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SOLDIERS’ LOVE OF ANIMALS.

The British soldier always has a aott corner in his heart for animals of all sorts, and a regiment without its complement of these would be almost like a regiment without rifles. In every barrack or camp throughout the Empire one may see numerous denizens of the fur and feather world accommodating themselves to military routine as though they were born to It. Every time the drum rolls or the stirring notes of the bugle peal out on the parade-ground there is a soldier’s dog or cat or bird somewhere in the immediate vicinity. They are always treated with the utmost kindness, and often live to a good old age. At Edinburgh Castle to this day may be seen “the dog’s cemetery,” a small plot of ground under the ramparts of the Argyle Battery, just below Mons Meg, where the canine friends of Highland regiments stationed there have been buried.

Army pets vary, naturally, with the'' particular quarter of the globe where the regiment to which they are attached may be stationed. In England, for example, one does not often see much beyond dogs and cats and canaries.

.When, however, troops are abroad the range becomes wider, and barracks and cantonments will then be found to contain, in addition to the usual number of dogs .and cats, all sorts of birds of rare and gorgeous plumage, mongooses,' harmless snakes monkeys, and even tame hears and lion-cubs. Of course, when these latter emerge from the cubstage to something approaching maturity they have to he got rid of. v

As a rule they are then presented to the nearest zoological gardens, where their former masters visit them during their hours of leisure.— “Chambers’s Journal.”

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/PGAMA19101202.2.11

Bibliographic details

Pelorus Guardian and Miners' Advocate., Volume 21, Issue 89, 2 December 1910, Page 2

Word Count
286

SOLDIERS’ LOVE OF ANIMALS. Pelorus Guardian and Miners' Advocate., Volume 21, Issue 89, 2 December 1910, Page 2

SOLDIERS’ LOVE OF ANIMALS. Pelorus Guardian and Miners' Advocate., Volume 21, Issue 89, 2 December 1910, Page 2

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