<h2><SPAN name="XLI" id="XLI"></SPAN>XLI</h2>
<p class="caption">THE MUSKRAT</p>
<p>A little turning of nature from her
own courses banishes the beaver from
his primal haunts, but his less renowned
and lesser cousin, the muskrat, philosophically
accommodates himself to the
changed conditions of their common foster
mother and still clings fondly to her
altered breast.</p>
<p>The ancient forests may be swept
away and their successors disappear, till
there is scarcely left him a watersoaked
log to use as an intermediate port in his
coastwise voyages; continual shadow may
give place to diurnal sunshine, woodland
to meadow and pasture, the plough tear
the roof of his underground home, and
cattle graze where once only the cloven
hoofs of the deer and the moose trod the
virgin mould, yet he holds his old place.</p>
<p>In the springtides of present years as
in those of centuries past his whining<span class="pagenum">[202]</span>
call echoes along the changed shores,
his wake seams with silver the dark garment
of the water, and his comically
grim visage confronts you now as it did
the Waubanakee bowmen in the old days
when the otter and the beaver were his
familiars.</p>
<p>Unlike the beaver's slowly maturing
crops, his food supply is constantly provided
in the annual growth of the
marshes. Here in banks contiguous
to endless store of succulent sedge and
lily roots and shell-cased tidbits of mussels,
he tunnels his stable water-portaled
home, and out there, by the channel's
edge, builds his sedge-thatched hut before
the earliest frost falls upon the
marshes. In its height, some find prophecy
of high or low water, and in the
thickness of its walls the forecast of a
mild or severe winter, but the prophet
himself is sometimes flooded out of his
house, sometimes starved and frozen
in it.</p>
<p>In the still, sunny days between the
nights of its unseen building, the blue
spikes of the pickerel-weed and the
white trinities of the arrow-head yet<span class="pagenum">[203]</span>
bloom beside it. Then in the golden
and scarlet brightness of autumn the departing
wood drake rests on the roof to
preen his plumage, and later the dusky
duck swims on its watery lawn. Above
it the wild geese harrow the low, cold
arch of the sky, the last fleet of sere
leaves drifts past it in the bleak wind,
and then ice and snow draw the veil of
the long winter twilight over the muskrat's
homes and haunts.</p>
<p>These may be gloomy days he spends
groping in the dark chambers of his hut
and burrow, or gathering food in the
dimly lighted icy water, with never a
sight of the upper world nor ever a sunbeam
to warm him.</p>
<p>But there are more woful days when
the sun and the sky are again opened to
him, and he breathes the warm air of
spring, hears the blackbirds sing and the
bittern boom. For, amid all the gladness
of nature's reawakened life, danger
lurks in all his paths; the cruel, hungry
trap gapes for him on every jutting log,
on every feeding-bed, even in the doorway
of his burrow and by the side of his
house.<span class="pagenum">[204]</span></p>
<p>The trapper's skiff invades all his
pleasant waters; on every hand he hears
the splash of its paddles, the clank of its
setting pole, and he can scarcely show
his head above water but a deadly shower
of lead bursts upon it. He hears the
simulated call of his beloved, and voyaging
hot-hearted to the cheating tryst
meets only death.</p>
<p>At last comes the summer truce and
happy days of peace in the tangled jungle
of the marsh, with the wild duck
and bittern nesting beside his watery
path, the marsh wren weaving her rushy
bower above it.</p>
<p>So the days of his life go on, and the
days of his race continue in the land
of his unnumbered generations. Long
may he endure to enliven the drear
tameness of civilization with a memory
of the world's old wildness.<span class="pagenum">[205]</span></p>
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