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As I sat looking from my
window the other morning upon a red squirrel gathering nuts from a small
hickory, and storing them up in his den in the bank, I was forcibly reminded of
the state of constant fear and apprehension in which the wild creatures live,
and I tried to picture to myself what life would be to me, or to any of us,
hedged about by so many dangers, real or imaginary.
The squirrel would shoot up
the tree, making only a brown streak from the bottom to the top; would seize
his nut and rush down again in the most hurried manner. Half way to his den,
which was not over three rods distant, he would rush up the trunk of another
tree for a few yards to make an observation. No danger being near, he would
dive into his den and reappear again in a twinkling.
Returning for another nut,
he would mount the second tree again for another observation. Satisfied that
the coast was clear, he would spin along the top of the ground to the tree that
bore the nuts, shoot up it as before, seize the fruit, and then back again to
his retreat.
Never did he fail during the
half hour or more that I watched him to take an observation on his way both to
and from his nest. It was "snatch and run" with him. Something seemed
to say to him all the time: "Look out! look out!" "The
cat!" "The hawk!" "The owl!" "The boy with the
gun!"
It was a bleak December morning; the first fine flakes of a cold, driving snowstorm were just beginning to sift down, and the squirrel was eager to finish harvesting his nuts in time. It was quite touching to see how hurried and anxious and nervous he was. I felt like going out and lending a hand. The nuts were small, poor pig-nuts, and I thought of all the gnawing he would have to do to get at the scanty meat they held. My little boy once took pity on a squirrel that lived in the wall near the gate, and cracked the nuts for him, and put them upon a small board shelf in the tree where he could sit and eat them at his ease.
The red squirrel is not so
provident as the chipmunk. He lays up stores irregularly, by fits and starts;
he never has enough put up to carry him over the winter; hence he is more or
less active all the season. Long before the December snow, the chipmunk has for
days been making hourly trips to his den with full pockets of nuts or corn or
buckwheat, till his bin holds enough to carry him through to April. He need
not, and I believe does not, set foot out of doors during the whole winter. But
the red squirrel trusts more to luck.
As alert and watchful as the
red squirrel is, he is frequently caught by the cat. My Nig, as black as ebony,
knows well the taste of his flesh. I have known him to be caught by the black
snake and successfully swallowed. The snake, no doubt, lay in ambush for him.
This fear, this ever-present
source of danger of the wild creatures, we know little about. Probably the
only person in the civilized countries who is no better off than the animals in
this respect is the Czar of Russia. He would not even dare gather nuts as
openly as my squirrel. A blacker and more terrible cat than Nig would be lying
in wait for him and would make a meal of him. The early settlers in this
country must have experienced something of this dread of apprehension from the
Indians. Many African tribes now live in the same state of constant fear of the
slave-catchers or of other hostile tribes. Our ancestors, back in prehistoric
times, must have known fear as a constant feeling. Hence the prominence of fear
in infants and children when compared with the youth or the grown person.
Babies are nearly always afraid of strangers.
In the domestic animals
also, fear is much more active in the young than in the old. Nearly every farm
boy has seen a calf but a day or two old, which its mother has secreted in the
woods or in a remote field, charge upon him furiously with a wild bleat, when
first discovered. After this first ebullition of fear, it usually settles down
into the tame humdrum of its bovine elders.
Eternal vigilance is the
price of life with most of the wild creatures. There is only one among them
whose wildness I cannot understand, and that is the common water turtle. Why is
this creature so fearful? What are its enemies? I know of nothing that preys
upon it. Yet see how watchful and suspicious these turtles are as they sun
themselves upon a log or a rock. While you are yet many yards away from them,
they slide down into the water and are gone.
The land turtle, on the
other hand, shows scarcely a trace of fear. He will indeed pause in his walk
when you are very near him, but he will not retreat into his shell till you
have poked him with your foot or your cane. He appears to have no enemies; but
the little spotted water turtle is as shy as if he were the delicate tidbit
that every creature was searching for. I did once find one which a fox had dug
out of the mud in winter, and carried a few rods and dropped on the snow, as if
he had found he had no use for it.
One can understand the
fearlessness of the skunk. Nearly every creature but the farm-dog yields to him
the right of way. All dread his terrible weapon. If you meet one in your walk
in the twilight fields, the chances are that you will turn out for him, not he
for you. He may even pursue you, just for the fun of seeing you run. He comes
waltzing toward you, apparently in the most hilarious spirits.
The coon is probably the
most courageous creature among our familiar wild animals. Who ever saw a coon
show the white feather? He will face any odds with perfect composure. I have
seen a coon upon the ground, beset by four men and two dogs, and never for a
moment losing his presence of mind, or showing a sign of fear. The raccoon is
clear grit.
The fox is a very wild and
suspicious creature, but curiously enough, when you suddenly come face to face
with him, when he is held by a trap, or driven by the hound, his expression is
not that of fear, but of shame and guilt. He seems to diminish in size and to
be overwhelmed with humiliation. Does he know himself to be an old thief, and
is that the reason of his embarrassment? The fox has no enemies but man, and
when he is fairly outwitted he looks the shame he evidently feels.
In the heart of the rabbit
fear constantly abides. How her eyes protrude! She can see back and forward and
on all sides as well as a bird. The fox is after her, the owls are after her,
the gunners are after her, and she has no defense but her speed. She always
keeps well to cover. The northern hare keeps in the thickest brush. If the hare
or rabbit crosses a broad open exposure it does so hurriedly, like a mouse when
it crosses the road. The mouse is in danger of being pounced upon by a hawk,
and the hare or rabbit by the snowy owl, or else the great horned owl.
A friend of mine was
following one morning a fresh rabbit track through an open field. Suddenly the
track came to an end, as if the creature had taken wings, — as it had after an
unpleasant fashion. There, on either side of its last foot imprint, were
several parallel lines in the snow, made by the wings of the great owl that had
swooped down and carried it off. What a little tragedy was seen .written there
upon the white, even surface of the field!
The rabbit has not much wit.
Once, when a boy, I saw one that had been recently caught, liberated in an open
field in the presence of a dog that was being held a few yards away. The poor
thing lost all presence of mind, and was quickly caught by the clumsy dog.
A hunter once saw a hare
running upon the ice along the shore of one of the Rangeley lakes. Presently a
lynx appeared in hot pursuit; as soon as the hare found it was being pursued,
it began to circle, foolish thing. This gave the lynx greatly the advantage, as
it could follow in a much smaller circle. Soon the hare was run down and
seized.
I saw a similar experiment
tried with a red squirrel with quite opposite results. The boy who had caught
the squirrel in his wire trap had a very bright and nimble dog about the size
of a fox, that seemed to be very sure he could catch a red squirrel under any
circum stances if only the trees were out of the way. So the boy went to the
middle of an open field with his caged squirrel, the dog, who seemed to know
what was up, dancing and jumping about him. It was in midwinter; the snow had a
firm crust that held boy and dog alike. The dog was drawn back a few yards and
the squirrel liberated.
Then began one of the most
exciting races I have witnessed for a long time. It was impossible for the
lookers-on not to be convulsed with laughter, though neither dog nor squirrel
seemed to regard the matter as much of a joke. The squirrel had all his wits
about him, and kept them ready for instant use. He did not show the slightest
confusion. He was no match for the dog in fair running, and he discovered this
fact in less than three seconds; he must win, if at all, by strategy. Not a
straight course for the nearest tree, but a zigzag course, yea, a double or
treble zigzag course. Every instant the dog was sure the squirrel was his, and
every instant he was disappointed. It was incredible and bewildering to him.
The squirrel dodged this way and that. The dog looked astonished and vexed.
Then the squirrel issued from between his enemy's hind legs and made three
jumps towards the woods before he was discovered. Our sides ached with
laughter, cruel as it may seem.
It was evident the squirrel
would win. The dog seemed to redouble his efforts. He would overshoot the game,
or shoot by it to the right or left. The squirrel was the smaller craft, and
could out-tack him easily. One more leap and the squirrel was up a tree, and
the dog was overwhelmed with confusion and disgust. He could not believe his
senses. "Not catch a squirrel in such a field as that? Go to, I will have
him yet!" and he bounded up the tree as high as one's head, and then bit
the bark of it in his anger and chagrin.
The boy says his dog has
never bragged since about catching red squirrels "if only the trees were
out of reach!"
When any of the winged
creatures are engaged in a life and death race in that way, or in any other
race, the tactics of the squirrel do not work; the pursuer never overshoots nor
shoots by his mark. The flight of the two is timed as if they were parts of one
whole. A hawk will pursue a sparrow or a robin through a zigzag course and not
lose a stroke or half a stroke of the wing by reason of any darting to the
right or left. The clue is held with fatal precision. No matter how quickly nor
how often the sparrow or the finch changes its course, its enemy changes,
simultaneously, as if every move was known to it from the first.
The same thing may be
noticed among the birds in their love chasings; the pursuer seems to know
perfectly the mind of the pursued. This concert of action among birds is very
curious. When they are on the alert, a flock of sparrows, or pigeons, or cedar-birds,
or snow buntings, or blackbirds, will all take flight as if there were but one
bird, instead of a hundred. The same impulse seizes every individual bird at
the same instant, as if they were sprung by electricity.
Or when a flock of birds is
in flight, it is still one body, one will; it will rise, or circle, or swoop
with a unity that is truly astonishing.
A flock of snow buntings
will perform their aerial evolutions with a precision that the best-trained
soldiery cannot equal. Have the birds an extra sense which we have not? A brood
of young partridges in the woods will start up like an explosion, every brown
particle and fragment hurled into the air at the same instant. Without word or
signal, how is it done?