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<h2> THE TRIUMPHS OF A TAXIDERMIST </h2>
<p>Here are some of the secrets of taxidermy. They were told me by the
taxidermist in a mood of elation. He told me them in the time between the
first glass of whisky and the fourth, when a man is no longer cautious and
yet not drunk. We sat in his den together; his library it was, his sitting
and his eating-room—separated by a bead curtain, so far as the sense
of sight went, from the noisome den where he plied his trade.</p>
<p>He sat on a deck chair, and when he was not tapping refractory bits of
coal with them, he kept his feet—on which he wore, after the manner
of sandals, the holy relics of a pair of carpet slippers—out of the
way upon the mantel-piece, among the glass eyes. And his trousers,
by-the-by—though they have nothing to do with his triumphs—were
a most horrible yellow plaid, such as they made when our fathers wore
side-whiskers and there were crinolines in the land. Further, his hair was
black, his face rosy, and his eye a fiery brown; and his coat was chiefly
of grease upon a basis of velveteen. And his pipe had a bowl of china
showing the Graces, and his spectacles were always askew, the left eye
glaring nakedly at you, small and penetrating; the right, seen through a
glass darkly, magnified and mild. Thus his discourse ran: “There
never was a man who could stuff like me, Bellows, never. I have stuffed
elephants and I have stuffed moths, and the things have looked all the
livelier and better for it. And I have stuffed human beings—chiefly
amateur ornithologists. But I stuffed a nigger once.</p>
<p>“No, there is no law against it. I made him with all his fingers out
and used him as a hat-rack, but that fool Homersby got up a quarrel with
him late one night and spoilt him. That was before your time. It is hard
to get skins, or I would have another.</p>
<p>“Unpleasant? I don’t see it. Seems to me taxidermy is a
promising third course to burial or cremation. You could keep all your
dear ones by you. Bric-`-brac of that sort stuck about the house would be
as good as most company, and much less expensive. You might have them
fitted up with clockwork to do things.</p>
<p>“Of course they would have to be varnished, but they need not shine
more than lots of people do naturally. Old Manningtree’s bald
head.... Anyhow, you could talk to them without interruption. Even aunts.
There is a great future before taxidermy, depend upon it. There is fossils
again....”</p>
<p>He suddenly became silent.</p>
<p>“No, I don’t think I ought to tell you that.” He sucked
at his pipe thoughtfully. “Thanks, yes. Not too much water.</p>
<p>“Of course, what I tell you now will go no further. You know I have
made some dodos and a great auk? No! Evidently you are an amateur at
taxidermy. My dear fellow, half the great auks in the world are about as
genuine as the handkerchief of Saint Veronica, as the Holy Coat of Treves.
We make ’em of grebes’ feathers and the like. And the great
auk’s eggs too!”</p>
<p>“Good heavens!”</p>
<p>“Yes, we make them out of fine porcelain. I tell you it is worth
while. They fetch—one fetched #300 only the other day. That one was
really genuine, I believe, but of course one is never certain. It is very
fine work, and afterwards you have to get them dusty, for no one who owns
one of these precious eggs has ever the temerity to clean the thing. That’s
the beauty of the business. Even if they suspect an egg they do not like
to examine it too closely. It’s such brittle capital at the best.</p>
<p>“You did not know that taxidermy rose to heights like that. My boy,
it has risen higher. I have rivalled the hands of Nature herself. One of
the <i>genuine</i> great auks”—his voice fell to a whisper—one
of the <i>genuine</i> great auks <i>was made by me</i>.”</p>
<p>“No. You must study ornithology, and find out which it is yourself.
And what is more, I have been approached by a syndicate of dealers to
stock one of the unexplored skerries to the north of Iceland with
specimens. I may—some day. But I have another little thing in hand
just now. Ever heard of the dinornis?</p>
<p>“It is one of those big birds recently extinct in New Zealand.
‘Moa’ is its common name, so called because extinct: there is
no moa now. See? Well, they have got bones of it, and from some of the
marshes even feathers and dried bits of skin. Now, I am going to—well,
there is no need to make any bones about it—going to <i>forge</i> a
complete stuffed moa. I know a chap out there who will pretend to make the
find in a kind of antiseptic swamp, and say he stuffed it at once, as it
threatened to fall to pieces. The feathers are peculiar, but I have got a
simply lovely way of dodging up singed bits of ostrich plume. Yes, that is
the new smell you noticed. They can only discover the fraud with a
microscope, and they will hardly care to pull a nice specimen to bits for
that.</p>
<p>“In this way, you see, I give my little push in the advancement of
science.</p>
<p>“But all this is merely imitating Nature. I have done more than that
in my time. I have—beaten her.”</p>
<p>He took his feet down from the mantel-board, and leant over confidentially
towards me. “I have <i>created</i> birds,” he said in a low
voice. “<i>New</i> birds. Improvements. Like no birds that was ever
seen before.”</p>
<p>He resumed his attitude during an impressive silence.</p>
<p>“Enrich the universe; <i>rath</i>-er. Some of the birds I made were
new kinds of humming birds, and very beautiful little things, but some of
them were simply rum. The rummest, I think, was the <i>Anomalopteryx
Jejuna. Jejunus-a-um</i>—empty—so called because there was
really nothing in it; a thoroughly empty bird—except for stuffing.
Old Javvers has the thing now, and I suppose he is almost as proud of it
as I am. It is a masterpiece, Bellows. It has all the silly clumsiness of
your pelican, all the solemn want of dignity of your parrot, all the gaunt
ungainliness of a flamingo, with all the extravagant chromatic conflict of
a mandarin duck. <i>Such</i> a bird. I made it out of the skeletons of a
stork and a toucan and a job lot of feathers. Taxidermy of that kind is
just pure joy, Bellows, to a real artist in the art.</p>
<p>“How did I come to make it? Simple enough, as all great inventions
are. One of those young genii who write us Science Notes in the papers got
hold of a German pamphlet about the birds of New Zealand, and translated
some of it by means of a dictionary and his mother-wit—he must have
been one of a very large family with a small mother—and he got mixed
between the living apteryx and the extinct anomalopteryx; talked about a
bird five feet high, living in the jungles of the North Island, rare, shy,
specimens difficult to obtain, and so on. Javvers, who even for a
collector, is a miraculously ignorant man, read these paragraphs, and
swore he would have the thing at any price. Raided the dealers with
enquiries. It shows what a man can do by persistence—will-power.
Here was a bird-collector swearing he would have a specimen of a bird that
did not exist, that never had existed, and which for very shame of its own
profane ungainliness, probably would not exist now if it could help
itself. And he got it. <i>He got it</i>.”</p>
<p>“Have some more whisky, Bellows?” said the taxidermist,
rousing himself from a transient contemplation of the mysteries of
will-power and the collecting turn of mind. And, replenished, he proceeded
to tell me of how he concocted a most attractive mermaid, and how an
itinerant preacher, who could not get an audience because of it, smashed
it because it was idolatry, or worse, at Burslem Wakes. But as the
conversation of all the parties to this transaction, creator, would-be
preserver, and destroyer, was uniformly unfit for publication, this
cheerful incident must still remain unprinted.</p>
<p>The reader unacquainted with the dark ways of the collector may perhaps be
inclined to doubt my taxidermist, but so far as great auks’ eggs,
and the bogus stuffed birds are concerned, I find that he has the
confirmation of distinguished ornithological writers. And the note about
the New Zealand bird certainly appeared in a morning paper of unblemished
reputation, for the Taxidermist keeps a copy and has shown it to me.</p>
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