Draft of a Plan for Beginning Animal Sanctuaries in Labrador
DRAFT Of A Plan for Beginning ANIMAL SANCTUARIES In LABRADOR BY LT.-COLONEL WILLIAM WOOD (_to be submitted to the Fourth Annual Meeting of the Conservation Commission of the Dominion of Canada in 1913._) I. RECAPITULATION.
statesmanship controlled the remotest details of the craft. Did one of
her gang get to work overnight and carry off a wealthy swag, she had due
intelligence of the affair betimes next morning, so that, furnished
with an inventory of the booty, she might make a just division, or be
prepared for the advent of the rightful owner.
So she gained a complete ascendency over her fellows. And when once her
position was assured, she came forth a pitiless autocrat. Henceforth the
gang existed for her pleasure, not she for the gang's; and she was as
urgent to punish insubordination as is an empress to avenge the heinous
sin of treason. The pickpocket who had claimed her protection knew no
more the delight of freedom. If he dared conceal the booty that was
his, he had an enemy more powerful than the law, and many a time did
contumacy pay the last penalty at the gallows. But the faithful also had
their reward, for Moll never deserted a comrade, and while she lived
in perfect safety herself she knew well how to contrive the safety of
others. Nor was she content merely to discharge those duties of the
fence for which an instinct of statecraft designed her. Her restless
brain seethed with plans of plunder, and if her hands were idle it was
her direction that emptied half the pockets in London. Having drilled
her army of divers to an unparalleled activity, she cast about for some
fresh method of warfare, and so enrolled a regiment of heavers, who
would lurk at the mercers' doors for an opportunity to carry off ledgers
and account-books. The price of redemption was fixed by Moll herself,
and until the mercers were aroused by frequent losses to a quicker
vigilance, the trade was profitably secure.
DRAFT Of A Plan for Beginning ANIMAL SANCTUARIES In LABRADOR BY LT.-COLONEL WILLIAM WOOD (_to be submitted to the Fourth Annual Meeting of the Conservation Commission of the Dominion of Canada in 1913._) I. RECAPITULATION.