118 VOICE AND ''language" OF CHIMPANZEES 



Being put down she protested thus: 



m 



^imsm- 



s t i s d d s -^ 



s 



1^ 



210 



ooh 



ooh 



Again, after her outing, she wanted to be carried, and 

 dimbed by way of Miss M.*s dress, uttering these tones: 



££zrr U ^£^S 



211 ooh 



She was promptly put down, and shrieked her despair: 

 8va 



ah o ah etc. 

 212 i u 



But with renewed determination she cUmbed up again, 

 expressing her feelings in this attractive phrase: 



213 



ooh - ooh - ooh 



Two children came frequently to look at the chimpanzees 

 at the screened end of their room. They always came as 

 though fearing to be discovered, and Panzee seemed to dis- 

 like it. She would stalk by them, the full width of the screen, 

 some twelve or fifteen feet, with her head in the air and her 

 steps emphasized in a manner that seemed to say, ** These 

 are not to my Hking. " 



