<h2 id="IX" class="vspace">IX<br/> <span class="subhead">HOHANKTON, PETTIE AND OTHERS<br/> <span class="subhead">THE TALE OF THE TRAINED PIG</span></span></h2></div>
<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">“Do</span> you remember Red’s pig, Foxy
Bill?” said Hydraulic Smith. “Well,
I was in a camp that had a pig for its chief
feature, myself. He wasn’t a fat, comfortable
old lad like Foxy Bill, but a sort of cross between
a razor-back and a buffalo. He was a
little feller, with a mane on his head and on
his shoulders. He had high shoulders on
him, like a buffalo, but, as for the rest of him,
he was that thin you wouldn’t have known
him for a pig, except for the curly tail at the
end.</p>
<p>“He was our sole and only pet. We was too
high in the air for cats. They died of heart
disease. Nobody owned a dog. We called<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">192</span>
piggie Johanus Eliphas Hohankton for a
noted statesman in that part of the country, a
great man on the pension vote (believe he
drew three himself), that told us politics with
one wooden leg and a mouthful of language
trying to gurgle through Greaser Pepe’s gin.</p>
<p>“I think Hohankton discovered the lack of
dogs in town, for he tried to act the part as
much as he could. He’d go trotting up Main
Street, kind of sniffing at you and rolling his
eyes, give two or three squeals like a dog,
when you called to him, then sometimes he’d
go mosying around important, full of his own
business, just as you see dogs do.</p>
<p>“He took care of the coats and the lunch-boxes.
If a stranger came around he’d show
his tusk with his lip all curled up, and growl
something ferocious. He was a right smart
animal. I can see him now, going the lengths
of Main Street, sounding like a busted clarinet
player telling his woes in music, to let you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">193</span>
know he was there, and that if there was a
doughnut or some apple-sass, or, in fact, almost
anything that a hog might like, you could
please your friend Hohankton by putting it
forth.</p>
<p>“But nothing in the world would get him
fat. He was built like a fish, fore and aft,
and in a straightaway I think he could hold a
jack-rabbit.</p>
<p>“The Judge, he was a heavy-built old man
who wore his chin on his breast most of the
time. When Hank walked alongside of him
he hunched up his back like the Judge, and
put on much the same expression, until the
Judge rumbled out, ‘Durn that hawg!’ and
give him a scratch on the back with his cane.</p>
<p>“Then, if there was a lively bunch, why,
Hank was merry, too. He would trot and
amble with one side, and gallop with the
other, make prancing steps, biting at his own
tail till an oyster’d laugh.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">194</span>
“We had miles of claims on the bank. The
pay was light, howsomever, and you had to
send about twenty acres down the stream to
get enough to pay the hands off. We had
plenty of water on a two-hundred-foot fall,
or it wouldn’t have paid for the trouble.</p>
<p>“Howsomever, we sent an almighty lot of
farm land down where the ranchers didn’t
want it. They objected to our covering their
vegetables with four solid foot of tailings, consequently
they kicked like anything, but it was
just mine job against vegetable job, and after
the law courts had been worn out and decided:</p>
<div class="poem-container">
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">The rose is red, the sky is blue;<br/></span>
<span class="i0">We don’t know nothing, no more’n you,<br/></span></div>
</div></div>
<p class="in0">and everybody had an injunction out against
somebody else, which he couldn’t enforce,
why it came back to our old friend, physical
trouble, again. The farmers outnumbered
us, but we ranked in the first class for physical<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">195</span>
trouble, so there hadn’t been anything but an
exchange of personal remarks.</p>
<p>“There was just one rancher, who grew too
fast when he was young, and then stopped too
quick after he grew up, came at us fierce. He
called us all kinds of twisted crooks and
straight-out thieves he could think of. He
had it in for me particular. Once, as he got
to putting it on me, he grew excited, and began
to swing an ax around. He came nigh
hitting the stream one or two passes, and I
told him:</p>
<p>“‘You jay bird, you’ll be a-sitting and a-singing
on a limb if you monkey with that
little squirt of water. You are perfectly safe
from me during working-hours, but don’t fool
with our piping lay.’</p>
<p>“Not one man in a million knows what a
stream of water can do, and he was one of the
million that didn’t. So he r’ared up and said
he would splash the water over me, and he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">196</span>
raised his ax. I had half a mind to turn the
lever and squirt him over the neighboring
bluff, but I had pity in my soul, so I hollers,
‘Don’t!’</p>
<p>“But them words was too late. He is one of
the very few men who will ever tell anybody
how he tried cutting a hydraulic stream in
two. While he was blasting me he wandered
about, sitting on his horse loose; the ax came
down. I was looking right plumb at him, but
just how, when and in what way he disappeared
I will never tell you.</p>
<p>“I followed the direction of the stream until
I found him. He was curled up on his back,
about half the ax handle in his hand. Soon
as I came in sight he hollered, ‘<em>Whoa!</em>’ I
stared at him. I come a little nearer, and he
yelled ‘<em>Whoa!</em>’ again, and tried to scramble
to his feet. I learned afterward that he’d been
a mule-skinner for a while and thought his
team had turned on him.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">197</span>
“I grabbed him by the neck. ‘Now, you
horny-headed son of toil,’ I said to him,
‘you’ve learned one thing to-day. Keep on
doing that for three thousand, six hundred and
seventy-five days in the year and by the end
of that time you won’t put your thumb on the
buzz-saw.’</p>
<p>“‘You don’t mean to tell me a stream of
water done that!’ he gasps out.</p>
<p>“‘You have three shies at it,’ I said. ‘I’ll
furnish the axes, and every time that stream
doesn’t knock you one hundred and fifty feet
you get a new cigar. Want to buy in the
game?’ I shambled him off to his wagon and
dumped him in.</p>
<p>“He laid low for his revenge, like the
darned farmer he was, and meanwhile Hohankton
was the cause of our undoing. Animals
have a heap more sense about natural
things than men has. Hank got in the way of
following the boys over to the side of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">198</span>
creek. You know I used to undercut the bank
while the boys worked the big stone out for
me and loosened up the dirt here and there.
They was as careless fellows as you’d see.
Yet, at the same time, no man wants an eighty-foot
bank of dirt on top of him, and so they’d
be quite anxious in their minds for about five
minutes before the slide came.</p>
<p>“The first day Hank went over there he
threw up his head as though he smelled something,
straightened his tail, grunted loud and
away he went. The boys near got pinched
looking at him and laughing. When they
went back, Hank went back, and the next time
he blew his signal everybody departed. We
were not such a swell-headed crowd we
couldn’t learn a thing from an animal. Hank,
old boy Rocks, was just as right as he was
before, and after that he took up his position
as Official Notifier and he never went wrong.
The boys could work right along till they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">199</span>
heard that squeal, and then do fast time to the
creek.</p>
<p>“We was proud enough of Hanky before,
but now he had this actual stunt of his that
we could prove to any or all lookers-on, our
chests stuck out till the buttons popped off.
Other fellows would drop in with stories of
dogs that had done all the wonderful things
that you have heard tell of, and cats that used
to milk cows, and horses that could figure up
to six times six, and all them lovely relations
that gets to be natural history around the
camps, and we could stand for it and say ‘Yes,’
just as if we believed it.</p>
<p>“Then we’d remark we had a pig in camp;
and wouldn’t say anything more until Hank
signaled, and the visitor would begin to open
his mouth to see everybody a-running, asking
why. Then down come the bank!</p>
<p>“Usually the stranger went and put up
money that it wouldn’t happen again. After<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">200</span>
three times, though, he’d let go, scratching his
head and meditating: ‘It’s so—I see it’s so,
but how the blazes a pig knows more about
the acts of gravitation than a white man—you
tell me now?’ And we’d answer we weren’t
going to tell him. Let him find out, same as
we did.</p>
<p>“Well, he’d admit in a kind of grudging
way that that pig of ours was quite a curiosity.
Yes, he’d admit it, in a sort of easy, offhand
style, that old Hank was quite a curiosity, and
we didn’t have to say anything.</p>
<p>“They would go on from Placerville, working
the yarn up, until fifty mile away it
seemed we had a pig that could smell a pay
streak, always pointing, like a pointer dog,
when he smelled the gold; that he usually
walked back home on the hydraulic stream,
and that when it was time for a bank to fall
he would make sounds that sounded so much
like ‘Look out!’ that you couldn’t hardly tell<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">201</span>
the difference from a man’s yelling it, except
that it had a kind of pig brogue to it, as it
were, and so forth.</p>
<p>“We didn’t have to advertise Hank one particle;
even that gol-darned farmer heard of it,
and slouched around on the quiet till he see
how things lay.</p>
<p>“Well, here’s the way he come near getting
even. If there’s anything I ever really did
love it is to get my hands on a monitor lever
and just feel that old streak of water flying
across, smacking, gargling and gurgling in the
earth, ripping her out, mud and suds a-flying
all over, rocks going, too, and just a little
touch bringing the blade in the stream and
swinging her around, because, you know, four
men couldn’t turn that nozzle by bull
strength, where just a little blade that cut into
it at each side made it turn like a delicate
vine.</p>
<p>“Now, I liked that as well as when I used<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">202</span>
to live back East in a little old town up in
New York, and it was my job to water the
front street, and when there come a carriage
along I always used to be absent-minded
somehow, and that carriage would run right
into the water, and then them good old aunts
of mine used to explain it, how absent-minded
I was, and the ladies that got wet wouldn’t
listen to it, and the nigger coachman and I had
it around the barn fast. Well, I was just the
same kind of kid again when the monitor was
playing, and the sun was shining, and the
clouds was sailing, and the grass was growing,
and everything that ought to happen was
happening.</p>
<p>“Yes, my mind was in an A-1 condition,
peace and good-will toward men, and everything
else, when all of a sudden Hank gives
his three locomotive whistles, and pulls for
the shore, followed by twenty grown-up men,
falling over bushes, jumping over boulders,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">203</span>
galloping and waving their arms in wild excitement,
Hank far in the lead.</p>
<p>“‘What in thunder?’ I said to myself.
‘That bank ain’t nowise loosening;’ when I
happened to look down, and there, on a little
bench, clapping his hands, sat that guerrilla-faced,
swivel-jointed rancher, and there was
coming up to him a black-and-tan dog, no bigger’n
three rats. He couldn’t see me, and the
boys couldn’t see him. They watched for that
bank to fall, and there wasn’t any fall, and
they waited, and they began cussing their good
old friend Hank, that had never failed them
once before.</p>
<p>“When I thought of Hank being thus
abused, just because a cussed little dog—a kind
of beast he ain’t never seen in his life before—has
run him out, my fighting-blood began
to run quick all around my veins and arteries,
and I thinks to myself, ‘Oh, you gol-darn potato-bug
assassin! You slayer of squ’sh bugs!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">204</span>
Here’s where you get the thirty-third degree
of Free and Accepted Masonry with all its
tips, spurs, right-angles and variations—so
mote it be!’</p>
<p>“It wasn’t the hour for blue checks to
run in my direction. I grabbed the elevator
wheel and sent the stream heavenward, started
her swinging, hoping to drop it right on the
back of Mr. Rancher’s neck. I didn’t intend
to push him into the bank and hold him there.
No, I was the slickest boy handling a stream
the country contained, and I thought, perhaps,
I could hit him in the neck with about
seven hundred assorted tons of water, and
leave his hat hanging in the air. I wanted to
do something real nice to him.</p>
<p>“Well, it was <em>me</em> that got it. I always told
the Boss he didn’t load the tripod heavy
enough. When I sent the stream up she teetered
for fair. It was like a camel buck-jumping.
There ain’t much give to three iron<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">205</span>
legs, and so, friends, I was sitting up and down
times oftener than I could realize.</p>
<p>“There wasn’t a bronc’ buster that wouldn’t
have yelled, ‘He’s a rider!’ if he’d seen me
stick to that machine. We crow-hopped on
the rocks back and forwards, and alleman’ all.
We pitched forward and back, and we did the
double teeter, and as for the stream—the
smack when she hit things sounded just like
a little small giant baby, nine hundred feet
high, clapping his hands with glee. Sometimes
through the whiz and howl I could hear
men’s voices asking why I done so, and they
no longer sounded like the voices of comrades
and friends.</p>
<p>“I was helpless as a child; couldn’t grab
lever, wheel nor nothing. Finally one leg
toppled off an edge of rock and then—!
Well, she shot the cook’s shanty across the
stream two hundred yards first whack. It was
so sudden it didn’t even put the fire out. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">206</span>
boys took their solemn oaths the kitchen stove
went across, smoking as calm and peaceful as
anything, just like it had decided to take a little
fly. Nothing to interrupt business, but just
the kind of exercise you would think a cook-stove
would take. Yet they was astonished
that I should shoot a cook-stove across the
stream.</p>
<p>“While they was standing there astonished,
the old nozzle bucked ’way back, and plowed
a well in a bank ten feet away. I bet you that
stream could shoot a hole right up Niagara
Falls, and when she mixed it with the mess of
dirt and rock in that bank, kicking it backwards
at me, old Napoleon at Waterloo was a
dum poor effigy for Hy Smith. I couldn’t
see how it was ever going to be possible for
me to breathe again, and the awful roar and
swatting and smashing makes it queer how I
ever got to hear or think again.</p>
<p>“But she passed through that bank of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">207</span>
dirt in no time, and all the fellows that was
asking, ‘Where’s he gone?’ found out. They
got the last of the bank. Men could show you
dents where pebbles no bigger’n buckshot had
been blown into them.</p>
<p>“The old monitor got real gay, and thought
she was a Fourth of July pin-wheel, and after
that there was nothing but water-works on
the whole cussed creek. She took from one
side to the other in quick swings. Billy, the
cook, said he saw a block of boards take wings
and sail right over Hooker’s Mountain.</p>
<p>“I was dumbfuzzled and geewhizzled, till
my head was full of curled hair and insect
powder. I hung on with all hands and feet
by instinct, like an insect, until finally we
steadied down and played in the same place
for half a minute, and I brushed some of the
water out of my eyes.</p>
<p>“Beside me was Hank, looking reproachful,
as much as to say, ‘I <em>thought</em> you knew your<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">208</span>
limit, Hy—but you must have stayed in town
<em>too</em> long last time.’</p>
<p>“Then the next thing that appeared was
that darned little black-and-tan dog that had
caused the whole trouble, followed by our
friend, the rancher. I pined to wash his
whiskers. But it was not to be. The monitor
had jacked all her levers and cogs by knocking
around.</p>
<p>“‘Come on,’ I yelped to the crowd—‘Come
on, you flapjack faces! Help me hold this
critter down.’</p>
<p>“They got a move on. We tied the monitor
and sent word to shut off the water. Whilst
we was all stepping on each other’s feet, I
thought I heard a mixture of sounds like small
roars and large ‘Ki-yi’s,’ but the farmer, he
was very busy, thinking we might catch on
to who did all this, and come down to his
cabin some night and take his whiskers as a
momentum.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">209</span>
“I had been pounded enough, so one of the
lads took my place. I stepped out. There
was a battle going on. That cussed little
black-and-tan terrier was snapping and flying
around poor old Hohankton, that had never
received anything but kind treatment in his
life, and scarcely knew what to make of this.
I hate a black-and-tan dog, anyway. I like
to see a dog with legs big enough and long
enough to support his body, and with a body
hefty enough to give the legs something to do.
This yapping little devil didn’t have none of
my sympathies. When I looked at the miserable
beast I felt something <em>had</em> to happen to
him.</p>
<p>“Just then he made a quick jump and nailed
old Hank by the nose, and at the very same
minute somebody hollered for me to come
and fix something.</p>
<p>“After I pounded my thumb and wrenched
my wrist getting the lever back in some shape<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">210</span>
again, they stopped the water off, and the
country was saved!</p>
<p>“Then I grabbed that farmer and began to
recite facts about his career, while the boys
spit on their hands and took hold of shovels.
It looked like uncle farmer would lead an upright
life for some time, but he begged and
hollered and pled, so the fellows loosed him
from the position where we could best apply
shovels, and he explained that he didn’t go
for to do all this when he started, and we let
him up.</p>
<p>“He rose to his feet and apologized to us,
singly and collectively, and then he says,
‘Now I’ll just get little Pettie and ride right
along home,’ and he began to holler, ‘Pettie!
Pettie! Pettie!’ and all that come was old
Hank, who looked him straight in the face.</p>
<div id="ip_210" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 36.0625em;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_227.jpg" width-obs="577" height-obs="600" alt="" />
<div class="caption">“Little Pettie has departed,” I said. <span class="in1"><SPAN href="#Page_211">Page 211</SPAN></span></div>
</div>
<p>“‘Well, what has become of the durn little
coyote?’ says everybody, and then it just occurred
to me that I knew, so I went back to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">211</span>
where I had seen little Pettie grab old Hank
by the nose, and, sure enough, there was a
lovely little black tail!</p>
<p>“I brought it down to the rancher and I
said, ‘Little Pettie has departed, but he, she
or it leaves this for you as a souvenir.’</p>
<p>“The rancher says, ‘Gosh almighty!’ as if
he couldn’t believe his eyes. I held up the
tail, and I asked Hank:</p>
<p>“‘Here, little Hanky-Panky, did it eat the
rest of little Pettie?’ and Hank looked at the
tail and slouched off, with a kind of long and
non-complaining squeal.</p>
<p>“‘Well,’ says the Boss, brisk, ‘if we find any
more of little Pettie we’ll send it down to you,
but I guess that’s all you can collect of him
now.’</p>
<p>“‘Well, darnation!’ said the farmer, and he
brushed off the dust and dirt of his hands on
his trousers’ leg. ‘Well, say,’ says he, ‘I don’t
know whether to weep or to yell Hosanna!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">212</span>
As for me, personally,’ he said, ‘that cussed
little dog has nigh chewed my fingers off,’ and
he showed us all kinds of bites on his fingers;
‘but,’ he says, ‘on the other hand, it’s my wife’s
pet, and every time one of the children lets
itself get bit by it, why, their mother raises
sin with them for tormentin’ it. If I had a
good lie ready I wouldn’t weep one bit. But
the circumstances and hullabaloos and waterfalls
and geysers I have seen in the last twenty
minutes have left my mind running in streaks.’</p>
<p>“We all looked at one another. We couldn’t
think of anything, so we shook our heads.</p>
<p>“‘Well,’ said he, ‘perhaps by the time I get
home I will be able to explain how little Pettie
separated himself from this,’ and he twirled
the last remains. ‘Perhaps I can,’ he said. ‘I
don’t bear you boys the slightest grudge no
more. I can’t. I set this dog on your pig
a-purpose, and I can’t pretend to be at all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">213</span>
sorry that your pig et him up.’ He shook his
head again, and fixed his hat on.</p>
<p>“‘Well,’ says he, ‘matrimony is the mother
of invention. I reckon I’ll get out of it somehow.
Good-by, boys!’ And he took one more
look at Pettie’s tail and put it in his pocket.
‘If anything happens to me you will know
who it is by that,’ said he.</p>
<p>“As for the rest of us, we enjoyed ourselves
figuring on just <em>what</em> that rancher could explain.
You can bring home a dog and say
its tail has been cut off someway, but to bring
home a tail and say the dog has been cut off
someway is a hard proposition to work on the
female mind that has lived on a ranch twenty
years or so.”</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">214</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />