worse, nightly concerts. Strange beasts! what
can they have meant by this howling? One began,
then two, then a few more, and, finally, the whole
hundred. As a rule, during a concert like this
they sit well down, stretch their heads as high in
the air as they can, and howl to their hearts’
content. During this act they seem very preoccupied,
and are not easily disturbed. But the strangest
thing is the way the concert comes to an end.
It stops suddenly along the whole line —
no stragglers, no “one cheer more.”
What is it that imposes this simultaneous stop?
I have observed and studied it time after time without
result. One would think it was a song that had
been learnt. Do these animals possess a power
of communicating with each other? The question
is extraordinarily interesting. No one among us,
who has had long acquaintance with Eskimo dogs, doubts
that they have this power. I learned at last
to understand their different sounds so well that
I could tell by their voices what was going on without
seeing them. Fighting, play, love-making, etc.,
each had its special sound. If they wanted to
express their devotion and affection for their master,
they would do it in a quite different way. If
one of them was doing something wrong —
something they knew they were not allowed to do, such
as breaking into a meat-store, for example —
the others, who could not get in, ran out and gave
vent to a sound quite different from those I have
mentioned. I believe most of us learned to distinguish
these different sounds. There can hardly be a
more interesting animal to observe, or one that offers
greater variety of study, than the Eskimo dog.
From his ancestor the wolf he has inherited the instinct
of self-preservation — the right of the
stronger — in a far higher degree than our
domestic dog. The struggle for life has brought
him to early maturity, and given him such qualities
as frugality and endurance in an altogether surprising
degree. His intelligence is sharp, clear, and
well developed for the work he is born to, and the
conditions in which he is brought up. We must
not call the Eskimo dog slow to learn because he cannot
sit up and take sugar when he is told; these are things
so widely separated from the serious business of his
life that he will never be able to understand them,
or only with great difficulty. Among themselves
the right of the stronger is the only law. The
strongest rules, and does as he pleases undisputedly;
everything belongs to him. The weaker ones get
the crumbs. Friendship easily springs up between
these animals — always combined with respect
and fear of the stronger. The weaker, with his
instinct of self-preservation, seeks the protection
of the stronger. The stronger accepts the position
of protector, and thereby secures a trusty helper,
always with the thought of one stronger than himself.
The instinct of self-preservation is to be found everywhere,
and it is so, too, with their relations with man.