<h2><SPAN name="RED_AND_BLACK_BATS" id="RED_AND_BLACK_BATS"></SPAN>RED AND BLACK BATS.</h2>
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<div class="verse">Over the houses, in the windows, fluttering everywhere,</div>
<div class="verse">Like Butterflies gigantic, the Bats dive through the air;</div>
<div class="verse">Up and down, hither, thither, round your head and away,</div>
<div class="verse">Look where they wander, coming ever with vanishing day.</div>
<div class="verse ar"><span class="sc">C. C. M.</span></div>
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<p class="drop-cap">BATS are so much alike, especially
those common to this country,
of which there are numerous
species known to naturalists,
that the description of one will serve
for all, with the exception of the
Vampire.</p>
<p>The sub-order of smooth-nosed Bats
is represented in this country by several
species peculiar to America. The
most common in all the Atlantic coast
states is the Red Bat, or New York
Bat, which is a busy hunter of flying
insects, which it follows so persistently
that it frequently flies into rooms in
pursuit of its favorite prey. It flies
rather slowly, but it changes the direction
of its flight very rapidly, and its
movements in the air are very graceful.
Besides this species is the Black Bat,
and several others have been observed
and described, but so far the descriptions,
according to Brehm, have been
principally technical, and little or
nothing is known of their habits, except
that no North American species
seems to be harmful, but the contrary,
as they are all insect-eaters.</p>
<p>The principal food of these Bats
consists of Butterflies, Beetles, Mosquitoes,
and the like.</p>
<p>All Bats sleep by day and fly about
by night. Most of them make their
appearance at dusk, and retire to their
hiding-places long before dawn. Some
species appear between three and five
o'clock in the afternoon and flicker
merrily about in the bright sunshine.
Each species has its own hunting-grounds
in forests, orchards, avenues,
and streets, and over stagnant or slowly
flowing water-surfaces. It is said to
be rare that they fly over open fields,
for the reason that there is no game
for them. In the South they haunt the
rice fields, where insects are numerous.
Their hunting-ground is limited,
although some large species will cover
a mile in their flight, and the Bats of
the tropics fly over much greater distances.</p>
<p>Bats are in general very much averse
to the ground, and never voluntarily
place themselves on a level surface.
Their method of walking is very curious.
First the forelegs or wings are
thrust forward, hooking the claw at its
extremity over any convenient projection,
or burying it in the ground.
By means of this hold the animals
draw themselves forward, then raising
their bodies partly off the earth advance
the hind-leg, making at the same
time a tumble forward. The process
is then repeated on the opposite side,
and thus they proceed in a strange and
unearthly fashion, tumbling and staggering
along as if their brains were
reeling.</p>
<p>It has long been known that Bats
are able to thread their way among
boughs of trees and other impediments
with an ease that seems almost beyond
the power of sight. Even utter darkness
does not apparently impede their
progress, for when shut up in a darkened
room, in which strings had been
stretched in various directions, they
still pursued their course through the
air, avoiding every obstacle with precision.
This faculty has been found
not to result from any unusual keenness
of sight, but from the exquisite
nervous system of their wings.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</SPAN></span></p>
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