LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. -fc- mpuf. Shelf ..VJLI.1 7 fU- UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ERI ,^J-t ...J-t THE HOG; THE TEEA.TMENT OF THE BREEDS, MANAGEMENT, FEEDING, AND MEDICAL TREATMENT OF SWINE; WITH DIRECTIONS FOB SALTINa POEK AND CURING BACON AND HAMS. / j/ BY WILLIAM YOUATT, V. S., ATJTHOR OF " THE HORSE," " CATTLE," " SHEEP," " TttK DOG," ETO^ ^ ^ AND W. C. L. MARTIN, MEMBEE OF THE KOYAL ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY. EDITED BY A. STEVENS. NEW EDITION, WITH INTRODUCTION BY COL. M. C. WELD ILLUSTRATED* NEW YORK: ORANGE JUDD COMPANY, 751 BROADWAY. 1884. S\ Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1883, by the ORANGE JUDD COMPANlf, In the OfSce of the Librarian of CougresB, at WasbingtoQ. INTRODUCTION. The admirable work of Mr. William Youatt was taken as the basis of the volume here presented, and that of Mt. W. 0. L. Martin, one of the officers of the London Zoological So- ciety, has furnished to the editor much valuable matter. Its Publishers entrusted the editorial work to that classical writer and Avell known breeder, the late Ambrose Stevens, wl o, wisely preserving entn-e the work of Youatt, so eminent for his historical descriptions and veterinary writings, combined with it such portions of Mr. Martin's work as would not be repetitions, thus forming a volume of no ordinary value. In his preface to his original work, Mr. Youatt says: ^'In undertaking this vv'ork, the author was influenced by an anx- ious desire to extend the views of Medical Science generally, and of his own profession in particular, and by a wish to draw the attention of agriculturists and veterinary surgeons to a too much neglected and undervalued class of animals, and by the hope of materially increasing the amount of knowledge already possessed. " It has been his task to collect all the various brief and cur- sory notices which have been accorded to swine by ancient as well as modern agricultural and medical writers; to select those which were valuable and worthy of record; and then, by weaving them into the groundwork of his own ideas and experience, to bring the before scattered rays into one focus, £0 that the eye of science may be attracted towards this hith- (3) INTUODUCTION". erto neglected branch, and, from contemplating, may be led to study it; and practical men may be induced to aid, by tbeir experience, in elucidating a subject which is as yet so little understood. In short, he has endeavored to act as a pioneer, to lead the way to, and break up, a new and fertile spot; one that will amply reward the labors of those whom he hopes to in- duce by his example to bestow some little of their care upon it." His success was so much beyond expectations, that the ap- pearance of this work really marks an era in swine breeding, and gives it a certain historical value of its own, aside from the care which Mr. Youatt took in presenting a history of each of the prominent breeds, and of those sources from which im- provement had come or was to be expected. The present Publishers therefore feel that no apology is necessary for pre- senting: a new edition of this standard work. CONTENTS. I. PAoa looLOGioAL definition of the Pig— The orde.r Pachydermata— The Peccary— The Babi- roussa— The Phaco 3hoere»— The Capibara — Various animals have been called by Ihe name of Hog, .......... li II. Derivation of the term Hog— The Hog was generally esteemed by the Romans— Wor- shipped by some of the ancients — Swine's flesh prohibited by the law of Moses By that of Mohammed — Despised by the Egyptians, . . , . , ,21 III. The early history of Swine— Legendary and authentic records respecting the keeping of them in England — Ancient Welsh laws relative to Swine — The forests of England- Swineherds— Their mode of managing their herds— Calabrian Swineherds— Horn used to assemble the grunting troop— The Schweim-Generai — Herds of Swine kept in France Value of Pigs— Some vindication of them— Anecdotes proving their teachaLility— >Saga' city of a Pig — Some demonstrations of memory in one— Attachment to individuals — Swine not innately filthy animals — Are possessed of more docility than they usually have credit ibr — Their exquisite sense of smell— Pigs said to foretell rain and wind, . 20 IV. The Wild Eoar — Description of him— Characteristics — The female and her young — Hunting the Wild Boar — Homer's description of a Boar-hunt — Roman festivals and games — The Wild Boar in Blngland and Scotland — In France — In Germany — Mode of hunting the Boar in Germany — Wild Boar park of the Emperor of Austria — Present wild breed in Germany — In Hungary— In the Styrian Alps— In Russia — In Swedec— In the East — Habits of the Wild Hog in India — Wild Hog hunting in India — The wild breed in America — Fearful conflict with a wild herd in Columbia — The Wild Boar the parent stock of all domesticated breeds — Resemblances between — Alterations produced by domestication —Resumption of old habits on again becoming free from control of man, . , 46 V. Bwine in America— In large towns— Original breed — Improved breed— Swine in Canada— In Ohio — In Mexico— Hebrides— In Coiumbia— In the South-Sea Islands- Swine in A8U —In China and Japan — Ceylon — Hindostan— Turkey and Arabia — Swine in Africa — Guinea— New Holland — Calf raria— Swine in Eukope — Malta — Italy^^ermany — ^Hun- -uMi.kv.^ i.^.T »^x'(.ucr of these animals to that planet. If at any other time an Egyp. aan even touched a hog, he was obliged to plunge into the Nile, 2i THE BOG. clothes and all, to purify himself, The swineherds formed rui isn- lated race, outcasts from society, forbidden to enter a temple, or mtermarry with othei f^tmilies." Hence it probably is, that, in the beautiful parable of th'^ Prodigal Son, this unhappy young man ia represented as being reduced to the office of a swineherd, that being considered as the lowest possible degradation. Others are of opinion that this and many other of the prohibitions and ordinances established by Moses were solely for the purpose of distinguishing the Jews from other nations, and making them v/hat they are to this day in all countries and under all climates, " a pe- culiar people." Others, again, assert that it was with a view to correct their gross and gluttonous habits that none but the simplest and mildest kinds of animal food were permitted to the Jews. And, lastly, another maintains that the swine was thus declared an abomi- nation in the sight of God, as a lesson to the Jews to abstain from the sensual and disgusting habits to which this animal is given. The aversion to swine has descended to the Jews, Egyptians, and followers of Mohammed of modern times. The Copts rear no pigs, indeed this animal is scarcely known in most of the cities of Lower Egypt; and the poorest Jew would sooner starve than touch a morsel of this forbidden food, even though the presumed cause of prohibition has long ceased to exist, and he is removed to colder climes, where pork is both wholesome and nutritious. By the precepts, warnings, and threatenings of the prophets, we read that, so great was the detestation excited in the minds of the Jewish nation against this animal, that they would not even pollute their lips by pronouncing its name, but always alluded to it as " that beast," " that thing ;" and we read in the history of the Maccabees, that Eleazer, a principal scribe, being compelled by Antiochus Epi- phanes to open his mouth and receive swine's flesh, spit it forth, and went of his accord to the torment, choosing rather to suffer death than break the divine law and offend his nation. And yet it is well known that immense numbers of swine were reared in the country of the Jews, probably for the purpose of gain, and in order to supply strangers and the neighboring idolaters; an.l it has been supposed, that it was in order to punish this violation of the Divine coniTnandinents that our Saviour permitted the herd of swine to be affected with that sudden disorder which caused them to rush headlong into the lake of Genesareth. Martin says — at what period the hog was reclaimed, and by what nation, we cannot tell. As far back as the records of history go, we find notices of this animal, and of the use of its flesh as food. By some nations it was held in abhorrence, and prohibited as food ; while among others its flesh was accounted a great delicacy. By the Mosaic law, the Jews were forbidden to use the flesh of the swine as food — it was unclean; and the followers of Mohammed, borrov^' GENERAL OBSERVAnONS. 25 ing their ritual from the institutions of Moses, hold the flesh of iho hog in utter abhorrence. Paxton, in his Illustrations of Scripture, vol. i., says, " The hog was justly classed by the Jews among the vilest animals in the scale of animated nature ; and it cannot be doubted that his keeper generally shared in the contempt and abhor- rence whi^h he had excited. The prodigal son in the parable had spent his all in riotous living, and was ready to perish through want, b.jfore he submitted to the humiliating employment of feeding swine." We pass over Paxton's description of the hog as the " vilest (jf animals," because there is no sense in the expression, and its pre- sumed meaning is unworthy notice. It cannot, however, be doubted, from the passage in Luke, (xv. 15,) and from others well known, that herds of swine were kept by the Jews, perhaps for sale and profit. Dr. J. Kitto says, " There does not appear to be any reason in the law of Moses why the hog should be held in such peculiar abomination. There seems nothing to have prevented the Jews, if they had been so inclined, to rear pigs for sale, or for the use of the lard, in the Talmud there are some indications that this was actu- ally done ; and it was probably for such purpose that the herds of swine, mentioned in the New Testament, were kept, although it is usual to consider that they were kept by the foreign settlers in the land. Indeed the story which accounts for the peculiar aversion of the Hebrews to the hog, assumes that it did not originate until about one hundred and thirty years before Christ, and that previously some Jews were in the habit of rearing hogs for the purposes indi- cated. The same writer, in a note upon Luke viii. 32, enters at greater length into this subject. " We have already," he says, " intimated our belief that there was much error in supposing that the law which declared that certain kinds of animals were not to be used for food, should be understood as prohibiting them from rearing, for any other purpose, the animals interdicted as food. There was certainly nothing ir. the law to prevent them from rearing hogs, more than from rearing asses, if they saw fit to do so. It appears, in fact, that the Jews did rear pigs for sale to their heathen neighbors, till this was forbidden after the principle of refining upon the law had been introduced. This prohibition demonstrates the previous existence of the practice; and it did not take effect till about seventy years B.C., when it is alleged to have originated in a circumstance which occurred between Hyrcanus and Aristobulus, the sons of King Alexander Janneus. Aristobulus was besieging Hyrcanus in Jeru- salem ; but not wishing to interrupt the services of the temple, he permitted an arrangement under which money was let down from the temple in a box, in return for which the lambs required for the daily sacrifices were sent up. It at last occurred to a mischievous 26 THE HOG. old man. ' who understooi the wisdom of the Greeks,' thai there would be no overcoming the adverse party while they employed themselves in the service of God ; and therefore one morning he put a hog in the box, instead of a lamb. When half way up, the pig reared himself up, and happened to rest his fore feet upon the temple wall, whereupon continues the story, Jerusalem and the land of Israel quaked. In consequence of this, two orders were issued by the Council: 'Cursed be he that breedeth hogs ;' and ' Cursed be he who teacheth his son the learning of the Greeks.' Such is the origin of the order against rearing hogs, as related in the Baby- lonian Talmud. One of the enforcements of this prohibition is curious, as showing for what purposes besides sale, hogs had been reared by the Jews. ' It is forbidden to rear any hog, even though hogs should come to a man by inheritance, in order to obtain profit from its skin or from its fat, for anointing or for light.' From this it would seem that the Jews had been wont to make ointments with hog's lard, and that they did not exclusively use oil for lights, but fat also, which was probably done according to a method we have often seen in the East, by introducing a wick into a lump of grease, which is set in a lamp, or in a round hollow vessel, made for the purpose ; the heat of the kindled wick, as in a candle, gradually melts as much of the feit as is required to feed the flame. The in- convenience of the deprivation of the useful lard of hogs for this and other purposes, seems to have given occasion to an explanation, that the prohibition was not to be understood to imply that the fat of hogs might not be obtained by purchase from the Gentiles. The prohibition of keeping hogs does not appear to have had complete effect, as regulations are made concerning towns in which hogs were kept ; and the keepers of swine are mentioned as contemptible and infiimous wretches, so that it was a favorite term of abuse to call a person a hog-breeder or a swineherd. Although, therefore, it may be likely that the herds of swine here mentioned were the property of the heathen, who certainly did live with the Jews in the towns of this neighborhood, (the country of the Gadarenes,) it is not impossible that they belonged to the Jews, who kept them in despite of the prohibitions we have mentioned." Among the ancient Egyptians, although the figure of the hog occurs several times well drawn at Edfou, this animal was held in detestation. " Swine," says Herodotus, " are accounted such impure beasts by the Egyptians, that if a man touches one even by acci- dent, he presently hastens to the river, ar5 in all his clothes plunges himself into the water. For this reason, swineherds alone of the Egyptians are not suffered to enter any of their temples ; neither will any man give his daughter in marriage to one of that profession, nor take a wife born of such parents, so that they are necessitated to intermarry among themselves. The Egyptians are forbidden to GENERAL OBSERVAlxONS. 21 sacrifice swine to any other deities than to Bacchus and to the moon; when completely at full, at which time they may eat of the flesh. When they offer this sacrifice to the moon, and have killed the victim, they put the end of the tail, with the spleen and fat, mto a caul found in the belly of the animal, all w^hicli they burn on the sacred fire, and eat the rest of the flesh on the day of the full moon, though at any other time they would not taste it. Those who, on account of their poverty, cannot bear the expense of this sacrifice, mould a paste into the form of a hog, and make their offering. In the evening of the festival of Bacchus, though every one be obliged to kill a swine before the door of his house, yet he immediately restores the carcass to the swineherd who sold it." This aversion tow^ards the hog, among the ancient Egyptians and the Jews, (we need not here notice the Mohammedans or the Brah- minical tribes of India,) is very remarkable. Among the Greeks and. Romans the flesh of the swine was held in estimation, although the swineherd attracted little notice from the poet. Why, then, in Western Asia and Egypt should it have been forbidden 1 We at- tribute it entirely to mystical or religious motives, which we are not quite able to appreciate. The following passage from Griffith's Cuvier is worthy our consi- deration, although it does not bring conviction to our mind ; it is rather plausible than demonstrative : — " In hot climates the flesh of swine is not good. M. Sonnini remarks, that in Egypt, Syria, and even the southern parts of Greece, this meat, though very white and delicate, is so far from being firm, and is so overcharged with fat. that it disagrees with the stronojest stomachs. It is therefore consi- dered unwholesome, and this will account for its proscription by the legislators and priests of the East. Such an abstinence was doubt- less indispensable to health, under the burning suns of Egypt and Arabia. The Egyptians were permitted to eat pork only once a year — on the feast day of the moon — and then they sacrificed a number of these animals to that planet. At other times, if any one even touched a hog, he was obliged immediately to plunge into the river Nile, with his clothes on, by way of purification. The swineherds formed an isolated class, the outcasts of society. They were interdicted from entering the temples, or intermarrying with any other families. This aversion for swine has been transmitted to the modern Egyptians. The Copts rear no pigs, any more than do the followers of Mohammed. The Jews, who borrcnved from the Egyptians their horror of pigs, as well as many other peculiariiies, continue their abstinence from thern in colder climates, where they form one of the most useful articles of subsistence." If the hog in warm climates is so unwholesome as food, how hap pens it that the Chinese rear this animal in such numbers for the table ] and how happens it that the hare (if indeed this animal be 28 , THE Hoa. intended) was forLidden by the Mosaic laws OrS food ? Surelj the same objection could not apply to this latter animal as to the hog. Whatever the motive might have been, both among the Egyptians and the Jews, which led them to forbid the use of swine's flesh on the table, a regard to the health of the people was not one. Locusts were permitted by the latter, but creep- ing things in general denied, as were also fishes destitute of ap- parent scales. Among the ancient Greeks and Romans, the flesh ol' the pig was held in great estimation. The art of rearing, breeding, or fattening these animals, was made a complete stu- dy ;and the dishes prepared from the meat were dressed with epicurean refinement, and in many modes. One dish consisted of a young pig whole, stuffed with beccaficoes and other small birds, together with oysters, and served in wine and rich gravy. This dish was termed Porcus Trojanus^ in allusion to the wooden horse, filled with men, which the Trojans introduced into their city — an unpleasant allusion, one would think, seeng that the Romans boasted their Trojan descent. However, such was the name of this celebrated and most expensive dish, so costly, indeed, that sumptuary regulations were passed respecting it. Esteemed, however, as the flesh of the hog was by the Greeks and Romans, commonly as the animal was kept, and carefully and even curiously as it was fed, in order to gratify the appetites of the wealthy and luxurious, yet the swineherd, as may be inferred from the silence of the classic writers, and especially of the poets who painted rural life, was not held in much estimation. No gods or neroes are described as keeping swine. Theocritus never intro- duces the swineherd into his idyls, nor does Virgil admit him into his eclogues, among his tuneful shepherds. Homer indeed honors Eumaeus, the swineherd of Ulysses, with many commendations ; but he is a remarkable exception. Perhaps a general feeling prevailed, and still in some measure prevails, that the feeders of the gluttonous and wallowing swine became assimilated in habits and manners to the animals under their charge ; or, it may be, that the prejudices of the Egyptians relative to this useful class of men, extended to (ireece or Italy, giving a bias to popular opinion. From the earliest times in our own island, the hog has been re- garded as a very important animial, and vast herds were tended by swineherds, who watched over their safety in the woods, and col- lected them under shelter at night. Its flesh was the staple article of consumption in every household, and much of the wealth of the rich and free portion of the community consisted in these animals. Hence bequests of swine, with land for their support, were often made ; rights and privileges connected with their feeding, and the extent of woodland to be occupied by a given number, were granteri according to established rules. In an ancient Saxon grant, quoted GENERAL OBSERVATIONS. 29 by Sharon Turner in his Histoi-y of the An^Jo- Saxons, we find the right of pasturage for swine conveyed by deed : — "I give food for seventy swine in that woody allotment which the countrymen call Wolferdinlegh." The locality of the swine's pasturage, as here described, has a somewhat ominous title, referring as it does to the haunt of an animal, fioni incursions of which, on flocks of sheep md herds of swine, during the Saxon period of our history, both he sliepherd and the swineherd had to preserve their respective jhargcs. The men employed in the duties — generally thralls, or borne slaves of the soil — were assisted by powerful dogs, capable of contending with a wolf, at least until the swineherd came with his heavy quarter-staff or spear to the rescue. In Sir Walter Scott's novel of Ivanhoe^ the character of Gurth is a true, but of course somewhat overcolored picture of an Anglo-Saxon swineherd, as is that of his master of a large landed proprietor, a great proportion of whose property consisted in swine, and v*hose rude but hospitable board, was liberally supplied with the flesh. Long after the close of the Saxon dynasty, the practice of feed- hig swine upon the mast and acorns of the forest was continued, till our forests were cut down and the land laid open for the plough ; even yet, in some districts, as the New Forest of Hampshire, the custom is not discontinued, and in various parts of the countrv, where branching oaks in the hedgerow overshadow the rural and secluded lanes, the cottagers turn out their pig or pigs, under the care of some boy, to pick up the fallen acorns in autunm. Pigs turned out upon stubble fields after harvest, often find in oak copses, in October and November, a welcome addition to their fare. The large forests of England were formerly royal property ; nevertheless the inhabitants- of the adjacent towns, villages, and farms enjoyed both before and long after the Conquest, under cer- tain conditions of a feudal nature, and probably varying according to circumstances, and the tenures by which lands were held, the right of fattening their swine in these woodlands. The lawful period for depasturing swine in the royal forests extended from fifteen days before Michaelmas, to forty days afterwards, and this was termed the pawnage month. This term was not, however, very strictly adhered to ; many herds were suffered to remain in the forest during the whole year, the consequence of which was tha numbers became feral, and were not collected by their owneri without difficulty. Little damage would be done in the woods by these swine, but, no doubt, like their wild progenitors, they would take every opportunity of invading the cultivated grounds, and of rioting in the fields of green or ripening corn. 3* 30 THE HOG. CHAPTEE. III. The early history of Swine — Lp°:endary and authentic records respecting tlie Keeping' of thenj in Enjjiand — Ancienl Welsh hivvs reli'.live io Swiue — Tiie forests of Enijfland — Swineherds— Their mode of managing their herds — Calabrian Swineherds — Horn used to assemble the granting troop — The Sehwein-General — Herds of Swine i\ept in France — Value of Pigs- Some vindication of them — Anecdote proving tiieir te:ielMl)i!ity— Sagacity of a I'ig^ Some demonstration of Memory in one— Attachment to itidividuils — Swkie not innately fil'hy animals — They are possessed of more docility than they usually have credit for — Their exquisite sense of smell — Pigs said to foretell rain and wind. In Greece and the neighboring ishinds, swine were common at an early period, and were kept in large droves by swineherds ; for we read in Homer's Odyssey, which is supposed to have been written upwards of 900 years b. c, that Ulysses, on his return from the Trojan war, first sought the dwelling of Eum{\jus, his faithful ser- vant, and the keeper of his swine : and that office must then have been held in high esteem, or it would not have been performed by that wise and good old man. The rude tables of the ancient Britons were chiefly supplied from their herds of swine, and the flesh of these animals furnished them with a great variety of dishes. (Cassar, book i. chap 1.) Sharon Turner, in his History of the Anglo-Saxons, while enu- merating their live stock, states they had " great abundance of swine ;" and adds, that although horned cattle are occasionally men- tioned in grants, wills, and exchange of property, swine are naost frequently spoken of. The country then abounded with woods and forests, and these are seldom particularized without some mention being made of the swine fed in them. These animals appear in fact to have constituted a considei-able item in the wealth of an indi- vidual, for legacies of them often occur in wills. Thus Alfred, a nobleman, bequeathed to his relatives a hide of land with one hun- dred swine, and directs that another hundred shall be given for masses for the benefit of his soul ; and to his daughters he leaves two thousand. So Elf helm left land to St. Peter's at Westminster, on the express condition that they should feed a herd of two hundred sw^ine for the use of his wife. In the original Doomsday -Book for Hampshire, where an estimate of the value of the lands and forests belonging to the king, the mo- nasteries, the hundreds, and other divisions is given, the number of hogs which can be fed on each separate portion is invariably spe- cified. In the oldest of the Welsh Triads, (which treat of the events of Britain ir. general,) we find evidence of the early domestication of swine, for one of these contains a recital of the actions of three powerful swineherds in the Isle of Britain, " over whom it was not po^eible to prevail or gain," and who restore! the swine to their SWINE IN THE FORESTS OF ENGLANr>. 31 owners with increase. Some of the fabulous narrations blenJed vvitii the history of these swineherds have been attributed by anti- quarians to a period aiitccedent to Christianity. In the law^s of Howel Dha, there is a chapter on the value of ani- inals, in which it is stated "that the price of a little pig from the time it is born until it grows to burrow, is one penny ; when it ceases sucking, which is at the end of three months, it is worth twopence ; from that time it goes to the wood with the swine, and Jt is consi- dered as a swine, and its value is fourpence ; from the Feast of St. John unto the 1st day of January, its value is fifteenpence ; from the 1st of January unto the Feast of St. John, its value is twenty- four pence ; and from that time forward its value shall be thirty pence, the same as its mother." "The qualities of a sow are, that she breeds pigs and do not de- vour her young ones. The seller must also warrant her sound against the quinsy for three days and nights after she is sold. If she ishould not possess these qualities, one third of her price must be returned. The value of a boar is equal to the value of three sows.'' The British forests, which formerly occupied the greater part of England, were peopled by the swinish multitude. Hertfordshire was nearly covered with wood and forest land; Buckinghamshire boasted its magnificent Bern Wood ; Hampshire, its extensive New Forest ; nor were the other counties destitute of these sylvan retreats, which have latterly vanished before the axe of the woodman and the industry of the husbandman. In 1646 Norwood in Surrey is described as containing 830 acres from which the inhabitants of Croydon " have herbage for all kinds of cattle, and mastage for swine without stint." The right of the forest borderers to fatten their swine in the vari- ous foresis, formcVly royal property, is very ancient, being evidently anterior to the Conquest. At first a small tax or fee was paid by those holding this right; but w^hether this went to the crown, or consisted in a certain gratuity to the forest ranger or the swineherd, is nowhere specified in the records. This privilege, like all others, was greatly abused ; for many of the keepers availed themselves of it, and kept large herds of swine which they suffered to run the fo'rests during the wdiole of the year, doing exceeding damage to the timber as well as to the land. The actual period for which it was lawful to turn swine into the royal woods and forests for masting, was from fifteen days before Michaelmas to forty days afterwards, and this was termed the pawn- age month. Nor was the p.-actice of feeding swine in herds, peculiar to this country. In Calabria they are grazed in herds, and the keeper uses a kind'of bagpipe, the tones of which, when the period arrives for cheir being driven home, quickly collects the scattered groups from every part. In TusCany it is the same. 32 THE HOG. Ill Germany almost every village has its swineherd, who at brealt of day goes from house to house collecting his noisy troop, blowing his still more noisy cow-horn, and cracking his clumsy whip, until the place echoes with the din. The following very amusing acaount of that important personage, the Schtoein- General^ has lately been given in a popular work : — " Every morning 1 hear the blast of a horn, when, proceeding from almost every door in the street, behold a pig! The pigs ge- nerally proceed of their own accord ; but shortly after they have passed, there comes a little bare-headed, bare-footed, stunted child about eleven years old. Thislittle attendant of the old pig-driver facetiously called at Langen-Schwalbach the ' Schwein -General, ktiows every house from which a pig ought to have proceeded : she can tell by the door being open or shut, or even by footmarks, whether the creature has joined the herd, or is still snoring in its sty A single glance determines whether she shall pass a yard, or enter it; and if a pig, from indolence or greediness, be loitering on the road, the sting of the wasp cannot be sharper or more spiteful than the cut she gives it. " Besides the little girl who brought up the rear, the herd was preceded by a boy of about fourteen, whose duty it was not to let the foremost advance too fast, [n the middle of the drove, sur- rounded like a shepherd by his flock, slowly stalked the ' Schwein- General.' In his left hand lie held a staff, while round his right shoulder hung a terrific whip. At the end of a short handle, turn- ing upon a swivel, there was a lash about nine feet long, each joint being an iron ring, which, decreasing in size, was closely connected with its neighbor by a band of hard greasy leather. The pliability, the weight, and the force of this iron whip, rendered it an argument which the obstinacy even of the pig was unable to resist ; yet, as the old man proceeded down the town, he endeavored to speak kindly to the herd. " As soon as the herd had got out of the town, they began gradu- ally to ascend the rocky, barren mountain which appeared towering above them, and then the labors of the Schweln- General and his staff became greater than ever ; in due time the drove reached the ground which was devoted for that day's exercise, the whole moun- Uiin being thus taken in regular succession. " In this situation do the pigs remain every morning for four hours enjoying little else but air and exercise. At about nine or ten o'clock they begin their march homeward, and nothing can form a greater contrast than their entry does to their exit from their native town. " Their eager anxiety to get to the dinner trough that awaits them is almost ungovernable, and they no sooner reach the first houses of the town than away each of them starts towards his home. " At half-pa^'- four the same horn is heard again ; the pij^s jncf THE SCHWEIX-GENERAL OF GERMANY. 33 more assemble, ascend the mountains, remain there for four h' urs, and in the evening return to their styes. " Such is the life of the pigs, not only of Langen-Schwalbach, but those of every village throughout a great part of Germany : every day of their existence, summer and winter, is spent in the way des- cribed." in France, swine are kept in herds, and in many districts the feed- ing of them in the woods and forests, {le glandage,) under certain conditions and restrictions, has been a source of no inconside- rable emolument to the forester. Indeed, to such an extent was it carried in certain localities, that it became an object of political economy. Bat of late years it has much diminished; the progress of agriculture is fast sweeping away those immense tracts of wood- land country which formerly existed in England and France, and with them depart the denizens of the forest, wild or tame. Nature designed the hog to fulfil many important functions in a forest country. By his burrowing after roots and such like, he turns up and destroys the larvee of innumerable insects that would other- wise injure the trees as well as their fruit. He destroys the slug, snail, snake, and adder, and thus not only rids the forest of the?e injurious and unpleasant inhabitants, but also makes them subservi- ent to his own nourishment, and thus to the benefit of mankind. The fruits which he eats, are such as would otherwise rot on the ground and be wasted, or yield nutriment to vermin ; and his dig- ging for earth-nuts, &c., loosens the soil and benefits the roots of the trees. Hence, hogs in forest-land may be regarded as eminently beneficial, and it is only the abuse of it which is to be feared. The German agriculturist, thaer, does not, however, advocate the forest feeding of swine unless they are kept in the woods day and night and carefully sheltered ; as he conceives that the bringing them home at night heats their blood, and nullifies the good effects^of the day's feeding. He likewise considers that, although acorns produce good firm flesh, beechmast makes unsound oily fat. But if he is a useful animal in this public point of view, how much more so is he to individuals % Among the poorer classes ot society how often is the pig their chief source of profit. In Ireland is this especially the case ; there he is emphatically " the gintleman what l^ays the riiit,'' better treated often than the peasant's own children. The small cost at which these animals can be reared and flittened, and the.r fecundity and wonderful powers of thriving under disad- vantages, render them an actual blessing to many a poor cotter, who, with his little savings, buys a young and ill-conditioned pig, fattens it on all the refuse he can beg or spare, or collect, and selTs it at a good profit, or occasionally, perhaps, kills it for the use of his family, who thus obtain an ample supply of cheap, nutritious diet. VVere it not for this animal, many oi' the laboring poor would 2* 34: THE UOG. scarcely be able to keep a roof over their heads, therefore, we may with justice designate the hog " the poor man's friend." With the exception of the rabbit, swine are the most prolific of all domesticated animals, and this is another argument in their favoi Nor does its value cease with its life ; there is scarcely a portion of the pig that is not available for some useful purpose. The flesh takes the salt more kindly than that of any other animal, and, whether dried as bacon, or salted down as pickled pork, forms an excellent and nutritious food, exceedingly valuable for all kinds of stores. The fat, or lard is useful for numerous purposes — the house- wife, the apothecary, and t!ie perfumer in particular, know how to value it ; the head, the feet, and great part of the intestines, all are esteemed as delicacies. Brawn, that far-famed domestic prepara- tion — which is evidently no recently invented dish, for at the mar- riage of Henry IV., in 1403, and of Henry V. in 1419, we find, among other records quoted by Strutt, that brawn and a kind of hashed pork formed the staple dishes — is made from the hog. The bristles, too, are another important item in the matters furnished by swine; they are used by brushmakers, and are necessary to the shoemaker, and some idea may be formed of the extent to which they form an article of use and of commerce, when we state that in the year 1828 alone, 1,748,921 lbs. of hog's bristles were imported into England, from Russia and Prussia. As these are only taken from the top of the hog's back, each hog cannot be supposed to have supplied more than 7680, which, reckoning each bristle to weigh two grains, will be one pound. Thus, in Russia and Prussia in 1728, 1,748,921 hogs were killed to supply the consumption of bristles in England. The skin is formed into pocket-books, employed in the manufacture of saddles, and of various other things, and even the ears are eaten in pies. It has been too much the custom to regard the hog as a stupid, brutal, rapacious, and filthy animal, grovelling and disgusting in all his habits; intractable and obstinate in temper. But may not much of these evil qualities be attributable to the life he leads'? In a na- tive state swine seem by no means destitute of natural affections ; they are gregarious, assemble together in defence of each other, herd together for warmth, and appear to have feelings in common ; no mother is more tender of her voungr than the sow, or more resolute in their defence. Besides, neglected as this animal has ever been by authors, there are not wanting records of many anecdotes illus- trative of their sagacity, tractability, and susceptibility of affection. How often among the peasantry, where the hog is, in a manner of speaking, one of the family, may this animal be seen following his n.i ister from place to place, and grunting his recognition of his pro- t ;tors. The well-aith3nticated account of the ^ow trained bv Toomer, a A SPORTING PIG. 35 g;amelveepor to Sir Henry Mildinay, testifies to the teachability of these animals ; and therefore, as it is our intention to defend them from many of the aspersions cast upon them, we will quote it. " Toomer actually broke a black sow to find game, and to back and stand. Slut was bred in, and was of that sort which maintain themselves in the New Forest without regular feeding, except when they have young, and then but for a few weeks, and was given, when about three months old, to be a breeding sow, by Mr. Thomas to Mr. Richai-d Tooner, both at that time keepers of the forest. From having no young she was not fed or taken much notice of, and, until about "eighteen months old, was seldom observed near the lodge, but chanced to be seen one day when Mr. Edward Toomei was there. The brothers were concerned together in breaking pointers and setters, some of their own breeding, and others sent to be broke by different gentlemen ; of the latter, although they would stand and back, many were so indifterent that they would neither hunt, nor express any satisfaction when birds were killed and put before them. The slackness of these dogs first suggested the idea that, by the same method, any other animal might be made to stand, and do as well as any of those huntless and inactive pointers. At this instant the sow passed by, and was remarked as being very handsome. R. Toomer threw her a piece or two of oatmeal roll, for which she appeared grateful, and approached very near ; from that time they were determined to make a sporting pig of her. The first step was to give her a name, and that of Slut (given in conse- quence of soiling herself in a bog) she acknowledged in the. course of the day, and never afterwards forgot. Within a fortnight she would find and point partridges or rabbits, and her training was much forwarded by the abundance of both which were near the lodge ; she daily improved, and in a few weeks would retrieve birds that had run as well as the best pointer, nay, her nose was superior to the best pointer they ever possessed, and no two men in England had better. She hunted principally on the moors and heaths. Slut has stood partridges, black-game, pheasants, snipes, and rabbits, in the same day, but was never known to point a hare. She was sel- dom taken by choice more than a mile or two from the lodge, but has frequently joined them when out with their pointers, ar.d con- tinued with them several hours. She has sometimes stood a jack- snipe when all the pointers had passed by it: she would back the dogs when they pointed, but the dogs refused to back her until spoke to, their dogs being all trained to make a general halt when the 111 word was given, whether any dog pointed or not, so that she has been fi-equently standing in the midst of a field of pointers. In consequence of the dogs not liking to hunt when she was with them, (for they dropped their sterns and showed symptoms of jealousy,^ she did not very often accompany them, except for the novelty, o/ 36 THE nvOQ. when she accidentally joined them in the forest. Her pace wa; mostly a trot, was seldom known to gallop, except when called to go out shooting; she would then come home off the forest at full stretch, for she was never shut up but to prevent her being out of the sound of the call or whistle when a party of gentlemen had ap- pointed to see her out the next day, and which call she obeyed as regularly as a dog, and was as much elevated as a dog upon being shown the gun. She always expressed great pleasure when game, either dead or alive, was placed before her. She has frequently stood a single partridge at forty yards' distance, her nose in an exact line, and would continue in that position until the game moved : if it took wing, she would come up to the place, and put her nose down two or three times; but if a bird ran off, she would get up and go to the place, and draw slowly after it, and when the bird stopped she would stand it as before. The two Mr. Toomers lived about seven miles apart, at Rhinefield and Broomey lodges; Slut has many times gone by herself from one lodge to the other, as if to coui't the beinor taken out shootiuij. She was about five years old when her master died, and, at the auction of his pointers, &;c., was bought in at ten guineas. Sir Henry Mildmay having expressed a wish to have her, she was sent to Dogmersfield Park, where she remained some years. She was last in the possession of Colonel Sykes, and was then ten years old, and had become fat and slothful, but could point game as well as ever. She was not often used, ex- cepting to show her to strangers, as the pointers refused to act when out with her. When killed she weighed 700 lbs. Her death-war- rant v/as signed in consequence of her having been accused of being instrumental to the disappearance of sundry missing lambs. (Daniel's Rural Sports.) Colonel Thornton also had a sow which was regularly taught to hunt, quarter the ground, and back the other pointers. Some thirty years since, it was mentioned in the public papers, that a gentleman had trained swine to run in his carriage, and drove four-in-hand through London with these curious steeds. And not long since the market-place of St. Albans was completely crowded, in consequence of an eccentric old farmer, who resided a few miles off, having entered it in a small chaise-cart drawn by four hogs at a brisk trot, which pace they kept up a few times round the area of the market-place. They were then driven to the wool-pack yard, and after being unharnessed were regaled with a trough of beana and wash. A gentleman present offered 50/. for the whole concern as it stood, but his offer was indignantly declined. In about two hours the ani mals were reharnessed, and the old farmer drove off with his ex traordinary team He stated that he had b(ien six months in trala ing them. TRACTABILITY OF SWINE. 37 Nor are these cases without parallel, for Montfaiicon informs us that Heiiogabalus, the Roman emperor, trained boars, stags, and asses to run in his chariot ; and Pennant states that in Minorca, and that part of Murray which lies between the Spey and Elgir, swine have been converted into beasts of draught, and that it is by no means unusual to see a cow, a sow, and tW(> young horses yoked together in a plough, and that the sow is the best drawei of the four In Minorca, the ass and hog may be regularly seen working together in turning up land. Henderson gives another, and a very simple account, illustrative of the tractability of swine : — "About twenty -five years ago my father farmed very extensively in various parts of the kingdom, and upon one of his farms in Redkirk, in the parish of Gretna Green, Dumfriesshire, kept at times upward of one hundred swine. It so happened that the keeper of that flock was either taken unwell or abruptly left his service one harvest, when every creature able to work was employed in reaping. A brother and I, being the only idleis about the premises, the above flock was given in charge to us for a few days, until the pro- per keeper was found ; we were then reluctantly obliged to march off with our 'hirsel ' early every morning to a clover-field about a mile distant, with our dinners, books, and great-coats, &c., packed upon our backs : we, however, soon began to think it was a great hard- ship for us to be groaning imder our loads while so many stout, able ponies were trotting along before us at their ease, and immediately set about training one of them to relieve us of our burdens, which we accomplished in a few days by occasionally scratching the animal and feeding it with bread, &c., out of our hands. It became at last so docile as to stand every morning until it received the burden girted upon it, and then marched on in the rear, which place it was trained to keep, as we had more than once lost om* dinners when it was allowed to join the herd ; and in the same matuier we soon trained two or three more into carrying the baggage in turns, Having been so successful in this training exploit, we then thought it would be turning our punishment into pleasure if we could train each of us one to ride : this was no sooner thought of than com- menced, and although we received many a tumble, yet we soon ac- complished our design, and succeeded in breaking in each two or three chai'gers. At length our system became so complete, that we not only rode to and from the field, but whenever any of the herd, were likely to stray, or go into some adjoining field of corn, &;c,, each alternately racmnted his charger, and went oft' at full gallop to turn back and punish the transgressors. " Such as w'ere trained, seldom or never went astray, being always about hand, and in readiness to be mounted ; in short, such days as my father was from home, i^. was not unusual for a group of servants 38 TnE HOG, to receive aiiuiseitient from my brother and I running set matches with our steeds, which were determined in the usual manner, with whip and spur ; and in this latter management there was no such thing as bolting or tum})ling going on, which occurred frequently dnrint out in the sitting-room. Nothing daunted by the splendor of its new abode, the pig ran up and down, snorting and snuf^ng at every chair and table in the room, overturning with his snout my aunt's footstool, and trying his teeth on her new straw work-basket. After the pig had been duly admired and commented on, Annette was desired to install it in its own domicile ; but this was more easily said than done ; for being, I suppose, pleased with his new quarters, Toby — for so we named him — ran hither and thither, now scudding behind a chair or table, now whisking under the sofa; at length Annette succeeded in dragging him from liis hidir.g-place while he roared out 'Murder!' as plain as a pig could speak. Annette was very fond of dumb creatures, as she called them ; the pig became her «arling, and for want of a companion o/ CLEANLINESS AND SENSITIVENESS OF KOGS. 41 her own ?pecies, Toby became her constant associate; and fmding his visits to the kitchen were winked at, he made use of the privi- lege, and would bask himself at full length before the fire. lie even ventured occasionally to follow her into the front lobby ; and if, as sometimes was the case, she put him into the yard, he would kick up such a row at the kitchen door to be let in, thumping on it vith his snout, that she was fain to admit him to his old quarteis. oby was of a very social disposition, and so fond of Annette, and so grateful for her kindness, that he would follow her about everywhere ; indeed to ray great surprise, one day I found him standing sentry over her while she was putting down the stair carpet, and he seemed to be watching her proceedings with a very sagacious air. In process of time there came another proof that the course of true love never did run smooth. Annette fell into bad health, and returned to her home ; the damsel who replaced her, had no taste for the society of pigs; so she thumped Toby away from the kitchen door, and many were the blows he got from her broom, or whatever missile first came to hand. Toby was soon exiled to his sty, much against his inclina tion, for he evidently would have preferred bivouacking in the back premises. We seldom passed to the garden without throwing him some comfort in the shape of a few cabbage-leaves, a handful of acorns, or a bunch of turnip-tops. It was truly amusing to see Tol)y make his bed. As the straw which was furnished for it was rather long and coarse, Toby used to take it bunch by bunch in his teeth, and run into a corner, breaking it into small pieces; and having accomplished this feat, he proceeded to arrange his couch in the most methodical manner. One day, Betty having omJtted to give him his dinner, Toby in a great passion, jumped out of his sty. and came running to the kitchen door to see what was the reason of his being so shamefully neglected, and loud and long were hi? remonstrances on the subject. Finding it difficult to get the pool animal properly attended to, he was transferred to a neighbor ; and we never gave him a successor, as we scarcely expected to find in another of his species that gratitude for kindness and affection for his friends, which shone so conspicuous in the character of poor It may appear absurd to c.aim cleanliness as a swinish virtue ; but in point of actual fact the pig is a much more cleanly animal than most of his calumniators give him credit for being. He is fond of a good cleanly bed ; and often, when this is not provided for him, it is curious to see the degree of sagacity with which he will forage for himself. "A hog is the cleanliest of all creatures, and will never dung or stale in his sty if he can get forth," says a quaint old writer of the sixteenth century, and we are very much of his opinion. But it is so much the habit to believe that this animal may be kept in any state of filth and reglect, that ''pig" and "pig-sty" are terms 42 THE HOG. usually regarded a? synonymous with, all that is dirty and dis» gusting. Tlis rolling in the mud is alleged against him as a proof of his filthy habits ; if so, the same accusation applies to the elephant, the rhinoceros, and other of the Pachyderinata. May this not rather bo for the purpose of cooling themselves and keeping off flies, as we admit it to be in the case of the animals above mentioned ? Savages cover themselves with grease in hot climates in order to protect .leir skins; may not instinct teach animals to roll themselves in mud for a similar purpose 1 Pigs are exceedingly fond of comfort and warmth, and will nestle together in order to obtain the latter, and often struggle vehemently to secure the warmest berth. They are eminently sensitive of approaching changes in the weather, and may often be observed suddenly to leave the places in which they had Ijeen quietly feeding, and run off to their styes at full speed, making loud outcries. Wh m storms are overhanging, they collect straw in their mouths, and run about as if inviting their companions to do the same; and if there is a shed or shelter near at hand, may be seen to carry and deposit it there, as if for the pur- pose of preparing a bed. Hence has arisen the common Wiltshire saying, "Pigs see the wind." Virgil, in enumerating the signs of settled fine weather, notices this peculiarity in swine : — '' Nor sows uncloan are rahidfiil to provide Their nestling beds of mouth collected straw !" Foster says — " When hogs shake the stalks of corn, and thereby spoil them, it indicates rain ; and when they run squeaking about and throw up their heads with a peculiar jerk, windy weather is about to commence." Darwin observes — " It is a sure sign of a cold wind \vhen pigs collect straw in their mouths, and run about crying loudly. They would carry it to their beds for warmth, and by their calls invite their companions to do the same, and add to the warmth by nume rous bedfellows." In their domesticated state, swine certainly are very greedy animals; eating is the business of their lives ; nor do they appear FC very delicate as to the kind or quality of the food which is set before them. Although naturally herbiverous animals, they have been known to devour carrion with all the voracity of beasts of prey, to eat and mangle infants, and even govgQ their appetites with their own young. Low, howevei, says — "Instances have occurred in which a sow has been known to devour her young ; but rarely, if ever, does this nappen in a state of nature. It is not unreasonable to believe that when an act so revolting does occur, it arises nore from the pain INTRACTABILITY OF HOGS. 45 and irritation produced by the state of confinement, and often filth, hi which she is kept, and the disturbances to which she is subjected, than from any actual ferocity : for it is well known that a sow is always unusually irritable at this period, snapping at all animals that approach her. If she is gently treated, properly supplied with sustenance, and sequestered from all annoyance, there is little danger of this ever happening." Roots and fruits are the natural food of the hog, in a wild as well as in a domesticated state ; and it is evident that, however omnivorous this animal may occasionally appear, its palate is by no means insensible to the difference of eatables, for whenever it finds variety it will be found to select the best with as much cleverness as other quadrupeds. " In the peach-tree orchards of North Amei-ica," says Pennant, "where hogs have plenty of delicious food, they have been observed to neglect the fruit that has lain a few hours upon the ground, ajid patiently wait for a considerable time for a fresh windfall." According to Linnseus, the hog is more nice in the selection of his vegetable diet than any of our other domesticated herbivorous animals. This great naturalist states that — The Cow eats 276 plants and rejects 218 '• Goat " 449 " 126 " Sheep " 387 " 141 " Horse ** 262 " 212 but that the Hog only "72 " 171 They are gifted with an exquisite sense of smell as well as touch, residing in the snout, and this enables them to discover roots, acorns, earth-nuts, or other delicacies suitable to their palates, which may be buried in the ground. In some parts of Italy swine are employed in hunting for truffles, that grow some inches below the surface of the soil, and form those pickles and sauces so highly esteemed by epicures. A pig is driven into a field, and there suffered to pursue his own course. Wherever he stops and begins to root with his nose, truffles will invariably be found. I'he last charge which we shall endeavor to refute is that of in- tractability. All the offences which swine commit are attributed to an innately bad disposition ; whereas they too often arise solely from bad management or total neglect. Would horses or cattle be- have one iota better, were they treated as pigs too often are ? They are legitimate objects for the sport of idle boys, hunted with dogs, pelted with stones, often neglected and obliged to find a meal for themselves, or wander about halfstarved. Can we wonder that, under such circumstances, they should be wild, unmanageable brutes ? Look at the. swine in a well-regulated farm-yard — they are as peace- ii THE HOG. able, and as little disposed to wander or trespass, as any of the other animals that it contains. Here, as in many other things, man is but too vri'lling to attribute the faults, which are essentially of his own causing, to any other than their true source. Martin says : — It has been usual to condemn the domestic hog, in no very measured terms, as a filthy, stupid brute, at once glutton- ous, obstinate, and destitute of intelligence. Against this sweeping censure we beg to enter our protest. With regard to the filthines3 of the hog in a state of confinement, every thing will depend on the trouble taken by its keeper. He may allow the sty or the yard to be covered v;ith filth of every description, as disgraceful to himself as it is injurious to the animals. In this case the hog is the sufferer, for naturally it delights in clean straw, luxuriating in it with evident pleasure, its twinkling little eyes and low grunt expressing its feel- ings of contentment. In fact, the hog, so far from being the filthi- est, is one of the cleanliest of our domestic quadrupeds, and is un- willing to soil the straw bed of his domicile if any thing like liberty be allowed him. It may be here said, is not the hog fond of wal- lowing in the mire ? Undoubtedly it is; and so are all the genuine packydermata^ as the elephant, the rhinoceros, and the tapir. The skin of these animals, thick as it may be, is nevertheless sensitive, and a covering of mud is doubtless intended as a protection to the skin in the heat of summer, (the time in which the hog chiefly de- lights to wallow.) both against the scorching rays of the sun and the attacks of myriads of puny but intolerable winged persecutors. No animal delights more to have its hide rubbed and scratched than the hog — a circumstance which every one practically conversant with pigs must have, very frequently noticed. With respect to the gluttony of the pig, we acknowledge him to be •' a huge feeder ;" but so is the horse or the ox, and indeed every animal that has to support a bulky carcass ; and not only so, but become fat upon vegetable aliment. To a certain extent, indeed, the hog is omnivorous, and may be reared on the refuse of the butchers' slaughter-houses ; but such food is not wholesome, nor is it natural; for though this animal be omnivorous, it is not essentially carnivo- rous. Vegetable ju'oductions, as roots and grain, beech-mast, and acorns, constitute the staple of its natural diet; hence, the refuse of the dairy farm is more congenial to the health of the anin:;al, to say nothing of the quality of its flesh. All animals eat with a keen relish — the hog amongst the rest ; besides, his appetite is pampered, the object being to make him fat: and certainly a well-fed, plump hog is a more comely-looking beast than the gaunt, lean, flat-sided animals so generally seen in France and Gerniany. However, if the charge of gluttony be proved against the pig fattening in his sty, it may be equally proved against the ox fattenmg in his stall. Whet old, or when oppressed by fat, the hog, 't must be confessed, is slug SAGACITY OF HOGS. 45 ^ish and indolent; when young, however, it is lively and energetic, and disposed to indulge in sportive gambols, which, for any thing we can see, are quite as amusing as those of lambs. Many extraordinary examples of the docility and intelligence oi the too much despised hog are on record. Be it remembered, that it belongs to that group of which the sagacious elephant forms a portion — not that we assert the intellectual equality of the two ani- mals ; still, we believe that the hog may be trained to various modes of labor, with far less trouble than is generally supposed. It is not, however, needed for any such purposes ; consequently, except in a few isolated instances, its education is utterly neglected ; all it has to do is to eat and sleep, and become fat — its utility to man com- mencing at its death, by the knife of the butcher. Yet, even under the disadvantages in which the pig is placed — debarred its liberty, prevented from exercising its natural instincts, and undisciplined in the slijrhtest deo-ree — it manifests both discernment and attachment ; it recognizes the voice, and even the footsteps of its feeder, and is evidently pleased with his notice. Instances of the attachment of pigs to particular persons, and even to other animals, are on record. It is not often, however, that porcine familiarity is encouraged. Set- ting all prejudice aside, it must be confessed that the animal would be more likely to prove troublesome and annoying, than agreeable or welcome. We have, however, heard of persons who have petted pigs, and know many who would abhor to partake of the flesh of one reared upon their own premises — a circumstance not to be won- dered at, when we consider that, while alive, the animal not only knew them, but greeted their approach, and displayed unmistak- able signs of attachment. The senses of smell, taste, and hearing, are possessed by the hog in great perfection. It is a common saying that pigs can smell the coming storm ; certain it is that they are very sensitive of approach- ing changes of weather. They become agitated, hurry under shel- ter, and during the continuance of the storm utter screams, run about with straw in their mouths, or carry it to their sty as if to add to their comfort and defence. This peculiarity has been noticed in ancient times, as well as in the present. Dr. Darwin, in his Zoono- mia^ says, " It is a sure sign of a cold wind when pigs collect straw in their mouths, and run about crying loudly. They would carry it to their beds for warmth, and by their calls invite their companions to do the same, and add to the warmth by numerous bedfellows." At all times pigs are fond of huddling together under the straw, but especially in chilly or windy weather, from which the young in par- ticular appear to suffer much. From this cause, litters of pigs far rowed during a severe winter are often greatly thinned, and the sui vivors thrive with difficulty. 46 THE HOG. CHAPTER IV The Wild Boar—Description of him—Charactpristics— the Femile and her \ nun"-_HuTitino- tl,. Wild Boar— Horner's description of a Boar-hunt— Roman festivals ami Ra^mrs-llie Wil(i Boar in England and fecotland-in France— in Germany-Mode of huntimfthe hoar in Ger many— Wild Boar park ot the Emperor of Austria— Pres-nt wild breed in Gcrmanv— in Hun,i;ary-in the Styrian Alps-in Russia and Sweden~In the East-Habits of ihe Wi-d Hog in ladia-Wdd Hog hunting mIndia-The wild l,reed in America-FeartuI conflict with a wild herd in Columbia— The Wild Boar the parent stock of all domesticated br^ed«- Reseniblances between— Alterations produced by domestication— Resun.piion ol old habits"'or again becoamig free from control of man. The wild boar {sus scmfa ; var. aper) is generally admitted to be the parent of the stock from which all our domesticated breeds and varieties have sprung. This animal is generally of a dusky brown or iron-gray color, inclining to black, and diversified with black spots or streaks. The body is covered with coarse hairs, intermixed THE WILD BOAR. with a do^vny wool ; these hairs become bristles as they approach the neck and shoulders, and are here so long as to form a species of mane, which the animal erects when irritated. The head is short, the forehead broad and flat, the ears short, rounded at the tips and inclined towards the neck, the jaw armed with sharp crooked tuski CHARACTERISTICS OF THE WILD BOAR. i7 which curve slightly upwards, and are capable of inflicting fearful wounds, the eye full, neck thick and muscular, the shoulders high, the loins broad, the tail stitf, and finished off with a tuft of bristles at the tip. the haunch well turned, and the legs strong. A full-grown Avild boar in India averages from thirty to forty inches in height at the shoulder. The African wild boar is about twenty-eight or thirty niches high. The wild boar is a very active and powerful animal, and becomes jBercer as he grows older. When he exists in a state of nature, he will usually be found in nioist, shady, and well-wooded situations, not far remote from streams or water. In India, they are found in the thick jungles, in plantations of sugar-canes, rice, or rhur, or in the thick patches of high, long grass.* In England, France, Germany, Italy, and Spain, their resorts have been in the woods and forests. This animal is naturally herbivorous, and appears to feed by choice upon plants, fruits, and roots. He will, however, eat the worms and larvae which he finds in the ground, also snakes and other such reptiles, and the eggs of birds ; and Buff(jn states that wild boars have been seen to devour the flesh of dead horses, while other authors accuse them of devouring hares, leverets, par- tridges, and indeed all kinds of small gamxC, and feeding greedily upon carrion ; but this has also been asserted to be only the case when they are pressed by hunger. They seldom quit their coverts during the day, but prowl about in search of food during twilight and the night. Their acute sense of smell enables them to detect the presence of roots or fruits deeply imbedded in the soil, and they often do considerable mischief by ploughing up the ground in i^eareh of them, particularly as they do not, like the common hog, root up a little spot here and there, but plough long continuous furrows. The wild boar, properly so called, is neither a solitary nor a gre- garious animal. For the first two or three years the whole herd * The wild hog delights in cultivated situations, but will not remain where water is not at hand in which he can quench his thirst and wallow at his ease. nor will he resort a second season to a spot that does not afford ample cover, either of heavy grass or underwood jungle, within a certain distance of him, to fly to in case of molestation, and especially to serve as a retreat during the hot reason, as otherwise he would find no shelter. The sugar-cane is his gre^at de- light, both as affording his favorite food and yielding a highly impervious, ?nd unfrequented situation. In these the hogs, and the breeding sows especially, commit great devastation, for the latter not only devour but cut the canes for a litter, and to thro«^ up a species of hut. which they do with much art, leaving a small entrance which they can stop up at pleasure. Sows never quit their young pigs without com.pletely shutting them up. This is, however, only re- quisite for a few days, after which, the little ones may be seen following their mother at a good round pico, though evidently not more than a week or ten days old. — Williamson's Orun'al Field Sports. 43 THE HOG. follows the sow, ami all unite in defence against any enemies, calling iipon each other with loud cries in case of emergency, and forming in reguhir line of battle, the weakest occupying the rear. But when arrived at maturity, the animals wander alone, as if in perfect con- sciousness of their strength, and appear as if they neither sought nor avoided any living creature. They are said to live about thirty years ; as they grow old the hair beconies gray, and the tusks begin to show syinptoms of decay. Old boars are rarely found associ- ating with a herd, but seem to keep apart from the rest, and from each other. The female produces but one litter in the year, and her litters are much smaller in number than those of the domestic pig ; she carries her young sixteen or twenty weeks, and generally is f)nly seen with the male during the rutting season. She suckles her young for several months, and continues to protect them for some time after wards ; if attacked then, she will defend herself and them with exceeding courage and fierceness. Many sows will often be found herding together, each followed by her litter of young ones, and in such parties they are exceedingly formidable to man and beast. Neither they nor the boar, however, appear to want to attack any thing, but only when roused by aggression, or disturbed in their retreat, do they turn upon their enemies and manifest their mighty strength with which nature has endowed them, otherwise they pur- sue their way in a kind of solitary savage majesty. Occasionally when two males encounter each other, a fierce and furious battle will ensue, especially if this happens during the rutting season, when their passions are inflamed. When attacked by dogs, the wild boar at first sullenly retreats, turning upon them from time to time, and menacing them with his tusks ; biit gradually his ire rises, and at length he stands at bay, fights furiously for his life, and tears and rends his persecutors. He has even been observed to single out the most tormenting of them, and rush savagely upon him. Hunting the wild boar has been a flivorite sport, in almost all the countries in which this animal was foimd, from the earliest ages. In all the ancient Grecian and Roman classical writers, some allusions to this animal will be found. Homer, whose vivid portraitures of the actions and habits of princes and v/arriors nearly thirty years ago, arc known to almost every scholar, again and again refers to this savage denizen of the forests, nor can we deny ourselves the pleasure o^' extracting the following graphic lines ; — " Soon as the morn, new rollM in purple light, Pierc'd with her golden shafts the rear of night, Ulysses, and his brave maternal race The young Antolici, assay the chase; I'arnassus, thick perph^x'd with horrid shades, With deep-mouthed bounds the hunter troop invades; A WILD BOAR HUNT, FROM HOMER. 49 »Vhat time the sun from ocean's peaceful stream Darts o'er the lawn his horizontal beam. The pack impatient snuff the tainted gale ; The thorny wilds the woodmen fierce assail ; And foremost of the Train, his cornel spear Ulysses wav'd to rouse the savage war ; Deep in the rough recesses of the wood, A lofty copse, the growth of ages stood ; Nor winter's boreal blast, nor thund'rous show'r, Nor solar ray could pierce the shady bower, AVith wither'd foliage strew'd, a heavy store! The warm pavilion of a dreadful boar. Rous'd by the hounds' and hunters' mingling cries,—— The savage from his leafy shelter flies, AVith fiery glare his sanguine eye-bails shine And bristles high impale his horrid chine. Young Ithacus advanced, defies the foe, Poising his lifted lance in act to throw : The savage renders vain the wound decreed, And springs impetuous with oi»ponent speed ! His tusks oblique he aim'd, the knee to gore ; Aslope they glanced, the sinewy fibres tore, And bar'd the bone : Ulysses undisniay'd, Soon with redoubled force the wound repaid 5 To the right shoulder-joint the spear applied, His further flank with streaming purple dyed ; Oa earth he rush'd with agonizing pain. With joy, and vast surprise, the applauding train Viewed tiis enormous back extended on the plain." The wild boar formed part of the sports, pageants, and wild-beast shows and fif^hts of the Romans. On the return of Se^e^us from Arabia and Egypt, in the tenth year of his reign, sixty wild boars fought each other ; and in the year that Gordian the First was fedile, he entertained the people of Rome, at his own exper.se, once a month ; and " on the sixth month there were two hundred stags, thirty wild horses, one hundred wild sheep, twenty elks, one hmidred Cyprian bulls, three hundred red Barbary ostriches, thirty wild cisses, and one hundred and fifty wild boars," given out to be hunted, and became the property of whosoever was fortunate enough to catch them. During the middle ages, hunting the wild boar formed one of the chief amusements of the nobility, in most European countries. The dogs provided for this sport were of the slow, heavy kind, anciently known by the name of the "' boarhound." None but the largest and oldest boars were hunted, and these afforded a very exciting and often dangerous sport, lasting for many hours ; for when first the animal was "rearfe^," he contented himself with slowly going away, just keeping ahead of his pursuers, and apparently caring but little for them, and pausing every half mile to rest himself, and give battle to his assailants, who are, however, too wary to advance upon him until he becomes tired ; then he takes his final stand, and dogs and 3 50 THE HOG. hunters close around him, and a mortal combat ensues, in which the beast eventually falls a victim. In treatises on venery and hunting, the technical term fur the boar in the first year is "a pig of the sounder ;" in the second, "a hog;" in the third, '• a hog steer;" and in the fourth, "a boar." Many of the forests in our own country were infested by wild boars. The Anglo-Saxons seem, from the rude frescoes and prints which are handed down to us, to have hunted this animal on foot with no other weapon but the boar-spear, and attended by powerful dogs ; and apparently with such success, that at the Nor- man conquest William the First thought it necessary to make some strict laws for the preservation of this beast of the chase. The period for hunting the wild boar among the Anglo-Saxons was in September. Howel Dha, the celebrated Welsh lawgiver, gave per- mission to his chief huntsman to chase the boar from the middle of November until the end* of J3ecember. These animals continued to linger in the forests of England and Scotland fur several centuries after the Norman conquest, and many tracts of land have derived their name from this occurrence, while instances of valor in their destruction are recorded in the heraldic devices of many a noble family. Fitzstephen, a writer of the twelfth century, informs us that wild boars, stags, fallow-deer, and bulls, abounded in the vast forests which existed on the northern side of London in the time of Henry II. The learned Whittaker informs us that this animal roved at liberty over the woods of the parish of Manchester for many centuries after the Romans departed from that station, and hence the name .of Barlow (ioar- ground) came to be assigned to a district in the south-western portion. In Cum- berland, the appellation " Wild Boar's Fell," still points out the haunts of this animal. The forests of Bernwood in Buckingham- shire, of Stainmore in Westmoreland, and those extensive woody districts which once existed in Hertfordshire and over the Chiltern Hills, were formerly peopled with wild boars, wolves, stags, and wild bulls. Many ancient Scottish writers, too, speak of the exist- ence of this animal in the woods of Caledonia. In the county of Fife there exists a tract of country formerly called Muckross (which In the Celtic signifies Boar's Promontory); it is said to have been famous as the haunt of wild boars. One part of it was called the Boar Hills, which name has since been corrupted into Byro Hills. It lies in the vicinity of St. Andrew's, and in the cathedral church of that city two enormous boar's tusks were formerly to be seen chained to the high altar, in commemoration of an immense brute slain by the inhabitants after it had long ravaged the surrounding country. The precise period at which the -yild boar became exterminated in England and Scotland cannot be correctly ascertained. Master John THE BOAR S HEAD OF THE MIDDLE AGES. 5] C-iilTord and William Tvvety, who lived in the reign of Edward 11., composed a book on the craft of hunting, part in verse and part in prose, and among the beasts mentioned in those hunted we fnid — '• To venery I cast me fyrsfc to go : Of wbicbe foure beast? there be ; that is to say, The hare, the herte, the ivulfhe ihe wild boor also." In the time of Charles I. they had evidently been long extinct, for he endeavored to reintroduce them, and was at considerable ex- ])cnse in order to procure a wild boar and his mate from Germany. These are said to have been turned into the New F<)rest, where thev propagated greatly. The breed commonly called " forest pigs," have many of the characteristics of the wild boar. 'i'hroiio;*hout the whole of England, the boar's head was formerly a standard Christmas dish, served with many ceremonies, and usher- ed in by an ancient chorus chanted by all present, the words of which are preserved in " Ritson's Ancient Song : — " The bore's heed in hand bring I, With ' garlands'' gay and rosemary, I pray you all synge merily, Qui estis in couvivio. The bore's heed, I understande, Is the " chefe" servyce in the lande Loke where ever it be founde, Servile cum cantico. Be gladde, lordes, bothe more and lasse, For this hath ordeyned our stevvarde, To chere you all this Christmasse, The bore's heed with mustarde.' Queen Margaret, wife of James IV. of Scotland, " at the first course of her wedding dinner," was served with a " wyld bore's head gylt within a fayr platter." King Henry II. himself bore this ancient dish into the hall, attend- ed with trumpeters and great ceremony, when his son was crowned. The boar's head is to the present day placed upon the table of the Queen's College, Oxford, on Christmas day, but now it is neatly carved in wood instead of being the actual head of the animal. This ceremony is said to have originated in a tabender belonging to that college having slain a wild boar on Christmas-day, which had long infested the neighborhood of Oxford. The abbot of St. Gei-main, in Yorkshire, was bound to send yearly a present of a boar's head to the hangman, which a monk was obliged to carry on his own. This rent was paid yearly, at the feast of St. Vincent, the patron of the Benedictines, and on that day the execu*:ioner took preced-^ncy '1 the procession of monks. 52 ' THE HOG. France, too, formerly had its trackless forests, thro gli which the grisly boar roved in savage grandeur — its boar hunts — its legends of sanguinary combats with these monsters. The " wild boar of Ardennes" has been the theme of many a lay and romance. But civilizafion, the increase of population, and the progress of agricul- ture, have here, too, been at work. Still, however, in the large tracts of forest land which yet exist and supply the towns with fuel, boars ;*re still occasionally to be met with, although they cannol be re- garded as so wild or ferocious as the ancient breed. At Chantilly, "v* ithin forty miles of Paris, the late Prince of Conde, who died in 1830, kept a pack of hounds expressly for the purpose of hunting the boar ; and some English gentlemen who visited the hmiting palace in the summer of 1830, were informed by the huntsman that a few days previously he had seen no less than fourteen wild hogs at one time. But the good old "wild boar hunt," as once existed, with all its perils and excitements, is now extinct in France as well as in Germany. Where any traces of it remain, they resolve them- selves into a battue of a most harmless description, which takes place in the parks of the princes or nobles. The drivers beat up the woods, the wild s^wine run until they come in contact with a fence stretched across the park for the purpose, and about the centre of which, at an opening in the wood, a sort of stage is raised, on which the sportsmen stand and fire at the swine as they run past. Germany being a country boasting forests of immense extent, was once the most celebrated of all nations for its wild boars and boar-hunts ; and in many parts wild hogs are still abundant, and various methods are adopted to destroy them, as well for amuse- ment as to turn their carcasses to account, which furnish those finely- flavored hams called Westphalian. The most simple and effectual way is to find out the haunts of the boar, and place a matchlock on rests, well charged, and concealed by brambles near it. A rope is attached to the trigger, and carried below the rests to the trunk of a tree at some little distance, so as to intersect the anijiial's path to the forest. Over this the hog inevitably stumbles, and thus discharges the piece, and receives the ball in the neck or shoulder. The ordinary method of shooting the hog in Germany is as fol- lows : — The huntsman, or ja(/er, goes out with an ugly but useful animal, not unlike a shepherd's dog, but smaller, which is in German lan- guage called " a sow-finder." The business of this creature is to seek the hog, and so well trained is he that no other animal will turn him from that particular scent. On meeting with the object of his search he gives tongue incessantly, and with active but cautious irri- tation pursues the boar till he is at bay ; then, by continual teasing, he manages to turn him sideways to his master, the shoulder afford- WILD BOARS IX GERMANY. 53 ing tlie Lest aim for readily disabling him. In this situation the sa- jyacioiis dog contrives to keep him until his master fires; then if the wounded boar makes off, the boar-hound (a species of blood-hound j is let loose, who pursues him for miles, giving tongue, nor will he leave him even if other boars come in the way. At the wild boar park of the Emperor of Austria, which is at Iliittelsdorf, near Vienna, Mr. Howitt states that he saw "numbers of swine of all ages and sizes, from the grisly old boar to the sow and her troop of suckling young ones. Here some grim old fellow as black as jet, or of a sun-burnt and savage gray, lay basking in the deep grass, and at our approach uttered a deep guff, and start- ing up, bolted into the wood. Others were lying their length under the broad trees, others scampering about with cocked tails. The sows and their young seemed most savage and impatient of our presence. Some were tame enough to come at the whistle of the keeper, and scores ran voraciously when he shook one of the wild cornel-trees, which grew plentifully in the forest. This is a tree as large as an apple-tree, bearing, in autumn, fruit of about the size of cherries, and of a coral red color. The swine are very fond of it, and as the trees were shook, and it pattered to the ground, they came running on all sides, and stood in the thickets eager for our departure, when they rushed ravenously forward and devoured it." "After all," he continues, "the wild swine here can present but a faint idea of what they were in their ancient wilds. They are all of the true breed, and cannot for a moment be confounded with the tame variety ; there is the tusked mouth, the thick fore-quarter, the narrow hind-quarter, the mane, the coarse bristles, the speed of gait, indicative of the wild breed, but they appeared tame and pigmy in comparison with the huge savage monsters bred in the obscure recesses of deep forests, and unacquainted with the sight of man. "Hunters tell us that, notwithstanding the orders of Government to exterminate swine in the open forests, on account of the mischief they do to cultivated land, thei'c are numbers in the forests in Han over and Westphalia, huge, gaunt, and ferocious as ever. These will snuff the most distant approach of danger, and with terrific noises rush into the densest woods ; or surrounding a solitary and unarmed individual, especially a woman or a child, will scour round and round them, coming nearer and nearer at every circle, until at last, bursting in upon them, they tear them limb from limb and de- vour them. Tame swine, which are herded in these forests and be- come mixed in breed with the wild, acquire the same blood-thirsty propensities, and will, in their herds, surround and devour persons in a similar manner." The wild breed abound in Upper Austria, on the Styrian Alps, and in many parts of Hungary. In the latter country, a recent author speaking of them, says : " These animals have lost some little 52 ' THE HOG. France, too, formerly had its trackless forests, thro gh which the grisly boar roved in savage grandeur — its boar hunts — its legends of sanguinary combats with these monsters. The " wild boar of Ardennes" has been the theme of many a lay and romance. But civiiizafion, the increase of population, and the progress of agricul- ture, have here, too, been at work. Still, however, in the large tracts of forest land which yet exist and supply the towns with fuel, boars ;ire still occasionally to be met with, although they cannot be re- garded as so wild or ferocious as the ancient breed. At Chantilly, w ithin forty miles of Paris, the late Prince of Conde, who died in 1830, kept a pack of hounds expressly for the purpose of hunting the boar ; and some English gentlemen who visited the hunting palace in the summer of 1830, were informed by the huntsman that a few days previously he had seen no less than fourteen wild hogs at one time. But the good old "wild boar hunt," as once existed, with all its perils and excitements, is now extinct in France as well as in Germany. Where any traces of it remain, they resolve them- selves into a battue of a most harmless description, which takes place in the parks of the princes or nobles. The drivers beat up the woods, the wild s^wine run until they come in contact with a fence stretched across the park for the purpose, and about the centre of which, at an opening in the wood, a sort of stage is raised, on which the sportsmen stand and fire at the swine as they run past. Germany being a country boasting forests of immense extent, was once the most celebrated of all nations for its wild boars and boar-hunts ; and in many parts wild hogs are still abundant, and various methods are adopted to destroy them, as well for amuse- ment as to turn their carcasses to account, which furnish those finely- flavored hams called Westphalian. The most simple and efilectual way is to find out the haunts of the boar, and place a matchlock on rests, well charged, and concealed by brambles near it. A rope is attached to the trigger, and carried bel<:>w the rests to the trunk of a tree at some little distance, so as to intersect the animal's path to the forest. Over this the hog inevitably stumbles, and thus discharges the piece, and receives the ball in the neck or shoulder. The ordinary method of shooting the hog in Germany is as fol- lows : — The huntsman, or jager, goes out with an ugly but useful animal, not unlike a shepherd's dog, but smaller, which is in German lan- guage called " a sow-finder." The business of this creature is to seek the hog, and so well trained is he that no other animal will turn him from that particular scent. On meeting with the object of his search he gives tongue incessantly, and with active but cautious irri- tation pursues the boar till he is at bay ; then, by continual teasing, he manages to turn him sideways to his master, the shoulder afford- WILD BOARS IX GERMANY. 53 ing the best aim for readily disabling him. In this situation the sa- gacious dog contrives to keep hun until his master fires; then if the wounded boar makes off, the hoar-liound (a species of blood-hound j is let loose, who pursues him for miles, giving tongue, nor will he leave him even if other boars come in the way. At the wild boar park of the Emperor of Austria, which is at Hiittelsdorf, near Vienna, Mr. Hovvitt states that he saw " numbers of swine of all ages and sizes, from the grisly old boar to the sow and her troop of suckling young ones. Here some grim old fellow as black as jet, or of a sun-burnt and savage gray, lay basking in the deep grass, and at our approach uttered a deep guff, and start- ing up, bolted into the wood. Others were lying their length under the broad trees, others scampering about with cocked tails. The sows and their young seemed most savage and impatient of our presence. Some were tame enough to come at the whistle of the keeper, and scores ran voraciously when he shook one of the wild cornel-trees, which grew plentifully in the forest. This is a tree as large as an apple-tree, bearing, in autumn, fruit of about the size of cherries, and of a coral red color. The swine are very fond of it, and as the trees were shook, and it pattered to the ground, they came running on all sides, and stood in the thickets eager for our departure, when they rushed ravenously forward and devoured it." "After all," he continues, "the wild swine here can present but a faint idea of what they were in their ancient wilds. They are all of the true breed, and cannot for a moment be confounded with the tame variety ; there is the tusked mouth, the thick fore-quarter, the narrovv^ hind-quarter, the mane, the coarse bristles, the speed of gait, indicative of the wild breed, but they appeared tame and pigmy in comparison with the huge savage monsters bred in the obscure recesses of deep forests, and unacquainted with the sight of man. "Hunters tell us that, notwithstanding the orders of Government to exterminate swine in the open forests, on account of the mischief they do to cultivated land, there are numbers in the forests in Han over and Westphalia, huge, gaunt, and ferocious as ever. These will snufl' the most distant approach of danger, and with terrific noises rush Into the densest woods ; or surrounding a solitary and unarmed individual, especially a woman or a child, will scour round and rovmd them, coming nearer and nearer at every circle, until at last, l)ursting in upon them, they tear them limb from limb and de- vour them. Tame swine, which are herded in these forests and be- come mixed in breed wn'th the wild, acquire the same blood-thirsty propensities, and will, in their herds, surround and devour persons in a similar manner." The wild breed abound in Upper Austria, on the Styrlan Alps, and in many parts of Hungary. In the latter country, a recent author speaking of them, says : " These aninuals have lost some little 56 THE HOG. very common to see a plough at work at the very edge v f the canea where the villagers are beating for hogs; and as the bdlocks em- ployed are extremely skittish and wild, it often happens that they take fright and run off with the plough, which frequently is broken to pieces. The ploughman, alai-med equally with his cattle, also takes to flight, as do ail the peasants who may see the bristling ani- mal ffiilloDins; frona his haunt." Mr. Johnson describes another scene eminently chai-isteristic of the desperate fierceness and strength of the, wild hog. He was one of a party of eight persons, on a sporting excursion near Patna on the banks of the Soane. Keturning one morning from shooting, they met with a very large boar, which they did not fire at or mo- lest, as, although several of the party were fond of hunting, they had no spears with them. The next morning they all sallied forth in search of him, and just as they had arrived at the spot where they had seen him the day before, they discovered him at some dis tance galloping ofl" towards. a grass jungle on the banks of the river They pressed their horses as fast as possible, and were nearly up with him when he disappeared all at once. The horses were then nearly at their full speed, and four of them could not be pulled up in time to prevent their going into a deep branch of the river, the banks of which were at least fourteen or fifteen feet high. Happily, there was no water in, or any thing but fine sand, and no person was hurt. One of the horses, that was ex- ceedingly vicious, got loose, attacked the others, and obliged them and all the rest, to recede. A few days afterwards they went again, early in the morning, in pursuit of the same hog, and found him farther off from the grass jungle, in a rhur-field, from which with much difficulty they drove him into a p*lain, where he stood at bay challenging the whole party, and boldly charging every horse that came within fifty yards of him, grunting loudly as he advanced. " The horse I rode," says Mr Johnston, *' would not go near him, and when I was at considerable distance off, he charged another horse with such ferocity that mine reared and plunged in so violent a manner as to throw me oft'. Two or three others were dismounted at nearly the same time ; and though there were many horses pre- sent that had been long accustomed to the sport, not one of them would stand his charges. He fairly drove the whole party off the field, and gently trotted on to the grass jungle, foaming and grind- ing his tusks." In Morocco the wnld boar is the most common and prolific of all the ferocious animals found there; the sow produces several large litters in the year; and were it uot that the young form the favorite food of the lion, the country wo^ild be overrun ^vith these animals. ALTER ATIOXS PRODUDED BY DOMESTICATION". 57 In the woods of South America there are abundance of \.'ild Bwine, possessing all tiie forocity of the boar. The following fear- ful scene occurred in Columbia. A party of six hunters had gone out on a sporting expedition. They fell in with a herd of swine, upon which four of them, less experienced than the others, immedi- ately fired, and the swine advanced fiercely to attack them. The four young men, intimidated, took to flight without warning their companions, or considering the danger to which they were exposed. They climbed up into some trees, but the other two were quickly surrounded by the swine. They made a long and desperate defence M'ith their lances, but were at length dragged down. One of thera was torn to pieces, and the other dreadfully lacerated, and left for dead by the swine, who now watched the four fugitives in the trees until sunset. Then, probably yielding to the calls of nature, they retired. The surviving hunters then came down and assisted their woimded companion into the canoe, and carried off the remains of the unfortunate man who had fallen in this horrible encounter. (Coch- rane's Columbia^ vol. i.) We have entered thus much at length into the history of the wild boar, because no one can for a moment doubt that it is the parent stock from which the domesticated breeds of swine originally sprung ; the well-known fact that all kinds breed with the boar, is in itself a sufficient testimony ; but to this we can add that the period of ges- tation is the same in the wild and tame sow ; the anatomical structure is identical ; the general form bears the same characters; and the habits, so far as they are not altered by domestication, re- main the same. Where individuals of the pure, wild race, have been caught young and subjected to the same treatment as a domestic pig, their fierce- ness has disappeared, they have become more social and less noctural in their habits, lost their activity, and lived more to eat. In the course of one or two generations even the form undergoes certain modifi- cations ; the body becomes larger and heavier ; the legs shorter and less adapted for exercise; the formidable tusks of the boar, being no longer needed as weapons of defence, disappear ; the shape of the head and neck alters; and in character as well as in form, the ani- mal adapts itself to its position. Nor does it appear that a return to their native wilds restores to them their original appearance ; for, in whatever country pigs have escaped from the control of man, and bred in the woods and wildernesses, there does not appear to be a single instance recorded by any naturalist in ^hich they have re- sumed the habits and form of the wild boar. They become fierce, wild, gaunt, and grisly, and live upon roots and fruits; but they are still merely degenerated swine, and they still associate together in herds, nor " walk the glade in savage solitary grandeur" like tlneir grim ancestors. 58 THE HOG. We shall now proceed to notice some of the accounts given of the swine found in various pai'ts of the world, previous to entering u| on a consideration of the breeds peculiar to our own country. CHAPTER V. Swine in America — In large towns — Original breed — Improved breed — Swine in Canada— In Ohio — In Mexico— Hebrides— In Columbia— In the South Sea Islands — Swine in Asia — in Chi- na and Japan — Ceylon — Hindostan — Turkey and Arabia — Swine in Africa — Guinea — New Holland — Caffraria — Swine in Europe— In Malta — In Italy — In Germany — In Hungary — In Kussia — In Sweden — In France — Swine indigenous to the Channel Islands — In Jersey — In Guernsey — In Sark — In Alderney — The Isle of Man — In the Hebrides — In the Shetland Islea — In the Orkneys. AMERICA. Throughout the whole of this quarter of the globe swine appear to abound. They are not, however, indigenous, but were doubtless originally carried^ thither by the early English settlers, and the breed thus introduced still may be distinguished by the traces they retain of their parent stock ; but France, Spain, and, during the slave-trade, Africa, have also combined to supply America with varieties of this animal, so useful to the settler in the wilds and woods, and so much esteemed throughout the whole of the country, as furnishing a valuable article of food. " It appears that the American zoologists describe no fewer than six species of the hog, some of them so entirely distinct in their general habits and appearance as to prevent their ever breeding or even associating together. Five of these species need only be re- garded as objects of curiosity ; the sixth is the common wild hog of the eastern continent, which we will describe, in order to illustrate the difference between a good and a bad animal of the same variety; they have long-peaked snouts, coarse heads, thin chests, narrow shoulders, sharp backs, slab sides, meagre, diminutive hams, big legs, clumped feet, the hide of a rhinoceros, the hair and bristles of a porcupine, and as thick and shaggy as a bear's; they have no capacity for digesting and concocting their food in the stomach for nourishment; there is nothing but offal, bones, rind, bristles, and hair, with a narrow streak of gristle underneath, and a still narrower line of lean, as tough and as rank as white leather — their snouts against every man, and every man's hand against them.- No rea- sonable fence can stop them, but, ever restive and uneasy, they rove SWINE IN AMEKIOA. . 59 about seeking for plunder ; swilling, grunting, rooting, pawing, al. ways in mischief and always destroying. The more a man posses- es of such stock the worse he is off; and he had far better sell his produce at any price, than to put it into such totally worthless crea- tures." — A. B. Allen. Stuart says — " Hogs are universal in this part of the world, and are well and frequently fed. At first they are kept in the woods, and nurtured on chestnuts and apples ; before being killed, they have good rations of Indian corn or barley-meal, and in many cases are likewise well supplied with steamed food. In South Carolina the climate is so mild that they are allowed to wander about the woods during the whole year, feeding on the nuts, acorns, &c., which are there so abundant, and occasionally eating the fallen fruit they meet with. They are very useful in destroying snakes." — Stuart's North America. In large towns, too, they are apparently as much at home and as common as in the forests, pacing the streets, instead of the glades, and feeding upon the offal and filth rejected by man, instead of the fresh and wholesome fruits supplied by the hand of nature. One of our countrymen gives an amusing graphic account of the swinish multitude, in some of the large towns through which he passed. " We are going to cross here. Take care of the pigs. Two portly sows r.re trotting up behind this carriage, and a select party of halfa-dozen gentlemen hogs have just now turned the corner. Here is a solitary swine, lounging homewards by himself ; he has only one ear, having parted with the other to vagrant dogs in the course of his city rambles ; but he gets on very well without it, and leads a roving, gentlemanly, vagabond kind of a life, somewhat answering to that of our clubmen at home. He leaves his lodgings every morning at a certain hour, throws himself upon the town, gets through his day in some manner quite satisfactory to himself, and regularly appears at the door of his own house again at night, like the mysterious master of Gil Bias ; he is a free-and-easy, careless, indifferent kind of pig, having a very large acquaintance among other pigs of the same character, whom he rather knows by sight than conversation, as he seldom troubles himself to stop and ex- change civilities, but goes grunting down the kennel, turniv^g up the news and small-talk of the city, in the shape of cabbage-stalks and offal, and bearing no tails but his own, which is a very short one, for his old enemies the dogs have been at that too, and have left him hardly enough to swear by ; he is in every respect a republi- can pig, going wherever he pleases, and mingling with the best society, on an equal, if not superior footing, for every one makes way when he appears, and the haughtiest give him the wall if he prefer it ; he is a great philosopher, and seldom, moved unless by the dogs before-mentioned ; sometimes, indeed, you may see hia 60 THE HCG. small eye twinkling on a slaughtered friend, whose carcass gar nishes a buU'hcr''s door-post, but he grunts out " vSueh is life; all flesh is pork !" buries his nose in the mire again, and waddles down the gutter, comforting himself with the reflection that there is one snout the less to anticipate stray cabbage-stalks, at any rate. " They are the city scavengers, these pigs, ugly brutes they are ; having for the most part scanty brown backs, like the lids of old horse-hair trunks, spotted with unwholesome black blotches ; they Iiave long, gaunt legs too, and such peaked snouts that if one of them could be persuaded to sit fov his profile, nobody would recognize it for a pig's likeness ; they are never attended upon, or fed, or driven, or caught, but are thrown upon their own resources in early life, and become preternaturally knowing in consequence; every pig knows where he lives much better than any body could tell him. At this hour, just as evening is closing in, you will see them roam- ing towards bed by scores, eating their way to the last. Occasion- ally some youth among them who has overeaten himself, or has been worried by dogs, trots shrinkingly homeward, like a prodigal son ; but this is a rare case; perfect self-possession and self-reliance, and immovable composure, being their foremost attributes. (Dick- ens' American Notes.) And Mrs. Trollope piteously exclaims — "I am sure 1 should have liked Cincinnati nnich better if the people had not dealt so very largely in hogs! The immense quantity of business done in this line wouli hardly be believed by those who had not witnessed it. i never saw a newspaper without remarking such advertisements as the following: " VVanted immediately, 4000 fat hogs;" "For sale, 2000 baiTels of prime pork." But the annoyance came nearer than this. If I determined upon a walk up Main Street, the chances were five hundred to one against my reaching the shady side with- out brushing by a snout or two, fresh dripping from the kennel. When we had screwed up our courage to the enterprise of mount- ing a certain noble-looking sugar-loaf hill, that promised pure air and a fine view, we found the brook we had to cross at its foot, red with the blood from a pig slaughter-house ; while our noses, instead of meeting " the thyme that loves the green hill's breast," were greeted by odors that I will not describe, and which I heartily hope ray readers cannot imagine; our feet, that on leaving the city had expected to press the flowery sod, literally got entangled in pigs' tails and jaw-bones ; and thus the prettiest walk in the neighborhood •was interdicted for ever." The common breed may for the most part be described as large, rough, long-nosed, big-boned, thin-backed, slab-sided, long-legged, ravenous, ugly animals. But latterly great improvements have been made in it by judicious crossing with the Chinese and Berkshire pigs, by crossing these two breeds with each other, and by careful breetl mg from these two stocks without intermixture. SWINE IN AMERICA. 61 Mr. Bement of Albany, -who has devoted grcj.t attention to the rearing and breeding of swine, speaks in the highest terms of praise of the cross between the pure Chinese breed and the original breed of the country, or, "■ laitd-skads,'''' as he termed them. He says that the Chinese breed was first introduced about twenty years ago, but that from their size, seldom attaining more than 250 lbs., and from their delicacy, they were not adapted for "a farmer's hog." But with the just-mentioned cross they become all that could be wished. He thus describes the " improved China hogs :" — " In color they are various — white, black and white, spotted, and gray and white; they are longer in the body than the pure Chinese breed ; small in the head and legs ; broad in the back ; round in the body ; the ham.s well let down ; skin thin ; and flesh delicate and finely flavored. They are easy keepers, small consumers, quiet in disposition, not given to roam or commit depredations ; ancl when in condition may be maintained so upon grass only." — The Cultivafor^ vol. ii. The best Berkshire breeds, as imported into America, vary some- what in size and appearance ; that from which most of the present stock have been raised was taken to America in 1832. This breed has spread rapidly over the country, and fetches a high prife from its peculiar aptitude to fatten. Its prevailing characteristics are — a fine head, a dished face, rather upright ears, close shoulders and hams, and a shcrt body ; animals of this kind mature very rapidly, and produce most delicate meat. There are now various improved breeds, known for the most part under the names of the improvers, or of the localities in which they are found, arising from crosses of the original American hog with the above-mentioned breeds, or others which may have been im- ported from England and other countries. The establishment of agricultural societies and cattle-shows, has contributed in the New as well as in the Old World to direct the attention of farmers and breeders to all kinds of domesticated animals, and the advantages which have been obtained in swine alone are sufficiently great to prove incentives to increased care and study on the all-important principles of breeding. Head, in his journey from Halifax to Upper Canada, again and again alludes to the fine pigs he saw, and the delicious pork wn'th ■which he was regaled by the settlers he met with in various parts, He says that bears are very fond of pork, for they often get into the farm-yards and carry off a squeaking, struggling victim to regale themselves upon INDIANA. In Indiana the breed of swine furnishes the principal supply for food and exportation; great quantities of pork being sent to New Orleans, Great numbers of swine roam in the woods of Indiana, far 62 THE HOG. fron^ all human dwellings, where they grow very fat upon the abun- dance of oak and beech mast. In some parts where great numbers of swine are allowed to run almost wild, a triangular yoke is fixed round their necks to prevent them from breaking through fences. — Weld's Travels in North America. They are of a reddish-brown color, with round black spots ; there are some quite wild, which any body is at liberty to shool. These animals are never housed, even in the vicinity of Harmony. In the depth of winter the young ones often perish with cold, or are devoured by the mothers ; and then dead swine will be seen lying about in all directions, some partly devoured by others. The negligence and want of feeling with which these animals are treated is very great, and consequently they can never be expected to prosper, or yield those advantages which might be derived from them under proper treatment. OHIO. Professor Silliman, in his account of Ohio, says that large num- oers of hogs pass the winter in the woods quite independent of the assistance of man, subsisting on nuts and acorns. Single individuals of these are occasionally destroyed by bears and wolves, but a herd of ten or twenty hogs are more than a match for a wolf or panther. Indeed an old hunter once saw a panther spring from a tree into a drove of wood hogs, and scarcely had he touched the ground than the larger ones fell upon him with their tusks and the weight of their bodies, and killed and tore him in pieces in a few moments. Arcana of Science^ 1828. MEXICO. In Mexico fine breeds of pigs are kept by many persons of wealth as an article of trade as well as of consumption, and the greatest possible care and attention are paid to the cleanliness and comfort of these animals ; nay, more, the Mexican pigs may be said to possess the luxuries of life, for two Indian lads are kept to sing the grunting herd to sleep. These boys are chosen for the strength of their lungs and their taste and judgment in deliirhtir.g the ears and lulling the senses of the porcine harmonists, and they take it by turns to chant throughout the whole day ; nor does their performance appear to be unappreciated by their strange audience, but rather to afford exceed- uig delight and gratification. HEBRIDES. The New Hebride'-!, the Marquesas, the Friendly and Society [slanJs, and New Guinea, abound with a breed of swine closeU resembling the Chinese, and these being almost the only domestic SWINE IN COLUMBIA. 63 animals which the natives of these islands posses^;, they accoiclingiy receive great care and attention. This race is small, the belly hanging, the legs short, the tail almost imperceptible, and the color gray. Its flesh is very white and delicate. COLUMBIA. In the woods of Columbia there are numbers of swine, but for tac most part wild ; and the flesh of these wild ones is far superior to that of the few that are domesticated, as that of the latter, from the animals being often fed on stale fish and all kinds of abomina- tions, acquires a rancid and unpleasant flavor. Some of the settlers chiefly live by the sale of the flesh of wild swine, which they obtain by hunting, and then cure or dry it. Experienced hunters will kill their fourteen or fifteen swine a-day, and a well-trained dog will often destroy two or three of these ani- mals a-day by himself. The mode of proceeding is for the dog to keep the hog at bay while the hunter creeps up, and watching his opportunity, throws his lance with such vigor as to pin the animal to the ground. This done, he rushes upon him, seizes the lance firmly with one hand, and with the other dispatches the game with his knife. In Paraguay and Brazil, swine are likewise abundant, and for the most part wild. The Falkland Islands were stocked with swine by the French and Spaniards, but little, if any, trace of the original breeds can now be discovered in the fierce, bristly; tusked animals now found there, some of the older ones of which rival the grisly boar in appearance and wildness. SOUTH-SEA ISLANDS. The South-Sea Islands, on their discovery by Europeans, were found to be well stocked with a small, black, short-legged hog ; the traditionary belief of the natives was, that these animals were as anciently descended as themselves. The hog, in fact, is in these islands the principal quadruped, and is of all others the most care- fully cultivated. The bread-fruit tree, either in the form of a sour paste or in its natural cctndition, constitutes its favorite food, and its additional choice of yams, eddoes, and other nutritive vegetables, renders its flesh most juicy and delicious; its fat, though rich, being at the same time (so says Foster) not less delicate and agreeable than the finest butter. Before our missionary labors had proved so successful in these once benighted regions, by substituting the mild spirit of Christianity for the sanguinary forms of a delusive and degrading worship, the Otaheitans and other South-Sea Islanders 64 THE HOG. were iii the habit of presenting roasted pigs nt the morals, as the ->iost sa 'ovy and acceptable offering to their deities which they could toUStOW. ASIA. Throiighciit the greater part of Asia, swine are to be found. The extensive and magnificent forests which cover much of the Birmese Empire, Siam, Cochin China, and other kingdoms of the south-east, abound with hogs, as well as other pachydermatous animals. Here are found the celebrated Siamese or Chinese breed, so much esteemed throughout all parts of the world to which they have been exported : distinguished for their small size, fine head and snoutj compact deep carcass, large hams and shoulders, short limbs, delicate feet, fine hair and skin, aptitude to fatten and grow, and the sweet, delicate meat they yield. CHINA AND JAPAN. The Chinese and Japanese are great pig-breeders, and make the art of crossing, breeding, and rearing swine, which furnishes them with their principal animal food, an object of peculiar attention and study. Merchants who have resided for some time in China, and even travellers who have merely been able to bestow a superficial glance on matters, speak of the great care bestowed on this point; but no author appears to have given any details as to the course of practice adopted. Perhaps from the naturally jealous and uncom miinicative disposition of the Chinese, they have been unable tc ac|j^uire any ; and, perhaps, few have thought it worth while to trou- ble themselves about so degraded an animal as the hocr. Howevei this may be, it is much to be regretted that the inforrnation is so very scanty, for many valuable hints might probably have been thus obtained. Tradescent Lay, the naturalist in Beechy's expedition, in his inte- resting work on China, thus amusingly speaks of the natives and their swine: — ''There is a striking analogy between these two, A Chinese admires a round face and the smooth curvatures of a hin- belly, and where opportunity serves, cultivates these additions to personal beauty in himself. The Chinese pig is fashioned on the same model. At an early period the back becomes convex, ihe belly protuberant, and the visage shows a remarkable disposition to rotundity. Nor is the resemblance merely personal ; m the moral chivracter there is an amusing similitude, contrariety and obstinacy being the prevailing characteristics of both men and brutes." The same author informs us that swine are rarely driven or made U) walk in China, but conveyed fj'om place to place in a species of SWINE IN CEYLON AND HINDOSTAN. 65 cradle suspended upon a pole, carried by two men. But he says, "the difficulty is to get the animal into this conveyance, and this is accomplished by the cradle being placed in front ot* the pig, and the owner then vigorously pulling at 'porky's tail,' and in the spirit of opposition the animal darts into the place they have prepared for him. At the journey's end, the bearers dislodge him by spitting m his face." Mr. Lay states that " pork is very plentiful in China, but never greeable to the European eye, from its shining, flabby appearance; it does not taste either like our pork, and is only tolerable when cut into thin slices and fi'ied in soy to correct the grossness of its natural juices. The natives cut it in long slices or rashers, and dry it in the sun, and thus prepared it is not unpleasant in flavor, although it is then by no means easy to distinguish it from dogs' or cats' flesh similarly prepared." CEYLON. In speaking of Ceylon, and its neighborhood, an intelligent travel- ler says: — "The swine here are a long-legged, ugly breed, allowed to run wild and pick up whatever food they can get. 1 never saw, at any native cottage or farm, a pig penned up or put to fatten, and yet the natives are very fond of hog's flesh, and never hold any feast or festival without this meat constituting the chief and most approved dishes." HINDOSTAN. The existence of a breed of swine in Hindostan and the Birmese empire is mentioned by several travellers, but scarcely one gives any account of them. It would seem, however, that they are iden- tical with the Siamese breed. Hogs are also enumerated as among the wild beasts of Central India. Some of the Hindoo tribes use hog's blood for all the purposes to which other natipns apply holy water ; but pork is not eaten, excepting by Europeans and the lowest caste of Plindoos. In the Eastern Archipelago and the Moluccas, a breed of wild swine exists bearing great resemblance to the Chinese, but rather longer in the legs and lighter in the body, and aff()rding delicious meat. TURKEY AND Ar.ABIA. In Turkey, Syria, Persia, iVrabia, and the north-eastern parts of Asia, comparatively few pigs are found, and these are of an iron- gray, black, and occasionally brown hue ; short-legged, small, round in the body, very apt to fatten, and attaining the weight of from 350 to 400 lbs. And there are two ways of accounting for this, 66 THE HOG. viz.; the prevalence of the Mohammedan religion, and the sandj^ open nature of the country ; for it is chiefly in well-wooded if not cultivated districts that we find swine, their nature and habits alike unfitting them for dry sandy deserts. AFRICA. In this quarter of the globe again, we meet with but few smIuc, until we approach the south-eastern parts, and for the same reasons which we have just given. In Abyssinia they are to be found, but they are not held in much estimation. They have been imported into New Holland, Caffraria, and the Cnpe of Good Hope, but are not kept to any extent, on account of the difficulty of feeding them. In most of these places pork is chiefly used as food for the lower classes, and but little care or attention is bestowed upon the ani- mals ; and the breeds greatly resemble the Chinese variety, but are somewhat less, being short-legged, round-bodied animals, of a black or dark brown color, the bristles few and almost as fine as hairs, and the tail terminated by a tuft. The Coast of Guinea used to possess a breed of swine which have been exported thence as an article of commerce, especially to the new settlements in America and to some parts of the East Indies, and were held in high estimation at that time. But the cessa- tion of the intercourse induced by the slave-trade, and the discovery of more valuable breeds, have rendered these almost forgotten. These animals were large in size, square in form, of a reddish color, the body covered with short, bristly hair, and smoother and more shiny than almost any other variety of the porcine race ; the tail very long, and the ears long, narrow, and terminating in a point. This variety is also found in Brazil. EUROPE. We now find swine almost universal, and every where, more or less, an object of special care and attention, both as furnishing a valuable kind of animal food, and an article of commerce. MALTA. Coming up the Mediterranean Sea we find the small black Maltese breed, the bodies of which are almost bare and smooth, and which iatton so aptly and afford such delicate pork. Spain then oflfers its breeds, none of whi'ii are, however, held in great estimation out of their native country. The chief of these is a short-headed, long, ye* round-bodied, dumpty-legged variety, of a reddish-brown or copper color : the skin fine and the bristles slender; it is small in size, very SWINE IN EUROPE. 67 prolific, and may easily be flittened to an enormous weight. This breed is also found in Portugal and some parts of the south of Italy ; it closely resembles the Siamese pigs, and has doubtless originally sprung from them. The far-famed Bologna sausages are made from the flesh of this animal. ITALY. Italy too is in some degree celebrated for its pigs, the best breeds of which, like the Maltese, are small, black, destitute of bristles, and delicate in flesh. The Neapolitan breed has been extensively ex- ported, for the purpose of crossing with other kinds, and has found considerable favor in many parts of England. In themselves these pigs are not sufficiently hardy for general use, but, crossed with rougher breeds, they yield a valuable progeny, fine in form, delicate in flesh, and easy to fatten. There is a much larger race of swine bred in the Duchy of Parma,^and generally considered to be the finest breed in Italy, in every point of view. In Palermo, Bosco, the environs of Rome, and the neighborhood of Bologna, Count Chateauvieux tells us pigs are kept. Those at Bosco, on the Apennines, he describes as a good breed, which the farmers fatten on chestnuts and milk, housing them in the winter and suffering them to run over the mountains during the summer. At the farm of Campo Morto he found a herd of 2000, of the domestic breed, and black. They run all the year on the immense tract of land which extends towards the sea, are fattened on nuts and acorns, and yield excellent meat. They are not indigenous, but have been brought thither to stock the woods, and they are regarded by the proprietor of that farm as the most valuable part of his stock, for their keep costs him little or nothing, and they yield a very good profit. The pigs he found on the marshy plains of Polesimo, between Bologna and Ferrara, he describes as large, lean, thin-flanked, and long-limbed animals. (Chateauvieux's Letters from Italy.) GERMANY. Pursuing our way to Germany we meet with totally different ani- mals, submitted for the most part to an entirely diflferent manage- ment. The common breeds of the country are every where describ- ed as huge, gaunt, long-legged, lean-bodied, greyhound-like animals, with exceedingly long snouts and coarse bristles, forming almost as much of a mane on the neck and shoulders as those of the wild boar. In l*russiaand mony parts ol Poland a rather smaller but scarcely less uncouth race are met with, of a yellow or redd 'sh-bf own color. 68 THE HOG. Thiler informs us, that "the chief breeds of figs knowr. in the north of Germany and crossed in various different ways, are, — the Moldavian, Wallachian, and Bothnlan, remarl^able for their enor- mous size, iron -gray color, and large lapping ears ; and the Polish, or, properly speaking, the Podolian, which are also very large, but are of a yellow color, and have a broad brown stripe along the spine." These two breeds, he says, furnish the large pigs for fattening, but they require a proportionably large quantity of food, and besides are not very productive, the sows seldom bringing forth more than four or five at the most at a birth. The Bavarian pigs, he states, are much esteemed for their small ness of bone and aptitude to fatten ; but the flesh is not liked, it being too flabby and soft. This breed is usually marked with red- dish-brown spots. The Westphalian is another breed very generally met with; these animals are large in size and very prolific, bringing forth ten or twelve at a litter. The next variety mentioned he designates " the English pig," and describes it as being large, full, and deep in the body, and requiring very substantial fjod. A cross between this breed and the West- phalian is stated to produce an excellent animal. To these he adds the Chinese breed, the Spanish or African black pig, which he estimates very highly from its aptitude to fatten on indifferent or scanty food, its rapid growth, delicate flesh, excellent hams, and the advantages derived from crossing the larger breeds with it ; and lastly, the German ]>ig, properly so called. But it appears that this can scarcely be J egarded as a distinct breed, but rather as the result of numerous and various crosses, for he says: " This breed is different in its characteristics in diflerent provinces ; the color is white, black, gray, or spotted. It is of a middling size and can be supported on a moderate quantity of nourishment. There is no doubt but that by more attention being bestowed upon the breeding, rearing, and feeding of this race, they might be mate- rially improved, but most of the persons who undertake the man- agement of pigs on an extensive scale, seem rather anxious to try the effect of different and new crosses than to improve the old breed." HUNGARY. In Ilunfiary, Croatia, and Servia a race of swine resembling that found in Turkey are met with ; small, of a dark gray color, and short-legged, yet not apparently deriving their origin from the Chinese. The flesh of the swine reared in Servia is said to be more delicate than will be met with any where throughout the whole of Europe. SWINE IX FRAIsCE. 69 '■p. Polancl, Russia, Sweden, and the northern parts of Europe, the -wine yet retain all the characteristics of their ancestor the wild boar. They are mostly of a red, or dirty brown, or yellow color; long in the body, light and active in make, having long legs, a broad flat head, erect ears, and a nervous, slightly up- turned snout. They are wild in their habits, fierce, not aj.*" fatteners, or producing deli- cate meat. In Holland and Belgium we find numerous varieties and crosses, but the original breeds have large bodies and long lopping ears; the sows are prolific, and if properly attended to, the animals fatten very kindly. There is a variety often met with, — and much esteemed for its productive powers, its disposition to fatten, and the delicacy of its flesh, — which most probably derives its origin from a cross between a native pig and one of the Siamese breed. This animal is of a me- dium size, rather short on the legs, with a full round body, straight back, broad flanks, and small head. The bristles are white and thin! v scattered over the back, bat growing rather closer upon the neck and towards the head. FRANCE. The original breeds of France are mostly coarse ungainly animals, for the most part white, excepting towards the south, and there we Hnd the native breeds very much to resemble those of Italy. "Jn the time of Buffon, the greater proportion of the hogs in the north of France were white, as were likewise those of Vivarais; while in Dauphiny, which is not far distant, they were all black. Those of Languedoc and Provence were also of the latter color. Black pigs still prevail both in Italy and Spain. According to the great French naturalist, one of the most evident marks of degeneration (an ill-ap- plied term) is furnished by the ears, which become more supple and pendent as the animal changes into the domestic state. He regards the wild boar as the model of the species erroneously, for it can only be looked upon as formed on the model best adapted to the haunts and habits of a wild animal, the welfare of which requires either the instinct of a cunning concealment or the possession of strength or swiftness. Now concealment in a pigsty is of little avail when the day of terror comes, and the obesity of a well-fed porker is, and must ever continue, entirely inconsistent either with speed of foot or vigor of limb ; therefore the proper attributes of the animal in its unreclaimed and domesticated conditions being incompatible with each other, those of the tbrmer ought not in any way to be set up or assumed as a model by which the latter should be altered or im- pr( ved." — Quarterly Journal of Agriculture, vol. iii. Of late years French agriculturists have seen the advantages small breeds possess over large ones, and endeavored by judicious crosses to reduce the 70 THE HOG. size of their pigs, and at the same time give to the breeds all the value arising from early maturity, a kindly disposition, and produc- tiveness. M. Magne says, " Our breeds of pigs are in general very defective ; they are long-limbed, thin-necked, narrow-chested, and have high curved backs ; they are hardy, but far from precocious, fatten with difficulty, and consume an immense quantity of food com- pared with the flesh they yield." We are partly indebted to Mr. Wilson's valuable " Essay on Do mestic Animals" for the following account of the present chief breeds of swine in France. The most distinguishable of the present races of France are the following: — " 1. The race of the Pays d'' Auge, (by some authors called the Normandy breed,) which has the head small and sharp-pointed ; the ears narrow and pointed ; the body lengthened ; the legs broad and strong; the hair coarse, spare, and of a white color; and the bones small. It attains to the weijxht of 600 lbs." M. Bella considers that this breed are great eaters, but do not fatten kindly. 2. The race of Poitu, of which the head is long and thick, the point projecting; the ears large and pendulous; the body lengthened ; the bristles white and coarse; the feet broad and strong; and the bones large. Its weight does not exceed 500 lbs. 8. The race am about and forage for themselves at will, and the mischief they do is by no means inconsiderable ; for with their muscular snouts they plough up the soil, and root out potatoes, carrots, and turnips, and even upturn the growing corn ; and, far from being a source of profit, are, from the mischief they do, an absolute loss to tlie country. Dr. Hibbert, [Account of the Shetland Isles^) describes the origi- nal Shetland pig as "a little brindle monster, the very epitome of" a wild boar, yet scarcely larger in size than a terrier dog : — " His bristled back a trench impaled appears, And stands erected like a field of speara" According to his account, " this lordling of the seat- holds and Arable lands ranges undisturbed over his free demesnes, and, in quest Of the earthworms and the roots of plants, furrows up the pastures or corn-fields in deep trenches, destroying in his progress all the plovers', curlews', and other birds' nests he meets with. He bivouacs in some potato-field, which he rarely quits until he has excavated a ditch large enough to bury within it a dozen fellow-commoners of his own weight and size. Nor is the reign of this petty tyrant wholly bloodless ; young lambs just dropped often fall victims t(» his ferocity or thirst for blood." The Orkneys. — To describe the swine found here would be but a repetition of what we have alrea