Who is Montmorency and what does the narrator think about him initially in Three Men in a Boat (To Say Nothing of the Dog)?
Montmorency is the dog in the group, a fox terrier. He belongs to J., the narrator, who explains the dog’s background in Chapter II. At first, J. thinks the dog has the look of “an angel sent upon the earth.” He’s so cute, small, and unassuming that you would think he would turn out to be the best behaved dog you’d ever met. J. learned differently when neighbors came to complain about killed chickens and a dead cat. Montmorency had even penned up a man in his own tool-shed, he had behaved so ferociously. So the readers quickly discover that the dog has two sides to his personality. He occasionally contributes something worthwhile during the river trip. In Chapter XIV, he catches a water-rat for George’s Irish stew.
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