142
S C A T T E R B R A I N E D
livestock) were fi lthy manifestations of bourgeois decadence
and had them all killed, proving once again that anyone car-
rying pictures of Chairman Mao ain’t gonna make it with
anyone anyhow. But now, 30 years later, the Chinese taboo
on pets is slowly lifting. In a country
where Big Brother says
you can only have one child, these days he’ll let you have sev-
eral dogs.
✖ ✖ ✖
GERMANY:
Even Hitler had a dog. Blondi was a German
(surprise!) shepherd who slept by Hitler’s bed every night in
his Berlin bunker and probably gave an evil man pure and
unconditional love.
In return for this service, Hitler let her
have a cyanide tablet right before he and Eva Braun ate their
own.
✖ ✖ ✖
THE HIGH SEAS:
Animals aboard pirate ships may have
been well loved, but hard life on the high seas trumps love.
Whole swaths of the Earth’s oceans were dubbed Horse Lat-
titudes, where winds stopped blowing and horses were
slaughtered and consumed. As for parrots, they were kept in
cages and used to bribe port offi
cials in the 18th
century be-
cause their feathers carried considerable value. Oh, and the
bird on Long John Silver’s shoulder? It was an invention of
author Robert Louis Stevenson and would probably have cre-
ated an unacceptable mess for an actual swashbuckler.
✖ ✖ ✖
THE EVERGLADES:
Pet Burmese pythons have long been
“set free” in Florida’s Everglades after reaching unmanage-
able lengths, and the python population in the Everglades
now seems to be self-sustaining. If you fear pythons (and
who doesn’t?), the man to ask for intercession is Saint Pat-
rick. Th
e patron saint of Ireland is
also the man some believe
143
responsible for having thus far kept Ireland a snake-free isle.
All of which brings us to . . .
03
Patron Saints
What You’ve Got:
a lost cause
Whom You Need:
Th
e problem with Saint Jude Th
addeus is
that he was also known as “Judas Jacobi, the most forgettable
disciple,” which sounds a lot like “Judas Iscariot, the guy who
betrayed Jesus.”
Both were disciples, but J.T. did
not
betray J.C.
for 30 lousy pieces of silver. Early Christians didn’t understand
that the slight diff erence in name represented a large diff er-
ence in piousness, and thus devotion to Saint Jude became a
hopeless cause, making Jude the patron saint of lost causes.
And while he may have gotten no love in the fi rst couple centu-
ries of the Common Era, Jude has made a remarkable come-
back. Besides being regularly thanked in newspaper classifi ed
ads throughout the world, the saint of last resort has also been
the subject of two recent biographies.
✖ ✖ ✖
What You’ve Got:
hemorrhoids
Whom You Need:
Saint Fiacre, a seventh-century Irish
monk renowned for his power to heal people by laying his
hands on them. Of course, this
makes us loath to imagine
how and why he came to be the patron saint of hemorrhoids.
But Fiacre was something of a misogynist. He never allowed
women into his hermitage or his chapel, and it’s said that
centuries after his death, in 1620, a woman from Paris was
driven mad after entering into his sacred space. Whether or
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