<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</SPAN></span>
<h2 class="nobreak">V<br/> <span class="xlarge">THE BEAVER</span><br/> <span class="large">“THE BEST BUILDER”</span></h2>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="ph2">THE BEST BUILDER</p>
<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap">Out</span> in the woods rain was pouring
down steadily from the black sky.
It beat against the leaves and trickled
over the trunks of the trees and spattered into
the pond. Now and then a flash of lightning
glimmered over the water and twinkled in
through the hole at the top of the little round
house where the beavers lived.</p>
<p>From the outside this house looked like a
heap of old brush-wood on a tiny island in
the middle of the pond. But inside of it there
was a little room, like a cave, with a smooth
floor and an arched roof. Along the sides of
this room there were five beds of leaves and
grass. On one of these beds lay three baby
beavers fast asleep in the dark.</p>
<p>The other beds were all empty. The big
one at the end belonged to the father beaver.
Before the babies were born in May he had
gone away for the summer. He had started
off with all the other old fathers in the beaver<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</SPAN></span>
village to have a good time in the woods up
the brook. They played and feasted on roots
and plants, while the mother beavers stayed
home to take care of the babies.</p>
<p>The other three beds belonged to the mother
and to her two older children. On this rainy
summer night they had gone out to eat their
supper under the trees by the pond.</p>
<p>Suddenly the three baby beavers opened
their eyes with a start, and rolled off their bed.
They had been awakened by the sound of a
loud whack on the water outside. It was a
noise made by the mother’s flat tail as she
dived down toward the door of her house.
Her front hall was a tunnel that led from
the bottom of the pond to the floor of the
dark little room. Through this she went
swimming, while the waves bubbled and
splashed around her.</p>
<p>When the babies saw her round head poke
up through the door in the floor they squeaked
and ran to meet her. She was carrying a
bundle of small sticks between her chin and
her fore-paw. Each little beaver sat up on
his hind-legs, with his tail propping him steady
from behind. Then he took one of the sticks<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</SPAN></span>
in his hands and began to nibble the bark with
his new yellow teeth.</p>
<p>They were wonderful teeth. After the
babies were too old to live on milk, four
curved teeth grew out in the front of each
little mouth. Two were in the upper jaw and
two in the lower jaw. It was the strangest
thing! The more these teeth gnawed the
sharper they became. The inner side of each
tooth was softer than the outer side. In biting
together, the inner edge wore down faster,
and left the outer edge as sharp as a knife.</p>
<p>The beaver belongs to the <i>Order of
Gnawers</i>. Squirrels and rabbits and rats and
many other mammals belong to this order.
They all have these chisel-shaped front teeth,
which keep on growing all their lives long.
If any one of them is too lazy to gnaw every
day his teeth grow so long that he cannot bite
anything at all. Beavers are the largest of
the gnawing animals, except the water-hog of
South America. They have stronger teeth
than any of the others.</p>
<p>Not long after this stormy night the mother
beaver decided to take the three babies out
with her into the woods. She chose another<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</SPAN></span>
rainy evening because then their enemies were
not likely to be wandering under the dripping
trees. Bears and foxes and wild-cats hate to
get wet, but beavers enjoy feeling the cool
water trickle over their fur and splash on their
tails.</p>
<p>Except for their broad, flat tails, the three
little beavers looked like rats covered with silky
brown fur. The mother seemed like a giant
rat, about three feet long from her round nose
to the root of her tail. Instead of fur her
tail was covered with thick skin. This skin
was so creased and dented that it looked like
scales.</p>
<p>What an exciting evening it was for the
babies! One behind the other they trotted
down the dark tunnel after their mother. At
first the floor was dry and hard. After a few
steps their feet touched something wet. Soft
mud oozed between the fingers on their fore-paws.
Their hind-feet were webbed up to the
toe-nails, and so did not sink in so deep as
their fore-paws. Beavers are the only mammals
which have webs on one pair of feet, and
not on the other pair. They are half land
animals and half water animals.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>This was not the first time that the three
little beavers had ventured into the tunnel.
More than once before they had crept down
as far as the water and waded about at the
edge. But now they kept right on, splashing
in farther and farther. The water grew deeper
and deeper. In the dark they felt it wash up
to their knees, and then up to their chins, and
finally away over their backs and their heads
to the roof of the tunnel.</p>
<p>Away went the three babies swimming after
the old mother. They held their breaths, and
shut their ears tight. Their small fore-paws
hung down by their sides. They paddled with
their webbed hind-feet, and used their broad
tails as rudders, to send them now this way,
now that.</p>
<p>It seemed the longest time to the last little
beaver before his head popped up into the
fresh air above the pond. He blinked his
light-brown eyes, and winked away the drops
on his eyelashes. Now and then a flash of
lightning glimmered on the trees around the
pond. Of course he did not know yet that
his food came from those tall, shadowy things
at the edge of the water.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Half-way to the shore a round, dark spot
was ploughing through the water, with two ripples
spreading out behind it. It was the head
of the mother beaver. Behind her followed
another head, and then another. The last little
beaver swung his tail around and started after
them. He puffed and sputtered when a wave
washed over his nose. But he did not mind
that at all, because this cool water was much
pleasanter than the stale air in the warm room
at home.</p>
<p>There, under a bush on the bank, he saw his
older brother and sister sitting on their tails,
while they nibbled the bark from some sticks
beside them. When the baby reached his hand
toward the pile they grunted and sniffed at
him. Just then a flash of lightning gleamed
on their long, yellow teeth, and frightened the
little fellow so much that he scampered after
his mother and the two other babies.</p>
<p>They followed a path into the woods. The
father beavers in the village had made it by
cutting down trees and bushes and dragging
them out of the way. It was a straight path,
and more than wide enough for the fattest old
beaver. But the last baby was so much afraid<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</SPAN></span>
of being left behind that he ran without looking
on the ground. He stumbled over two
low stumps, and bumped into a trunk at one
side, before he caught up to the others.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><ANTIMG src="images/i087.jpg" alt="The Beaver" /></div>
<p class="caption"><span class="smcap">The Beaver.</span><br/>
“Across the pond to feast in the woods.” <i>Page</i> 65.</p>
<p>He saw the mother beaver standing on her
hind-legs under a tree. She reached up as
high as she could with her mouth and gnawed
off a branch. When it fell crackling and
rustling she called the three babies to come
and learn how to cut their own sticks to eat.
She showed them how to set their teeth against
the bark, and tear off a chip with a jerk of the
head. Another chip and another was gnawed
out till the branch was cut in two. The mother
could bite through a small stick with one snip
of her jaws.</p>
<p>After that, every night all summer long,
the three babies followed their mother out
through the tunnel and across the pond to
feast in the woods. They ate tender grasses
and roots as well as bark. Sometimes they
went out before dark to romp and play tag
in the pond. The biggest little beaver thought
that it was the greatest fun to push the others
off floating logs. He chased them round and
round, splashing water in their faces and mak<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</SPAN></span>ing
them duck their heads. They enjoyed the
fun as much as he did, especially after they
all scrambled upon the bank to rest.</p>
<p>On land, the biggest baby was too fat and
clumsy to move as fast as the other two. They
danced about on their hind-legs, and pretended
to step on his tail or pull his fur. It was
beautiful fur, so fine and thick and soft that
water could not soak through to the skin.
The babies did not have a coat of coarse outer
hair like the old beavers. When tired of play
they sat up and scratched their heads and
shoulders with the claws on their hairy fore-paws.
Then, after combing their sides with
their hind-feet, they curled down in the grass
for a nap.</p>
<p>There were plenty of other little low houses
in the pond, and in each one lived a family of
beavers. The three babies made friends with
all the other babies. Together they explored
every corner of the pond, from the brook at
the upper end to the dam at the lower end.</p>
<p>Very likely the little fellows believed that
the dam had always been there. But in fact
the old beavers had built it themselves. When
they first came to that spot in the woods<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</SPAN></span>
they found only a brook flowing over a hard,
gravelly bottom. They first cut down a bush
and floated it along till it stuck fast between
a rock and a clump of trees. Next they cut
other bushes, and carried down poles and
branches, till they had a tangle of brush
stretching from one bank to the other. Upon
this they piled sticks and stones and mud, and
then more sticks and stones and mud, and then
still more sticks and stones and mud.</p>
<p>At last the dam was so high and solid that
the water could not flow through. So it spread
out in a pond above the dam till it was deep
enough to trickle over the top and tinkle away
in a little brook under the trees.</p>
<p>Tiny islands were left here and there in the
pond. The old beavers built their houses on
the islands or on the bank. First each mother
and father dug two tunnels from the bottom
of the pond up through the earth to the floor
of their house. One tunnel was to be used
when going in and out during the summer.
The other tunnel led to their winter pantry
under the water. This pantry was to be a
pile of fresh sticks cut in the woods every
autumn.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Around the two holes in the floor the beavers
laid logs and stones in a circle. Upon this
foundation they piled sticks and sod to form
walls and a roof. Then they plastered the
house all over with mud. At the top of the
roof they left a small hole, covered only with
a tangle of sticks. This was for fresh air.
Last of all they swam inside and made the
walls even by gnawing off the sharp ends of
the wood. Then the house was ready to be
furnished with beds of leaves and grasses.</p>
<p>Perhaps during the happy summer the
babies believed that play was the most delightful
thing in the world. But soon the
father beavers came strolling back to the village
to cut down trees for the winter. Then
the little fellows found that work was even
better fun than play.</p>
<p>One night the three babies followed their
parents into the woods and watched them cut
down a tree. The father stood up on his
hind-legs, propping himself with his tail, and
began to cut a notch around the trunk. The
mother helped on the other side. They
gnawed upward and downward, digging out
huge chips with their chisel teeth. The circle<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</SPAN></span>
grew deeper and deeper, till the father’s head
was almost hidden whenever he thrust it in to
take a fresh bite.</p>
<p>When finally the wood cracked and the tree-top
began to sway all the family scampered
away to the pond. They dived for the tunnel
and hid in the house for a while. There was
danger that some hungry wild-cat had heard
the crash of the branches and had hurried
there to catch them for its supper.</p>
<p>As soon as it seemed safe to do so the
beavers paddled out again and trotted away
to the fallen tree. The parents trimmed off
the branches and cut the trunk into pieces
short enough to carry. The father seized a
thick pole in his teeth and swung it over
his shoulders. As he dragged it toward the
pond he kept his head twisted to one side,
so that the end of the pole trailed on the
ground.</p>
<p>The biggest little beaver tried to drag a
smaller branch in the same way. When he
rose on his hind-legs, so as to walk along
more easily, he forgot to brace himself with
his tail. The branch caught on a stone and
tipped him backwards, heels over head. The<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</SPAN></span>
two other babies were rolling a short log by
pushing it with their noses. At the sound of
their brother’s surprised squeals they gave the
log a last wild poke. It seemed to make a
jump over a bump, and then tumbled into a
hole. There it stayed, though they pushed
and pulled and puffed and grunted in trying
to get it out again.</p>
<p>It happened that the father beaver reached
the pond just in time to help mend the dam
with his thick pole. A pointed log had
jammed a hole in the dam. The water was
beginning to pour through the hole with a
rush. If the pond should run dry the doors
of the tunnels would be left in plain sight.
Then probably a wolf, or some other enemy,
would hide there to catch the beavers on their
way from the woods to their houses.</p>
<p>The old father pushed his pole into the
water; then he jumped in, and, taking hold
of it with his teeth, he swam out above the
hole. When he let go the water carried the
pole squarely across the break in the dam.
The other beavers cut bushes and floated them
down to weave across the hole. After that
they scooped up mud and stones to plaster<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</SPAN></span>
the dam till not a drop trickled through the
mended places.</p>
<p>The next work to be done that autumn was
to gather food for the winter. Some of the
trees with the juiciest bark grew too far away
to be easily dragged to the pond. All the
grown-up beavers set to work to dig a canal.
They dug and scooped and gnawed off roots,
and dragged out stones, till they had made a
long canal more than a foot deep. The water
flowed into this from the pond. Then it was
easy enough to float wood from the juicy trees
down to the beaver village.</p>
<p>Even the babies could help in towing the
wood down the canal and across the pond to
the different houses. Some of the wood became
so heavy with soaked-up water that it
sank to the bottom beside the doors, and
could be packed in a solid pile as easily as on
land. Most of the wood, however, kept light
enough to float. Instead of heaping new
sticks on top, the beavers pushed them under
the top branches. Then more was pressed
under that, and more under that, till the pile
reached to the bottom. In the winter, of
course, the top sticks could not be eaten,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</SPAN></span>
because they would be frozen fast in the
ice.</p>
<p>The autumn days were growing frostier
and frostier. After mending the dam and
gathering their woodpiles, the beavers plastered
a last coat of mud all over the outside
of their houses. The mud froze hard and
made the little rooms inside as safe as a
fort, with walls two feet thick. The babies
carried leaves and grasses for their fresh beds.
With a bundle tucked between his chin and
fore-paw, each one hobbled along on three
legs, “working like a beaver,” as the saying
is.</p>
<p>One cloudy night, when the beavers were
busy out in the woods, something soft and
cold began to float down through the chilly
air. The biggest baby felt a sting on his
nose. When he put out his tongue to lick it
he touched only a speck of water. Bits of
white sifted on his fur and melted in drops.
Presently the ground began to look lighter
colored. Something fluttered about his head
and settled on his eyelashes. He winked and
sneezed and squeaked to the other babies.
They had never seen a snowstorm before.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>When they jumped into the pond to paddle
home something sharp and brittle cracked and
snapped in the icy black water. One of the
little fellows caught a bit in his mouth. It
smarted on his tongue and then it was gone.
It was the first time that he had ever tasted
ice.</p>
<p>The next night, when the beavers swam to
the top of the pond, they bumped their heads
against something hard. It cracked all around
them. They pushed on, with the water lapping
at the jagged edges. After they reached the
shore they found it very tiresome to wade
through the snow. Before the night was
quarter past the old father hurried back to
the pond. He was afraid that the ice might
freeze too thick for them to break their way
home again. He arched his back and slapped
his tail on the water with an echoing whack
to call the babies after him.</p>
<p>All winter long the beavers lived quietly in
their little homes under the snow. Most of
the time they slept, each on his own soft bed
in the dark. Whenever they were hungry
they paddled down the tunnel which led to
the woodpile. Gnawing off some sticks they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</SPAN></span>
swam back with the bundles under their chins.
They used the middle of the room for a dining-table.
There they nibbled the bark. Then
they carried the peeled sticks back into the
pond. They did not like to have rubbish left
on the floor.</p>
<p>Sometimes the babies grew restless and tired
of staying still in the room. They swam out
into the pond and moved about under the ice.
They hunted for roots of the yellow water-lily.
It must have been hard to hold their
breaths long enough to dig up the roots and
paddle away back into the house. Once the
biggest baby almost had a fight with one of
his playmates over a juicy root. They pulled
at it so roughly that it was torn to pieces.</p>
<p>So the winter months slipped away. At
last spring melted the ice on the pond. Here
and there in the black water little brown heads
came popping up. They went plowing toward
shore, leaving v-shaped ripples stretching out
behind. Up the banks scrambled the beavers,—mother
beavers and father beavers, big
brother beavers and big sister beavers, and
all the little beavers who had been babies the
year before.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Away roamed the fathers up the brook, to
have a good time travelling all summer long.
The grown-up brothers and sisters started out
to build dams and houses of their own. The
little fellows wandered into the woods to find
their dinners of tender buds and twigs. The
mothers ate the bark from fresh sticks, and
then hurried back to carry milk to the new
baby beavers, asleep on their soft beds at
home.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr class="chap" />
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