Are Cats Really Dragons?

It may not be the most obvious of links, but then, one does not immediately think of ferocious dinosaurs when considering a chicken. Nor does one immediately think of feathers when considering a ferocious dinosaur. Let us review the evidence.

Anatomy
Consider the dragon. (You don’t have one to hand? Imagine, then.) Four legs, yes? Claws, fangs, long lashing tail.
Now consider your cat. (If no cat to hand, consult SPCA, Cats Protection League or similar.) Four legs, claws, fangs, long lashing tail…


What else do we know about dragons’ physiques? Bilbo Baggins tells Smaug he’s always believed “that dragons were softer underneath,” and indeed “there is a large patch in the hollow of his left breast as bare as a snail out of its shell!” Nor is this softness beneath a feature of Smaug only.

Captain Carrot informs Cpl. Nobby and Sgt. Colon in Guards! Guards! that every dragon has a voonerable spot. “You wait till it flies over and then you say, there’s the voonerable spot, and then you kill it.” Clearly, since it is only visible when the dragon flies over, this “voonerable spot” is on the underside of the dragon.

And here, my friends and fellow dracologists, we find the explanation of that long-known and familiar phenomenon, the cat who wants their belly rubbed, but suddenly mid-rub snaps shut about the rubbing hand like a bear trap. The unwitting tummy-rubber has ventured too close to the voonerable spot, and aggressive evasive measures must be taken to prevent discovery of this weakness.

Persian kitten Playfighting
Away from my voonerable spot!
Behaviour

The classic behaviour of the dragon is, of course, the forming and guarding of a hoard. This is generally supposed to be of gold, jewels etc, but other hoards are known (e.g. hoarding books, as in Mercedes Lackey’s One Good Knight; or even fruit, as with this dragon). With cats, the hoarding instinct takes a variety of forms.

Toys under furniture is a popular hoard-form, but cases have been known of tennis-ball hoards, junk-mail hoards, and even cicada-casing hoards – and yes, those are just my cats. Cats don’t always sleep on their hoards, though The Cat is often found sleeping in the box of paper recycling to which her junk-mail contributions are invariably added.

It has recently occurred to me to wonder if the reason why our cats so much dislike sharing a lap with each other (indeed, The Cat will only climb onto a lap which already contains The Kitten if he is concealed beneath a blanket) is that the person to whom the lap belongs is, for the time at least, considered the cat of the first part’s hoard, and the cat of the second part is committing a dreadful solecism by attempting to share it.

Innocence, c 1904, watercolour by Thomas Cooper Gotch
Dis mai human. Get ur own.
The above illustration also depicts another point of similarity – or dare I say, continuity: the habit of sleeping in a curled position. Dragons don’t generally need to curl up as tightly as cats, because the flame-breathing apparatus acts as an internal heat source.

Of course, there are doubtless those who will point out that dragons are more like reptiles in their general appearance (although these are quite possibly people who do not think of T-Rex as feathered). It is true, I admit, that dragons have one or two lizardly aspects. Basking, for example. But is basking any less catly? Run this simple test: have a patch of bright sunlight in your home, and see what arrives to bask in it first: a lizard or a cat.

Basking in sunlight – or indeed by any heat source – is what cats do best, possibly because it reminds them of the far-off days when they could breathe fire. Let us all be thankful that cats no longer have this capability, or it would be even harder to ignore their persistent demands for food hours before dinnertime.

Cat yawning
The last thing you’d ever see…
Habitat
The final pieces of evidence linking cats with dragons relate to the creatures’ preferred habitat. Dragons are famed for living in caves, and cats today show the caving instinct. What, after all, is a cardboard box but a temporary cave? Create a cave from anything – bedding, furniture, boxes – and watch as the irresistible urge of its ancestral habit draws the cat in.

There is also the vexed question of how the cat (or dragon) relates to its environment. Stealthing forth in the night to feast upon small helpless creatures which cannot flee in time? Sounds familiar, does it not? (Just you wait till you find a propitiatory mouse chained to a rock at the end of the garden…) Furthermore, both cats and dragons are noted for being what Sid Meier’s Civilization II called “aggressive militaristic expansionists” – whatever it is, they never have enough.

What do you think? Are you convinced? Will you ever look at your cat the same way again?

Please note: this blog post is provided for your comedic consumption, and is not an accurate reflection of reality. What you may experience after consuming psychoactive substances is also not an accurate reflection of reality. The difference is that enjoying the blog post is legal in all jurisdictions (with a few exceptions such as North Korea).

14 Replies to “Are Cats Really Dragons?”

  1. I tripped on mushrooms last night and saw dragons merging into cats. When I told my boyfriend that dragons are cats he looked at me like i was mad then I just found this to confirm 🙂

    1. You could’ve just read this post – or “The Dragon Tamers” by E. Nesbit (from The Book of Dragons) – and saved yourself the trip!
      Please be careful: a trip (like pride) so often goes before a fall.

  2. I was just making this argument a week ago! I’m glad someone else in the world agrees. Cats are the closest thing we have to dragons.

    1. I thought it was an original argument when I made it, but no, it’s been around a long time, it turns out! Thanks for stopping by and commenting!

  3. I actually made this claim and linked their anatomy, behavior, and habitat a whole 10 years ago myself, hehe, glad to see people are coming out of the shadows of ignorance and realizing deeper truths about the world we live in.

        1. Who can fathom the mind of a cat? Twice already this morning I have had to scold one of my cats for licking a wheat pack as though it was some kind of non-contiguous body part he was grooming.

  4. I’ve been told that hissing is how they breathe fire now. Thankfully it’s much less destructive, though no less terrifying!

    1. Ah! That makes a lot of sense! The question is, are they still expecting fire every time they hiss, and feeling resentfully disappointed that their intended target does not go up in flames?

  5. I don’t know if cats are dragons, but I know for sure that someone decided to put dragon eyes on cats. Lions, tigers, cougars don’t have dragon eyes. Back when they were designing the smaller feline version, they decide to pick in the library the dragon eyes (same used for snakes). I don’t know what it is, but there must be a reason for this.

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