Our hero enlarged upon—Grumps.
Two years passed away. The Mustang
Valley settlement advanced prosperously, despite one
or two attacks made upon it by the savages, who were,
however, firmly repelled. Dick Varley had now
become a man, and his pup Crusoe had become a full-grown
dog. The “silver rifle,” as Dick’s
weapon had come to be named, was well known among the
hunters and the Redskins of the border-lands, and
in Dick’s hands its bullets were as deadly as
its owner’s eye was quick and true.
Crusoe’s education, too, had
been completed. Faithfully and patiently had
his young master trained his mind, until he fitted
him to be a meet companion in the hunt. To “carry”
and “fetch” were now but trifling portions
of the dog’s accomplishments. He could dive
a fathom deep in the lake and bring up any article
that might have been dropped or thrown in. His
swimming powers were marvellous, and so powerful were
his muscles that he seemed to spurn the water while
passing through it, with his broad chest high out
of the curling wave, at a speed that neither man nor
beast could keep up with for a moment. His intellect
now was sharp and quick as a needle; he never required
a second bidding. When Dick went out hunting,
he used frequently to drop a mitten or a powder-horn
unknown to the dog, and after walking miles away from
it, would stop short and look down into the mild, gentle
face of his companion.
“Crusoe,” he said, in
the same quiet tones with which he would have addressed
a human friend, “I’ve dropped my mitten;
go fetch it, pup.” Dick continued to call
it “pup” from habit.
One glance of intelligence passed
from Crusoe’s eye, and in a moment he was away
at full gallop, nor did he rest until the lost article
was lying at his master’s feet. Dick was
loath to try how far back on his track Crusoe would
run if desired. He had often gone back five and
six miles at a stretch; but his powers did not stop
here. He could carry articles back to the spot
from which they had been taken and leave them there.
He could head the game that his master was pursuing
and turn it back; and he would guard any object he
was desired to “watch” with unflinching
constancy. But it would occupy too much space
and time to enumerate all Crusoe’s qualities
and powers. His biography will unfold them.
In personal appearance he was majestic,
having grown to an immense size even for a Newfoundland.
Had his visage been at all wolfish in character, his
aspect would have been terrible. But he possessed
in an eminent degree that mild, humble expression
of face peculiar to his race. When roused or
excited, and especially when bounding through the
forest with the chase in view, he was absolutely magnificent.
At other times his gait was slow, and he seemed to
prefer a quiet walk with Dick Varley to anything else
under the sun. But when Dick was inclined to
be boisterous, Crusoe’s tail and ears rose at
a moment’s notice, and he was ready for anything.
Moreover, he obeyed commands instantly and implicitly.
In this respect he put to shame most of the boys of
the settlement, who were by no means famed for their
habits of prompt obedience.
Crusoe’s eye was constantly
watching the face of his master. When Dick said
“Go” he went, when he said “Come”
he came. If he had been in the midst of an excited
bound at the throat of a stag, and Dick had called
out, “Down, Crusoe,” he would have sunk
to the earth like a stone. No doubt it took many
months of training to bring the dog to this state
of perfection, but Dick accomplished it by patience,
perseverance, and love.
Besides all this, Crusoe could speak!
He spoke by means of the dog’s dumb alphabet
in a way that defies description. He conversed,
so to speak, with his extremities—his head
and his tail. But his eyes, his soft brown eyes,
were the chief medium of communication. If ever
the language of the eyes was carried to perfection,
it was exhibited in the person of Crusoe. But,
indeed, it would be difficult to say which part of
his expressive face expressed most—the cocked
ears of expectation, the drooped ears of sorrow; the
bright, full eye of joy, the half-closed eye of contentment,
and the frowning eye of indignation accompanied with
a slight, a very slight pucker of the nose and a gleam
of dazzling ivory—ha! no enemy ever saw
this last piece of canine language without a full
appreciation of what it meant. Then as to the
tail—the modulations of meaning in the varied
wag of that expressive member—oh! it’s
useless to attempt description. Mortal man cannot
conceive of the delicate shades of sentiment expressible
by a dog’s tail, unless he has studied the subject—the
wag, the waggle, the cock, the droop, the slope, the
wriggle! Away with description—it
is impotent and valueless here!
As we have said, Crusoe was meek and
mild. He had been bitten, on the sly, by half
the ill-natured curs in the settlement, and had only
shown his teeth in return. He had no enmities—though
several enemies—and he had a thousand friends,
particularly among the ranks of the weak and the persecuted,
whom he always protected and avenged when opportunity
offered. A single instance of this kind will serve
to show his character.
One day Dick and Crusoe were sitting
on a rock beside the lake—the same identical
rock near which, when a pup, the latter had received
his first lesson. They were conversing as usual,
for Dick had elicited such a fund of intelligence
from the dog’s mind, and had injected such wealth
of wisdom into it, that he felt convinced it understood
every word he said.
“This is capital weather, Crusoe; ain’t
it, pup?”
Crusoe made a motion with his head
which was quite as significant as a nod.
“Ha! my pup, I wish that you
and I might go and have a slap at the grizzly bars,
and a look at the Rocky Mountains. Wouldn’t
it be nuts, pup?”
Crusoe looked dubious.
“What, you don’t agree
with me! Now tell me, pup, wouldn’t ye like
to grip a bar?”
Still Crusoe looked dubious, but made
a gentle motion with his tail, as though he would
have said, “I’ve seen neither Rocky Mountains
nor grizzly bars, and know nothin’ about ’em,
but I’m open to conviction.”
“You’re a brave pup,”
rejoined Dick, stroking the dog’s huge head
affectionately. “I wouldn’t give you
for ten times your weight in golden dollars—if
there be sich things.”
Crusoe made no reply whatever to this.
He regarded it as a truism unworthy of notice; he
evidently felt that a comparison between love and
dollars was preposterous.
At this point in the conversation
a little dog with a lame leg hobbled to the edge of
the rocks in front of the spot where Dick was seated,
and looked down into the water, which was deep there.
Whether it did so for the purpose of admiring its
very plain visage in the liquid mirror, or finding
out what was going on among the fish, we cannot say,
as it never told us; but at that moment a big, clumsy,
savage-looking dog rushed out from the neighbouring
thicket and began to worry it.
“Punish him, Crusoe,” said Dick quickly.
Crusoe made one bound that a lion
might have been proud of, and seizing the aggressor
by the back, lifted him off his legs and held him,
howling, in the air—at the same time casting
a look towards his master for further instructions.
“Pitch him in,” said Dick, making a sign
with his hand.
Crusoe turned and quietly dropped
the dog into the lake. Having regarded his struggles
there for a few moments with grave severity of countenance,
he walked slowly back and sat down beside his master.
The little dog made good its retreat
as fast as three legs would carry it; and the surly
dog, having swum ashore, retired sulkily, with his
tail very much between his legs.
Little wonder, then, that Crusoe was
beloved by great and small among the well-disposed
of the canine tribe of the Mustang Valley.
But Crusoe was not a mere machine.
When not actively engaged in Dick Varley’s service,
he busied himself with private little matters of his
own. He undertook modest little excursions into
the woods or along the margin of the lake, sometimes
alone, but more frequently with a little friend whose
whole heart and being seemed to be swallowed up in
admiration of his big companion. Whether Crusoe
botanized or geologized on these excursions we will
not venture to say. Assuredly he seemed as though
he did both, for he poked his nose into every bush
and tuft of moss, and turned over the stones, and dug
holes in the ground—and, in short, if he
did not understand these sciences, he behaved very
much as if he did. Certainly he knew as much about
them as many of the human species do.
In these walks he never took the slightest
notice of Grumps (that was the little dog’s
name), but Grumps made up for this by taking excessive
notice of him. When Crusoe stopped, Grumps stopped
and sat down to look at him. When Crusoe trotted
on, Grumps trotted on too. When Crusoe examined
a bush, Grumps sat down to watch him; and when he
dug a hole, Grumps looked into it to see what was there.
Grumps never helped him; his sole delight was in looking
on. They didn’t converse much, these two
dogs. To be in each other’s company seemed
to be happiness enough—at least Grumps
thought so.
There was one point at which Grumps
stopped short, however, and ceased to follow his friend,
and that was when he rushed headlong into the lake
and disported himself for an hour at a time in its
cool waters. Crusoe was, both by nature and training,
a splendid water-dog. Grumps, on the contrary,
held water in abhorrence; so he sat on the shore of
the lake disconsolate when his friend was bathing,
and waited till he came out. The only time when
Grumps was thoroughly nonplussed was when Dick Varley’s
whistle sounded faintly in the far distance. Then
Crusoe would prick up his ears and stretch out at
full gallop, clearing ditch, and fence, and brake
with his strong elastic bound, and leaving Grumps
to patter after him as fast as his four-inch legs would
carry him. Poor Grumps usually arrived at the
village to find both dog and master gone, and would
betake himself to his own dwelling, there to lie down
and sleep, and dream, perchance, of rambles and gambols
with his gigantic friend.