As the moon swung clear of the pointed
fir tops and shone full upon a tall spruce tree in
the wilderness, a dark object, looking not unlike a
great bird’s nest upon one of the branches, suddenly
came to life. Kagh, the porcupine, had awakened
from his dreamless slumber and, though scarce two
hours had elapsed since his last satisfying meal upon
tender poplar shoots, he decided that it was time
to eat. With a dry rustling of quills and scratching
of sharp claws upon the bark, he scrambled clumsily
down the tree. Then, with an air of calm fearlessness
which few of the wilderness folk can assume, he set
off toward the east, his short legs moving slowly
and awkwardly as if unaccustomed to travel upon the
ground.
Now, when Kagh left the spruce tree,
it seemed he had in mind a definite goal; yet he had
not gone far when his movements took on the aimlessness
characteristic of most of a porcupine’s wanderings.
Here and there he paused to browse upon a young willow
shoot or to sniff inquiringly at the base of some
great tree. Once he turned sharply aside to poke
an inquisitive nose into a prostrate, hollow log,
where a meal of fat white grubs rewarded his search.
Kagh emerged from the thick, tangled
underbrush upon a faint trail, invisible to all save
the keen eyes of the forest folk. Here travel
was easier and he made better time, though it could
not be said that he hurried. He had not gone
far upon the trail when he heard behind him a soft
pad, pad. At the sound he paused a moment to stare
indifferently, expecting to be given a wide berth,
for, though Kagh seldom takes the offensive, even
the savage lynx, unless crazed by winter hunger, will
let him severely alone. This time, however, Kagh
was disappointed, for the newcomer was a furry bear
cub who had never had experience with a porcupine
to teach him wisdom.
The cub stopped and sat upon his haunches
to stare curiously at the strange creature in his
path, while Kagh, incensed by the delay, tucked his
nose under him until he resembled nothing so much as
a huge bristling pincushion. He lay still, his
small eyes shining dully among his quills. The
cub regarded him for a moment; then he advanced and
reached out an inquisitive paw toward the queer-looking
ball. For this Kagh had been waiting. There
was a lightning swing of his armed tail which, if
it had reached its mark, would have filled the paw
with deadly quills. Fortunately, however, the
cruel barbs failed to reach their mark, for, an instant
before the swing, the small bear received a cuff which
sent him sprawling into the bushes, and Mother Bruin
stood in the trail confronting the porcupine.
Kagh, like most of the wilderness
folk, knows that there is a vast difference between
a full-grown bear and a furry, inquisitive cub.
Though he was not afraid, the appearance of the mother
bear was more than he had bargained for, and he immediately
rolled himself into a ball again, every quill bristling
defiantly. The old bear, however, wise in the
lore of the dim trails, paid no more attention to him.
Calling her cub, she shambled off through the bushes,
the youngster casting many a backward glance at this
little, but seemingly very dangerous creature.
Kagh went on his way well satisfied with himself.
As before, he traveled leisurely, pausing often to
browse or to stare at some larger animal upon whose
path he chanced.
Of all the creatures of the wilderness
the porcupine seems the most slow and stupid, yet
he bears a charmed life. In the woods, where few
may cross the path of the hunter and live, the porcupine
is usually allowed to go unhurt. Because he can
easily be killed without a gun, his flesh has more
than once, it is said, been the means of saving a lost
hunter from starvation. As a rule, the creatures
of the wilderness, too, let him strictly alone, knowing
well the deadly work of his quills, which, when embedded
in the flesh, sink deeper and deeper with every frantic
effort toward dislodgment.
Only under the stress of winter hunger
will an animal sometimes throw caution to the winds
and attack this living pincushion. And then his
dinner is usually the price of his life, for there
is no escaping the lightning-like swing of the barbed
tail.
In the course of time Kagh came to
the edge of a tamarack swamp. Here the ground
was soft and spongy. The prostrate trunks of a
number of great trees lay half submerged in lily-choked
pools, beside which stalks of the brilliant cardinal
flower flamed by day in the green dimness. Scrambling
upon one of these decaying logs the porcupine made
his way, almost eagerly for him, far out among the
lily-pads. Kagh reveled in succulent lily stems
and buds, and as he feasted he uttered little grunts
of satisfaction.
Here he would probably have been content
to spend the remainder of the night had not an interruption
occurred. Another porcupine crawled out upon
the same log and proceeded confidently toward the choice
position at its farther end. At sight of Kagh
he paused a moment; then he went on, his quills raised.
Kagh looked up from his feasting, astonished that
any one should thus intrude upon his hunting-ground.
And then on the end of the old log
in the tamarack swamp was fought a bloodless battle,
a conflict mainly of pushing and shoving. Much
to his disgust, Kagh was hustled to the very end of
the log and was at length pushed off, splashing into
the cool water beneath. For a moment the victor
peered down at him with indifferent eyes, then deliberately
turned his back and began to feed upon the lilies,
leaving Kagh either to sink or swim. The latter,
however, was in no danger. Buoyed up by his hollow
quills he soon reached the shore, none the worse for
his sudden bath, save for his sorely ruffled feelings.
For the time being his hunger for lily-pads had been
satisfied but, as he shambled out of the swamp toward
the dryer woods, he grunted complainingly.
A dim light among the trees warned
him of the approach of day, and Kagh looked about
for a place to take a nap. Immediately in his
path a prostrate pine trunk with a snug hollow at
the center offered an inviting shelter, but when the
porcupine poked in his blunt black nose, he found
the retreat occupied. A red fox lay curled in
a furry ball, fast asleep. Even in slumber, however,
a fox is alert. At the sound of Kagh’s
heavy breathing the occupant of the log was instantly
wide awake.
By right of discovery and occupation
the hollow trunk belonged to the fox, but Kagh’s
moral sense was either lacking or undeveloped.
He wanted the hollow. Therefore he set about
securing it in the easiest and most effective way.
By pressing his quills close to his body and backing
into the log, the sharp points presented a formidable
front against which the fox had no protection.
So, as Kagh backed in, the fox backed out, incensed
but helpless. In a very few moments the porcupine
was fast asleep, his conscience quite untroubled.
As the sun rose higher, a bloodthirsty weasel thrust
its pointed nose into the log and glared with red
eyes of hate upon the sleeping porcupine, then went
his way, spreading terror and destruction among the
smaller wood folk.
About noon Kagh awoke and, crawling
to the opening of the log, looked about him.
As a rule the porcupine travels and feeds by night,
but Kagh was a creature of whims and he decided that
he had been fasting quite long enough. Accordingly
he set out in a leisurely search for food, loafing
along the base of a sunny ledge of rock. A meal
of grubs and peppery wake-robin roots left him happy,
but still he rambled on, following his nose and alert
for any new adventure.
Suddenly he lifted his head and sniffed
the air. To his nostrils drifted the faint scent
of smoke, and smoke in Kagh’s mind was associated
with campfires and delectable bits of bacon rind or
salty wood. For the first time since leaving
his spruce tree the evening before, Kagh hurried.
He blundered along the trail in a way which would
have scandalized the other forest inhabitants, among
whom silence is the first law of preservation.
Near the camp a rabbit had crept timidly
from the forest and was sitting erect upon its haunches,
its quivering nose testing the wind, its bulging eyes
missing nothing that went on around it. Kagh paid
no more attention to the rabbit than to the bush under
which it sat. He blundered into the camp, from
which the hunter was absent in search of game, but
the next moment he backed off, squeaking with pain
and surprise. He had walked straight into the
warm ashes of the campfire.
His discomfort was soon forgotten,
however, as he came upon a board saturated with bacon
grease. Kagh’s teeth were sharp as chisels
and the sound of his gnawing could be heard far in
the still air. He ate all he could hold of the
toothsome wood, then started upon a tour of inspection
of the camp.
An open tent-flap drew his attention.
Forthwith he walked inside, knocking down as he went,
an axe which had been propped close beside the entrance.
Kagh sampled the axe-helve and, finding to his liking
the faint taste of salt from the hand of the man who
had wielded it, he succeeded in rendering it almost
useless before his interest flagged. His inquisitive
nose now drew him to a small bag of tobacco beside
which lay a much blackened cob pipe. Whether
Kagh did not care for tobacco, or whether some new
fancy at that moment took possession of him, no one
can tell. At any rate he nosed the pipe from
its place, scattered the tobacco to the four winds,
and then shambled from the tent and disappeared among
the trees.
Ten minutes later he was sound asleep
in a poplar sapling. What the hunter said when
he returned to camp and beheld the work of his visitor
is not recorded.
Kagh’s was a restless spirit.
Moonrise again found him abroad in search of food
and adventure. This time he traveled far for a
slow old fellow. At length he came to the zigzag
fence of split rails which prevented the wilderness
from encroaching upon the clearing of the Hermit.
From the top rail of the fence he
could see the gray roof of the Hermit’s cabin,
silvered with the radiance of the full moon. At
no time was Kagh troubled with bashfulness and now,
under the influence of that flooding radiance, he
decided to investigate the cabin and the clearing.
The fence, ending in a rough wall of field stone, made
a capital highway along which he shuffled happily
until brought to an abrupt halt by the appearance
of another fence traveler. The white quills with
their dark points erected themselves from his blackish-brown
fur until he looked twice his normal size. This
time, however, his armor failed to strike terror to
the heart of the enemy.
Kagh, the porcupine, was scornful
of man and feared but one beast, the one who now advanced
toward him along the wall. That long, silky fur,
jet black save for two broad white stripes running
down the back, and that plumy tail, could belong to
but one creature. The skunk, returning from a
neighborly visit to the Hermit’s cabin, probably
with a view to a meal of fat chicken, advanced with
its usual air of owning the earth. This time
the porcupine did not dispute the passage. Instead,
he curled up and dropped to the ground, whence he
proceeded on his way, complaining peevishly to himself.
All was still about the cabin.
Kagh circled it until he came to the lean-to at the
back that served the Hermit as a storehouse. Here
the animal’s useful nose caught an alluring
scent. The logs of the building were thick, but
patient search was at length rewarded by the discovery
of a large chink. His keen cutting-teeth at once
came into play and the sound of his gnawing, which
carried clearly in the still night air, awakened the
Hermit.
“Only a porcy,” he said
to himself, after listening a moment, and he went
peacefully to sleep, little dreaming of the havoc which
that same “porcy” was to make.
In a very short time Kagh had succeeded
in gnawing a hole large enough to permit his entrance
into the storehouse. Then indeed he found himself
in rich pasturage. The first thing he came to
was a small basket of eggs, a delicacy which he prized
highly. When these were neatly reduced to shells,
he gnawed a hole in a barrel near by and sampled the
little stream of flour which ran out. This was
not to be compared with eggs, however, and after scattering
a goodly quantity about the floor, he finished his
meal on a side of fat bacon. When at last he turned
his face toward the forest, he found that the hole,
which had been a tight squeeze when he entered, was
now out of the question, and he must do some further
gnawing before he could squeeze his fat sides through.
Once in the open he set a leisurely
course toward the borders of the forest, only to be
interrupted by a series of staccato barks as Pal rounded
the cabin and glimpsed the night prowler. Like
the bear cub, Pal had had no experience with a porcupine
to teach him prudence. He felt that the beast
had no business in the clearing and accordingly charged,
barking furiously, only to be met by a round ball of
bristling quills. Pal stopped, clearly astonished.
Then, as the ball lay deceivingly still, he rashly
tried closer investigation, and was met with a smashing
blow from the barbed tail.
Several quills fastened themselves
in the dog’s soft and tender nose and there
they stayed, paining him unbearably. The aggressive
challenge changed to yelps of pain and, as swiftly
as he had charged, Pal retreated to the cabin, vainly
trying to free his muzzle of the fiery barbs.
With his efforts they but sank the deeper. He
suffered agony until his master, aroused by the outcry,
came to his relief. Holding the struggling dog
firmly with both hands, the Hermit extracted the quills
with his teeth. It was a painful process and both
were glad when the last quill was out.
Meanwhile, Kagh continued on his placid
way toward the black forest wall, just beyond the
rail fence. He had fed well and had quickly routed
his enemy. Altogether he considered the world
a happy place for porcupines. In the darkness
which precedes the dawn he took his way to a slender
poplar sapling standing near the border of the woods.
This he climbed as far as his weight would permit
and, seated comfortably on one branch, with his hand-like
paws tightly clasping another, he went peacefully
to sleep, lulled by every passing breeze.