146 INSESSORES. 
cat very plainly, saying, ‘Puss! puss!’ and then 
answers, ‘Jew ;’ but the most amusing part is, that 
whenever | want to make her call it. and to that pur- 
pose say, ‘Puss! Puss!’ myself, she always answers 
‘Mew,’ till I begin mewing, and then she begins call- 
ing puss.as quick as possible. She imitates every 
kind of noise, and barks so naturally, that I have 
known her to set all the dogs on the parade at Hamp- 
ton Court barking; and the consternation I have seen 
her cause in a party of cocks and hens, by her crow- 
ing and clucking, has been the most ludicrous thing 
possible. She sings just like a child, and I have 
more than once thought it was a human being; and 
it was ridiculous to hear her make what one should 
call a false note, and then say, ‘Oh, la!” and burst 
out laughing at herself, beginning again in quite an- 
other key. She is very fond of singing, ‘Buy a 
Broom,’ which she says quite plainly; but in the 
same spirit as in calling the cat, if we say, with a 
view to make her repeat it, ‘Buy a Broom,’ she al- 
ways says, ‘ Buy a Brush,’ and then laughs, as a child 
might do when mischievous. She often performs a 
kind of exercise which I do not know how to de- 
scribe, except by saying it is like the lance exercise. 
She puts her claw behind her, first on one side and 
then on the other, then in fronf, and round over her 
head, and whilst doing so, keeps saying, ‘Come on! 
Come on!’ and, when finished, says, ‘ Bravo! beau- 
tiful!’ and draws herself up. Before I was as well 
acquainted with her as I am now, she would stare in 
my face for some time, and then say, ‘ How d’ye do, 
