In the dusk of early evening, as Peter
Rabbit sat trying to make up his mind whether to spend
that night at home in the dear Old Briar-patch with
timid little Mrs. Peter or go over to the Green Forest
in search of adventure, a very fine, squeaky voice
which came right out of the air above him startled
him for a moment.
“Better stay at home, Peter
Rabbit. Better stay at home to-night,”
said the thin, squeaky voice.
“Hello, Flitter!” exclaimed
Peter, as he stared up at a little dark form darting
this way, twisting that way, now up, now down, almost
brushing Peter’s head and then flying so high
he could hardly be seen. “Why should I
stay at home?”
“Because I saw Old Man Coyote
sneaking along the edge of the Green Forest, Reddy
Fox is hunting on the Green Meadows, and Hooty the
Owl is on watch in the Old Orchard,” replied
Flitter the Red Bat. “Of course it is no
business of mine what you do, Peter Rabbit, but were
I in your place I certainly would stay at home.
Gracious! I’m glad I can go where I please
when I please. You ought to fly, Peter.
You ought to fly. There is nothing like it.”
“I wish I could,” sighed Peter.
“Well, don’t say I didn’t
warn you,” squeaked Flitter, and darted away
in the direction of Farmer Brown’s house.
Peter wisely decided that the dear Old Briar-patch
was the best place for him that night, so he remained
at home, to the joy of timid little Mrs. Peter, and
spent the night eating, dozing and wondering how it
would seem to be able to fly like Flitter the Bat.
Flitter was still in his mind when
he started for school the next morning, and by the
time he got there he was bubbling over with curiosity
and questions. He could hardly wait for school
to be called to order. Old Mother Nature noticed
how fidgety he was.
“What have you on your mind, Peter?” she
asked.
“Didn’t you tell us that
the Shrew family and the Mole family are the only
families in this country in the order of insect-eaters?”
asked Peter.
“I certainly did,” was
the prompt reply. “Doesn’t Flitter
the Bat live on insects?” asked Peter.
Old Mother Nature nodded. “He
does,” said she. “In fact he lives
altogether on insects.”
“Then why isn’t he a member
of that order?” demanded Peter.
Old Mother Nature smiled, for she
was pleased that Peter had thought of this.
“That question does you credit, Peter,”
said she. “The reason is that he and his
relatives are so very different from other animals
that they have been placed in an order of their own.
It is called the Chi-rop-ter-a, which means wing-handed.
How many of you know Flitter the Bat?”
“I’ve often seen him,” declared
Jumper the Hare.
“So have I,” said Chatterer
the Red Squirrel. Each of the others said the
same thing. There wasn’t one who hadn’t
watched and envied Flitter darting about in the air
just at dusk of early evening or as the Black Shadows
were stealing away in the early morning. Old
Mother Nature smiled.
“Seeing him isn’t knowing
him,” said she. “Who is there who
knows anything about him and his ways save that he
flies at night and catches insects in the air?”
She waited a minute or two, but no
one spoke. The fact is there was not one who
really knew anything about Flitter. “It
is one of the strange things of life,” said
she, “that people often know nothing about the
neighbors whom they see every day. But in this
case it is not to be wondered at. I suspect none
of you has seen Flitter, excepting in the air, and
then he moves so rapidly that there is no chance to
get a good look at him. I think this is just
the time and place for you to really make the acquaintance
of Flitter the Red Bat.”
She stepped over to a bush and parted
the leaves. Hanging from a twig was what appeared
at first glance to be a rumpled, reddish-brown dead
leaf. She touched it lightly. At once it
came to life, stirring uneasily. A thin, squeaky
voice peevishly demanded to know what was wanted.
“You have some callers, a few
of your friends who want to get really acquainted
with you. Suppose you wake up for a few minutes,”
explained Old Mother Nature pleasantly.
Flitter, for that is just who it was,
yawned once or twice sleepily, shook himself, then
grinned down at the wondering faces of his friends
crowded about just under him. “Hello, folks,”
said he in that thin, squeaky voice of his.
The sunlight fell full on him, but
he seemed not to mind it in the least. In fact,
he appeared to enjoy its warmth. He was hanging
by his toes, head down, his wings folded. He
was about four inches long, and his body was much
like that of a Mouse. His fur was fine and thick,
a beautiful orange-red. For his size his ears
were large. Instead of the long head and sharp
nose of the Mouse family, Flitter had a rather round
head and blunt nose. Almost at once Peter Rabbit
made a discovery. It was that Flitter possessed
a pair of bright, little, snapping eyes and didn’t
seem in the least bothered by the bright light.
“Where did that saying ‘blind
as a Bat’ ever come from?” demanded Peter.
Old Mother Nature laughed. “Goodness
knows; I don’t,” said she. “There
is nothing blind about Flitter. He sleeps through
the day and does his hunting in the dusk of evening
or early morning, but if he is disturbed and has to
fly during the day, he has no trouble in seeing.
Flitter, stretch out one of your wings so that everybody
can see it.”
Obediently Flitter stretched out one
of his wings. Everybody gasped, for it was the
first time any of them ever had seen one of those
wings near enough to know just what it was like.
Flitter’s arm was long, especially from his elbow
to his hand. But the surprising thing was the
length of his three fingers. Each finger appeared
to be about as long as the whole arm. From his
shoulder a thin, rubbery skin was stretched to the
ends of the long fingers, then across to the ankle
of his hind foot on that side, and from there across
to the tip of his tail. A little short thumb
with a long, curved claw stuck up free from the edge
of the wing.
“Now you can see just why he
is called winghanded,” explained Old Mother
Nature, as Flitter folded the wing. In a minute
he began to clean it. Everybody laughed, for
it was funny to watch him. He would take the
skin of the wing in his mouth and pull and stretch
it as if it were rubber. He washed it with his
tiny tongue. Then he washed his fur. You
see, Flitter is very neat. With the little claw
of his thumb he scratched his head and combed his hair.
All the time he remained hanging head down, clinging
to the twig with his toes.
“Where is Mrs. Flitter?” asked Old Mother
Nature.
“Don’t know,” replied
Flitter, beginning on the other wing. “She’s
quite equal to looking after herself, so I don’t
worry about her.”
“Nor about your babies.
Flitter, I’m ashamed of you. You are a
poor kind of father,” declared Old Mother Nature
severely. “If you don’t know where
to find your family, I’ll show you.”
She stepped over to the very next
tree, parted the leaves, and there, sure enough, hung
Mrs. Flitter fast asleep. And clinging to her
were three of the funniest babies in all the Great
World! All were asleep, and Old Mother Nature
didn’t awaken them. As for Flitter, he
seemed to take not the slightest interest in his family,
but went right on with his toilet.
“Flitter the Red Bat is one
of the best known of the whole family in this country,”
said Old Mother Nature, as they left Flitter to resume
his nap. He is found from the East to the Far
West, from ocean to ocean. Like the birds, he
migrates when cold weather comes, returning in the
early summer. Although, like all Bats, he sleeps
all day as a rule, he doesn’t mind the sunlight,
as you have just seen for yourselves. Sometimes
on dull, dark days he doesn’t wait for evening,
but flies in the afternoon. Usually he is the
first of the Bat family to appear in the evening, often
coming out while it is still light enough to show
the color of his red coat. No other member of
his family has a coat of this color.
“Some people call him the Tree
Bat. After seeing him hanging over there I think
you can guess why. He rarely goes to a cave for
his daytime sleep, as most of his relatives do, but
hangs by his toes from a twig of a tree or bush, frequently
not far from the ground, just as he is right now.
“As all of you who have watched
him know, Flitter is a swift flier. This is because
his wings are long and narrow. They are made
for speed. I want you to know that the Bats
are among the most wonderful of all my little people.
Few if any birds can equal them in the air because
of their wonderful ability to twist and turn.
They are masters of the art of flying. Moreover,
they make no sound with their wings, something which
only the Owls among birds can boast of.
“You all saw the three babies
clinging to Mrs. Flitter. Most Bats have but
two babies at a time, occasionally only one, but the
Red Bat and his larger cousin, the Hoary Bat, have
three or four. Mrs. Flitter carries her babies
about with her until they are quite big. When
they are too large to be carried she leaves them hanging
in a tree while she hunts for her meals.
“Flitter has many cousins.
One of these is the Little Brown Bat, one of the
smallest members of the family and found all over the
country. He is brown all over. He is sometimes
called the Cave Bat, because whenever a cave is to
be found he sleeps there. Sometimes great numbers
of these little Bats are found crowded together in
a big cave. When there is no cave handy, a barn
or hollow tree is used. Often he will creep
behind the closed blinds of a house to spend the day.
“Very like this little fellow
in color is his cousin the Big Brown Bat, called the
House Bat and the Carolina Bat. He is especially
fond of the homes of men. He is a little bigger
than the Red Bat. While the latter is one of
the first Bats to appear in the evening, the former
is one of the last, coming out only when it is quite
dark. He also found all over the country.
“The Silvery Bat is of nearly
the same size and in many places is more common than
any its cousins. The fur is dark brown or black
with white tips, especially in the young. From
this it gets its name. One of the largest and
handsomest of the Bat cousins, and one of the rarest
is the Hoary Bat. His fur is a mixture of dark
and light brown tipped with white. He is very
handsome. His wings are very long and narrow
and he is one of the most wonderful of all fliers.
He is a lover of the Green Forest and does his hunting
high above the tree-tops, making his appearance late
in the evening. Like the Red Bat he spends the
hours of daylight hanging in a tree.
“Down in the Southeast is a
member of the family with ears so big that he is called
the Big-eared Bat. He is a little chap, smaller
than Little Brown Bat, and his ears are half as long
his head and body together. What do you think
of that? For his size he has the biggest ears
of any animal in all this great country. A relative
in the Southwest is the Big-eared Bat.
“All members of the Bat family
are drinkers and usually the first thing they do when
they start out at dusk is to seek water. All
live wholly on insects, and for this reason they are
among the very best friends of man. They eat
great numbers of Mosquitoes. They do no harm
whatever, which is more than can be said for some of
the rest of you little folks. Now who shall
we learn about next?”