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<h2> CHAPTER VI </h2>
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CONCERNING CATS IN ENGLAND
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<p>If the growing fancy for cats in this country is benefiting
the feline race as a whole, they have to thank the English
people for it. For certain cats in England are held at a
value that seems preposterous to unsophisticated Americans.
At one cat and bird show, held at the Crystal Palace, near
London, some of the cats were valued at thirty-five hundred
pounds sterling ($17,500)—as much as the price of a
first-class race-horse.</p>
<p>For more than a quarter of a century National Cat Shows have
been held at Crystal Palace and the Westminster Aquarium,
which have given great stimulus to the breeding of fine cats,
and "catteries" where high-priced cats and kittens are raised
are common throughout the country.</p>
<p>England was the first, too, to care for lost and deserted
cats and dogs. At Battersea there is a Temporary Home for
both these unfortunates, where between twenty and twenty-five
thousand dogs and cats are sheltered and fed. The objects of
this home, which is supported entirely by voluntary
subscriptions, are to restore lost pets to their owners, to
find suitable homes for unclaimed cats and dogs, and to
painlessly destroy useless and diseased ones. There is a
commodious cat's house where pets may be boarded during their
owner's absence; and a separate house where lost and deserted
felines are sheltered, fed, and kindly tended.</p>
<p>Since long before Whittington became Lord Mayor of London,
indeed, cats have been popular in England: for did not the
law protect them? As to the truth of the story of
Whittington's cat, there has been much earnest discussion.
Although Whittington lived from about 1360 to 1425, the story
seems to have been pretty generally accepted for three
hundred years after his death. A portrait still exists of
him, with one hand holding a cat, and when his old house was
remodelled in recent times, a carved stone was found in it
showing a boy with a cat in his arms. Several similar tales
have been found, it is argued, in which the heroes in
different countries have started to make a fortune by selling
a cat. But as rats and mice were extremely common then, and
it has been shown that a single pair of rats will in three
years multiply into over six hundred thousand, which will eat
as much as sixty-four thousand men, why shouldn't a cat be
deemed a luxury even for a king's palace? The argument that
the cat of Whittington was a "cat," or boat used for carrying
coal, is disproved by the fact that no account of such
vessels in Whittington's time can be found, and also that the
trade in coal did not begin in Europe for some time
afterward. And there really seems nothing improbable in the
story that at a time when a kitten big enough to kill mice
brought fourpence in England, such an animal, taken to a
rat-infested, catless country, might not be sold for a sum
large enough to start an enterprising youth in trade. Surely,
the beginnings of some of our own railroad kings and
financiers may as well look doubtful to future generations.</p>
<p>It is a pretty story—that of Whittington; how he rose
from being a mere scullion at fourteen, to being "thrice Lord
Mayor of London." According to what are claimed to be
authentic documents, the story is something more than a
nursery tale, and runs thus: Poor Dick Whittington was born
at Shropshire, of such very poor parents that the boy, being
of an ambitious nature, left home at fourteen, and walked to
London, where he was taken into the hospital of St. John at
Clerkenwell, in a menial capacity. The prior, noticing his
good behavior and diligent conduct, took a fancy to him, and
obtained him a position in a Mr. Fitzwarren's household on
Tower Hill. For some time at this place his prospects did not
improve; he was nothing but a scullion, ridiculed and
disliked by the cook and other servants. Add to this the fact
that an incredible swarm of mice and rats infested the
miserable room in which he slept, and it would seem that he
was indeed a "poor Richard." One fortunate day, however, he
conceived the idea of buying a cat, and as good luck would
have it, he was enabled within a few days to earn a penny or
two by blacking the boots of a guest at the house. That day
he met a woman with a cat for sale, and after some dickering
(for she asked more money for it than the boy possessed in
the world), Dick Whittington carried home his cat and put it
in a cupboard or closet opening from his room. That night
when he retired he let the cat out of the cupboard, and she
evidently had "no end of fun"; for, according to these
authentic accounts, "she destroyed all the vermin which
ventured to make their appearance." For some time after that
she passed her days in the cupboard (in hiding from the cook)
and her nights in catching mice.</p>
<p>And then came the change. Mr. Fitzwarren was fitting out a
vessel for Algiers, and kindly offered all his servants a
chance to send something to barter with the natives. Poor
Dick had nothing but his cat, but the commercial instinct was
even then strong within him, and with an enterprise worthy of
the early efforts of any of our self-made men, he decided to
send that, and accordingly placed it, "while the tears run
plentifully down his cheeks," in the hands of the master of
the vessel. She must have been a most exemplary cat, for by
the time they had reached Algiers, the captain was so fond of
her that he allowed no one to handle her but himself. Not
even he, however, expected to turn her into money; but the
opportunity soon came.</p>
<p>At a state banquet, given by the Dey, the captain and his
officers were astonished to notice that rats and mice ran
freely in and out, stealing half the choice food, which was
spread on the carpet; and this was a common, every-day
occurrence. The captain saw his, or Whittington's,
opportunity, and stated that he knew a certain remedy for
this state of affairs; whereupon he was invited to dinner
next day, to which he carried the cat, and the natural
consequence ensued. This sudden and swift extermination of
the pests drove the Dey and his court half frantic with
delight; and the captain, who must have been the original
progenitor of the Yankee race, drove a sharp bargain by
assuming to be unwilling to part with the cat, so that the
Dey finally "sent on board his ship the choicest commodities,
consisting of gold, jewels, and silks."</p>
<p>Meanwhile, things had gone from bad to worse with the youth,
destined to become not only Lord Mayor of London, but the
envy and admiration of future generations of youths; and he
made up his mind to run away from his place. This he did, but
while he was on his way to more rural scenes, he sat down on
a stone at the foot of Highgate Hill (a stone that still
remains marked as "Whittington's Stone") and paused to
reflect on his prospects. His thoughts turned back to the
home he had left, where he had at least plenty to eat, and,
although the "authentic reports" use a great many words to
tell us so, the boy was homesick. Just then the sound of Bow
Bells reached him, and to his youthful fancy seemed to call
him back:—</p>
<p><br/>
"Return, return, Whittington;<br/>
Thrice Lord Mayor of London."<br/></p>
<p>Thus the old tale hath it. At any rate, the boy gave up the
idea of flight and went back to Mr. Fitzwarren's house. The
second night after, his master sent for him in the midst of
one of the cook's tirades, and going to the "parlour" he was
apprised of his sudden wealth; because, added to the rest of
his good luck, that captain happened to be an honest man. And
then he went into trade and married the daughter of Mr.
Fitzwarren and became Lord Mayor of London, and lived even
happier ever after than they do in most fairy tales. And
everybody, even the cook, admired and loved him after he had
money and position, as has been known to happen outside of
fairy tales.</p>
<p>Whether or not cats in England owe anything of their position
to-day to the Whittington story, it is certain that they have
more really appreciating friends there than in any other
country. The older we grow in the refinements of
civilization, the more we value the finely bred cat. In
England it has long been the custom to register the pedigree
of cats as carefully as dog-fanciers in this country do with
their fancy pets. Some account of the Cat Club Stud Book and
Register will be found in the next chapter. Queen Victoria,
and the Princess of Wales, and indeed many members of the
nobility are cat-lovers, and doubtless this fact influences
the general sentiment in England.</p>
<p>Among the most devoted of Pussy's English admirers is the
Hon. Mrs. McLaren Morrison, who is the happy possessor of
some of the most perfect dogs and cats that have graced the
bench. She lives at Kepwick Park, in her stately home in
Yorkshire—a lovely spot, commanding a delightful view
of picturesque Westmoreland on one side and on the other
three surrounded and sheltered by hills and moors. Some of
her pets go with her, however, to her flat in Queen Anne's
Mansions, and even to her residence in Calcutta. It is at
Kepwick Park that Mrs. McLaren Morrison has her celebrated
"catteries." Here there are magnificent blue, black and
silver and red Persians; snowy white, blue-eyed beauties;
grandly marked English tabbies; handsome blue Russians, with
their gleaming yellow-topaz eyes; some Chinese cats, with
their long, edge-shaped heads, bright golden eyes, and shiny,
short-haired black fur; and a pair of Japanese pussies, pure
white and absolutely without tails. One of the handsomest
specimens of the feline race ever seen is her blue Persian,
Champion Monarch, who, as a kitten in 1893, won the gold
medal at the Crystal Palace given for the best pair of
kittens in the show, and the next year the Beresford
Challenge Cup at Cruft's Show, for the best long-haired cat,
besides taking many other honors. Among other well-known
prize winners are the champions Snowball and Forget-me-not,
both pure white, with lovely turquoise-blue eyes. Of Champion
Nizam (now dead) that well-known English authority on cats,
Mr. A.A. Clark, said his was the grandest head of any cat he
had ever seen. Nizam was a perfect specimen of that rare and
delicate breed of cats, a pure chinchilla. The numberless
kittens sporting all day long are worthy of the art of Madame
Henriette Ronner, and one could linger for hours in these
delightful and most comfortable catteries watching their
gambols. The gentle mistress of this fair and most
interesting domain, the Hon. Mrs. McLaren Morrison herself,
is one of the most attractive and fascinating women of the
day—one who adds to great personal beauty all the charm
of mental culture and much travel. She has made Kepwick Park
a veritable House Beautiful with the rare curios and art
treasures collected with her perfect taste in the many lands
she has visited, and it is as interesting and enjoyable to a
virtuoso as it is to an animal lover. Mrs. McLaren Morrison
exhibits at all the cat shows, often entering as many as
twenty-five cats. Other English ladies who exhibit largely
are Mrs. Herring, of Lestock House, and Miss Cockburn
Dickinson, of Surrey. Mrs. Herring's Champion Jimmy is very
well known as a first prize-winner in many shows. He is a
short-haired, exquisitely marked silver tabby valued at two
thousand pounds ($10,000).</p>
<p>Another feline celebrity also well known to frequenters of
English cat shows, is Madame L. Portier's magnificent and
colossal Blue Boy, whose first appearance into this world was
made on the day sacred to St. Patrick, 1895. He has a fine
pedigree, and was raised by Madame Portier herself. Blue Boy
commenced his career as a show cat, or rather kitten, at
three months old, when he was awarded a first prize, and when
the judge told his mistress that if he fulfilled his early
promise he would make a grand cat. This he has done, and is
now one of the finest specimens of his kind in England. He
weighs over seventeen pounds, and always has affixed to his
cage on the show-bench this request, "Please do not lift this
cat by the neck; he is too heavy." He has long dark blue fur,
with a ruff of a lighter shade and brilliant topaz eyes.
Already Blue Boy has taken many prizes. He is a gelded cat
and one of the fortunate cats who have "Not for Sale" after
their names in the show catalogues.</p>
<p>To Mrs. C. Hill's beautiful long-haired Patrick Blue fell the
honor, at the Crystal Palace Show in 1896, of a signed and
framed photograph of the Prince of Wales, presented by his
Royal Highness for the best long-haired cat in the show,
irrespective of sex or nationality. Besides the prize given
by the Prince, Patrick Blue was the proud winner of the
Beresford Challenge Cup for the best blue long-haired cat,
and the India Silver Bowl for the best Persian. He also was
born on St. Patrick's Day, hence his name. He was bred by
Mrs. Blair Maconochie, his father, Blue Ruin I, being a
celebrated gold medallist. His mother, Sylvia, who belongs to
Mrs. Maconochie, has never been shown, her strong point being
her lovely color, which is most happily reproduced in her
perfect son. Patrick Blue has all the many charms of a petted
cat, and was undoubtedly one of the prominent attractions of
the first Championship Show of the National Cat Club in 1896.</p>
<p>Silver Lambkin is another very famous English cat, owned by
Miss Gresham, of Surrey. Princess Ranee, owned by Miss
Freeland, of Mottisfont, near Romney; Champion Southsea
Hector, owned by Miss Sangster, at Southsea; champions Prince
Victor and Shelly, of Kingswood (both of whom have taken no
end of prizes), are other famous English cats.</p>
<p>Topso, a magnificent silver tabby male, belonging to Miss
Anderson Leake, of Dingley Hill, was at one time the best
long-haired silver tabby in England, and took the prize on
that account in 1887; his sons, daughters, grandsons, and
granddaughters, have all taken prizes at Crystal Palace in
the silver tabby classes, since that time.</p>
<p>Lady Marcus Beresford has for the last fifteen years made
quite a business of the breeding and rearing of cats. At
Bishopsgate, near Egham, she has what is without doubt the
finest cattery. "I have applications from all parts of the
world for my cats and kittens," said Lady Marcus, in a talk
about her hobby, "and I may tell you that it is largely
because of this that I founded the Cat Club, which has for
its object the general welfare of the cat and the improvement
of the breed. My catteries were established in 1890, and at
one time I had as many as 150 cats and kittens. Some of my
pets live in a pretty cottage covered with creepers, which
might well be called Cat Cottage. No expense has been spared
in the fittings of the rooms, and every provision is made for
warmth and ventilation. One room is set apart for the girl
who takes entire charge of and feeds the pussies. She has a
boy who works with her and performs the rougher tasks. There
is a small kitchen for cooking the meals for the cats, and
this is fitted with every requisite. On the walls are racks
to hold the white enamelled bowls and plates used for the
food. There is a medicine chest, which contains everything
that is needful for prompt and efficacious treatment in case
pussy becomes sick. On the wall are a list of the names and a
full description of all the inmates of the cattery, and a set
of rules to be observed by both the cats and their
attendants. These rules are not ignored, and it is a tribute
to the intelligence of the cat to see how carefully pussy can
become amenable to discipline, if once given to understand of
what that discipline consists.</p>
<p>"Then there is a garden cattery. I think this is the
prettiest of all. It is covered with roses and ivy. In this
there are three rooms, provided with shelves and all other
conveniences which can add to the cats' comfort and
amusement. The residences of the male cats are most complete,
for I have given them every attention possible. Each male cat
has his separate sleeping apartments, closed with wire and
with a 'run' attached. Close at hand is a large, square grass
'run,' and in this each gentleman takes his daily but
solitary exercise. One of the stringent rules of the cattery
is that no two males shall ever be left together, and I know
that with my cats if this rule were not observed, both in
letter and precept, it would be a case of 'when Greek meets
Greek.'</p>
<p>"I vary the food for my cats as much as possible. One day we
will have most appetizing bowls of fish and rice. At the
proper time you can see these standing in the cat kitchen
ready to be distributed. Another day these bowls will be
filled with minced meat. In the very hot weather a good deal
of vegetable matter is mixed with the food. Swiss milk is
given, so there is no fear of its turning sour. For some time
I have kept a goat on the premises, the milk from which is
given to the delicate or younger kittens.</p>
<p>"I have started many of my poorer friends in cat breeding,
and they have proved conclusively how easily an addition to
their income can be made, not only by breeding good Persian
kittens and selling them, but by exhibiting them at the
various shows and taking prizes. But of course there is a
fashion in cats, as in everything else. When I started
breeding blue Persians about fifteen years ago they were very
scarce, and I could easily get twenty-five dollars apiece for
my kittens. Now this variety is less sought after, and
self-silvers, commonly called chinchillas, are in demand."</p>
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