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著者と犬

The Librarian Collection

著者と犬

The Librarian Collection

偉大な文学は、特にスマートで整然としたLibrarian Collectionを作成する際に、Mungo & Maudにとって大きなインスピレーションの源です。

では、偉大な作家たちにインスピレーションを与えるものとは何でしょうか?多くの場合、それは彼らの犬や猫です。忠実な仲間でありミューズであるこれらの生き物たちは、すべて文学の巨匠たちの作品に顕著な影響を与えました…

ロード・バイロン

1803年、詩人が約15歳の時、ロード・バイロンはボーツウェインと名付けたニューファンドランド犬を与えられました。バイロンは生涯に多くの犬を飼いましたが、ボーツウェインを「最も堅固な友」と表現しました。悲劇的にその犬は狂犬病にかかり、5年後に亡くなりました。犬の病気の間、バイロンは自分の手でボーツウェインの感染した唾液を拭い、感染を恐れずに個人的に看病したと言われています。犬の死後、バイロンは詩 Epitaph To A Dogを作り、「かわいそうな犬は、生前最も堅固な友であり、/ 最初に歓迎し、最前線で守り、/ その正直な心は今も主人のものである」という一節を含めました。この詩はバイロンの邸宅ニューイースト・アビーの犬の墓に刻まれており、バイロンの友人ジョン・ホブハウスによる序文もあります。「この場所の近くに/ 美しさを虚栄心なく持ち、/ 傲慢さなく強さを持ち、/ 凶暴さなく勇気を持ち、/ 人間の悪徳なしにすべての美徳を持つ者の遺骸が埋められている」。バイロンは自分の死後、犬のそばに埋葬されることを望みましたが、この願いは叶えられず、ボーツウェインの墓はバイロン自身の墓よりも大きいです。

 

Anton Chekhov

The Russian playwright and short-story writer had two dachshunds, Bromine (a male) and Quinine (a female). Although lazy and potbellied, Quinine was his favourite. Chekhov wrote of them that “The former is dexterous and lithe, polite and sensitive. The latter is clumsy, fat, lazy and sly… They both love to weep from an excess of feelings.” The author’s family recounted that “every evening Quinine would come up to Anton, put her front paws on his knees and look into his eyes devotedly.” The writer featured dogs in a number of his works, including The Lady With The Dog and Kashtanka – a novel narrated from the point of view of a dachshund mix.

Elizabeth Barrett Browning 

A cocker spaniel called Flush was a favoured friend of Elizabeth Barrett Browning. "He & I are inseparable companions," wrote the English poet of her dog, "and I have vowed him my perpetual society in exchange for his devotion." The dog offered companionship to Barrett Browning when confined to her sickbed. Flush was dognapped three times, and Barrett Browning had to pay heavy ransom for his return, which was a common occurrence for dog owners of the genteel classes in Victorian London. He is immortalised as the subject of her poems To Flush, My Dog and Flush or Faunus.

Virginia Woolf

Also greatly inspired by Flush, Virginia Woolf crafted Flush: A Biography, a cross genre, light-hearted blend of fiction and nonfiction narrated from the viewpoint of Barret Browning’s dog. Woolf wrote to a friend of the story that while reading the love letters of Elizabeth Barrett and Robert Browning, she found that "the figure of their dog made me laugh so I couldn't resist making him a Life". A dog to Woolf, “somehow represents the private side of life – the play side". Woolf’s first published essay was an obituary for her family's dog and the writer also had her own cocker spaniel, Pinka.

Thomas Hardy

A white fox terrier called Wessex (or Wessie for short) was seen by Thomas Hardy as able to do no wrong. Named after the semi-fictional region of West England where the writer set many of his novels Wessex was a relation of Caesar, Edward VII’s terrier. By all accounts, he was a snappy and aggressive dog. Wessex would cause a scene if not allowed to listen to his favourite radio programmes and attack the legs of strangers visiting Hardy’s home, often ripping their trousers. Lady Cynthia Asquith described him as "the most despotic dog guests have ever suffered under" who would contest “every single forkful of food on its way from my plate to my mouth" as he walked atop the dinner table during meals. The postman was bitten three times and on one occasion retaliated by kicking out two of the dog’s teeth. Despite all this, Hardy grew very attached to the dog and composed two poems in his honour upon his death, Dead 'Wessex' the Dog of the Household and A Popular Personage at Home.

Ernest Hemingway

Cats are almost as synonymous with Ernest Hemingway’s legacy as his litrary works and they feature heavily throughout his later writings. It’s said to be a six-toed (polydactyl) cat called Snow White that started it all. Snow White was a gift from sea captain, Stanley Dexter, in the 1930s. Polydactyl cats (often called “mitten cats” because they appear to have a thumb), were favoured by sailors as their extra toes gave them better balance at sea, enhancing their performance as mousers. As Hemingway wrote, “one cat just leads to another,” and he went on to adopt more cats and breed even more polydactyl kittens. There are still forty to fifty cats living at his home (now museum) in Key West, Florida, half of which are polydactyl and many are likely direct descendants of Snow White.

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