
-
Kitten Playing
419 visits
-
Kitten playing with a ball
403 visits
-
Cat
319 visits
-
Cat on an old book
335 visits
-
Cat licking a kitten
419 visits
-
Cat in tree
314 visits
-
Cat Hunting
415 visits
-
Cat Family
436 visits
-
After Rosa Bonheur had painted horses, cows, and other tame animals a great many times, she began to want to paint wild animals, such as tigers and bears. She could not go to the far-away countries where they live, so she bought a lion and lioness from a man who had been there. These she kept in a very strong cage of heavy iron bars. Here she came to watch them every day.
This is one of the pictures she painted of the lion. She called him “Nero,” and was so kind to him that after a while he became quite tame. The lioness was always wild, but good old Nero soon became so gentle that Rosa Bonheur could pet him and even go into his cage.
586 visits
-
Mountain Lion
463 visits
-
Bobcat crouching
433 visits
-
Lynx in a tree
426 visits
-
Affection for one of the feathered race was shown by a cat which was rearing several kittens.
In another part of the loft a pigeon had built her nest; but her eggs and young having been frequently destroyed by rats, it seemed to occur to her that she should be in safer quarters near the cat. Puss, pleased with the confidence placed in her, invited the pigeon to remain near her, and a strong friendship was established between the two. They fed out of the same dish; and when Puss was absent, the pigeon, in return for the protection afforded her against the rats, constituted herself the defender of the kittens—and on any person approaching nearer than she liked, she would fly out and attack them with beak and wings, in the hope of driving them away from her young charges. Frequently, too, after this, when neither the kittens nor her own brood required her care, and the cat went out about the garden or fields, the pigeon might be seen fluttering close by her, for the sake of her society.
705 visits
-
I have an instance of a still stranger friendship to mention. The servants of a country-house—and I am sure that they were kind people—had enticed a frog from its hole by giving it food. As winter drew on, Froggy every evening made its way to the kitchen hearth before a blazing fire, which it found much more comfortable than its own dark abode out in the yard. Another occupant of the hearth was a favourite old cat, which at first, I daresay, looked down on the odd little creature with some contempt, but was too well bred to disturb an invited guest. At length, however, the two came to a mutual understanding; the kind heart of Puss warming towards poor chilly little Froggy, whom she now invited to come and nestle under her cozy fur. From that time forward, as soon as Froggy came out of its hole, it hopped fearlessly towards the old cat, who constituted herself its protector, and would allow no one to disturb it.
484 visits
-
A lady in France possessed a cat which exhibited great affection for her. She accompanied her everywhere, and when she sat down always lay at her feet. From no other hands than those of her mistress would she take food, nor would she allow any one else to fondle her.
The lady kept a number of tame birds; but the cat, though she would willingly have caught and eaten strange birds, never injured one of them.
At last the lady fell ill, when nothing could induce the cat to leave her chamber; and on her death, the attendants had to carry away the poor animal by force. The next morning, however, she was found in the room of death, creeping slowly about, and mewing piteously. After the funeral, the faithful cat made her escape from the house, and was at length discovered stretched out lifeless above the grave of her mistress, having evidently died of a broken heart.
498 visits
-
When you see Puss seated by the fireside, blinking her eyes, and looking very wise, you may often ask, “I wonder what she can be thinking about.” Just then, probably, she is thinking about nothing at all; but if you were to turn her out of doors into the cold, and shut the door in her face, she would instantly begin to think, “How can I best get in again?” And she would run round and round the house, trying to find a door or window open by which she might re-enter it.
I once heard of a cat which exerted a considerable amount of reason under these very circumstances. The house is situated in the country, and there is a door with a small porch opening on a flower-garden. Very often when this door was shut, little Deb was left outside; and on such occasions she used to mew as loudly as she could to beg for admittance. Occasionally she was not heard; but instead of running away, and trying to find some other home, she used patiently to ensconce herself in a corner of the window-sill, and wait till some person came to the house, who, on knocking at the door, found immediate attention. Many a day, no doubt, little Deb sat there on the window-sill and watched this proceeding, gazing at the knocker, and wondering what it had to do with getting the door open.
A month passed away, and little Deb grew from a kitten into a full-sized cat. Many a weary hour was passed in her corner. At length Deb arrived at the conclusion that if she could manage to make the knocker sound a rap-a-tap-tap on the door, the noise would summon the servant, and she would gain admittance as well as the guests who came to the house.
One day Deb had been shut out, when Mary, the maidservant, who was sitting industriously stitching away, heard a rap-a-tap at the front door, announcing the arrival, as she supposed, of a visitor. Putting down her work, she hurried to the door and lifted the latch; but no one was there except Deb, who at that moment leaped off the window-sill and entered the house. Mary looked along the road, up and down on either side, thinking that some person must have knocked and gone away; but no one was in sight.
The following day the same thing happened, but it occurred several times before any one suspected that Deb could possibly have lifted the knocker. At length Mary told her mistress what she suspected, and one of the family hid in the shrubbery to watch Deb’s proceedings. Deb was allowed to run out in the garden, and the door was closed. After a time the little creature was seen to climb up on the window-sill, and then to rear herself on her hind-feet, in an oblique position at the full stretch of her body, when, steadying herself with one front paw, with the other she raised the knocker; and Mary, who was on the watch, instantly ran to the door and let her in.
Deb’s knock now became as well-known to the servant as that of any other member of the family, and, no doubt to her great satisfaction, it usually met with prompt attention.
[Edited slightly]
503 visits
-
A Cats Eye
444 visits
-
A domestic cat sitting before a picture of a male lion
568 visits
-
Study of a cat from nature
440 visits
-
Kitten and puppy playing with a basket of apples
698 visits
-
A Kitten playing (or sleeping)
675 visits
-
A Cats Eye
453 visits
-
A cat cleaning her kitten
522 visits
-
Cat sitting on some cloth
451 visits
-
Cat cleaning itself
444 visits
-
Cat looking at reflection in the water
723 visits
-
Cat on a fence
722 visits
-
Cat asleep on a chair
708 visits
-
Cartoon Cat
682 visits
-
Cat and birds
787 visits
-
Egyptian Cat
936 visits
-
Cat Face
645 visits
-
Cat with kittens
977 visits
-
Cat on a wall
657 visits
-
Tom Tita
There was at Arlington a large yellow cat, called Tom Tita. All the family were fond of him, and Colonel Lee among the rest. This led him to write home about the cats he saw in his travels.
3449 visits
-
Image 237
2325 visits
-
Mountain lion
1867 visits
-
Black Persian 'Minnie'
1578 visits
-
Archangel Blue Cat
1507 visits
-
a white Persian - Muff
1548 visits
-
Young Persian Kitten
1623 visits
-
Wild Cat shown at the Crystal Palace Cat Show, 1871
1474 visits
-
White Persian 'Tim'
1495 visits
-
White Persian 'Miss Whitey'
1458 visits
-
White Persian - 'Lambkin 2'
1633 visits
-
White Cat, winner of many prizes
1470 visits
-
White cat - prize winner in 1879
1402 visits
-
White Angora
1443 visits
-
Kittens watching a mouse
1733 visits
-
Well-marked Silver Black-banded Tabby
1267 visits
-
very Light Blue Tabby, 'Sylvie'.
1252 visits
-
Unusual Long Haired Cat
1303 visits
-
Tortoiseshell-and-white Cat, finely marked
1279 visits
-
Tortoise Shell Manx
1250 visits
-
Tired of play
1196 visits
-
'Tiger'
1224 visits
-
'The old Lady' - Silver Tabby
1210 visits
-
'The Colonel' - White Persian
1145 visits
-
Tabby Manx kitten
1138 visits
-
'Sylvie'
1166 visits
-
Spotted Tabby Half-bred Indian Wild Cat
937 visits
-
Spotted Silver Tabby
1111 visits
-
Siamese, winner of many prizes
1137 visits
-
Siamese winner of many prizes
1184 visits
-
Properly Marked Siamese
1166 visits
-
Properly marked black and white cat
1172 visits
-
Prize winning siamese
933 visits
-
Preperly Marked Black and White
1140 visits
-
Persian Kitten 'Lambkin'
977 visits
-
Mr. Smith's Tortoiseshell He-Cat
986 visits
-
Long Haired Persian
872 visits
-
Long Haired Persian 'Bogey'
922 visits
-
Long haired kitten 'Chloe'
891 visits
-
Long Haired cat
877 visits
-
Long Haired Cat 'Tiger'
941 visits
-
Light White and Sandy She-Cat and Kittens
1326 visits
-
Kittens at the Show
785 visits
-
Kittens after the Show
1337 visits
-
Kitten playing with a ball
782 visits
-
Head of a well-marked Striped Brown Tabby
820 visits