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Are_grits_groceries

(17,111 posts)
Wed Jul 11, 2012, 06:18 AM Jul 2012

E.B.White responds to the ASPCA when he was accused of harboring an unlicensed dog:


In 1951, E. B. White — the novelist responsible for, most notably, Charlotte's Web and Stuart Little — was accused by the ASPCA of not paying his dog tax and, as a result, "harboring" an unlicensed dog. He responded by way of the following delightful letter.

(Source: Letters of a Nation; Image: E. B. White with his dachshund, Minnie, via Mister Crew.)

12 April 1951

The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals
York Avenue and East 92nd Street
New York, 28, NY

Dear Sirs:

I have your letter, undated, saying that I am harboring an unlicensed dog in violation of the law. If by "harboring" you mean getting up two or three times every night to pull Minnie's blanket up over her, I am harboring a dog all right. The blanket keeps slipping off. I suppose you are wondering by now why I don't get her a sweater instead. That's a joke on you. She has a knitted sweater, but she doesn't like to wear it for sleeping; her legs are so short they work out of a sweater and her toenails get caught in the mesh, and this disturbs her rest. If Minnie doesn't get her rest, she feels it right away. I do myself, and of course with this night duty of mine, the way the blanket slips and all, I haven't had any real rest in years. Minnie is twelve.

In spite of what your inspector reported, she has a license. She is licensed in the State of Maine as an unspayed bitch, or what is more commonly called an "unspaded" bitch. She wears her metal license tag but I must say I don't particularly care for it, as it is in the shape of a hydrant, which seems to me a feeble gag, besides being pointless in the case of a female. It is hard to believe that any state in the Union would circulate a gag like that and make people pay money for it, but Maine is always thinking of something. Maine puts up roadside crosses along the highways to mark the spots where people have lost their lives in motor accidents, so the highways are beginning to take on the appearance of a cemetery, and motoring in Maine has become a solemn experience, when one thinks mostly about death. I was driving along a road near Kittery the other day thinking about death and all of a sudden I heard the spring peepers. That changed me right away and I suddenly thought about life. It was the nicest feeling.

You asked about Minnie's name, sex, breed, and phone number. She doesn't answer the phone. She is a dachshund and can't reach it, but she wouldn't answer it even if she could, as she has no interest in outside calls. I did have a dachshund once, a male, who was interested in the telephone, and who got a great many calls, but Fred was an exceptional dog (his name was Fred) and I can't think of anything offhand that he wasn't interested in. The telephone was only one of a thousand things. He loved life — that is, he loved life if by "life" you mean "trouble," and of course the phone is almost synonymous with trouble. Minnie loves life, too, but her idea of life is a warm bed, preferably with an electric pad, and a friend in bed with her, and plenty of shut-eye, night and days. She's almost twelve. I guess I've already mentioned that. I got her from Dr. Clarence Little in 1939. He was using dachshunds in his cancer-research experiments (that was before Winchell was running the thing) and he had a couple of extra puppies, so I wheedled Minnie out of him. She later had puppies by her own father, at Dr. Little's request. What do you think about that for a scandal? I know what Fred thought about it. He was some put out.

Sincerely yours,

E. B. White
http://www.lettersofnote.com/2012/02/she-doesnt-answer-phone.html

Love the whimsy!
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E.B.White responds to the ASPCA when he was accused of harboring an unlicensed dog: (Original Post) Are_grits_groceries Jul 2012 OP
K& R n/t Dalai_1 Jul 2012 #1
Happy birthday E. B. White, July 11, 1899 /nt al bupp Jul 2012 #2
brilliant. nt xchrom Jul 2012 #3
I knew I always liked him RockaFowler Jul 2012 #4
I've loved E.B. White since being made to read "Charlotte's Web" in third grade. Chorophyll Jul 2012 #5
. . . he loved life if by "life" you mean "trouble," siligut Jul 2012 #6
My daughter is reading E.B. White now...I was able to give her my copies of msanthrope Jul 2012 #7
What a writer! surrealAmerican Jul 2012 #8
Priceless! Thanks - n/t coalition_unwilling Jul 2012 #9

Chorophyll

(5,179 posts)
5. I've loved E.B. White since being made to read "Charlotte's Web" in third grade.
Wed Jul 11, 2012, 08:30 AM
Jul 2012

It's even better when you read it again as an adult, as are all of his children's books. I also highly recommend "Here is New York," a small book of White's observations of the city, which is beautiful and strangely prescient.

Thanks so much for posting this!

 

msanthrope

(37,549 posts)
7. My daughter is reading E.B. White now...I was able to give her my copies of
Wed Jul 11, 2012, 08:45 AM
Jul 2012
Charlotte's Web and Trumpet of the Swan. Some of my favorite books as a child.

What a delightful person! I should have liked to have met him, and Minnie.
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