Bannertail: The Story of a Graysquirrel

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Bannertail: The Story of a Graysquirrel by Ernest Thompson Seton, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Ernest Thompson Seton ISBN: 9781465628503
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Ernest Thompson Seton
ISBN: 9781465628503
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English

IT was a rugged old tree standing sturdy and big among the slender second-growth. The woodmen had spared it because it was too gnarled and too difficult for them to handle. But the Woodpecker, and a host of wood-folk that look to the Woodpecker for lodgings, had marked and used it for many years. Its every cranny and borehole was inhabited by some quaint elfin of the woods; the biggest hollow of all, just below the first limb, had done duty for two families of the Flickers who first made it, and now was the homing hole of a mother Graysquirrel. She appeared to have no mate; at least none was seen. No doubt the outlaw gunners could have told a tale, had they cared to admit that they went gunning in springtime; and now the widow was doing the best she could by her family in the big gnarled tree. All went well for a while, then one day, in haste maybe, she broke an old rule in Squirreldom; she climbed her nesting tree openly, instead of going up its neighbor, and then crossing to the den by way of the overhead branches. The farm boy who saw it, gave a little yelp of savage triumph; his caveman nature broke out. Clubs and stones were lying near, the whirling end of a stick picked off the mother Squirrel as she tried to escape with a little one in her mouth. Had he killed two dangerous enemies the boy could not have yelled louder. Then up the tree he climbed and found in the nest two living young ones. With these in his pocket he descended. When on the ground he found that one was dead, crushed in climbing down. Thus only one little Squirrel was left alive, only one of the family that he had seen, the harmless mother and two helpless, harmless little ones dead in his hands.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

IT was a rugged old tree standing sturdy and big among the slender second-growth. The woodmen had spared it because it was too gnarled and too difficult for them to handle. But the Woodpecker, and a host of wood-folk that look to the Woodpecker for lodgings, had marked and used it for many years. Its every cranny and borehole was inhabited by some quaint elfin of the woods; the biggest hollow of all, just below the first limb, had done duty for two families of the Flickers who first made it, and now was the homing hole of a mother Graysquirrel. She appeared to have no mate; at least none was seen. No doubt the outlaw gunners could have told a tale, had they cared to admit that they went gunning in springtime; and now the widow was doing the best she could by her family in the big gnarled tree. All went well for a while, then one day, in haste maybe, she broke an old rule in Squirreldom; she climbed her nesting tree openly, instead of going up its neighbor, and then crossing to the den by way of the overhead branches. The farm boy who saw it, gave a little yelp of savage triumph; his caveman nature broke out. Clubs and stones were lying near, the whirling end of a stick picked off the mother Squirrel as she tried to escape with a little one in her mouth. Had he killed two dangerous enemies the boy could not have yelled louder. Then up the tree he climbed and found in the nest two living young ones. With these in his pocket he descended. When on the ground he found that one was dead, crushed in climbing down. Thus only one little Squirrel was left alive, only one of the family that he had seen, the harmless mother and two helpless, harmless little ones dead in his hands.

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book Stella Australis Poems: Verses and Prose Fragments by Ernest Thompson Seton
Cover of the book The Rayner-Slade Amalgamation by Ernest Thompson Seton
Cover of the book The Selected Works of Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. by Ernest Thompson Seton
Cover of the book The Devil: a Tragedy of the Heart and Conscience by Ernest Thompson Seton
Cover of the book The Book of Saints and Friendly Beasts by Ernest Thompson Seton
Cover of the book From Veldt Camp Fires by Ernest Thompson Seton
Cover of the book The Wolf Demon: The Queen of the Kanawha by Ernest Thompson Seton
Cover of the book The Voyages of Captain Scott: Retold from the Voyage of the Discovery and Scott's Last Expedition by Ernest Thompson Seton
Cover of the book Páginas escogidas by Ernest Thompson Seton
Cover of the book The Lady of Big Shanty by Ernest Thompson Seton
Cover of the book The Black Swan at Home and Abroad, or, A Biographical Sketch of Miss Elizabeth Taylor Greenfield, the American Vocalist by Ernest Thompson Seton
Cover of the book The Daughter of an Empress by Ernest Thompson Seton
Cover of the book A Soldier's Daughter and Other Stories by Ernest Thompson Seton
Cover of the book Biography of a Slave: Being the Experiences of Rev. Charles Thompson by Ernest Thompson Seton
Cover of the book In Touch with Nature: Tales and Sketches from the Life by Ernest Thompson Seton
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy