The Achievement of the Cat
In the political history of nations it is no uncommon experience to find States and peoples which but
a short time since were in bitter conflict and animosity with each other, settled down comfortably on
terms of mutual goodwill and even alliance. The natural history of the social developments of species
affords a similar instance in the coming-together of two once warring elements, now represented by
civilised man and the domestic cat. The fiercely waged struggle which went on between humans and
felines in those far-off days when sabre-toothed tiger and cave lion contended with primeval man, has
long ago been decided in favour of the most fitly equipped combatantthe Thing with a Thumband
the descendants of the dispossessed family are relegated today, for the most part, to the waste lands
of jungle and veld, where an existence of self-effacement is the only alternative to extermination. But
the felis catus, or whatever species was the ancestor of the modern domestic cat (a vexed question at
present), by a master-stroke of adaptation avoided the ruin of its race, and captured a place in the very
keystone of the conquerors organization. For not as a bond-servant or dependent has this proudest
of mammals entered the human fraternity; not as a slave like the beasts of burden, or a humble camp-
follower like the dog. The cat is domestic only as far as suits its own ends; it will not be kennelled or
harnessed nor suffer any dictation as to its goings out or comings in. Long contact with the human race
has developed in it the art of diplomacy, and no Roman Cardinal of mediæval days knew better how to
ingratiate himself with his surroundings than a cat with a saucer of cream on its mental horizon. But
the social smoothness, the purring innocence, the softness of the velvet paw may be laid aside at a
moments notice, and the sinuous feline may disappear, in deliberate aloofness, to a world of roofs and
chimney-stacks, where the human element is distanced and disregarded. Or the innate savage spirit
that helped its survival in the bygone days of tooth and claw may be summoned forth from beneath
the sleek exterior, and the torture-instinct (common alone to human and feline) may find free play in
the death-throes of some luckless bird or rodent. It is, indeed, no small triumph to have combined the
untrammelled liberty of primeval savagery with the luxury which only a highly developed civilization can
command; to be lapped in the soft stuffs that commerce has gathered from the far ends of the world,
to bask in the warmth that labour and industry have dragged from the bowels of the earth; to banquet
on the dainties that wealth has bespoken for its table, and withal to be a free son of nature, a mighty
hunter, a spiller of life-blood. This is the victory of the cat. But besides the credit of success the cat has
other qualities which compel recognition. The animal which the Egyptians worshipped as divine, which
the Romans venerated as a symbol of liberty, which Europeans in the ignorant Middle Ages anathematised
as an agent of demonology, has displayed to all ages two closely blended characteristicscourage and
self-respect. No matter how unfavourable the circumstances, both qualities are always to the fore. Confront
a child, a puppy, and a kitten with a sudden danger; the child will turn instinctively for assistance, the
puppy will grovel in abject submission to the impending visitation, the kitten will brace its tiny body for
a frantic resistance. And disassociate the luxury-loving cat from the atmosphere of social comfort in
which it usually contrives to move, and observe it critically under the adverse conditions of civilisation
that civilisation which can impel a man to the degradation of clothing himself in tawdry ribald garments
and capering mountebank dances in the streets for the earning of the few coins that keep him on the
respectable, or non-criminal, side of society. The cat of the slums and alleys, starved, outcast, harried,
still keeps amid the prowlings of its adversity the bold, free, panther-tread with which it paced of yore
the temple courts of Thebes, still displays the self-reliant watchfulness which man has never taught it
to lay aside. And when its shifts and clever managings have not sufficed to stave off inexorable fate,
when its enemies have proved too strong or too many for its defensive powers, it dies fighting to the
last, quivering with the choking rage or mastered resistance, and voicing in its death-yell that agony of
bitter remonstrance which human animals, too, have flung at the powers that may be; the last protest
against a destiny that might have made them happyand has not.