Scampering along on his way to school
and thinking of nothing so uninteresting as watching
his steps, Peter Rabbit stubbed his toes. Yes,
sir, Peter stubbed his toes. With a little exclamation
of impatience he turned to see what he had stumbled
over. It was a little ridge where the surface
of the ground had been raised a trifle since Peter
had passed that way the day before.
Peter chuckled. “Now isn’t
that funny?” he demanded of no one at all, for
he was quite alone. Then he answered himself.
“It certainly is,” said he. “Here
I am on my way to learn something about Miner the
Mole, and I trip over one of the queer little ridges
he is forever making. It wasn’t here yesterday,
so that means that he is at work right around here
now. Hello, I thought so!”
Peter had been looking along that
little ridge and had discovered that it ended only
a short distance from him. Now as he looked at
it again, he saw the flat surface of the ground at
the end of the ridge rise as if being pushed up from
beneath, and that little ridge became just so much
longer. Peter understood perfectly. Out
of sight beneath the surface Miner the Mole was at
work. He was digging a tunnel, and that ridge
was simply the roof to that tunnel. It was so
near the surface of the ground that Miner simply pushed
up the loose soil as he bored his way along, and this
made the little ridge over which Peter had stumbled.
Peter watched a few minutes, then
turned and scampered, lipperty-lipperty-lip, for
the Green Forest. He arrived at school quite
out of breath, the last one. Old Mother Nature
was about to chide him for being late, but noticing
his excitement, she changed her mind.
“Well, Peter,” said she.
“What is it now? Did you have a narrow
escape on your way here?”
Peter shook his head. “No,”
he replied. “No, I didn’t have a
narrow escape, but I discovered something.”
Happy Jack Squirrel snickered.
“Peter is always discovering something,”
said he. “He is a great little discoverer.
Probably he has just found out that the only way
to get anywhere on time is to start soon enough.”
“No such thing!” declared Peter indignantly.
“You—”
“Never mind him, Peter,”
interrupted Old Mother Nature soothingly. “What
was it you discovered?”
“That the very one we are to
learn about is only a little way from here this very
minute. Miner the Mole is at work on the Green
Meadow; close to the edge of the Green Forest,”
cried Peter eagerly. “I thought perhaps
you would want to-”
“Have this morning’s lesson
right there where we can at least see his works if
not himself,” interrupted Old Mother Nature again.
“That is fine, Peter. We will go over there
at once. It is always better to see things than
to merely hear about them.”
So Peter led the way to where he had
stumbled over that little ridge on his way to school.
It was longer than when he had left it, but even
as the others crowded about to look, the earth was
pushed up and it grew in length. Old Mother Nature
stooped and made a little hole in that ridge.
Then she put her lips close to it and commanded Miner
to come out. She spoke softly, pleasantly, but
in a way that left no doubt that she expected to be
obeyed.
She was. Almost at once a queer,
long, sharp nose was poked out of the little hole
she had made, and a squeaky voice asked fretfully,
“Do I have to come way out?”
“You certainly do,” replied
Old Mother Nature. “I want some of your
friends and neighbors to get a good look at you, and
they certainly can’t do that with only that
sharp nose of yours to be seen. Now scramble
out here. No one will hurt you. I will
keep you only a few minutes. Then you can go
back to your everlasting digging. Out with you,
now!”
While the others gathered in a little
circle close about that hole there scrambled into
view one of the queerest little fellows in all the
Great World. Few of them had ever seen him close
to before. He was a stout little fellow with
the softest, thickest, gray coat imaginable.
He was about six inches long and had a funny, short,
pinkish-white, naked tail that at once reminded Peter
of an Angleworm.
His head seemed to be set directly
on his shoulders, so that there was no neck worth
mentioning. His nose was long and sharp and
extended far beyond his mouth. Neither ears nor
eyes were to be seen.
Striped Chipmunk at once wanted to
know how Miner could see. “He doesn’t
see as you do,” replied Old Mother Nature.
“He has very small eyes, tiny things, which
you might find if you should part the fur around them,
but they are of use only to distinguish light from
darkness. Miner hasn’t the least idea what
any of you look like. You see, he spends his
life under ground and of course has no use for eyes
there. They would be a nuisance, for the dirt
would be continually getting in them if they were
any larger than they are or were not protected as
they are. If you should feel of Miner’s
nose you would find it hard. That is because
he uses it to bore with in the earth. Just notice
those hands of his.”
At once everybody looked at Miner’s
hands. No one ever had seen such hands before.
The arms were short but looked very strong.
The hands also were rather short, but what they lacked
in length they made up in width and they were armed
with long, stout claws. But the queer thing about
them was the way he held them. He held them
turned out. His hind feet were not much different
from the hind feet of the Mouse family.
Miner was plainly uncomfortable.
He wriggled about uneasily and it was very clear
that he was there only because Old Mother Nature had
commanded him to be there, and that the one thing he
wanted most was to get back into his beloved ground.
Old Mother Nature saw this and took pity on him.
She picked him up and placed him on the ground where
there was no opening near.
“Now, Miner,” said she,
“your friends and neighbors have had a good
look at you, and I know just how uncomfortable you
feel. There is but one thing more I’ll
ask of you. It is that you will show us how
you can dig. Johnny Chuck thinks he is a pretty
good digger. Just show him what you can do in
that line.”
Miner didn’t wait to be told
twice. The instant Old Mother Nature stopped
speaking he began to push and bore into the earth with
his sharp nose. One of those great, spadelike
hands was slipped up past his face and the claws driven
in beside his nose. Then it was swept back and
the loosened earth with it. The other hand was
used in the same way. It was quite plain to everybody
why they were turned out in the way they were.
There was nothing slow about the way Miner used that
boring nose and those shoveling hands. Peter
Rabbit had hardly time for half a dozen long breaths
before Miner the Mole had disappeared.
“Some digging!” exclaimed Peter.
“Never again as long as I live
will I boast of my digging,” declared Johnny
Chuck admiringly. From the point where Miner
had entered the ground a little ridge was being pushed
up, and they watched it grow surprisingly fast as
the little worker under the sod pushed his tunnel
along in the direction of his old tunnels. It
was clear that he was in a hurry to get back where
he could work in peace.
“What a queer life,” exclaimed
Happy Jack Squirrel. “He can’t have
much fun. I should think it would be awful living
in the dark that way all the time.”
“You forget that he cannot see
as you can, and so prefers the dark,” replied
Old Mother Nature. “As for fun, he gets
that in his work. He is called Miner because
he lives in the ground and is always tunneling.”
“What does he eat, the roots
of plants?” asked Jumper the Hare.
Old Mother Nature shook her head.
“A lot of people think that,” said she,
“and often Miner is charged with destroying growing
crops, eating seed corn, etc. That is because
his tunnels are found running along the rows of plants.
The fact is Miner has simply been hunting for grubs
and worms around the roots of those plants.
He hasn’t touched the plants at all. I
suspect that Danny Meadow Mouse or one of his cousins
could explain who ate the seed corn and the young
plants. They are rather fond of using Miner’s
tunnels when he isn’t about.”
Danny hung his head and looked guilty,
but didn’t say anything. “The only
harm Miner does is sometimes to tunnel so close to
garden plants that he lets air in around the tender
roots and they dry out,” continued Old Mother
Nature. “His food consists almost wholly
of worms, grubs and insects, and he has to have a great
many to keep him alive. That is why he is so
active. Those tunnels of his which seem to be
without any plan are made in his search for food.
He is especially fond of Angleworms.
“As a matter of fact, he is
a useful little fellow. The only time he becomes
a nuisance to man is when he makes his little ridges
across smooth lawns. Even then he pays for the
trouble by destroying the grubs in the grass roots,
grubs that in their turn would destroy the grass.
When you see his ridges you may know that his food
is close to the surface. When in dry or cold
weather the worms go deep in the ground, Miner follows
and then there is no trace of his tunnels on the surface.
“Night and day are all the same
to him. He works and sleeps when he chooses.
In winter he tunnels below the frost line. You
all noticed how dense his fur is. That is so
the sand cannot work down in it. His home is
a snug nest of grass or leaves in a little chamber
under the ground in which several tunnels offer easy
means of escape in case of sudden danger.”
“Has Miner any near relatives?” asked
Peter Rabbit.
“Several,” replied Old
Mother Nature. “All are much alike in
habits. One who lives a little farther north
is called Brewer’s Mole or the Hairytailed Mole.
His tail is a little longer than Miner’s and
is covered with fine hair. The largest and handsomest
member of the family is the Oregon Mole of the Northwest.
His coat is very dark and his fur extremely fine.
His ways are much the same as those of Miner whom
you have just met, excepting that when he is tunneling
deep in the ground he pushes the earth to the surface
after the manner of Grubby Gopher, and his mounds become
a nuisance to farmers. When he is tunneling just
under the surface he makes ridges exactly like these
of his eastern cousin.
“But the oddest member of the
Mole family is the Star-nosed Mole. He looks
much like Miner with the exception of his nose and
tail. His nose has a fringe of little fleshy
points, twenty-two of them, like a many-pointed star.
From this he gets his name. His tail is a little
longer than Miner’s and is hairy. During
the late fall and winter this becomes much enlarged.
“This funny little fellow with
the star-like nose is especially fond of moist places,
swamps, damp meadows, and the banks of streams.
He is not at all afraid of the water and is a good
swimmer. Sometimes he may be seen swimming under
the ice in winter. He is seldom found where
the earth is dry. For that matter, none of the
family are found in those sections where there are
long, dry periods and the earth becomes baked and hard.
“The fur of Miner and his cousins
will lay in either direction, which keeps it smooth
no matter whether the wearer is going forward or backward.
Otherwise it would be badly mussed up most of the
time. Altogether these little underground workers
are most interesting little people when you know them.
But that is something few people have a chance to
do.
“Now just remember that the
Shrews and the Moles belong to the order of Insectivora,
meaning eaters of insects, and are the only two families
in that order. And don’t despise either
of them, for they do a great deal of good in the Great
World, more than some right here whom I might name,
but will not. School is dismissed.”