Afoot in England eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 290 pages of information about Afoot in England.

Afoot in England eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 290 pages of information about Afoot in England.

I was glad to think that there was at least one completely happy cow in Devonshire.

After leaving the cowkeeper I had that feeling of revulsion very strongly which all who know and love cows occasionally experience at the very thought of beef.  I was for the moment more than tolerant of vegetarianism, and devoutly hoped that for many days to come I should not be sickened with the sight of a sirloin on some hateful board, cold, or smoking hot, bleeding its red juices into the dish when gashed with a knife, as if undergoing a second death.  We do not eat negroes, although their pigmented skins, flat feet, and woolly heads proclaim them a different species; even monkey’s flesh is abhorrent to us, merely because we fancy that that creature in its ugliness resembles some old men and some women and children that we know.  But the gentle large-brained social cow that caresses our hands and faces with her rough blue tongue, and is more like man’s sister than any other non-human being—­the majestic, beautiful creature with the juno eyes, sweeter of breath than the rosiest virgin—­we slaughter and feed on her flesh—­monsters and cannibals that we are!

But though cannibals, it is very pleasant to find that many cowmen love their cows.  Walking one afternoon by a high unkept hedge near Southampton Water, I heard loud shouts at intervals issuing from a point some distance ahead, and on arriving at the spot found an old man leaning idly over a gate, apparently concerned about nothing.  “What are you shouting about?” I demanded.  “Cows,” he answered, with a glance across the wide green field dotted with a few big furze and bramble bushes.  On its far side half a dozen cows were, quietly grazing.  “They came fast enough when I was a-feeding of ’em,” he presently added; “but now they has to find for theirselves they don’t care how long they keeps me.”  I was going to suggest that it would be a considerable saving of time if he went for them, but his air of lazy contentment as he leant on the gate showed that time was of no importance to him.  He was a curious-looking old man, in old frayed clothes, broken boots, and a cap too small for him.  He had short legs, broad chest, and long arms, and a very big head, long and horselike, with a large shapeless nose and grizzled beard and moustache.  His ears, too, were enormous, and stood out from the head like the handles of a rudely shaped terra-cotta vase or jar.  The colour of his face, the ears included, suggested burnt clay.  But though Nature had made him ugly, he had an agreeable expression, a sweet benign look in his large dark eyes, which attracted me, and I stayed to talk with him.

It has frequently been said that those who are much with cows, and have an affection for them, appear to catch something of their expression—­to look like cows; just as persons of sympathetic or responsive nature, and great mobility of face, grow to be like those they live and are in sympathy with.  The cowman who looks like a cow may be more bovine than his fellows in his heavier motions and slower apprehensions, but he also exhibits some of the better qualities—­the repose and placidity of the animal.

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Afoot in England from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.