<h2 class="c4"><SPAN name="CHAPTER10" id="CHAPTER10">CHAPTER XI</SPAN></h2>
<p class="MsoNormal c1">A SEA CHANGE</p>
<p class="MsoNormal"> </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">That long sea voyage was a strange, instructive experience
for Finn. The preceding few months had made for rapid development upon his
wilder side; they had taught him much as a hound and a hunter. This voyage
developed his personality, his character, the central something that was Finn,
and that differentiated him from other Irish Wolfhounds. Above all, the voyage
brought great development in Finn in the matter of his relations with the
Master and the Mistress of the Kennels.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The first three or four days of the passage did, as an
experience, resemble a Dog Show, in that Finn spent almost the whole time on
his bench, and was only taken down for a few minutes at a time. Later on,
however, when things and people had settled down into their places on board the
big liner, the Master obtained permission to give Finn a good deal more
freedom, on the understanding that he held himself responsible for the
Wolfhound's good behaviour. This meant that, by day and night, Finn was given
his liberty for hours together; but during the whole of that time he was never
out of the sight of one or other of his two friends, and, the Mistress not
being a good sailor, it meant that Finn was nearly always with the Master.
This, again, meant a marked change in Finn's ways of life, and a change which
affected his character materially. Here was no orchard through which he could
wander off to the open country, there to roam and hunt alone, and out of touch
with humans. Now, whether moving about or at rest, Finn was continuously within
hearing and sight of the Master, and practically always within touch of him.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">One result of all this was that Finn became greatly
humanised. He grew to understand far more of the Master's speech than he had
ever understood before; he came to depend greatly upon the Master's company and
kindly intercourse with him. With this came the development of an enduring and
conscious love of the Master, which filled Finn's mind and heart through all
these warm and lazy days, and entirely dominated his environment. With regard
to other people, he was a great deal more reserved than he had been in the old
days before he met Matey, and before he took to hunting. He permitted their
attentions courteously and, in the case of children, he would lend himself to
their desires readily enough. But he never invited attention from any one,
excepting the Master; and, whereas he would settle down comfortably to doze on
the sun-bathed deck, with his muzzle resting on the Master's feet, he never
volunteered to touch other people, though he accepted their caresses
good-humouredly enough.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Hitherto, putting aside the exuberant demonstrativeness of
early puppyhood, this had been Finn's attitude toward all humans, including
even the Master. He had liked the Master and the Mistress; he had trusted them,
and he had been deeply thankful to find them again after his escapade with
Matey; but it could hardly have been said that he had loved them, in the sense,
for example, that his mother had loved the Master, or that he himself loved the
Master now; now that he would lie for hours on his bench, waiting, watching,
and listening for the sound of the footfall which he easily distinguished from
among the many that he heard. In short, what had been no more than friendly
affection and confidence, grew now to personal attachment, to a feeling which
could fairly be called love, seeing that it comprised intense and jealous
devotion, and a contentedness which approached rapture, in the touch and
presence and society of one person. When they sat on the deck together at
night, the Master and Finn, under the gorgeous sky which so often favours
Pacific travellers by sea, the Wolfhound's intercourse with the man stopped
only just short of articulation, and went far beyond the normal companionship
of man and dog.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">For instance, the Master would sometimes growl out low
remarks to Finn about the Old Country, about Tara, and the house beside the
Sussex Downs; and Finn understood practically every word he said on those
occasions. And then the Master might wind up by stroking his head in a heavy,
lingering way that Finn loved, and saying--</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Ah, well, Finn boy; there's other good places in the
world, too. The Australian bush is a mighty big hunting ground, I can tell you.
We'll have some good times there, Finn boy; rabbits, and wallabies, and
kangaroos, Finn; great sport for my big Wolfhound and me. And maybe we'll get a
good home together out there before long, old man; might even strike it rich,
somehow, and go back to the Downs again, and do the thing in real solid style,
my Finn, with big kennels and half a score of hounds for you to lord it
over!"</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">And at such times, Finn's inability to speak after the
human fashion was no particular bar between them. Understanding was so clearly
voiced in his dark, glistening eyes, in the eager thrust of his wet, cool
muzzle, and sometimes, for emphasis, in the compelling weight of his great arm,
as he laid it, with a pulling pressure, over the Master's shoulder. In addition
to all this, he would occasionally whimper, or make low growling noises, while
he pawed the Master's shoulder; and these sounds said as plainly as any words
could, and perhaps more emphatically: "I love you. I understand; and I love
you, Master. It's you and me, for always; and nothing else matters, wherever we
may be!"</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">And then the Master would say something about the Mistress
of the Kennels, and Finn would beat the deck with his thirty-inch tail, which
was as thick and strong at its roots as a man's arm. Or perhaps, if the weather
were calm as well as fine, the Mistress herself would come along and join them,
seated in a low deck chair; and then, though Finn's eyes would take on a
momentarily anxious look if her hand touched the Master, he would yet be very
happy, stretched out between them, with the half of one dark eye to spare for
one of them, and his whole big heart shining out upon the Master in the gaze
which held his head always turned the one way.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Just as something always seems to strike a balance in the
affairs of men-folk, so the gods who watch over the affairs of Finn's kind are
wont to provide compensations. For months, before this sea voyage, Finn's whole
being had been absorbed by the interests of the half-tame wild, in the country
beside the Sussex Downs. Dreaming and waking, the hunt had held his thoughts,
and solitary roaming had been his delight. Here aboard the great steamer he was
suddenly and completely cut off from all these things; but something else had
come to take possession of his active nature, his busy mind, his growing heart;
and the great love of the Master which grew in him now effectually shut out
anything like regret for the old life, by making the new life all-sufficing and
more compact of interest, of satisfying fullness, than ever the home life had
been at its best.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">If it had not been for this remarkable development of
Finn's character which was brought about by his confinement on board a ship
with the Master, he would never have played the part he did in what was really
the most important event of his life up till this time; and one, too, which
taught the Master a good deal, regarding his own relationship to the great
Wolfhound he had bred. It all happened on a Sunday morning when, the weather
being very hot, the captain held service on the upper deck, under awnings, of
course. Half a dozen children were allowed, during the latter part of the
service, to withdraw, and play quietly by themselves, twenty yards away from
the last row of chairs occupied by the congregation. At one end of this last
row the Master sat, with Finn beside him on the deck. Among the children, one,
a curly-headed rascal of a boy named Tim, aged eight, was everybody's
favourite, and the leader of the rest in most kinds of mischief. Exactly how he
managed it was never rightly understood, but when the piercing sound of a
childish scream smote upon the Master's ears, through the droning periods of
the captain's read sermon, Tim was in mid-air, half-way between the ship's rail
and the sea, and the other children were staring, horror-stricken, at the place
he had occupied a moment before, with his chubby arms about the stem of a
boat's davit, and his brown legs astride the rail.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The Master was a man given to acting swiftly upon impulse.
Finn had leaped to his feet at sound of the scream. The Master followed on the
instant, and reached the ship's side within a second or two of Finn's arrival
there. Finn's muzzle was thrust out between the white rails, and he saw the
tiny figure of Tim in the smoothly eddying water a little abaft of the ship's
beam. The Master saw it, too, and, turning, with one urgent hand on Finn's
neck, he shouted--</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Over and fetch him, Finn! Over boy! Over!"</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">There was no mistaking his meaning. Finn had instant
understanding of that. But Finn was no water dog. The sea was very far below.
He let out two short nasal whimpers. The Master swung one arm excitedly.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Over, boy! Fetch Tim! Over, then!"</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Then the growing love of the past few weeks spoke strongly
in Finn, overriding instinct in him, and, with a whining sort of bark of
protest against the order his new love forced him to obey, he leaped over the
white rail, and down, down, down through five-and-thirty feet of space into the
smooth, blue sea, where it swirled and rippled past the high steel walls of the
ship.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">This exhausted the Master's first impulse. Instantly then
there flashed through his mind knowledge of the fact that Finn was no water
dog; that he had never been trained to fetch from the water, or to handle human
beings gently with his teeth. The Master had never even seen Finn swim. That
was a great love, a wonderful trust which had shone out from Finn's eyes, when,
instinct protesting in his whining bark, he had leaped the rail in obedience to
orders given on the impulse, and without thought. Would Finn be able to help
the child who had often played with him about the deck? And how if that whining
bark were a last good-bye?</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">In the next moment the Master acted on his second impulse,
regardless of the shouts he heard behind him. His shoes and coat were shed from
him in a moment, and he, too, leaped the rail, reaching the warm, blue water
feet first, and striking out at once towards Finn and the child. As a swimmer
his powers were not at all above the average.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">For all his inexperience of the water Finn was a quicker
swimmer than the Master, and he reached little Tim within a very few seconds,
and seized the youngster firmly between his great jaws, while turning in the
water towards the ship he had left. Finn was careful enough to prevent his
teeth from injuring the child; there was no more fear of his doing that than of
his biting the hand of a man who caressed him. But he was no trained
life-saver, and it did not occur to him to notice which side up the child was
held. Also, a few seconds later, he caught sight of the Master in the water,
and that made him loose his hold of Tim, in his haste to reach one whose claim
upon him he regarded as infinitely greater. This was only momentary, however.
Some instinct told him he must not leave undone the task he had been set, and
with a swift movement he plucked the child to him again, and exerted all his
great strength to reach the Master. This time little Tim's face was uppermost;
but his small arms hung limply and helplessly at right angles from his body.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">It was only a matter of seconds now till Finn and the
Master met in the water. The Master seized little Tim, and Finn seized the
Master, by one arm.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Down, boy! Get down, Finn!" shouted the Master; and Finn
obediently loosed his hold, and swam anxiously round and round his friend in
short circles, while the Master trod water, and held Tim high above him, head
down, and body bent in the middle.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">It was less than three minutes later that the second
officer of the liner shouted, "Way enough!" and a big white lifeboat slid past
the Master's shoulder. The second officer leaned far out, and snatched little
curly-headed Tim from the Master's hands, passing him straight to the waiting
arms of another officer, the ship's surgeon.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Help the dog in!" shouted the Master, as two sailorly
hands reached out toward himself. But Finn was watchfully circling behind him.
It was rather an undertaking getting the great Wolfhound into the lifeboat; but
it was presently accomplished, the Master thrusting behind, and two men in the
boat tugging in front. Tim was lying on his face on the doctor's knees, and
gasping his way back to life under a vigorous kneading treatment. Whatever it
may have been for the man and the Wolfhound, it had undoubtedly been a close
call for the child. There were great rejoicings on the big Australian liner
during the rest of that sunshiny Sunday, and you may imagine that Finn came in
for a good deal of flattering attention. But he paid small heed to this. What
did make his heart swell within him, till his great chest seemed scarcely big
enough to hold it, was the little talk he had with the Master before they
boarded the ship from the lifeboat. The Master had one dripping arm about
Finn's wet shoulder, and held it there with a warm pressure, while he muttered
certain matters in Finn's right ear which sent hot blood pumping into the
Wolfhound's heart. The Master knew that Finn had done a big thing for love of
him that day, and he would never forget it. Finn would have leaped overboard
fifty times to earn again that pressure about his shoulder, and that low murmur
of loving commendation in his ear. The half-hysterical caresses of Tim's
mother, and the admiring attention of the whole ship's company were trifles
indeed after this.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The voyage to Australia took Finn into a new world in more
senses than one. Nature and the Master had endowed him richly before. This
voyage endowed him with the gift of true love, which he had not known before;
and whereas he had come aboard that ship a very magnificent Wolfhound, he would
leave it, the richer by something which would almost be called a soul, a
personality developed by these long weeks of close intercourse with a man, and
the final mental triumph which had ended in his successfully rebelling against
the dominion of instinct, by reason of the completeness of his devotion to the
Master.</p>
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