A pig’s salvation goes by the book
MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — The message of “Charlotte’s Web” has softened the heart of a farmer who has decided a piggy who posed as Wilbur won’t be going to market after all.
“Charlotte’s Web,” which author E.B. White called “a story of friendship and salvation on a farm,” tells how a clever spider named Charlotte saves Wilbur the pig from slaughter. HarperCollins Publishers wanted photos for an upcoming reprint of the children’s classic, and the pictures were shot last week on John L. Batey’s farm about 25 miles southeast of Nashville.
Batey said he didn’t recollect the moral of the story -- or the potential for publicity -- when he told a reporter the piglet was destined to be sold within the year.
When the prospect of Wilbur becoming pork chops was reported, the phone at Batey’s farm started ringing.
Calls from Canada, Boston, Chattanooga and the publisher in New York urged clemency for the pig.
So now Batey, who has raised livestock for decades, has named the pig Wilbur and pledged to keep him in a specially built pig pad down on the farm.
“I wasn’t going to be the bad old farmer in the book,” Batey said. “I’m going to be keeping him myself.”
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