whistle"), called “Tartar” in “Shirley,”
was “Keeper” in Haworth parsonage; a gift
to Emily. With the gift came a warning.
Keeper was faithful to the depths of his nature as
long as he was with friends; but he who struck him
with a stick or whip, roused the relentless nature
of the brute, who flew at his throat forthwith, and
held him there till one or the other was at the point
of death. Now Keeper’s household fault
was this. He loved to steal upstairs, and stretch
his square, tawny limbs, on the comfortable beds,
covered over with delicate white counterpanes.
But the cleanliness of the parsonage arrangements
was perfect; and this habit of Keeper’s was so
objectionable, that Emily, in reply to Tabby’s
remonstrances, declared that, if he was found again
transgressing, she herself, in defiance of warning
and his well-known ferocity of nature, would beat him
so severely that he would never offend again.
In the gathering dusk of an autumn evening, Tabby
came, half-triumphantly, half-tremblingly, but in great
wrath, to tell Emily that Keeper was lying on the best
bed, in drowsy voluptuousness. Charlotte saw
Emily’s whitening face, and set mouth, but dared
not speak to interfere; no one dared when Emily’s
eyes glowed in that manner out of the paleness of
her face, and when her lips were so compressed into
stone. She went upstairs, and Tabby and Charlotte
stood in the gloomy passage below, full of the dark
shadows of coming night. Down-stairs came Emily,
dragging after her the unwilling Keeper, his hind
legs set in a heavy attitude of resistance, held by
the “scuft of his neck,” but growling
low and savagely all the time. The watchers would
fain have spoken, but durst not, for fear of taking
off Emily’s attention, and causing her to avert
her head for a moment from the enraged brute.
She let him go, planted in a dark corner at the bottom
of the stairs; no time was there to fetch stick or
rod, for fear of the strangling clutch at her throat—her
bare clenched fist struck against his red fierce eyes,
before he had time to make his spring, and, in the
language of the turf, she “punished him”
till his eyes were swelled up, and the half-blind,
stupified beast was led to his accustomed lair, to
have his swollen head fomented and cared for by the
very Emily herself. The generous dog owed her
no grudge; he loved her dearly ever after; he walked
first among the mourners to her funeral; he slept moaning
for nights at the door of her empty room, and never,
so to speak, rejoiced, dog fashion, after her death.
He, in his turn, was mourned over by the surviving
sister. Let us somehow hope, in half Red Indian
creed, that he follows Emily now; and, when he rests,
sleeps on some soft white bed of dreams, unpunished
when he awakens to the life of the land of shadows.
Now we can understand the force of the words, “Our poor little cat is dead. Emily is sorry.”