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Four Little Bear Cubs
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Melancholy Wahb
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Lessons in Survival
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Coming into His Strength
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Pursued by an Indian
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Wahb's Sixth Year
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What Became of Jack and Miller
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Good Gold
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Everything
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The "Ugly Old Fellow"
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Refuge at Yellowstone
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Baldy Roachback
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Wahb's Last Season
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Part I The Cubhood of Wahb
Four Little Bear Cubs
H
E was born over a score of years ago, away up in the
wildest part of the wild West, on the head of
the Little Piney, above where the
Palette Ranch is now.
His Mother was just an ordinary Silvertip, living the
quiet life that all Bears prefer, minding her own
business and doing her duty by her family, asking no
favors of any one excepting to let her alone.
It was July before she took her remarkable family down
the Little Piney to the Graybull, and showed them what
strawberries were, and where to find them.
Notwithstanding their Mother's deep conviction, the
cubs were not remarkably big or bright; yet they were
a remarkable family, for there were four of them, and
it is not often a Grizzly Mother can boast of more than
two.
The woolly-coated little creatures were having a fine
time, and reveled in the lovely mountain summer and the
abundance of good things. Their Mother turned over each
log and flat stone they came to, and the moment it was
lifted they all rushed under it like a lot
of little pigs to lick up the ants and
grubs there hidden.
It never once occurred to them that Mammy's strength
might fail sometime, and let the great rock drop just
as they got under it; nor would any one have thought
so that might have chanced to see that huge arm and
that shoulder sliding about under the great yellow robe
she wore. No, no; that arm could never fail. The
little ones were quite right. So they hustled and
tumbled one another at each fresh log in their haste to
be first, and squealed little squeals, and growled
little growls, as if each was a pig, a pup, and a
kitten all rolled into one.
They were well acquainted with
the common little brown ants that harbor under logs in
the uplands, but now they came for the first time on
one of the hills of the great, fat, luscious Wood-ant,
and they all crowded around to lick up those that ran
out. But they soon found that they were licking up more
cactus-prickles and sand than ants, till their Mother
said in Grizzly, "Let me show you how."
She knocked off the top of the hill, then laid her
great paw flat on it for a few moments, and as the
angry ants swarmed on to it she licked them up with one
lick, and got a good rich mouthful to crunch, without a
grain of sand or a cactus-stinger in it. The cubs soon
learned. Each put up both his little brown paws, so
that there was a ring of paws all around the ant-hill,
and
there they sat, like children playing 'hands,' and
each licked first the right and then the left paw, or
one cuffed his brother's ears for licking a paw that
was not his own, till the ant-hill was cleared out and
they were ready for a change.
Ants are sour food and made the Bears thirsty, so the
old one led down to the river. After they had drunk as
much as they wanted, and dabbled their feet, they
walked down the bank to a pool, where the old one's
keen eye caught sight of a number of Buffalo-fish
basking on the bottom. The water was very low, mere
pebbly rapids between these deep holes, so Mammy said
to the little ones:
"Now you all sit there on the bank and learn something
new."
First she went to the lower end
of the pool and stirred up a cloud of mud which hung in
the still water, and sent a long tail floating like a
curtain over the rapids just below. Then she went
quietly round by land, and sprang into the upper end of
the pool with all the noise she could. The fish had
crowded to that end, but this sudden attack sent them
off in a panic, and they dashed blindly into the
mud-cloud. Out of fifty fish there is always a good
chance of some being fools, and half a dozen of these
dashed through the darkened water into the current, and
before they knew it they were struggling over the
shingly shallow. The old Grizzly jerked them out to the
bank, and the little ones rushed
noisily on these funny, short snakes that could not get
away, and gobbled and gorged till their little bellies
looked like balloons.
They had eaten so much now, and the sun was so hot,
that all were quite sleepy. So the Mother-bear led them
to a quiet little nook, and as soon as she lay down,
though they were puffing with heat, they all snuggled
around her and went to sleep, with their little brown
paws curled in, and their little black noses tucked
into their wool as though it were a very cold day.
After an hour or two they began to yawn and stretch
themselves, except little Fuzz, the smallest; she
poked out her sharp nose for a moment, then snuggled
back
between her Mother's great arms,
for she was a gentle, petted little thing. The largest,
the one afterward known as Wahb, sprawled over on his
back and began to worry a root that stuck up, grumbling
to himself as he chewed it, or slapped it with his paw
for not staying where he wanted it.
Presently Mooney, the mischief, began tugging at
Frizzle's ears, and got his own well boxed. They
clenched for a tussle; then, locked in at
tight, little grizzly yellow ball, they sprawled over
and over on thegrass, and, before they knew it, down a
bank, and away out of sight toward the river.
Almost immediately there was an outcry of yells for
help from the
little wrestlers. There could be no mistaking the real
terror in their voices. Some dreadful danger was
threatening.
Up jumped the gentle Mother, changed into a perfect
demon, and over the bank in time to see a huge
Range-bull make a deadly charge at what he doubtless
took for a yellow dog. In a moment all would have been
over with Frizzle, for he had missed his footing on the
bank; but there was a thumping of heavy feet, a roar
that startled even the great Bull, and, like a huge
bounding ball of yellow fur, Mother Grizzly was upon
him. Him! the monarch of the herd, the master of all
these plains, what had he to fear? He bellowed his deep
war-cry, and
charged to pin the old one to the bank; but as he bent
to tear her with his shining horns, she dealt him a
stunning blow, and before he could recover she was on
his shoulders, raking the flesh from his ribs with
sweep after sweep of her terrific claws.
The Bull roared with rage, and plunged and reared,
dragging Mother Grizzly with him; then, as he hurled
heavily off the slope, she let go to save herself, and
the Bull rolled down into the river.
This was a lucky thing for him, for the Grizzly did not
want to follow him there; so he waded out on the other
side, and bellowing with fury and pain, slunk off to
join the herd to which he belonged.
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