Cat Stories

Posts in The Copybook tagged ‘Cat Stories’

13
Thoughtful Tom Jane Loudon

Jane Loudon describes an moment of unexpected paternal affection from a Tom cat.

Jane Loudon was a pioneering science fiction writer, whose novel “The Mummy!” of 1827 was a landmark in the genre. She also wrote an engaging account of her family pets that included several anecdotes about cats.

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14
The Mischief-Maker Clay Lane

A stranger warns the people of Shorapur that they will come to regret their hospitality.

In 1850, Charles Dickens’s magazine ‘Household Words’ carried this curious tale, written by Colonel Philip Meadows Taylor, who at the time was a correspondent on ‘The Times’ in India. Set in the legendary past, the story concerns the town of Shorapur in India, which in Dickens’s time was still a semi-independent Kingdom, and a question as simple as it is timeless: Cats, or Dogs?

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15
The Wolf, the Bear and Cat Ivanovitch Clay Lane

A faithful but unprepossessing pet is turned out of hearth and home.

This Russian folktale is a story about a tom cat who is abandoned by his fastidious owner, but shows all the philosophical resilience of cats, and reinvents himself as Cat Ivanovitch, Head Forester of all the animals of the wood. But he could not have done it without the help of a little vixen called Lisabeta, and a good deal of luck.

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16
The Convert Harrison Weir

Victorian cat-lover Harrison Weir launches into his favourite subject, but finds his audience growing restive.

On the eve of the world’s first Cat Show, held in 1871 at the Crystal Palace in London, organiser Harrison Weir was frankly boring a friend with his flights of ecstasy on cats. Just when the argument seemed lost, a happy inspiration struck him.

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17
Pangur Bán Anonymous (Irish Monk)

A 9th century Irish monk scribbled some verses about a beloved cat into his copy book.

An anonymous ninth-century Irish monk – possibly Sedulius Scottus, driven onto the Continent by Vikings – penned a little poem about his cat Pangur Bán (Fuller the White) into his scrapbook, sharing the precious space with Latin hymns and noble quotations.

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18
Persian Treasures Edith Nesbit

‘Be careful what you wish for’, they say, and there could be no more endearing example.

Four suburban children (two girls and two boys) have discovered a Phoenix wrapped up in a Persian carpet. The fire-bird, proud of its homeland, has encouraged them to send the magic carpet back to fetch Persia’s ‘most beautiful and delightful’ produce, and the bulging carpet has just returned.

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