Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

‘REMNANT.’

The eats of Marblehead always seemed to me a very important part of the population. There was Postoffice Tom, over on the Neck, a great, handsome fellow who presided over the distribution of the mails, looking down with big green eyes from his lofty perch on the very top of the pigeon-holed cabinet where the letters awaited their owners.

There was the bewitching Maltese kitten who took me in charge when I went sketching in the old town, and sat demurely at my side while 1 worked, with an occasional scamper after her own frolicsome gray tail by way of refreshment. There were various aristocratic cottage cats, sleek and proud; and there was Remnant. The first time I saw her the little steamer had just come in from the Neck, and the people were hurrying to and fro, some going ashore and some running to take their places in the boat; and Remnant, not a bit abashed by all the bustle, looked on with her bright eyes from the post where she lay basking in the sunshine, and evidently feeling herself the proprietress of the whole affair. It seemed a strange place for a cat. I thought; but she was quite as much at home among the boats and piles of timber and dingy wharf-houses as is your own puss in her peaceful backyard. or her corner by the kitchen stove.

She was a pretty creature, black and gray and tawny yellow, with snow-

white breast and paws, and because of this colouring, like a piece of gay calico, the sailors gave her the curious name of ‘Remnant.’ She had a family of kittens somewhere among the old canvas in one of the dark sail-lofts; but she had hidden them away so safely that even her good friends the sailors could not find them.

All night she stayed with them, and part of the day, but I am sure she felt equally the responsibility of looking after the wharf, to see that the boats eame and went regularly, and that the float was kept as clean as a tidy eat would wish to see it.

And how was she fed? No doubt there were plenty of rats and mice about the wharves, but Remnant had a taste for daintier fare, as you shall see.

When the little steamer had puffed away again, and the deserted float swayed gently on the quiet water, kind Captain T. looked up at Remnant, where she still sat on her post in the sunshine.

‘1 guess you're hungry, puss.’ he said. ‘lt’s about dinner-time.’ Then he called, ‘Kit, kit, kit!’ She blinked her eyes lazily, and did not move. The captain smiled at me.

‘This wiil fetch her,’ he said, and took a fishing-reel out of his pocket. ‘Kit. kit, kit!’ he called again softly, holding it up so that she could see. And Remnant understood. Down she came, stepping gravely along the gang plank, and looked up with questioning eyes in the captain’s face. ‘Are you hungry, puss?’ he asked.

‘Me-ow!’ she answered gently, with a wave of her plumy tail. Then the captain knelt down on the float, unwound his reel and dropped the line into the water, and Remnant settled herself beside him, watching every movement with an air of entire familiarity with the proceedings. She was too well-bred to show any impatience.

Her manners were perfect, though she was born and brought up on the wharf, and had not had the advantages which your pussy has enjoyed. She cocked her pretty head on one side with an expression of alert and intelligent interest, restrained by a gentle dignity. Jerk! up came the line. A quiver ran through Remnant’s delicate body. But there was only a bit of seaweed on the hook, and down it went again.

Over and over this happened, and still with unwearied patience the man knelt and threw his line, and the cat sat motionless beside him, gazing gravely down into the dark water. The float rose and fell on the tide, and the sunshine lay warm on the boards, and I watched the pretty sight, smiling, from my bench corner. ‘l’m afraid you'll have to go hungry, puss.’ said the captain at last. ‘They won’t bite to-day.’ And then, as he spoke, jerk! up came the line again, and he sprang to his feet, for this time there was a little fish dangling and shining on the hook!

Remnant would have liked to jump for joy, 1 think. But she didn’t.' She eaught the fish in her while pa vs. with a soft ‘me-ow!’ for ‘thank you,’ when the captain tossed it to her, and walked away to enjoy her dinner in a sheltered corner; after which she sought her young family to tell them no about, about the fishing, while the good captain wound up his line and went whistling off to his own dinner.

A wise cat was Remnant. Down on her wharf she might miss some of the privileges enjoyed by her fashionable cottage friends, but which of them had a fresh fish dinner caught and served up every day for her own especial benefit? MARGARET JOHXSON.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZGRAP18981203.2.52.3

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Graphic, Volume XXI, Issue XXIII, 3 December 1898, Page 739

Word Count
864

‘REMNANT.’ New Zealand Graphic, Volume XXI, Issue XXIII, 3 December 1898, Page 739

‘REMNANT.’ New Zealand Graphic, Volume XXI, Issue XXIII, 3 December 1898, Page 739