'Bunny, meantime, is wiitchintj just inside tlie next bner-l>iitc-li." 



of such a move. When pressed l)y hunger or 

 lionnded hard, they often take to a rail-pile, and 

 sometimes they grow so bold as to seek hiding 

 under a bain or house. One young buck lived 

 all winter in the wood-pile of one of niy neigh- 

 liors, ]>ecoming' so tame that he fed with the 

 chickens. 



The nearest approach that a ral)bit makes to 

 a house is his "squat," or form. This is simply a 

 sitting-place in the fields or along the woods, that 

 he will change every time he is thoroughly fright- 

 ened out of it. Undisturbed he will stay in this 

 [21.5] 



