Mrs. Strudwarden is very attached to her Pomeranian Louis, though he doesn't demonstrate much affection in return. Strudwarden finds the dog is interfering with his life and determines to get rid of it, with the help of his sister. This is eventually accomplished but in a very different manner than they anticipated.
| Date | Publication | Publisher | Type | Page | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1919 | The Toys of Peace, and Other Papers | John Lane, The Bodley Head | Collection | 49 | |
| 1974 |
|
The Hounds of Hell: Weird Tales About Dogs | Gollancz | Anthology | 100 |
| 1974 |
|
The Hounds of Hell: Stories of Canine Horror and Fantasy | Taplinger | Anthology | 100 |
| 1975 |
|
The Hounds of Hell | Arrow Books | Anthology | 100 |
| 1976 |
|
The Complete Works of Saki | Doubleday | Omnibus | 414 |
| 1982 | The Complete Saki | Penguin Books | Omnibus | 414 | |
| 1993 |
|
The Complete Stories of Saki | Wordsworth Editions | Omnibus | 295 |
| May 1998 |
|
The Complete Saki | Penguin Books | Omnibus | 414 |
| October 1998 | The Toys of Peace, and Other Papers | Project Gutenberg | Collection | ||
| October 1999 |
|
The New Roger Caras Treasury of Great Dog Stories | Bristol Park Books | Anthology | 335 |
| October 2000 |
|
Saki: The Complete Short Stories | Penguin Books | Collection | 414 |