baskets suspended around his neck, angering his advisors. Perhaps they were upset because there was little time for such frivolity; Henri III lived in turbulent times, and he was almost constantly involved in religious wars between Catholics (whom he championed) and Protestants.
On the night of August 1, 1589, Henri encamped with his army in Saint Cloud on his way to lay siege to Paris. Before he retired, a monk named Jacques Clement, who had asked to see him, was admitted into his presence. Henriâs favorite papillon, Liline, took an instant dislike to the man, barking so hysterically that she had to be taken from the room. Ignoring her reaction cost the king dearly.
The monk pulled out a knife and stabbed the king in the stomach. Poor Henri III lingered for several days before finally expiring. It was long enough to reflect on the folly of ignoring the warning of his best advisorâand surest judge of characterâtiny Liline.
KEES
THE DOG WHO BECAME
A POLITICAL SYMBOL
Hollandâs unofficial national dog is a fuzzy, medium-sized creature called the keeshond. Used for centuries to guard canal barges, the breed was nearly driven into extinction when it ended up on the losing side of a high-stakes political disputeâthe same dispute, ironically, that gave the breed its name.
In the 1770s, populist forces battled the ruling House of Orange for control of the Low Countries. Their leader was Cornelis de Gyselaer, a man who was constantly shadowed by a furry gray dog known by his masterâs nickname, Kees. The canine, and the breed in general, became the movementâs symbolâa fact that almost spelled doom for the dogs when the House of Orange regained power. Suddenly Kees and all his compatriots were very unfashionable. The poor keeshond (translation: Keesâs hound) was saved from oblivion in the early twentieth century, when the Baroness van Hardenbroek rounded up surviving examples of the rebel dog and formed a viable breeding population. Today the keeshond is popular again throughout Hollandâeven though it isnât recognized there as a purebred.
FALA
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D.
ROOSEVELTâS CANINE MASCOT
Franklin D. Roosevelt was elected president of the United States for an unprecedented four terms, leading the nation through both the Great Depression and World War II. During his decade and a half in office, his most famous, most beloved associate (after his wife, Eleanor) was most likely Fala, a Scottish terrier who brightened the last five years of his life.
Fala came to the White House on November 10, 1940, the gift of one of Rooseveltâs cousins. He was originally named Big Boy, until the president changed it to Murray the Outlaw of Falahill (a reference to a Scottish ancestor), then shortened that mouthful to âFala.â Shortly after his arrival at the executive mansion, the little dog had to go to the vet for treatment of severe stomach trouble. A quick investigation revealed the cause: Everyone on the White House staff, from presidential aides to kitchen personnel, was slipping him snacks. To avoid such problems in the future, Roosevelt decreed that the only food Fala would eat would come from him.
The little dog accompanied the president everywhere. Fala attended the Atlantic Charter Conference in Quebec and talks with the presidentof Mexico in Monterey. Fala was even sucked into a political dustup. During the 1944 presidential election campaign, Rooseveltâs Republican opponents put out a story that, during a tour of the Aleutian Islands off the coast of Alaska, the president had diverted a navy destroyer to pick up Fala, who had been left behind at one of his stops.
This âscandalâ was put to rest on September 23, 1944, when FDR gave what came to be known as his âFala speech.â During a Washington, D.C., campaign dinner, he enumerated the various bad things his opponents had said about him, saving the Fala incident for last. âThese