BOWSER BECOMES A PRISONER
There is no one in all the
Great World more faithful than a
faithful dog.
Bowser the Hound.
Bowser the Hound was a prisoner.
Yes, Sir, Bowser was a sure-enough prisoner.
But there is a great difference in prisons. Bowser
was a prisoner of kindness. It seems funny that
kindness should ever make any one a prisoner, but
it is so sometimes.
You see, it was this way: When
Bowser had been taken in to that strange farmhouse,
he had been so used up that he had had only strength
enough to very feebly wag his tail. Right away
the people in that farmhouse knew what had happened
to Bowser. That is, they knew part of what had
happened to him. They knew that he had been lost
and had somehow hurt one leg. They were very,
very good to him. They fed him, and made a comfortable
bed for him, and rubbed something on the leg which
he had hurt and which had swollen. Almost right
away after eating Bowser went to sleep and slept and
slept and slept. It was the very best thing he
could have done.
The next day he felt a whole lot better,
but he was so stiff and lame that he could hardly
move. He didn’t try very much. He was
petted and cared for quite as tenderly as he would
have been at his own home. So several days passed,
and Bowser was beginning to feel more like himself.
The more he felt like himself, the more he wanted to
go home. It wasn’t that there he would
receive any greater kindness than he was now receiving,
but home is home and there is no place like it.
So Bowser began to be uneasy.
“This dog doesn’t belong
anywhere around here,” said the man of the house.
“I know every Hound for miles around, and I never
have seen this one before. He has come a long
distance. It will not do to let him go, for he
will try to find his way home and the chances are that
he will again get lost. We must keep him in the
house or chained up. Perhaps some day we may
be able to find his owner. If not, we will keep
him. I am sure he will soon become contented
here.”
Now that man knew dogs. Had Bowser
had the chance, he would have done exactly what that
man had said. He would have tried to find his
way home, and he hadn’t the least idea in the
world in which direction home lay. But he didn’t
get the chance to try. When he was allowed to
run out of doors it was always with some one to watch
him. He was petted and babied and made a great
deal of, but he knew all the time that he was a prisoner.
He knew that if he was to get away at all he would
have to sneak away, and somehow there never seemed
a chance to do this. He was grateful to these
kindly people, but down in his heart was a great longing
for Farmer Brown’s boy and home.
He always felt this longing just a wee bit stronger
when Blacky the Crow passed over and cawed.