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<h2> VI. Children and Animals </h2>
<p>Through all his life, and through all his letters, dogs and children
followed him as shadows follow men. To walk in the streets with him was a
slow procession. Every dog and every child one met must be spoken to, and
each made answer. Throughout the later letters the names Bonfire and
Bonneau occur continually. Bonfire was his horse, and Bonneau his dog.</p>
<p>This horse, an Irish hunter, was given to him by John L. Todd. It was
wounded twice, and now lives in honourable retirement at a secret place
which need not be disclosed to the army authorities. One officer who had
visited the hospital writes of seeing him going about the wards with
Bonneau and a small French child following after. In memory of his love
for animals and children the following extracts will serve:</p>
<p>You ask if the wee fellow has a name—Mike, mostly, as a term of
affection. He has found a cupboard in one ward in which oakum is stored,
and he loves to steal in there and "pick oakum", amusing himself as long
as is permitted. I hold that this indicates convict ancestry to which Mike
makes no defence.</p>
<p>The family is very well, even one-eyed Mike is able to go round the yard
in his dressing-gown, so to speak. He is a queer pathetic little beast and
Madame has him "hospitalized" on the bottom shelf of the sideboard in the
living room, whence he comes down (six inches to the floor) to greet me,
and then gravely hirples back, the hind legs looking very pathetic as he
hops in. But he is full of spirit and is doing very well.</p>
<p>As to the animals—"those poor voiceless creatures," say you. I wish
you could hear them. Bonneau and Mike are a perfect Dignity and Impudence;
and both vocal to a wonderful degree. Mike's face is exactly like the
terrier in the old picture, and he sits up and gives his paw just like
Bonneau, and I never saw him have any instruction; and as for voice, I
wish you could hear Bonfire's "whicker" to me in the stable or elsewhere.
It is all but talk. There is one ward door that he tries whenever we pass.
He turns his head around, looks into the door, and waits. The Sisters in
the ward have changed frequently, but all alike "fall for it", as they
say, and produce a biscuit or some such dainty which Bonfire takes with
much gravity and gentleness. Should I chide him for being too eager and
give him my hand saying, "Gentle now," he mumbles with his lips, and licks
with his tongue like a dog to show how gentle he can be when he tries.
Truly a great boy is that same. On this subject I am like a doting
grandmother, but forgive it.</p>
<p>I have a very deep affection for Bonfire, for we have been through so much
together, and some of it bad enough. All the hard spots to which one's
memory turns the old fellow has shared, though he says so little about it.</p>
<p>This love of animals was no vagrant mood. Fifteen years before in South
Africa he wrote in his diary under date of September 11th, 1900:</p>
<p>I wish I could introduce you to the dogs of the force. The genus dog here
is essentially sociable, and it is a great pleasure to have them about. I
think I have a personal acquaintance with them all. There are our pups—Dolly,
whom I always know by her one black and one white eyebrow; Grit and Tory,
two smaller gentlemen, about the size of a pound of butter—and
fighters; one small white gentleman who rides on a horse, on the blanket;
Kitty, the monkey, also rides the off lead of the forge wagon. There is a
black almond-eyed person belonging to the Royal Scots, who begins to twist
as far as I can see her, and comes up in long curves, extremely genially.
A small shaggy chap who belongs to the Royal Irish stands upon his hind
legs and spars with his front feet—and lots of others—every
one of them "a soldier and a man". The Royal Scots have a monkey, Jenny,
who goes around always trailing a sack in her hand, into which she creeps
if necessary to obtain shelter.</p>
<p>The other day old Jack, my horse, was bitten by his next neighbor; he
turned SLOWLY, eyed his opponent, shifted his rope so that he had a little
more room, turned very deliberately, and planted both heels in the
offender's stomach. He will not be run upon.</p>
<p>From a time still further back comes a note in a like strain. In 1898 he
was house physician in a children's hospital at Mt. Airy, Maryland, when
he wrote:</p>
<p>A kitten has taken up with a poor cripple dying of muscular atrophy who
cannot move. It stays with him all the time, and sleeps most of the day in
his straw hat. To-night I saw the kitten curled up under the bed-clothes.
It seems as if it were a gift of Providence that the little creature
should attach itself to the child who needs it most.</p>
<p>Of another child:</p>
<p>The day she died she called for me all day, deposed the nurse who was
sitting by her, and asked me to remain with her. She had to be held up on
account of lack of breath; and I had a tiring hour of it before she died,
but it seemed to make her happier and was no great sacrifice. Her friends
arrived twenty minutes too late. It seems hard that Death will not wait
the poor fraction of an hour, but so it is.</p>
<p>And here are some letters to his nephews and nieces which reveal his
attitude both to children and to animals.</p>
<p>From Bonfire to Sergt.-Major Jack Kilgour</p>
<p>August 6th, 1916.</p>
<p>Did you ever have a sore hock? I have one now, and Cruickshank puts
bandages on my leg. He also washed my white socks for me. I am glad you
got my picture. My master is well, and the girls tell me I am looking
well, too. The ones I like best give me biscuits and sugar, and sometimes
flowers. One of them did not want to give me some mignonette the other day
because she said it would make me sick. It did not make me sick. Another
one sends me bags of carrots. If you don't know how to eat carrots, tops
and all, you had better learn, but I suppose you are just a boy, and do
not know how good oats are.</p>
<p>BONFIRE His * Mark.<br/></p>
<p>* Here and later, this mark is that of a horse-shoe. A. L., 1995.<br/></p>
<p>From Bonfire to Sergt.-Major Jack Kilgour</p>
<p>October 1st, 1916.</p>
<p>Dear Jack,</p>
<p>Did you ever eat blackberries? My master and I pick them every day on the
hedges. I like twenty at a time. My leg is better but I have a lump on my
tummy. I went to see my doctor to-day, and he says it is nothing at all. I
have another horse staying in my stable now; he is black, and about half
my size. He does not keep me awake at night. Yours truly,</p>
<p>BONFIRE His * Mark.<br/></p>
<p>From Bonfire to Margaret Kilgour, Civilian</p>
<p>November 5th, 1916.</p>
<p>Dear Margaret:</p>
<p>This is Guy Fox Day! I spell it that way because fox-hunting was my
occupation a long time ago before the war. How are Sergt.-Major Jack and
Corporal David? Ask Jack if he ever bites through his rope at night, and
gets into the oat-box. And as for the Corporal, "I bet you" I can jump as
far as he can. I hear David has lost his red coat. I still have my grey
one, but it is pretty dirty now, for I have not had a new one for a long
time. I got my hair cut a few weeks ago and am to have new boots next
week. Bonneau and Follette send their love. Yours truly,</p>
<p>BONFIRE His * Mark.<br/></p>
<p>In Flanders, April 3rd, 1915.</p>
<p>My dear Margaret:</p>
<p>There is a little girl in this house whose name is Clothilde. She is ten
years old, and calls me "Monsieur le Major". How would you like it if
twenty or thirty soldiers came along and lived in your house and put their
horses in the shed or the stable? There are not many little boys and girls
left in this part of the country, but occasionally one meets them on the
roads with baskets of eggs or loaves of bread. Most of them have no homes,
for their houses have been burnt by the Germans; but they do not cry over
it. It is dangerous for them, for a shell might hit them at any time—and
it would not be an eggshell, either.</p>
<p>Bonfire is very well. Mother sent him some packets of sugar, and if ever
you saw a big horse excited about a little parcel, it was Bonfire. He can
have only two lumps in any one day, for there is not much of it. Twice he
has had gingerbread and he is very fond of that. It is rather funny for a
soldier-horse, is it not? But soldier horses have a pretty hard time of
it, sometimes, so we do not grudge them a little luxury. Bonfire's friends
are King, and Prince, and Saxonia,—all nice big boys. If they go
away and leave him, he whinnies till he catches sight of them again, and
then he is quite happy. How is the 15th Street Brigade getting on? Tell
Mother I recommend Jack for promotion to corporal if he has been good.
David will have to be a gunner for awhile yet, for everybody cannot be
promoted. Give my love to Katharine, and Jack, and David.</p>
<p>Your affectionate uncle Jack.</p>
<p>Bonfire, and Bonneau, and little Mike, are all well. Mike is about four
months old and has lost an eye and had a leg broken, but he is a very good
little boy all the same. He is very fond of Bonfire, and Bonneau, and me.
I go to the stable and whistle, and Bonneau and Mike come running out
squealing with joy, to go for a little walk with me. When Mike comes to
steps, he puts his feet on the lowest steps and turns and looks at me and
I lift him up. He is a dear ugly little chap.</p>
<p>The dogs are often to be seen sprawled on the floor of my tent. I like to
have them there for they are very home-like beasts. They never seem French
to me. Bonneau can "donner la patte" in good style nowadays, and he
sometimes curls up inside the rabbit hutch, and the rabbits seem to like
him.</p>
<p>I wish you could see the hundreds of rabbits there are here on the
sand-dunes; there are also many larks and jackdaws. (These are different
from your brother Jack, although they have black faces.) There are herons,
curlews, and even ducks; and the other day I saw four young weasels in a
heap, jumping over each other from side to side as they ran.</p>
<p>Sir Bertrand Dawson has a lovely little spaniel, Sue, quite black, who
goes around with him. I am quite a favourite, and one day Sir Bertrand
said to me, "She has brought you a present," and here she was waiting
earnestly for me to remove from her mouth a small stone. It is usually a
simple gift, I notice, and does not embarrass by its value.</p>
<p>Bonfire is very sleek and trim, and we journey much. If I sit down in his
reach I wish you could see how deftly he can pick off my cap and swing it
high out of my reach. He also carries my crop; his games are simple, but
he does not readily tire of them.</p>
<p>I lost poor old Windy. He was the regimental dog of the 1st Batt.
Lincolns, and came to this vale of Avalon to be healed of his second
wound. He spent a year at Gallipoli and was "over the top" twice with his
battalion. He came to us with his papers like any other patient, and did
very well for a while, but took suddenly worse. He had all that care and
love could suggest and enough morphine to keep the pain down; but he was
very pathetic, and I had resolved that it would be true friendship to help
him over when he "went west". He is buried in our woods like any other
good soldier, and yesterday I noticed that some one has laid a little
wreath of ivy on his grave. He was an old dog evidently, but we are all
sore-hearted at losing him. His kit is kept should his master return,—only
his collar with his honourable marks, for his wardrobe was of necessity
simple. So another sad chapter ends.</p>
<p>September 29th, 1915.</p>
<p>Bonneau gravely accompanies me round the wards and waits for me, sitting
up in a most dignified way. He comes into my tent and sits there very
gravely while I dress. Two days ago a Sister brought out some biscuits for
Bonfire, and not understanding the rules of the game, which are bit and
bit about for Bonfire and Bonneau, gave all to Bonfire, so that poor
Bonneau sat below and caught the crumbs that fell. I can see that Bonfire
makes a great hit with the Sisters because he licks their hands just like
a dog, and no crumb is too small to be gone after.</p>
<p>April, 1917.</p>
<p>I was glad to get back; Bonfire and Bonneau greeted me very
enthusiastically. I had a long long story from the dog, delivered with
uplifted muzzle. They tell me he sat gravely on the roads a great deal
during my absence, and all his accustomed haunts missed him. He is back on
rounds faithfully.</p>
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