<h2><SPAN name="V" id="V"></SPAN>V</h2>
<p class="caption">THE MINK</p>
<p>This little fur-bearer, whose color has
been painted darker than it is, singularly
making his name proverbial for blackness,
is an old acquaintance of the angler
and the sportsman, but not so familiar
to them and the country boy as it was
twoscore years ago.</p>
<p>It was a woeful day for the tribe of
the mink when it became the fashion for
other folk to wear his coat, which he
could only doff with the subtler garment
of life.</p>
<p>Throughout the term of his exaltation
to the favor of fashion, he was lain
in wait for at his own door and on his
thoroughfares and by-paths by the traps,
dead-falls, and guns of professional and
amateur trappers and hunters, till the
fate of his greater cousin the otter
seemed to overtake him. But the fickle
empress who raised him to such perilous<span class="pagenum">[23]</span>
estate, changing her mood, thrust him
down almost to his old ignoble but safer
rank, just in time to avert the impending
doom of extermination. Once more the
places that knew him of old, know him
again.</p>
<p>In the March snow you may trace the
long span of his parallel footprints where,
hot with the rekindled annual fire of love,
he has sped on his errant wooing, turning
not aside for the most tempting bait,
halting not for rest, hungering only for
a sweetheart, wearied with nothing but
loneliness. Yet weary enough would
you be if you attempted to follow the
track of but one night's wandering along
the winding brook, through the tangle
of windfalls, and across the rugged ledges
that part stream from stream. When
you go fishing in the first days of summer,
you may see the fruits of this early
springtide wooing in the dusky brood
taking their primer-lesson in the art that
their primogenitors were adepts in before
yours learned it. How proud one
baby fisher is of his first captured minnow,
how he gloats over it and defends<span class="pagenum">[24]</span>
his prize from his envious and less fortunate
brothers.</p>
<p>When summer wanes, they will be a
scattered family, each member shifting
for himself. Some still haunt the alder
thicket where they first saw light, whose
netted shadows of bare branches have
thickened about them to continued
shade of leafage, in whose midday twilight
the red flame of the cardinal flower
burns as a beacon set to guide the dusky
wanderer home. Others have adventured
far down the winding brook to
the river, and followed its slowing current,
past rapids and cataract, to where
it crawls through the green level of
marshes beloved of water fowl and of
gunners, whose wounded victims, escaping
them, fall an easy prey to the lurking
mink.</p>
<p>Here, too, in their season are the
tender ducklings of wood duck, teal, and
dusky duck, and, all the year round, fat
muskrats, which furnish for the price of
conquest a banquet that the mink most
delights in.</p>
<p>In the wooded border are homes ready
builded for him under the buttressed<span class="pagenum">[25]</span>
trunks of elms, or in the hollow boles of
old water maples, and hidden pathways
through fallen trees and under low green
arches of ferns.</p>
<p>With such a home and such bountiful
provision for his larder close at hand,
what more could the heart and stomach
of mink desire? Yet he may not be satisfied,
but longs for the wider waters of
the lake, whose translucent depths reveal
to him all who swim beneath him, fry innumerable;
perch displaying their scales
of gold, shiners like silver arrows shot
through the green water, the lesser bass
peering out of rocky fastnesses, all attainable
to this daring fisher, but not his
great rivals, the bronze-mailed bass and
the mottled pike, whose jaws are wide
enough to engulf even him.</p>
<p>Here, while you rest on your idle oar
or lounge with useless rod, you may see
him gliding behind the tangled net of
cedar roots, or venturing forth from a
cranny of the rocks down to the brink,
and launching himself so silently that
you doubt whether it is not a flitting
shadow till you see his noiseless wake<span class="pagenum">[26]</span>
breaking the reflections lengthening out
behind him.</p>
<p>Of all swimmers that breathe the free
air none can compare with him in swiftness
and in a grace that is the smooth
and even flow of the poetry of motion.
Now he dives, or rather vanishes from
the surface, nor reappears till his wake
has almost flickered out.</p>
<p>His voyage accomplished, he at once
sets forth on exploration of new shores
or progress through his established domain,
and vanishes from sight before
his first wet footprints have dried on the
warm rock where he landed.</p>
<p>You are glad to have seen him, thankful
that he lives, and you hope that,
sparing your chickens and your share of
trout, partridges, and wild ducks, he too
may be spared from the devices of the
trapper to fill his appointed place in the
world's wildness.<span class="pagenum">[27]</span></p>
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