Among the animals, also, that are domesticated with mankind,
there are many circumstances that are far from undeserving
of being known: among these, there are more particularly
that most faithful friend of man, the dog, and the horse. We
have an account of a dog that fought against a band of robbers,
in defending its master; and although it was pierced with
wounds, still it would not leave the body, from which it drove
away all birds and beasts. Another dog, again, in Epirus,
recognized the murderer of its master, in the midst of an assemblage of people, and, by biting and barking at him, extorted from him a confession of his crime. A king of the
Garamantes also was brought back from exile by two hundred
dogs, which maintained the combat against all his opponents.
The people of Colophon[1] and Castabala[2] kept troops of dogs,
for the purposes of war; and these used to fight in the front
rank, and never retreat; they were the most faithful of auxiliaries, and yet required no pay. After the defeat of the
Cimbri, their dogs defended their moveable houses, which were
carried upon waggons. Jason, the Lycian, having been slain,
Among ourselves, Volcatius, a man of rank, who instructed
Cascellius in the civil law,[5] as he was riding on his Asturian
jennet, towards evening, from his country-house, was attacked
by a robber, and was only saved by his dog. The senator
Cælius,[6] too, while lying sick at Placentia, was surprised by
armed men, but received not a wound from them until they
had first killed his dog. But a more extraordinary fact than
all, is what took place in our own times, and is testified by the
public register of the Roman people. In the consulship of
Appius Junius and P. Silius, when Titius Sabinus[7] was put to
Dogs are the only animals that are sure to know their masters; and if they suddenly meet him as a stranger, they will instantly recognize him. They are the only animals that will answer to their names, and recognize the voices of the family. They recollect a road along which they have passed, however long it may be. Next to man, there is no living creature whose memory is so retentive. By sitting down on the ground, we may arrest their most impetuous attack, even when prompted by the most violent rage.
In daily life we have discovered many other valuable qualities in this animal; but its intelligence and sagacity are more
especially shown in the chase. It discovers and traces out the
tracks of the animal, leading by the leash[9] the sportsman who
accompanies it straight up to the prey; and as soon as ever it
has perceived it, how silent it is, and how secret but significant
is the indication which it gives, first by the tail and afterwards
by the nose![10] Hence it is, that even when worn out with
old age, blind, and feeble, they are carried by the huntsman
in his arms, being still able to point out the coverts where
the game is concealed, by snuffing with their muzzles at the
wind. The Indians raise a breed between the dog and the
tiger,[11] and for this purpose tie up the females in the forests
The Gauls do the same with the wolf and the dog;[12] and
their packs of hounds have, each of them, one of these dogs,
which acts as their guide and leader. This dog they follow
in the chase, and him they carefully obey; for these animals
have even a notion of subordination among themselves. It is
asserted that the dogs keep running when they drink at the
Nile, for fear of becoming a prey to the voracity of the
crocodile.[13] When Alexander the Great was on his Indian
expedition, he was presented by the king of Albania with a
dog of unusual size; being greatly delighted with its noble
appearance, he ordered bears, and after them wild boars, and
then deer, to be let loose before it; but the dog lay down, and
regarded them with a kind of immoveable contempt. The
noble spirit of the general became irritated by the sluggishness thus manifested by an animal of such vast bulk, and he
ordered it to be killed. The report of this reached the king,
who accordingly sent another dog, and at the same time sent
word that its powers were to be tried, not upon small animals,
but upon the lion or the elephant; adding, that he had had
originally but two, and that if this one were put to death, the
race would be extinct. Alexander, without delay, procured a
lion, which in his presence was instantly torn to pieces. He
then ordered an elephant to be brought, and never was he
more delighted with any spectacle; for the dog, bristling up
its hair all over the body, began by thundering forth a loud
barking, and then attacked the animal, leaping at it first on
one side and then on the other, attacking it in the most skilful
manner, and then again retreating at the opportune moment,
until at last the elephant, being rendered quite giddy by turning round and round, fell to the earth, and made it quite reecho with his fall.
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