EDUCATION
1784–1786
École Royale Militaire
• Studied artillery, which later came in handy. Became fa-
mous in 1795 for using artillery to repel royalist attackers
on the streets of Paris.
PERSONAL
Married great love of life, Joséphine, in 1796. Had marriage with
great love of life annulled in 1810 because she didn’t seem capable
of bearing male heirs. If only empresses had babies in litters . . .
from
PUPPIES
PETS AROUND THE WORLD
PATRON SAINTS
THE OTHER WHITE MEAT
DRUNK WRITERS
DRUNK CHAR ACTERS
DA PL ANE!
OUR WACKY PRESIDENTS
ROCK!
to
STALIN
139
01
Puppies
Before puppy love (the kind that human teenagers experience)
was called puppy love (the fi rst recorded use was in 1834), it was
known as “calf love.” Equally
immature but somehow less
adorable. In fact, the language
of love is always changing.
Why, it wasn’t too long ago
that “fl irting” with a “hunk”
for example, meant something
entirely diff erent than it does
today. Th
e word
hunk
used to
refer to a slow-witted or fat
man, and the verb
to fl irt
origi-
nally meant “to snub.”
✖ ✖ ✖
About dog years: Th
e seven-
human-years-per-dog-year
formula for determining a
dog’s age isn’t the best avail-
able. Th
e fi rst year of a pup-
py’s life is equal to about 21
Taking the Bull
Out of the Bulldog
Bulldogs are so named not be-
cause they look like bulls
(which, you’ll note, they don’t),
but rather because they were
bred for the exclusive purpose
of attacking bulls. In the spec-
tator sport of “bull baiting,”
which dates to the Middle
Ages, a bulldog would bite
into a bull’s nose and then
hang on while the bull bucked
and attempted to gore the dog.
(This is still done today, but
now, with humans, and it’s
called “rodeo.”) For this reason,
140
S C A T T E R B R A I N E D
human years; every succeed-
ing year is equal to about four
human years.
✖ ✖ ✖
Just like many human babies,
puppies are often born with
blue eyes that darken in the
fi rst few months of their lives.
✖ ✖ ✖
As for when it’s safe to neuter
or spay your puppy: Puppies
are generally spayed or neu-
tered between the ages of fi ve
and eight months, but recent
studies have shown that the
operations are safe in dogs as
young as six weeks. And just so you know, some puppies be-
gin humping legs at the tender age of four weeks. (Th
ey aren’t
sexually mature for several months, but it’s never too early to
start practicing!)
owners bred dogs with short
teeth (so they wouldn’t hurt the
bull
too
badly), squat bodies
(harder for bulls to gore), and
a turned-up nose (so they could
still breathe even while latched
onto a bull). Altogether brilliant
breeding, except for one prob-
lem: The bodies of bulldogs
don’t actually lend themselves
to breeding. They’ve been so
selectively bred that generally
bulldogs can no longer do it
themselves—so most bulldog
pups are the product of artifi -
cial insemination.
The Scoop on Poop
It’s an ancient question: Why do puppies, um, eat their poop?
There’s a name for that phenomenon, incidentally—coprophagia,
which we’ll use because it sounds less disgusting than the alterna-
tives. Some veterinary scientists believe that puppies engage in
coprophagia due to mineral defi ciencies and that giving dogs a
multivitamin will address the issue. Others argue that it’s a result of
owners using the old “rub their nose in it” potty-training strategy.
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