<h2><SPAN name="THE_CONY" id="THE_CONY"></SPAN>THE CONY.</h2>
<p class="ac">C. C. M.</p>
<p>THE specimen of this animal presented
here (<i>Hyrax abyssinicus</i>)
is the best-known of the species.
It measures from ten to
twelve inches in length; the fur consists
of somewhat long, fine hairs, gray-brown
at the base, lighter gray in the
middle portions, merging into a dark-brown
surmounted by a light-colored
tip, the resulting general color of this
combination being a mottled pale-gray.</p>
<p>The Book of Proverbs, enumerating
four animals which it describes as "exceeding
wise," says: "The conies are
but a feeble folk, yet they make their
houses in the rocks." The conies are
mentioned by various writers as well-known
animals in days of remotest antiquity.
They are found in the wild,
desolate mountain regions of Africa
and western Asia, and the variety inhabiting
Syria and Palestine is probably
referred to in the Hebrew text
of the Bible under the name of "laphan,"
which Luther translated by the word,
"rabbit," and in the authorized and revised
versions is rendered "cony."
They inhabit all the mountains of
Syria, Palestine, and Arabia, perhaps
also of Persia, the Nile country, east,
west, and south Africa, frequently at
elevations of six thousand or nine thousand
feet above sea-level, and "the
peaks and cones that rise like islands
sheer above the surface of the plains—the
presence of the little animals constituting
one of the characteristic features
of the high table-lands of northeastern
Africa." It is stated that if
the observer quietly passes through the
valleys he sees them sitting or lying
in rows on the projecting ledges, as
they are a lazy, comfort-loving tribe
and like to bask in the warm sunshine.
A rapid movement or unusual
noise quickly stampedes them, and
they all flee with an agility like that
usual among rodents, and almost instantly
disappear. A traveler says of
them, that in the neighborhood
of villages, where they are also to be
found, they show little fear of the
natives, and boldly attend to their
affairs as if they understood that nobody
thinks of molesting them; but
when approached by people whose
color or attire differs from that of their
usual human neighbors, they at once
retreat to their holes in the rocks. A
dog inspires them with greater fear
than does a human being. When
startled by a canine foe, even after they
have become hidden, safe from pursuit,
in their rocky crevices, they continue
to give utterance to their curious, tremulous
yell, which resembles the cry of
small monkeys.</p>
<p>Brehm confirms the statement of another
traveler, who called attention to
the striking fact that the peaceable and
defenseless cony lives in the permanent
society and on the best of terms with a
by no means despicable beast of prey,
a variety of mongoose.</p>
<p>In regard to their movements and mental
characteristics, the conies have been
placed between the unwieldy rhinoceros
and the nimble rodent. They
are excellent climbers. The soles of
the feet are as elastic and springy as
rubber, enabling the animal to contract
and distend the middle cleft or fissure
of its sole-pad at will, and thereby to
secure a hold on a smooth surface by
means of suction. In behavior the
conies are gentle, simple, and timid.
The social instinct is highly developed
in them, and they are rarely seen alone.</p>
<p>The conies have been regarded as the
smallest and daintiest of all the existing
species of odd-toed animals. Naturalists,
however, have held widely
divergent opinions as to the classification
of the pretty cliff-dwellers. Pallas,
because of their habits and outward appearance,
called them rodents. Oken
thought them to be related to the
marsupials, or pouched animals. Cuvier
placed them in his order of "many-toed
animals," which classification has
also been disputed, and Huxley has
raised them to the dignity of representatives
of a distinct order. Who shall
decide where all pretend to know?</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</SPAN></span></p>
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