“Now we come to the largest
family of the Rodent order, the Rat family, which
of course includes the Mice,” said Old Mother
Nature, after calling school to order at the old meeting-place.
“And the largest member of the family reminds
me very much of the one we learned about yesterday.”
“I know!” cried Peter
Rabbit. “You mean Jerry Muskrat.”
“Go to the head of the class,
Peter,” said Old Mother Nature, smiling.
“Jerry is the very one, the largest member of
the Rat family. Sometimes he is spoken of as
a little cousin of Paddy the Beaver. Probably
this is because he looks something like a small Beaver,
builds a house in the water as Paddy does, and lives
in very much the same way. The truth is, he
is no more closely related to Paddy than he is to
the rest of you. He is a true Rat. He is
called Muskrat because he carries with him a scent
called musk. It is not an unpleasant scent,
like that of Jimmy Skunk, and isn’t used for
the same purpose. Jerry uses his to tell his
friends where he has been. He leaves a little
of it at the places he visits. Some folks call
him Musquash, but Muskrat is better.
“Jerry is seldom found far from
the water and then only when he is seeking a new home.
He is rather slow and awkward on land; but in the
water he is quite at home, as all of you know who have
visited the Smiling Pool. He can dive and swim
under water a long distance, though not as far as
Paddy the Beaver.”
“Has he webbed hind feet like
Paddy?” piped up Jumper the Hare.
“Yes and no,” replied
Old Mother Nature. “They are not fully
webbed as Paddy’s are, but there is a little
webbing between some of the toes, enough to be of
great help in swimming. His tail is of greater
use in swimming than is Paddy’s. It is
bare and scaly, but instead of being flat top and
bottom it is flattened on the sides, and he uses it
as a propeller, moving it rapidly from side to side.
“Like Paddy he has a dark brown
outer coat, lighter underneath than on his back and
sides, and like Paddy he has a very warm soft under
coat, through which the water cannot get and which
keeps him comfortable, no matter how cold the water
is. You have all seen his house in the Smiling
Pool. He builds it in much the same way that
Paddy builds his, but instead of sticks he cuts and
uses rushes. Of course it is not nearly as large
as Paddy’s house, because Jerry is himself so
much smaller. It is arranged much the same,
with a comfortable bedroom and one or more passages
down to deep water. In winter Jerry spends much
of his time in this house, going out only for food.
Then he lives chiefly on lily roots and roots of
other water plants, digging them up and taking them
back to his house to eat. When the ice is clear
you can sometimes see him swimming below.”
“I know,” spoke up Peter
Rabbit. “Once I was crossing the Smiling
Pool on the ice and saw him right under me.”
“Jerry doesn’t build dams,
but he sometimes digs little canals along the bottom
where the water isn’t deep enough to suit him,”
continued Old Mother Nature. “Sometimes
in the winter Jerry and Mrs. Jerry share their home
with two or three friends. If there is a good
bank Jerry usually has another home in that.
He makes the entrance under water and then tunnels
back and up for some distance, where he builds a snug
little bedroom just below the surface of the ground
where it is dry. Usually he has more than one
tunnel leading to this, and sometimes an opening from
above. This is covered with sticks and grass
to hide it, and provides an entrance for fresh air.
“Jerry lives mostly on roots
and plants, but is fond of mussels or fresh-water
clams, fish, some insects and, I am sorry to say, young
birds when he can catch them. Jerry could explain
where some of the babies of Mr. And Mrs. Quack the
Ducks have disappeared to. Paddy the Beaver doesn’t
eat flesh at all.
“Jerry and Mrs. Jerry have several
families in a year, and Jerry is a very good father,
doing his share in caring for the babies. He
and Mrs. Jerry are rather social and enjoy visiting
neighbors of their own kind. Their voices are
a sort of squeak, and you can often hear them talking
among the rushes in the early evening. That is
the hour they like best, though they are abroad during
the day when undisturbed. Man is their greatest
enemy. He hunts and traps them for their warm
coats. But they have to watch out for Hooty
the Owl at night and for Reddy Fox and Old Man Coyote
whenever they are on land. Billy Mink also is
an enemy at times, perhaps the most to be dreaded
because he can follow Jerry anywhere.
“Jerry makes little landings
of mud and rushes along the edge of the shore.
On these he delights to sit to eat his meals.
He likes apples and vegetables and sometimes will
travel quite a distance to get them. Late in
the summer he begins to prepare for winter by starting
work on his house, if he is to have a new one.
He is a good worker. There isn’t a lazy
bone in him. All things considered, Jerry is
a credit to his family.
“But if Jerry is a credit to
his family there is one of its members who is not
and that is—who knows?”
“Robber the Brown Rat,”
replied Happy Jack Squirrel promptly. “I
have often seen him around Farmer Brown’s barn.
Ugh! He is an ugly-looking fellow.”
“And he is just as ugly as he
looks,” replied Old Mother Nature. “There
isn’t a good thing I can say for him, not one.
He doesn’t belong in this country at all.
He was brought here by man, and now he is found everywhere.
He is sometimes called the Norway Rat and sometimes
the Wharf Rat and House Rat. He is hated by all
animals and by man. He is big, being next in
size to Jerry Muskrat, savage in temper, the most
destructive of any animal I know, and dirty in his
habits. He is an outcast, but he doesn’t
seem to care.
“He lives chiefly around the
homes of men, and all his food is stolen. That
is why he is named Robber. He eats anything he
can find and isn’t the least bit particular
what it is or whether it be clean or unclean.
He gnaws into grain bins and steals the grain.
He gets into hen-houses and sucks the eggs and kills
young chickens. He would like nothing better
than to find a nest of your babies, Peter Rabbit.”
Peter shivered. “I’m
glad he sticks to the homes of men,” said he.
“But he doesn’t,”
declared Old Mother Nature. “Often in summer
he moves out into the fields, digging burrows there
and doing great damage to crops and also killing and
eating any of the furred and feathered folk he can
catch. But he is not fond of the light of day.
His deeds are deeds of darkness, and he prefers dark
places. He has very large families, sometimes
ten or more babies at a time, and several families
in a year. That is why his tribe has managed
to overrun the Great World and why they cause such
great damage. Worse than the harm they do with
their teeth is the terrible harm they do to man by
carrying dreadful diseases and spreading them—
diseases which cause people to die in great numbers.”
“Isn’t Robber afraid of any one?”
asked Peter.
“He certainly is,” replied
Old Mother Nature. “He is in deadly fear
of one whom every one of you fears—Shadow
the Weasel. One good thing I can say for Shadow
is that he never misses a chance to kill a Rat.
Wherever a Rat can go he can go, and once he finds
a colony he hunts them until he has killed all or
driven them away.
“When food becomes scarce, Robber
and his family move on to where it is more plentiful.
Often they make long journeys, a great number of
them together, and do not hesitate to swim a stream
that may be in their path.”
“I’ve never seen Robber,”
said Peter. “What kind of a tail does
he have?”
“I might have known you would
ask that,” laughed Old Mother Nature. “It
is long and slim and has no hair on it. His fur
is very coarse and harsh and is brown and gray.
He has a close relative called the Black Rat.
But the latter is smaller and has been largely driven
out of the country by his bigger cousin. Now
I guess this is enough about Robber. He is bad,
all bad, and hasn’t a single friend in all the
Great World.”
“What a dreadful thing—not
to have a single friend,” said Happy Jack.
“It is dreadful, very dreadful,”
replied Old Mother Nature. “But it is
wholly his own fault. It shows what happens when
one becomes dishonest and bad at heart. The
worst of it is Robber doesn’t care. To-morrow
I’ll tell you about some of his cousins who are
not bad.