<h2 class="c4"><SPAN name="CHAPTER2" id="CHAPTER2">CHAPTER III</SPAN></h2>
<p class="MsoNormal c1">THE FOSTER-MOTHER</p>
<p class="MsoNormal"> </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Finn's first adventure came to him when he was no more
than about thirty-seven hours old, and, of course, still blind as any bat. That
being so, it may be taken that the grey whelp was not particularly interested.
Still, the event was important, and probably affected the whole of Finn's after
life. This was the way of it:--</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Early on the second morning of his life in this beautiful
world, Finn was lying snugly asleep between his mother's hind-legs on the great
bed at the stove-end of the outside den. When a litter of puppies are lying
with their mother there is always one place which is snugger, and in various
ways rather better than any other place. You would have said that the little
more or less shapeless, blind lump of gristle and skin that was Finn, at this
stage, had no more intelligence or reasoning power than a potato; but it is to
be noted that, from the very beginning, this best place had been exclusively
occupied by him; and if while he slept one of his wakeful brothers or sisters
crawled over him and momentarily usurped his proud position, then, in the very
moment of his awakening, that other puppy would be rolled backward, full of
gurgling and futile protestation, and Finn would resume the picked place.
Whatever was best in the way of warmth, and food, and comfort, that Finn
obtained, even at this absurdly rudimentary stage, by token of superior weight,
energy, and vitality. Also, though the last to be born, Finn was the first to
approach the achievement of standing, for an instant, upon his own little
pink-padded feet, and the first, by days, to dream of the impertinence of
blindly pawing his mother's wet satin nose, while that devoted parent washed
her family.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">But Finn and the rest were sound asleep, and Tara was
dozing with one brown eye uncovered, when the Master came into the den on that
second morning and spoke invitingly to his beloved mother of heroes. The great
bitch rose slowly and with gentle care, and Finn, with the other sucklings,
rolled helplessly on his back, sleepily cheeping a puny remonstrance, though he
had no idea what he wanted. Then, in his ridiculously masterful way, Finn
grovellingly burrowed under the other puppies, that he might have the benefit
of all their warmth, and was asleep again. Tara eyed the blind things for a
moment with maternal solicitude, and then, seeing that all was well with them,
followed the Master out into the bright, fresh sunshine of the stable-yard. She
did not think about it, but she was perfectly well aware that it was desirable
for her to take fresh air, and move about a little to stretch her great
limbs.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Come and see the Mistress, old lady; come along and
stretch yourself," said her friend.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">And so Tara strolled round the yard twice, and then across
to the back-kitchen door, where, inside the house, she had some warm bread and
milk with the Mistress of the Kennels. Tara lapped steadily and
conscientiously, but without much appetite. Suddenly, when the basin was about
three-quarters empty, she realised with a start that the Master had left her.
One quick look she gave to right and left, and then, the mother anxiety shining
in her brown eyes, she reached the outer door in a bound.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Look out for Tara!" cried the Mistress through the open
window. And: "All right! I'm clear now. Let her in, will you?" answered the
Master, from beyond the gate leading to the coach-house.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">So the Mistress opened the house door, and in three
cat-like bounds Tara reached the door of the den, and stood erect, her
fore-paws against the door, more than six feet above the ground.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"There, there, pet; your children are all right, you see,"
said the Mistress, as she let Tara into the den.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">In a moment, lighter of foot than a terrier, for all that
she weighed as much as an average man, Tara was in the midst of the big bed,
where she saw her puppies bunched snugly and asleep. She looked up gratefully
at the Mistress, as the roused pups (she had touched them with her nose) came
mewing about her feet, and coiled down at once to nurse them, apparently
unconscious of the fact that there were only four mouths to feed instead of
five. One cannot say for certain whether or not she missed Finn then. She
licked the four assiduously while they nursed; and, in any case, four gaping
little mouths, and four wriggling, helpless little bodies, represent a
considerable claim upon a Wolfhound mother's attention and strength; also, it
may be, that if she did notice that the big grey whelp was missing, she was too
wise and devoted a mother and nurse to allow herself to injure the remaining
four by fretting and worrying over matters beyond her immediate control. One
must remember, too, that Tara lived in an atmosphere of the most implicit
confidence, in which she never even heard an unkind word. On the other hand, if
there had been no puppies at all on that bed, when Tara returned from her brief
excursion to the back-kitchen, then it is likely that the big den would not
have been strong enough to have held her for long within its wooden walls. The
room had windows, and match-boarding and weather-board are not like iron.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Having seen Tara comfortably settled down with her family
of four, the Mistress hurried back to the house in time to see the Master
unwrapping little Finn from a soft old blanket, and placing him carefully in
the midst of three puppies of perhaps half his size, in a hamper near the
kitchen stove. Finn bleated rather languidly for two minutes in his new
environment, and then, being very full of milk, and very warm, forgot what the
trouble was and fell asleep. The Master closed the lid of the hamper then, and
said:--</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"I'll let them have a good two hours together there. Finn
ought to assimilate the smell of the others pretty well by then. What do you
think of the foster?"</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Oh, I like her," said the Mistress of the Kennels. "She
seems a nice affectionate little beast, and I think she has quite recovered
from the effects of that awful journey."</p>
<p><SPAN name="L3772" id="L3772"></SPAN><ANTIMG alt="sheepdog nursing puppies"
src="images/plate02.jpg"
style="display: block; text-align: center; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto"
width="400" height="537" /></p>
<p class="MsoNormal c1">Finn and his foster-mother</p>
<p class="MsoNormal c1"> </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Um! Yes, twelve or fourteen hours' travelling with three
new-born pups must be rather awful--poor little beast! Did she take her
breakfast?"</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Yes; a first-rate meal. And I think she will be a good
mother. She seems to have any amount of milk--more than is comfortable for her,
poor little thing!"</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Yes; that's exactly what I want. I want her to be
uncomfortably heavy for the time, and then she will be the less likely to
resent my great big Finn's introduction. It's only discomfort, you know, not
pain; and we shall put it right in a couple of hours."</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Then you have decided to put Finn to the
foster-mother?"</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Yes. You see, poor old Tara--well, she----"</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Yes, I know; she's poor old Tara--spoiled darling!"</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The Master chuckled. "Well, perhaps it is partly that.
And, any way, she deserves it. The old girl has done a good share of
prize-winning, and nursing, and the rest of it. I think of her as a lady who
has earned repose, particularly after----"</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Yes, I know; the illness, you mean."</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Well, anyhow, I think four pups quite enough for her to
nurse. And, as a matter of fact, I am none too comfortable about that. You know
I have always believed that that awful bout of mammitis permanently affected
her; her heart, and----and other things, too. Four days with a temperature of
over a hundred and five, you know; and, mind you, the vet. said she must die.
It was, so to say, in spite of Nature that we pulled her through. I am not at
all sure that we may not have to take them all from her. We shall see better by
to-night."</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Yes; I see." The Mistress of the Kennels was thoughtfully
balancing on the tip of her fore-finger a big wooden spoon, used in the mixing
of Tara's meals. "But why do you choose Finn for the foster?"</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Well, now, that's rather a nice point, and involves a
conviction of mine which I know you'll resent, because you rightly think Tara
the perfection of all that a Wolfhound should be. But the conviction is right,
all the same. A mongrel's milk is far stronger, heartier food than the milk of
so highly-bred a great lady as dear old Tara. Tara gives the most aristocratic
blood in the world; but when you come to food, the nourishment that is to build
up bone and muscle, and hardy health--that's different. Also, I only mean to
give the foster this one pup, though I dare say she is capable of rearing two
or three. Therefore that one pup ought to do exceedingly well with her. Now
Finn, as you see him, is the biggest pup I ever knew, and I want to give him
every chance of growing into the biggest Irish Wolfhound living. That's why he
is going to have this sheep-dog foster all to his little self, and, unless I'm
mistaken, you'll find him in a week the fattest little tub of a pup in all
England--the fatter the better at this stage, so the food's wholesome and
digestible."</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">In about one hour from that time, Finn woke among his
strange bedfellows, and trampled all over them, in a vain and wrathful search
for his mother's dugs. Then he bleated vigorously for three minutes; and then
the warmth of that snug corner of the kitchen sent him off to sleep again.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Another hour passed, and when Finn woke this time one
could tell from the furious lunges he made over the little bodies of his
foster-brothers that he had arrived at a serious determination to let nothing
stand any longer between himself and a good square meal. He would take one
indignant step forward (as it might have been a rather gouty and very choleric
old gentleman, prepared to tear down his bell-rope if dinner were not served
that minute); then his podgy little fore-legs would double up, and the next few
inches of progress would be made on blunt little pink nose, and round little
stomach, his hind-legs being flattened out behind him in the exact position of
a frog's while swimming. Several times Finn quite thought he had at length
found a teat, and, in its infantile, impotent way, the blind fury he displayed
was quite terrible, when he discovered that he was merely chewing the muzzle of
one of the other pups. On one of these occasions, Finn spluttered and swore so
vehemently that the effort completely robbed him of what rudimentary sense of
balance he had, and he rolled over on his back, leaving all his four pink feet
wriggling in the air in a passion of protest.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">It was in this undignified position that the Master
presently found the grey whelp, and he chuckled as he picked up Finn, with two
of the other pups, and wrapped them together in a warm blanket. The remaining
puppy was handed over to the gardener and seen no more in that place; so it is
safe to assume that this little creature's life embraced no sorrows or
disillusions. The next thing Finn knew was that his gaping mouth, held open by
the Master's thumb and forefinger, was being pressed against a soft surface
from which warm milk trickled. "At last!" one can imagine Finn muttering, if he
had been old enough to know how to talk. Immediately his little hind-legs began
to work like pistons, and his fore-paws to knead and pound at the soft udder
from which the milk was drawn. Finn, with his two foster-brothers, was at the
dugs of the foster-mother, a soft-eyed little sheep-dog, then occupying a very
comfortable corner of the big bed in the coach-house.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The Master sat watchfully beside the sheep-dog. She was
very glad to be eased of some of her superabundance of milk, and curved her
elastic body forward to simplify matters for the pups. Then she began to lick
the back and flank of the pup nearest her head; one of her own. The Master
leaned forward. The foster's sensitive nose passed over the back of the first
pup to the wriggling tail of Finn; and her big eyes hardened and looked queerly
straight down her muzzle at the fat grey back of the stranger; a back twice as
broad as those of her own pups. The black nostrils quivered and expanded,
expressing suspicious resentment. No warm tongue curled out over Finn's fat
back; but, instead, a nose made curiously harsh and unsympathetic pushed him
clear away from the place he had selected, after spluttering hurried
investigation, and out upon the straw of the bed.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Immediately then, and almost before Finn's sticky mouth
could open in a bleat of protest, the Master's hand had returned him to the
warm dugs. Again came the harsh, suspicious nose of the foster about Finn's
tail, and this time a low growl followed the resentful sniff, and blind,
helpless, unformed little jelly that Finn was, instinct made him wriggle
fearfully from under that cold nose. The language in which bitches speak to the
very young among puppies is simplicity itself. The Master, human though he was,
had not failed to catch the sense of this observation of the foster's, which
was:--</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Get out of here, you lumping great whelp! You're not
mine, and I won't nurse you. Get out, or I'll bite. It's true you've somehow
got the smell of mine; but--you can't deceive me. Gr-r-r-! Get out!"</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">But, though Finn instinctively wriggled his hind-quarters
from under that cold muzzle, his mouth and fore-feet vigorously pursued their
business; and, before the threatened bite came, the Master's hand (a firm one,
and soothing to dog people) had caressingly pressed the foster's head back upon
the straw, and held it there.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"There, there, little woman," he said, good-humouredly.
"Let him have his chance; he's a good pup, and will do you great credit
presently."</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">His hand continued to rest on the sheep-dog's neck or
head, till the three pups were comfortably full, and the foster herself was
comfortably eased of her bounteous milk-supply. Then, gently, he removed his
hand, and the foster proceeded to lick her own two pups with exemplary
diligence. Out of consideration for the Master, whom she found an obviously
well-meaning person, she refrained from taking any active steps against the big
grey pup, but she very pointedly ignored him. And when, in due course, Finn
came galumphing about her neck, with all the doddering insolence of the
full-fed pup, she turned her head in the opposite direction with cool
superciliousness, and exhaled a long breath through her nose, as though she
found the air offensive. But the Master petted her, and gave her a very little
warm bread and milk. Then he took the three puppies away in the warm blanket
and handed one of them to some one who waited outside the door of the
back-kitchen. Finn, with one sleepy foster-brother, was replaced in the hamper
near the kitchen stove.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">A couple of hours later, the foster-mother began to worry,
and to wish that her puppies would come and take another meal. At about the
same time Finn and his diminutive companion in the hamper began to worry, and
to wish that they could have another meal. Ten minutes after that they were
carried down to the coach-house, and put to nurse again. While they fed
vigorously, the foster, apparently by accident, touched Finn once or twice with
her tongue, in process of licking her own pup; and she did not growl.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Good!" said the Master, and he sat down on a little
barrel of disinfectant powder to fill a pipe.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Then both puppies began to grovel and slide about the
foster's legs and body; this being the natural order of things for very young
puppies: to feed full, to grovel and wriggle, to sleep; and then to begin again
at the beginning. But for the complete comfort and well-being of puppies at
this age, certain maternal attentions, apart from the provision of nourishment,
are requisite. For several minutes the foster-mother plied her own offspring
with every good office, and severely ignored the rotund and would-be playful
Finn. Then the sheep-dog lay flat on her side, and breathed out through her
nostrils a statement to the effect that:--</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"That is really quite as far as I can be expected to go.
This big grey creature has fed beside mine, and I have suffered it, as a matter
of charity; but---no more. The great clumsy thing must shift for itself
now."</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">But Finn appeared to think otherwise. His mode of
progression was rather that of an intoxicated snake, or an over-fed turtle on
dry land; but he managed to stagger along as far as the foster's muzzle, and
swayed there on his little haunches within reach of her warm breath. Instinct
guided the pup so far, and left him waiting vaguely uncomfortable.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The Master watched closely, but nothing happened, save
that the bitch ostentatiously closed her eyes. Then instinct moved again,
strongly, in shapeless little Finn, and he straddled the foster's nose, so that
his round stomach pressed on her nostrils. There he wriggled helplessly. Then a
curious thing happened, while the Master leaned forward, prepared to snatch the
pup from danger. The sheep-dog emitted a low, angry growl, which filled Finn
with uncomprehending fear, and toppled him over on his fat back. But, even
while she growled, maternity asserted its claim strongly in the kindly heart of
this soft-eyed sheep-dog. Finn did not know in the least what he wanted; but
the wise little sheep-dog did; and, her growl ended, she rolled Finn into the
required position with her nose, and gave him the licking and tongue-washing
which his bodily comfort demanded, with quiet, conscientious thoroughness. When
this was over, Finn, feeling ever so much more content, sidled back to a place
beside the other pup, and in a minute the pair of them were fast asleep in the
warm shelter of the foster's flank. Then the Master laid down his pipe, and
bent forward to stroke and fondle the little sheep-dog for two or three
minutes, chatting with her, and establishing firmly the friendship already
begun between them. And then, feeling quite safe in the matter, now that the
foster had once licked Finn into comfort, he went away, and left the three
together while he paid a visit to Tara.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Next morning, while the foster-mother was being petted and
fed in the garden, some one removed her own little puppy from the bed, and when
she returned to the coach-house, full of the contentment inspired by a good
meal, a little exercise, and a deal of kindly petting, it was to find her bed
occupied only by the big grey whelp. But she showed no more than momentary
surprise and uneasiness, and within the minute was busily engaged in giving
Finn his morning tubbing and polishing, after which she disposed herself with
great consideration in a position which made nursing an easy delight for Finn,
and enabled his assiduous foster-mother to watch the undulations of his fat
back, out of the tail of her left eye, while apparently sleeping.</p>
<p></p>
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