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Albert Payson Terhune

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Beschreibung

In "The Critter and Other Dogs," Albert Payson Terhune presents a heartwarming and insightful exploration of canine companionship. The collection is imbued with Terhune's characteristic blend of vivid, emotive prose and astute observations, masterfully reflecting the bond between humans and their four-legged friends. Rich with anecdotes and richly detailed descriptions, the book captures the essence of different dog breeds, showcasing their unique personalities and quirks. Set against the backdrop of early 20th-century America, Terhune's narrative resonates with themes of loyalty, love, and the sheer joy that dogs bring into our lives. Albert Payson Terhune, renowned for his deep affinity for dogs, was a prominent American author and dog breeder. His experiences at Sunnybank, his beloved estate in New Jersey, shaped his understanding and portrayal of dogs in literature. Terhune's background as a writer for magazines and newspapers honed his ability to convey stories that are as engaging as they are heartfelt, allowing him to connect with readers on a deeply emotional level. This enchanting collection is a must-read for dog lovers and literary enthusiasts alike. Terhune's passion for dogs shines through every story, inviting readers to reflect on the remarkable relationships we share with these loyal companions. "The Critter and Other Dogs" is not just a book; it is a celebration of the unwavering spirit of dogs and the joy they bring into our lives. In this enriched edition, we have carefully created added value for your reading experience: - A succinct Introduction situates the work's timeless appeal and themes. - The Synopsis outlines the central plot, highlighting key developments without spoiling critical twists. - A detailed Historical Context immerses you in the era's events and influences that shaped the writing. - A thorough Analysis dissects symbols, motifs, and character arcs to unearth underlying meanings. - Reflection questions prompt you to engage personally with the work's messages, connecting them to modern life. - Hand‐picked Memorable Quotes shine a spotlight on moments of literary brilliance. - Interactive footnotes clarify unusual references, historical allusions, and archaic phrases for an effortless, more informed read.

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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2021

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Albert Payson Terhune

The Critter and Other Dogs

Enriched edition. Timeless Tales of Canine Loyalty and Friendship
In this enriched edition, we have carefully created added value for your reading experience.
Introduction, Studies and Commentaries by Vanessa Winslow
Edited and published by Good Press, 2022
EAN 4064066362454

Table of Contents

Introduction
Synopsis (Selection)
Historical Context
The Critter and Other Dogs
Analysis
Reflection
Memorable Quotes

Introduction

Table of Contents

At the heart of The Critter and Other Dogs lies the test by which animals and people are known: how courage, loyalty, and quick intelligence meet the demands of a sometimes harsh landscape and the imperfect, necessary bonds of training and trust, across episodes that pit instinct against obedience and compassion against expediency, asking what it means to be worthy of devotion and to steward another being’s fate without sentimentality yet with unblinking care, so that in moments of chase, crisis, and quiet companionship the true character of both species gradually comes into focus.

Albert Payson Terhune, an American author renowned for vivid dog narratives, wrote most of his best-known work in the early decades of the twentieth century, when magazine serialization and later book publication carried animal stories to a broad readership. The Critter and Other Dogs belongs to that tradition of realistic canine fiction with an adventurous bent, situating its episodes in recognizably American rural and small-town settings. Readers encounter fields, farm lanes, kennels, and hearths that frame moral tests and practical challenges. The result is a collection that draws on period outdoorsmanship and everyday life while remaining accessible as popular narrative rather than technical treatise.

The book presents a suite of self-contained tales united by their attention to a dog’s point of view as understood through close observation of behavior rather than fanciful invention. The title story introduces a hard-used animal whose resourcefulness and spirit redefine expectations, while companion pieces follow other dogs through trials of training, loyalty, and survival. The experience is brisk and immersive: scenes of weather and terrain anchor action; suspense builds from tangible risks; and moments of tenderness arrive without dissolving the underlying realism. Terhune’s voice is plainspoken and confident, inviting readers to trust what the eye sees and the heart recognizes.

Key themes thread quietly but firmly through the collection. Loyalty is tested not as sentiment but as repeated choice under pressure; courage shows itself in steadiness rather than bravado; justice and mercy are weighed in how humans handle power over vulnerable creatures. The stories consider the lifelong work of training—what it demands, what it earns, and where it must yield to instinct. They also reflect on stewardship: the responsibilities that come with ownership and the character revealed in meeting them. Throughout, the natural world is not an idyll but a proving ground, sharpening questions about fairness, resilience, and the sources of trust.

Terhune’s craft balances immediacy with restraint. Action sequences are cleanly staged and grounded in physical detail—scent, wind, trail, fence, river—while the narrative resists overexplaining motives, letting decisions and consequences reveal temperament. Anthropomorphic touches remain anchored in observable behavior: alertness, body language, learned cues, and hard-won habits. Dialogue, when it appears, serves function over flourish, and moral framing arises from outcomes more than authorial sermon. The cumulative effect is a classic storytelling cadence: short arcs with crisp stakes, alternating tension and respite, and endings that feel earned by the terms the tales themselves establish.

For contemporary readers, these stories resonate as portraits of companionship under responsibility. They prompt reflection on humane training, ethical ownership, and the limits of breed lore when faced with circumstance and character. At the same time, the collection bears the marks of its era, including social assumptions and idioms that modern audiences may assess with a critical eye. Approached with that awareness, the book rewards attention with durable questions: What do we owe dependents in our care, and what do our choices teach them—and us—about courage, patience, and fairness in a world that often tests all three?

This volume invites several modes of reading: one story at a time, as distinct encounters with grit and grace, or straight through, to watch patterns of trial and redemption accumulate into a broader portrait of the human–canine bond. It offers suspense without cynicism, sentiment without indulgence, and a landscape vivid enough to feel the rasp of bark and the pull of current. Readers new to Terhune will find a clear point of entry; longtime admirers will recognize the steady hand and field-wise attentiveness. In either case, the dogs stand at the center, and their measure becomes, in part, our own.

Synopsis (Selection)

Table of Contents

The Critter and Other Dogs is a collection of short fiction by Albert Payson Terhune, centering on the character, courage, and companionship of dogs in varied settings. Known for clear, incident-driven storytelling, Terhune presents independent tales tied by attention to canine intelligence and the responsibilities of human stewardship. Scenes unfold around country homes, farms, and small towns, with ventures into field and show. The title piece and its companion stories balance action with observation, presenting dogs as active agents rather than ornaments. Taken together, the selections build a coherent portrait of loyalty tested by circumstance, with outcomes shaped by choice and training.

Opening selections establish the book’s environment and Terhune’s method: a dog is situated within a household or working context, its instincts and training introduced through a first, contained challenge. The narrative observes routines around feeding, herding, guarding, or play, then pivots to a situation that requires judgment under pressure. Human figures—owners, farmhands, neighbors—are sketched economically, primarily to define expectations the dog must read and meet. Early episodes emphasize clear cause and effect: a signal given, a hazard recognized, a boundary tested. The dramatic stakes remain modest at first, building a foundation of competence that later stories will strain and expand.

As the collection moves forward, the range of dogs broadens from pedigreed collies to strays, farm workers, and beloved companions in town. Terhune varies setting and tempo: a quiet watch through a storm, a brisk sequence on a trail, a measured day around a stable. Conflicts arise from natural threats, human carelessness, and competing loyalties. Some incidents revolve around lost property or a misjudged character; others around work, competition, or rescue. Without repeating plots, the stories share a structure in which observation leads to decision and action. Each outcome underscores the practical value of training joined to native wit.

The title story, centered on a small, underestimated dog nicknamed the Critter, exemplifies this pattern. Dismissed by size or appearance, the animal faces an adverse situation that asks more than reflex: it must read signs, weigh risks, and act decisively. Terhune traces the steps plainly, keeping close to behavior rather than attributing human motives. Human onlookers misjudge what they see; the dog’s work clarifies the picture. The episode turns on resourcefulness under constraint and the earned revision of opinion. Its resolution, kept understated, aligns with the collection’s interest in measurable deeds over reputation or pedigree.

Subsequent pieces raise stakes in measured increments. A watch becomes a vigil; a routine errand intersects with danger; a game turns into a test. Terrain and weather figure actively, as do distances that challenge endurance or orientation. Terhune stages moments of separation that require a dog to solve a problem without direct guidance, then reunites animal and human with the consequences of those choices. Action sequences are clear and spare, with attention to sensory cues—scent, sound, movement—guiding decisions. The tension derives less from surprise than from whether learned habits will hold when fatigue, fear, or distraction intrude.

Not every story strains to a crisis. Terhune includes domestic interludes that show manners learned at the fireside, young dogs mastering thresholds, and the quiet rhythm of companionship. There are playful misunderstandings and bits of humor, set beside matter-of-fact passages on discipline and care. Training methods are described in practical terms: consistency, fair correction, and clear rewards. Pack dynamics and rivalry among dogs appear without melodrama, revealing how status is negotiated and stability maintained. Human dilemmas—work pressures, pride, impatience—mirror or disrupt these balances, giving the narratives a double register of behavior observed across species.

Later selections consider time and memory. Older dogs confront diminished strength with retained knowledge; younger ones confront tasks that outstrip raw energy. Terhune marks changes in season and routine to trace how patterns persist or give way. Some episodes turn on passing roles from one animal to another or on recognizing limits and accepting help. The tone remains steady and unsentimental, attentive to what can be done rather than to what cannot. By this point, the collection has shown the same qualities in different guises, preparing closing pieces that gather threads of trust, habit, and earned responsibility.

Across the volume, the central message is consistent: loyalty is meaningful when joined to responsibility, and affection finds its best expression in fair treatment, thoughtful training, and respect for a dog’s nature. Breed and background influence aptitude, but individuality sets the course. Terhune’s settings—lakeshore lawns, wooded lanes, barns and lanes of rural New Jersey—provide a concrete frame for these ideas. Outcomes are presented as consequences of choices made by people and dogs within that frame. The book’s perspective favors cooperation over bravado and steadiness over show, inviting readers to value competence as much as devotion.

Arranged as self-contained narratives that nonetheless echo one another, the book moves from orientation to complexity to reflective closure. Early stories acquaint readers with the author’s plain style and the dogs’ working vocabulary; the middle stretch multiplies situations and tests; the final pieces reaffirm the quiet bonds that sustain the whole. Without revealing the pivotal turns in individual plots, it is fair to say the collection ends where it began: with attention to small, observable acts that accumulate into trust. The sequence delivers variety while maintaining a throughline of purpose, leaving a clear, cohesive impression.

Historical Context

Table of Contents

Set principally at Sunnybank, Albert Payson Terhune’s country estate on the shore of Pompton Lake in Wayne Township, New Jersey, the stories in The Critter and Other Dogs occupy an interwar Northeastern landscape—semi-rural yet within reach of New York City. The time frame reflected in the episodes spans roughly the 1910s through the 1930s, when telephones, automobiles, and improved roads were knitting farm, village, and suburb together. Sunnybank functions as a microcosm of regional life: local constables and, after 1921, the New Jersey State Police interact with landowners; seasonal tourism brings outsiders up from Newark and Manhattan; and the rhythms of kennel management, gamekeeping, and household labor reveal a social order balanced between tradition and modernization.

The American dog fancy’s rapid institutionalization shaped Terhune’s world and the milieu of this collection. The American Kennel Club (AKC) was founded in 1884; the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show, running since 1877, added Best in Show in 1907, and by the 1910s–1920s occupied national headlines. Queen Victoria’s nineteenth-century enthusiasm for collies had already popularized the breed in Britain, and U.S. interest surged. Terhune bred collies at Sunnybank and wrote for mass-circulation magazines that celebrated pedigree culture and working instincts. The book’s ringcraft details, kennel discipline, and references to standards mirror the era’s fascination with conformation, while its praise for courage and utility tempers a purely ornamental view of purebreds.

Prohibition reshaped New Jersey between 1920 and 1933, after ratification of the Eighteenth Amendment (1919) and passage of the Volstead Act (October 1919). Offshore Rum Row, stretching off Sandy Hook and down the coast, fed inland distribution networks through Passaic and Bergen Counties. The U.S. Coast Guard battled smugglers; local authorities were unevenly funded and staffed. Terhune’s estate fiction repeatedly stages confrontations with trespassers, night traffic, and furtive exchanges on back roads—dramatic patterns consonant with Prohibition-era lawbreaking. In The Critter and Other Dogs, vigilant household routines and canine patrols evoke the cultural memory of bootlegging and rural property defense, grounding episodes of pursuit and loyalty in recognizable interwar anxieties.

The Great Depression, triggered by the 1929 stock market crash (Black Thursday, 24 October; Black Tuesday, 29 October), brought unemployment near 25 percent by 1933 and widespread bank failures. New Deal programs followed—Civilian Conservation Corps (1933) and Works Progress Administration (1935)—yet insecurity lingered. In northern New Jersey, factory slowdowns in Paterson, Passaic, and Newark rippled into outlying towns like Wayne; tax arrears and foreclosures thinned country estates and farms. Rail corridors, including the Erie Railroad’s Greenwood Lake line, carried itinerant job-seekers. Terhune’s Depression-era stories, including those in this collection, portray drifters, odd-job men, and desperate thefts alongside acts of charity. The dogs’ constancy counterpoints human precarity, dramatizing a moral economy of obligation, vigilance, and earned trust that resonated with readers facing economic shock.

World War I (1914–1918), with U.S. entry in April 1917, lent a martial ethos to American popular culture and to dog narratives. The American Expeditionary Forces deployed nearly two million soldiers to France; dogs served as messengers, sentries, and searchers with Allied units. High-profile examples, such as Sgt. Stubby (publicized in 1918–1920), made canine heroism a household trope. British reliance on collie-type dogs as couriers and scouts further attached the breed to ideals of duty and intelligence. Terhune’s training regimes, calls for steadiness under pressure, and battlefield-like tests in the countryside echo this heritage. Scenes of risk, rescue, and disciplined obedience in The Critter and Other Dogs draw directly on the war’s vocabulary of courage and sacrifice.

Automobility and suburbanization transformed the New Jersey countryside that frames the collection. Mass-produced cars (the Ford Model T, 1908–1927) and paved highways expanded weekend travel; the U.S. Numbered Highway System launched in 1926, and State Route 23 (organized in 1927) connected Newark to Sussex County via Wayne. Telephones and electrification tightened rural surveillance and social networks. The New Jersey State Police, established in 1921, professionalized response to theft and trespass. Increased traffic brought strays, accidents, and opportunistic crime to once-quiet lanes. Terhune’s plots leverage these developments: vehicles deliver strangers to the gate, dogs track tire scents along cinder roads, and coordinated calls to police frame the animals’ work within a modernizing infrastructure.

An expanding humane movement supplied a moral framework for Terhune’s canine ethos. The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA, founded 1866) and the American Humane Association (1877) promoted anti-cruelty laws, humane education, and sheltering. By the 1910s–1930s, cities professionalized animal control; rabies vaccination campaigns and licensing regimes spread; commercial dog foods such as Ken-L Ration (introduced 1922) signaled the cultural shift toward companion animal care. Terhune’s stories echo these currents by condemning neglect, rewarding responsible breeding and training, and dramatizing rescues of strays. The Critter and Other Dogs uses household routines—feeding, veterinary calls, disciplined exercise—to map humane ideals onto everyday life, insisting that ownership entails legal and ethical duties.

Read against its era, the collection functions as a critique of indifference, lawlessness, and status-only pedigree culture. By staging conflicts amid Prohibition trespass and Depression hardship, it exposes the social costs of weak enforcement and economic desperation while arguing for stewardship, duty, and mutual aid. Its valorization of courage and character—sometimes in unfashionable or outcast dogs—implicitly questions narrow class and breed snobberies that dominated show culture. At the same time, the estate’s protective order argues for civic restraint and humane responsibility: property rights balanced by compassion, discipline tempered by mercy. The book thus interrogates how a community treats the vulnerable—animal and human—as a measure of its political and moral health.

The Critter and Other Dogs

Main Table of Contents
I
WILD HEATHER
II
DYNAMITE
III
JOCK
IV
THE “CRITTER”
V
YAS-SUH, ’ATS ER DOG!
VI
FOREST LOVERS
VII
HEROISM, LIMITED
VIII
THE COWARD
IX
A CRIME OR SO
X
“ HUMAN INTEREST STUFF ”
XI
SNOW WHITE
XII
“ MASCOT! ”
XIII
MY FRIEND, THE GENTLE MAN-HUNTER
XIV
“ ALL IN THE DAY’S WORK ”
XV
MAROONED
XVI
SEVENTH SON
XVII
THANE

I

Table of Contents

WILD HEATHER

Table of Contents

Champion Bruckwold Heather had brought home many a cup, many a medal, double-handfuls of blue ribbons and winners’ rosettes, and several hundred dollars in cash prizes, from the big dog-shows.

As a result she was tended and guarded and conditioned and pampered as though she were heiress to some super-imperial throne. Never in her two years of life had Heather caught so much as a mouse. Never had she known the disreputable joys of rummaging garbage-pails. Never had she had the miles of sweeping cross-country gallops which are a collie’s immemorial heritage.

Her balanced rations were served to her on sanitary pewter dishes. Her daily exercise was a walk of precisely two miles on the end of a leash, supplemented by a carefully supervised half-hour of wandering around an enclosed half-acre lot.

The Bruckwold kennels were inordinately proud of her. Her owner dreamed of founding a glorious collie dynasty from her future puppies; a race of sublimated show-type collies which should make Simon Bruckwold’s name immortal in dog-show annals.

From Scotland, at a cost of $2,700, Bruckwold imported a mate for her—the peerless British collie champion, Kirkcaldie Cragsmere. This Scottish paragon, alone of all dogdom, was deemed worthy by Bruckwold to sire Heather’s wondrous progeny.

But the day before Kirkcaldie Cragsmere was due to arrive in America, one of the Bruckwold kennelmen got exceedingly drunk. When he carried Heather’s evening meal to her he fumbled awkwardly at the drop latch of her yard’s door in closing it after him. The iron pin dropped, unheeded, to the ground, instead of fitting into the socket. The heavy yard gate swung slightly ajar.

There was an odd uneasiness in Heather’s blood on that winter night; an urge to rove instead of settling down stolidly on her cedar-mat bed as usual. There was invitation in the half-open yard gate. Nature for once was out-calling mere lifelong environment.

Through the doorway trotted Heather, a little scared at her own temerity, and out into the deepening dusk.

Aimlessly she wandered about the grounds. Then she followed the driveway out into the main road. Here the going was smooth. Her sense of adventure quickened. For perhaps a mile she ambled along the road. A passing car halted abruptly a few rods beyond her. A man descended to the ground and came back toward Heather.

The collie made no resistance when he laid hold of her ruff. She had known nothing but kindness. Her temper was gentle. She was used to being handled by strange judges in the show ring. So she stood still, even waving her plumed tail gently.

The man’s fingers were exploring her throat in search of a collar and license tag. He found neither. Apparently this was a mere stray dog, one hundred per cent eligible for the pound. The man was poundmaster at the village of Hampton, seven miles distant.

In this capacity he received from the township a dollar for every stray dog he could pick up, and an extra dollar for every unredeemed dog he put to death. Thus, ever, he was on the alert for such chances for revenue. That he was far from his own bailiwick, now, and returning from a trip to a dogskin dealer’s at the county seat, did not deter him from picking up this friendly lost collie and lifting her into his car.

To the dog-show world, Bruckwold Heather represented something close to $2,000 in cash value. To the poundmaster she typified merely a much-needed dollar, and perhaps a second dollar if she should remain unclaimed for forty-eight hours.

Dollars were few, just now, in the Hampton poundmaster’s line of industry. There was but one dog, at present, in the backyard pen he used as a pound. This was a savage male bull terrier his net had caught that morning when the hungry stray was too busy looting a garbage dump to note the poundmaster’s sly approach.

Into the pen, with this sulkingly ferocious brute, the man tossed Heather as soon as he reached home.

Next morning, when he came out with a panful of moldy scraps for his prisoners’ breakfast and swung wide the pen’s narrow door to take the pan in, the bull terrier launched himself voicelessly at his captor; digging his teeth deep into the unprepared man’s forearm and hanging on like grim death.

Back staggered the poundmaster under the impact. He smote with his free fist at the rage-wrinkled head whose jaws were grinding so agonizingly into his flesh.

Heather had shrunk back in terror at the din and turmoil of the attack. Now, unseen by her struggling jailer, she slipped out through the pen’s doorway and made off at a gallop.

She was wretchedly homesick. Above all things, she craved to get back to her own peaceful kennel, to her human friends there and to her food. She was rumpled and dirty from her night in the filthy pen. Nervousness made her tongue hang out. A light foam dripped from her lips.

As she rushed down the village street some one set up a screech of, “Mad dog!”

This asinine cry lurks ever in the fear mists at the back of the human brain, ready to spring to noisy life at the faintest provocation. In an amazingly short time a group of men and boys were streaming along the short street in full pursuit of the harmless and friendly little collie.

Their yells terrified Heather. The thud of their chasing feet lent the speed of dread to her own fast pace. A stone whizzed past her head. Another grazed her hip, painfully. Heather proceeded to grow crazy from panic. Unseeing, guideless, she tore along the street at express-train speed, whimpering and gasping. Out beyond the village she ran, and into the open country.

The miles flowed past; but ever she seemed to hear that howling man-pack at her heels and to feel the whiz and the sting of the volley of flung stones. Unseeing, unthinking, scourged by that crazy yearning to outstrip her human tormentors, she fled.

At last her straining muscles refused to carry her further. Sheer exhaustion began to clear the panic-cloud from her bewildered brain. Her sweeping and scrambling gallop slowed to a trot. Presently she slid to a halt, then dropped heavily to the ground. There she lay, fighting to get her breath.

Bit by bit her breathing waxed less labored. Bit by bit the wiry young strength seeped back into her worn-out body. She got waveringly to her feet and looked about.

She was in the middle of a hillside wood. The nearest house in sight was fully two miles away. All around her was brown forest, broken here and there by browner clearings. She had not the remotest idea whither her mad flight had carried her, nor that she was a full fifteen miles from the kennels of her birth.

To some dogs is given the mystic homing instinct which carries them unerringly over scores of miles of unknown territory, back to their owners. Many collies have this odd instinct. But many more have not. Most assuredly Champion Bruckwold Heather had not. Her pamperedly sheltered life had not been of a kind to waken such occult power.

She was lost. Irretrievably lost.

Ordinarily, in this predicament, she would have sought the nearest human, for food and for shelter and for companionship. But this morning’s harrowing experience had broken to pieces her loving trust in mankind. It had taught her that strange humans chase dogs and stone them and try to kill them. It had implanted in her undeveloped mind a mortal fear of men.

Remember, please, that this had been the first painful or exciting or even interesting occurrence in her entire cut-to-order life. And such an experience was certain to burn indelibly deep into her sensitive organism.

From somewhere just ahead of Heather, in the woods, sounded the trickle of water. It reminded her that she was torturingly thirsty. She moved forward into a steep glen where ran a shallow brook newly loosened from its clogging burden of ice.

Never before had Heather drunk except from her sanitary and oft-scoured pewter water-dish. But never before had water tasted one-millionth as good as from this half-frozen brook. She lapped up pints of it, raising her head now and then for breath, then continuing to drink.

In front of her there was an outjut of rock under the shale-walled side of the glen. Beneath this roof a riffle of dead leaves had drifted. The nook was sheltered from the damp February wind, and it was dry. Heather curled herself deep in the leaves. She fell asleep almost at once.

When she awoke, night was falling. She drank deep again from the brook. Then she was aware of a compelling hunger. She was aware, too, for the first time in her cotton-wool-wrapped life, that getting food may sometimes be a problem. The knowledge increased her teasing hunger and it drove her forth from her shelter on a quest for supper.

Ever, up to now, humans had provided everything for her. They had solved all her simple difficulties. Hence, toward the abode of humans she bent her steps. True, humans had turned out to be murderous enemies, to be shunned and dreaded. But where there were humans there was food. Always that had been Heather’s experience.

She raised her head and sniffed the still night air sharply; without the remotest idea why she sniffed or what she hoped to achieve thereby. Then, still not consciously aware why she was doing such a thing, she loped off through the woods, sniffing occasionally as she ran.

Soon she came in sight of a farmhouse’s lights. She slackened her pace and slunk forward, stomach to earth, on a tour of inspection. Around the house she crept, her nose ever busy in its quest for food. At a dairy door she paused. Here on the dead grass had been set a bucket of sour milk for the pigs’ next morning meal.

Heather plunged her dainty nose into the bucket with no daintiness at all. Long she lapped the acridly nourishing milk. At last the edge of her famine was dulled. She moved on to a second and larger pail, near by. The pail was full of table-scrapings, and the like, also designed for the pigs’ breakfast. Heather nosed aside some wilted green stuff. She drew forth a lump of underdone bread—token of a failure in the day’s baking.

This she gorged. She was helping herself to other edible bits amid the conglomeration of swill, when she heard the knob of the dairy door turn. Swift and noiseless as a shadow she disappeared into the night. Her hunger was appeased. Now she sought the lair she had found during the day.

For weeks Heather continued to creep through the darkness, every night, to feast on the pigs’ breakfast. Her innate daintiness and her fear of being heard made her nose too delicately in the pail to scatter any of its contents. Thus her nightly visits went unsuspected by the occupants of the house.

Also, this late-awakened forage instinct taught her to chase such rabbits as she encountered in the woods. At first she did this with so little adroitness that the pursuit always ended in failure. But, without realizing her own improvement, she taught herself by instinct to stalk her prey and to anticipate by a fraction of a second a running rabbit’s doublings. In like fashion she became a moderately good stalker of game birds and she learned to scent the underground haunts of field mice.

But never was she an inspired hunter. The farmhouse’s pig-food was still a welcome addition to her fare.

This pig-provender became more and more useful to her as the weeks went on. For she found herself growing slower and lazier and heavier, day by day. The clumsiest rabbit or grouse could elude her now. But for the farmhouse folk’s habit of setting out the sour milk and swill every evening for a hired man to carry to the pigpen early the next morning, she must have starved. Even the nightly two-mile trip, between the house and her lair became a burdensome effort.

On her return from one such foray, Heather sank limply on her side, among the leaves, muttering and whining. Then, feverishly, she began to scratch the leaves together in heaps, pawing them here and there, never satisfied with the results of her bedmaking.

At sunrise she was still lying there, weak, languid, but at peace. Nuzzling against her furry underbody were three squirmy puppies, about the size of rats. Sightless, vehemently hungry, they nursed with avid greediness; digging their almost hairless little claws deep into their mother’s fur and chuckling to themselves.

An expert dogman, viewing the newborn trio, would have had scant trouble classifying two of them as baby bull terriers. At least they were much more like bull-terrier pups than like anything else. But the third had all the general aspect of a collie.

The same expert dogman, a few days later, would not have had to classify the two infants that resembled bull terriers. For both of them were dead. Like so many dog mothers, Heather ate the two, almost as soon as they died. This with the canine instinct to keep the nest clean, and through no taint of cannibalism.

But the baby that looked like a reasonably pure-breed collie lived on. Lived and throve. For his was the nourishment which otherwise would have gone into the feeding of all three pups.

And now Heather took up the burden of life afresh; working hard for her son’s livelihood as well as for her own. Foraging was easier, every day. For April had come. The woods and fields were turning green in sheltered places. Birds and squirrels and rabbits grew daily more plentiful and fatter and less timid. And habit was teaching Heather to hunt better and more wilily, as time went on.

No longer did she bother to visit the farmhouse dairy yard. There was food and to spare, all around her; food which her increasing reversion to the wild rendered more and more palatable.

The puppy was pudgy and strong and inordinately fat. Now he did not resemble a rat, nor even a well-fed rabbit. He was growing at an incredible rate. His mother’s new-waked instinct made her change his diet, when he was five weeks old, to such game as she brought home to the nook from her daily rambles. With an atavistic joy, the puppy learned to love his new fare; and to growl horrifically as he sank his needle-sharp milk-teeth into the breast of some fresh-killed pheasant or quail.

He did not need to be taught to hunt. Perhaps, from pre-natal influences, the stalking of game was wholly natural to him; even when he was still too young and unwieldy to put on the necessary spurts of speed. He followed his mother afield as soon as he could travel with any certainty on his thick legs. And he watched her in vibrant excitement as she stalked and killed.

By the time he was five months old he was joining her in these stalks and in heading off rabbits she drove toward him. Slowly and with much difficulty had Heather become a huntress. Never was she a gifted performer in the rôle. But the puppy was born to it, as much as is any young wolf.

Soon it was he, not she, that did the bulk of the killing. It was he, not she, for example, that learned the wolf-trick of cutting a fat fawn out of the wandering deer herd or from beside the doe, and of driving the bleating fugitive into a ravine pocket whence there was no outlet; there to pull it down at his leisure and to devour the feast with Heather.

When they were not hunting or sleeping, there was a spot to which Heather used to lead the way, almost daily, from the time the pup was strong enough to follow her so far. This was a tumble of rocks atop a knoll which overlooked a stretch of hillside pasture land. Amid the huddle of split boulders there was ample space for the two dogs to lie or sit unseen and to scan the fields just beneath them.

There, for hours at a time, they remained. There was a magic fascination, to Heather, in what she saw from the rock-tumble eyrie. She herself did not know why the spectacle stirred her so. But she seemed able to impart its keen interest to her young son.

To a human onlooker there would have been nothing dramatic or exciting in what the two dogs watched. Such a human would have seen only an extensive rock-pasture where grazed about a hundred sheep; and another and lower pasture with twenty cattle browsing its lush grass.

Yet Heather could not keep her eyes from the occupants of these two spacious fields. She had no such red impulse to chase or kill any of the silly sheep or their stiff-legged lambs as was hers when she and the puppy came upon a herd of deer. She felt no desire to harm these sheep. But she found their every motion of absorbing interest.

For ten centuries her collie ancestors in Scotland had won their right to a livelihood by herding and guarding sheep and cattle. Hereditary instinct was gripping mightily at Heather’s heartstrings; and in only slightly lesser fashion at her son’s. The cattle in the more distant pasture were also most attractive to the two. Some urge they could not at all understand awoke in the brains of mother and son; an urge that had no objective and that certainly was not for destruction.

And so, hour after hour, they would look down upon the grazing creatures, lying silent, tense, in their double vigil, their eyes straying from group to group.

Once in a while a human would go to one or another of the pastures, to inspect the flock or the herd. At such times the pup would glance sidewise at his mother, as if for explanation of the queer biped and of his presence. At such times, too, Heather’s upper lip would curl in something like a reminiscent snarl; at sight and scent of the kind of creatures that had chased her out of civilization.

Once or twice, when the wind was right and the human who was inspecting the cattle and sheep passed within closer distance to the knoll, Heather could catch his scent and could identify it. She knew it for one of the several scents which had reached her from indoors; and by means of footprints on the dooryard ground, on the countless nights when she had pillaged the milk-bucket and swill-pail outside the farmhouse two miles away. The man must belong there, she knew.

Then came autumn and then the stripping of the trees by a gigantic invisible hand and the searing of the sweet meadow grass into brown-gray. The man whose scent Heather remembered came with two other men. They drove the sheep from their pasture and off to the farmhouse folds. The next day the three drove away the cattle, in like manner. And there was nothing left to entertain and excite the two dogs, from the rock eyrie on their chosen knoll.

Winter laid its strangling white grip on their world. Lean days followed. Game was scarcer and scarcer. The dogs sometimes had to range for many miles for a single square meal. They grew gaunt beneath their mighty winter coats. Yet they were as hard as nails. And by constant hunting they managed not only to keep alive, but to keep strong and vigorous.

The puppy went on growing. He was much larger now than was his pretty little mother. His chest was deepening—the chest he inherited from his bull-terrier sire, along with that sire’s terrible fighting prowess. It was always the pup nowadays that led the hunt. Yet always he gave Heather the lion’s share of the kill. His tender adoration for her was complete.

After months of lean dreariness the snow was gone and the earth began to array itself in green. On a May morning mother and son visited the rocky knoll for the first time in months. A nameless Something told them the two pastures no longer would be empty. And they were right.

Below them, in the farther field, some twenty cattle grazed. Up a rocky and twisting lane, from the direction of the farmhouse, the three men were driving the hundred sheep toward the nearer field.

The close-set bars of this pasture’s fence were down, as they had been all winter. Toward the bars, along the steep lane, the men were trying to pilot the milling and jostling sheep. The task was anything but easy, sheep being perhaps the silliest and most erratic and annoying members of the animal kingdom. The men had their hands full, to keep the flock from bolting or scattering or trying to turn back. But after violent effort the drovers brought their foolish convoys to within perhaps ninety yards of the pasture bars.

It was then that an enormous red mongrel came charging up from the direction of the far-off highway—a dog owned by a shiftless laborer in the valley below; a dog that ranged the countryside at will and had proven himself a pest and a menace to livestock for miles around. A dozen farmers had long been seeking positive evidence to connect him with a series of henroost-slaughters and lamb-killings.

The sight of so many moving sheep apparently went to the red brute’s brain and deprived him of his wonted craftiness. For now he was coming straight for the flock, head down, jaws slavering. The men shouted. One of them ran at the advancing dog with stick raised, while the two other drovers tried in vain to keep the flock bunched and free from panic.

Eluding the man with the stick, the mongrel hurled himself into the welter of baaing and scattering sheep. Slashing murderously right and left as his prey fled in every direction, he caught one yearling, pinned it to the ground, and tore out its throat. In what was almost the same instant, he was up and after another victim.

The sheep dispersed to every point of the compass, running wild, crazy with fear. All over the hillside they scattered, for a full quarter-mile; so that no man or no ten men could hope to round them up within a day. Ever among them, quadrupling their runaway panic, dashed the giant red mongrel. As he ran he pulled down a second sheep, slew it, and was away again after more victims. Then——

From nowhere—from the sky itself, it seemed—appeared two collies, galloping like the wind, their mighty pale golden coats aflame.

The three men shouted aloud in sheer despair at the advent of these two presumptive allies of the great red killer. The situation was beyond their control. All they could do was to stand impotently and watch the trio of sheep murderers go on with their horrible work.

But in the next breath the farmer whose scent Heather had recognized caught the arm of one of his two hired men. He pointed unbelievingly toward the rabble rout of pursuer and pursued.

The two collies had been racing side by side toward the scene of slaughter. Now, as at a signal, they separated. The younger dog flew, head down, toward the red killer. Heather made a galloping detour of hundreds of yards, until she was beyond the farthermost of the scattered sheep. Then she wheeled.

Deftly she turned back the group of sheep she had just flashed past. She headed them toward the men. Then, racing in and out, she caught up with single strays, turning them in like manner and driving them into the bunch she first had halted.

Ever augmenting the numbers of the bunch by whirling side trips for more recruits, she kept her captives in close formation and she kept them moving steadily, if unwillingly, in the direction she had chosen for them. It was pretty herding. It was as neatly and as swiftly and as deftly achieved as if by a life-trained sheep-dog. The spirits of a million brilliant herd-collie ancestors were shouting their atavistic secrets to her.

Again and again, here and in Europe, has a novice collie shown this miraculous hereditary skill at rounding up sheep. But to the three onlooking men Heather’s work savored of stark magic. From her to her son their bulging eyes kept shifting, and back again; after the fashion of folk who view a three-ring circus.

The younger collie did not swerve nor slacken his headlong pace as he bore down upon the huge red mongrel. The latter, by scent or by instinct, became aware of his approach.

Whirling around, as his teeth were about to close on the shoulder of a ewe he had just overhauled, the red dog was barely in time to brace himself for the collie’s charge.

The two dogs came together with a shock that threw them both off their feet. On the instant they were up again, mad for battle. The red mongrel was a famous warrior. Dog after dog, throughout the valley, he had killed in fair or, preferably, unfair fight. He was eager to use his most deadly and foulest tactics on this pale-gold intruder that was interfering with his glorious sport of sheep-slaying. But the task of getting rid of the new foe seemed suddenly more difficult than the mongrel had expected.

Never before had the young collie fought. But in his veins ran not only the blood of a thousand redoubtable pit bulldogs—invincible fighters all—but also the collie strain which gives its possessor a speed and elusiveness in battle and a quality of being everywhere and nowhere at once. The combination of the two strains was teaching its ancestral secrets to the youngster; even as atavism was telling Heather how to round up and turn a horde of panicky sheep.

By sheer weight, the red dog sought to bear down his smaller and lighter foe and to get the desired death grip on the jugular or at the base of the skull. But the collie dived under the plunging rufous bulk, slashing deeply the other’s underbody, then writhing free and tearing into his shoulder.

With a roar, the red giant shook loose and hurled himself afresh at the collie. Four times in as many seconds, he sought to crush and pinion the lighter dog. Four times the collie was not there as he lunged. Four times, deep slashing furrows in the red dog’s coat attested to the efficiency of the pup’s countering.

Then, as the collie sprang nimbly aside from the fifth lunge, his hindfeet slipped on a wet rock and he crashed to the ground. Ragingly the red dog threw himself into the slaughter.

But a collie down is not a collie beaten. There was no scope for the pup to get to his feet or to roll aside, before the gigantic red bulk was upon him. Nor did he seek to. Instead, as the huge jaws snapped shut on a handful of mattress-like hair and on little else, the collie struck upward for the mongrel’s briefly unguarded throat.

His collie swiftness and accuracy enabled him to secure the vital grip. But his bulldog strain’s all-crushing jaws enabled him to make the most of it, in one quick and body-wrenching motion.

The red dog slumped to the ground, his throat as completely torn out as had been the throats of his sheep victims. The pup wriggled from under him and stood for an instant, panting and looking about him. Then he saw Heather and what she was doing. Immediately the pup was in rapid motion.

And now the dazed onlookers saw both collies at work among the scattered sheep; as perfect a team as though they had been trained to herding, all their lives. Steadily, rapidly, the scatter of sheep ceased to be a scatter. Firmly, compactly, the protesting beasts were herded and bunched, in spite of anything they could do, and they were headed toward the pasture bars. Every time one of them tried to break formation, it was pushed back into place as readily as if a solid wall of collies surrounded it.

The gray-white jostle of sheep moved toward the bars. Not one of them was hurt or so much as bruised. For, after the custom of the best type of herd-collie, the two dogs were as gentle as they were deft.

At the bars there was one more futile mass attempt to balk. Quickly it was frustrated. The flock was urged into a gallop. Into the broad pasture they cascaded, all of them, from first to last. The panting dogs stood in the gap, side by side, to frustrate any stray’s possible attempt to double back and to escape.

Then only did Ellis Slater, master of the flock, find his voice and come out of his daze of wonder.

“I—I’ve read about such things,” he blithered to his gaping men. “I’ve read about them in Dad’s farm-books. But I never believed it. If it wasn’t for those two collies we’d have lost forty sheep before the red devil was through with them. And it would have taken us maybe days to round up the rest. I’m going to find who owns the collies. If I have to advertise for him. And I’m going to offer him his own price for the pair of them, even if I have to put a mortgage on the land to do it.”

As he talked he and his assistants were hurrying toward the bars where stood the golden dogs on guard. Heather and her son did not run away as the three men came forward, though memory made Heather shiver as if with a chill.

They waited until Slater and his hired men were too close at hand for the sheep to try to bolt past them. Then—once more as if at a signal—the dogs darted off.

Unheeding Slater’s pleading calls to them and the blandishing whistles of the two other men, mother and son made for the sheet of underbrush which covered the upper half of the hill. Into this they melted from sight, like a brace of wolves.

Their work was done—cleverly, gloriously done—the work to which they had leaped by instinct at sight of the red mongrel’s onslaught. Now they were free to take up again the forest life they loved; to turn their backs on their brief intercourse with humankind, and with no desire to renew it.

With eager joy, the Wild returned to the Wild[1q].

II

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He was not wanted. He was as unwanted as a wrinkle, or as a boost in the income tax. He was a collie pup—furry, pretty, eagerly friendly. His name was Kenneth.

He was given to Margaret Bryce by a man she detested. That was one reason why Kenneth was unwanted. Another reason was that Margaret was afraid of dogs and that neither of her parents had any experience or interest in them. Margaret was for sending Kenneth back at once—the moment the messenger boy deposited the small pup in the big basket at her feet on the veranda and handed her the note from Mallon.

But her parents would not have it so. They liked Mallon. They liked his gentleness with women, his outdoor ways, the tinge of the wild that seemed to cling to him. Besides, he had more money and more common sense about its use than has the average youth of twenty-seven. Wherefore they encouraged his visits to Mossmere, and they reproved Margaret for her unreasoning prejudice against him.

So now when, after one disgusted look into the shiny wicker basket, the girl demanded that the messenger take it back to the donor, both her father and her mother vetoed the return. For a wonder they managed to do so with such vehemence that Margaret yielded. But she yielded about as graciously as might a sick wildcat.