FIDELITY OF A DOG.
The Pastoral Times relates the following : “ The scene at Boonoke Station, near Deniliquin, the other clay, when Mr Webber was lost, was one that possibly only takes place in Australia. He, six feet high, hail left hearty and strong in the morning to place some sheep in one of the paddocks of the run, which is owned by Messrs Peppin ; he had crossed over two bridges and had deposited the sheep, when it must have occurred to him that he could make a short cut of it. Instead of returning by the bridges, he dot ermine cl to swim his horse, though the ruler could not swim. In trying to swim across the narrow creek the horse must have rolled over, and poor Webber was drowned, while the horse landed safely. A (second) creek now interposed between the horse and the homestead, where at night Webber was'expected, but not arriving there for the night, young Broughton, one of the overseers, started off a messenger to Couargo to make inquiries, but the missing man had not been there. In the forenoon succeeding the evening of the drowning, the horse which Webber rode was discovered within half a mile or so of the homestead. The saddle was wet, and a watertight bag, or pouch, on the side of the saddle, was full of water, showing that the
horse had recently swum the second creek. Webber’s faithful dog, too, had just returned. A caucus was now held, and in a very short time twenty-six mounted horsemen (the men were either shearers or workers on the station) were off to search for Mr Webber. They tracked the horse’s steps towards the creek, the dog in their company, running from one to another, looking unutterable things in his fidelity. On, on they went, until they arrived with half a mile or so of the fatal spot, when the dog broke away howling, making straight for the water; he then plunged in, and swam round the place where his master lay dead in 15ft of water. Thirteen shearers now took off their clothes and dived for the body, the dog among them the most active. The moment that they relaxed their efforts he seemed to be seized with new life, plunged again and again into the water, ducked and dived, crying bitterly At length they gave up the search, while they sent off to the station for a boat and draghooks. After ten minutes’ operation with these, the body was recovered. The dog, faithful to the last, when his master’s dead body lay for a few minutes stretched on the bank, clung to the corpse. ’
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GLOBE18741125.2.14
Bibliographic details
Globe, Volume II, Issue 149, 25 November 1874, Page 3
Word Count
443FIDELITY OF A DOG. Globe, Volume II, Issue 149, 25 November 1874, Page 3
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