Little Cyclone: The Story of a Grizzly Cub By
William Temple Hornaday (Source TN Textbook)
We find little kids hugging their
teddies and not parting from them even when they sleep. Perhaps the warm and
furry appearance of the bear attracts them and offers them comfort.They love
the doll so much that they spend their time feeding it, dressing it up and
holding it to their bosom.
Little kids cry when they are separated
from their mothers. Mothers too would not allow their children to be taken away
from them.
How do you think animals would behave when they are isolated
from their families?
Here is an
interesting story of a young grizzly bear which proved its strength and grit,
not wishing to be cowed down or dominated by other bigger bears.
Little Cyclone
is a grizzly cub from Alaska, who earned his name by the vigour of his
resistance to ill-treatment. When his mother was fired at, on a timbered
hillside facing Chilkat River, he and his brother ran away as fast as their
stumpy little legs could carry them. When they crept where they had last seen
her, they thought her asleep;
and cuddling up close against her yet warm body they slept peacefully until
morning.
Before the early morning sun had
reached their side of the mountains, the two orphans were awakened by the rough
grasp of human hands. Valiantly they bit and scratched, and bawled aloud with
rage. One of them made a fight so fierce and terrible that his nervous captor
let him go, and that one is still on the Chilkoot.
Although the other cub fought just as
desperately, his captor seized him by the hind legs, dragged him backwards,
occasionally swung him around his head, and kept him generally engaged until
ropes were procured for binding him. When finally established, with collar, chain
and post, in the rear of the saloon in Porcupine City, two-legged animals less
intelligent than himself frequently and violently prodded the little grizzly
with a long pole "to see him fight." Barely in time to save him from
insanity, little Cyclone was rescued by the friendly hands of the Zoological
Society's field agent, placed in a comfortable box, freed from all annoyance,
and shipped to New York.
He was at
that time as droll and roguish-looking a grizzly cub as ever stepped. In a
grizzly-gray full moon of fluffy hair, two big black eyes sparkled like jet
beads, behind a pudgy little nose, absurdly short for a bear. Excepting for his
high shoulders, he was little more than a big bale of gray fur set up on four
posts of the same material.
But his claws were formidable, and he had
the true grizzly spirit.
The Bears' Nursery at the New York
Zoological Park is a big yard with a shade tree, a tree to climb, a swimming
pool, three sleeping dens, and a rock cliff. It never contains fewer than six
cubs, and sometimes eight.
Naturally, it
is a good test of courage and temper to turn a new bear into that roistering
crowd. Usually a newcomer is badly scared during his first day in the Nursery,
and very timid during the next. But grizzlies are different. They are born full
of courage and devoid of all sense of
fear.
When little Cyclone's travelling box
was opened, and he found himself free in the Nursery, he stalked deliberately
to the centre of the stage, halted, and calmly looked about him. His air and
manner said as plainly as English: "I'm a grizzly from Alaska, and I've
come to stay. If any of you fellows think there is anything coming to you from
me, come and take it."
Little Czar, a very saucy but
good-natured European brown bear cub, walked up and aimed a sample blow at
Cyclone's left ear. Quick as a flash, outshot Cyclone's right paw, as only a
grizzly can strike, and caught the would-be hazer on the side of the head.
Amazed and confounded, Czar fled in wild haste. Next in order, a black bear
cub, twice the size of Cyclone, made a pass at the newcomer, and he too
received so fierce a countercharge that he ignominiously quit the field and
scrambled to the top of the cliff.
Cyclone conscientiously met every
attack, real or feigned, that was made upon him. In less than an hour it was
understood by every bear in the Nursery that, that queer-looking gray fellow
with the broad head and short nose could strike quick and hard, and that he
could fight any other bear on three seconds' notice.
From that time
on Cyclone's position has been assured. He is treated with the respect that a
good forearm inspires, but being really a fine-spirited, dignified little
grizzly, he attacks no one, and never has
had a fight.
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