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<h1>Wilderness Babies</h1>
<p><small>By</small><br/>
Julia Augusta Schwartz</p>
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</SPAN></span>
<h2 class="nobreak">INTRODUCTION</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">This</span> book tells the stories of some of the baby
mammals of the wilderness,—how they grow
and learn day by day to take care of themselves.
In hollow trees or down under water among
the lily leaves, in the cool sea or on the rugged
mountains, on the grassy plains or among the
waving tree-tops, in the dark caves and burrows
or hidden in the tangles underfoot,—all the
world is alive with young creatures.</p>
<p>Bright eyes glitter and small paws patter,
little noses sniff the air and sharp ears twitch.
There is a rustling of leaves above and a crackling
of twigs below, a splashing in the swamp
and a silent bending of the grasses. In the
sunshine or the rain, in the daytime or at night,
life is busy everywhere on this beautiful old
earth.</p>
<p>All the mammals are alike in having hair
on some part of their bodies, in having teeth
at some time in their lives, and in feeding the
young with milk. But there are many, many
kinds of mammals, of different shapes and sizes<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[Pg x]</SPAN></span>
and colors. There are all sorts of babies, from
the tiny mouse that could sleep in an eggshell
to the big baby whale, twice as long as an ox.
Some can swim like fishes; others can fly like
birds. Some dig homes under the ground;
others make their nests in hollow trees or caves.
Some live in the mountains and some on the
plains. Some live in the woods and some in
the sea. Some eat grass, and others eat flesh;
some eat nuts, some eat fruit, and some eat
anything they can find.</p>
<p>Many of the mammals are alike in some
ways. Squirrels and mice have strong teeth
to gnaw with; the cow and elk eat grass and
chew a cud, and the bear, wolf, and fox eat
flesh.</p>
<p>Those mammals that are most alike are said
to belong to the same order. For example,
every animal with hoofs belongs to the Order
of Hoofed Mammals. Every animal with four
gnawing teeth in the front of its mouth belongs
to the Order of Gnawing Mammals. Every
animal that lives on flesh belongs to the Order
of Flesh-Eating Mammals.</p>
<p>There are eleven of these groups, but the
animals of North America belong to only eight
of them. All the animals in the first group
have pouches or pockets, of their own skin, in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[Pg xi]</SPAN></span>
which to carry the young. The opossum belongs
to this Order of Pouched Mammals.
When he is a baby he is carried around in his
mother’s furry pocket. Later he learns to hang
by his feet and tail to a branch while he eats
fruit. At night he trots through the woods
and roots for insects with his pointed nose.</p>
<p>The manatee belongs to the Order of Sea-Cows.
Sea-Cows are fishlike creatures that
eat vegetable food in the sea or in rivers. The
fat baby manatee lies in his mother’s arms as
she balances herself on the end of her tail in
the water. He learns to crawl about on the
sandy bottom and munch water-plants.</p>
<p>The whale belongs to the Order of Whales.
Though he lives in the deep ocean and looks
like a monstrous fish, he is really a mammal.
He has warm blood and a few bristles for hair.
The baby whale is fed on milk at first. When
he grows older he is taught to catch and eat
water animals.</p>
<p>The wapiti, called the American elk, belongs
to the Order of Hoofed Four-Foots. They
eat grass and chew the cud. The story of an
elk roaming over the mountains is almost the
same as the story of any of the swift deer
family.</p>
<p>The beaver and the squirrel and the rabbit<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[Pg xii]</SPAN></span>
belong to the Order of Gnawers. The beaver
cuts down trees with his strong teeth, and
builds dams and houses of sticks. The squirrel
scampers along the branches, and sits up to
nibble nuts in the shadow of his own bushy
tail. The rabbit scuttles over the ground from
one hiding-place to another, in his daily search
for green grass and tender twigs to eat. Rats
and mice are also Gnawers. Indeed, there are
many more animals in this Order than in any
of the others.</p>
<p>The bear and the wolf and the fox belong
to the Order of Flesh Eaters. They are all
mighty hunters. The swift wolf, the tricky
fox, and the strong-armed bear all have many
long, cutting teeth to tear their prey to pieces.</p>
<p>The mole belongs to the Order of Insect-Eaters.
He lives underground, and learns to
dig with his shovel-like hands. When his
pointed teeth grow out he chases worms up
and down and around, and gobbles them as
fast as he can.</p>
<p>The bats belong to the Order of Wing-Handed
Mammals. The baby bat is rocked
to sleep in his mother’s wings. He learns to
fly in the dark and to hunt the swift insects
that hover above the roads and ponds. When
winter is near he finds a gloomy cave. There<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">[Pg xiii]</SPAN></span>
he hangs, head downward, by the hooks on
his claws, and sleeps till spring brings the
warm weather again.</p>
<p>It is now countless years since the earth was
new. It has changed from a bare, hot gloomy
ball, covered with black rocks and muddy
water, to a green, beautiful world. There are
all kinds of living things in the ocean. In the
forests insects hum above the flowers; birds
fly from branch to branch; reptiles crawl
beside the rivers. And everywhere—in the
air and beneath the ground, on the land and
under the water—live the mammals.</p>
<p>The opossum is the one with a pocket. The
manatee is the only eater of grass in the sea.
The whale is the biggest of all animals. The
elk is the handsomest of the swift deer family.
The beaver is the best builder. The squirrel
has the prettiest tail. The rabbit is the most
hunted by all its hungry enemies. The bear
is the surliest one. The wolf is the fiercest.
The fox is the shrewdest. The mole can dig
better and faster than any of the others.</p>
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