Stories of Animal Sagacity | Page 6

W.H.G. Kingston
another in all right things, as did the cat and the
pigeon, whatever your respective ages or stations in life. The big boy or
girl may be able to assist and protect the little ones, who may render
many a service in return.
THE CAT AND THE LEVERET.
Cats exhibit their affectionate nature in a variety of ways. If deprived of
their kittens, they have a yearning for the care of some other young
creatures, which they will gratify when possible.
A cat had been cruelly deprived of all her kittens. She was seen going
about mewing disconsolately for her young ones. Her owner received
about the same time a leveret, which he hoped to tame by feeding it
with a spoon. One morning, however, the leveret was missing, and as it
could nowhere be discovered, it was supposed to have been carried off
and killed by some strange cat or dog. A fortnight had elapsed, when,
as the gentleman was seated in his garden, in the dusk of the evening,
he observed his cat, with tail erect, trotting towards him, purring and
calling in the way cats do to their kittens. Behind her came, gambolling
merrily, and with perfect confidence, a little leveret,--the very one, it
was now seen, which had disappeared. Pussy, deprived of her kittens,
had carried it off and brought it up instead, bestowing on it the
affection of her maternal heart.
It is your blessed privilege to have hearts to feel the greatest enjoyment
in tender love for others. See that you keep that love in constant
exercise, or, like others of our best gifts, it may grow dull by disuse or
abuse. The time may come when, deprived of your parents or brothers
and sisters, you will bitterly mourn the sorrow you have caused by your
evil temper or neglect.

THE CAT AND THE PUPPIES.
I have a longer story than the last to tell, of a cat which undertook the
nursing of some puppies while she already had some kittens of her own.
It happened that her mistress possessed a valuable little black spaniel,
which had a litter of five puppies. As these were too many for the
spaniel to bring up, and the mistress was anxious to have them all
preserved, it was proposed that they should be brought up by hand. The
cook, to whom the proposal was made, suggested that this would be a
difficult undertaking; but as the cat had lately kittened, some of the
puppies might be given to her to bring up. Two of the kittens were
accordingly taken away, and the same number of puppies substituted.
What Puss thought of the matter has not transpired, or whether even
she discovered the trick that had been played her; but be that as it may,
she immediately began to bestow the same care on the little
changelings that she had done on her own offspring, and in a fortnight
they were as forward and playful as kittens would have been,
gambolling about, and barking lustily--while the three puppies nursed
by their own mother were whining and rolling about in the most
helpless fashion.
Puss had proved a better nurse than the little spaniel. She gave them her
tail to play with, and kept them always in motion and amused, so that
they ate meat, and were strong enough to be removed and to take care
of themselves, long before their brothers and sisters.
On their being taken away from her, their poor nurse showed her
sorrow, and went prowling about the house, looking for them in every
direction. At length she caught sight of the spaniel and the three
remaining puppies. Instantly up went her back; her bristles stood erect,
and her eyes glared fiercely at the little dog, which she supposed had
carried off her young charges.
"Ho, ho! you vile thief, who have ventured to rob me of my young ones;
I have found you at last!" she exclaimed--at least, she thought as much,
if she did not say it. The spaniel barked defiance, answering--"They are
my own puppies; you know they are as unlike as possible to your little,
tiresome, frisky mewlings."

"I tell you I know them to be mine," cried Puss, spitting and hissing; "I
mean to recover my own." And before the spaniel knew what was
going to happen, Puss sprang forward, seized one of the puppies, and
carried it off to her own bed in another part of the premises.
Not content with this success, as soon as she had safely deposited the
puppy in her home, she returned to the abode of the spaniel. This time
she simply dashed forward, as if she had made up her mind what to do,
knocked over the spaniel with her paw, seized another puppy in
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