<SPAN name="ch09"><!--Marker--></SPAN>
<h2> CHAPTER IX </h2>
<h3> THE SHEPHERD ON FOXES </h3>
<blockquote>
A fox-trapping shepherd—Gamekeepers and foxes—Fox
and stoat—A gamekeeper off his guard—Pheasants
and foxes—Caleb kills a fox—A fox-hunting
sheep-dog—Two varieties of foxes—Rabbits playing
with little foxes—How to expel foxes—A playful
spirit in the fox—Fox-hunting a danger to sheep
</blockquote>
<p>Caleb related that his friend Shepherd Gathergood was a great
fox-killer and, as with hares, he took them in a way of his
own. He said that the fox will always go to a heap of ashes
in any open place, and his plan was to place a steel trap
concealed among the ashes, made fast to a stick about three
feet high, firmly planted in the middle of the heap, with a
piece of strong-smelling cheese tied to the top. The two
attractions of an ash-heap and the smell of strong cheese was
more than any fox could resist. When he caught a fox he
killed and buried it on the down and said "nothing to nobody"
about it. He killed them to protect himself from their
depredations; foxes, like Old Gaarge and his son in Caleb's
case, went round at night to rob him of the rabbits he took
in his snares.</p>
<p>Caleb never blamed him for this; on the contrary, he greatly
admired him for his courage, seeing that if it had been found
out he would have been a marked man. It was perhaps
intelligence or cunning rather than courage; he did not
believe that he would be found out, and he never was; he told
Caleb of these things because he was sure of his man. Those
who were interested in the hunt never suspected him, and as
to gamekeepers, they hardly counted. He was helping them; no
one hates a fox more than they do. The farmer gets
compensation for damage, and the hen-wife is paid for her
stolen chickens by the hunt, The keeper is required to look
after the game, and at the same time to spare his chief
enemy, the fox. Indeed, the keeper's state of mind with
regard to foxes has always been a source of amusement to me,
and by long practice I am able to talk to him on that
delicate subject in a way to make him uncomfortable and
self-contradictory. There are various, quite innocent
questions which the student of wild life may put to a keeper
about foxes which have a disturbing effect on his brain. How
to expel foxes from a covert, for example; and here is
another: Is it true that the fox listens for the distressed
cries of a rabbit pursued by a stoat and that he will deprive
the stoat of his captive? Perhaps; Yes; No, I don't think so,
because one hunts by night, the other by day, he will answer,
but you see that the question troubles him. One keeper, off
his guard, promptly answered, "I've no doubt of it; I can
always bring a fox to me by imitating the cry of a rabbit
hunted by a stoat." But he did not say what his object was in
attracting the fox.</p>
<p>I say that the keeper was off his guard in this instance,
because the fiction that foxes were preserved on the estate
was kept up, though as a fact they were systematically
destroyed by the keepers. As the pheasant-breeding craze
appears to increase rather than diminish, notwithstanding the
disastrous effect it has had in alienating the people from
their lords and masters, the conflict of interest between
fox-hunter and pheasant-breeder will tend to become more and
more acute, and the probable end will be that fox-hunting
will have to go. A melancholy outlook to those who love the
country and old country sports, and who do not regard
pheasant-shooting as now followed as sport at all. It is a
delusion of the landlords that the country people think most
highly of the great pheasant-preserver who has two or three
big shoots in a season, during which vast numbers of birds
are slaughtered—every bird "costing a guinea," as the
saying is. It brings money into the country, he or his
apologist tells you, and provides employment for the village
poor in October and November, when there is little doing. He
does not know the truth of the matter. A certain number of
the poorer people of the village are employed as beaters for
the big shoots at a shilling a day or so, and occasionally a
labourer, going to or from his work, finds a pheasant's nest
and informs the keeper and receives some slight reward. If he
"keeps his eyes open" and shows himself anxious at all times
to serve the keeper he will sometimes get a rabbit for his
Sunday dinner.</p>
<p>This is not a sufficient return for the freedom to walk on
the land and in woods, which the villager possessed formerly,
even in his worst days of his oppression, a liberty which has
now been taken from him. The keeper is there now to prevent
him; he was there before, and from of old, but the pheasant
was not yet a sacred bird, and it didn't matter that a man
walked on the turf or picked up a few fallen sticks in a
wood. The keeper is there to tell him to keep to the road and
sometimes to ask him, even when he is on the road, what is he
looking over the hedge for. He slinks obediently away; he is
only a poor labourer with his living to get, and he cannot
afford to offend the man who stands between him and the lord
and the lord's tenant. And he is inarticulate; but the
insolence and injustice rankle in his heart, for he is not
altogether a helot in soul; and the result is that the
sedition-mongers, the Socialists, the furious denouncers of
all landlords, who are now quartering the country, and whose
vans I meet in the remotest villages, are listened to, and
their words—wild and whirling words they may
be—are sinking into the hearts of the agricultural
labourers of the new generation.</p>
<p>To return to foxes and gamekeepers. There are other estates
where the fiction of fox-preserving is kept up no longer,
where it is notorious that the landlord is devoted
exclusively to the gun and to pheasant-breeding. On one of
the big estates I am familiar with in Wiltshire the keepers
openly say they will not suffer a fox, and every villager
knows it and will give information of a fox to the keepers,
and looks to be rewarded with a rabbit. All this is
undoubtedly known to the lord of the manor; his servants are
only carrying out his own wishes, although he still
subscribes to the hunt and occasionally attends the meet. The
entire hunt may unite in cursing him, but they must do so
below their breath; it would have a disastrous effect to
spread it abroad that he is a persecutor of foxes.</p>
<p>Caleb disliked foxes, too, but not to the extent of killing
them. He did once actually kill one, when a young
under-shepherd, but it was accident rather than intention.</p>
<p>One day he found a small gap in a hedge, which had been made
or was being used by a hare, and, thinking to take it, he set
a trap at the spot, tying it securely to a root and covering
it over with dead leaves. On going to the place the next
morning he could see nothing until his feet were on the very
edge of the ditch, when with startling suddenness a big dog
fox sprang up at him with a savage snarl. It was caught by a
hind-leg, and had been lying concealed among the dead leaves
close under the bank. Caleb, angered at finding a fox when he
had looked for a hare, and at the attack the creature had
made on him, dealt it a blow on the head with his heavy
stick—just one blow given on the impulse of the moment,
but it killed the fox! He felt very bad at what he had done
and began to think of consequences. He took it from the trap
and hid it away under the dead leaves beneath the hedge some
yards from the gap, and then went to his work. During the day
one of the farm hands went out to speak to him. He was a
small, quiet old man, a discreet friend, and Caleb confided
to him what he had done. "Leave it to me," said his old
friend, and went back to the farm. In the afternoon Caleb was
standing on the top of the down looking towards the village,
when he spied at a great distance the old man coming out to
the hills, and by and by he could make out that he had a sack
on his back and a spade in his hand. When half-way up the
side of the hill he put his burden down and set to work
digging a deep pit. Into this he put the dead fox, and threw
in and trod down the earth, then carefully put back the turf
in its place, then, his task done, shouldered the spade and
departed. Caleb felt greatly relieved, for now the fox was
buried out on the downs, and no one would ever know that he
had wickedly killed it.</p>
<p>Subsequently he had other foxes caught in traps set for
hares, but was always able to release them. About one he had
the following story. The dog he had at that time, named Monk,
hated foxes as Jack hated adders, and would hunt them
savagely whenever he got a chance. One morning Caleb visited
a trap he had set in a gap in a hedge and found a fox in it.
The fox jumped up, snarling and displaying his teeth, ready
to fight for dear life, and it was hard to restrain Monk from
flying at him. So excited was he that only when his master
threatened him with his crook did he draw back and, sitting
on his haunches, left him to deal with the difficult business
in his own way. The difficulty was to open the steel trap
without putting himself in the way of a bite from those
"tarrable sharp teeth." After a good deal of manoeuvring he
managed to set the butt end of his crook on the handle of the
gin, and forcing it down until the iron teeth relaxed their
grip, the fox pulled his foot out, and darting away along the
hedge side vanished into the adjoining copse. Away went Monk
after him, in spite of his master's angry commands to him to
come back, and fox and dog disappeared almost together among
the trees. Sounds of yelping and of crashing through the
undergrowth came back fainter and fainter, and then there was
silence. Caleb waited at the spot full twenty minutes before
the disobedient dog came back, looking very pleased. He had
probably succeeded in overtaking and killing his enemy.</p>
<p>About that same Monk a sad story will have to be told in
another chapter.</p>
<p>When speaking of foxes Caleb always maintained that in his
part of the country there were two sorts: one small and very
red, the larger one of a lighter colour with some grey in it.
And it is possible that the hill foxes differed somewhat in
size and colour from those of the lower country. He related
that one year two vixens littered at one spot, a deep bottom
among the downs, so near together that when the cubs were big
enough to come out they mixed and played in company; the
vixens happened to be of the different sorts, and the
difference in colour appeared in the little ones as well.</p>
<p>Caleb was so taken with the pretty sight of all these little
foxes, neighbours and playmates, that he went evening after
evening to sit for an hour or longer watching them. One thing
he witnessed which will perhaps be disbelieved by those who
have not closely observed animals for themselves, and who
still hold to the fable that all wild creatures are born with
an inherited and instinctive knowledge and dread of their
enemies. Rabbits swarmed at that spot, and he observed that
when the old foxes were not about the young, half-grown
rabbits would freely mix and play with the little foxes. He
was so surprised at this, never having heard of such a thing,
that he told his master of it, and the farmer went with him
on a moonlight night and the two sat for a long time
together, and saw rabbits and foxes playing, pursuing one
another round and round, the rabbits when pursued often
turning very suddenly and jumping clean over their pursuer.</p>
<p>The rabbits at this place belonged to the tenant, and the
farmer, after enjoying the sight of the little ones playing
together, determined to get rid of the foxes in the usual way
by exploding a small quantity of gunpowder in the burrows.
Four old foxes with nine cubs were too many for him to have.
The powder was duly burned, and the very next day the foxes
had vanished.</p>
<p>In Berkshire I once met with that rare being, an intelligent
gamekeeper who took an interest in wild animals and knew from
observation a great deal about their habits. During an
after-supper talk, kept up till past midnight, we discussed
the subject of strange, erratic actions in animals, which in
some cases appear contrary to their own natures. He gave an
instance of such behaviour in a fox that had its earth at a
spot on the border of a wood where rabbits were abundant. One
evening he was at this spot, standing among the trees and
watching a number of rabbits feeding and gambolling on the
green turf, when the fox came trotting by and the rabbits
paid no attention. Suddenly he stopped and made a dart at a
rabbit; the rabbit ran from him a distance of twenty to
thirty yards, then suddenly turning round went for the fox
and chased it back some distance, after which the fox again
chased the rabbit, and so they went on, turn and turn about,
half a dozen times. It was evident, he said, that the fox had
no wish to catch and kill a rabbit, that it was nothing but
play on his part, and that the rabbits responded in the same
spirit, knowing that there was nothing to fear.</p>
<p>Another instance of this playful spirit of the fox with an
enemy, which I heard recently, is of a gentleman who was out
with his dog, a fox-terrier, for an evening walk in some
woods near his house. On his way back he discovered on coming
out of the woods that a fox was following him, at a distance
of about forty yards. When he stood still the fox sat down
and watched the dog. The dog appeared indifferent to its
presence until his master ordered him to go for the fox,
whereupon he charged him and drove him back to the edge of
the wood, but at that point the fox turned and chased the dog
right back to its master, then once more sat down and
appeared very much at his ease. Again the dog was encouraged
to go for him and hunted him again back to the wood, and was
then in turn chased back to its master, After several
repetitions of this performance, the gentleman went home, the
fox still following, and on going in closed the gate behind
him, leaving the fox outside, sitting in the road as if
waiting for him to come out again to have some more fun.</p>
<p>This incident serves to remind me of an experience I had one
evening in King's Copse, an immense wood of oak and pine in
the New Forest near Exbury. It was growing dark when I heard
on or close to the ground, some twenty to thirty yards before
me, a low, wailing cry, resembling the hunger-cry of the
young, long-eared owl. I began cautiously advancing, trying
to see it, but as I advanced the cry receded, as if the bird
was flitting from me. Now, just after I had begun following
the sound, a fox uttered his sudden, startlingly loud scream
about forty yards away on my right hand, and the next moment
a second fox screamed on my left, and from that time I was
accompanied, or shadowed, by the two foxes, always keeping
abreast of me, always at the same distance, one screaming and
the other replying about every half-minute. The distressful
bird-sound ceased, and I turned and went off in another
direction, to get out of the wood on the side nearest the
place where I was staying, the foxes keeping with me until I
was out.</p>
<p>What moved them to act in such a way is a mystery, but it was
perhaps play to them.</p>
<p>Another curious instance of foxes playing was related to me
by a gentleman at the little village of Inkpen, near the
Beacon, in Berkshire. He told me that when it happened, a
good many years ago, he sent an account of it to the "Field."
His gamekeeper took him one day "to see a strange thing," to
a spot in the woods where a fox had a litter of four cubs,
near a long, smooth, green slope. A little distance from the
edge of the slope three round swedes were lying on the turf.
"How do you think these swedes came here?" said the keeper,
and then proceeded to say that the old fox must have brought
them there from the field a long distance away, for her cubs
to play with. He had watched them of an evening, and wanted
his master to come and see too. Accordingly they went in the
evening, and hiding themselves among the bushes near waited
till the young foxes came out and began rolling the swedes
about and jumping at and tumbling over them. By and by one
rolled down the slope, and the young foxes went after it all
the way down, and then, when they had worried it
sufficiently, they returned to the top and played with
another swede until that was rolled down, then with the third
one in the same way. Every morning, the keeper said, the
swedes were found back on top of the ground, and he had no
doubt that they were taken up by the old fox again and left
there for her cubs to play with.</p>
<p>Caleb was not so eager after rabbits as Shepherd Gathergood,
but he disliked the fox for another reason. He considered
that the hunted fox was a great danger to sheep when the ewes
were heavy with lambs and when the chase brought the animal
near if not right into the flock. He had one dreadful memory
of a hunted fox trying to lose itself in his flock of
heavy-sided ewes and the hounds following it and driving the
poor sheep mad with terror. The result was that a large
number of lambs were cast before their time and many others
were poor, sickly things; many of the sheep also suffered in
health. He had no extra money from the lambs that year. He
received but a shilling (half a crown is often paid now) for
every lamb above the number of ewes, and as a rule received
from three to six pounds a year from this source.</p>
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