<h2 class="c4"><SPAN name="CHAPTER15" id="CHAPTER15">CHAPTER XVI</SPAN></h2>
<p class="MsoNormal c1">MARTYRDOM</p>
<p class="MsoNormal"> </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">It may be that a good deal of the wisdom and philosophy of
mankind is born of grief and suffering. It is certain that a good deal of
philosophy came to Finn as the aftermath of that evening upon which he retired,
heart-broken, to the farthest corner of his cage, after seeing the Master and
the Mistress of the Kennels pass him without a word or a glance. His mind did
not deal in niceties. He did not tell himself that if the Master had only
guessed at his presence there, all would have been different. He was conscious
only of the apparently brutal fact that the Master had walked past his cage and
ignored him; left him there in his horrible confinement. He bore no malice, for
there was not any malice in his nature; which is not at all the same thing as
saying that he was incapable of wreaking vengeance or administering punishment.
He simply was smitten to the very heart with grief and sorrow. And so he lay,
all through that night, silent, sorrowful, and blind to his surroundings.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The natural result was that sleep came to him after a
while, when all was dark and silent, and the folk who had visited the circus,
like those who had entertained them, were in their beds. And this sleep he
badly needed. While he slept the burns on his muzzle and ear were healing, the
searing heat of his grief was subsiding, and his body and nervous system were
adapting themselves to his situation, and recharging themselves after the great
drain which had been made upon them during the past couple of days.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">When Killer's long, snarling yawn woke Finn in the morning
he did not fling himself against the partition which hid the tiger from him. He
did not even bark or snarl a defiant reply. He only bared his white fangs in
silence, and breathed somewhat harshly through his nostrils, while the hair
over his shoulders rose a little in token of instinctive resentment. This
comparatively mild demonstration cost Finn a great deal less in the way of
expenditure of vitality than his previous day's reception of the tiger's
snarls; and left him by just so much the better fitted to cope with other
ordeals that lay before him.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">If Finn had been a wild beast, his experience in the
Southern Cross Circus would have been a far less trying one for him than it
was. He would have learned early that the Professor was a practically
all-powerful tyrant, who had to be obeyed because he had the power and the will
to inflict great suffering upon those of the wild kindred who refused him
obedience. That he was a tyrant and an enemy the wild creature would have
accepted from the outset, as a natural and an inevitable fact. In Finn's case
the matter was far otherwise. His instinct and inclination bade him regard a
man as a probable friend. Naturally, if the Professor had been aware of this,
he would never have approached Finn with a hot iron, and their relations would
have been quite different from the beginning. As it was, or as Finn saw it,
anyhow, the Professor had proved himself a creature absolutely beyond the pale;
a mad wild beast, disguised as a man; a devil who met friendly advances with
repeated blows of a magic weapon, a stick made of fire, against which no living
thing might stand. Matey had seemed to Finn a mad man, and one to be avoided.
But Matey had not been a wild beast as well, neither had he carried fire in his
hand. The Professor was a far more formidable and deadly creature. However he
might disguise his intentions, his purpose clearly was Finn's destruction. That
was how Finn saw it, and he acted accordingly; consistently, and not from
malice, but upon the dictates of common sense and self-preservation, as he
understood them.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Having said so much, it is hardly necessary to add that
Finn suffered greatly during the next few weeks of his life; for had not the
Professor sworn to make the Giant Wolf his obedient creature, and a docile
performer in the circus? That he never did. His boast was never made good,
though with a real wolf it might have been; and again it almost certainly would
have been, had he ever guessed that Finn was not a wolf at all, but one of the
most aristocratic hounds and friends of man ever bred. But his failure cost
Finn dear, in pain, humiliation, fear, and suffering of diverse kinds.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The boss jeered at the Professor when the failure to tame
Finn had extended over a week; and that added greatly to the severity of Finn's
ordeal. The Professor was on his mettle; and now, while he made no further
spoken boasts, he swore to himself that he would break the Giant Wolf's spirit
or kill him. He never guessed that his whole failure rested upon one initial
mistake. To the wild beast the red-hot iron bar was merely the terrible
insignia of the Professor's indubitable might and mastery; a very compelling
invitation to docility and respectful obedience. To Finn it was not that at
all; but merely terrible and unmistakable evidence of basest treachery and
malevolent madness. And it was largely with the red-hot iron that the Professor
sought to tame Finn, believing, as he did, that this was necessary to his own,
the Professor's, preservation.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Upon one occasion--one brilliantly sunny morning of Finn's
martyrdom--it did dimly occur to the Professor that it might be the hot iron
which somehow stood between himself and the mastery of Finn. Accordingly, he
twisted some wire round the end of his quilt, or cutting whip, and entered the
cage without the iron, while Sam stood outside with the brazier, ready to pass
in the iron if that should prove necessary. Finn absolutely mistrusted the man,
of course--he had suffered what he believed to be the man's insane lust of
cruelty for a fortnight now--but yet he saw that the iron was not in the cage,
and so he made no hostile demonstration; and that was a notable concession on
his part, for, of late, the Professor's tactics, so far from taming him, had
taught the naturally gracious and kindly Wolfhound to fly at the man with
snapping jaws the instant he came within reach. Now the man moved slowly, very
slowly, nearer and nearer to Finn's corner, using ingratiating words. When it
seemed that he meant to come near enough for touch, Finn decided that he would
slip across the cage to its opposite far corner in order to avoid the hated
contact. He did not snarl; he did not even uncover his fangs, for the fiery
instrument of torture was not there. He rose from his crouching position, and
of necessity that brought him a few inches nearer to the Professor, before he
could move toward the far side of the cage.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Would yer? Down, ye brute!" snarled the man, in his best
awe-inspiring tone. And in that instant the wire-bound rhinoceros-hide whistled
down across Finn's face, cutting him almost as painfully as the hot iron was
wont to sear him. He snarled ferociously. Down came the lash again, and this
time a loose end of wire stabbed the corner of one of his eyes. The next
instant saw the Professor flung back at length against the bars of the cage;
and in his face he felt Finn's breath, and heard and saw the flashing, clashing
gleam of Finn's white fangs. Sam thrust the white-hot bar in, stabbing Finn's
neck with its hissing end. The Professor seized the bar and beat Finn off with
it; not for protection now, but in sheer, savage anger. Then he withdrew from
the cage, and seizing a long pole beat Finn crushingly with that, through the
bars, till his arms ached. Meantime, Finn fought the pole like a mad thing; and
the Professor, unable to think of any other way of inflicting punishment upon
the untameable Giant Wolf, took his food from the basket and gave it to Killer
before Finn's eyes, leaving the Wolfhound to go empty for the day.</p>
<p></p>
<p><SPAN name="L3450" id="L3450"></SPAN><ANTIMG alt="wolfhound standing over man in cage" src="images/plate06.jpg"
style="display: block; text-align: center; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto"
width="400" height="546" /></p>
<p class="MsoNormal c1">The next instant saw the Professor flung back at length
against the bars of the cage.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal"> </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">That was the result of the Professor's one attempt,
according to his lights, at humouring the Giant Wolf, by approaching him
without the iron. That also was a specimen of the kind of daily interviews he
had with Finn.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">By this time the Wolfhound actually was a very fierce and
savage creature. But he was not at all like the magnificently raging whirlwind
of wrath which had aroused the boss's admiring wonder on the day he first saw
Finn. Killer might growl and snarl himself hoarse now for all the notice Finn
took of the great beast. Scarred from nose to flank with burns, bruised and
battered and aching in every limb, Finn remained always curled in the darkest,
farthest corner of his cage now, roused only by the daily fight, the daily
torture, of his interviews with the Professor. At other times, as the boss said
bitterly, he might have been dead or a lap-dog, for all the spectacle he
offered to the curious who visited his cage. All they saw was a coiled,
iron-grey mass, and two burning black eyes, with a glint of red in them, and a
blood-coloured triangle in their upper corners.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Now and again, in the midst of the night, Finn would rise
and go down to the bars of his cage and stand there, motionless, for an hour at
a stretch, his scarred muzzle protruding between two bars, his aching nostrils,
hot and dry, drinking in the night air, his eyes robbed of their resentful
fire, and pitiably softened by the great tears that stood in them. At the end
of such an hour he would sometimes begin to walk softly to and fro, inside the
bars, the four paces that his cage allowed him. Thus he would pad back and
forth silently for another hour, with tail curled toward his belly and nose on
a level with his knees, almost brushing the bars as he passed them. He made no
sound at all, even when the moon's silvery light flooded his cage, or when
Killer snarled in his sleep. But always, before returning to his corner, he
would systematically test every bar at its base with teeth and paws; and then
sigh, like a very weary man, as he slouched despairingly back to his corner.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">But, for all the glowering misery that possessed him by
day and the despair to which he would give rein by night, it was always with
dauntless ferocity that the tortured Wolfhound faced his enemy, the Professor.
Short of starving him to death, or killing him outright with the iron bar, the
Professor could see no way of making the Giant Wolf cringe to him; he could
devise no method of breaking that fierce spirit, though he exhausted every kind
of severity and every sort of cruelty that his wide experience in the handling
of fierce animals could furnish. For any one who could have comprehended the
true inwardness of that situation, its tragedy would have lain in the
reflection that, had he but known it, Finn could without difficulty have earned
not alone ease and good treatment, but high honours in the Southern Cross
Circus. But Finn had no means of guessing that the Professor merely desired to
master him, and to teach him to stand erect, or leap through a hoop at the word
of command. No sign of any such desire, that Finn could possibly read, had been
furnished. But, on the contrary, the one thing made evident to the Wolfhound's
understanding was that here was a bloodthirsty man in a leather coat who
desired to burn him to death, when not engaged in beating him with a pole, or
thrusting at him viciously through the bars of his cage with a stick, or
slashing at him with a whip that cut through hair and skin. And, be it
remembered, that the hound who was faced with these, to him, utterly gratuitous
and senseless atrocities, was one who, if we except the single occasion of his
night with the dog-thief in Sussex, had never known what it meant to face an
angry man, or to receive a blow from a man, angry or otherwise. It was small
wonder that Finn had only snarls and snapping jaws for the Professor. The pity
of it was that he could have avoided as much suffering if he had only known
what it was desired of him. The wonder of it was that he faced the Professor
day after day with such unfailing courage, with a spirit which remained
absolutely uncowed, though the body which sheltered it could not present a
single patch of the bigness of a man's hand which was neither burned, nor
bruised, nor cut.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">There came a day when, other matters occupying his
attention, the Professor did not trouble to pay one of his futile visits to
Finn's cage. Sam fed him as usual, when Killer was fed. (One of the features of
Finn's captivity, which, while in his confinement it helped to injure his
physical condition, also helped to make him the more fierce, was the fact that
his diet consisted exclusively of raw meat.) Finn waited through the long day
for the Professor, steeling himself for the daily struggle and the daily
suffering. His body free of new pains he rested that night more thoroughly than
he had rested for a long time; and there were faint stirrings of hope in his
mind. Next morning the boss happened to walk past the cages with the Professor,
and when they came to Finn's place the Professor said--</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"I reckon I'll give that brute best, unless you'd like him
killed. I'll tackle that job for you with pleasure; but your Giant Wolf's no
good for the show."</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"No, the joke's on me about the Giant Wolf," admitted the
boss, crossly. "Sam had me for fair, over him. Fifteen quid for a useless pig
like that! Why, he won't even stand up to make a show. The brute's not worth
his tucker, is he?"</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"He is not. And, if you ask me, you'd better let me feed
him to the others, while there's any meat left on his bones. He's no good for
aught else, as I can see. The Tasmanian Devil was a lap-dog to him, and he died
before I could get him trained, you remember."</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"H'm! Well, we'll see. We might get some fool to buy him.
Anyway, you'd better tell Sam to pry him round a bit somehow when the show's
opening. He looks all right when he gets a move on him, but he ain't worth a
hill o' beans lyin' curled up there in a corner. How'd it do to get a dingo,
and put it in there with him!"</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"You might as well give him a mouse. He'd swaller it
whole. He's twice the size of a dingo."</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"He sure is twice as sulky as any beast I ever saw. An'
that blame book-writin' chap from the city the other night said he reckoned the
Giant was a dog, an' not a wolf at all! Nice sociable sort of a dog for a
family gathering, I <em>don't</em> think!"</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"You should have asked the gent to go in his cage an' try
'im with a bit of sugar. My bloomin' Colonial! He wouldn't have written any
more books."</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">And now, whenever the boss met Sam, he would "jolly" the
young man a bit, as he said, regarding the Giant Wolf as a bargain, and ask
what Sam had done with the fifteen pounds, and whether he had any other cheap
freaks to sell. Also, Sam's half-crown was docked from his wages; and Sam,
after all, had never laid claim to any bigness of heart or philosophy of mind.
He had long since spent the fifteen pounds. The twenty-five shillings he had
paid for Finn loomed larger in his recollection now than the fifteen pounds he
had received; particularly after a dose of the boss's chaff.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">"Why the blazes can't yer learn, an' work fer yer livin',
ye ugly great brute?" Sam would growl, as he threw Finn his daily portion of
flesh. And, more often than not, he would pick up a stake, and thrust viciously
at the Wolfhound, or strike at him as he crept forward to snatch his meat.
Thus, as poor Finn saw it, another of the strange man-like beasts had gone mad,
and was to be treated as a dangerous enemy.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">If the Professor had continued his daily attempts to cow
Finn, as a preliminary to training, he would have been likely to succeed at
about this time; for the Wolfhound was losing strength daily, and though the
fire of wrath and fierceness burned strongly when he saw the leather-coated
man, it had little to feed on now, and must soon have died down under the hot
bar and the wired whip. But the Professor could not be expected to know this.
He had had as many as sixty futile struggles with Finn, and, as he thought, had
only stopped short of killing the Giant outright. But idleness, or some other
cause, did lead him to make one other attempt, on a hot afternoon, just before
the hour of tea and of dressing for the evening show. Finn's fighting blood,
inherited through long centuries of unsmirched descent, made him put his best
foot foremost, and meet the Professor with a mien of most formidable ferocity
as soon as the red iron appeared. The Professor did not know how near to
breaking-point Finn's despair had reached. There was little sign of it in the
roaring fierceness with which he faced the iron and whip. A wolf in such a
case, with the cunning of the wild, and without the life's experience of humans
which made the Professor's part so incredibly base, so gratuitously cruel and
treacherous to Finn, would have given in long before. Finn fought with the
courage of a brave man who has reached the last ditch, and with the ferocity
that came to him out of the ancient days in which his warrior ancestors were
never known either to give or to receive quarter.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">The Professor felt that this was a last attempt, and he
did not greatly care whether the great hound lived or died. The Giant Wolf had
defeated him as a trainer; but the Giant Wolf should never forget the price
paid for the defeat. It was a cruel onslaught. The iron bit deep, and--it had
been better for the Professor's character development, better for his record as
man, if he had left Finn alone when he decided to make no further attempt at
taming. But men, too, have fierce, brutal passions, with less than the
simplicity of brutes, and more, far more, of the knowledge which makes cruelty
leave a permanent stain upon them. The Professor himself was aching and sore
when he flung passionately out from Finn's cage and slammed the iron gate to;
and as for Finn, I have no words in which to explain how his poor body ached
and was sore. If the iron had been stone cold, Finn would still have been a
terribly badly beaten hound, when he staggered to his corner, after this last
visit from the mad beast-man in the leathern coat--so he thought of the
Professor, in that tumult of sinking flames which we may call his mind. He lay
in his corner, quivering and shuddering, and did not even find the heart to
lick his wounds till long hours afterwards, when silence ruled in the field
where the circus was encamped that night.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">This field was on the outskirts of a considerable
township; the twenty-second that Finn had visited with the Southern Cross
Circus. The authorities had refused to allow the boss to come closer in, and so
one side of his camping-place was walled by virgin bush; a dense tract of
blue-gum and iron-bark stretching, almost as far as the eye could reach, to the
foot-hills of a gaunt mountain range. For a mile or so from the circus camp the
trees had all been ring-barked a couple of seasons or more before this time,
with the result that they were now the very haggard skeletons of mighty trees,
naked for the most part, their white bones open to all the winds of heaven, but
here and there sporting a ghastly kind of drapery, remnants of their
grave-clothes as it might be, in the shape of long hanging streamers of dead
bark, which moaned and rustled eerily in the night breezes. High above the
tattered grave-clothes of their lifeless trunks, the knotted, tortured-looking
arms and fingers of the trees groped painfully after the life that had fled
their neighbourhood.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Finn could just see the ghostly extremities of these
spectral trees over the top of the main tent as he lay crouched in his corner,
after devoting an hour to the licking of his sores. Presently, an almost full
moon rose among the trees' fleshless limbs, and painted their nakedness in more
than ever ghostly guise. It was then that Finn rose, painfully and slowly, to
his feet, and moved, like an old, old man, across the floor of his cage to the
bars, the bars that were of an inky blackness in that silvery light. For almost
an hour this great hound, this tortured prince of a kingly race, stood sadly
there, staring out at the moonlight between the bars of his prison; and for
almost an hour, big clear drops kept forming in his black eyes and trickling
along his scarred muzzle, till they pattered down upon the floor of the cage.
If he had ever heard of such a thing as suicide, it may be that his soul would
have known the final humiliation of self-destruction that night. But there is
something that strikes a balance, as well in a Wolfhound's life as a man's
life.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Near as Finn was to the limit of his endurance, his brave
spirit lived within him yet, and he did not forego the nightly habit he had
formed long since of trying the bars that made him a prisoner. It is possible
that there never was a much more pathetically forlorn hope than that which
animated this sorely racked prisoner when he felt his bars. But if the iron of
them had entered into his soul, then it had made for endurance. The process was
not made easier by the existence of Finn's latest wounds. Both his fore-legs
and his muzzle had suffered severely under the iron that day; and it was with
these that he now tested his bars, slowly, conscientiously, and with painful
thoroughness, from the bar nearest Killer's cage to that at the end of the gate
of his own, which closed on to the partition of the native bears' division. It
was the bottom of the bars that Finn always tried, where they entered the floor
of the cage. He took each between his teeth and pushed and pulled; sometimes
pushing or pulling with his paws as well. And the result, on this night of
bright moonlight and great pain, was as it had always been. The iron did not
change.</p>
<p></p>
<p><SPAN name="L3461" id="L3461"></SPAN><ANTIMG alt="wolfhound fleeing circus by night"
src="images/plate07.jpg"
style="display: block; text-align: center; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto"
width="401" height="547" /></p>
<p class="MsoNormal c1">Was lost in the shadow of the main tent.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal"> </p>
<p class="MsoNormal">Having reached the end of his task, Finn sat erect on his
haunches for it may have been a quarter of an hour, gazing out at the risen
moon, which sailed serenely now, high above the praying hands of the skeleton
trees. Certainly, Finn's spirit was near to breaking-point. He rose, meaning to
seek his corner again, as after so many other futile testings of his bars; but
something moved him first to look out as far as he could, over the tent-top, to
the great world beyond. Sore though his body was, he rose erect upon his
hind-feet, placed his fore-feet against the upper half of the gate, and only
narrowly escaped falling forward through the gate to the ground beneath. In his
passion the Professor had slammed the barred gate to as usual and, in flinging
himself angrily off from the place, had omitted to slip the two thick bolts
which normally held it secure. The gate fitted closely, and was rusty, besides;
so that Finn's jaws, tugging at its extreme foot, and upon this particular
occasion less strongly no doubt than usual, had not shifted it. But his weight
pressing against the upper half was quite another matter; and now the gate
stood wide open before him.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal">For an instant, Finn's heart swelled within him, so
sharply, and so greatly, that a little whine burst from him, and it seemed he
was unable to move. So the sight of the open gate, giving upon the silent open
night, affected the Wolfhound. In the next instant he dropped quietly to the
earth, and was lost in the inky shadow of the main tent.</p>
<p class="MsoNormal"> </p>
<p></p>
<p></p>
<p class="MsoNormal"> </p>
<p><ANTIMG alt="man and kangaroo hound outside tent" src="images/fig24.png"
style="display: block; text-align: center; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto"
width="400" height="255" /></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />