Kindness to Animals | Page 9

Charlotte Elizabeth

savage on purpose; and soon after beaten for flying at some person, or
thing that he was not wanted to attack. No wonder if the poor creature
loses all his fine qualities under such treatment.
All that he wishes is to be allowed to love you, and follow you, and
serve you. He wants the help of your reason to keep him from doing
wrong; and he wants you to explain to him how he may please you. It
has made my heart ache, many a time, to see a poor dog obey his
master's call, coming up to him in a crouching, crawling way, trembling
with fear, and seeming to say, "Pray, pray do not hurt me! I am ready to
do what you wish, and to lay down my life for you; but you are going
to beat or to kick me, and I am a poor creature, without any one to take
my part. I could bite you, I could seize you by the throat, or tear the
flesh off your leg, but I will not do so. I come because you call me;
pray do not hurt me!" And I have seen the meek, obedient creature
struck, and put to cruel pain, without the smallest reason in the world.
And when I recollected the words of the Bible, "Verily there is a God
that judgeth in the earth," I have grieved the more to think what

punishment that cruel man or boy was bringing on himself.
If we call one of our dogs, even when at high play in the fields, he
instantly comes bounding up, puts his head on one side, pricks up his
ears, and looks full in our faces as if saying, "Well, here I am; what do
you want me to do?" A beating is the last thing that they would think of.
I am not now speaking of Bronti and Fiddy in particular, but all the
dogs that ever I had. The reason is, that the dog is the very fondest
creature that breathes; and any but a really ill-tempered dog may be
managed by means of this fondness; while, as I before remarked, a
really bad-tempered one should not be kept to be punished, but speedily
destroyed.
You know what a terrible thing the bite of a mad dog is. The wound
may be so small as hardly to leave a scar, and it may heal, and be
forgotten, perhaps for weeks and months; still, the deadly poison is in
the person's blood, and when it breaks out, a most fearful death follows,
after such sufferings as nobody, who has not seen them, can have an
idea of. But, perhaps, you do not know that the angry bite of a dog,
when teased or hurt, has often produced the same awful madness. I
remember a neighbour's son dying most horribly of it, who had only
had his finger wounded, as if by a pin's point, by the tooth of a little
dog which he was teasing and provoking in play. This shows us how
very dangerous it is to irritate an animal; for you never know what peril
you may run into. These things do not fall out by chance. The Lord
God orders them all; and sometimes he does very terrible things, in
judgment on those who knowingly transgress, and for an example to
others. May you, dear young readers, be loving, and merciful, and kind;
and never stand for a moment in the hateful character of oppressors,
where it is alike your duty and your happiness to help the defenceless
and to protect the weak!

[Illustration]
CHAPTER IV.

THE CAT--THE COW--THE SHEEP--THE ASS.
Poor Puss! I have not so much to say for her as for the noble dog. The
cat is more selfish, and not so trustful; neither does she often show so
much affection for us. The cat's habits are more like those of a wild
animal, than are the habits of any other of our domestic creatures. It is
hardly possible to keep her from straying about, or to teach her to do no
mischief. I have had a cat that would not steal, and a dog that would:
both proving that every rule has an exception. I often think, when I see
Puss watching for mice and birds, and choosing them rather than meat,
what a wonderful thing it is that God should have taught a beast of prey
to attach itself to man, so far as to rid him of other creatures which, by
increasing too fast, would eat up what he wants to live upon. At the
same time, I grieve to remember that this war between us and the
smaller animals, and between them and each other, comes from our
rebellion against
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