Mammal Study 249 



the skunk ever hurry? Is it afraid? How does it protect itself from its 

 enemies? Do you think that the skunk's freedom from fear has rendered 

 the animal less intelligent ? 



4. At what time do the skunk kittens appear? Have you ever seen 

 little skunks playing? If so, describe their antics. How is the nest made 

 soft for the young ones ? 



5. How does the skunk benefit farmers? Does it ever do them any 

 injury? Do you think that it does more good than harm? 



6. Describe the skunk's track as follows: How many toes show in 

 the track? Does the palm or heel show? Are the tracks near together? 

 Do they form a single or a double line? 



Supplementary reading Squirrels and Other Fur Bearers, Burroughs. 



Saiv a little skunk coming up the river bank in the woods at the U'lnte oak, a funny 

 little fellow, about six inches long and nearly as broad. It faced me and actually com- 

 pelled me to retreat before it for five minutes. Perhaps I was between it and its hole. 

 Its broad black tail, tipped with white, was erect like a kitten's. It had what looked like 

 a broad white band drawn tight across its forehand or top-head, from which two lines of 

 white ran dow'ii, one on each side of its back, and there ivas a narrow white line down its 

 snout. It raised its back, sometimes ran a few feet forward, sometimes backward, and 

 repeatedly turned its tail to me. prepared to discharge its fluid, like the old ones. Such 

 was its instinct, and all the while it kept up a fine grunting like a little pig or a red 

 squirrel. HENRY THOREAU. 



Few animals are so silent as the skunk. Zoological works contain no information 

 as to its voice, and the essayists rarely mention it except by implication. Mr. Bur- 

 roughs says: "The most silent creature known to me. he makes no sound, so far as I 

 have observed, save a diffuse, impatient noise, like that produced by beating your hand 

 with a whisk-broom, when the farm-dog has discovered his retreat in the stone fence." 

 Rowland Robinson tells us that: "The voiceless creature sometimes frightens tin- 

 belated farm-boy, whom he curiously follow' sicitli a mysterious hollow beating of liis feet 

 upon the ground." Thoreau, as has been mentioned, heard one keep up a "fine 

 grunting, like a little pig or a squirrel ;" but he seems to have misunderstood altogether a 

 singular loud patting sound heard repeatedly on the frozen ground under the wall, which 

 he also listened to, for he thought it "had to do with getting its food, patting the earth to 

 get the insects or worms." Probably he would have omitted this guess if he could have 

 edited his dia^y instead of Laving that to be done after his death. The pattingis evi- 

 dently merely a nervous sign of impatience or apprehension, similar to the icell-known 

 stamping with the hind feet indulged in by rabbits, in tliis ease probably a menace like a 

 doubling of the fists, as the hind legs, w'ith which they kick, arc their only weapons. 

 The skunk, then, is not voiceless, but its voice is weak and attentions, and it is rarely if 

 ever heard except in the expression of anger. 



ERNEST INOERSOL IN "WILD NEIGHBORS. 



