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قراءة كتاب Autobiography of Matthew Scott, Jumbo's Keeper Also Jumbo's Biography, by the same Author
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Autobiography of Matthew Scott, Jumbo's Keeper Also Jumbo's Biography, by the same Author
MEDAL PRESENTED BY THE ZOÖLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON
“TO MATTHEW SCOTT, FOR HIS SUCCESS IN BREEDING
FOREIGN ANIMALS IN THE SOCIETY’S GARDENS,
1866.”
AUTOBIOGRAPHY
OF
MATTHEW SCOTT
JUMBO’S KEEPER
FORMERLY OF THE ZOÖLOGICAL SOCIETY’S GARDENS,
LONDON, AND RECEIVER OF SIR EDWIN
LANDSEER MEDAL IN 1866
ALSO
JUMBO’S BIOGRAPHY
By the Same Author
BRIDGEPORT, CONN.
TROW’S PRINTING AND BOOKBINDING CO., NEW YORK
1885
Copyright, 1885, by
MATTHEW SCOTT AND THOMAS E. LOWE
Bridgeport, Conn.
DEDICATION.
I take great pleasure in dedicating this book, containing my autobiography and the biography of Jumbo, to the people of the United States of America and Great Britain.
I have travelled through the United States, North, East, South, and West, and have received in my travels the greatest kindness. If “Jumbo” could but speak, I know he would endorse what I say here. I have had the same experience in Great Britain, and the spirit of gratitude impels me to acknowledge my appreciation of the good will of the people of both countries, by dedicating my humble efforts to them, hoping that this attempt may be received with the same kindness that has been always extended to me in person.
Respectfully,
Matthew Scott.
Bridgeport, Conn.,
January 14, 1885.
MY AUTOBIOGRAPHY.
CHAPTER I.
MY BIRTH-PLACE AND START IN LIFE.
I purpose giving to the world, for the benefit of my fellow-men, my humble and truthful history. I have many times thought I would do so, not for my own glory, but for the enlightenment of such people as are anxious to obtain knowledge. It is only to-day, January 14, 1885, that I have concluded to set about writing it, and I purpose to give a faithful record of my life, setting forth the various experiences through which I have passed.
I was born at Knowsley, Lancashire, England, in 1834. It was the seat of Lord Derby, the grandfather of the present earl; and from a child I learned to love that family.
The Earls of Derby were, and are, among the greatest statesmen of England.
My start in life was very humble, and I have even now, in my fifty-first year, very little to boast of with regard to this world’s goods. I have lived with Jumbo day and night for twenty years of my life. I am what is called a “self-made man,” and can boast that the knowledge and experience I possess, I have learned while living with wild beasts, latterly in the company of my friend and companion “Jumbo,” the greatest known animal on earth. I suppose my companion and I have seen more human faces than most people, and I have spoken to as many people as almost any other man. My life has been, perhaps, as peculiar and checkered as that of any man of my time of life; yet I claim nothing but to show to the people of the United States and Great Britain, to whom this book is dedicated, what an humble son of toil has passed through in the precarious, though to me, pleasant, occupation of keeper, breeder, and lover of the beasts and birds of the forests and fields of all countries and climes.
CHAPTER II.
MY FIRST EXPERIENCE AS A KEEPER.
I have already remarked in the previous chapter that I was born at Knowsley, near Liverpool, England, on the estate of Lord Derby. My father was born at the same place, and was “brewer” to the earl.
My dear, good, and much-loved mother was born on the same estate.
Our family consisted of sixteen sons and one daughter—a goodly number—and I am the fifteenth son (though “better late than never”).
I lost my dear father when I was four years old—he lived to the age of three score years and ten.
My mother lived to survive him several years.
When I was sent to London in 1851, I left the dear old soul hearty and in good spirits, proud of her boy’s going up to the biggest city in the world. I verily believe the good woman thought her fifteenth son was going to turn out something unusual. Although she used to say that I was “a rough, naughty lad, full of devilment,” she also said, in her quaint way, “if you take that lad and strip him naked, and put him on top of a mountain anywhere on the globe, he can get his own living; for, if there’s nobody round the neighborhood of the mountain, he will have the birds and animals feed him, like old Elijah and the raven in the wilderness, or, like John the Baptist, he will live on locusts and honey, and clothe himself with the skins of animals.”
Oh! my dear young readers, such a mother is worth more to you than all the world. You just listen to your mother, and mark every word she says when she advises and directs you, and you cannot fail to get along in life.
I returned from London to Knowsley to visit the dear soul once before she died.
However, to continue my story, I grew up at Knowsley, and at ten years of age was engaged to feed the feathered tribes at the private menagerie of the earl, who was a great lover of birds and beasts, and who spent much time and money in their importation and breeding in Great Britain. I had a great love (I suppose it was inherent) for birds, and I also was proud to earn a few shillings a week for my dear old mother. So I turned in under the guidance of my brother, who had charge of the aviary, and was put to work at cleaning, feeding, breeding, and generally attending to the parrots—that talkative tropical bird, whose tongue imitates so well the speech of man and woman.
It was, perhaps, the happiest week’s work I ever put in, and I assure my readers it was a delightful occupation.
CHAPTER III.
MY EXPERIENCE WITH BIRDS AT KNOWSLEY.
“Feed and tend birds,” say you, “a delightful occupation?