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Lives of Two Cats

Chapter 11: (IX)
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About This Book

The narrator recalls two household cats—an Angora and a gray cat often called Chinese—whose characters and daily habits are rendered in affectionate vignettes. The prose interweaves playful episodes and quiet domestic rituals: sunlit idleness, nocturnal wanderings, encounters with family members and a resident tortoise, and small mischiefs. Alongside concrete scenes, the account offers gentle reflections on animal consciousness, loyalty, attachment, aging, and loss. Moving through seasons and modest adventures, these sketches compose a tender portrait of companionship that doubles as a meditation on memory, the passage of time, and the comfort and sorrow found in close domestic bonds.

(IX)

IT was at the close of winter, one of the first warm days of March, that Pussy Chinese made her début at my home in France. Pussy White still wore at that season her royal winter robe, and I had never seen her more imposing. The contrast would be the more overwhelming for my poor favorite, lean, lank, with her faded fawn-colored fur looking as if moth-eaten. I felt myself much embarrassed when our man Sylvester, returning with my pet from the ship, lifted, with a half disdainful air, the cover of the basket where he had placed her, and I saw, in the midst[34] of the assembled family, my little Chinese friend creep tremblingly forth.

Most deplorable was her first appearance. I felt the impression of the group in Aunt Clara’s simple exclamation: “Oh! my friend, how homely she is!”

Homely indeed! And in what way, under what pretense could I present her to the magnificent Pussy White? In utter helplessness I had her carried, for the time being, to an isolated granary,—that I might gain time to reflect on the situation.