登陆注册
4609900000012

第12章 The Pest(3)

(Try to cross Madison Square Garden, on Washington's Birthday afternoon, while the Westminster Kennel Club's Show is in progress. If you can work your way through the press of visitors in less than half an hour, then Nature intended you for a football champion.)The fortunate absence of a betting-interest alone keeps such affairs from becoming among the foremost sporting features of the world. Many of the dogs on view are fools, of course. Because many of them have been bred solely with a view to show-points.

And their owners and handlers have done nothing to awaken in their exhibits the half-human brain and heart that is a dog's heritage. All has been sacrificed to "points"--to points which are arbitrary and which change as freakily as do fashions in dress.

For example, a few years ago, a financial giant collected and exhibited one of the finest bunches of collies on earth. He had a competent manager and an army of kennel-men to handle them. He took inordinate pride in these priceless collies of his. Once Iwatched him, at the Garden Show, displaying them to some Wall Street friends. Three times he made errors in naming his dogs.

Once, when he leaned too close to the star collie of his kennels, the dog mistook him for a stranger and resented the intrusion by snapping at him. He did not know his own pets, one from another.

And they did not know their owner, by sight or by scent.

At the small shows, there is an atmosphere wholly different. Few of the big breeders bother to compete at such contests. The dogs are for the most part pets, for which their owners feel a keen personal affection, and which have been brought up as members of their masters' households. Thus, if small shows seldom bring forth a world-beating dog, they at least are full of clever and humanized exhibits and of men and women to whom the success or failure of their canine friends is a matter of intensest personal moment. Wherefore the small show often gives the beholder something he can find but rarely in a larger exhibition.

A few dogs genuinely enjoy shows--or are supposed to. To many others a dogshow is a horror.

Which windy digression brings us back by prosy degrees to Bruce and to the Hampton dogshow.

The collies were the first breed to be judged. And the puppy class, as usual, was the first to be called to the ring.

There were but three collie pups, all males. One was a rangy tri-color of eleven months, with a fair head and a bad coat. The second was an exquisite six-months puppy, rich of coat, prematurely perfect of head, and cowhocked. These two and Bruce formed the puppy class which paraded before Symonds in the oblong ring.

"Anyhow," whispered the Mistress as the Master led his stolidly gigantic entry toward the enclosure, "Bruce can't get worse than a third-prize yellow ribbon. We ought to be a little proud of that. There are only three entries in his class."But even that bit of barren pride was denied the awkward youngster's sponsor. As the three pups entered the enclosure. the judge's half-shut eyes rested on Bruce--at first idly, then in real amazement. Crossing to the Master, before giving the signal for the first maneuvers, he said in tired disgust--"Please take your measly St. Bernard monstrosity out of the ring.

This is a class for collies, not for freaks. I refuse to judge that pup as a collie.""He's a thoroughbred," crossly protested the Master. "I have his certified pedigree. There's no better blood in--""I don't care what his ancestors were," snapped the judge. "He's a throw-back to the dinosaur or the Great Auk. And I won't judge him as a collie. Take him out of the ring. You're delaying the others."A judge's decision is final. Red with angry shame and suppressing an unworthy desire to kick the luckless Bruce, the Master led the pup back to his allotted bench. Bruce trotted cheerily along with a maddening air of having done something to be proud of. Deaf to the Mistress's sympathy and to her timidly voiced protests, the Master scrawled on an envelope-back the words "For Sale. Name Your Own Price," and pinned it on the edge of the bench.

"Here endeth the first lesson in collie-raising, so far as The Place is concerned," he decreed, stalking back to the ringside to watch the rest of the judging.

The Mistress lingered behind, to bestow a furtive consolatory pat upon the disqualified Bruce. Then she joined her husband beside the ring.

It was probably by accident that her skirt brushed sharply against the bench-edge as she went--knocking the "For Sale" sign down into the litter of straw below.

But a well-meaning fellow-exhibitor, across the aisle, saw the bit of paper flutter floorward. This good soul rescued it from the straw and pinned it back in place.

(The world is full of helpful folk. That is perhaps one reason why the Millennium's date is still so indefinite.)An hour later, a man touched the Master on the arm.

"That dog of your, on Bench 48," began the stranger, "the big pup with the 'For Sale' sign on his bench. What do you want for him?"The Mistress was several feet away, talking to the superintendent of the show. Guiltily, yet gratefully, the Master led the would-be purchaser back to the benches, without attracting his wife's notice.

A few minutes afterward he returned to where she and the superintendent were chatting.

"Well," said the Master, trying to steel himself against his wife's possible disappointment, "I found a buyer for Bruce--a Dr.

Halding, from New York. He likes the pup. Says Bruce looks as if he was strong and had lots of endurance. I wonder if he wants him for a sledge-dog. He paid me fifteen dollars for him; and it was a mighty good bargain. I was lucky to get more than a nickel for such a cur."The Master shot forth this speech in almost a single rapid breath. Then, before his wife could reply,--and without daring to look into her troubled eyes,--he discovered an acquaintance on the far side of the ring and bustled off to speak to him. The Master, you see, was a husband, not a hero.

同类推荐
  • 立齋閒錄

    立齋閒錄

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 新编诸宗教藏总录

    新编诸宗教藏总录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 太上洞玄灵宝授度仪

    太上洞玄灵宝授度仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 史佚书

    史佚书

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 金刚般若波罗蜜经注解

    金刚般若波罗蜜经注解

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 神医曦月王妃倾天下

    神医曦月王妃倾天下

    她是历经磨难练就一身医术的圣医,在人人爱戴的仁心形象下隐藏着一颗冷漠的心;他是皇宫中受人跪拜的高贵皇子,却被皇室众人厌弃、恐惧,在低微的身份下,拥有无情的眼神。当她与他相遇是谁迷了谁的心,又是谁灿烂了谁一生的繁花。作者初次写文,请大家多多包涵,谢谢#^_^#(本文内容架空。)由于是学生党,更新日期不定,但绝对不会弃坑的^O^。
  • 文骚

    文骚

    文人的骚,小心,别闪了你的腰~~(新书《我对钱真没兴趣》已经发布,求支援!群号:241190226)
  • 我们那如此怒放过的青春

    我们那如此怒放过的青春

    回忆我们大学的时光依昔如同昨日,那时我们纯真的恋爱快乐的生活。社会生活把我们拉到现实的残酷中,我们开始在这残酷的现实社会中学着挣扎、学着坚强了,也学会了妥协。而且我们还不知不觉地变老,青春就这么地容易凋零吗?这是一个很残酷的事实,但我们不得不接受这样的事实。因为人一代繁衍着一代,都是这么走过来的。不同的只是现在轮到我们了,我们的青春也将像怒放过的花朵,慢慢地将会面临着凋谢……本故事讲述了一群年轻大学生,在当今这个物欲横流与精神危机的社会中,是怎样从自卑与放纵中逐步走向成熟与成功的道德情感故事。
  • 藏地密码8

    藏地密码8

    一部关于西藏的百科全书式小说!了解西藏,就读《藏地密码》!十年经典,强势回归!火爆热销10周年!数千万粉丝的真爱之选!喜马拉雅雪人出没,请注意!这是一个西藏已经开放为全世界的旅游胜地却依旧守口如瓶的秘密——公元838年,吐蕃末代赞普朗达玛登位,随即宣布禁佛。在禁佛运动中,僧侣们提前将宝物埋藏,随后将其秘密转移,他们修建了一座神庙,称为帕巴拉神庙。随着时光流失,战火不断,那座隐藏着无尽佛家珍宝的神庙彻底消失于历史尘埃之中……1938年和1943年,希特勒曾派助手希姆莱两次带队深入西藏;上世纪66年代,斯大林曾派苏联专家团前后五次考察西藏,他们的秘密行动意味深远,没有人知道他们的真实目的。多年之后,藏獒专家卓木强巴突然收到一封信,里面是两张远古神兽的照片……不久后,一支由特种兵、考古学家、密修高手等各色人物组成的神秘科考队,悄悄出发,开始了一场穿越生死禁地的探险之旅,他们要追寻藏传佛教千年隐秘历史的真相……西藏,到底向我们隐瞒了什么?
  • 魂兮归来

    魂兮归来

    本书以著名翻译家杨苡的视角,对杨宪益先生的一生进行回看,既是杨苡女士作为妹妹对兄长的怀念,又是同为翻译家的杨苡女士对同行、战友的怀念。书中大量收录了杨宪益先生一生中重要的书信,是了解杨宪益先生的重要参考书籍。一个纯粹的读书人,一个心如明镜的爱国者,一个默默无闻的斗士,一个被遗忘、被时代湮没了的寂寞老人,他的躯体虽已远去,但灵魂却驻足人心。也许被时代所遗忘,待时他却开创了一个名为杨宪益的时代,他的伟大值得我们一生铭记于心。
  • 我爱你,与你无关

    我爱你,与你无关

    一场相思,寂寞难寻。他把她放在身边,百般折磨,误会后将她赶走。她被侮辱,被折磨,再也没有比她还惨的女人了。她终于明白。我爱你,与你无关。
  • 再见亨特

    再见亨特

    无为,原名赵亮。甘肃平凉人,定居广西北海。出版有中短篇小说集《周家情事》。广西作家协会会员!
  • 杨忠愍集

    杨忠愍集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 乱世美人:倾城大小姐

    乱世美人:倾城大小姐

    新书《第一傲妃:腹黑帝君快点追》欢迎收藏~~她本是魔族的大小姐,玩世不恭,为了寻找魔族的大祭师,踏足凡尘。他本是大启国的皇子,沉默不语,不想屈服于皇室的斗争,浪迹乱世。当玩世不恭的大小姐霸上面瘫不语的皇子,将会碰撞出什么样的火花?且看风云!“美人,你跑啥?”叶七双眼露出精光。“姑娘,请自重。”南初把叶七推出怀中。“我很重吗?姐一百斤都不到!!”叶七气愤装作要走。“站住,你跑啥?”好啊!本来姐要压得人,怎么被人压了。哇呀呀呀气死姐了!反压回去,“美人应该在下面”且看他们强强联手,颠覆这乱世。
  • 黄河故道人家

    黄河故道人家

    这是一本短篇小说集。1985年黄河在河南兰考铜瓦厢改道东流后,留下的黄河故道,飞沙走石,稼穑不立。一百多年来,故道两岸的人们几乎伴随着泪水和汗水苦熬岁月。《黄河故道人家》虽然是萌生在这片灾难的土地上,但作者却不是悲悲切切地抚摸伤疤,不是泪痕满面地诉说痛苦,而是用一种萌发于心底最深处的情感,以故黄河为背景,对生活在故黄河两岸的一群小人物进行描摹、刻画,用质朴的语言叙述展现黄河故道发生、发展和丰富了的民族乡土文化,勾勒出黄河故道两岸的世俗风情画卷。