Memoirs of a
Yellow Dog
I don't suppose it will knock any of you off your perch to read a
contribution from an animal. Mr. Kipling and a good many others have
demonstrated the fact that animals can express themselves in remunerative
English, and no magazine goes to press nowadays without an animal story in it,
except the old-style monthlies that are still running pictures of Bryan and the
Mont Pelée horror.
But you needn't look for any stuck-up literature in my piece, such as
Bearoo, the bear, Snakoo, the snake, and Tammanoo, the tiger, talk in the
jungle books. A yellow dog that's spent most of his life in a cheap New York
flat, sleeping in a corner on an old sateen underskirt (the one she spilled
port wine on at the Lady Longshoremen's banquet), mustn't be expected to
perform any tricks with the art of speech.
I was born a yellow pup; date, locality, pedigree, and weight are unknown.
The first thing I can remember is that an old woman had me in a basket at
Broadway and Twenty-third, trying to sell me to a fat lady. Old Mother Hubbard
was boosting me to beat the band as a genuine
Pomeranian-Hambletonian-Red-Irish-Cochin-China-Stoke-Pogis fox terrier. The fat
lady chased a V around among the samples of gros grain flannelette in her
shopping bag till she cornered it and gave up. From that moment on, I was a
pet—a mamma's own wootsey squidlums. Say, gentle reader, did you ever have a
200-pound woman breathing a flavor of Camembert cheese and Peau d'Espagne pick
you up and wallop her nose all over you, remarking all the time in an Emma
Eames tone of voice: 'Oh, oo's um oodlum, doodlum, woodlum, toodlum,
bitsy-witsy skoodlums?'
From a pedigreed yellow pup, I grew up to be an anonymous yellow cur,
looking like a cross between an Angora cat and a box of lemons. But my mistress
never tumbled. She thought that the two primeval pups that Noah chased into the
ark were but a collateral branch of my
ancestors. It took two policemen to keep her from entering me at Madison
Square Garden for the Siberian bloodhound prize.
I'll tell you about that flat. The house was an ordinary thing in New York,
paved with Parian marble in the entrance hall and cobblestones above the first
floor. Our flat was three—not flights—climbs up. My mistress rented it
unfurnished and put in the regular things—a 1903 antique upholstered parlor
set, an oil chromo of geishas in a Harlem tea house, a rubber plant, and her
husband.
By Sirius! There was a biped I felt sorry for. He was a little man with
sandy hair and whiskers a good deal like mine. Hen-pecked? Well, toucans,
flamingoes, and pelicans all had their bills in him. He wiped the dishes and
listened to my mistress tell about the cheap, ragged things the lady with the
squirrel-skin coat on the second floor hung out on her line to dry. And every
evening, while she was getting supper, she made him take me out on the end of a
string for a walk.
If men knew how women pass the time when they are alone, they'd never marry.
Laura Lean Jibbey, peanut brittle, a little almond cream on the neck muscles,
dishes unwashed, half an hour's talk with the iceman, reading a package of old
letters, a couple of pickles, and two bottles of malt extract, one hour peeking
through a hole in the window shade into the flat across the air shaft—that's
about all there is to it. Twenty minutes before time for him to come home from
work, she straightens up the house, fixes her rat so it won't show, and gets
out a lot of sewing for a ten-minute bluff.
I led a dog's life in that flat. Most of the day, I lay there in my corner,
watching the fat woman kill time. I slept sometimes and had pipe dreams about
being out chasing cats into basements and growling at old ladies with black
mittens, as a dog was intended to do. Then she would pounce upon me with a lot
of that drivelling poodle palaver and kiss me on the nose, but what could I do?
A dog can't chew cloves.
I began to feel sorry for Hubby and for my cats if I didn't. We looked so
much alike that people noticed it when we went out, so we shook the streets
that Morgan's cab drives down and took to climbing the piles of last December's
snow on the streets where cheap people live.
One evening when we were thus promenading, and I was trying to look like a
prize St. Bernard, and the old man was trying to look like he wouldn't have
murdered the first organ grinder he heard play Mendelssohn's wedding march, I
looked up at him and said, in my way:
'What are you looking so sour about, you oakum-trimmed lobster? She doesn't
kiss you. You don't have to sit on her lap and listen to her talk; that would
make the book of a musical comedy sound like the maxims of Epictetus. You ought
to be thankful that you're not a dog. Brace up, Benedick, and bid the blues be
gone.'
The matrimonial mishap looked down at me with almost canine intelligence in
his face.
'Why, doggie,' says he, 'good doggie. You almost look like you could speak.
What is it, doggie-cats?'
Cats! Could speak!
But, of course, he couldn't understand. Humans were denied the speech of
animals. The only common ground of communication upon which dogs and men can
get together is in fiction.
In the flat across the hall from us lived a lady with a black-and-tan
terrier. Her husband strung it and took it out every evening, but he always
came home cheerful and whistling. One day I touched noses with the
black-and-tan in the hall, and I struck him for an elucidation.
"See here, Wiggle-and-Skip," I said, "you know that it ain't
the nature of a real man to play dry-nurse to a dog in public. I never saw one
leashed to a bow-wow yet that didn't look like he'd like to lick every other
man that looked at him. But your boss comes in every day as perky and set up as
an amateur prestidigitator doing the egg trick. How does he do it? Don't tell
me he likes it."
"Him?" says the black-and-tan. "Why, he uses Nature's Own
Remedy. He gets spifflicated. At first when we go out, he's as shy as the man
on the steamer who would rather play pedro when they make 'em all jackpots. By
the time we've been in eight saloons, he don't care whether the thing on the
end of his line is a dog or a catfish. I've lost two inches of my tail trying
to sidestep those swinging doors."
The pointer I got from that terrier - vaudeville please copy - set me to
thinking. One evening about six o'clock, my mistress ordered him to get busy
and do the ozone act for Lovey. I have concealed it until now, but that is what
she called me. The black-and-tan was called 'Tweetness.' I consider that I have
the bulge on him as far as you could chase a rabbit. Still 'Lovey' is something
of a nomenclatural tin-can on the tail of one's self-respect.
At a quiet place on a safe street, I tightened the line of my custodian in
front of an attractive, refined saloon. I made a dead-ahead scramble for the
doors, whining like a dog in the press dispatches that lets the family know
that little Alice is bogged down while gathering lilies in the brook.
"Why, darn my eyes," says the old man, with a grin, "darn my
eyes if the saffron-coloured son of a seltzer lemonade ain't asking me in to
take a drink. Lemme see - how long's it been since I saved shoe leather by
keeping one foot on the footrest? I believe I'll - "
I knew I had him. Hot Scotches he took, sitting at a table. For an hour, he kept
the Campbells coming. I sat by his side rapping for the waiter with my tail and
eating free lunch such as mamma in her flat never equaled with her homemade
truck bought at a delicatessen store eight minutes before papa comes home.
When the products of Scotland were all exhausted except the rye bread, the
old man unwound me from the table leg and played me outside like a fisherman
plays a salmon. Out there, he took off my collar and threw it into the street.
'Poor doggie,' says he, 'good doggie. She shan't kiss you any more. ' S a
darned shame. Good doggie, go away and get run over by a street car and be
happy.'
I refused to leave. I leaped and frisked around the old man's legs, happy as
a pug on a rug.
'You old flea-headed woodchuck-chaser,' I said to him - 'you moon-baying,
rabbit-pointing, egg-stealing old beagle, can't you see that I don't want to
leave you? Can't you see that we're both Pups in the Wood and the missis is the
cruel uncle after you with the dish towel and me with the flea liniment and a
pink bow to tie on my tail. Why not cut that all out and be pards for
evermore?'
Maybe you'll say he didn't understand - maybe he didn't. But he kind of got
a grip on the Hot Scotches and stood still for a minute, thinking.
'Doggie,' says he finally, 'we don't live more than a dozen lives on this
earth, and very few of us live to be more than 300. If I ever see that flat
anymore I'm a flat, and if you do you're flatter; and that's no flattery. I'm
offering 60 to 1 that Westward Ho wins out by the length of a dachshund.'
There was no string, but I frolicked along with my master to the
Twenty-third Street ferry. And the cats on the route saw reason to give thanks
that prehensile claws had been given them.
On the Jersey side, my master said to a stranger who stood eating a currant
bun:
'Me and my doggie, we are bound for the Rocky Mountains.' But what pleased
me most was when my old man pulled both of my ears until I howled, and said:
'You common, monkey-headed, rat-tailed, sulphur-coloured son of a door-mat,
do you know what I'm going to call you?'
I thought of 'Lovey,' and I whined dolefully.
'I'm going to call you "Pete," ' says my master; and if I'd had
five tails I couldn't have done enough wagging to do justice to the occasion.
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