<h2 id="CHAPTER_XII" class="vspace">CHAPTER XII<br/> <span class="subhead">THE ANIMAL TRAINER—SOME FAMOUS TRAINERS</span></h2>
<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">To</span> secure the right man for the training
of wild animals is about the most serious
problem that the proprietor of an animal exhibition
has to solve; very often the problem
remains unsolved.</p>
<p>An animal trainer is a complex and unique
person in more ways than one. He is not always
superlatively endowed with the characteristics
that are attributed to him by most
casual observers. Curiously enough, the very
element that would seem the most essential is
scarcely ever reckoned as his chief virtue.
Courage is considered by those who know
little about it as one of the first requisites, but
a man may have physical and moral courage
to an unusual degree and still be quite unfit for
a trainer.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">203</span>
The animal trainer may have, and all do
have to some extent, the physical courage
which is admired, but it is an unconscious
courage, and plays such a minor part in a successful
performance, that the possession of it
is not noted, either by the trainer himself, or
by those who know him. There are faculties
far higher and far more difficult of cultivation,
as well as more rarely possessed, which
the animal trainer must have.</p>
<p>First of all are good personal habits. The
finest lion-trainers are men of the most absolute
personal integrity, who smoke and drink
very little, if at all, and who possess self-control
to an unusual degree. It is a fact very
little known and somewhat difficult to realize
by those who have not studied the matter, that
in some curious, incomprehensible way, wild
animals know instinctively whether men are
addicted to bad habits. It is one of the many
problems which are beyond the human understanding.
For those who are the least bit inclined
to drink, or live a loose life, the wild
animal has neither fear nor respect.</p>
<p>He despises them with all the contempt of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">204</span>
his animal nature, and recognizes neither
their authority nor superiority. Just as men
recognize superior minds and strong personalities
in other men, so does the wild animal
recognize such qualities, and it is wonderful
how extremely susceptible animals are to
graceful, refined, and pleasing personalities.</p>
<p>The personality of an animal trainer is one
that counts both with the animals and with
the audience, and the more magnetic, polished,
and accomplished he is, the greater will be his
success and the stronger will be his influence,
both with the animals with which he comes in
contact and with the public which observes
him. But if a man has begun to take just a
little, or has deviated somewhat from the
straight road, the animals will discover it long
before his fellow-men.</p>
<p>From that moment the trainer’s life is in
danger every time he enters the cage, and the
animals keep a keen lookout for the moment
when he will either trip a little,—always the
signal for animals to spring,—lose his nerve,
or let his thoughts go wandering off to other
matters, even for a moment or two. The least<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">207</span>
carelessness, the least indifference, even a little
unusual movement on his part, is quite enough
to make the animals spring upon him and get
him down.</p>
<div id="ip_205" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 30em;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_225.jpg" width-obs="467" height-obs="600" alt="" />
<div class="caption">HERMAN WEEDON DEFYING HIS FIERCEST LION</div>
</div>
<p>Occasionally a trainer who is beginning to
take to drink or other bad habits realizes
that he will soon lose the respect and control
of his animals, and is wise enough to drop the
training business before too late. But, as a
rule, once a man has taken up this profession
he is extremely loath to resign, although he
may be perfectly well aware that he endangers
his life every moment he trusts himself among
the animals. There is a peculiar fascination
about the life which keeps him at it; and although
I have often warned men, they have
rarely been induced to give it up until some
severe accident has happened which has either
disabled them, or given them such a shock
that they lost their nerve entirely.</p>
<p>One of the finest lion-trainers that America
ever had has now voluntarily retired, though
still in the prime of life; but he is addicted to
drink, realized the danger, and so was sensible
enough to give it up before too late. He felt<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">208</span>
it was absolutely unsafe for him to enter the
arena night after night, when no matter how
little he drank had a numbing effect upon him.</p>
<p>The climax came one night when, feeling
a little more numb than usual, he suddenly noticed
in the midst of the performance that his
lions were all looking at him curiously. Instantly
he knew that they had lost their respect
for him, for all trainers can tell, before
anything happens, when the moment has come
in which they are likely to lose their dominance,
if that loss comes, not through accident,
but through the paralysis of their own
power. He realized at once the pitiful state
he was drifting into, and the danger, and was
wise and quick enough to get out before they
got him.</p>
<p>But that was the last time he ever entered
the cage. From being tractable and docile,
the lions from that time had nothing but
hatred and contempt for him, and his approach
even near their cages was always the signal
for savage snarls and vicious leaps at the bars.</p>
<p>Another essential in animal training is patience.
It must be an ingrained attribute of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">209</span>
the character, and dominant at all times—a
constant, persistent, unwearying patience.
Without it the trainer will never make a complete
success. Allied with patience must be
good judgment, and one who is patient generally
has good judgment. This is one of the
reasons that, as a rule, Englishmen and Germans,
being more phlegmatic, make excellent
animal trainers.</p>
<p>Trainers whose patience is limited never
last long. There comes a day when, through
hasty temper or a sudden loss of patience, the
trainer says or does some foolish thing, which
he always has reason to regret, and bitterly,
too.</p>
<p>In one case, one of the animals would not
respond to his cue, in spite of being spoken
to several times. The trainer kept his patience
for some time, but the fact that the audience
was getting restless made him nervous,
and in a foolish moment he shouted at the lion.
The shout was so unusual and so unexpected
that every lion in the cage started, and the
next moment there was a scene of the wildest
confusion.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">210</span>
The animals roared, jumped from their
pedestals, and soon pinned the man to the
floor. By a supreme effort he raised himself,
and being near the door, the attendants were
able to keep the lions back by firing blank cartridges
until he could get out. But he was terribly
mauled, and it was a long and tedious
illness which followed. To show what a disturbing
effect that shout had on the lions, it
was hours before they could be quieted, and
even when they were fed, two hours afterward,
they were still restless and excited, and
left their meat every few minutes to roar and
growl.</p>
<p>That was the last time the trainer ever entered
the cage. He lost his nerve completely.
Unless a man has absolute self-control, he can
never be sure of what may happen to him as
a lion-trainer. This trainer’s sudden loss of
patience proved that he was unable to control
his feelings, in itself a weakness, and animals
recognize all weaknesses immediately.</p>
<div id="ip_211" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 26em;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_231.jpg" width-obs="415" height-obs="600" alt="" />
<div class="caption">CAPTAIN JACK BONAVITA</div>
</div>
<p>Among other things, physical agility is a
prime requisite. It is better if it is the agility
of reserve rather than the agility of aggression,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">213</span>
for aggression arouses a like quality in
the animal, and develops an appreciation of
his brute strength, which sooner or later may
be used against the trainer. But the equipoise
and power existing only in those of good personal
habits and judgment give an animal
trainer the needed ability to escape an otherwise
unavoidable danger.</p>
<p>Another quality is nerve—and plenty of it.
Without nerve no man can do anything with
a wild animal; it is the secret of the animal
trainer’s success, while ceaseless vigilance
means the safety of his life. A man may be
nervous and yet have plenty of nerve. I have
known trainers who would start at the slightest
noise or a sudden sound, and who would
rather walk ten miles out of their way than
meet a stranger, or attract attention in any
way; and yet in times of danger, when their
lives hung in the balance, would exhibit the
utmost nerve and daring, mixed with a calm
assurance that was astonishing.</p>
<p>These personal qualities are more or less
apparent to all close observers of animal training,
but there is one which is even more essential<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">214</span>
than any of the others, and for which the
trainer seldom gets credit, yet it is one which
places his profession on a par with that of the
school-teacher, the preacher, the writer, or
any of the students of men, because the study
is more difficult and more complex.</p>
<p>This is a knowledge of animal nature, as
diversified and peculiar, and as subject to
varying conditions and environment, as human
nature. Some may say that it is not as
complex as human nature, because it is not as
highly organized, but it furnishes the same
food for thought, with the added element that
upon the trainer’s knowledge of the idiosyncrasies
of his charges depends his success, and
very often his life.</p>
<p>Constant vigilance, not only in the arena,
but out of it, is the trainer’s watchword. Consequently,
trainers are a hard-working lot; for
it is not only the actual public performances
which take up their time. It is necessary to
have constant rehearsals, constant lessons to
the animals about various things; for it is
never wise to try to correct or teach much
during a performance, and there is always<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">215</span>
much to learn and study. Many animals drop
off in time, either by sickness or from some
other causes, and new animals have to be
trained to take their place: this is always
done privately, and few ever realize the
amount of time and trouble that an animal
will sometimes require before he is perfected
in one little act.</p>
<p>The ideal animal trainer is a man of superb
physique. His eyes are clear, his muscles
hard and sinewy, his limbs well grown, his
body well developed, and his clean, healthy
skin shows the warm blood circulating beneath.
He is without blemish physically, and
his mental capabilities are good. He knows
men as well as animals. He makes a versatile
application of that knowledge; he knows the
traits, the history, and the tendencies of those
animals which form his life study, and on the
constant use of that knowledge depends his
dominance.</p>
<p>I have always been particularly fortunate
in my trainers. From the time when I assumed
control of the business in 1881, it has
been my good fortune to have intelligent men,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">216</span>
who take an interest in and love their profession,
and who love their animals and charges.</p>
<p>Edward Deyerling, chief animal trainer at
the Chicago Exposition in 1893, received his
tuition under me in England in the eighties.</p>
<p>His persistency in practice was remarkable,
and while his methods with his animals
gained their entire confidence in him, the unearthly
hours which he devoted to their education
would have told on the vitality of
many men of stronger constitution than his.
The success he attained was more than well
deserved. He was a humane trainer and possessed
those good qualities so essential for success
in the art of animal subjugation.</p>
<p>He was not killed, as is generally believed,
but died a natural death several years ago.</p>
<p>The wild animal performances of 1893
were small affairs compared with the exhibitions
of to-day, but his performance with
five male lions gave the World’s Fair visitors
much to talk about, and secured for him a
great reputation in this country, and I am
naturally proud that he began his career in
one of my establishments.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">217</span>
But I am prouder still of a lion-trainer who
is with me now, Captain Jack Bonavita, who
has trained no less than twenty-seven grown
lions to perform in the arena at the same time.
That this has been the work of years it is
hardly necessary to state; but the patience,
courage, judgment, and terrible nerve-strain
necessary to reach this climax no one can ever
realize except those who have watched him
carefully week after week, month after month,
and year after year.</p>
<p>There were times when it seemed as though
he would certainly have to abandon his task;
there was so much to contend with, so many
difficulties to face and overcome, and such bitter
disappointments. But Bonavita is a man
of iron will, and when once he has made up
his mind to do a thing, he never rests until
he has accomplished it thoroughly.</p>
<p>When he first made his appearance at the
Pan-American Exhibition in 1901, his entrance
with the twenty-seven lions was so impressive
that for a few seconds after the first
flare of the band the silence was intense. Few
will forget that incident. The gates at the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">218</span>
back of the arena opened, and slowly and majestically
out walked twenty-seven kings of
the forest, and at the unspoken order of one
man,—for he never speaks to them when performing,—each
one took his special place on
a certain pedestal, and went through all the
various evolutions and acts in which he had
been so carefully trained. The sight of this
one man moving quietly about among all the
lions made a deep impression upon many
people.</p>
<p>President Roosevelt remarked, after witnessing
his performance, that he had never
seen or heard of anything like it, and that he
admired the man’s pluck, for he was a hero.
General Miles wrote from the War Office, and
said:</p>
<p>“I was particularly impressed with Bonavita
and his monster grouping of twenty-seven
lions. Such control of these noble creatures
as was shown is truly remarkable.”</p>
<p>The first impression one gets of Captain
Bonavita is that of a refined and courteous
gentleman. He is peculiarly reserved, and it
is with the greatest reluctance that he can ever<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">219</span>
be induced to talk about himself, but he is
never tired of talking about his lions.</p>
<p>He is of an extremely sensitive, highly
strung nature, and although many feel that
his nerves must be of steel, there are times
when the terrible strain is more than unusually
severe, and he retires to his own quarters
completely played out. For it is absurd
to think that a man who does such a risky
thing as he does is never nervous. He
realizes his danger as much as any one, and
he has had cause to do so many times.</p>
<p>His chief comforts seem to be his cat and
dog. The dog, a magnificent Great Dane
named Pluto, is devoted to his master, and
after a specially trying time, when he seems
quite unable to speak to any one else, the master
talks to him. The cat, named Tramp, has
no pedigree whatever, and is as commonplace-looking
an animal as can be found in any back
yard. But Captain Bonavita is almost as devoted
to him as to the dog, and when the cat
sits on the dog’s back the man who can control
twenty-seven lions is perfectly satisfied.</p>
<p>I have spoken of some of his accidents in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">220</span>
other chapters. In all Captain Bonavita has
had over fifty bad ones, but these have not
prevented his going among the lions again at
the very first opportunity. To use his own
words: “A man does not refuse to go into
battle because he has been hurt.”</p>
<p>Another trainer who has become famous
through her daring and wonderful control of
the most treacherous of wild beasts is Mme.
Louise Morelli. She is a Frenchwoman, and
talks to her jaguars, leopards, and panthers in
French, which they appear to understand
quite as well as any other language, as it is
not so much what is said as the tone of voice in
which the words are spoken.</p>
<div id="ip_221" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 30em;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_241.jpg" width-obs="465" height-obs="600" alt="" />
<div class="caption">MADAME MORELLI AND HER JAGUARS, PANTHERS,
AND LEOPARDS</div>
</div>
<p>Mme. Morelli is a small woman and rather
frail, but her nerve and quiet self-possession
are truly wonderful. Leopards, panthers, and
jaguars are noted for their stealthy, sly ways,
and their deceit and treachery. They are
most difficult to train and subdue, and can
never be relied upon. These cringing big cats
are the most alert fiends by nature; they have
none of the nobility of the lion, none of the
aloofness of the tiger. They are cowardly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">223</span>
and sly, and are always watching an opportunity
to spring on the trainer’s back on the
slightest provocation, so that the training of
them is more perilous than work with any
other animals. And yet this small woman
goes into the arena with five of them, makes
them go through various acts and manœuvers,
and finally sits down among them and allows
one or two of them to lick her hands, and even
to take them in their treacherous mouths.</p>
<p>This is dangerous enough, but the most
dangerous trick of all is when she allows one
of her jaguars, Cartouche, to place the weight
of his prostrate body on a stick held horizontally
in her hands and over her face, while she
looks up into his glaring eyes.</p>
<p>Herman Weedon is noted for his mixed
groups, of which I have already spoken. He
has unlimited courage and daring, and is a
splendid trainer, but runs a terrible risk in
dealing with Goldie, who is one of the fiercest
and most dangerous tigresses. Time after
time he has been terribly torn and lacerated by
this animal, and time after time he has been
warned to give up all attempts at training her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">224</span>
and leave her out of the group altogether.
But one might as well ask a mountain to move
as to ask Weedon to give up Goldie. In spite
of her treachery and vindictiveness, he is
truly fond of her. He will take the trouble to
explain over and over again that it is only occasionally
that she has these wicked fits, that
often she is most gentle and affectionate, and
that she has such a beautiful head and body
that it would completely spoil his group to
leave her out.</p>
<p>And although all he has ever been able to
make her do is to sit on a pedestal and ladder
and allow him to open her mouth, he persists
in trying, with wonderful and unlimited patience,
to subdue that terrible, passionate nature
of hers, and induce her to be a little more
tractable. He is afraid of nothing, and
trouble and opposition only make him more
determined to overcome obstacles and attain
his object.</p>
<p>A wonderful proof of training is the man-ape,
or chimpanzee, Consul. This animal eats
and drinks like a human being, plays the piano,
uses a typewriter, and behaves in such a wonderfully<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">225</span>
human way that one begins to wonder
whether Darwin’s theory is not right,
after all.</p>
<p>Charles Day is one of the oldest trainers in
the exhibition, and has been in the Bostock
family for thirty years. The fascination of
this life is well shown in his case. At one
time he was also a trainer of lions, but now
contents himself with showing visitors round
and explaining the various zoological specimens.
He has had more unique experiences
than any man I know, and tells them in a very
dramatic and amusing manner.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">226</span></p>
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