippers for
+ me every night,' said a friend, triumphantly, not long ago.
+ 'He puts them first to warm by the fire, and then brings them
+ over to my chair, wagging his tail, and as proud as Punch.
+ Would your cat do as much for you, I'd like to know?'
+ Assuredly not. If I waited for Agrippina to fetch me shoes or
+ slippers, I should have no other resource save to join as
+ speedily as possible one of the barefooted religious orders
+ of Italy. But after all, fetching slippers is not the whole
+ duty of domestic pets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As for curiosity, that vice which the Abb&eacute; Galiani
+ held to be unknown to animals, but which the more astute
+ Voltaire detected in every little dog that he saw peering out
+ of the window of its master's coach, it is the ruling passion
+ of the feline breast. A closet door left ajar, a box with
+ half-closed lid, an open bureau drawer,&#8212;these are the
+ objects that fill a cat with the liveliest interest and
+ delight. Agrippina watches breathlessly the unfastening of a
+ parcel, and tries to hasten matters by clutching actively at
+ the string. When its contents are shown to her, she examines
+ them gravely, and then, with a sigh of relief, settles down
+ to repose. The slightest noise disturbs and irritates her
+ until she discovers its cause. If she hears a footstep in the
+ hall, she runs out to see whose it is, and, like certain
+ troublesome little people I have known, she dearly loves to
+ go to the front door every time the bell is rung. From my
+ window she surveys the street with tranquil scrutiny, and if
+ the boys are playing below, she follows their games with a
+ steady, scornful stare, very different from the wistful
+ eagerness of a friendly dog, quivering to join in the sport.
+ Sometimes the boys catch sight of her, and shout up rudely at
+ her window; and I can never sufficiently admire Agrippina's
+ conduct upon these trying occasions, the well-bred composure
+ with which she affects neither to see nor to hear them, nor
+ to be aware that there are such objectionable creatures as
+ children in the world. Sometimes, too, the terrier that lives
+ next door comes out to sun himself in the street, and,
+ beholding my cat sitting well out of reach, he dances madly
+ up and down the pavement, barking with all his might, and
+ rearing himself on his short legs, in a futile attempt to
+ dislodge her. Then the spirit of evil enters Agrippina's
+ little heart. The window is open and she creeps to the
+ extreme edge of the stone sill, stretches herself at full
+ length, peers down smilingly at the frenzied dog, dangles one
+ paw enticingly in the air, and exerts herself with quiet
+ malice to drive him to desperation. Her sense of humor is
+ awakened by his frantic efforts and by her own absolute
+ security; and not until he is spent with exertion, and lies
+ panting and exhausted on the bricks, does she arch her
+ graceful back, stretch her limbs lazily in the sun, and with
+ one light bound spring from the window to my desk."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And what more delightful word did ever Miss Repplier write
+ than her description of a kitten? It, she says, "is the most
+ irresistible comedian in the world. Its wide-open eyes gleam
+ with wonder and mirth. It darts madly at nothing at all, and
+ then, as though suddenly checked in the pursuit, prances
+ sideways on its hind legs with ridiculous agility and zeal.
+ It makes a vast pretence of climbing the rounds of a chair,
+ and swings by the curtains like an acrobat. It scrambles up a
+ table leg, and is seized with comic horror at finding itself
+ full two feet from the floor. If you hasten to its rescue, it
+ clutches you nervously, its little heart thumping against its
+ furry sides, while its soft paws expand and contract with
+ agitation and relief:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <pre>
+ "'And all their harmless claws disclose,
+ Like prickles of an early rose.'
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Yet the instant it is back on the carpet it feigns to be
+ suspicious of your interference, peers at you out of 'the
+ tail o' its e'e,' and scampers for protection under the sofa,
+ from which asylum it presently emerges with cautious,
+ trailing steps as though encompassed by fearful dangers and
+ alarms."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nobody can sympathize with her in the following description
+ better than I, who for years was compelled by the insistence
+ of my Pretty Lady to aid in the bringing up of
+ infants:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I own that when Agrippina brought her first-born
+ son&#8212;aged two days&#8212;and established him in my
+ bedroom closet, the plan struck me at the start as
+ inconvenient. I had prepared another nursery for the little
+ Claudius Nero, and I endeavored for a while to convince his
+ mother that my arrangements were best. But Agrippina was
+ inflexible. The closet suited her in every respect; and, with
+ charming and irresistible flattery, she gave me to
+ understand, in the mute language I knew so well, that she
+ wished her baby boy to be under my immediate protection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'I bring him to you because I trust you,' she said as
+ plainly as looks can speak. 'Downstairs they handle him all
+ the time, and it is not good for kittens to be handled. Here
+ he is safe from harm, and here he shall remain,' After a few
+ weak remonstrances, the futility of which I too clearly
+ understood, her persistence carried the day. I removed my
+ clothing from the closet, spread a shawl upon the floor, had
+ the door taken from its hinges, and resigned myself, for the
+ first time in my life, to the daily and hourly companionship
+ of an infant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was amply rewarded. People who require the household cat
+ to rear her offspring in some remote attic or dark corner of
+ the cellar have no idea of all the diversion and pleasure
+ that they lose. It is delightful to watch the little, blind,
+ sprawling, feeble, helpless things develop swiftly into the
+ grace and agility of kittenhood. It is delightful to see the
+ mingled pride and anxiety of the mother, whose parental love
+ increases with every hour of care, and who exhibits her young
+ family as if they were infant Gracchi, the hope of all their
+ race. During Nero's extreme youth, there were times when
+ Agrippina wearied both of his companionship and of her own
+ maternal duties. Once or twice she abandoned him at night for
+ the greater luxury of my bed, where she slept tranquilly by
+ my side, unmindful of the little wailing cries with which
+ Nero lamented her desertion. Once or twice the heat of early
+ summer tempted her to spend the evening on the porch roof
+ which lay beneath my windows, and I have passed some anxious
+ hours awaiting her return, and wondering what would happen if
+ she never came back, and I were left to bring up the baby by
+ hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But as the days sped on, and Nero grew rapidly in beauty and
+ intelligence, Agrippina's affection for him knew no bounds.
+ She could hardly bear to leave him even for a little while,
+ and always came hurrying back to him with a loud, frightened
+ mew, as if fearing he might have been stolen in her absence.
+ At night she purred over him for hours, or made little
+ gurgling noises expressive of ineffable content. She resented
+ the careless curiosity of strangers, and was a trifle
+ supercilious when the cook stole softly in to give vent to
+ her fervent admiration. But from first to last she shared
+ with me her pride and pleasure; and the joy in her beautiful
+ eyes, as she raised them to mine, was frankly confiding and
+ sympathetic. When the infant Claudius rolled for the first
+ time over the ledge of the closet and lay sprawling on the
+ bedroom floor, it would have been hard to say which of us was
+ the more elated at his prowess."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What became of these most interesting cats, is only hinted
+ at; Miss Repplier's sincere grief at their loss is evident in
+ the following:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Every night they retired at the same time and slept upon the
+ same cushion, curled up inextricably into one soft, furry
+ ball. Many times I have knelt by their chair to bid them both
+ good night; and always when I did so, Agrippina would lift
+ her charming head, purr drowsily for a few seconds, and then
+ nestle closer still to her first-born, with sighs of supreme
+ satisfaction. The zenith of her life had been reached. Her
+ cup of contentment was full.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is a rude world, even for little cats, and evil chances
+ lie in wait for the petted creatures we strive to shield from
+ harm. Remembering the pangs of separation, the possibilities
+ of unkindness or neglect, the troubles that hide in ambush on
+ every unturned page, I am sometimes glad that the same cruel
+ and selfish blow struck both mother and son, and that they
+ lie together, safe from hurt or hazard, sleeping tranquilly
+ and always, under the shadow of the friendly pines."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Probably no modern cat has been more written about than Miss
+ Mary L. Booth's Muff. There was a "Tippet," but he was early
+ lost. Miss Booth, as the editor of <i>Harper's Bazar</i>, was
+ the centre of a large circle of literary and musical people.
+ Her Saturday evenings were to New York what Mrs. Moulton's
+ Fridays are to Boston, the nearest approach to the French
+ salon possible in America. At these Saturday evenings Muff
+ always figured prominently, being dressed in a real lace
+ collar (brought him from Yucatan by Madame la Plongeon, and
+ elaborate and expensive enough for the most fastidious lady),
+ and apparently enjoying the company of noted intellectual
+ people as well as the best of them. And who knows, if he had
+ spoken, what light he might have shed on what seemed to mere
+ mortals as mysterious, abstruse, and occult problems?
+ Perhaps, after all, he liked that "salon" because in reality
+ he found so much to amuse him in the conversation; and
+ perhaps he was, under that guise of friendly interest in
+ noted scientists, reformers, poets, musicians, and
+ litterateurs, only whispering to himself, "O Lord, what fools
+ these mortals be!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For when I play with my cat," says Montaigne, "how do I know
+ whether she does not make a jest of me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Muff was a real nobleman among cats, and extraordinarily
+ handsome. He was a great soft gray maltese with white paws
+ and breast&#8212;mild, amiable, and uncommonly intelligent.
+ He felt it his duty to help entertain Miss Booth's guests,
+ always; and he more than once, at the beginning of a
+ reception, came into the drawing-room with a mouse in his
+ mouth as his offering to the occasion. Naturally enough "he
+ caused the stampede," as Mrs. Spofford puts it, "that Mr.
+ Gilbert forgot to put into 'Princess Ida' when her Amazons
+ wild demonstrate their courage."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As one of Miss Booth's intimate friends, Mrs. Spofford was
+ much at her house and became early a devoted admirer of
+ Muff's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "His latter days," she says, "were rendered miserable by a
+ little silky, gray creature, an Angora named Vashti, who was
+ a spark of the fire of the lower regions wrapped round in
+ long silky fur, and who never let him alone one moment: who
+ was full of tail-lashings and racings and leapings and fury,
+ and of the most demonstrative love for her mistress. Once I
+ made them collars with breastplates of tiny dangling bells,
+ nine or ten; it excited them nearly to madness, and they flew
+ up and down stairs like unchained lightning till the trinkets
+ were taken off."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a house full of birds Muff never touched one, although he
+ was an excellent mouser (who says cats have no conscience?).
+ He was, although so socially inclined toward his mistress's
+ guests, a timid person, and the wild back-yard cats filled
+ him with terror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But as one must see something of the world," continues Mrs.
+ Spofford, "he used to jump from lintel to lintel of the
+ windows of the block, if by chance his own were left open,
+ and return when he pleased."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Muff died soon after the death of Miss Booth. Vashti, who was
+ very much admired by all her mistress's literary friends, was
+ given to Miss Juliet Corson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Edna Dean Proctor, the poet, is another admirer of fine
+ cats. Her favorite, however, was the friend of her childhood
+ called Beauty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Beauty was my grandmother's cat," says Miss Proctor, "and
+ the delight of my childhood. To this far-off day I remember
+ her as distinctly as I do my aunt and cousins of that
+ household, and even my dear grandmother herself. I know
+ nothing of her ancestry and am not at all sure that she was
+ royally bred, for she came, one chill night, a little
+ wanderer to the door. But a shred of blue ribbon was clinging
+ to her neck, and she was so pretty, and silky, and winsome
+ that we children at once called her Beauty, and fancied she
+ had strayed from some elegant home where she had been the pet
+ of the household, lapping her milk from finest china and
+ sleeping on a cushion of down. When we had warmed, and fed,
+ and caressed her, we made her bed in a flannel-lined box
+ among our dolls, and the next morning were up before the sun
+ to see her, fearing her owners would appear and carry her
+ away. But no one arrived to claim her, and she soon became an
+ important member of the family, and grew handsomer, we
+ thought, day by day. Her coat was gray with tiger markings,
+ but paws and throat and nose were snowy white, and in spite
+ of her excursions to barns and cellars her constant care kept
+ them spotless&#8212;indeed, she was the very Venus of cats
+ for daintiness and grace of pose and movement. To my
+ grandmother her various attitudes had an undoubted meaning.
+ If in a rainy day Beauty washed her face toward the west, her
+ observant mistress would exclaim: 'See, kitty is washing her
+ face to the west. It will clear.' Or, even when the sky was
+ blue, if Beauty turned eastward for her toilet, the comment
+ would be: 'Kitty is washing her face to the east. The wind
+ must be getting "out" (from the sea), and a storm brewing.'
+ And when in the dusk of autumn or winter evenings Beauty ran
+ about the room, chasing her tail or frolicking with her
+ kittens instead of sleeping quietly by the fire as was her
+ wont, my grandmother would look up and say: 'Kitty is wild
+ to-night. The wind will blow hard before morning.' If I
+ sometimes asked how she knew these things, the reply would
+ be, 'My mother told me when I was a little girl.' Now her
+ mother, my great-grandmother, was a distinguished personage
+ in my eyes, having been the daughter of Captain Jonathan
+ Prescott who commanded a company under Sir William Pepperell
+ at the siege of Louisburg and lost his life there; and I
+ could not question the wisdom of colonial times. Indeed, to
+ this hour I have a lingering belief that cats can foretell
+ the weather.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And what a mouser she was! Before her time we often heard
+ the rats and mice in the walls, but with her presence not one
+ dared to peep, and cupboard and pantry were unmolested. Now
+ and then she carried her forays to hedge and orchard, and I
+ remember one sad summer twilight that saw her bring in a
+ slender brown bird which my grandmother said was the cuckoo
+ we had delighted to hear in the still mornings among the
+ alders by the river. She was scolded and had no milk that
+ night, and we never knew her to catch a bird again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "O to see her with her kittens! She always hid them in the
+ haymows, and hunting and finding them brought us no end of
+ excitement and pleasure. Twice a day, at least, she would
+ come to the house to be fed, and then how we watched her
+ returning steps, stealing cautiously along the path and
+ waiting behind stack or door the better to observe
+ her&#8212;for pussy knew perfectly well that we were eager to
+ see her darlings, and enjoyed misleading and piquing us, we
+ imagined, by taking devious ways. How well I recall that
+ summer afternoon when, soft-footed and alone, I followed her
+ to the floor of the barn. Just as she was about to spring to
+ the mow she espied me, and, turning back, cunningly settled
+ herself as if for a quiet nap in the sunny open door.
+ Determined not to lose sight of her, I threw myself upon the
+ fragrant hay; but in the stillness, the faint sighing of the
+ wind, the far-off ripple of the river, the hazy outline of
+ the hills, the wheeling swallows overhead, were blended at
+ length in an indistinct dream, and I slept, oblivious of all.
+ When I woke, pussy had disappeared, the sun was setting, the
+ cows were coming from the pastures, and I could only return
+ to the house discomfited. That particular family of kittens
+ we never saw till a fortnight later, when the proud mother
+ brought them in one by one, and laid them at my grandmother's
+ feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What became of Beauty is as mysterious as the fate of the
+ Dauphin. To our grief, she disappeared one November day, and
+ we never saw her more. Sometimes we fancied she had been
+ carried off by an admiring traveller: at others we tortured
+ ourselves with the belief that the traditional wildcat of the
+ north woods had devoured her. All we knew was that she had
+ vanished; but when memory pictures that pleasant country home
+ and the dear circle there, white-throated Beauty is always
+ sleeping by the fire."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Fidelia Bridges, the artist, is another devoted cat
+ lover, and at her home at Canaan, Ct., has had several
+ interesting specimens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Among my many generations of pet cats," says Miss Bridges,
+ "one aristocratic maltese lady stands out in prominence
+ before all the rest. She was a cat of great personal beauty
+ and independence of character&#8212;a remarkable huntress,
+ bringing in game almost as large as herself, holding her
+ beautiful head aloft to keep the great wings of pigeons from
+ trailing on the ground. She and her mother were fast friends
+ from birth to death. When the young maltese had her first
+ brood of kittens, her mother had also a family in another
+ barrel in the cellar. When we went to see the just-arrived
+ family, we found our Lady Malty's bed empty, and there in her
+ mother's barrel were both families and both mothers. A
+ delightful arrangement for the young mother, who could leave
+ her children in the grandmother's care and enjoy her liberty
+ when it pleased her to roam abroad. The young lady had an
+ indomitable will, and when she decided to do a thing nothing
+ would turn her aside. She found a favorite resting-place on a
+ pile of blankets in a dark attic room. This being disapproved
+ of by the elders, the door was kept carefully closed. She
+ then found entrance through a stove-pipe hole, high up on the
+ wall of an adjoining room. A cover was hung over the hole.
+ She sprang up and knocked it off. Then, as a last resort, the
+ hole was papered over like the wall-paper of the room. She
+ looked, made a leap, and crashed through the paper with as
+ merry an air as a circus-rider through his papered hoop. She
+ had a habit of manoeuvring to be shut out of doors at
+ bed-time, and then, when all was still, climbing up to my
+ window by means of a porch over a door beneath it, to pass
+ the night on my bed. In some alterations of the house, the
+ porch was taken away. She looked with dismay for a moment at
+ the destruction of her ladder, then calmly ran up the side of
+ the house to my window, which she always after continued to
+ do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Next in importance, perhaps, is my present intimate
+ companion, now ten years old and absolutely deaf, so that we
+ communicate with signs. If I want to attract his attention I
+ step on the floor: if to go to his dinner, I show him a
+ certain blue plate: to call him in at night, I take a lantern
+ outside the door, and the flash of light attracts his
+ attention from a great distance. On one occasion he lived
+ nine months alone in the house while I made a trip to Europe,
+ absolutely refusing all the neighbors' invitations to enter
+ any other house. A friend's gardener brought him his daily
+ rations. As warm weather came, he spent his days in the
+ fields, returning in the night for his food, so that at my
+ return it was two or three days before he discovered that the
+ house was open. The third evening he entered the open door,
+ looked wildly about for a moment, but when I put my hand on
+ him suddenly recognized me and overwhelmed me with
+ affectionate caresses, and for two days and nights would not
+ allow me out of his sight, unable to eat or sleep unless I
+ was close at hand, and following me from room to room and
+ chair to chair. And people say that cats have no affection!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the Quincy House in Boston may be seen in the office an
+ oil painting of an immense yellow cat. The first time I
+ noticed the picture, I was proceeding into the dining room,
+ and while waiting for dinner, was amused at seeing the
+ original of the picture walk sedately in, all alone, and
+ going to an empty table, seat himself with majestic grace in
+ a chair. The waiter, seeing him, came forward and pushed up
+ the chair as he would do for any other guest. The cat then
+ waited patiently without putting his paws on the table, or
+ violating any other law of table etiquette, until a plate of
+ meat came, cut up to suit his taste (I did not hear him give
+ his order), and then, placing his front paws on the edge of
+ the table, he ate from his plate. When he had finished, he
+ descended from his table and stalked out of the room with
+ much dignity. He was always regular at his meals, and
+ although he picked out a good seat, did not always sit at the
+ same table. He was in appearance something like the famous
+ orange cats of Venice, and attracted much attention, as might
+ be expected, up to his death, at a ripe old age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Frances Willard was a cat-lover, too, and had a
+ beautiful cat which is known to all her friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tootsie" went to Rest Cottage, the home of Frances Willard,
+ when only a kitten, and there he lived, the pet of the
+ household and its guests, until several years ago, when Miss
+ Willard prepared to go abroad. Then she took Tootsie in her
+ arms, carried him to the Drexel kennels in Chicago, and asked
+ their owner, Mrs. Leland Norton, to admit him as a member of
+ her large cat family, where he still lives. To his praise be
+ it spoken, he has never forgotten his old friends at Rest
+ Cottage. To this day, whenever any of them come to call upon
+ him, he honors them with instant and hearty recognition. Miss
+ Willard was sometimes forced to be separated from him more
+ than a year at a time, but neither time nor change had any
+ effect upon Tootsie. At the first sound of her voice he would
+ spring to her side. He is a magnificent Angora, weighing
+ twenty-four pounds, with the long, silky hair, the frill, or
+ lord mayor's chain, the superb curling tail, and the large,
+ full eyes of the thoroughbred. Then he has proved himself of
+ aristocratic tendencies, has beautiful manners, is endowed
+ with the human qualities of memory and discrimination, and is
+ aesthetic in his tastes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Being the privileged character that he is, Tootsie always
+ eats at the table with the family. He has his own chair and
+ bib, and his manners are said to be exquisite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH5"><!-- CH5 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ CONCERNING SOME HISTORIC CATS
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ It is quite common for writers on the cat to say, "The story
+ of Th&eacute;ophile Gautier's cats is too familiar to need
+ comment." On the contrary, I do not believe it is familiar to
+ the average reader, and that only those who know Gautier's
+ "M&eacute;nagerie In-time" in the original, recall the
+ particulars of his "White and Black Dynasties." For this
+ reason they shall be repeated in these pages. I use Mrs.
+ Cashel-Hoey's translation, partly in a selfish desire to save
+ myself time and labor, but principally because she has
+ preserved so successfully the sympathetic and appreciative
+ spirit of M. Gautier himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dynasties of cats, as numerous as those of the Egyptian
+ kings, succeeded each other in my dwelling," says he. "One
+ after another they were swept away by accident, by flight, by
+ death. All were loved and regretted: but life is made up of
+ oblivion, and the memory of cats dies out like the memory of
+ men." After making mention of an old gray cat who always took
+ his part against his parents, and used to bite Madame
+ Gautier's legs when she presumed to reprove her son, he
+ passes on at once to the romantic period, and the
+ commemoration of Childebrand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This name at once reveals a deep design of flouting Boileau,
+ whom I did not like then, but have since become reconciled
+ to. Has not Nicholas said:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <pre>
+ "'O le plaisant projet d'un po&euml;te ignorant
+ Que de tant de h&eacute;ros va choisir Childebrant!'
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Now I considered Childebrand a very fine name indeed,
+ Merovingian, mediaeval, and Gothic, and vastly preferable to
+ Agamemnon, Achilles, Ulysses, or any Greek name whatsoever.
+ Romanticism was the fashion of my early days: I have no doubt
+ the people of classical times called their cats Hector, Ajax,
+ or Patroclus. Childebrand was a splendid cat of common kind,
+ tawny and striped with black, like the hose of Saltabadil in
+ 'Le Rois' Amuse.' With his large, green, almond-shaped eyes,
+ and his symmetrical stripes, there was something tigerlike
+ about him that pleased me. Childebrand had the honor of
+ figuring in some verses that I wrote to 'flout'
+ Boileau:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <pre>
+ "Puis je te d&eacute;crirai ce tableau de Rembrandt
+ Que me fait tant plaisir: et mon chat Childebrand,
+ Sur mes genoux pose selon son habitude,
+ Levant sur moi la t&ecirc;te avec inqui&eacute;tude,
+ Suivra les mouvements de mon doigt qui dans l'air
+ Esquisse mon r&eacute;cit pour le rendre plus clair.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "Childebrand was brought in there to make a good rhyme for
+ Rembrandt, the piece being a kind of confession of the
+ romantic faith made to a friend, who was then as enthusiastic
+ as myself about Victor Hugo, Sainte Beuve, and Alfred de
+ Musset.... I come next to Madame Th&eacute;ophile, a 'red'
+ cat, with a white breast, a pink nose, and blue eyes, whom I
+ called by that name because we were on terms of the closest
+ intimacy. She slept at the foot of my bed: she sat on the arm
+ of my chair while I wrote: she came down into the garden and
+ gravely walked about with me: she was present at all my
+ meals, and frequently intercepted a choice morsel on its way
+ from my plate to my mouth. One day a friend who was going
+ away for a short time, brought me his parrot, to be taken
+ care of during his absence. The bird, finding itself in a
+ strange place, climbed up to the top of its perch by the aid
+ of its beak, and rolled its eyes (as yellow as the nails in
+ my arm-chair) in a rather frightened manner, also moving the
+ white membranes that formed its eyelids. Madame
+ Th&eacute;ophile had never seen a parrot, and she regarded
+ the creature with manifest surprise. While remaining as
+ motionless as a cat mummy from Egypt in its swathing bands,
+ she fixed her eyes upon the bird with a look of profound
+ meditation, summoning up all the notions of natural history
+ that she had picked up in the yard, in the garden, and on the
+ roof. The shadow of her thoughts passed over her changing
+ eyes, and we could plainly read in them the conclusion to
+ which her scrutiny led, 'Decidedly this is a green chicken.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This result attained, the next proceeding of Madame
+ Th&eacute;ophile was to jump off the table from which she had
+ made her observations, and lay herself flat on the ground in
+ a corner of the room, exactly in the attitude of the panther
+ in G&eacute;r&ocirc;me's picture watching the gazelles as
+ they come down to drink at a lake. The parrot followed the
+ movements of the cat with feverish anxiety: it ruffled its
+ feathers, rattled its chain, lifted one of its feet and shook
+ the claws, and rubbed its beak against the edge of its
+ trough. Instinct told it that the cat was an enemy and meant
+ mischief. The cat's eyes were now fixed upon the bird with
+ fascinating intensity, and they said in perfectly
+ intelligible language, which the poor parrot distinctly
+ understood, 'This chicken ought to be good to eat, although
+ it is green.' We watched the scene with great interest, ready
+ to interfere at need. Madame Th&eacute;ophile was creeping
+ nearer and nearer almost imperceptibly; her pink nose
+ quivered, her eyes were half closed, her contractile claws
+ moved in and out of their velvet sheaths, slight thrills of
+ pleasure ran along her backbone at the idea of the meal she
+ was about to make. Such novel and exotic food excited her
+ appetite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All in an instant her back took the shape of a bent bow, and
+ with a vigorous and elastic bound she sprang upon the perch.
+ The parrot, seeing its danger, said in a bass voice as grave
+ and deep as M. Prudhomme's own, 'As tu d&eacute;jeun&eacute;,
+ Jacquot?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This utterance so terrified the cat that she sprang
+ backwards. The blare of a trumpet, the crash and smash of a
+ pile of plates flung to the ground, a pistol shot fired off
+ at her ear, could not have frightened her more thoroughly.
+ All her ornithological ideas were overthrown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Et de quoi? Du r&ocirc;ti du roi?' continued the parrot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then might we, the observers, read in the physiognomy of
+ Madame Th&eacute;ophile, 'This is not a bird, it is a
+ gentleman; it talks.'
+ </p>
+ <pre>
+ "'Quand j'ai bu du vin clairet,
+ Tout tourne, tout tourne an cabaret,'
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ shrieked the parrot in a deafening voice, for it had
+ perceived that its best means of defence was the terror
+ aroused by its speech. The cat cast a glance at me which was
+ full of questioning, but as my response was not satisfactory,
+ she promptly hid herself under the bed, and from that refuge
+ she could not be induced to stir during the whole of the day.
+ People who are not accustomed to live with animals, and who,
+ like Descartes, regard them as mere machines, will think that
+ I lend unauthorized meanings to the acts of the 'volatile'
+ and the 'quadruped,' but I have only faithfully translated
+ their ideas into human language. The next day Madame
+ Th&eacute;ophile plucked up courage and made another attempt,
+ which was similarly repulsed. From that moment she gave it
+ up, accepting the bird as a variety of man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This dainty and charming animal was extremely fond of
+ perfumes, especially of patchouli and the scent exhaled by
+ India shawls. She was also very fond of music, and would
+ listen, sitting on a pile of music-books, while the fair
+ singers who came to try the critic's piano filled his room
+ with melody. All the time Madame Th&eacute;ophile would
+ evince great pleasure. She was, however, made nervous by
+ certain notes, and at the high <i>la</i> she would tap the
+ singer's mouth with her paw. This was very amusing, and my
+ visitors delighted in making the experiment. It never failed;
+ the dilettante in fun was not to be deceived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The rule of the 'White Dynasty' belonged to a later epoch,
+ and was inaugurated in the person of a pretty little kitten
+ as white as a powder puff, who came from Havana. On account
+ of his spotless whiteness he was called Pierrot; but when he
+ grew up this name was very properly magnified into
+ Don-Pierrot-de-Navarre, which was far more majestic, and
+ suggested 'grandee-ism.' [M. Th&eacute;ophile Gautier lays it
+ down as a dogma that all animals with whom one is much taken
+ up, and who are 'spoiled,' become delightfully good and
+ amiable. Don-Pierrot-de-Navarre successfully supported his
+ master's theory; perhaps he suggested it.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He shared in the life of the household with the enjoyment of
+ quiet fireside friendship that is characteristic of cats. He
+ had his own place near the fire, and there he would sit with
+ a convincing air of comprehension of all that was talked of
+ and of interest in it; he followed the looks of the speakers,
+ and uttered little sounds toward them as though he, too, had
+ objections to make and opinions to give upon the literary
+ subjects which were most frequently discussed. He was very
+ fond of books, and when he found one open on a table he would
+ lie down on it, turn over the edges of the leaves with his
+ paws, and after a while fall asleep, for all the world as if
+ he had been reading a fashionable novel. He was deeply
+ interested in my writing, too; the moment I took up my pen he
+ would jump upon the desk, and follow the movement of the
+ penholder with the gravest attention, making a little
+ movement with his head at the beginning of each line.
+ Sometimes he would try to take the pen out of my hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don-Pierrot-de-Navarre never went to bed until I had come
+ in. He would wait for me just inside the outer door and rub
+ himself to my legs, his back in an arch, with a glad and
+ friendly purring. Then he would go on before me, preceding me
+ with a page-like air, and I have no doubt, if I had asked
+ him, he would have carried the candlestick. Having thus
+ conducted me to my bedroom, he would wait quietly while I
+ undressed, and then jump on my bed, take my neck between his
+ paws, gently rub my nose with his own, and lick me with his
+ small, pink tongue, as rough as a file, uttering all the time
+ little inarticulate cries, which expressed as clearly as any
+ words could do his perfect satisfaction at having me with him
+ again. After these caresses he would perch himself on the
+ back of the bedstead and sleep there, carefully balanced,
+ like a bird on a branch. When I awoke, he would come down and
+ lie beside me until I got up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pierrot was as strict as a concierge in his notions of the
+ proper hour for all good people to return to their homes. He
+ did not approve of anything later than midnight. In those
+ days we had a little society among friends, which we called
+ 'The Four Candles,'&#8212;the light in our place of meeting
+ being restricted to four candles in silver candlesticks,
+ placed at the four corners of the tables. Sometimes the talk
+ became so animated that I forgot all about time, and twice or
+ three times Pierrot sat up for me until two o'clock in the
+ morning. After a while, however, my conduct in this respect
+ displeased him, and he retired to rest without me. I was
+ touched by this mute protest against my innocent dissipation,
+ and thenceforth came home regularly at twelve o'clock.
+ Nevertheless, Pierrot cherished the memory of my offence for
+ some time; he waited to test the reality of my repentance,
+ but when he was convinced that my conversion was sincere, he
+ deigned to restore me to his good graces, and resumed his
+ nocturnal post in the anteroom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To gain the friendship of a cat is a difficult thing. The
+ cat is a philosophical, methodical, quiet animal, tenacious
+ of its own habits, fond of order and cleanliness, and it does
+ not lightly confer its friendship. If you are worthy of its
+ affection, a cat will be your friend, but never your slave.
+ He keeps his free will, though he loves, and he will not do
+ for you what he thinks unreasonable; but if he once gives
+ himself to you, it is with such absolute confidence, such
+ fidelity of affection. He makes himself the companion of your
+ hours of solitude, melancholy, and toil. He remains for whole
+ evenings on your knee, uttering his contented purr, happy to
+ be with you, and forsaking the company of animals of his own
+ species. In vain do melodious mewings on the roof invite him
+ to one of those cat parties in which fish bones play the part
+ of tea and cakes; he is not to be tempted away from you. Put
+ him down and he will jump up again, with a sort of cooing
+ sound that is like a gentle reproach; and sometimes he will
+ sit upon the carpet in front of you, looking at you with eyes
+ so melting, so caressing, and so human, that they almost
+ frighten you, for it is impossible to believe that a soul is
+ not there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don-Pierrot-de-Navarre had a sweetheart of the same race and
+ of as snowy a whiteness as himself. The ermine would have
+ looked yellow by the side of Seraphita, for so this lovely
+ creature was named, in honor of Balzac's Swedenborgian
+ romance. Seraphita was of a dreamy and contemplative
+ disposition. She would sit on a cushion for hours together,
+ quite motionless, not asleep, and following with her eyes, in
+ a rapture of attention, sights invisible to mere mortals.
+ Caresses were agreeable to her, but she returned them in a
+ very reserved manner, and only in the case of persons whom
+ she favored with her rarely accorded esteem. She was fond of
+ luxury, and it was always upon the handsomest easy-chair, or
+ the rug that would best show off her snowy fur, that she
+ would surely be found. She devoted a great deal of time to
+ her toilet, her glossy coat was carefully smoothed every
+ morning. She washed herself with her paw, and licked every
+ atom of her fur with her pink tongue until it shone like new
+ silver. When any one touched her, she instantly effaced all
+ trace of the contact; she could not endure to be tumbled. An
+ idea of aristocracy was suggested by her elegance and
+ distinction, and among her own people she was a duchess at
+ least. She delighted in perfumes, would stick her nose into
+ bouquets, bite scented handkerchiefs with little spasms of
+ pleasure, and walk about among the scent bottles on the
+ toilet table, smelling at their stoppers; no doubt, she would
+ have used the powder puff if she had been permitted. Such was
+ Seraphita, and never did cat more amply justify a poetic
+ name. I must mention here that, in the days of the White
+ Dynasty, I was also the happy possessor of a family of white
+ rats, and that the cats, always supposed to be their natural,
+ invariable, and irreconcilable enemies, lived in perfect
+ harmony with my pet rodents. The rats never showed the
+ slightest distrust of the cats, nor did the cats ever betray
+ their confidence. Don-Pierrot-de-Navarre was very much
+ attached to them. He would sit close to their cage and
+ observe their gambols for hours together, and if by any
+ chance the door of the room in which they were left was shut,
+ he would scratch and mew gently until some one came to open
+ it and allow him to rejoin his little white friends, who
+ would often come out of the cage and sleep close to him.
+ Seraphita, who was of a more reserved and disdainful temper,
+ and who disliked the musky odor of the white rats, took no
+ part in their games; but she never did them any harm, and
+ would let them pass before her without putting out a claw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don-Pierrot-de-Navarre, who came from Havana, required a
+ hothouse temperature: and this he always had in his own
+ apartments. The house was, however, surrounded by extensive
+ gardens, divided by railings, through and over which cats
+ could easily climb, and in those gardens were trees inhabited
+ by a great number of birds. Pierrot would frequently take
+ advantage of an open door to get out of an evening and go
+ a-hunting through the wet grass and flower-beds: and, as his
+ mewing under the windows when he wanted to get in again did
+ not always awaken the sleepers in the house, he frequently
+ had to stay out until morning. His chest was delicate, and
+ one very chilly night he caught a cold which rapidly
+ developed into phthisis. At the end of a year of coughing,
+ poor Don Pierrot had wasted to a skeleton, and his coat, once
+ so silky, was a dull, harsh white. His large, transparent
+ eyes looked unnaturally large in his shrunken face: the pink
+ of his little nose had faded, and he dragged himself slowly
+ along the sunny side of the wall with a melancholy air,
+ looking at the yellow autumnal leaves as they danced and
+ whirled in the wind. Nothing is so touching as a sick animal:
+ it submits to suffering with such gentle and sad resignation.
+ We did all in our power to save Pierrot: a skilful doctor
+ came to see him, felt his pulse, sounded his lungs, and
+ ordered him ass's milk. He drank the prescribed beverage very
+ readily out of his own especial china saucer. For hours
+ together he lay stretched upon my knee, like the shadow of a
+ sphinx. I felt his spine under my finger tips like the beads
+ of a rosary, and he tried to respond to my caresses by a
+ feeble purr that resembled a death-rattle. On the day of his
+ death he was lying on his side panting, and suddenly, with a
+ supreme effort, he rose and came to me. His large eyes were
+ opened wide, and he gazed at me with a look of intense
+ supplication, a look that seemed to say, 'Save me, save me,
+ you, who are a man.' Then he made a few faltering steps, his
+ eyes became glassy, and he fell down, uttering so lamentable
+ a cry, so dreadful and full of anguish, that I was struck
+ dumb and motionless with horror. He was buried at the bottom
+ of the garden under a white rose tree, which still marks the
+ place of his sepulture. Three years later Seraphita died, and
+ was buried by the side of Don Pierrot. With her the White
+ Dynasty became extinct, but not the family. This snow-white
+ couple had three children, who were as black as ink. Let any
+ one explain that mystery who can. The kittens were born in
+ the early days of the great renown of Victor Hugo's 'Les
+ Miserables,' when everybody was talking of the new
+ masterpiece, and the names of the personages in it were in
+ every mouth. The two little male creatures were called
+ Enjolras and Gavroche, and their sister received the name of
+ Eponine. They were very pretty, and I trained them to run
+ after a little ball of paper and bring it back to me when I
+ threw it into the corner of the room. In time they would
+ follow the ball up to the top of the bookcase, or fish for it
+ behind boxes or in the bottom of china vases with their
+ dainty little paws. As they grew up they came to disdain
+ those frivolous amusements, and assumed the philosophical and
+ meditative quiet which is the true temperament of the cat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To the eyes of the careless and indifferent observer, three
+ black cats are just three black cats, but those who are
+ really acquainted with animals know that their physiognomy is
+ as various as that of the human race. I was perfectly well
+ able to distinguish between these little faces, as black as
+ Harlequin's mask, and lighted up by disks of emerald with
+ golden gleams. Enjolras, who was much the handsomest of the
+ three, was remarkable for his broad, leonine head and full
+ whiskers, strong shoulders, and a superb feathery tail. There
+ was something theatrical and pretentious in his air, like the
+ posing of a popular actor. His movements were slow,
+ undulatory, and majestic: so circumspect was he about where
+ he set his feet down that he always seemed to be walking
+ among glass and china. His disposition was by no means
+ stoical, and he was much too fond of food to have been
+ approved of by his namesake. The temperate and austere
+ Enjolras would certainly have said to him, as the angel said
+ to Swedenborg, 'You eat too much.' I encouraged his
+ gastronomical tastes, and Enjolras attained a very unusual
+ size and weight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gavroche was a remarkably knowing cat, and looked it. He was
+ wonderfully active, and his twists, twirls, and tumbles were
+ very comic. He was of a Bohemian temperament, and fond of low
+ company. Thus he would occasionally compromise the dignity of
+ his descent from the illustrious Don-Pierrot-de-Navarre,
+ grandee of Spain of the first class, and the Marquesa Dona
+ Seraphita, of aristocratic and disdainful bearing. He would
+ sometimes return from his expeditions to the street,
+ accompanied by gaunt, starved companions, whom he had picked
+ up in his wanderings, and he would stand complacently by
+ while they bolted the contents of his plate of food in a
+ violent hurry and in dread of dispersion by a broomstick or a
+ shower of water. I was sometimes tempted to say to Gavroche,
+ 'A nice lot of friends you pick up,' but I refrained, for,
+ after all, it was an amiable weakness: he might have eaten
+ his dinner all by himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The interesting Eponine was more slender and graceful than
+ her brothers, and she was an extraordinarily sensitive,
+ nervous, and electric animal. She was passionately attached
+ to me, and she would do the honors of my hermitage with
+ perfect grace and propriety. When the bell rang, she hastened
+ to the door, received the visitors, conducted them to the
+ salon, made them take seats, talked to them&#8212;yes,
+ talked, with little coos, murmurs, and cries quite unlike the
+ language which cats use among themselves, and which bordered
+ on the articulate speech of man. What did she say? She said
+ quite plainly: 'Don't be impatient: look at the pictures, or
+ talk with me, if I amuse you. My master is coming down.' On
+ my appearing she would retire discreetly to an arm-chair or
+ the corner of the piano, and listen to the conversation
+ without interrupting it, like a well-bred animal accustomed
+ to good society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Eponine's intelligence, fine disposition, and sociability
+ led to her being elevated by common consent to the dignity of
+ a person, for reason, superior instinct, plainly governed her
+ conduct. That dignity conferred on her the right to eat at
+ table like a person, and not in a corner on the floor, from a
+ saucer, like an animal. Eponine had a chair by my side at
+ breakfast and dinner, but in consideration of her size she
+ was privileged to place her fore paws on the table. Her place
+ was laid, without a knife and fork, indeed, but with a glass,
+ and she went regularly through dinner, from soup to dessert,
+ awaiting her turn to be helped, and behaving with a quiet
+ propriety which most children might imitate with advantage.
+ At the first stroke of the bell she would appear, and when I
+ came into the dining room she would be at her post, upright
+ in her chair, her fore paws on the edge of the tablecloth,
+ and she would present her smooth forehead to be kissed, like
+ a well-bred little girl who was affectionately polite to
+ relatives and old people. When we had friends to dine with
+ us, Eponine always knew that company was expected. She would
+ look at her place, and if a knife, fork, and spoon lay near
+ her plate she would immediately turn away and seat herself on
+ the piano-stool, her invariable refuge. Let those who deny
+ the possession of reason to animals explain, if they can,
+ this little fact, apparently so simple, but which contains a
+ world of induction. From the presence near her plate of those
+ implements which only man can use, the observant and
+ judicious cat concluded that she ought on this occasion to
+ give way to a guest, and she hastened to do so. She was never
+ mistaken: only, when the visitor was a person whom she knew
+ and liked, she would jump on his knee and coax him for a bit
+ off his plate by her graceful caresses. She survived her
+ brothers, and was my dear companion for several years....
+ Such is the chronicle of the Black Dynasty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although cats have no place in the Bible, neither can their
+ enemies who sing the praise of the dog, find much advantage
+ there: for that most excellent animal is referred to in
+ anything but a complimentary fashion&#8212;"For without are
+ dogs and sorcerers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great prophet of Allah, however, knew a good cat when he
+ saw it. "Muezza" even contributed her small share to the
+ development of the Mahometan system: for did she not sit
+ curled up in her master's sleeve, and by her soft purring
+ soothe and deepen his meditations? And did she not keep him
+ dreaming so long that she finally became exhausted herself,
+ and fell asleep in his flowing sleeve; whereupon did not
+ Mahomet, rather than disturb her, and feeling that he must be
+ about his Allah's business, cut off his sleeve rather than
+ disturb the much loved Muezza? The nurses of Cairo tell this
+ story to their young charges to this day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cardinal Richelieu had many a kitten, too; and morose and
+ ill-tempered as he was, found in them much amusement. His
+ love for them, however, was not that unselfish love which led
+ Mahomet to cut off his sleeve; but simply a selfish desire
+ for passing amusement. He cared nothing for that most
+ interesting process, the development of a kitten into a cat,
+ and the study of its individuality which is known only to the
+ real lover of cats. For it is recorded of him that as soon as
+ his pets were three months old he sent them away, evidently
+ not caring where, and procured new ones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M. Champfleury, however, thinks it possible that there may
+ not be any real foundation for this story about Richelieu. He
+ refers to the fact that Moncrif says not a word about the
+ celebrated cardinal's passion for those creatures; but he
+ does say, "Everybody knows that one of the greatest ministers
+ France ever possessed, M. Colbert, always had a number of
+ kittens playing about that same cabinet in which so many
+ institutions, both honorable and useful to the nation, had
+ their origin." Can it be that Richelieu has been given credit
+ for Colbert's virtues?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In various parts of Chateaubriand's "Memoires" may be found
+ eulogiums on the cat. So well known was his fondness for
+ them, that even when his other feelings and interests faded
+ with age and decay, his affections for cats remained strong
+ to the end. This love became well known to all his compeers,
+ and once on an embassy to Rome the Pope gave him a cat. He
+ was called "Micetto." According to Chateaubriand's
+ biographer, M. de Marcellus, "Pope Leo XII's cat could not
+ fail to reappear in the description of that domestic hearth
+ where I have so often seen him basking. In fact,
+ Chateaubriand has immortalized his favorite in the sketch
+ which begins, 'My companion is a big cat, of a greyish red.'"
+ This ecclesiastical pet was always dignified and imposing in
+ manners, ever conscious that he had been the gift of a
+ sovereign pontiff, and had a tremendous weight of reputation
+ to maintain. He used to stroke his tail when he desired
+ Madame Recamier to know that he was tired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I love in the cat," said Chateaubriand to M. de Marcellus,
+ "that independent and almost ungrateful temper which prevents
+ it from attaching itself to any one: the indifference with
+ which it passes from the salon to the house-top. When you
+ caress it, it stretches itself out and arches its back,
+ indeed: but that is caused by physical pleasure, not, as in
+ the case of the dog, by a silly satisfaction in loving and
+ being faithful to a master who returns thanks in kicks. The
+ cat lives alone, has no need of society, does not obey except
+ when it likes, and pretends to sleep that it may see the more
+ clearly, and scratches everything that it can scratch. Buffon
+ has belied the cat: I am laboring at its rehabilitation, and
+ hope to make of it a tolerably good sort of animal, as times
+ go."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cardinal Wolsey, Lord High Chancellor of England, was another
+ cat-lover, and his superb cat sat in a cushioned arm-chair by
+ his side in the zenith of his pride and power, the only one
+ in that select circle who was not obliged to don a wig and
+ robe while acting in a judicial capacity. Then there was
+ Bouhaki, the proud Theban cat that used to wear gold earrings
+ as he sat at the feet of King Hana, his owner, perhaps, but
+ not his master, and whose reproduction in the tomb of Hana in
+ the Necropolis at Thebes, between his master's feet in a
+ statue, is one of the most ancient reproductions of a cat.
+ And Sainte-Beuve, whose cat used to roam at will over his
+ desk and sit or lie on the precious manuscripts no other
+ person was allowed to touch; it is flattering to know that
+ the great Frenchman and I have one habit in common; and Miss
+ Repplier owns to it too. "But Sainte-Beuve," says she,
+ "probably had sufficient space reserved for his own comfort
+ and convenience. I have not; and Agrippina's beautifully
+ ringed tail flapping across my copy distracts my attention
+ and imperils the neatness of my penmanship." And even as I
+ write these pages, does the Pretty Lady's daughter Jane lie
+ on my copy and gaze lovingly at me as I work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Julian Hawthorne is another writer whose cat is an
+ accompaniment of his working hours. In this connection we
+ must not forget M. Brasseur Wirtgen, a student of natural
+ history who writes of his cat: "My habit of reading," he
+ says, "which divided us from each other in our respective
+ thoughts, prejudiced my cat very strongly against my books.
+ Sometimes her little head would project its profile on the
+ page which I was perusing, as though she were trying to
+ discover what it was that thus absorbed me: doubtless, she
+ did not understand why I should look for my happiness beyond
+ the presence of a devoted heart. Her solicitude was no less
+ manifest when she brought me rats or mice. She acted in this
+ case exactly as if I had been her son: dragging enormous
+ rats, still in the throes of death, to my feet: and she was
+ evidently guided by logic in offering me a prey commensurate
+ with my size, for she never presented any such large game to
+ her kittens. Her affectionate attention invariably caused her
+ a severe disappointment. Having laid the product of her
+ hunting expedition at my feet, she would appear to be greatly
+ hurt by my indifference to such delicious fare."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That Tasso had a cat we know because he wrote a sonnet to
+ her. Alfred de Musset's cats are apostrophized in his verses.
+ Dr. Johnson's Hodge held a soft place for many years in the
+ gruff old scholar's breast. And has not every one heard how
+ the famous Dr. Johnson fetched oysters for his beloved Hodge,
+ lest the servants should object to the trouble, and vent
+ their displeasure on his favorite?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor can one forget Sir Isaac Newton and his cats: for is it
+ not alleged that the great man had two holes cut in his barn
+ door, one for the mother, and a smaller one for the kitten?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Byron was fond of cats: in his establishment at Ravenna he
+ had five of them. Daniel Maclise's famous portrait of Harriet
+ Martineau represents that estimable woman sitting in front of
+ a fireplace and turning her face to receive the caress of her
+ pet cat crawling to a resting-place upon her mistress's
+ shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although La Fontaine in his fables shows such a delicate
+ appreciation of their character and ways, it is doubtful
+ whether he honestly loved cats. But his friend and patron,
+ the Duchess of Bouillon, was so devoted to them that she
+ requested the poet to make her a copy with his own hand of
+ all his fables in which pussy appears. The exercise-book in
+ which they were written was discovered a few years ago among
+ the Bouillon papers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Baudelaire, it is said, could never pass a cat in the street
+ without stopping to stroke and fondle it. "Many a time," said
+ Champfleury, "when he and I have been walking together, have
+ we stopped to look at a cat curled luxuriously in a pile of
+ fresh white linen, revelling in the cleanliness of the newly
+ ironed fabrics. Into what fits of contemplation have we
+ fallen before such windows, while the coquettish laundresses
+ struck attitudes at the ironing boards, under the mistaken
+ impression that we were admiring them." It was also related
+ of Baudelaire that, "going for the first time to a house, he
+ is restless and uneasy until he has seen the household cat.
+ But when he sees it, he takes it up, kisses and strokes it,
+ and is so completely absorbed in it, that he makes no answer
+ to what is said to him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Professor Huxley's notorious fondness for cats was a fad
+ which he shared with Paul de Koch, the novelist, who, at one
+ time, kept as many as thirty cats in his house. Many
+ descriptions of them are to be found scattered through his
+ novels. His chief favorite, Fromentin, lived eleven years
+ with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pierre Loti has written a charming and most touching history
+ of two of his cats&#8212;Moumette Blanche and Moumette
+ Chinoise&#8212;which all true cat-lovers should make a point
+ of reading.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Algernon Swinburne, the poet, is devoted to cats. His
+ favorite is named Atossa. Robert Southey was an ardent lover
+ of cats. Most people have read his letter to his friend
+ Bedford, announcing the death of one. "Alas, Grosvenor," he
+ wrote, "this day poor Rumpel was found dead, after as long
+ and happy a life as cat could wish for, if cats form wishes
+ on that subject. His full titles were: The Most Noble, the
+ Archduke Rumpelstiltzchen, Marcus Macbum, Earl Tomlefnagne,
+ Baron Raticide, Waowhler and Scratch. There should be a
+ court-mourning in Catland, and if the Dragon (your pet cat)
+ wear a black ribbon round his neck, or a band of crape <i>a
+ la militaire</i> round one of his fore paws it will be but a
+ becoming mark of respect." Then the poet-laureate adds, "I
+ believe we are each and all, servants included, more sorry
+ for his loss, or, rather, more affected by it, than any of us
+ would like to confess."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Josh Billings called his favorite cat William, because he
+ considered no shorter name fitted to the dignity of his
+ character. "Poor old man," he remarked one day, to a friend,
+ "he has fits now, so I call him Fitz-William."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH6"><!-- CH6 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ CONCERNING CATS IN ENGLAND
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ If the growing fancy for cats in this country is benefiting
+ the feline race as a whole, they have to thank the English
+ people for it. For certain cats in England are held at a
+ value that seems preposterous to unsophisticated Americans.
+ At one cat and bird show, held at the Crystal Palace, near
+ London, some of the cats were valued at thirty-five hundred
+ pounds sterling ($17,500)&#8212;as much as the price of a
+ first-class race-horse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For more than a quarter of a century National Cat Shows have
+ been held at Crystal Palace and the Westminster Aquarium,
+ which have given great stimulus to the breeding of fine cats,
+ and "catteries" where high-priced cats and kittens are raised
+ are common throughout the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ England was the first, too, to care for lost and deserted
+ cats and dogs. At Battersea there is a Temporary Home for
+ both these unfortunates, where between twenty and twenty-five
+ thousand dogs and cats are sheltered and fed. The objects of
+ this home, which is supported entirely by voluntary
+ subscriptions, are to restore lost pets to their owners, to
+ find suitable homes for unclaimed cats and dogs, and to
+ painlessly destroy useless and diseased ones. There is a
+ commodious cat's house where pets may be boarded during their
+ owner's absence; and a separate house where lost and deserted
+ felines are sheltered, fed, and kindly tended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since long before Whittington became Lord Mayor of London,
+ indeed, cats have been popular in England: for did not the
+ law protect them? As to the truth of the story of
+ Whittington's cat, there has been much earnest discussion.
+ Although Whittington lived from about 1360 to 1425, the story
+ seems to have been pretty generally accepted for three
+ hundred years after his death. A portrait still exists of
+ him, with one hand holding a cat, and when his old house was
+ remodelled in recent times, a carved stone was found in it
+ showing a boy with a cat in his arms. Several similar tales
+ have been found, it is argued, in which the heroes in
+ different countries have started to make a fortune by selling
+ a cat. But as rats and mice were extremely common then, and
+ it has been shown that a single pair of rats will in three
+ years multiply into over six hundred thousand, which will eat
+ as much as sixty-four thousand men, why shouldn't a cat be
+ deemed a luxury even for a king's palace? The argument that
+ the cat of Whittington was a "cat," or boat used for carrying
+ coal, is disproved by the fact that no account of such
+ vessels in Whittington's time can be found, and also that the
+ trade in coal did not begin in Europe for some time
+ afterward. And there really seems nothing improbable in the
+ story that at a time when a kitten big enough to kill mice
+ brought fourpence in England, such an animal, taken to a
+ rat-infested, catless country, might not be sold for a sum
+ large enough to start an enterprising youth in trade. Surely,
+ the beginnings of some of our own railroad kings and
+ financiers may as well look doubtful to future generations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a pretty story&#8212;that of Whittington; how he rose
+ from being a mere scullion at fourteen, to being "thrice Lord
+ Mayor of London." According to what are claimed to be
+ authentic documents, the story is something more than a
+ nursery tale, and runs thus: Poor Dick Whittington was born
+ at Shropshire, of such very poor parents that the boy, being
+ of an ambitious nature, left home at fourteen, and walked to
+ London, where he was taken into the hospital of St. John at
+ Clerkenwell, in a menial capacity. The prior, noticing his
+ good behavior and diligent conduct, took a fancy to him, and
+ obtained him a position in a Mr. Fitzwarren's household on
+ Tower Hill. For some time at this place his prospects did not
+ improve; he was nothing but a scullion, ridiculed and
+ disliked by the cook and other servants. Add to this the fact
+ that an incredible swarm of mice and rats infested the
+ miserable room in which he slept, and it would seem that he
+ was indeed a "poor Richard." One fortunate day, however, he
+ conceived the idea of buying a cat, and as good luck would
+ have it, he was enabled within a few days to earn a penny or
+ two by blacking the boots of a guest at the house. That day
+ he met a woman with a cat for sale, and after some dickering
+ (for she asked more money for it than the boy possessed in
+ the world), Dick Whittington carried home his cat and put it
+ in a cupboard or closet opening from his room. That night
+ when he retired he let the cat out of the cupboard, and she
+ evidently had "no end of fun"; for, according to these
+ authentic accounts, "she destroyed all the vermin which
+ ventured to make their appearance." For some time after that
+ she passed her days in the cupboard (in hiding from the cook)
+ and her nights in catching mice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then came the change. Mr. Fitzwarren was fitting out a
+ vessel for Algiers, and kindly offered all his servants a
+ chance to send something to barter with the natives. Poor
+ Dick had nothing but his cat, but the commercial instinct was
+ even then strong within him, and with an enterprise worthy of
+ the early efforts of any of our self-made men, he decided to
+ send that, and accordingly placed it, "while the tears run
+ plentifully down his cheeks," in the hands of the master of
+ the vessel. She must have been a most exemplary cat, for by
+ the time they had reached Algiers, the captain was so fond of
+ her that he allowed no one to handle her but himself. Not
+ even he, however, expected to turn her into money; but the
+ opportunity soon came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At a state banquet, given by the Dey, the captain and his
+ officers were astonished to notice that rats and mice ran
+ freely in and out, stealing half the choice food, which was
+ spread on the carpet; and this was a common, every-day
+ occurrence. The captain saw his, or Whittington's,
+ opportunity, and stated that he knew a certain remedy for
+ this state of affairs; whereupon he was invited to dinner
+ next day, to which he carried the cat, and the natural
+ consequence ensued. This sudden and swift extermination of
+ the pests drove the Dey and his court half frantic with
+ delight; and the captain, who must have been the original
+ progenitor of the Yankee race, drove a sharp bargain by
+ assuming to be unwilling to part with the cat, so that the
+ Dey finally "sent on board his ship the choicest commodities,
+ consisting of gold, jewels, and silks."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, things had gone from bad to worse with the youth,
+ destined to become not only Lord Mayor of London, but the
+ envy and admiration of future generations of youths; and he
+ made up his mind to run away from his place. This he did, but
+ while he was on his way to more rural scenes, he sat down on
+ a stone at the foot of Highgate Hill (a stone that still
+ remains marked as "Whittington's Stone") and paused to
+ reflect on his prospects. His thoughts turned back to the
+ home he had left, where he had at least plenty to eat, and,
+ although the "authentic reports" use a great many words to
+ tell us so, the boy was homesick. Just then the sound of Bow
+ Bells reached him, and to his youthful fancy seemed to call
+ him back:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <pre>
+ "Return, return, Whittington;
+ Thrice Lord Mayor of London."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Thus the old tale hath it. At any rate, the boy gave up the
+ idea of flight and went back to Mr. Fitzwarren's house. The
+ second night after, his master sent for him in the midst of
+ one of the cook's tirades, and going to the "parlour" he was
+ apprised of his sudden wealth; because, added to the rest of
+ his good luck, that captain happened to be an honest man. And
+ then he went into trade and married the daughter of Mr.
+ Fitzwarren and became Lord Mayor of London, and lived even
+ happier ever after than they do in most fairy tales. And
+ everybody, even the cook, admired and loved him after he had
+ money and position, as has been known to happen outside of
+ fairy tales.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whether or not cats in England owe anything of their position
+ to-day to the Whittington story, it is certain that they have
+ more really appreciating friends there than in any other
+ country. The older we grow in the refinements of
+ civilization, the more we value the finely bred cat. In
+ England it has long been the custom to register the pedigree
+ of cats as carefully as dog-fanciers in this country do with
+ their fancy pets. Some account of the Cat Club Stud Book and
+ Register will be found in the next chapter. Queen Victoria,
+ and the Princess of Wales, and indeed many members of the
+ nobility are cat-lovers, and doubtless this fact influences
+ the general sentiment in England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the most devoted of Pussy's English admirers is the
+ Hon. Mrs. McLaren Morrison, who is the happy possessor of
+ some of the most perfect dogs and cats that have graced the
+ bench. She lives at Kepwick Park, in her stately home in
+ Yorkshire&#8212;a lovely spot, commanding a delightful view
+ of picturesque Westmoreland on one side and on the other
+ three surrounded and sheltered by hills and moors. Some of
+ her pets go with her, however, to her flat in Queen Anne's
+ Mansions, and even to her residence in Calcutta. It is at
+ Kepwick Park that Mrs. McLaren Morrison has her celebrated
+ "catteries." Here there are magnificent blue, black and
+ silver and red Persians; snowy white, blue-eyed beauties;
+ grandly marked English tabbies; handsome blue Russians, with
+ their gleaming yellow-topaz eyes; some Chinese cats, with
+ their long, edge-shaped heads, bright golden eyes, and shiny,
+ short-haired black fur; and a pair of Japanese pussies, pure
+ white and absolutely without tails. One of the handsomest
+ specimens of the feline race ever seen is her blue Persian,
+ Champion Monarch, who, as a kitten in 1893, won the gold
+ medal at the Crystal Palace given for the best pair of
+ kittens in the show, and the next year the Beresford
+ Challenge Cup at Cruft's Show, for the best long-haired cat,
+ besides taking many other honors. Among other well-known
+ prize winners are the champions Snowball and Forget-me-not,
+ both pure white, with lovely turquoise-blue eyes. Of Champion
+ Nizam (now dead) that well-known English authority on cats,
+ Mr. A.A. Clark, said his was the grandest head of any cat he
+ had ever seen. Nizam was a perfect specimen of that rare and
+ delicate breed of cats, a pure chinchilla. The numberless
+ kittens sporting all day long are worthy of the art of Madame
+ Henriette Ronner, and one could linger for hours in these
+ delightful and most comfortable catteries watching their
+ gambols. The gentle mistress of this fair and most
+ interesting domain, the Hon. Mrs. McLaren Morrison herself,
+ is one of the most attractive and fascinating women of the
+ day&#8212;one who adds to great personal beauty all the charm
+ of mental culture and much travel. She has made Kepwick Park
+ a veritable House Beautiful with the rare curios and art
+ treasures collected with her perfect taste in the many lands
+ she has visited, and it is as interesting and enjoyable to a
+ virtuoso as it is to an animal lover. Mrs. McLaren Morrison
+ exhibits at all the cat shows, often entering as many as
+ twenty-five cats. Other English ladies who exhibit largely
+ are Mrs. Herring, of Lestock House, and Miss Cockburn
+ Dickinson, of Surrey. Mrs. Herring's Champion Jimmy is very
+ well known as a first prize-winner in many shows. He is a
+ short-haired, exquisitely marked silver tabby valued at two
+ thousand pounds ($10,000).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another feline celebrity also well known to frequenters of
+ English cat shows, is Madame L. Portier's magnificent and
+ colossal Blue Boy, whose first appearance into this world was
+ made on the day sacred to St. Patrick, 1895. He has a fine
+ pedigree, and was raised by Madame Portier herself. Blue Boy
+ commenced his career as a show cat, or rather kitten, at
+ three months old, when he was awarded a first prize, and when
+ the judge told his mistress that if he fulfilled his early
+ promise he would make a grand cat. This he has done, and is
+ now one of the finest specimens of his kind in England. He
+ weighs over seventeen pounds, and always has affixed to his
+ cage on the show-bench this request, "Please do not lift this
+ cat by the neck; he is too heavy." He has long dark blue fur,
+ with a ruff of a lighter shade and brilliant topaz eyes.
+ Already Blue Boy has taken many prizes. He is a gelded cat
+ and one of the fortunate cats who have "Not for Sale" after
+ their names in the show catalogues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Mrs. C. Hill's beautiful long-haired Patrick Blue fell the
+ honor, at the Crystal Palace Show in 1896, of a signed and
+ framed photograph of the Prince of Wales, presented by his
+ Royal Highness for the best long-haired cat in the show,
+ irrespective of sex or nationality. Besides the prize given
+ by the Prince, Patrick Blue was the proud winner of the
+ Beresford Challenge Cup for the best blue long-haired cat,
+ and the India Silver Bowl for the best Persian. He also was
+ born on St. Patrick's Day, hence his name. He was bred by
+ Mrs. Blair Maconochie, his father, Blue Ruin I, being a
+ celebrated gold medallist. His mother, Sylvia, who belongs to
+ Mrs. Maconochie, has never been shown, her strong point being
+ her lovely color, which is most happily reproduced in her
+ perfect son. Patrick Blue has all the many charms of a petted
+ cat, and was undoubtedly one of the prominent attractions of
+ the first Championship Show of the National Cat Club in 1896.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Silver Lambkin is another very famous English cat, owned by
+ Miss Gresham, of Surrey. Princess Ranee, owned by Miss
+ Freeland, of Mottisfont, near Romney; Champion Southsea
+ Hector, owned by Miss Sangster, at Southsea; champions Prince
+ Victor and Shelly, of Kingswood (both of whom have taken no
+ end of prizes), are other famous English cats.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Topso, a magnificent silver tabby male, belonging to Miss
+ Anderson Leake, of Dingley Hill, was at one time the best
+ long-haired silver tabby in England, and took the prize on
+ that account in 1887; his sons, daughters, grandsons, and
+ granddaughters, have all taken prizes at Crystal Palace in
+ the silver tabby classes, since that time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Marcus Beresford has for the last fifteen years made
+ quite a business of the breeding and rearing of cats. At
+ Bishopsgate, near Egham, she has what is without doubt the
+ finest cattery. "I have applications from all parts of the
+ world for my cats and kittens," said Lady Marcus, in a talk
+ about her hobby, "and I may tell you that it is largely
+ because of this that I founded the Cat Club, which has for
+ its object the general welfare of the cat and the improvement
+ of the breed. My catteries were established in 1890, and at
+ one time I had as many as 150 cats and kittens. Some of my
+ pets live in a pretty cottage covered with creepers, which
+ might well be called Cat Cottage. No expense has been spared
+ in the fittings of the rooms, and every provision is made for
+ warmth and ventilation. One room is set apart for the girl
+ who takes entire charge of and feeds the pussies. She has a
+ boy who works with her and performs the rougher tasks. There
+ is a small kitchen for cooking the meals for the cats, and
+ this is fitted with every requisite. On the walls are racks
+ to hold the white enamelled bowls and plates used for the
+ food. There is a medicine chest, which contains everything
+ that is needful for prompt and efficacious treatment in case
+ pussy becomes sick. On the wall are a list of the names and a
+ full description of all the inmates of the cattery, and a set
+ of rules to be observed by both the cats and their
+ attendants. These rules are not ignored, and it is a tribute
+ to the intelligence of the cat to see how carefully pussy can
+ become amenable to discipline, if once given to understand of
+ what that discipline consists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then there is a garden cattery. I think this is the
+ prettiest of all. It is covered with roses and ivy. In this
+ there are three rooms, provided with shelves and all other
+ conveniences which can add to the cats' comfort and
+ amusement. The residences of the male cats are most complete,
+ for I have given them every attention possible. Each male cat
+ has his separate sleeping apartments, closed with wire and
+ with a 'run' attached. Close at hand is a large, square grass
+ 'run,' and in this each gentleman takes his daily but
+ solitary exercise. One of the stringent rules of the cattery
+ is that no two males shall ever be left together, and I know
+ that with my cats if this rule were not observed, both in
+ letter and precept, it would be a case of 'when Greek meets
+ Greek.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I vary the food for my cats as much as possible. One day we
+ will have most appetizing bowls of fish and rice. At the
+ proper time you can see these standing in the cat kitchen
+ ready to be distributed. Another day these bowls will be
+ filled with minced meat. In the very hot weather a good deal
+ of vegetable matter is mixed with the food. Swiss milk is
+ given, so there is no fear of its turning sour. For some time
+ I have kept a goat on the premises, the milk from which is
+ given to the delicate or younger kittens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have started many of my poorer friends in cat breeding,
+ and they have proved conclusively how easily an addition to
+ their income can be made, not only by breeding good Persian
+ kittens and selling them, but by exhibiting them at the
+ various shows and taking prizes. But of course there is a
+ fashion in cats, as in everything else. When I started
+ breeding blue Persians about fifteen years ago they were very
+ scarce, and I could easily get twenty-five dollars apiece for
+ my kittens. Now this variety is less sought after, and
+ self-silvers, commonly called chinchillas, are in demand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH7"><!-- CH7 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ CONCERNING CAT CLUBS AND CAT SHOWS
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ The annual cat shows in England, which have been held
+ successively for more than a quarter of a century, led to the
+ establishment in 1887 of a National Cat Club, which has
+ steadily grown in membership and interest, and by the
+ establishment of the National Stud Book and Register has
+ greatly raised the standard of felines in the mother country.
+ It has many well-known people as members, life members, or
+ associates; and from time to time people distinguished in the
+ cat world have been added as honorary members.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The officers of the National Cat Club of England, since its
+ reconstruction in March, 1898, are as follows:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Presidents.</i>&#8212;Her Grace the Duchess of Bedford;
+ Lord Marcus Beresford.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Vice-presidents.</i>&#8212;Lily, Duchess of Marlborough,
+ now Lady Wm. Beresford; the Countess of Warwick; Lady
+ Granville Gordon; Hon. Mrs. McL. Morrison; Madame Ronner; Mr.
+ Isaac Woodiwiss; the Countess of Sefton; Lady Hothfield; the
+ Hon. Mrs. Brett; Mr. Sam Woodiwiss; Mr. H.W. Bullock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>President of Committee.</i>&#8212;Mr. Louis Wain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Committee</i>.&#8212;Lady Marcus Beresford; Mrs. Balding;
+ Mr. Sidney Woodiwiss; Mr. Hawkins; Mrs. Blair Maconochie;
+ Mrs. Vallance; Mr. Brackett; Mr. F. Gresham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Hon. Secretary and Hon. Treasurer</i>.&#8212;Mrs. Stennard
+ Robinson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This club has a seal and a motto: "Beauty lives by kindness."
+ It publishes a stud book in which are registered pedigrees
+ and championship wins which are eligible for it. Only wins
+ obtained from shows held under N.C.C. rules are recorded free
+ of charge. The fee for ordinary registration is one shilling
+ per cat, and the stud book is published annually. There are
+ over two thousand cats now entered in this National Cat Club
+ Stud Book, the form of entry being as follows (L.F. means
+ long-haired female; C.P., Crystal Palace):&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <hr>
+ <p>
+ No. 1593, Mimidatzi, L.F. Silver Tabby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Anna F. Gardner, Hamswell House, near Bath, shown as
+ Mimi.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bred by Miss How, Bridgeyate, near Bristol. Born April, 1893.
+ Alive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sire, Blue Boy the Great of Islington, 1090 (Mrs H.B.
+ Thompson).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dam, Boots of Bridgeyate, 1225 (Miss How).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prizes won&#8212;1st Bilton, 2nd, C.P. 1893, Kitten Class.
+ </p>
+ <hr>
+ <p>
+ No. 1225, Boots of Bridgeyate. L.F. Silver Tabby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss E. How, Bridgeyate House, Warmly, Bristol.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Former owner, Mrs. Foote, 43 Palace Gardens, Kensington.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Born March, 1892. Alive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the cats entered have records of prizes covering
+ nearly half a page of the book. The advantage of such a book
+ to cat owners can be readily seen. A cat once entered never
+ changes its number, no matter how many owners he may have,
+ and his name cannot be changed after December 31 of the year
+ in which he is registered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The more important rules of the English National Cat Club are
+ given in condensed form as follows:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The name is "The National Cat Club."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Objects</i>: To promote honesty in the breeding of cats,
+ so as to insure purity in each distinct breed or variety; to
+ determine the classification required, and to insure the
+ adoption of such classification by breeders, exhibitors,
+ judges, and the committees of all cat shows; to encourage
+ showing and breeding by giving championship and other prizes,
+ and otherwise doing all in its power to protect and advance
+ the interest of cats and their owners. The National Cat Club
+ shall frame a separate set of rules for cat shows to be
+ called "National Cat Club Rules," and the committees of those
+ cat shows to which the rules are given, shall be called upon
+ to sign a guarantee to the National Cat Club binding them to
+ provide good penning and effectual sanitation, also to the
+ punctual payment of prize money and to the proper
+ adjudication of prizes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Stud Book</i>: The National Cat Club shall keep a stud
+ book.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Neuter Classes</i>.&#8212;For gelded cats.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Kitten Classes</i>.&#8212;Single entries over three and
+ under eight months.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Kitten Brace</i>.&#8212;Kittens of any age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Brace</i>.&#8212;For two cats of any age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Team</i>.&#8212;For three or more cats, any age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Paris, although cats have not been commonly appreciated as
+ in England, there is an increasing interest in them, and cat
+ shows are now a regular feature of the Jardin d'Acclimation.
+ This suggests the subject of the cat's social position in
+ France. Since the Revolution the animal has conquered in this
+ country "<i>toutes les liberties</i>," excepting that of
+ wearing an entire tail, for in many districts it is the
+ fashion to cut the caudal appendage short.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Paris cats are much cherished wherever they can be without
+ causing too much unpleasantness with the landlord. The system
+ of living in flats is not favorable to cat culture, for the
+ animal, not having access either to the tiles above or to the
+ gutter below, is apt to pine for fresh air, and the society
+ of its congeners. Probably in no other city do these
+ creatures lie in shop windows and on counters with such an
+ arrogant air of proprietorship. In restaurants, a very large
+ and fat cat is kept as an advertisement of the good feeding
+ to be obtained on the premises. There is invariably a cat in
+ a <i>charbonnier's</i> shop, and the animal is generally one
+ that was originally white, but long ago came to the
+ conclusion that all attempts to keep itself clean were
+ hopeless. Its only consolation is that it is never blacker
+ than its master. It is well known that the Persians and
+ Angoras are much esteemed in Paris and are, to some extent,
+ bred for sale. In the provinces, French cats are usually
+ low-bred animals, with plebeian heads and tails, the
+ stringlike appearance of the latter not being improved by
+ cropping. Although not generally esteemed as an article of
+ food in France, there are still many people scattered
+ throughout the country who maintain that a <i>civet de
+ chat</i> is as good, or better, than a <i>civet de
+ lievre</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ M. Fran&ccedil;ois Copp&eacute;e's fondness for cats as pets
+ is so well known that there was great fitness in placing his
+ name first upon the jury of awards at the 1896 cat show in
+ Paris. Such other well-known men as &Eacute;mile Zola,
+ Andr&eacute; Theuriet, and Catulle Mendes, also figured on
+ the list. There is now an annual "Exposition Feline
+ Internationale."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this country the first cat show of general interest was
+ held at Madison Square Garden, New York, in May, 1895. Some
+ years before, there had been a cat show under the auspices of
+ private parties in Boston, and several minor shows had been
+ held at Newburgh, N.Y., and other places. But the New York
+ shows were the first to attract general attention. One
+ hundred and seventy-six cats were exhibited by one hundred
+ and twenty-five owners, besides several ocelots, wild cats,
+ and civets. For some reason the show at Madison Square Garden
+ in March, 1896, catalogued only one hundred and thirty-two
+ cats and eighty-two owners. Since that time there have been
+ no large cat shows in New York.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There have been several cat shows in Boston since 1896, but
+ these are so far only adjuncts to poultry and pigeon shows.
+ Great interest has been manifest in them, however, and the
+ entries have each year run above a hundred. Some magnificent
+ cats are exhibited, although as a rule the animals shown are
+ somewhat small, many kittens being placed there for sale by
+ breeders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several attempts to start successful cat clubs in this
+ country have been made. At the close of the New York show in
+ 1896, an American Cat Club was organized for the purpose "of
+ investigating, ascertaining, and keeping a record of the
+ pedigrees of cats, and of instituting, maintaining,
+ controlling, and publishing a stud book, or book of registry
+ of such kind of domestic animals in the United States of
+ America and Canada, and of promoting and holding exhibitions
+ of such animals, and generally for the purpose of improving
+ the breed thereof, and educating the public in its knowledge
+ of the various breeds and varieties of cats."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The officers were as follows:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>President</i>.&#8212;Rush S. Huidekoper, 154 E. 57th St.,
+ New York City.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Vice-presidents</i>.&#8212;W.D. Mann, 208 Fifth Ave., New
+ York City; Mrs. E.N. Barker, Newburgh, N.Y.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Secretary-treasurer</i>.&#8212;James T. Hyde, 16 E. 23d
+ St., New York City.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Executive Committee</i>.&#8212;T. Farrar Rackham, E.
+ Orange, N.J.; Miss Edith Newbold, Southampton, L.I.; Mrs.
+ Harriet C. Clarke, 154 W. 82d St., New York City; Charles R.
+ Pratt, St. James Hotel, New York City; Joseph W. Stray, 229
+ Division St., Brooklyn, N.Y.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ More successful than this club, however, is the Beresford Cat
+ Club formed in Chicago in the winter of 1899. The president
+ is Mrs. Clinton Locke, who is a member of the English cat
+ clubs, and whose kennel in Chicago contains some of the
+ finest cats in America. The Beresford Cat Club has the
+ sanction of John G. Shortall, of the American Humane Society,
+ and on its honorary list are Miss Agnes Repplier, Madame
+ Ronner, Lady Marcus Beresford, Miss Helen Winslow, and Mr.
+ Louis Wain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At their cat shows, which are held annually, prizes are
+ offered for all classes of cats, from the common feline of
+ the back alley up to the aristocratic resident of milady's
+ boudoir.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Beresford Club Cat shows are the most successful of any
+ yet given in America. One hundred and seventy-eight prizes
+ were awarded in the show of January, 1900, and some
+ magnificent cats were shown. It is said by those who are in a
+ position to know that there are no better cats shown in
+ England now than can be seen at the Beresford Show in
+ Chicago. The exhibits cover short and long haired cats of all
+ colors, sizes, and ages, with Siamese cats, Manx cats, and
+ Russian cats. At the show in January, 1900, Mrs. Clinton
+ Locke exhibited fourteen cats of one color, and Mrs. Josiah
+ Cratty five white cats. This club numbers one hundred and
+ seventy members and has a social position and consequent
+ strength second to none in America. It is a fine, honorable
+ club, which has for its objects the protection of the Humane
+ Society and the caring for all cats reported as homeless or
+ in distress. It aims also to establish straightforward and
+ honest dealings among the catteries and to do away with the
+ humbuggery which prevails in some quarters about the sales
+ and valuation of high-bred cats. This club cannot fail to be
+ of great benefit to such as want to carry on an honest
+ industry by the raising and sale of fine cats. It will also
+ improve the breeding of cats in this country, and thereby
+ raise the standard and promote a more general intelligence
+ among the people with regard to cats. Some of the best people
+ in the United States belong to the Beresford Club, the
+ membership of which is by no means confined to Chicago; on
+ the contrary, the club is a national one and the officers and
+ board of directors are:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>President.</i>&#8212;Mrs. Clinton Locke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>1st Vice-president.</i>&#8212;Mrs W. Eames Colburn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>2d Vice-president.</i>&#8212;Mrs. F.A. Howe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Corresponding Secretary.</i>&#8212;Mrs. Henry C. Clark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Recording Secretary</i>.&#8212;Miss Lucy Claire Johnstone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Treasurer</i>.&#8212;Mrs. Charles Hampton Lane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Elwood H. Tolman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. J.H. Pratt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Mattie Fisk Green.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. F.A. Story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Louise L. Fergus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The club is anxious to have members all over the United
+ States, just as the English cat clubs do. The non-resident
+ annual fees are only one dollar, and a member has to be
+ proposed by one and endorsed by two other members. The
+ register cats for the stud book are entered at one dollar
+ each, and it is proposed to give shows once a year. The main
+ objects of the club are to improve the breeds of fancy cats
+ in America, to awaken a more general interest in them, and to
+ secure better treatment for the ordinary common cat. The
+ shows will be given for the benefit of the Humane Society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chicago Cat Club has done excellent work also, having
+ established a cat home, or refuge, for stray, homeless, or
+ diseased cats, with a department for boarding pet cats during
+ the absence of their owners. It is under the personal care
+ and direction of Dr. C.A. White, 78 E. 26th Street. The first
+ cat to be admitted there was one from Cleveland, Ohio, which
+ was to be boarded for three months during the absence of its
+ owner in Europe and also to be treated for disease. This club
+ was incorporated under the state laws of Illinois, on January
+ 26, 1899. In connection with it is a children's cat club,
+ which has for its primary object the teaching of kindness to
+ animals by awakening in the young people an appreciative love
+ for cats. At the show of the Chicago Cat Club, small dogs and
+ cavies are exhibited also, the Cavy Club and the Pet Dog Club
+ having affiliated with the Chicago Cat Club.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The president of the Chicago Cat Club is Mrs. Leland Norton,
+ of the Drexel Kennels, at 4011 Drexel Boulevard, Chicago. The
+ corresponding secretary is Mrs. Laura Daunty Pelham, 315
+ Interocean Building, and the other officers are:
+ Vice-president, Miss Gertrude Estabrooks; recording
+ secretary, Miss Jennie Van Allen; and treasurer, Mrs. Ella B.
+ Shepard. Membership is only one dollar a year, and the
+ registration fee in the Chicago stud book fifty cents for
+ each cat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cat shows already held and the flourishing state of our
+ cat clubs have proved that America has as fine, if not finer,
+ cats than can be found in England, and that interest in
+ finely bred cats is on the increase in this country. The
+ effect of the successful cat clubs and cat shows must be to
+ train intelligent judges and to raise the standard of cats in
+ this country. It will also tend to make the cat shows of such
+ a character that kind-hearted owners need not hesitate to
+ enter their choicest cats. As yet, however, the judging at
+ cat shows is not so well managed as in England. It should be
+ a rule that the judges of cats should not only understand
+ their fine points, but should be in sympathy with the little
+ pets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cat dealers who have a number of cats entered for
+ competition, should not be allowed on the board of judges. In
+ England, the cats to be judged are taken by classes into a
+ tent for the purpose, and the door is fastened against all
+ but the judges; whereas over here the cats are too often
+ taken out of their cages in the presence of a crowd of
+ spectators and judged on a table or some public place,
+ thereby frightening the timid ones and bringing annoyance to
+ the owners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, there should be several judges. In England there are
+ seven, including two or three women, and these are assigned
+ to different classes: Mr. Harrison Weir, F.R.H.S., the
+ well-known authority on cats, and Louis Wain, the well-known
+ cat artist, are among them. In this country there are a
+ number of women who are not dealers, but who are fully posted
+ in the necessary qualifications for a high-bred cat. American
+ cat shows should have at least three judges, one of whom, at
+ least, should be a woman. A cat should be handled gently and
+ kept as calm as possible during the judging. Women are
+ naturally more gentle in their methods, and more
+ tenderhearted. When my pets are entered for competition, may
+ some wise, kind woman have the judging of them!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In judging a cat the quality and quantity of its fur is the
+ first thing considered. In a long-haired cat this includes
+ the "lord mayor's chain," or frill, the tail, and, most
+ important of all, the ear-tufts. The tufts between the toes
+ and the flexibility of the tail are other important points.
+ The shape of head, eyes, and body are also carefully noted. A
+ short-haired cat is judged first for color, then for eyes,
+ head, symmetry, and ears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all cats the head should show breadth between the eyes.
+ The eyes should be round and open. White cats to be really
+ valuable should have blue eyes (without deafness); black cats
+ should have yellow eyes; other cats should have pea-green
+ eyes, or in some cases, as in the brown, self-colored eyes.
+ The nose should be short and tapering. The teeth should be
+ good, and the claws flat. The lower leg should be straight,
+ and the upper hind leg lie at closed angles. The foot should
+ be small and round (in the maltese, pointed). A good cat has
+ a light frame, but a deep chest; a slim, graceful, and fine
+ neck; medium-sized ears with rounded tips. The croup should
+ be square and high; the tail of a short-haired cat long and
+ tapering, and of a long-haired cat broad and bent over at the
+ end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The good results of a cat show are best told in a few words
+ by one who has acted as judge at an American exhibition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One year," he said, "people have to learn that there is such
+ a thing as a cat; the next they come to the show and learn to
+ tell the different breeds; another year they learn the
+ difference between a good cat and a poor one; and the next
+ year they become exhibitors, and tell the judges how to award
+ the premiums."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH8"><!-- CH8 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ CONCERNING HIGH-BRED CATS IN AMERICA
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ One of the first American women to start a "cattery" in this
+ country was Mrs. Clinton Locke, wife of the rector of Grace
+ Church, Chicago. As a clergyman's wife she has done a great
+ deal of good among the various charities of her city simply
+ from the income derived from her kennels. She has been very
+ generous in gifts of her kittens to other women who have made
+ the raising of fine cats a means to add to a slender income,
+ and has sent beautiful cats all over the United States, to
+ Mexico, and even to Germany. Under her hospitable roof at
+ 2825 Indiana Avenue is a cat family of great distinction.
+ First, there is The Beadle, a splendid blue male with amber
+ eyes, whose long pedigree appears in the third volume of the
+ N.C.C.S.B. under the number 1872, sired by Glaucus, and his
+ dam was Hawthorne Bounce. His pedigree is traced for many
+ generations. He was bred by Mrs. Dean of Hawthornedene,
+ Slough, England. The Beadle took first prize at the cat show
+ held in Chicago in 1896. He also had honorable mention at two
+ cat shows in England when a kitten, under the name of Bumble
+ Bee. Lord Gwynne is a noble specimen, a long-haired white cat
+ with wonderful blue eyes. He was bred from Champion Bundle,
+ and his mother was out of The Masher, No. 1027, winner of
+ many championships. His former owner was Mrs. Davies, of
+ Upper Cattesham. Mrs. Locke purchased him from A.A. Clarke,
+ one of the best judges of cats in England. Lord Gwynne took a
+ prize at the Brighton Cat Show in England in 1895, as a
+ kitten. The father of The Beadle's mate, Rosalys, was the
+ famous "Bluebeard."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Locke's chinchillas are the finest ones in this country.
+ Atossa, the mother cat, has a wonderful litter of kittens.
+ She was bred to Lord Argent, one of the three celebrated stud
+ chinchillas in England. She arrived in this country in July,
+ and ten days after gave birth to her foreign kittens. One of
+ the kittens has been sold to Mrs. Dr. Forsheimer, of
+ Cincinnati, and another to Mrs. W.E. Colburn, of South
+ Chicago. The others Mrs. Locke will not part with at any
+ price.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Smerdis, the grand chinchilla male brought over as a future
+ mate for Atossa, is a royal cat. He looks as though he had
+ run away from Bengal, but, like all of Mrs. Locke's cats, he
+ is gentle and loving. He is the son of Lord Southampton, the
+ lightest chinchilla stud in England (N.C.C.S.B. 1690), and
+ his mother is Silver Spray, No. 1542. His maternal
+ grandparents are Silver King and Harebell, and his
+ great-grandparents Perso and Beauty,&#8212;all registered
+ cats. On his father's side a pedigree of three generations
+ can be traced. One of her more recent importations is Lord
+ Gwynne's mate, Lady Mertice, a beautiful long-haired cat with
+ blue eyes. Other famous cats of hers have been Bettina, Nora,
+ Doc, Vashti, Marigold, Grover, and Wendell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of Mrs Locke's treasures is a <i>bona fide</i> cat mummy,
+ brought by Mrs. Locke from Egypt. It has been verified at the
+ Gizeh Museum to be four thousand years old.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is fully twenty-five years since Mrs. Locke began to turn
+ her attention to fine cats, and when she imported her first
+ cat to Chicago there was only one other in the United States.
+ That one was Mrs. Edwin Brainard's Madam, a wonderful black,
+ imported from Spain. Her first long-haired cat was Wendell,
+ named for the friend who brought him from Persia, and his
+ descendants are now in the Lockehaven Cattery. Queen Wendella
+ is one of the most famous cats in America to-day, and mother
+ of the beautiful Lockehaven Quartette. These are all
+ descended from the first Wendell. The kittens in the
+ Lockehaven Quartette went to Mrs. S.S. Leach, Bonny Lea, New
+ London, Ct.; Miss Lucy Nichols, Ben Mahr Cattery, Waterbury,
+ Ct.; Miss Olive Watson, Warrensburg, Pa.; and Mrs. B.M.
+ Gladding, at Memphis, Tenn, Mrs. Locke's Lord Argent,
+ descended from Atossa and the famous Lord Argent, of England,
+ is a magnificent cat, while her Smerdis is the son of the
+ greatest chinchillas in the world. Rosalys II, now owned by
+ Mr. C.H. Jones, of Palmyra, N.Y., was once her cat, and was
+ the daughter of Rosalys (owned by Miss Nichols, of Waterbury,
+ Ct), who was a granddaughter of the famous Bluebeard, of
+ England. These, with the beautiful brown tabby, Crystal,
+ owned by Mr. Jones, have all been prize winners. Lucy Claire
+ is a recent importation, who won second and third prizes in
+ England under the name of Baby Flossie. She is the daughter
+ of Duke of Kent and Topso, of Merevale. Her paternal
+ grandparents are Mrs. Herring's well-known champion, Blue
+ Jack, and Marney. The maternal grandparents are King Harry, a
+ prize winner at Clifton and Brighton, and Fluff.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Locke's cats are all imported. She has sometimes
+ purchased cats from Maine or elsewhere for people who did not
+ care to pay the price demanded for her fine kittens, but she
+ has never had in her own cattery any cats of American origin.
+ Her stock, therefore, is probably the choicest in America.
+ She always has from twenty to twenty-five cats, and the
+ cat-lover who obtains one of her kittens is fortunate indeed.
+ A beautiful pair of blacks in Mrs. Locke's cattery have the
+ most desirable shade of amber eyes, and are named "Blackbird"
+ and "St. Tudno"; she has also a choice pair of Siamese cats
+ called "Siam" and "Sally Ward."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Josiah Cratty, of Oak Park, has a cattery called the
+ "Jungfrau Katterie," and her cats are remarkably beautiful.
+ Her Bartimaeus and True Blue are magnificent white cats,
+ sired by Mrs. Locke's Lord Gwynne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss L.C. Johnstone, of Chicago, has some of the handsomest
+ cats in the country. Cherie is a wonderful blue shaded cat;
+ Lord Humm is a splendid brown tabby; while Beauty Belle is an
+ exceedingly handsome white cat. Miss Johnstone takes great
+ pains with her cats, and is rewarded by having them rated
+ among the best in America.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the beautiful cats which have been sent from Chicago
+ to homes elsewhere are Teddy Roosevelt, a magnificent white,
+ sired by Mrs. W.E. Colburn's Paris, and belonging to Mrs. L.
+ Kemp, of Huron, S. Dak.; Silver Dick, a gorgeous buff and
+ white, whose grandmother was Mrs. Colburn's Caprice, and who
+ is owned by Mrs. Porter L. Evans, of East St. Louis; Toby, a
+ pure white with green eyes, owned by Mrs. Elbert W. Shirk, of
+ Indianapolis; and Amytis, a chinchilla belonging to Mrs. S.S.
+ Leach, of New London, sired by Mrs. Locke's Smerdis, and the
+ daughter of Rosalys II.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Cora Wallace, of East Brady, Pa., has Lord Ruffles, son
+ of the first Rosalys and The Beadle, formerly Bumble Bee.
+ Mrs. Fisk Greene, of Chicago, now owns a beautiful cat in
+ Bumble Bee, and another in Miss Merrylegs, a blue with golden
+ eyes, the daughter of Bumble Bee and Black Sapho. The Misses
+ Peacock, of Topeka, have a pair of whites called Prince Hilo
+ and Rosebud, the latter having blue eyes. Mrs. Frederick
+ Monroe, of Riverside, Ill., owns a remarkable specimen of a
+ genuine Russian cat, a perfect blue of extraordinary size.
+ Miss Elizabeth Knight, of Milwaukee, has a beautiful silver
+ tabby, Winifred, the daughter of Whychwood, Miss Kate Loraine
+ Gage's celebrated silver tabby, of Brewster, N.Y. The most
+ perfect "lavender blue" cat belongs to Miss Lucy E. Nichols,
+ of Waterbury, Ct., and is named Roscal. He has beautiful long
+ fur, with a splendid ruff and tail, and is a son of Rosalys
+ and The Beadle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Leland Norton has a number of magnificent cats. It was
+ she who adopted Miss Frances Willard's "Tootsie," the famous
+ cat which made two thousand dollars for the temperance cause.
+ Miss Nella B. Wheatley has very fine kennels, and raises some
+ beautiful cats. Her Taffy is a beautiful buff and white
+ Angora, which has been very much admired. Her cats have been
+ sold to go to many other cities. Speaking from her own
+ experience Miss Wheatley says, "Raising Angoras is one of the
+ most fascinating of employments, and I have found, when
+ properly taken care of, they are among the most beautiful,
+ strong, intelligent, and playful of all animals."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. W.E. Colburn is another very successful owner of cat
+ kennels. She has had some of the handsomest cats in this
+ country, among which are "Paris," a magnificent white cat
+ with blue eyes, and his mother, "Caprice," who has borne a
+ number of wonderfully fine pure white Angoras with the most
+ approved shade of blue eyes. Her cattery is known as the
+ "Calumet Kennel," and there is no better judge of cats in the
+ country than Mrs. Colburn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So much has been said of the cats which were "mascots" on the
+ ships during the Cuban War that it is hardly necessary to
+ speak of them. Tom, the mascot of the <i>Maine</i>, and
+ Christobal have been shown in several cities of the Union
+ since the war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most beautiful collection of brown tabbies is owned by
+ Mr. C.H. Jones, of Palmyra, N.Y., who has the "Crystal
+ Cattery." Crystal, the son of Mrs. E.M. Barker's "King
+ Humbert," is the champion brown tabby of America, and is a
+ magnificent creature, of excellent disposition and greatly
+ admired by cat fanciers everywhere. Mona Liza, his mate, and
+ Goozie and Bubbles make up as handsome a quartet of this
+ variety as one could wish to see. Goozie's tail is now over
+ twelve inches in circumference. Mr. Jones keeps about twenty
+ fine cats in stock all the time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most highly valued cat in America is Napoleon the Great,
+ whose owner has refused four thousand dollars for him. A
+ magnificent fellow he is too, with his bushy orange fur and
+ lionlike head. He is ten years old and weighs twenty-three
+ pounds, which is a remarkable weight in a male cat, only
+ gelded ones ordinarily running above fifteen pounds. Napoleon
+ was bred by a French nobleman, and was born at the Chateau
+ Fontainebleau, near Paris, in 1888. He is a pure French
+ Angora, which is shown by his long crinkly hair&#8212;so long
+ that it has to be frequently clipped to preserve the health
+ and comfort of the beautiful creature. This clipping is what
+ causes the uneven quality of fur which appears in his
+ picture. His mother was a famous cat, and his grandmother was
+ one of the grandest dams of France (no pun intended). The
+ latter lived to be nineteen years old, and consequently
+ Napoleon the Great is regarded by his owners as a mere youth.
+ He has taken first prizes and medals wherever he has been
+ exhibited, and at Boston, 1897, won the silver cup offered
+ for the best cat in the exhibition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another fine cat belonging to Mrs. Weed, is Marguerite,
+ mother of Le Noir, a beautiful black Angora, sired by
+ Napoleon the Great and owned by Mrs. Weed. Juno is Napoleon's
+ daughter, born in 1894, and is valued at fifteen hundred
+ dollars. When she was seven months old her owners refused two
+ hundred dollars for her. She is a tortoise-shell and white
+ French Angora, and a remarkably beautiful creature. All these
+ cats are great pets, and are allowed the freedom of the house
+ and barns, although when they run about the grounds there is
+ always a man in attendance. Six or seven thousand dollars'
+ worth of cats sporting on the lawn together is a rich sight,
+ but not altogether without risk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Fabius M. Clarke's "Persia," a beautiful dark
+ chinchilla, is one of the finest cats in this country. She
+ began her career by taking special and first prizes at
+ Fastmay's Cat Show in England, as the best long-haired
+ kitten. She also took the first prize as a kitten at
+ Lancashire, and at the National Cat Show in New York in 1895.
+ She was bred in England; sire, King of Uhn; dam, Brunette, of
+ pure imported Persian stock. Mrs. Clarke brought her home in
+ January, 1895, and she is still worshipped as a family pet at
+ her New York home. "Sylvio" was also brought over at the same
+ time. He was a beautiful long-haired male silver tabby, and
+ bred by Mrs. A.F. Gardner. Sylvio was sired by the famous
+ Topso of Dingley (owned by Miss Leake), famous as the best
+ long-haired tabby in England. Sylvio's mother was Mimidatzi,
+ whose pedigree is given in the previous chapter. "Mimi's"
+ sire was the champion Blue Boy the Great, whose mother was
+ Boots of Bridgeyate, whose pedigree is also given in the
+ extract from the stud book. Sylvio took a first prize at the
+ New York Show, 1895, but unfortunately was poisoned before he
+ was a year old. This seems the greater pity, because he had a
+ remarkably fine pedigree, and gave promise of being one of
+ the best cats America has yet seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Persia is a handsome specimen of the fine blue chinchilla
+ class. She is quiet, amiable, and shows her high breeding in
+ her good manners and intelligence. Her tail is like a fox's
+ brush, and her ruff gladdens the heart of every cat fancier
+ that beholds her. She is an aristocratic little creature, and
+ seems to feel that she comes of famous foreign ancestry. Mrs.
+ Clarke makes great pets of her beautiful cats, and trains
+ them to do many a cunning trick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another cat which has won several prizes, and took the silver
+ bowl offered for the best cat and litter of kittens in the
+ 1895 cat show of New York is Ellen Terry, a handsome orange
+ and white, exhibited by Mrs. Fabius M. Clarke. At that show
+ she had seven beautiful kittens, and they all reposed in a
+ dainty white and yellow basket with the mother, delighting
+ the hearts of all beholders. She now belongs to Mrs. Brian
+ Brown, of Brooklyn. She is a well-bred animal, with a pretty
+ face and fine feathering. One of the kittens who won the
+ silver bowl in 1895 took the second prize for long-haired
+ white female in New York, in March, 1896. She is a beautiful
+ creature, known as Princess Dinazarde, and belongs to Mrs.
+ James S.H. Umsted, of New York.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sylvia is still in Mrs. Clarke's possession, and is a
+ beautiful creature, dainty, refined, and very jealous of her
+ mistress's affection. Mrs. Clarke also owns a real Manx cat,
+ brought from the Isle of Man by Captain McKenzie. It acts
+ like a monkey, climbing up on mantels and throwing down
+ pictures and other small objects, in the regular monkey
+ spirit of mischief. It has many queer attributes, and hops
+ about like a rabbit. She also owns Sapho, who was bred by
+ Ella Wheeler Wilcox from her Madame Ref and Mr. Stevens's
+ Ajax, an uncommonly handsome white Angora.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sire of Topso and Sylvia was Musjah, owned by Mr.
+ Ferdinand Danton, a New York artist. He was a magnificent
+ creature, imported from Algiers in 1894; a pure blue Persian
+ of uncommon size and beautiful coloring. Musjah was valued at
+ two hundred dollars, but has been stolen from Mr. Danton.
+ Probably his present owner will not exhibit him at future cat
+ shows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ajax is one of the finest white Angoras in this country. His
+ owner, Mr. D.W. Stevens, of West-field, Mass., has refused
+ five hundred dollars for him, and would not consider one
+ thousand dollars as a fair exchange for the majestic
+ creature. He was born in 1893, and is valued, not only for
+ his fine points, but because he is a family pet, with a fine
+ disposition and uncommon intelligence. At the New York show
+ in 1895, and at several other shows, he has won first prizes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of his sons bids fair to be as fine a cat as Ajax. This
+ is Sampson, bred by Ella Wheeler Wilcox, from Madame Ref, and
+ owned by Mrs. Brian Brown. Mr. Stevens has a number of other
+ high-bred cats, one of whom is Raby, a reddish black female,
+ with a red ruff. Another is Lady, who is pure white; and then
+ there are Monkey and Midget, who are black and white Angoras.
+ All of these cats are kept in a pen, half of which is within
+ the barn, and the other half out of doors and enclosed by
+ wire netting. Ajax roams over the house at will, and the
+ others pass some of the time there, but the entire
+ collection, sometimes numbering twenty-five, is too valuable
+ to be given the freedom of all outdoors. Both Mr. and Mrs.
+ Stevens are very fond of cats, and have made a study of them
+ in sickness and health. Some years ago, a malicious raid was
+ made on the pen, and every cat poisoned with the exception of
+ Raby, whose life was saved only by frequent and generous
+ doses of skunk's oil and milk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the first New York show, Miss Ethel Nesmith Anderson's
+ Chico, an imported Persian, took the second prize, after
+ Ajax, in the pure white, longhaired class. The third prize
+ was won by Snow, another imported Angora, belonging to Mr.
+ George A. Rawson, of Newton, Mass. Snow had already taken a
+ prize at Crystal Palace. He is a magnificent animal. Mr.
+ Rawson owns a number of beautiful cats, which are the pride
+ of his family, and bring visitors from all parts of the
+ country. His orange-colored, long-haired Dandy won first
+ prizes at the Boston shows of 1896 and 1897 in the gelded
+ class. He is beautifully marked, and has a disposition as
+ "childlike and bland" as the most exacting owner could wish.
+ Miss Puff is also owned by Mr. Rawson, and presents him with
+ beautiful white Angora kittens every year. The group of ten
+ white kittens, raised by him in 1896, gives some idea of the
+ beauty of these kittens: although the picture was taken with
+ a high wind blowing in their faces, causing one white beauty
+ to conceal all marks of identification except an ear, and
+ another to hide completely behind his playmates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mustapha was entered by Dr. Huidekoper in the first New York
+ show, but not for competition. He was a magnificent brindled
+ Persian gelded cat, six years old, who enjoyed the plaudits
+ of the multitude just as well as though he had taken first
+ prize. He was very fond of his master, but very shy with
+ strangers when at home. He slept on the library desk, or a
+ cushion next his master's bed whenever he could be alone with
+ the doctor, but at other times preferred his own company or
+ that of the cook.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another cat that attracted a great deal of attention was
+ Master Pettet's Tommy, a white Persian, imported in 1889 and
+ valued at five hundred dollars, although no money
+ consideration could induce his owners to part with him. He
+ was brought from the interior of Persia, where he was
+ captured in a wild state. He was kept caged for over a year,
+ and would not be tamed; but at last he became domesticated,
+ and is now one of the dearest pets imaginable. His fur is
+ extremely long and soft, without a colored hair. His tail is
+ broad and carried proudly aloft, curling over toward his back
+ when walking. His face is full of intelligence: his ears
+ well-tipped and feathered, and his ruff a thing of beauty and
+ a joy forever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ King Max, a long-haired, black male, weighing thirteen pounds
+ at the age of one year, and valued at one thousand dollars,
+ took first prizes in Boston in January, 1897, '98, and '99.
+ He is owned by Mrs. E.R. Taylor, of Medford, Mass., and
+ attracts constant attention during shows. His fur is without
+ a single white hair and is a finger deep; his ruff encircles
+ his head like a great aureole. He is not only one of the most
+ beautiful cats I have ever seen, but one of the best-natured:
+ as his reputation for beauty spreads among visitors at the
+ show, everybody wants to see him, and he has no chance at all
+ for naps. Generally he is brought forward and taken from his
+ cage a hundred times a day; but not once does he show the
+ least sign of ill-temper, and even on the last day of the
+ show he keeps up a continual low purr of content and
+ happiness. Perhaps he knows how handsome he is.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grover B., the Mascotte, is a Philadelphia cat who took the
+ twenty-five dollar gold medal in 1895, at the New York show,
+ as the heaviest white cat exhibited. He belongs to Mr. and
+ Mrs. W.P. Buchanan, and weighs over twenty pounds. He is a
+ thoroughbred, and is valued at one thousand dollars, having
+ been brought from the Isle of Malta, and he wears a
+ one-hundred-dollar gold collar. He is a remarkable cat, noted
+ particularly for his intelligence and amiability. He is very
+ dainty in his choice of food, and prefers to eat his dinners
+ in his high chair at the table. He has a fascinating habit of
+ feeding himself with his paws. He is very talkative just
+ before meal-times, and is versed in all the feline arts of
+ making one's self understood. He waits at the front door for
+ his master every night, and will not leave him all the
+ evening. He sleeps in a bed of his own, snugly wrapped up in
+ blankets, and he is admired by all who know him, not more for
+ his beauty than for his excellent deportment. He furnishes
+ one more proof that a properly trained and well-cared-for cat
+ has a large amount of common sense and appreciation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Frances Hodgson Burnett's tiger cat Dick attracted a
+ great deal of attention at the first New York show. He weighs
+ twenty-two pounds and is three feet long, with a girth of
+ twenty-four inches; and he has attained some degree of
+ prominence in her writings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A trio of cats that were a centre of attraction at that first
+ show belonged to Colonel Mann, of <i>Town Topics</i>. They
+ were jet black, and rejoiced in the names of Taffy, The
+ Laird, and Little Billee. They took a first prize, but two of
+ them have since come to an untimely end. Colonel Mann is a
+ devoted lover of animals, and has given a standing order that
+ none of his employees shall, if they see a starving kitten on
+ the street, leave it to suffer and die. Accordingly his
+ office is a sort of refuge for unfortunate cats, and one may
+ always see a number of happy-looking creatures there, who
+ seem to appreciate the kindness which surrounds them. The
+ office is in a fifth story overlooking Fifth Avenue: and the
+ cats used to crawl out on the wide window-ledge in
+ summer-time and enjoy the air and the view of Madison Square.
+ But alas! The Laird and Little Billee came to their deaths by
+ jumping from their high perch after sparrows and falling to
+ the pavement below. Now there is a strong wire grating across
+ the windows, and Taffy, a monstrous, shiny black fellow, is
+ the leader in the "<i>Town Topics</i> Colony."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. H.L. Hammond, of Killingly, Ct., makes a speciality of
+ the rare Australian cats, and has taken numerous prizes with
+ them at every cat show in this country, where they are
+ universally admired. His Columbia is valued at six hundred
+ dollars, and his Tricksey at five hundred dollars. They are,
+ indeed, beautiful creatures, though somewhat unique in the
+ cat world, as we see it. They are very sleek cats, with fur
+ so short, glossy, and fine that it looks like the finest
+ satin. Their heads are small and narrow, with noses that seem
+ pointed when compared with other cats. They are very
+ intelligent and affectionate little creatures, and make the
+ loveliest of pets. Dr. and Mrs. Hammond are extremely fond of
+ their unusual and valuable cat family,&#8212;and tell the
+ most interesting tales of their antics and habits. His
+ Columbia was an imported cat, and the doctor has reason to
+ believe that she with her mate are originally from the
+ Siamese cat imported from Siam to Australia. They are all
+ very delicate as kittens, the mother rarely having more than
+ one at a time. With two exceptions, these cats have never had
+ more than two kittens at a litter. They are very partial to
+ heat, but cannot stand cold weather. They have spells of
+ sleeping when nothing has power to disturb them, but when
+ they do wake up they have a "high time," running and playing.
+ They are affectionate, being very fond of their owner, but
+ rather shy with strangers. They are uncommonly intelligent,
+ too, and are very teachable when young. They are such
+ beautiful creatures, besides being rare in this part of the
+ world, that it is altogether probable that they will be much
+ sought after as pets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH9"><!-- CH9 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ CONCERNING CATS IN POETRY
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ As far back as the ninth century, a poem on a cat was
+ written, which has come down to us from the Arabic. Its
+ author was Ibn Alalaf Alnaharwany, of Bagdad, who died in 318
+ A.H. or A.D. 930. He was one of the better known poets of the
+ khalifate, and his work may still be found in the original.
+ The following verses, which were translated by Dr. Carlyle,
+ are confessedly a paraphrase rather than a strict
+ translation; but, of course, the sense is the same.
+ Commentators differ on the question as to whether the poet
+ really meant anything more in this poem than to sing of the
+ death of a pet, and some have tried to ascribe to it a hidden
+ meaning which implies beautiful slaves, lovers, and
+ assignations; just as the wise Browning student discovers
+ meanings in that great poet's works of which he never
+ dreamed. Nevertheless, we who love cats are fain to believe
+ that this follower of Mahomet meant only to celebrate the
+ merits&#8212;perhaps it would hardly do to call them
+ virtues&#8212;of his beloved cat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lines are inscribed,&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ ON A CAT
+ </h3>
+ <center>
+ THAT WAS KILLED AS SHE WAS ATTEMPTING TO ROB A DOVE-HOUSE<br>
+ BY IBN ALALAF ALNAHARWANY
+ </center>
+ <pre>
+ Poor Puss is gone!&#8212;'tis Fate's decree&#8212;
+ Yet I must still her loss deplore;
+ For dearer than a child was she,
+ And ne'er shall I behold her more!
+
+ With many a sad, presaging tear,
+ This morn I saw her steal away,
+ While she went on without a fear,
+ Except that she should miss her prey.
+
+ I saw her to the dove-house climb,
+ With cautious feet and slow she stept,
+ Resolved to balance loss of time
+ By eating faster than she crept.
+
+ Her subtle foes were on the watch,
+ And marked her course, with fury fraught;
+ And while she hoped the birds to catch,
+ An arrow's point the huntress caught.
+
+ In fancy she had got them all,
+ And drunk their blood and sucked their breath;
+ Alas! she only got a fall,
+ And only drank the draught of death.
+
+ Why, why was pigeon's flesh so nice,
+ That thoughtless cats should love it thus?
+ Hadst thou but lived on rats and mice,
+ Thou hadst been living still, poor Puss!
+
+ Cursed be the taste, howe'er refined,
+ That prompts us for such joys to wish;
+ And cursed the dainty where we find
+ Destruction lurking in the dish.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Among the poets, Pussy has always found plenty of friends.
+ Her feline grace and softness has inspired some of the
+ greatest, and, from Tasso and Petrarch down, her quiet and
+ dignified demeanor have been celebrated in verse. Mr.
+ Swinburne, within a few years, has written a charming poem
+ which was published in the <i>Athenaeum</i>, and which places
+ the writer among the select inner circle of true cat-lovers.
+ He calls his verses&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ TO A CAT
+ </h3>
+ <pre>
+ Stately, kindly, lordly friend,
+ Condescend
+ Here to sit by me, and turn
+ Glorious eyes that smile and burn,
+ Golden eyes, love's lustrous meed,
+ On the golden page I read.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Dogs may fawn on all and some
+ As they come:
+ You a friend of loftier mind,
+ Answer friends alone in kind.
+ Just your foot upon my hand
+ Softly bids it understand.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Thomas Gray's poem on the death of Robert Walpole's cat,
+ which was drowned in a bowl of goldfish, was greatly prized
+ by the latter; after the death of the poet the bowl was
+ placed on a pedestal at Strawberry Hill, with a few lines
+ from the poem as an inscription. In a letter dated March 1,
+ 1747, accompanying it, Mr. Gray says:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As one ought to be particularly careful to avoid blunders in
+ a compliment of condolence, it would be a sensible
+ satisfaction to me (before I testify my sorrow and the
+ sincere part I take in your misfortune) to know for certain
+ who it is I lament. [Note the 'Who.'] I knew Zara and Selima
+ (Selima was it, or Fatima?), or rather I knew them both
+ together, for I cannot justly say which was which. Then, as
+ to your handsome cat, the name you distinguish her by, I am
+ no less at a loss, as well knowing one's handsome cat is
+ always the cat one likes best; or if one be alive and the
+ other dead, it is usually the latter that is the handsomest.
+ Besides, if the point were never so clear, I hope you do not
+ think me so ill bred or so imprudent as to forfeit all my
+ interest in the survivor. Oh, no; I would rather seem to
+ mistake and imagine, to be sure, it must be the tabby one
+ that had met with this sad accident. Till this affair is a
+ little better determined, you will excuse me if I do not cry,
+ 'Tempus inane peto, requiem, spatiumque doloris.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He closes the letter by saying, "There's a poem for you; it
+ is rather too long for an epitaph." And then the
+ familiar&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <pre>
+ "'Twas on a lofty vase's side,
+ Where China's gayest art had dy'd
+ The azure flowers that blow:
+ Demurest of the tabby kind,
+ The pensive Selima, reclined,
+ Gazed on the lake below."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Wordsworth's "Kitten and the Falling Leaves," is in the high,
+ moralizing style.
+ </p>
+ <pre>
+ "That way look, my Infant, lo!
+ What a pretty baby show.
+ See the kitten on the wall,
+ Sporting with the leaves that fall,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "But the kitten, how she starts,
+ Crouches, stretches, paws, and darts
+ First at one and then its fellow,
+ Just as light and just as yellow:
+ There are many now&#8212;now one,
+ Now they stop, and there are none.
+ What intentness of desire
+ In her upward eye of fire!
+ With a tiger-leap halfway
+ Now she meets the coming prey,
+ Lets it go as fast, and then
+ Has it in her power again:
+ Now she works with three or four.
+ Like an Indian conjuror:
+ Quick as he in feats of art,
+ Far beyond in joy of heart.
+ Were her antics played in the eye
+ Of a thousand standers-by,
+ Clapping hands with shout and stare,
+ What would little Tabby care
+ For the plaudits of the crowd?
+ Over happy to be proud,
+ Over wealthy in the treasure
+ Of her own exceeding pleasure.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Pleased by any random toy:
+ By a kitten's busy joy,
+ Or an infant's laughing eye
+ Sharing in the ecstacy:
+ I would fain like that or this
+ Find my wisdom in my bliss:
+ Keep the sprightly soul awake,
+ And have faculties to take,
+ Even from things by sorrow wrought,
+ Matter for a jocund thought,
+ Spite of care and spite of grief,
+ To gambol with life's falling leaf."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Cowper's love for animals was well known. At one time,
+ according to Lady Hesketh, he had besides two dogs, two
+ goldfinches, and two canaries, five rabbits, three hares, two
+ guinea-pigs, a squirrel, a magpie, a jay, and a starling. In
+ addition he had, at least, one cat, for Lady Hesketh says,
+ "One evening the cat giving one of the hares a sound box on
+ the ear, the hare ran after her, and having caught her,
+ punished her by drumming on her back with her two feet hard
+ as drumsticks, till the creature would actually have been
+ killed had not Mrs. Unwin rescued her." It might have been
+ this very cat that was the inspiration of Cowper's poem, "To
+ a Retired Cat," which had as a moral the familiar
+ stanza:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <pre>
+ "Beware of too sublime a sense
+ Of your own worth and consequence:
+ The man who dreams himself so great
+ And his importance of such weight,
+ That all around, in all that's done,
+ Must move and act for him alone,
+ Will learn in school of tribulation
+ The folly of his expectation."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Baudelaire wrote:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <pre>
+ "Come, beauty, rest upon my loving heart,
+ But cease thy paws' sharp-nailed play,
+ And let me peer into those eyes that dart
+ Mixed agate and metallic ray."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Grave scholars and mad lovers all admire
+ And love, and each alike, at his full tide
+ Those suave and puissant cats, the fireside's pride,
+ Who like the sedentary life and glow of fire."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Goldsmith also wrote of the kitten:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <pre>
+ "Around in sympathetic mirth
+ Its tricks the kitten tries:
+ The cricket chirrups in the hearth,
+ The crackling fagot flies."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Does this not suggest a charming glimpse of the poet's
+ English home?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Keats was evidently not acquainted with the best and sleekest
+ pet cat, and his "Sonnet to a Cat" does not indicate that he
+ fully appreciated their higher qualities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Whittier, our good Quaker poet, while not attempting an
+ elaborate sonnet or stilted elegiac, shows a most
+ appreciative spirit in the lines he wrote for a little girl
+ who asked him one day, with tears in her eyes, to write an
+ epitaph for her lost Bathsheba.
+ </p>
+ <pre>
+ "Bathsheba: To whom none ever said scat,
+ No worthier cat
+ Ever sat on a mat
+ Or caught a rat:
+<i>Requies-cat</i>."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Clinton Scollard, however, has given us an epitaph that many
+ sympathizing admirers would gladly inscribe on the tombstones
+ of their lost pets, if it were only the popular fashion to
+ put tombstones over their graves. This is Mr. Scollard's
+ tribute, the best ever written:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ GRIMALKIN
+ </h3>
+ <center>
+ AN ELEGY ON PETER, AGED TWELVE
+ </center>
+ <pre>
+ In vain the kindly call: in vain
+ The plate for which thou once wast fain
+ At morn and noon and daylight's wane,
+ O King of mousers.
+ No more I hear thee purr and purr
+ As in the frolic days that were,
+ When thou didst rub thy velvet fur
+ Against my trousers.
+
+ How empty are the places where
+ Thou erst wert frankly debonair,
+ Nor dreamed a dream of feline care,
+ A capering kitten.
+ The sunny haunts where, grown a cat,
+ You pondered this, considered that,
+ The cushioned chair, the rug, the mat,
+ By firelight smitten.
+
+ Although of few thou stoodst in dread,
+ How well thou knew a friendly tread,
+ And what upon thy back and head
+ The stroking hand meant.
+ A passing scent could keenly wake
+ Thy eagerness for chop or steak,
+ Yet, Puss, how rarely didst thou break
+ The eighth commandment.
+
+ Though brief thy life, a little span
+ Of days compared with that of man,
+ The time allotted to thee ran
+ In smoother metre.
+ Now with the warm earth o'er thy breast,
+ O wisest of thy kind and best,
+ Forever mayst thou softly rest,
+<i>In pace</i>, Peter.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ One only has to read this poem to feel that Mr. Scollard knew
+ what it is to love a gentle, intelligent, affectionate
+ cat&#8212;made so by kind treatment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Fran&ccedil;ois Copp&eacute;e the cat is as sacred as it
+ was to the Egyptians of old. The society of his feline pets
+ is to him ever delightful and consoling, and it may have
+ inspired him to write some of his most melodious verses.
+ Nevertheless he is not the cat's poet. It was Charles Cros
+ who wrote:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <pre>
+ "Chatte blanche, chatte sans tache,
+ Je te demande dans ces vers
+ Quel secret dort dans tes yeux verts,
+ Quel sarcasme sous ta moustache?"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Here is a version in verse of the famous "Kilkenny
+ Cats":&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <pre>
+ "O'Flynn, she was an Irishman, as very well was known,
+ And she lived down in Kilkenny, and she lived there all alone,
+ With only six great large tom-cats that knowed their ways about;
+ And everybody else besides she scrupulously shut out."
+
+ "Oh, very fond of cats was she, and whiskey, too, 'tis said,
+ She didn't feed 'em very much, but she combed 'em well instead:
+ As may be guessed, these large tom-cats did not get very sleek
+ Upon a combing once a day and a 'haporth' once a week.
+
+ "Now, on one dreary winter's night O'Flynn she went to bed
+ With a whiskey bottle under her arm, the whiskey in her head.
+ The six great large tom-cats they all sat in a dismal row,
+ And horridly glared their hazy eyes, their tails wagged to and fro.
+
+ "At last one grim graymalkin spoke, in accents dire to tell,
+ And dreadful were the words which in his horrid whisper fell:
+ And all the six large tom-cats in answer loud did squall,
+ 'Let's kill her, and let's eat her, body, bones, and all.'
+
+ "Oh, horrible! Oh, terrible! Oh, deadly tale to tell!
+ When the sun shone through the window-hole all seemed still and well:
+ The cats they sat and licked their paws all in a merry ring.
+ But nothing else in all the house looked like a living thing.
+
+ "Anon they quarrelled savagely&#8212;they spit, they swore, they hollered:
+ At last these six great large tom-cats they one another swallered:
+ And naught but one long tail was left in that once peaceful dwelling,
+ And a very tough one, too, it was&#8212;it's the same that I've been telling."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ By far more artistic is the version for which I am indebted
+ to Miss Katharine Eleanor Conway, herself a poet of high
+ order and a lover of cats.
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ THE KILKENNY CATS
+ </h3>
+ <pre>
+ There wanst was two cats in Kilkenny,
+ Aitch thought there was one cat too many;
+ So they quarrelled and fit,
+ They scratched and they bit,
+ Till, excepting their nails,
+ And the tips of their tails,
+ Instead of two cats, there wasn't any.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This version comes from Ireland, and is doubtless the correct
+ original.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Note," says Miss Conway, "the more than Greek delicacy with
+ which the tragedy is told. No mutilation, no gore; just an
+ effacement&#8212;prompt and absolute&#8212;'there wasn't
+ any.' It would be hard to overpraise that fine touch."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH10"><!-- CH10 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ CONCERNING CAT ARTISTS
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ While thousands of artists, first and last, have undertaken
+ to paint cats, there are but few who have been able to do
+ them justice. Artists who have possessed the technical skill
+ requisite to such delicate work have rarely been willing to
+ give to what they have regarded as unimportant subjects the
+ necessary study; and those who have been willing to study
+ cats seriously have possessed but seldom the skill requisite
+ to paint them well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thomas Janvier, whose judgment on such matters is
+ unquestioned, declares that not a dozen have succeeded in
+ painting thoroughly good cat portraits, portraits so true to
+ nature as to satisfy&#8212;if they could express their
+ feelings in the premises&#8212;the cat subjects and their cat
+ friends. Only four painters, he says, ever painted cats
+ habitually and always well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two members of this small but highly distinguished company
+ flourished about a century ago in widely separated parts of
+ the world, and without either of them knowing that the other
+ existed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One was a Japanese artist, named Ho-Kou-Say, whose method of
+ painting, of course, was quite unlike that to which we are
+ accustomed in this western part of the world, but who had a
+ wonderful faculty for making his queer little cat figures
+ seem intensely alive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other was a Swiss artist, named Gottfried Mind, whose cat
+ pictures are so perfect in their way that he came to be
+ honorably known as "the Cat Raphael."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other two members of the cat quartet are the French
+ artist, Monsieur Louis Eugene Lambert, whose pictures are
+ almost as well known in this country as they are in France;
+ and the Dutch artist, Madame Henriette Ronner, whose
+ delightful cat pictures are known even better, as she catches
+ the softer and sweeter graces of the cat more truly than
+ Lambert.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A thoroughly good picture of a cat is hard to paint, from a
+ technical standpoint, because the artist must represent not
+ only the soft surface of fur, but the underlying hard lines
+ of muscle: and his studies must be made under conditions of
+ cat perversity which are at times quite enough to drive him
+ wild. If he is to represent the cat in repose, he must wait
+ for her to take that position of her own accord; and then,
+ just as his sketch is well under way, she is liable to rise,
+ stretch herself, and walk off. If his picture is to represent
+ action, he must wait for the cat to do what he wants her to
+ do, and that many times before he can be quite sure that his
+ drawing is correct. With these severe limitations upon cat
+ painting, it is not surprising that very few good pictures of
+ cats have been painted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gottfried Mind has left innumerable pen sketches to prove his
+ intimate knowledge of the beauty and charm of the cat. He was
+ born at Berne in 1768. He had a special taste for drawing
+ animals even when very young, bears and cats being his
+ favorite subjects. As he grew older he obtained a wonderful
+ proficiency, and his cat pictures appeared with every variety
+ of expression. Their silky coats, their graceful attitudes,
+ their firm shape beneath the undulating fur, were treated so
+ as to make Mind's cats seem alive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was Madame Lebrun who named him the "Raphael of Cats," and
+ many a royal personage bought his pictures. He, like most cat
+ painters, kept his cats constantly with him, knowing that
+ only by persistent and never tiring study could he ever hope
+ to master their infinite variety. His favorite mother cat
+ kept closely at his side when he worked, or perhaps in his
+ lap; while her kittens ran over him as fearlessly as they
+ played with their mother's tail. When a terrible epidemic
+ broke out among the cats of Berne in 1809, he hid his Minette
+ safely from the police, but he never quite recovered from the
+ horror of the massacre of the eight hundred that had to be
+ sacrificed for the general safety of the people. He died in
+ 1814, and in poverty, although a few years afterward his
+ pictures brought extravagant prices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burbank, the English painter, has done some good things in
+ cat pictures. The expression of the face and the peculiar
+ light in the cat's eye made up the realism of Burbank's
+ pictures, which were reproductions of sleek and handsome
+ drawing-room pets, whose shining coats he brings out with
+ remarkable precision.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ill-fated Swiss artist Cornelius Wisscher's marvellous
+ tom-cat has become typical.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Delacroix, the painter of tigers, was a man of highly nervous
+ temperament, but his cat sketches bring out too strongly the
+ tigerish element to be altogether successful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Louis Eugene Lambert was a pupil of Delacroix. He was born in
+ Paris, September 25, 1825, and the chief event of his youth
+ was, perhaps, the great friendship which existed between him
+ and Maurice Sands. Entomology was a fad with him for a time,
+ but he finally took up his serious life-work in 1854, when he
+ began illustrating for the <i>Journal of Agriculture</i>. In
+ connection with his work, he began to study animals
+ carefully, making dogs his specialty. In 1862 he illustrated
+ an edition of La Fontaine, and in 1865 he obtained his first
+ medal for a painting of dogs. In 1866 his painting of cats,
+ "L'Horloge qui avance," won another medal, and brought his
+ first fame as a cat painter. In 1874 he was made a Chevalier
+ of the Legion of Honor. His "Envoi" in 1874, "Les Chats du
+ Cardinal," and "Grandeur Decline" brought more medals.
+ Although he has painted hosts of excellent dog pictures, cats
+ are his favorites, on account, as he says, of "les formes
+ fines et gracieux; mouvements, souple et subtil."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Luxembourg Gallery, Mr. Lambert's "Family of Cats" is
+ considered one of the finest cat pictures in the world. In
+ this painting the mother sits upon a table watching the
+ antics of her four frivolous kittens. There is a wonderful
+ smoothness of touch and refinement of treatment that have
+ never yet been excelled. "After the Banquet" is another
+ excellent example of the same smoothness of execution, with
+ fulness of action instead of repose. And yet there is an
+ undeniable lack of the softer attributes which should be
+ evident in the faces of the group.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is here that Madame Ronner excels all other cat painters,
+ living or dead. She not only infuses a wonderful degree of
+ life into her little figures, but reproduces the shades of
+ expression, shifting and variable as the sands of the sea, as
+ no other artist of the brush has done. Asleep or awake, her
+ cats look exactly to the "felinarian" like cats with whom he
+ or she is familiar. Curiosity, drowsiness, indifference,
+ alertness, love, hate, anxiety, temper, innocence, cunning,
+ fear, confidence, mischief, earnestness, dignity,
+ helplessness,&#8212;they are all in Madame Ronner's cats'
+ faces, just as we see them in our own cats.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame Ronner is the daughter of Josephus Augustus Knip, a
+ landscape painter of some celebrity sixty years ago, and from
+ her father she received her first art education. She is now
+ over seventy years old, and for nearly fifty years has made
+ her home in Brussels. There, she and her happy cats, a big
+ black Newfoundland dog named Priam, with a pert cockatoo
+ named Coco, dwell together in a roomy house in its own
+ grounds, back a little from the Charleroi Road. Madame Ronner
+ has a good son to care for her, and she loves the animals,
+ who are both her servants and her friends. Every day she
+ spends three good hours of the morning in her studio,
+ painting her delightful cat pictures with the energy of a
+ young artist and the expert precision which we know so well.
+ She was sixteen when she succeeded in painting a picture
+ which was accepted and sold at a public exhibition at
+ Dusseldorf. This was a study of a cat seated in a window and
+ examining with great curiosity a bumblebee; while it would
+ not compare with her later work, there must have been good
+ quality in it, or it would not have got into a Dusseldorf
+ picture exhibition at all. At any rate, it was the beginning
+ of her successful career as an artist. From that time she
+ managed to support herself and her father by painting
+ pictures of animals. For many years, however, she confined
+ herself to painting dogs. Her most famous picture, "The
+ Friend of Man," belongs to this period&#8212;a pathetic group
+ composed of a sorrowing old sand-seller looking down upon a
+ dying dog still harnessed to the little sand-wagon, with the
+ two other dogs standing by with wistful looks of sympathy.
+ When this picture was exhibited, in 1860, Madame Ronner's
+ fame was established permanently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it so happened that in the same year a friendly kitten
+ came to live in her home, wandering in through the open
+ doorway from no one knew where, and deciding, after sniffing
+ about the place in cat fashion, to remain there for the
+ remainder of its days. And it also happened that Madame
+ Ronner was lured by this small stranger, who so coolly
+ quartered himself upon her, to change the whole current of
+ her artistic life, and to paint cats instead of dogs. Of
+ course, this change could not be made in a moment; but after
+ that the pictures which she painted to please herself were
+ cat pictures, and as these were exhibited and her reputation
+ as a cat painter became established, cat orders took the
+ place of dog orders more and more, until at last her time was
+ given wholly to cat painting. Her success in painting cat
+ action has been due as much to her tireless patience as to
+ her skill; a patience that gave her strength to spend hours
+ upon hours in carefully watching the quick movements of the
+ lithe little creatures, and in correcting again and again her
+ rapidly made sketches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every cat-lover knows that a cat cannot be induced, either by
+ reason or by affection, to act in accordance with any wishes
+ save its own. Also that cats find malicious amusement in
+ doing what they know they are not wanted to do, and that with
+ an affectation of innocence that materially aggravates their
+ deliberate offence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Madame Ronner, through her long experience, has evolved a
+ way to get them to pose as models. Her plan is the simple one
+ of keeping her models prisoners in a glass box, enclosed in a
+ wire cage, while she is painting them. Inside the prison she
+ cannot always command their actions, but her knowledge of cat
+ character enables her to a certain extent to persuade them to
+ take the pose which she requires. By placing a comfortable
+ cushion in the cage she can tempt her model to lie down; some
+ object of great interest, like a live mouse, for instance,
+ exhibited just outside the cage is sure to create the eager
+ look that she has shown so well on cat faces; and to induce
+ her kittens to indulge in the leaps and bounds which she has
+ succeeded so wonderfully in transferring to canvas, she keeps
+ hanging from the top of the cage a most seductive "bob."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame Ronner's favorite models are "Jem" and "Monmouth,"
+ cats of rare sweetness of temper, whose conduct in all
+ relations of life is above reproach. The name of "Monmouth,"
+ as many will recall, was made famous by the hero of Monsieur
+ La Bedolierre's classic, "Mother Michel and her Cat,"
+ [Footnote: Translated into English by Thomas Bailey Aldrich.]
+ and therefore has clustering about it traditions so glorious
+ that its wearers in modern times must be upheld always by
+ lofty hopes and high resolves. Doubtless Monmouth Ronner
+ feels the responsibility entailed upon him by his name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the European galleries are several noted paintings in
+ which the cat appears more or less unsuccessfully. Breughel
+ and Teniers made their grotesque "Cat Concerts" famous, but
+ one can scarcely see why, since the drawing is poor and there
+ is no real insight into cat character evident. The sleeping
+ cat, in Breughel's "Paradise Lost" in the Louvre, is better,
+ being well drawn, but so small as to leave no chance for
+ expression. Lebrun's "Sleep of the Infant Jesus," in the
+ Louvre, has a slumbering cat under the stove, and in
+ Barocci's "La Madonna del Gatto" the cat is the centre of
+ interest. Holman Hunt's "The Awakening Conscience" and
+ Murillo's Holy Family "del Pajarito" give the cat as a type
+ of cruelty, but have failed egregiously in accuracy of form
+ or expression. Paul Veronese's cat in "The Marriage at Cana"
+ is fearfully and wonderfully made, and even Rembrandt failed
+ when he tried to introduce a cat into his pictures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rosa Bonheur has been wise enough not to attempt cat
+ pictures, knowing that special study, for which she had not
+ the time or the inclination, is necessary to fit an artist to
+ excel with the feline character. Landseer, too, after trying
+ twice, once in 1819 with "The Cat Disturbed" and once in 1824
+ with "The Cat's Paw," gave up all attempts at dealing with
+ Grimalkin. Indeed, most artists who have attempted it, have
+ found that to be a wholly successful cat artist such
+ whole-hearted devotion to the subject as Madame Ronner's is
+ the invariable price of distinction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of late, however, more artists are found who are willing to
+ pay this price, who are giving time and study not only to the
+ subtle shadings of the delicate fur, but to the varying
+ facial expression and sinuous movements of the cat. Margaret
+ Stocks, of Munich, for example, is rapidly coming to the
+ front as a cat painter, and some predict for her (she is
+ still a young woman) a future equal to Madame Ronner's.
+ Gambier Bolton's "Day Dreams" shows admirably the quality and
+ "tumbled-ness" of an Angora kitten's fur, while the
+ expression and drawing are equally good. Miss Cecilia Beaux's
+ "Brighton Cats" is famous, and every student of cats
+ recognizes its truthfulness at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Angora and Persian kittens find another loving and faithful
+ student in J. Adam, whose paintings have been photographed
+ and reproduced in this country times without number. "Puss in
+ Boots" is another foreign picture which has been photographed
+ and sold extensively in this country. "Little Milksop" by the
+ same artist, Mr. Frank Paton, gives fairly faithful drawing
+ and expression of two kittens who have broken a milk pitcher
+ and are eagerly lapping up the contents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Munich Gallery there is a painting by Claus Meyer,
+ "Bose Zungen," which has become quite noted. His three old
+ cats and three young cats show three gossiping old crones by
+ the side of whom are three small and awkward kittens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, there are no artists whose painting of the cat is
+ to be compared with Madame Ronner's. Mr. J.L. Dolph, of New
+ York City, has painted hundreds of cat pieces which have
+ found a ready sale, and Mr. Sid L. Brackett, of Boston, is
+ doing very creditable work. A successful cat painter of the
+ younger school is Mr. N.N. Bickford, of New York, whose
+ "Peek-a-Boo" hangs in a Chicago gallery side by side with
+ cats of Madame Ronner and Monsieur Lambert. "Miss Kitty's
+ Birthday" shows that he has genuine understanding of cat
+ character, and is mastering the subtleties of long white fur.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Bickford is a pupil of Jules Lef&egrave;bvre Boulanger
+ and Miralles. It was by chance that he became a painter of
+ cats. Mademoiselle Marie Engle, the prima-donna, owned a
+ beautiful white Angora cat which she prized very highly, and
+ as her engagements abroad compelled her to part with the cat
+ for a short time, she left Mizzi with the artist until her
+ return. One day Mr. Bickford thought he would try painting
+ the white, silken fur of Mizzi: the result not only surprised
+ him but also his artist friends, who said, "Lambert himself
+ could not have done better."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon Miss Engle's return, seeing what an inspiration her cat
+ had been, she gave her to Mr. Bickford, and it is needless to
+ add that he has become deeply attached to his beautiful
+ model. Mizzi is a pure white Angora, with beautiful blue
+ eyes, and silky fur. She won first prize at the National Cat
+ Show of 1895, but no longer attends cat shows, on account of
+ her engagements as professional model.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ben Austrian, who has made a success in painting other
+ animals, has done a cat picture of considerable merit. The
+ subject was Tix, a beautiful tiger-gray, belonging to Mr.
+ Mahlon W. Newton, of Philadelphia. The cat is noted, not only
+ in Philadelphia, but among travelling men, as he resides at a
+ hotel, and is quite a prominent member of the office force.
+ He weighs fifteen pounds and is of a very affectionate
+ nature, following his master to the park and about the
+ establishment like a dog. During the day he lives in the
+ office, lying on the counter or the key-rack, but at night he
+ retires with his master at eleven or twelve o'clock, sleeping
+ in his own basket in the bathroom, and waking his master
+ promptly at seven every morning. Tix's picture hangs in the
+ office of his hotel, and is becoming as famous as the cat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Elizabeth Bonsall is a young American artist who has
+ exhibited some good cat pictures, and whose work promises to
+ make her famous some day, if she does not "weary in
+ well-doing"; and Mr. Jean Paul Selinger's "Kittens" are quite
+ well known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The good cat illustrator is even more rare than the cat
+ painters. Thousands of readers recall those wonderfully
+ lifelike cats and kittens which were a feature of the <i>St.
+ Nicholas</i> a few years ago, accompanied by "nonsense
+ rhymes" or "jingles." They were the work of Joseph G.
+ Francis, of Brookline, Mass., and brought him no little fame.
+ He was, and is still, a broker on State Street, Boston, and
+ in his busy life these inimitable cat sketches were but an
+ incident. Mr. Francis is a devoted admirer of all cats, and
+ had for many years loved and studied one cat in particular.
+ It was by accident that he discovered his own possibilities
+ in the line of cat drawing, as he began making little
+ pen-and-ink sketches for his own amusement and then for that
+ of his friends. The latter persuaded him to send some of
+ these drawings to the <i>St. Nicholas</i> and the
+ <i>Wide-Awake</i> magazines, and, rather to his surprise,
+ they were promptly accepted, and the "Francis cats" became
+ famous. Mr. Francis does but little artistic work, nowadays,
+ more important business keeping him well occupied; besides,
+ he says, he "is not in the mood for it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who does not know Louis Wain's cats?&#8212;that prince of
+ English illustrators. Mr. Wain's home, when not in London, is
+ at Bendigo Lodge, Westgate, Kent. He began his artistic
+ career at nineteen, after a training in the best London
+ schools. He was not a hard worker over his books, but his
+ fondness for nature led him to an artist's career. American
+ Indian stories were his delight, and accounts of the
+ wandering outdoor life of our aborigines were instrumental in
+ developing his powers of observation regarding the details of
+ nature. Always fond of dumb animals, he began life by making
+ sketches for sporting papers at agricultural shows all over
+ England. It was his own cat "Peter" who first suggested to
+ Louis Wain the fanciful cat creations which have made his
+ name famous. Watching Peter's antics one evening, he was
+ tempted to do a small study of kittens, which was promptly
+ accepted by a magazine editor in London. Then he trained
+ Peter to become a model and the starting-point of his
+ success. Peter has done more to wipe out of England the
+ contempt in which the cat was formerly held there, than any
+ other feline in the world. He has done his race a service in
+ raising their status from neglected, forlorn creatures on the
+ one hand, or the pampered, overfed object of old maids'
+ affections on the other, to a dignified place in the English
+ house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The double-page picture of the "Cat's Christmas Dance" in the
+ <i>London Illustrated News</i> of December 6, 1890, contains
+ a hundred and fifty cats, with as many varying facial
+ expressions and attitudes. It occupied eleven working days of
+ Mr. Wain's time, but it caught the public fancy and made a
+ tremendous hit all over the world. Louis Wain's cats
+ immediately became famous, and he has had more orders than he
+ can fill ever since. He works eight hours a day, and then
+ lays aside his brush to study physical science, or write a
+ humorous story. He has written and illustrated a comic book,
+ and spent a great deal of time over a more serious one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the best known of his cat pictures, after the
+ "Christmas Party," is his "Cats' Rights Meeting," which not
+ even the most ardent suffragist can study without laughter.
+ From a desk an ardent tabby is expounding, loud and long, on
+ the rights of her kind. In front of her is a double row of
+ felines, sitting with folded arms, and listening with
+ absorbed attention. The expressions of these cats' faces,
+ some ardent, some indignant, some placid, but all interested,
+ form a ridiculous contrast to a row of "Toms" in the rear,
+ who evidently disagree with the lecturer, and are prepared to
+ hiss at her more "advanced" ideas. "Returning Thanks" is
+ nearly as amusing, with its thirteen cats seated at table
+ over their wine, while one offers thanks, and the remainder
+ wear varying expressions of devotion, indifference, or
+ irreverence. "Bringing Home the Yule Log" gives twenty-one
+ cats, and as many individual expressions of joy or
+ discomfort; and the "Snowball Match" shows a scene almost as
+ hilarious as the "Christmas Dance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Wain believes there is a great future for black and white
+ work if a man is careful to keep abreast of the times. "A man
+ should first of all create his public and draw upon his own
+ fund of originality to sustain it," he says, "taking care not
+ to pander to the degenerate tendencies which would prevent
+ his work from elevating the finer instincts of the people."
+ Says a recent visitor to the Wain household: "I wonder if
+ Peter realizes that he has done more good than most human
+ beings, who are endowed not only with sense but with brains?
+ if in the firelight, he sees the faces of many a suffering
+ child whose hours of pain have been shortened by the recital
+ of his tricks, and the pictures of himself arrayed in white
+ cravat, or gayly disporting himself on a 'see-saw'? I feel
+ inclined to wake him up, and whisper how, one cold winter's
+ night, I met a party of five little children, hatless and
+ bootless, hurrying along an East-end slum, and saying
+ encouragingly to the youngest, who was crying with cold and
+ hunger, 'Come along: we'll get there soon.' I followed them
+ down the lighted street till they paused in front of a
+ barber's shop, and I heard their voices change to a shout of
+ merriment: for in the window was a crumpled Christmas
+ supplement, and Peter, in a frolicsome mood, was represented
+ entertaining at a large cats' tea-party. Hunger, and cold,
+ and misery were all dispelled. Who would not be a cat of
+ Louis Wain's, capable of creating ten minutes' sunshine in a
+ childish heart?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Wain announces a discovery in relation to cats which
+ corroborates a theory of my own, adopted from long
+ observation and experience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have found," he says, "as a result of many years of
+ inquiry and study, that people who keep cats and are in the
+ habit of petting them, do not suffer from those petty
+ ailments which all flesh is heir to. Rheumatism and nervous
+ complaints are uncommon with them, and Pussy's lovers are of
+ the sweetest temperament. I have often felt the benefit,
+ after a long spell of mental effort, of having my cats
+ sitting across my shoulders, or of half an hour's chat with
+ Peter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is a frequent experience of my own. Nothing is more
+ restful and soothing after a busy day than sitting with my
+ hands buried in the soft sides of one of my cats.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you know," said one of my neighbors, recently, "when I am
+ troubled with insomnia, lately, I get up and get Bingo from
+ his bed, and take him to mine. I can go to sleep with my
+ hands on him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a powerful magnetic influence which emanates from a
+ sleepy or even a quiet cat, that many an invalid has
+ experienced without realizing it. If physicians were to
+ investigate this feature of the cat's electrical and magnetic
+ influence, in place of anatomical research after death, or
+ the horrible practice of vivisection, they might be doing a
+ real service to humanity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Wain's success as an illustrator brought him great
+ prominence in the National Cat Club of England, and he has
+ been for a number of years its president, doing much to raise
+ the condition and quality of cats and the status of the club.
+ He has a number of beautiful and high-bred cats at Bendigo
+ Lodge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With regard to the painting of cats Champfleury said, "The
+ lines are so delicate, the eyes are distinguished by such
+ remarkable qualities, the movements are due to such sudden
+ impulses, that to succeed in the portrayal of such a subject,
+ one must be feline one's self." And Mr. Spielman gives the
+ following advice to those who would paint cats:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You must love them, as Mahomet and Chesterfield loved them:
+ be as fond of their company as Wolsley and Richelieu, Mazarin
+ and Colbert, who retained them even during their most
+ impressive audiences: as Petrarch, and Dr. Johnson, and Canon
+ Liddon, and Ludovic Hal&eacute;vy, who wrote with them at
+ their elbow: and Tasso and Gray, who celebrated them in
+ verse: as sympathetic as Carlyle, whom Mrs. Allingham painted
+ in the company of his beloved 'Tib' in the garden at Chelsea,
+ or as Whittington, the hero of our milk-and-water days: think
+ of El Daher Beybars, who fed all feline comers, or 'La Belle
+ Stewart,' Duchess of Richmond, who, in the words of the poet,
+ 'endowed a college' for her little friends: you must be as
+ approbative of their character, their amenableness to
+ education, their inconstancy, not to say indifference and
+ their general lack of principle, as Madame de Custine: and as
+ appreciative of their daintiness and grace as Alfred de
+ Musset. Then, and not till then, can you consider yourself
+ sentimentally equipped for studying the art of cat painting."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH11"><!-- CH11 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ CONCERNING CAT HOSPITALS AND REFUGES
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ At comparatively frequent intervals we read of some woman,
+ historic or modern, who has left an annuity (as the Duchess
+ of Richmond, "La Belle Stewart") for the care of her pet
+ cats; now and then a man provides for them in his will, as
+ Lord Chesterfield, for instance, who left a permanent pension
+ for his cats and their descendants. But I find only one who
+ has endowed a home for them and given it sufficient means to
+ support the strays and waifs who reach its shelter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in the eighties, Captain Nathan Appleton, of Boston (a
+ brother of the poet Longfellow's wife, and of Thomas
+ Appleton, the celebrated wit), returned from a stay in London
+ with a new idea, that of founding some sort of a refuge, or
+ hospital, for sick or stray cats and dogs. He had visited
+ Battersea, and been deeply impressed with the need of a
+ shelter for small and friendless domestic animals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Battersea there is an institution similar to the one the
+ Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals in New York have
+ at East 120th Street, where stray animals may be sent and
+ kept for a few days awaiting the possible appearance of a
+ claimant or owner; at the end of which time the animals are
+ placed in the "lethal chamber," where they die instantly and
+ painlessly by asphyxiation. In Boston, the Society of
+ Prevention of Cruelty to Animals have no such refuge or
+ pound, but in place of it keep one or two men whose business
+ it is to go wherever sent and "mercifully put to death" the
+ superfluous, maimed, or sick animals that shall be given
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Appleton's idea, however, was something entirely
+ different from this. These creatures, he argued, have a right
+ to their lives and the pursuit of happiness after their own
+ fashion, and he proposed to help them to enjoy that right. He
+ appealed to a few sympathetic friends and gave two or three
+ acres of land from his own estate, near "Nonantum Hill,"
+ where the Apostle Eliot preached to the Indians, and where
+ his iodine springs are located. He had raised a thousand or
+ two dollars and planned a structure of some kind to shelter
+ stray dogs and cats, when the good angel that attends our
+ household pets guided him to the lawyer who had charge of the
+ estates of Miss Ellen M. Gifford, of New Haven, Ct. "I think
+ I can help you," said the lawyer. But he would say nothing
+ more at that time. A few weeks later, Captain Appleton was
+ sent for. Miss Gifford had become deeply interested in the
+ project, and after making more inquiries, gave the proposed
+ home some twenty-five thousand dollars, adding to this amount
+ afterward and providing for the institution in her will. It
+ has already had over one hundred thousand dollars from Miss
+ Gifford's estates, and it is so well endowed and well managed
+ that it is self-supporting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Ellen M. Gifford Sheltering Home for Animals is situated
+ near the Brookline edge of the Brighton district in Boston.
+ In fact, the residential portion of aristocratic Brookline is
+ so fast creeping up to it that the whole six acres of the
+ institution will doubtless soon be disposed of at a very
+ handsome profit, while the dogs and cats will retire to a
+ more remote district to "live on the interest of their
+ money."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The main building is a small but handsome brick affair,
+ facing on Lake Street. This is the home of the
+ superintendent, and contains, besides, the offices of the
+ establishment. Over the office is a tablet with this
+ inscription, taken from a letter of Miss Gifford's about the
+ time the home was opened:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If only the waifs, the strays, the sick, the abused, would
+ be sure to get entrance to the home, and anybody could feel
+ at liberty to bring in a starved or ill-treated animal and
+ have it cared for without pay, my object would be obtained.
+ March 27, 1884."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The superintendent is a lover of animals as well as a good
+ business manager, and his work is in line with the sentence
+ just quoted. Any one wanting a cat or a dog, and who can
+ promise it a good home, may apply there. But Mr. Perkins does
+ not take the word of a stranger at random. He investigates
+ their circumstances and character, and never gives away an
+ animal unless he can be reasonably sure of its going to a
+ good home. For instance, he once received an application from
+ one man for six cats. The wholesale element in the order made
+ him slightly suspicious, and he immediately drove to Boston,
+ where he found that his would-be customer owned a big granary
+ overrun with mice. He sent the six cats, and two weeks later
+ went to see how they were getting on, when he found them
+ living happily in a big grain-loft, fat and contented as the
+ most devoted Sultan of Egypt could have asked. None but
+ street cats and stray dogs, homeless waifs, ill-treated and
+ half starved, are received at this home. Occasionally, some
+ family desiring to get rid of the animal they have petted for
+ months, perhaps years, will send it over to the Sheltering
+ Home. But if Mr. Perkins can find where it came from he
+ promptly returns it, for even this place, capable of
+ comfortably housing a hundred cats and as many dogs, cannot
+ accommodate all the unfortunates that are picked up in the
+ streets of Boston. The accommodations, too, while they are
+ comfortable and even luxurious for the poor creatures that
+ have hitherto slept on ash-barrels and stone flaggings, are
+ unfit for household pets that have slept on cushions, soft
+ rugs, and milady's bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a dog-house and a cat-house, sufficiently far apart
+ that the occupants of one need not be disturbed by those of
+ the other. In the dog-house there are rows of pens on each
+ side of the middle aisle, in which from one to four or five
+ dogs, according to size, are kept when indoors. These are of
+ all sorts, colors, dispositions, and sizes, ranging from pugs
+ to St. Bernards, terriers to mastiffs. There are few purely
+ bred dogs, although there are many intelligent and really
+ handsome ones. The dogs are allowed to run in the big yard
+ that opens out from their house at certain hours of the day;
+ but the cats' yards are open to them all day and night. All
+ yards and runs are enclosed with wire netting, and the
+ cat-house has partitions of the same. All around the sides of
+ the cat-house are shelves or bunks, which are kept supplied
+ with clean hay, for their beds. Here one may see cats of
+ every color and assorted sizes, contentedly curled up in
+ their nests, while their companions sit blinking in the sun,
+ or run out in the yards. Cooked meat, crackers and milk, and
+ dishes of fresh water are kept where they can get at them.
+ The cats all look plump and well fed, and, indeed, the
+ ordinary street cat must feel that his lines have fallen in
+ pleasant places.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not so, however, with pet cats who may be housed there. They
+ miss the companionship of people, and the household
+ belongings to which they have been accustomed. Sometimes it
+ is really pathetic to see one of these cast-off pets climb up
+ the wire netting and plainly beg the visitor to take him away
+ from that strange place, and give him such a home as he has
+ been used to. In the superintendent's house there is usually
+ a good cat or two of this sort, as he is apt to test a
+ well-bred cat before giving him away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Somewhat similar, and even older than the Ellen Gifford
+ Sheltering Home, is the Morris Refuge of Philadelphia. This
+ institution, whose motto is "The Lord is good to all: and his
+ tender mercies are over all his works," was first established
+ in May, 1874, by Miss Elizabeth Morris and other ladies who
+ took an interest in the protection of suffering animals. It
+ does not limit its tender mercies to cats and dogs, but cares
+ for every suffering animal. It differs from the Ellen Gifford
+ Home chiefly in the fact that, while the latter is a
+ <i>home</i> for stray cats and dogs, the Morris Refuge has
+ for its object the care for and disposal of suffering animals
+ of all sorts. In a word, it brings relief to most of these
+ unfortunate creatures by means of a swift and painless death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was first known as the City Refuge, although it was never
+ maintained by the city. In January, 1889, it was reorganized
+ and incorporated as the "Morris Refuge for Homeless and
+ Suffering Animals." It is supported by private contributions,
+ and is under the supervision of Miss Morris and a corps of
+ kind-hearted ladies of Philadelphia. A wagon is kept at the
+ home to respond to calls, and visits any residence where
+ suffering animals may need attention. The agent of the
+ society lives at the refuge with his family, and receives
+ animals at any time. When notice is received of an animal
+ hurt or suffering, he sends after it. Chloroform is
+ invariably taken along, in order that, if expedient, the
+ creature may be put out of its agony at once. This refuge is
+ at 1242 Lombard Street, and there is a temporary home where
+ dogs are boarded at 923 South 11th Street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1895, out of 23,067 animals coming under the care of the
+ association, 19,672 were cats. In 1896, there were 24,037
+ animals relieved and disposed of, while the superintendent
+ answered 230 police calls. Good homes are found for both dogs
+ and cats, but not until the agent is sure that they will be
+ kindly treated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Miss Morris's eighth annual report she says: "Looking back
+ to the formation of the first society for the prevention of
+ cruelty to animals, we find since that time a gradual
+ awakening to the duties man owes to those below him in the
+ scale of animal creation. The titles of those societies and
+ their objects, as defined by their charters, show that at
+ first it was considered sufficient to protect animals from
+ cruel treatment: very few people gave thought to the care of
+ those that were without homes. Now many are beginning to
+ think of the evil of being overrun with numbers of homeless
+ creatures, whose sufferings appeal to the sympathies of the
+ humane, and whose noise and depredations provoke the cruelty
+ of the hard-hearted: hence the efforts that are being made in
+ different cities to establish refuges. A request has lately
+ been received from Montreal asking for our reports, as it is
+ proposed to found a home for animals in that city, and
+ information is being collected in relation to such
+ institutions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lady Marcus Beresford has succeeded in establishing and
+ endowing a home for cats in Englefield Green, Windsor Park.
+ She has made a specialty of Angoras, and her collection is
+ famous. Queen Victoria and her daughters take a deep
+ interest, not alone in finely bred cats, but in poor and
+ homeless waifs as well. Her Royal Highness, in fact, took
+ pains to write the London S.P.C.A. some years ago, saying she
+ would be very glad to have them do something for the safety
+ and protection of cats, "<i>which are so generally
+ misunderstood and grossly ill-treated</i>." She herself sets
+ a good example in this respect, and when her courts remove
+ from one royal residence to another, her cats are taken with
+ her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a movement in Paris, too, to provide for sick and
+ homeless cats as well as dogs. Two English ladies have
+ founded a hospital near Asni&egrave;res, where ailing pets
+ can be tended in illness, or boarded for about ten cents a
+ day; and very well cared for their pensioners are. There is
+ also a charity ward where pauper patients are received and
+ tended carefully, and afterward sold or given away to
+ reliable people. Oddly, this sort of charity was begun by
+ Mademoiselle Claude Bernard, the daughter of the great
+ scientist who, it is said, tortured more living creatures to
+ death than any other. Vivisection became a passion with him,
+ but Mademoiselle Bernard is atoning for her father's cruelty
+ by a singular devotion to animals, and none are turned from
+ her gates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the way they do it in Cairo even now, according to
+ Monsieur Prisse d'Avennes, the distinguished
+ Egyptologist:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Sultan, El Daher Beybars, who reigned in Egypt and Syria
+ toward 658 of the Hegira (1260 A.D.) and is compared by
+ William of Tripoli to Nero in wickedness, and to Caesar in
+ bravery, had a peculiar affection for cats. At his death, he
+ left a garden, 'Gheyt-el-Quoltah' (the cats' orchard),
+ situated near his mosque outside Cairo, for the support of
+ homeless cats. Subsequently the field was sold and resold
+ several times by the administrator and purchasers. In
+ consequence of a series of dilapidations it now produces a
+ nominal rent of fifteen piastres a year, which with certain
+ other legacies is appropriated to the maintenance of cats.
+ The Kadi, who is the official administrator of all pious and
+ charitable bequests, ordains that at the hour of afternoon
+ prayer, between noon and sunset, a daily distribution of
+ animals' entrails and refuse meat from the butchers' stalls,
+ chopped up together, shall be made to the cats of the
+ neighborhood. This takes place in the outer court of the
+ 'Mehkemeh,' or tribunal, and a curious spectacle may then be
+ seen. At this hour all the terraces near the Mehkemeh are
+ crowded with cats: they come jumping from house to house
+ across the narrow Cairo streets, hurrying for their share:
+ they slide down walls and glide into the court, where they
+ dispute, with great tenacity and much growling, the scanty
+ meal so sadly out of proportion to the number of guests. The
+ old ones clear the food in a moment: the young ones and the
+ newcomers, too timid to fight for their chance, must content
+ themselves with licking the ground. Those wanting to get rid
+ of cats take them there and deposit them. I have seen whole
+ baskets of kittens deposited in the court, greatly to the
+ annoyance of the neighbors."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are similar customs in Italy and Switzerland. In Geneva
+ cats prowl about the streets like dogs at Constantinople. The
+ people charge themselves with their maintenance, and feed the
+ cats who come to their doors at the same hour every day for
+ their meals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Florence, a cloister near St. Lorenzo's Church serves as a
+ refuge for cats. It is an ancient and curious institution,
+ but I am unable to find whether it is maintained by the city
+ or by private charities. There are specimens of all colors,
+ sizes, and kinds, and any one who wants a cat has but to go
+ there and ask for it. On the other hand, the owner of a cat
+ who is unable or unwilling to keep it may take it there,
+ where it is fed and well treated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Rome, they have a commendable system of caring for their
+ cats. At a certain hour butchers' men drive through the city,
+ with carts well stocked with cat's meat. They utter a
+ peculiar cry which the cats recognize, and come hurrying out
+ of the houses for their allowances, which are paid for by the
+ owners at a certain rate per month.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Boston, during the summer of 1895, a firm of butchers took
+ subscriptions from philanthropic citizens, and raised enough
+ to defray the expenses of feeding the cats on the Back
+ Bay,&#8212;where, in spite of the fact that the citizens are
+ all wealthy and supposedly humane, there are more starving
+ cats than elsewhere in the city. But the experiment has not
+ been repeated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hospitals for sick animals are no new thing, but a really
+ comfortable home for cats is an enterprise in which many a
+ woman who now asks despondently what she can do in this
+ overcrowded world to earn a living, might find pleasant and
+ profitable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A most worthy charity is that of the Animal Rescue League in
+ Boston, which was started by Mrs. Anna Harris Smith in 1899.
+ She put a call in the newspapers, asking those who were
+ interested in the subject to attend a meeting and form a
+ league for the protection and care of lost or deserted pets.
+ The response was immediate and generous. The Animal Rescue
+ League was formed with several hundred members, and in a
+ short time the house at 68 Carver Street was rented, and a
+ man and his wife put in charge. Here are brought both cats
+ and dogs from all parts of Boston and the suburbs, where they
+ are sure of kind treatment and care. If they are diseased
+ they are immediately put out of existence by means of the
+ lethal chamber; otherwise they are kept for a few days in
+ order that they may be claimed by their owners if lost, or
+ have homes found for them whenever it is possible. During the
+ first year over two thousand cats were cared for, and several
+ hundred dogs. This home is maintained by voluntary
+ contributions and by the annual dues of subscribers. These
+ are one dollar a year for associate members and five dollars
+ for active members. It is an excellent charity, and one that
+ may well be emulated in other cities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are several cat asylums and refuges in the Far West,
+ and certainly a few more such institutions as the Sheltering
+ Home at Brighton, Mass., or the Morris Refuge would be a
+ credit to a country. How better than by applying it to our
+ cats can we demonstrate the truth of Solomon's maxim, "A
+ merciful man is merciful to his beast"?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH12"><!-- CH12 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ CONCERNING THE ORIGIN OF CATS
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ If any of my readers hunger and thirst for information
+ concerning the descent of the cat through marsupial ancestors
+ and mesozoic mammals to the generalized placental or
+ monodelphous carnivora of to-day, let them consult St. George
+ Mivart, who gives altogether the most comprehensive and
+ exhaustive scientific study to the cat ever published, and
+ whose book on the cat is an excellent work for the earnest
+ beginner in the study of biological science. He says no more
+ complete example can be found of a perfectly organized living
+ being than that supplied by the highest mammalian
+ family&#8212;<i>Felidae</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the whole," he sums up, "it seems probable that the
+ mammalia, and therefore the cat, descends from some highly
+ developed, somewhat reptile-like batrachian of which no trace
+ has been found."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Away back in the eighth century of the Hegira, an Arab
+ naturalist gives this account of the creation of the cat:
+ "When, as the Arab relates, Noah made a couple of each animal
+ to enter the ark, his companions and family asked, 'What
+ security can you give us and the other animals, so long as
+ the lion dwells with us on this narrow vessel?' Then Noah
+ betook himself to prayer, and entreated the Lord God.
+ Immediately fever came down from heaven and seized upon the
+ king of beasts." This was the origin of fever. But
+ constituents in Noah's time, as now, were ungrateful; and no
+ sooner was the lion disposed of, than the mouse was
+ discovered to be an object of suspicion. They complained that
+ there would be no safety for provisions or clothing. "And so
+ Noah renewed his supplication to the Most High, the lion
+ sneezed, and a cat ran out of his nostrils. From that time
+ the mouse has been timid and has hidden in holes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Egyptian gallery of the British Museum there is an
+ excellent painting of a tabby cat assisting a man to capture
+ birds. Hieroglyphic inscriptions as far back as 1684 B.C.
+ mention the cat, and there is at Leyden a tablet of the
+ eighteenth or nineteenth dynasty with a cat seated under a
+ chair. A temple at Beni-Hassan is dedicated to Pasht or
+ Bubastis, the goddess of cats, which is as old as Thothmes IV
+ of the eighteenth dynasty, 1500 B.C.; and the cat appears in
+ written rituals of that dynasty. Herodotus tells of the
+ almost superstitious reverence which dwellers along the Nile
+ felt for the cat, and gravely states that when one died a
+ natural death in any house, the inmates shaved their eyebrows
+ as a token of grief; also, that in case of a fire the first
+ thing they saved was the household cat. Fortunate pussies!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is thought that cats were introduced into Greece from
+ Egypt, although Professor Rolleston, of Cambridge University,
+ believes the Grecian pet cat to have been the white-breasted
+ marten. Yet why should he? Is not a soft, white-breasted
+ maltese or tabby as attractive? The idea that cats were
+ domesticated in Western Europe by the Crusaders is thought to
+ be erroneous; but pet cats were often found in nunneries in
+ the Middle Ages, and Pope Gregory the Great, toward the end
+ of the sixth century, had a pet cat of which he was very
+ fond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An old writer says, "A favorite cat sometimes accompanied the
+ Egyptians on these occasions [of sport], and the artist of
+ that day intends to show us by the exactness with which he
+ represents her seizing her prey, that cats were trained to
+ hunt and carry water-fowl." There are old Egyptian paintings
+ representing sporting scenes along the Nile, where the cats
+ plunge into the water of the marshes to retrieve and carry
+ game; while plenty of mural paintings show them sitting under
+ the arm-chair of the mistress of the house. Modern
+ naturalists, however, claim a radical difference between
+ those old Egyptian retrieving cats and our water-hating
+ pussies. There are no records of cats between that period in
+ Egypt, about 1630 B.C., and 260 B.C., when they seem to have
+ become acclimated in Greece and Rome. There is in the
+ Bordeaux Museum an ancient picture of a young girl holding a
+ cat, on a tomb of the Gallo-Roman Epoch, and cats appeared in
+ the heraldry of that date; but writers of those ages speak
+ rather slightingly of them. Then for centuries the cat was
+ looked upon as a diabolic creature, fit company for witches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why," says Balthazar Bekker in the seventeenth century, "is
+ a cat always found among the belongings of witches, when
+ according to the Sacred Book, and Apocalypse in particular,
+ it is the dog, not a feline animal, that consorts with the
+ sorcerers?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Russia even yet the common people believe that black cats
+ become devils at the end of seven years, and in many parts of
+ Southern Europe they are still supposed to be serving
+ apprenticeship as witches. In Sicily the peasants are sure
+ that if a black cat lives with seven masters, the soul of the
+ seventh will surely accompany him back to the dominion of
+ Hades. In Brittany there is a dreadful tale of cats that
+ dance with unholy glee around the crucifix while their King
+ is being put to death. Cats figure in Norwegian folk-lore,
+ too, as witches and picturesque incumbents of ghost-haunted
+ houses and nocturnal revels. And even to-day there is a
+ legend in Westminster to the effect that the dissipated cats
+ of that region indulge in a most disreputable revel in some
+ country house, and that is why they look so forlorn and
+ altogether undone by daylight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A canon enacted in England in 1127 forbade any abbess or nun
+ to use more costly fur than that of lambs or cats, and it is
+ proved that cat-fur was at that time commonly used for
+ trimming dresses. The cat was, probably for that reason, an
+ object of chase in royal forests, and a license is still in
+ existence from Richard II to the Abbot of Peterborough, and
+ dated 1239, granting liberty to hunt cats. This was probably
+ the wild cat, however, which was not the same as the
+ domestic.[1]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [Footnote 1:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These are among the laws supposedly enacted by Hoel Dha
+ (Howell the Good) sometime between 915 and 948 A.D.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Vendotian Code XI.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The worth of a cat and her teithi (qualities) this is:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1st. The worth of a kitten from the night it is kittened
+ until it shall open its eyes, is one penny.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2d. And from that time until it shall kill mice, two pence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3d. And after it shall kill mice, four legal pence; and so it
+ shall always remain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4th. Her teithe are to see, to hear, to kill mice, and to
+ have her claws.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the "Dimentian Code." XXXII. Of Cats.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1st. The worth of a cat that is killed or stolen. Its head to
+ be put downward upon a clean, even floor, with its tail
+ lifted upward and thus suspended, whilst wheat is poured
+ about it until the top of its tail be covered and that is to
+ be its worth. If the corn cannot be had, then a milch sheep
+ with a lamb and its wool is its value, if it be a cat that
+ guards the king's barn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2d. The worth of a common cat is four legal pence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3d. The teithi of a cat, and of every animal upon the milk of
+ which people do not feed, is the third part of its worth or
+ the worth of its litter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4th. Whosoever shall sell a cat (cath) is to answer that she
+ devour not her kittens, and that she have ears, teeth, eyes,
+ and nails, and be a good mouser.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The "Gwentian Code" begins in the same way, but says:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3d. That it be perfect of ear, perfect of eye, perfect of
+ teeth, perfect of tail, perfect of claw, and without marks of
+ fire. And if the cat fall short in any of these particulars,
+ a third of her price had to be refunded. As to the fire, in
+ case her fur had been singed the rats could detect her by the
+ odor, and her qualities as a mouser were thus injured. And
+ then it goes on to say:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4th. That the teithi and the legal worth of a cat are
+ coequal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5th. A pound is the worth of a pet animal of the king.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 6th. The pet animal of a breyer (brewer) is six score pence
+ in value.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 7th. The pet animal of a taoog is a curt penny in value.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the 39th chapter, 53d section, we find that "there are
+ three animals whose tails, eyes, and lives are of the same
+ value&#8212;a calf, a filly for common work, and a cat,
+ except the cat which shall watch the king's barn," in which
+ case she was more valuable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another old Welsh law says: "Three animals reach their worth
+ in a year: a sheep, a cat, and a cur. This is a complement of
+ the legal hamlet; nine buildings, one plough, one kiln, one
+ churn, and one cat, one cock, one bull, and one herdsman."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order that there might be no mistake in regard to the cat,
+ a rough sketch of Puss is given in the Mss. of the laws.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That cats, even in the Middle Ages, were thought much more
+ highly of in Great Britain than on the Continent is proved by
+ the fact that the laws there imposed a heavy fine on
+ cat-killers, the fine being as much wheat as would serve to
+ bury the cat when he was held up by the tip of the tail with
+ his nose on the ground. So that pet cats stood a fairly good
+ chance in those days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the good things remembered of Louis XIII is that he
+ interceded as Dauphin with Henri IV for the lives of the cats
+ about to be burned at the festival on St. John's Day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nowadays, there is a current superstition that a black cat
+ brings good luck to a house; but in the Middle Ages they
+ believed that the devil borrowed the form of a black cat when
+ he wanted to torment or get control of his victims. There are
+ plenty of old traditions about cats having spoken to human
+ beings, and been kicked, or struck, or burned by them in
+ return; and invariably, these tales tell us, those who are so
+ bespoken meet some one the next day with plain marks of the
+ injury they had inflicted on the froward cat,&#8212;which was
+ sure evidence of witchery and sorcery. Doubtless full many a
+ human being has been put to death, in times past, on no
+ stronger evidence of being a witch. Humanity did not come to
+ the rescue of the cat and bring her out from the shadow of
+ ignominy that hung over her in mediaeval times until 1618,
+ when an interdict was issued in Flanders prohibiting the
+ festive ceremony of throwing cats from the high tower of
+ Ypres on Wednesdays of the second week in Lent. And from that
+ time Pussy's fortunes began to look up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To-day, travellers on the edge of the Pyrenees know a little
+ old man, Martre Tolosan, who makes and sells replicas of the
+ original models of cats found among the Roman remains at a
+ small town near Toulouse. These are made in blue and white
+ earthenware and each one is numbered. Mine, bought by a
+ friend in 1895, is marked 5000. They are not exact models of
+ our cats of to-day, to be sure, but they express all the snug
+ content and inscrutable calm of our modern pets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chinese reproduce cats in their ceramics in white,
+ turquoise blue, and old violet. One that once belonged to
+ Madame de Mazarin sold for eight hundred livres. In Japan,
+ cats are reproduced in common ware, daubed with paint, but
+ the Chinese make them of finer ware, enamelling the commoner
+ kinds of porcelain and using the cat in conventional forms as
+ flower-vases and lamps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH13"><!-- CH13 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ CONCERNING VARIETIES OF CATS
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ Few people realize how many kinds of cats there are. The
+ fashionable world begins to discuss cats technically and
+ understand their various points of excellence. The "lord
+ mayor's chain," the "Dutch rabbit markings," and similar
+ features are understood by more cat fanciers than a few years
+ ago; but, until within that time, it is doubtful if the
+ number of people who knew the difference between the Angora
+ and the Persian in this country amounted to a hundred. It is
+ but a few years since the craze for the Angora cat started.
+ These cats have been fashionable pets in England for some
+ years back, and now America begins to understand their value
+ and the principles of breeding them. Today, there are as
+ handsome, well-bred animals in the United States as can be
+ found abroad. The demand for high-bred animals with a
+ pedigree is greatly increasing, and society people are
+ beginning to understand the fine points of the thoroughbred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Angora cat, as its name indicates, comes from Angora in
+ Western Asia, the province that is celebrated for its goats
+ with long hair of fine quality. In fact, the hair under the
+ Angora cat's body often resembles the finest of the Angora
+ goatskins. Angora cats are favorites with the Turks and
+ Armenians, and exist in many colors, especially since they
+ have been more carefully bred. They vary in form, color, and
+ disposition, and also in the quality of their hair. The
+ standard calls for a small head, with not too long a nose,
+ large eyes that should harmonize in color with the fur,
+ small, pointed ears with a tuft of hair at the apex, and a
+ very full, fluffy mane around the neck. This mane is known as
+ the "lord mayor's chain." The body is longer than that of the
+ ordinary cat in proportion to its size, and is extremely
+ graceful, and covered with long, silky hair, which is crinkly
+ like that of the Angora goat. This hair should be as fine as
+ possible, and not woolly. The legs are of a moderate length,
+ but look short on account of the length of hair on the body.
+ Little tufts of hair growing between the toes indicate high
+ breeding. The Angora cat, in good condition, is one of the
+ most beautiful and elegant creatures in the world, and few
+ can resist its charm. The tail is long and like an ostrich
+ plume. It is usually carried, when the cat is in good
+ spirits, straight up, with the end waving over toward one
+ side. The tail of the Angora serves as a barometer of its
+ bodily and mental condition. If the cat is ill or frightened,
+ the tail droops, and sometimes trails on the ground; but when
+ she is in good spirits, playing about the house or grounds,
+ it waves like a great plume, and is exceedingly handsome. The
+ suppleness of the Angora's tail is also a mark of fine
+ breeding. A highbred Angora will allow its tail to be doubled
+ or twisted without apparent notice of the performance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Angora does not reach its prime until about two years.
+ Before that time its head and body are not sufficiently
+ developed to give the full beauty and grace of the animal. As
+ a rule, the Angora is of good disposition, although the
+ females are apt to be exceedingly nervous. They are sociable
+ and docile, although fond of roaming about, especially if
+ allowed to run loose. As a rule, they do not possess the keen
+ intelligence of the ordinary short-haired family cat, but
+ their great beauty and their cleanly and affectionate habits
+ make them favorites with fashionable people. The proper
+ breeding of the Angora cat is a regular science. Of the
+ colors of the Angoras, the blue or maltese is a favorite, and
+ rather common, especially when mixed with white.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The white Angora is extraordinarily beautiful, and brings a
+ high price when it has blue eyes and all its points are
+ equally good. The orange, or yellow, and the black with amber
+ eyes are also prize winners. There are the tigers also, the
+ brown tabby, and the orange and white. Mixed colors are more
+ common than solid ones; the tortoise-shell cat of three
+ colors and well mottled being considered particularly
+ desirable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Persian cat differs from the Angora in the quality of its
+ fur, although the ordinary observer sees little difference
+ between them. All the long-haired cats originated from the
+ Indian Bengalese, Thibetan, and other wild cats of Asia and
+ Russia. The Persian cat of very great value is all black,
+ with a very fluffy frill, or lord mayor's chain, and orange
+ eyes. Next to him comes a light slate or blue Persian, with
+ yellow eyes. The fur of the Persian cat is much more woolly
+ than that of the Angora, and sometimes in hot weather mats
+ badly. The difference between a Persian and an Angora can
+ usually be told by an amateur, by drawing the tail between
+ the thumb and first finger. The Angora's tail comes out thin,
+ silky, and narrow, although it immediately "fluffs" up. The
+ Persian's tail does not compress itself readily into a small
+ space. The Persian cat's head is larger, its ears are less
+ pointed, although it should have the tuft at the end and the
+ long hair inside. It is usually larger in body and apparently
+ stronger made, although slender and elegant in appearance,
+ with small bones and graceful in movement. The colors vary,
+ as with the Angora, except that the tortoise-shell and the
+ dark-marked tabby do not so frequently appear. The temper is
+ usually less reliable and the intelligence less keen than the
+ Angora.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Russian long-haired pet is much less common even than the
+ Persian and Angora. It is fond of cold weather, and its fur
+ is denser, indicating that it has been used to colder
+ regions. Many of the cats that we see are crosses of Angora
+ and Persian, or Angora and Russian, so that it is extremely
+ difficult for the amateur to know a thoroughbred cat which
+ has not been mixed with other varieties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is also a fine short-haired cat coming from Russia,
+ usually self-colored. Mrs. Frederick Monroe, of Chicago, owns
+ a very handsome blue and white one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Pegu, Siam, and Burmah, there is a race of cats known as
+ the Malay cat, with tails only half the ordinary length and
+ often contorted into a sort of a knot that cannot be
+ straightened, after the fashion of the pug dog or ordinary
+ pig.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is another cat known as the Mombas, a native of the
+ west coast of Africa and covered with stiff, bristling hair.
+ Paraguay cats are only one-quarter as big as our ordinary
+ cat, and are found along the western coast of South America,
+ even as far north as Mexico.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The royal cat of Siam is a short-haired cat, yet widely
+ different from other short-haired varieties. They are
+ extremely pretty, with blue or amber-colored eyes by day
+ which grow brilliant at night. These cats also frequently
+ have the kink in the tail, and sometimes a strong animal
+ odor, although this is not disagreeable. The head is rather
+ longer than the ordinary cat's, tapering off sharply toward
+ the muzzle, the forehead flat and receding, and the eyes more
+ slanting toward the nose than the American cat's. The form
+ should be slender, graceful, and delicately made; the body
+ long; the tail very thin and rather short; the legs short and
+ slender, and the feet oval. The body is of a bright, uniform
+ color, and the legs, feet, and tail are usually black.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Manx cat is considered by many people as a natural
+ curiosity. It differs from the ordinary domestic cat but
+ little, except in the absence of a tail, or even an apology
+ for one. The hind legs are thicker and rather longer than the
+ ordinary cat's, and it runs more like a hare. It is not a
+ graceful object when seen from behind, but it is an
+ affectionate, home-loving creature with considerable
+ intelligence. The Manx cat came from the Isle of Man
+ originally, and is a distinct breed. So-called Manx cats have
+ tails from one to a few inches long, but these are crosses of
+ the Manx and the ordinary cat. In the Crimea is found another
+ kind of cat which has no tail. The cats known as the
+ "celebrated orange cats of Venice," are probably descendants
+ of the old Egyptian cat, and are of varying shades of yellow,
+ sometimes deepening into a sandy color which is almost red.
+ There are obscure stripes on the body, which become more
+ distinct on the limbs. The tail is more or less ringed toward
+ its termination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There has been a newspaper paragraph floating about stating
+ that a prize of several thousand dollars had been offered in
+ England for a male tortoise-shell cat. This is probably not
+ true, as a Mr. Smith exhibited a tortoise-shell he-cat at the
+ Crystal Palace Show of 1871. Several tortoise-shell and white
+ toms have been exhibited since, and one of these has taken
+ nine first prizes at the Crystal Palace Show; but the
+ tortoise-shell he-cat is extremely rare. The real
+ tortoise-shell is not a striped tiger nor a tabby. It has
+ three colors usually, black, yellow, and red or brown; but
+ these appear in patches rather than stripes. It is said that
+ the tortoise-shell cat is common in Egypt and the south of
+ Europe. It comes from a different stock than the ordinary
+ short-haired cat, the texture of the hair being different, as
+ well as the color. The tortoise-shell and white cat is much
+ more common, and is the product of a cross between a tortoise
+ shell and a solid color cat. In this case the hair is usually
+ coarser and the tail thicker than in the ordinary cat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among cat fanciers there is a distinctive variety known as
+ the tortoise-shell tabby. As the tabby cat is one of the
+ varieties of striped or spotted cats having markings, broad
+ or narrow, of bands of black on a dark tan or gray ground,
+ the tortoise-shell cat would have both stripes and patches of
+ color.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the tabbies, there are brown tabbies, silver tabbies, and
+ red tabbies. It is said that the red tabby she-cat is as
+ scarce as the tortoise-shell he-cat. The ordinary observer
+ considers the brown tabby with white markings as much the
+ handsomest of the tabbies. But fanciers and judges do not
+ agree with him, the cats having narrow bands and spots being
+ the ones to take prizes. The word "tabby," according to
+ Harrison Weir, was derived from a kind of taffeta or ribbed
+ silk which used to be called tabby silk. Other authorities
+ state that tabby cats got their name from Atab, a street in
+ Bagdad; but as this street was famous for its watered silks
+ perhaps the same reason holds. The tortoise-shell used to be
+ called, in England, the Calimanco. In America, it is
+ sometimes called the calico cat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The red tabby is of a deep reddish or yellow brown, with a
+ well-ringed tail, orange or yellow eyes, and pink cushions to
+ the feet. The brown tabby is orange brown, with black lips,
+ brown whiskers, black feet, black pads, long tail, greenish
+ orange eyes, and red nose bordered with black. The spotted
+ tabby must have no bands at all. It must be brown, red, or
+ yellow, with black spots. In the brown tabby the feet and
+ pads are black; in the yellow and red, the feet and pads are
+ pink. The spotted cat sometimes resembles a leopard, while
+ the banded tabby resembles more the tiger. Some of the
+ spotted tabbies are extremely handsome, and came originally
+ from a cross between the ordinary cat and the wild cat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Self-colored cats" are entirely of one color, which may vary
+ in different cats, but must never be mixed in the same cat,
+ nor even shaded into a lighter tone on the animal; and
+ whether this color be black, blue, red, or yellow, the
+ self-colored cat should have a rich deep tint. Of course the
+ short-haired white cat is the handsomest of all. One of the
+ peculiarities of this white cat is that it is apt to be deaf.
+ The most valuable white cats, whether long or short haired,
+ have blue eyes. Sometimes they have one blue eye and one
+ green or yellow, which gives a comical effect, and detracts
+ from their value. By the way, cross-eyed cats are not
+ unknown. The best white cats have a yellowish white tint
+ instead of grayish white, as the latter have a coarser
+ quality of fur.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The jet-black cat is thought by many to be the most
+ desirable. The true black cat should have a uniform,
+ intensely black coat, velvety and extremely glossy; the eyes
+ should be round and full, and of a brilliant amber; the nose
+ and pads of the feet should be jet-black, and the tail long
+ and tapering. It is difficult to find a black cat without a
+ white hair, as usually there are a few under the chin or on
+ the belly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The blue cat is the one ordinarily known in this country as
+ the dark maltese. There is a tradition that it came from the
+ Island of Malta. Many people do not consider it a distinct
+ breed, but think it a light-colored variety of the black cat.
+ It is known sometimes as the Archangel, sometimes as the
+ Russian blue, the Spanish blue, the Chartreuse blue, but more
+ commonly in this country as the maltese. When it is of a deep
+ bluish color, or of the soft silver-gray maltese without
+ stripes, it is extremely handsome. The most desirable are the
+ bluish lilac-colored ones, with soft fur like sealskin. The
+ nose and pads of the feet are dark, and the eyes are orange
+ yellow. The maltese and white cat when well marked is
+ extremely handsome, and there is no prettier kitten than the
+ maltese and white.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The black and white, yellow and white, blue and white, and in
+ fact, any self-colored and white cat is a mixture of the
+ other breeds. If well marked they are extremely handsome and
+ are usually bright and intelligent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The solid gray cat is very rare. It is, in fact, a tabby
+ without the black stripes or spots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Australia, New Zealand, and New Guinea there used to be no
+ cat of any kind. The Siamese cat has been imported to
+ Australia, and some authorities claim that the cats known in
+ this country as Australian cats are of Siamese origin.
+ Madagascar is a catless region.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is in this country a variety known as the "coon cat,"
+ which is handsome, especially in the solid black. Its native
+ home is in Maine, and it is thought by many to have
+ originated with the ordinary cat and the raccoon. It grows
+ somewhat larger than the ordinary cat, with thick, woolly fur
+ and an extremely bushy tail. It is fond of outdoor life, and
+ when kept as a pet must be allowed to run out of doors or it
+ is apt to become so savage and disagreeable that nothing can
+ be done with it. When it is allowed its freedom, however, it
+ becomes affectionate, intelligent, and is usually a handsome
+ cat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The term "Dutch rabbit markings" refers to the white markings
+ on the cat of two or three colors. Evidently, the cats
+ themselves understand the value of Dutch rabbit markings, as
+ one which has them is invariably proud of them. A cat that
+ has white mittens, for instance, is often inordinately vain,
+ and keeps them in the most immaculate state of cleanliness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p><a name="CH14"><!-- CH14 --></a>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV
+ </h2>
+ <center>
+ CONCERNING CAT LANGUAGE
+ </center>
+ <p>
+ Montaigne it was who said: "We have some intelligence of
+ their senses: so have also the beasts of ours in much the
+ same measure. They flatter us, menace us, need us, and we
+ them. It is manifestly evident that there is among them a
+ full and entire communication, and that they understand each
+ other."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That this applies to cats is certainly true. Did you ever
+ notice how a mother cat talks to her children, and simply by
+ the utterances of her voice induces them to abandon their
+ play and go with her, sometimes with the greatest reluctance,
+ to some place that suited her whim&#8212;or her wisdom?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dupont de Nemours, a naturalist of the eighteenth century,
+ made himself ridiculous in the eyes of his compatriots by
+ seeking to penetrate the mysteries of animal language. "Those
+ who utter sounds," he affirmed, "attach significance to them;
+ their fellows do the same, and those sounds originally
+ inspired by passion and repeated under similar recurrent
+ circumstances, become the abiding expressions of the passions
+ that gave rise to them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fortified by this theory he devoted a couple of years to the
+ study of crow language, and made himself ridiculous in the
+ eyes of his adversaries by attempting to translate a
+ nightingale's song.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chateaubriand was much interested in Dupont de Nemours's
+ researches into the language of cats. "Its claws," says the
+ latter, "and the power of climbing trees which its claws give
+ it, furnish the cat with resources of experience and ideas
+ denied the dog. The cat, also, has the advantage of a
+ language which has the same vowels as pronounced by the dog,
+ and with six consonants in addition, <i>m, n, g, h, v</i>,
+ and <i>f</i>. Consequently the cat has a greater number of
+ words. These two causes, the finer structure of its paws, and
+ the larger scope of oral language, endow the solitary cat
+ with greater cunning and skill as a hunter than the dog."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Abb&eacute; Galiani also says: "For centuries cats have been
+ reared, but I do not find they have ever been really studied.
+ I have a male and a female cat. I have cut them off from all
+ communication with cats outside the house, and closely
+ observe their proceedings. During their courtship they never
+ once miowed: the miow, therefore, is not the language of
+ love, but rather the call of the absent. Another positive
+ discovery I have made is that the voice of the male is
+ entirely different from that of the female, as it should be.
+ I am sure there are more than twenty different inflections in
+ the language of cats, and there is really a 'tongue' for they
+ always employ the same sound to express the same thing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I heartily concur with him, and in addition have often
+ noticed the wide difference between the voice and manner of
+ expression of the gelded cat and the ordinary tom. The former
+ has a thin, high voice with much smaller vocabulary. As a
+ rule, the gelded cat does not "mew" to make known his wants,
+ but employs his voice for conversational purposes. A mother
+ cat "talks" much more than any other, and more when she has
+ small kittens than at other times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cat language has been reduced to etymology in several
+ tongues. In Arabia their speech is called naoua; in Chinese,
+ ming; in Greek, larungizein; in Sanscrit, madj, vid, bid; in
+ German, miauen; in French miauler; and in English, mew or
+ "miaouw."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps, if Professor Garner had turned his attention to cat
+ language instead of monkeys we would know more about it. But
+ a French professor, Alphonse L&eacute;on Grimaldi, of Paris,
+ claims that cats can talk as readily as human beings, and
+ that he has learned their language so as to be able to
+ converse with them to some extent. Grimaldi goes even
+ further: he not only says that he knows such a language, but
+ he states definitely that there are about six hundred words
+ in it, that it is more like modern Chinese than anything
+ else, and to prove this contention, gives a small vocabulary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Most of us would prefer to accept St. George Mivart's
+ conclusions, that the difference between all animals and
+ human beings is that while they have some means of
+ communication, or language, we only have the gift of speech.
+ Among the eighteen distinct active powers which he attributes
+ to the cat, he quotes: "16th, powers of pleasurable or
+ painful excitement on the occurrence of sense-perceptions
+ with imaginations, <i>emotions</i>;" and "17th, a power of
+ expressing feelings by sounds or gestures which may affect
+ other individuals,&#8212;<i>emotional language</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again he says: "The cat has a language of sounds and gestures
+ to express its feelings and emotions. So have we. But we have
+ further&#8212;which neither the cat, nor the bird, nor the
+ beast has&#8212;a language and gestures to express our
+ thoughts." The sum of his conclusions seems to be that while
+ the cat has a most highly developed nervous system, and much
+ of what is known as "animal intelligence," it is not a human
+ intelligence&#8212;not consciousness, but "con-sentience."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Elsewhere St. George Mivart doubts if a cat distinguishes
+ odors as such. Perhaps a cat starts for the kitchen the
+ instant he smells meat because of the mental association of
+ the scent with the gratification of hunger; but why, pray
+ tell, do some cats evince such delight in delicate perfumes?
+ Our own Pomp the First, for instance, had a most
+ demonstrative fondness for violets, and liked the scent of
+ all flowers. One winter I used to bring home a bunch of Parma
+ or Russian violets every day or two, and put them in a small
+ glass bowl of water. It soon became necessary to put them on
+ the highest shelf in the room, and even then Pompey would
+ find them. Often have I placed them on the piano, and a few
+ minutes later seen him enter the room, lift his nose, give a
+ few sniffs, and then go straight to the piano, bury his nose
+ in the violets, and hold it there in perfect ecstacy. And
+ usually, wherever they were placed, the bunch was found the
+ next morning on the floor, where Pompey had carried the
+ violets, and holding them between his paws for a time, had
+ surfeited himself with their delicious fragrance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, I am not prepared to say that Pompey had any word for
+ violets, or for anything else that ministered to his delight.
+ It was enough for him to be happy; and he had better ways of
+ expressing it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cats do have the power of making people understand what they
+ want done, but so far as my knowledge of them goes, some of
+ the most intelligent ones "talk" the least. Thomas Erastus,
+ whose intelligence sometimes amounts to a knowledge that
+ seems almost uncanny, seldom utters a sound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is&#8212;or was&#8212;a black cat belonging to the city
+ jail of a Californian town, named "Inspector Byrnes," because
+ of his remarkable assistance to the police force. When, one
+ night, a prisoner in the jail had stuffed the cracks to his
+ cell with straw, and turned on the gas in an attempt to
+ commit suicide, "Inspector Byrnes" hurried off and notified
+ the night keeper that something was wrong, and induced him to
+ go to the cell in time to save the prisoner's life. He once
+ notified the police when a fire broke out on the premises,
+ and at another time made such a fuss that they followed
+ him&#8212;to discover a woman trying to hang herself. Again,
+ some of the prisoners plotted to escape, and the cat crawled
+ through the hole they had filed and called the warden's
+ attention to it. In fact, there was no doubt that "Inspector
+ Byrnes" considered himself assistant warden at the jail, and
+ he did not waste much time in talk either.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pretty Lady had ways of her own to make us know when
+ things were wrong in the household, although she used to
+ utter a great many sounds, either of pleasure or
+ perturbation, which we came to understand. I remember one
+ morning, when my sister was ill upstairs, that I had
+ breakfasted and sat down to read my morning's mail, when the
+ Pretty Lady came, uttering sounds that denoted
+ dissatisfaction with matters somewhere. I was busy, and at
+ first paid no attention to her; but she grew more persistent,
+ so that I finally laid down my letters and asked: "What is
+ it, Puss? Haven't you had breakfast enough?" I went out to
+ the kitchen, and she followed, all the time protesting
+ articulately. She would not touch the meat I offered, but
+ evidently wanted something entirely different. Just then my
+ sister came down and said:&#8212;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wish you would go up and see H. She is suffering terribly,
+ and I don't know what to do for her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that the Pretty Lady led the way into the hall and up the
+ stairs, pausing at every third step to make sure I was
+ following, and leading me straight to my sister. Then she
+ settled herself calmly on the foot-board and closed her eyes,
+ as though the whole affair was no concern of hers. Afterward,
+ my sister said that when the pain became almost unendurable,
+ so that she tossed about and groaned, the Pretty Lady came
+ close to her face and talked to her, just as she did to her
+ kittens when they were in distress, showing plainly that she
+ sympathized with and would help her. When she found it
+ impossible to do this, she hurried down to me. And then
+ having got me actually up to my sister's bedside, she threw
+ off her own burden of anxiety and settled into her usual calm
+ content.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My Goliath is at the helm now," she expressed by her
+ attitude, "and the world is sure to go right a little longer
+ while I take a nap."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &nbsp;
+ </p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Concerning Cats, by Helen M. Winslow
+
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+</pre>
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+ </body>
+</html>
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