قراءة كتاب Wild Animals at Home

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Wild Animals at Home

Wild Animals at Home

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 5

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  • The six chapters of the Bobcat's adventure 102
  • My tame Skunks 103
  • Red-squirrel storing mushrooms for winter use 134
  • Chink stalking the Picket-pin 135
  • The Snowshoe Hare is a cross between a Rabbit and a Snowdrift 150
  • The Cottontail freezing 151
  • The Baby Cottontail that rode twenty miles in my hat 162
  • Snowshoe Rabbits dancing in the light of the lantern 163
  • Snowshoe Rabbits fascinated by the lantern 170
  • The Ghost Rabbit 171
  • The Coney or Calling Hare 178
  • The Coney barns full of hay stored for winter use 179
  • (a) Tracks of Deer escaping and (b) Tracks of Mountain Lion in pursuit 186
  • The Mountain Lion sneaking around us as we sleep 187
  • Sketch of the Bear Family as made on the spot 198
  • Two pages from my journal in the garbage heap 199
  • While I sketched the Bears, a brother camera-hunter was stalking me without my knowledge 206
  • One meets the Bears at nearly every turn in the woods 207
  • The shyer ones take to a tree, if one comes too near 210
  • Clifford B. Harmon feeding a Bear 211
  • The Bears at feeding time 218
  • (a) Tom Newcomb pointing out the bear's mark, (b) E. T. Seton feeding a Bear 219
  • Johnnie Bear: his sins and his troubles 222
  • Johnnie happy at last 223

  • I

    The Cute Coyote


    I

    The Cute Coyote

    AN EXEMPLARY LITTLE BEAST, MY FRIEND THE COYOTE

    If you draw a line around the region that is, or was, known as the Wild West, you will find that you have exactly outlined the kingdom of the Coyote. He is even yet found in every part of it, but, unlike his big brother the Wolf, he never frequented the region known as Eastern America.

    This is one of the few wild creatures that you can see from the train. Each time I have come to the Yellowstone Park I have discovered the swift gray form of the Coyote among the Prairie-dog towns along the River flat between Livingstone and Gardiner, and in the Park itself have seen him nearly every day, and heard him every night without exception.

    Coyote (pronounced Ky-o'-tay, and in some regions Ky-ute) is a native Mexican contribution to the language, and is said to mean "halfbreed," possibly suggesting that the Coyote looks like a cross between the Fox and the Wolf. Such an origin would be a very satisfactory clue to his character, for he does seem to unite in himself every possible attribute in the mental make-up of the other two that can contribute to his success in life.

    He is one of the few Park animals not now protected, for the excellent reasons, first that he is so well able to protect himself, second he is even already too numerous, third he is so destructive among the creatures that he can master. He is a beast of rare cunning; some of the Indians call him God's dog or Medicine dog. Some make him the embodiment of the Devil, and some going still further, in the light of their larger experience, make the Coyote the Creator himself seeking amusement in disguise among his creatures, just as did the Sultan in

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