Thursday, July 12, 2007

LEGEND OF THE PEMBROKE WELSH CORGI

The legend of the Pembroke Welsh Corgi provides a charming tale for the curious of how the Corgi came to live in the hills of southwest Wales. According to this legend, two young children out tending the family's cattle on the king's land found a pair of puppies which they thought were little foxes. When the children took the puppies home, they were told by the menfolk that the little dogs were a gift from the fairies. The "wee folk" of Welsh legend used the small dogs either to pull their carriages or as fairy steeds. As the fox-like puppies grew, they learned to help their human companions watch over the cattle, a task which was to be the duty of their Corgi descendants for many centuries to come. Should anyone doubt the truth of the legend, the present-day Welsh Corgi still bears the mark over his shoulders of the little saddle used by his fairy riders.
Enchanted? Perhaps not-- but surely the Pembroke Welsh Corgi is a bit fay. What other dog can fold his front paws underneath his chest as completely as a cat? What other dog can flop over onto his back at the drop of a hat, paws waving ridiculously aloft, then right himself with a lightning twist that would do credit to a circus acrobat? And, finally, what other dog can manage to look-- while hopping up and down on his short hind legs in a rage at a cat or similar irritant-- so very much like Rumpelstiltskin when the queen told him she knew his name?

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