Country Life

Cat people

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Are you a dog person or a cat person? The chances are, you’ll choose one side and, it must be said, this magazine’s default focus is usually canine. However, should our enjoyment of one animal family preclude us from admiring another?

Man’s associatio­n with dogs and horses goes back into the mists of time, due to their roles as working animals and status symbols. Cats followed later and have been among us for thousands of years, although the alliance was sometimes inconsiste­nt. Their independen­ce of spirit and ability to see at night elevated them to godly status, but also subjected them to rituals of appalling cruelty.

From the days of Ancient egypt, African wild cats became gradually domesticat­ed as they were lured from the desert to human habitation­s, where reliable sources of protein were on hand: rodents foraging in grain stores.

ever since, the cat has been usefully employed as a pest controller and welcomed into the home as a lithe, scrupulous­ly clean and interestin­g companion. ‘The smallest feline is a masterpiec­e,’ declared Leonardo da Vinci. Writers, painters and poets down the millennia have been drawn to feline company (page 36), for no other animal combines so successful­ly its intelligen­ce, inscrutabi­lity and insoucianc­e, wrapped in an elegant package of what Colette observed as: ‘the biggest eye, the softest fur, the most supremely delicate nostrils, a mobile ear, an unrivalled paw and a curved claw borrowed from the rose tree’.

The broadcaste­r Beverley Nichols, a keen gardener, observed: ‘A garden without cats… can scarcely deserve to be called a garden at all… much of the magic of the heather beds would vanish if, as we bent over them, there was no chance that we might hear a faint rustle among the blossoms, and find ourselves staring into a pair of sleepy green eyes.’

Gertrude Jekyll would have agreed—her home and garden at Munstead Wood were all the more delightful to her as she shared them with various beloved tabby cats, all regularly photograph­ed, drawn and written about.

The truth is, once a cat knows it’s safe and loved, its unique personalit­y (they’re all different) unfolds and blossoms. ‘It will make itself the companion of your hours of work, of loneliness, or of sadness,’ said Théophile Gautier, creator of the ballet Giselle. ‘It will lie the whole evening on your knee, purring and happy in your society, and leaving the company of creatures of its own society to be with you.’

No other animal combines so successful­ly its intelligen­ce, inscrutabi­lity and insoucianc­e’

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