General History of the Dog
There is no incongruity in the idea
that in the very earliest period of man's habitation of this world he
made a friend and companion of some sort of aboriginal representative
of our modern dog, and that in return for its aid in protecting him
from wilder animals, and in guarding his sheep and goats, he gave it a
share of his food, a corner in his dwelling, and grew to trust it and
care for it. Probably the animal was originally little else than an
unusually gentle jackal, or an ailing wolf driven by its companions
from the wild marauding pack to seek shelter in alien surroundings.
One can well conceive the possibility of the partnership beginning in
the circumstance of some helpless whelps being brought home by the
early hunters to be tended and reared by the women and children. The
present-day savage of New Guinea and mid-Africa does not, as a rule,
take the trouble to tame and train an adult wild animal for his own
purposes, and primitive man was surely equally indifferent to the
questionable advantage of harbouring a dangerous guest. But a litter
of woolly whelps introduced into the home as playthings for the
children would grow to regard themselves, and be regarded, as members
of the family, and it would soon be found that the hunting instincts
of the maturing animal were of value to his captors. The savage
master, treading the primeval forests in search of food, would not
fail to recognise the helpfulness of a keener nose and sharper eyes
even than his own unsullied senses, while the dog in his turn would
find a better shelter in association with man than if he were hunting
on his own account. Thus mutual benefit would result in some kind of
tacit agreement of partnership, and through the generations the wild
wolf or jackal would gradually become gentler, more docile, and
tractable, and the dreaded enemy of the flock develop into the trusted
guardian of the fold.
In nearly all parts of the world
traces of an indigenous dog family are found, the only exceptions
being the West Indian Islands, Madagascar, the eastern islands of the
Malayan Archipelago, New Zealand, and the Polynesian Islands, where
there is no sign that any dog, wolf, or fox has existed as a true
aboriginal animal. In the ancient Oriental lands, and generally among
the early Mongolians, the dog remained savage and neglected for
centuries, prowling in packs, gaunt and wolf-like, as it prowls to-day
through the streets and under the walls of every Eastern city. No
attempt was made to allure it into human companionship or to improve
it into docility. It is not until we come to examine the records of
the higher civilisations of Assyria and Egypt that we discover any
distinct varieties of canine form.
Assyrian sculptures depict two
such, a Greyhound and a Mastiff, the latter described in the tablets
as "the chained-up, mouth-opening dog"; that is to say, it was used as
a watch-dog; and several varieties are referred to in the cuneiform
inscriptions preserved in the British Museum. The Egyptian monuments
of about 3000 B.C. present many forms of the domestic dog, and there
can be no doubt that among the ancient Egyptians it was as completely
a companion of man, as much a favourite in the house, and a help in
the chase, as it is among ourselves at present. In the city of
Cynopolis it was reverenced next to the sacred jackal, and on the
death of a dog the members of the household to which he had belonged
carefully shaved their whole bodies, and religiously abstained from
using the food, of whatever kind, which happened to be in the house at
the time. Among the distinct breeds kept in Egypt there was a massive
wolf-dog, a large, heavily-built hound with drooping ears and a
pointed head, at least two varieties of Greyhound used for hunting the
gazelle, and a small breed of terrier or Turnspit, with short, crooked
legs. This last appears to have been regarded as an especial household
pet, for it was admitted into the living rooms and taken as a
companion for walks out of doors. It was furnished with a collar of
leaves, or of leather, or precious metal wrought into the form of
leaves, and when it died it was embalmed. Every town throughout Egypt
had its place of interment for canine mummies.
The dog was not greatly appreciated
in Palestine, and in both the Old and New Testaments it is commonly
spoken of with scorn and contempt as an "unclean beast." Even the
familiar reference to the Sheepdog in the Book of Job--"_But now they
that are younger than I have me in derision, whose fathers I would
have disdained to set with the dogs of my flock_"--is not without a
suggestion of contempt, and it is significant that the only biblical
allusion to the dog as a recognised companion of man occurs in the
apocryphal Book of Tobit (v. 16), "_So they went forth both, and the
young man's dog with them_."
The pagan Greeks and Romans had a
kindlier feeling for dumb animals than had the Jews. Their hounds,
like their horses, were selected with discrimination, bred with care,
and held in high esteem, receiving pet names; and the literatures of
Greece and Rome contain many tributes to the courage, obedience,
sagacity, and affectionate fidelity of the dog. The Phoenicians, too,
were unquestionably lovers of the dog, quick to recognise the points
of special breeds. In their colony in Carthage, during the reign of
Sardanapalus, they had already possessed themselves of the Assyrian
Mastiff, which they probably exported to far-off Britain, as they are
said to have exported the Water Spaniel to Ireland and to Spain.
It is a significant circumstance
when we come to consider the probable origin of the dog, that there
are indications of his domestication at such early periods by so many
peoples in different parts of the world. As we have seen, dogs were
more or less subjugated and tamed by primitive man, by the Assyrians,
Egyptians, Phoenicians, Greeks, and Romans, as also by the ancient
barbaric tribes of the western hemisphere. The important question now
arises: Had all these dogs a common origin in a definite parent stock,
or did they spring from separate and unrelated parents?
Half a century ago it was believed
that all the evidence which could be brought to bear upon the problem
pointed to an independent origin of the dog. Youatt, writing in 1845,
argued that "this power of tracing back the dog to the very earliest
periods of history, and the fact that he then seemed to be as
sagacious, as faithful, and as valuable as at the present day,
strongly favours the opinion that he was descended from no inferior
and comparatively worthless animal; and that he was not the progeny of
the wolf, the jackal, or the fox, but was originally created, somewhat
as we now find him, the associate and friend of man."
When Youatt wrote, most people
believed that the world was only six thousand years old, and that
species were originally created and absolutely unchangeable. Lyell's
discoveries in geology, however, overthrew the argument of the earth's
chronology and of the antiquity of man, and Darwin's theory of
evolution entirely transformed the accepted beliefs concerning the
origin of species and the supposed invariability of animal types.
The general superficial resemblance
between the fox and many of our dogs, might well excuse the belief in
a relationship. Gamekeepers are often very positive that a cross can
be obtained between a dog fox and a terrier bitch; but cases in which
this connection is alleged must be accepted with extreme caution. The
late Mr. A. D. Bartlett, who was for years the superintendent of the
Zoological Gardens in London, studied this question with minute care,
and as a result of experiments and observations he positively affirmed
that he had never met with one well-authenticated instance of a hybrid
dog and fox. Mr. Bartlett's conclusions are incontestable. However
much in appearance the supposed dog-fox may resemble the fox, there
are certain opposing characteristics and structural differences which
entirely dismiss the theory of relationship.
One thing is certain, that foxes do
not breed in confinement, except in very rare instances. The silver
fox of North America is the only species recorded to have bred in the
Zoological Gardens of London; the European fox has never been known to
breed in captivity. Then, again, the fox is not a sociable animal. We
never hear of foxes uniting in a pack, as do the wolves, the jackals,
and the wild dogs. Apart from other considerations, a fox may be
distinguished from a dog, without being seen or touched, by its smell.
No one can produce a dog that has half the odour of Reynard, and this
odour the dog-fox would doubtless possess were its sire a fox-dog or
its dam a vixen.
Whatever may be said concerning the
difference existing between dogs and foxes will not hold good in
reference to dogs, wolves, and jackals. The wolf and the jackal are so
much alike that the only appreciable distinction is that of size, and
so closely do they resemble many dogs in general appearance,
structure, habits, instincts, and mental endowments that no difficulty
presents itself in regarding them as being of one stock. Wolves and
jackals can be, and have repeatedly been, tamed. Domestic dogs can
become, and again and again do become, wild, even consorting with
wolves, interbreeding with them, assuming their gregarious habits, and
changing the characteristic bark into a dismal wolf-like howl. The
wolf and the jackal when tamed answer to their master's call, wag
their tails, lick his hands, crouch, jump round him to be caressed,
and throw themselves on their backs in submission. When in high
spirits they run round in circles or in a figure of eight, with their
tails between their legs. Their howl becomes a business-like bark.
They smell at the tails of other dogs and void their urine sideways,
and lastly, like our domestic favourites, however refined and
gentlemanly in other respects, they cannot be broken of the habit of
rolling on carrion or on animals they have killed.
This last habit of the domestic dog
is one of the surviving traits of his wild ancestry, which, like his
habits of burying bones or superfluous food, and of turning round and
round on a carpet as if to make a nest for himself before lying down,
go far towards connecting him in direct relationship with the wolf and
the jackal.
The great multitude of different
breeds of the dog and the vast differences in their size, points, and
general appearance are facts which make it difficult to believe that
they could have had a common ancestry. One thinks of the difference
between the Mastiff and the Japanese Spaniel, the Deerhound and the
fashionable Pomeranian, the St. Bernard and the Miniature Black and
Tan Terrier, and is perplexed in contemplating the possibility of
their having descended from a common progenitor. Yet the disparity is
no greater than that between the Shire horse and the Shetland pony,
the Shorthorn and the Kerry cattle, or the Patagonian and the Pygmy;
and all dog breeders know how easy it is to produce a variety in type
and size by studied selection.
In order properly to understand
this question it is necessary first to consider the identity of
structure in the wolf and the dog. This identity of structure may best
be studied in a comparison of the osseous system, or skeletons, of the
two animals, which so closely resemble each other that their
transposition would not easily be detected.
The spine of the dog consists of
seven vertebrae in the neck, thirteen in the back, seven in the loins,
three sacral vertebrae, and twenty to twenty-two in the tail. In both
the dog and the wolf there are thirteen pairs of ribs, nine true and
four false. Each has forty-two teeth. They both have five front and
four hind toes, while outwardly the common wolf has so much the
appearance of a large, bare-boned dog, that a popular description of
the one would serve for the other.
Nor are their habits different. The
wolf's natural voice is a loud howl, but when confined with dogs he
will learn to bark. Although he is carnivorous, he will also eat
vegetables, and when sickly he will nibble grass. In the chase, a pack
of wolves will divide into parties, one following the trail of the
quarry, the other endeavouring to intercept its retreat, exercising a
considerable amount of strategy, a trait which is exhibited by many of
our sporting dogs and terriers when hunting in teams.
A further important point of
resemblance between the _Canis lupus_ and the _Canis familiaris_ lies
in the fact that the period of gestation in both species is
sixty-three days. There are from three to nine cubs in a wolf's
litter, and these are blind for twenty-one days. They are suckled for
two months, but at the end of that time they are able to eat
half-digested flesh disgorged for them by their dam--or even their
sire.
We have seen that there is no
authenticated instance of a hybrid between the dog and the fox. This
is not the case with the dog and the wolf, or the dog and the jackal,
all of which can interbreed. Moreover, their offspring are fertile.
Pliny is the authority for the statement that the Gauls tied their
female dogs in the wood that they might cross with wolves. The Eskimo
dogs are not infrequently crossed with the grey Arctic wolf, which
they so much resemble, and the Indians of America were accustomed to
cross their half-wild dogs with the coyote to impart greater boldness
to the breed. Tame dogs living in countries inhabited by the jackal
often betray the jackal strain in their litters, and there are
instances of men dwelling in lonely outposts of civilisation being
molested by wolves or jackals following upon the trail of a bitch in
season.
These facts lead one to refer to
the familiar circumstance that the native dogs of all regions
approximate closely in size, coloration, form, and habit to the native
wolf of those regions. Of this most important circumstance there are
far too many instances to allow of its being looked upon as a mere
coincidence. Sir John Richardson, writing in 1829, observed that "the
resemblance between the North American wolves and the domestic dog of
the Indians is so great that the size and strength of the wolf seems
to be the only difference. I have more than once mistaken a band of
wolves for the dogs of a party of Indians; and the howl of the animals
of both species is prolonged so exactly in the same key that even the
practised ear of the Indian fails at times to discriminate between
them."
As the Eskimo and Indian dogs
resemble the North American wolf, so the dog of the Hare Indians, a
very different breed, resembles the prairie wolf. Except in the matter
of barking, there is no difference whatever between the black wolf-dog
of the Indians of Florida and the wolves of the same country. The same
phenomenon is seen in many kinds of European dogs. The Shepherd Dog of
the plains of Hungary is white or reddish-brown, has a sharp nose,
short erect ears, shaggy coat, and bushy tail, and so much resembles a
wolf that Mr. Paget, who gives the description, says he has known a
Hungarian mistake a wolf for one of his own dogs. Many of the dogs of
Russia, Lapland, and Finland are comparable with the wolves of those
countries. Some of the domestic dogs of Egypt, both at the present day
and in the condition of mummies, are wolf-like in type, and the dogs
of Nubia have the closest relation to a wild species of the same
region, which is only a form of the common jackal. Dogs, it may again
be noted, cross with the jackal as well as with wolves, and this is
frequently the case in Africa, as, for example, in Bosjesmans, where
the dogs have a marked resemblance to the black-backed jackal, which
is a South African variety.
It has been suggested that the one
incontrovertible argument against the lupine relationship of the dog
is the fact that all domestic dogs bark, while all wild _Canidae_
express their feelings only by howls. But the difficulty here is not
so great as it seems, since we know that jackals, wild dogs, and wolf
pups reared by bitches readily acquire the habit. On the other hand,
domestic dogs allowed to run wild forget how to bark, while there are
some which have not yet learned so to express themselves.
The presence or absence of the
habit of barking cannot, then, be regarded as an argument in deciding
the question concerning the origin of the dog. This stumbling block
consequently disappears, leaving us in the position of agreeing with
Darwin, whose final hypothesis was that "it is highly probable that
the domestic dogs of the world have descended from two good species of
wolf (_C. lupus_ and _C. latrans_), and from two or three other
doubtful species of wolves--namely, the European, Indian, and North
African forms; from at least one or two South American canine species;
from several races or species of jackal; and perhaps from one or more
extinct species"; and that the blood of these, in some cases mingled
together, flows in the veins of our domestic breeds.
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