Part 1 (1/2)

Prince Jan, St. Bernard.

by Forrestine C. Hooker.

Chapter I

THE HOSPICE DOGS

Prince Jan was a fuzzy, woolly puppy with clumsy paws and fat, round body covered with tawny hair. His brown eyes looked with loving good-will at everything and everybody.

Jan and his brother, Rollo, had great fun playing together, his long fur making it easy for Rollo to haul him around, while Jan's teeth slipped from his brother's short hair. Though they tumbled about and growled fiercely at each other, their eyes were dancing with laughter.

When tired of playing, they would coax their mother to tell them stories about the Hospice dogs. Then they would lie very quietly listening with p.r.i.c.ked-up ears and earnest eyes. Sometimes Bruno, the oldest dog in the kennels, would join in the talk, and all the young dogs would gather around to hear the history of their family. Prince Jan and Rollo, cuddled beside their mother, would look at each other with pride, remembering that they, too, were St. Bernards.

”I have heard the monks tell visitors that our ancestors have lived in the Hospice for a thousand years,” said Bruno in one of his talks. ”When you puppies are old enough, you will be trained for work. The duty of a St. Bernard dog is to save lives and be worthy of his ancestors.”

Jan and Rollo looked at him and thumped their tails to show that they understood.

”A good St. Bernard dog must have a sensitive nose, st.u.r.dy legs, and keen brains,” Bruno's voice was very sober. ”He knows what he must do when he finds a human being lost in the storm or frozen in the snow.

Then he leads the way to the Hospice, or if the traveller does not follow, the dog brings monks to aid the man. Should one of us ever fail to do his best,” he turned his big head slowly and his eyes were serious as he looked at the puppies, ”it would mean disgrace for all the rest of the St. Bernard dogs.”

”Tell us more stories, Bruno,” the youngsters begged.

”Not to-day,” Bruno shook his wise head. ”Your ancestors have done great things, and you have the right to be proud of them, but the only way to prove yourselves worthy is for you to do your duty as well as they did theirs. Unless you remember your lessons and follow them, you will not be true St. Bernards, and your failures will be stains on the honor of the name we bear. Never forget that as long as you live!”

Bruno understood that the soft little whimpers were promises that each puppy would do his best when the test came to him. Jan and Rollo watched the old dog, limping from rheumatism in his shoulders, move slowly across the enclosed yard that opened from the kennels. Bruno was no longer able to go out on the trails, but spent his days teaching the young dogs. Sometimes he would lie asleep, and when his paws jerked and his tail moved, Jan's mother would say, ”Be quiet, children! Bruno is dreaming he is out on the trail.”

Then she would speak softly, ”When you are older you will be taught to break trails through the snow and carry food and wine, fastened about your necks. You may be tempted, when the wind howls and the snow blinds you, to sneak back or hide in a sheltered place. You must not forget, as long as you live, that there was never a traitor or coward in your father's family or in mine. When you remember this, you will stagger on or crawl, if you cannot stand, and keep your nose close to the ground, sniffing and sniffing.”

She turned her head toward the white peaks that loomed high above the stone walls around the enclosure. ”Only a St. Bernard can tell whether the snow which has drifted during the night is strong enough to bear the weight of a man, or whether that man would sink beyond rescuing.”

Jan and his brother waited respectfully when she stopped speaking and stared at the mountain-tops, until she said, ”Sometimes, you will find an ice-bridge. Then you must go very carefully. If it creaks beneath your weight, never let any human being step on it, even if you must fight him back. Your father, Rex, died when an ice-bridge broke through; but he saved four men from death. Always remember one thing. To die doing one's duty is the greatest honor that can come to a St. Bernard.”

The two puppies whined softly and their mother knew that each of her children was promising that he would do his best to be worthy of such a father.

”Ah,” said Prince Jan to his brother, as their mother crossed the yard toward the kennel, ”some day we, too, will go out and do our work. Won't that be glorious, Rollo?”

In their happiness they raced to their mother, who watched them with loving, proud eyes. When they reached her side Jan measured himself to see how much bigger he must grow, for though he was large for his age, he was only six months old.

”Oh, if I could only grow faster, mother!” he cried.

”Be patient, Jan,” she answered, biting his ear gently. ”Your time is coming soon!”

”My time is coming! My time is coming!” Jan leaped and barked in glee.

”Mine, too!” called Rollo. ”We'll work together, Jan!”

The big door leading from the enclosure where the dogs romped and played swung open, and two men who came out, stood looking at the dogs. The puppies watched eagerly, for these men had charge of the youngsters. All the dogs knew them, and even if the men had been strangers the Hospice dogs would have known they were monks who belonged to the Hospice, for the clothes they wore were different from the clothes of other men who came to the Hospice for a day or two.

A long, black, close-fitting coat reached almost to the feet of each monk, a peaked hood hung between his shoulders and a little round, black, skull-cap was on his head. All of the monks dressed the same way, and when it was cold and they went out on the trail, they took off the little cap and pulled the peaked hood over their heads and around their ears.