<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
<p>One learns to be modest by living on a poultry farm, for there
are constant expositions of the most deplorable vanity among the
cocks. We have a couple of pea-fowl who certainly are an
addition to the landscape, as they step mincingly along the
square of turf we dignify by the name of lawn. The head of
the house has a most languid and self-conscious strut, and his
microscopic mind is fixed entirely on his splendid trailing
tail. If I could only master his language sufficiently to
tell him how hideously ugly the back view of this gorgeous fan
is, when he spreads it for the edification of the observer in
front of him, he would of course retort that there is a
“congregation side” to everything, but I should at
least force him into a defence of his tail and a confession of
its limitations. This would be new and unpleasant, I fancy;
and if it produced no perceptible effect upon his super-arrogant
demeanour, I might remind him that he is likely to be used,
eventually, for a feather duster, unless, indeed, the Heavens are
superstitious and prefer to throw his tail away, rather than
bring ill luck and the evil eye into the house.</p>
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<ANTIMG alt="More pride of bearing, and less to be proud of" src="images/p43.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p>The longer I study the cock, whether Black Spanish, White
Leghorn, Dorking, or the common barnyard fowl, the more
intimately I am acquainted with him, the less I am impressed with
his character. He has more pride of bearing, and less to be
proud of, than any bird I know. He is indolent, though he
struts pompously over the grass as if the day were all too short
for his onerous duties. He calls the hens about him when I
throw corn from the basket, but many a time I have seen him
swallow hurriedly, and in private, some dainty titbit he has
found unexpectedly. He has no particular chivalry. He
gives no special encouragement to his hen when he becomes a
prospective father, and renders little assistance when the
responsibilities become actualities. His only personal
message or contribution to the world is his raucous
cock-a-doodle-doo, which, being uttered most frequently at dawn,
is the most ill-timed and offensive of all musical notes.
It is so unnecessary too, as if the day didn’t come soon
enough without his warning; but I suppose he is anxious to waken
his hens and get them at their daily task, and so he disturbs the
entire community. In short, I dislike him; his swagger, his
autocratic strut, his greed, his irritating self-consciousness,
his endless parading of himself up and down in a procession of
one.</p>
<p>Of course his character is largely the result of
polygamy. His weaknesses are only what might be expected;
and as for the hens, I have considerable respect for the
patience, sobriety, and dignity with which they endure an
institution particularly offensive to all women. In their
case they do not even have the sustaining thought of its being an
article of religion, so they are to be complimented the more.</p>
<p>There is nothing on earth so feminine as a hen—not
womanly, simply feminine. Those men of insight who write
the Woman’s Page in the Sunday newspapers study hens more
than women, I sometimes think; at any rate, their favourite types
are all present on this poultry farm.</p>
<p>Some families of White Leghorns spend most of their time in
the rickyard, where they look extremely pretty, their slender
white shapes and red combs and wattles well set off by the
background of golden hayricks. There is a great oak-tree in
one corner, with a tall ladder leaning against its trunk, and a
capital roosting-place on a long branch running at right angles
with the ladder. I try to spend a quarter of an hour there
every night before supper, just for the pleasure of seeing the
feathered “women-folks” mount that ladder.</p>
<p>A dozen of them surround the foot, waiting restlessly for
their turn. One little white lady flutters up on the lowest
round and perches there until she reviews the past, faces the
present, and forecasts the future; during which time she is
gathering courage for the next jump. She cackles, takes up
one foot and then the other, tilts back and forth, holds up her
skirts and drops them again, cocks her head nervously to see
whether they are all staring at her below, gives half a dozen
preliminary springs which mean nothing, declares she can’t
and won’t go up any faster, unties her bonnet strings and
pushes back her hair, pulls down her dress to cover her toes, and
finally alights on the next round, swaying to and fro until she
gains her equilibrium, when she proceeds to enact the same scene
over again.</p>
<p>All this time the hens at the foot of the ladder are
criticising her methods and exclaiming at the length of time she
requires in mounting; while the cocks stroll about the yard
keeping one eye on the ladder, picking up a seed here and there,
and giving a masculine sneer now and then at the too-familiar
scene. They approach the party at intervals, but only to
remark that it always makes a man laugh to see a woman go up a
ladder. The next hen, stirred to the depths by this speech,
flies up entirely too fast, loses her head, tumbles off the top
round, and has to make the ascent over again. Thus it goes
on and on, this <i>petite comédie humaine</i>, and I could
enjoy it with my whole heart if Mr. Heaven did not insist on
sharing the spectacle with me. He is so inexpressibly dull,
so destitute of humour, that I did not think it likely he would
see in the performance anything more than a flock of hens going
up a ladder to roost. But he did; for there is no man so
blind that he cannot see the follies of women; and, when he
forgot himself so far as to utter a few genial, silly, well-worn
reflections upon femininity at large, I turned upon him and
revealed to him some of the characteristics of his own sex,
gained from an exhaustive study of the barnyard fowl of the
masculine gender. He went into the house discomfited,
though chuckling a little at my vehemence; but at least I have
made it for ever impossible for him to watch his hens without an
occasional glance at the cocks.</p>
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<ANTIMG alt="Mr. Heaven discomfited" src="images/p46s.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
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