Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 156, January 22, 1919 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 55 pages of information about Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 156, January 22, 1919.

Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 156, January 22, 1919 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 55 pages of information about Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 156, January 22, 1919.

And that’s how the War Dogs’ Party came to be formed, for when they heard how the land lay some of the influential dogs in our neighbourhood called a meeting in Jorrocks’ Mews and elected me chairman.  We decided that membership should not be confined to dogs who had actually seen service at the Front, but that any dog who had faced the trials of the War in the spirit of true patriotism should be eligible.  A slight difficulty was encountered in the case of the Irish terrier who owns the butcher’s shop and notoriously has never been on bone rations, some of the young hotheads claiming that he was not eligible.  But Snap is a very popular dog, and when he is not brooding over his national grievances is a merry fellow and always ready to share a bone with a pal.  So I ruled that on account of the historic wrongs of Ireland we would overlook Snap’s defiance of the Public Bones Order and allow him to be one of us.

One of the first things you learn in the trenches is the use of tact in coping with delicate situations.  Well, we drew up a very strong platform and were on the point of carrying it unanimously when our secretary, a clever fellow but temperamental, like all poodles, spotted the big yellow cat from No. 14 slinking down the street on some poisonous errand or other, and the meeting adjourned in what I can only describe as a disorderly manner.  Of course we are treating the Declaration of Peace Aims, as we called it, as carried, though the secretary insists on adding a fifteenth point, which he says is of vital importance, relating to the Declawing of Yellow Cats.

The first plank in our platform is BRITAIN FOR BRITISH DOGS, which sounds very well, don’t you think?  Sassafras, the Aberdeen terrier from No. 3, a solid fellow but unimaginative, wanted it to be ONCE A U-DOG ALWAYS A U-DOG, but I ruled that that couldn’t be right because once there had been a U-dog next door to us, but now there wasn’t.  Of course they all wanted to hear about it, but we war dogs are supposed to be as modest as we are brave, so I simply said that he was spurlos versenkt.  But it isn’t only German dogs we draw the line at.  Take the Pekinese.  I’ve always said if we didn’t combat the Yellow Peril we’d regret it, and now the pests are everywhere.  My master’s woman has one which she calls Pitti Sing.  Did you ever hear of such a name for a dog?  But then it isn’t a dog in the real sense of the word.  Only last Friday the little beast flew at me—­all over an absurd chicken bone which was really meant for me but had been put on to its plate by mistake—­and deliberately filled my mouth full of nasty fluffy fur.

Of course the woman had to come in at that moment and, instead of chastising the little monster, she grabbed it up and hugged it, saying, “Diddums nasty great dog bite um poor ickle Pitti Singums?” and a lot more silly rot equally at variance with the facts.  I wagged my tail at her to show it wasn’t my fault, but she just wouldn’t see reason and told master that I must have a good whipping.  Of course master and I both know that one isn’t whipped for a little thing like that, so we retired into the study, and while master pretended to whip me I pretended to howl.  I was just beginning to howl in a very lifelike way when the woman rushed in and called master a cruel brute, and said she didn’t mean him to hurt me really.

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Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 156, January 22, 1919 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.