it seems, following a bicyclist. There are men,
you know—save the mark—who, when
their beasts get ill or too expensive, jump on their
bicycles and take them for a quick run, taking care
never to look behind them. When they get back
home they say: ‘Hallo! where’s Fido?’
Fido is nowhere, and there’s an end! Well,
this poor puppy gave up just as it got to our village;
and, roaming shout in search of water, attached itself
to a farm labourer. The man with excellent intentions—as
he told me himself—tried to take hold of
it, but too abruptly, so that it was startled, and
snapped at him. Whereon he kicked it for a dangerous
cur, and it went drifting back toward the village,
and fell in with the boys coming home from school.
It thought, no doubt, that they were going to kick
it too, and nipped one of them who took it by the
collar. Thereupon they hullabalooed and stoned
it down the road to where I found them. Then
I put in my little bit of torture, and drove it away,
through fear of infection to my own dog. After
that it seems to have fallen in with a man who told
me: ’Well, you see, he came sneakin’
round my house, with the children playin’, and
snapped at them when they went to stroke him, so that
they came running in to their mother, an’ she’
called to me in a fine takin’ about a mad dog.
I ran out with a shovel and gave ’im one, and
drove him out. I’m sorry if he wasn’t
mad, he looked it right enough; you can’t be
too careful with strange dogs.’ Its next
acquaintance was an old stone-breaker, a very decent
sort. ‘Well! you see,’ the old man
explained to me, ’the dog came smellin’
round my stones, an’ it wouldn’ come near,
an’ it wouldn’ go away; it was all froth
and blood about the jaw, and its eyes glared green
at me. I thought to meself, bein’ the dog-days—I
don’t like the look o’ you, you look funny!
So I took a stone, an’ got it here, just on
the ear; an’ it fell over. And I thought
to meself: Well, you’ve got to finish it,
or it’ll go bitin’ somebody, for sure!
But when I come to it with my hammer, the dog it
got up—an’ you know how it is when
there’s somethin’ you’ve ’alf
killed, and you feel sorry, and yet you feel you must
finish it, an’ you hit at it blind, you hit at
it agen an’ agen. The poor thing, it wriggled
and snapped, an’ I was terrified it’d bite
me, an’ some’ow it got away."’ Again
our friend paused, and this time we dared not look
at him.
“The next hospitality it was shown,” he went on presently, “was by a farmer, who, seeing it all bloody, drove it off, thinking it had been digging up a lamb that he’d just buried. The poor homeless beast came sneaking back, so he told his men to get rid of it. Well, they got hold of it somehow—there was a hole in its neck that looked as if they’d used a pitchfork—and, mortally afraid of its biting them, but not liking, as they told me, to drown it, for fear the owner might come on them, they got a stake and a chain, and fastened it up, and left it in the water by the hay-stack where