<h2> CHAPTER VI </h2>
<p>It was terrible to Dot to see the Kangaroo hop off into the dark bush,
and to find herself all alone; so she crawled out from under the ledge
of rock into the moonlight, and sat on a stone where she could see the
sky, and watch the black ragged clouds hurry over the moon. But the bush
was not altogether quiet. She could hear an owl hooting at the moon. Not
far off was a camp of quarrelsome Flying Foxes, and the melancholy
Nightjar in the distance was fulfilling its mission of making all the
bush creatures miserable with its incessant, mournful "mo-poke!
mo-poke!" As Dot could understand all the voices, it amused her to
listen to the wrangles of the Flying Foxes, as they ate the fruit of a
wild fig tree near by. She saw them swoop past on their huge black wings
with a solemn flapping. Then, as each little Fox approached the tree,
the Foxes who were there already screamed, and swore in dreadfully bad
language at the visitor. For every little Fox on the tree was afraid
some other Flying Fox would eat all the figs, and as each visitor
arrived he was assailed with cries of, "Get away! you're not wanted
here!"</p>
<p>"This is my branch, my figs!"</p>
<p>"Go and find figs for yourself!"</p>
<p>"These figs are not half ripe like the juicy ones on the other side of
the tree!"</p>
<p>Then the new-comer Flying Fox, with a spiteful squeal, would pounce down
on a branch already occupied, and angry spluttering and screams would
arise, followed by a heavy fall of fighting Foxes tumbling with a crash
through the trees. Then out into the open sky swept dozens of black
wings, accompanied by abusive swearing from dozens of wicked little
brown Foxes; and, as they settled again on the tree, all the fighting
would begin again, so that the squealing, screaming, and swearing never
ended.</p>
<p>As Dot was listening to the fighting of the Flying Foxes, she heard a
sound near her that alarmed her greatly. It was impossible to say what
the noise was like. It might have been the braying of a donkey mixed up
with the clattering of palings tumbled together, and with grunts and
snorts. Dot started to her feet in fright, and would have run away, only
she was afraid of being lost worse than ever, so she stood still and
looked round for the terrible monster that could make such extraordinary
sounds. The grunts and clattering stopped, and the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page32" name="page32"></SPAN>[32]</span>
noise died away in a long doleful bray, but she could not see where it
came from. Having peered into the dark shadows, Dot went more into the
open, and sat with her back to a fallen tree, keeping an anxious watch
all round.</p>
<p>"Perhaps it is the Blacks. What would they do with me if they found me?
What will happen if they have killed my dear Kangaroo?" and she covered
her face with her hands as this terrible thought came into her head.
Soon she heard something coming towards her stealthily and slowly. She
would not look up she was so frightened. She was sure it was some
fierce-looking Black man, with his spear, about to kill her. She shut
her eyes closer, and held her breath. "Perhaps," she thought, "he will
not see me." Then a cold shiver went through her little body, as she
felt something claw hold of her hair, and she thought she was about to
be killed. She kept her eyes shut, and the clawing went on, and then to
her astonishment she heard an animal voice say in wondering tones:</p>
<p>"Why, it's fur! how funny it looked in the moonlight!" Then Dot opened
her eyes very wide and looked round, and saw a funny Native Bear on the
tree trunk behind her. He was quite clearly to be seen in the moonlight.
His thick, grey fur, that looked as if he was wrapped up to keep out the
most terrible cold weather; his short, stumpy, big legs, and little
sharp face with big bushy ears, could be seen as distinctly as in
daylight. Dot had never seen one so near before, and she loved it at
once, it looked so innocent and kind.</p>
<p>"You dear little Native Bear!" she exclaimed, at once stroking its head.</p>
<p>"Am I a Native Bear?" asked the animal in a meek voice. "I never heard
that before. I thought I was a Koala. I've always been told so, but of
course one never knows oneself. What are you? Do you know?"</p>
<p>"I'm a little girl," replied Dot, proudly.</p>
<p>The Koala saw that Dot was proud, but as it didn't see any reason why
she should be, it was not a bit afraid of her.</p>
<p>"I never heard of one or saw one before," it said, simply. "Do you
burrow, or live in a tree?"</p>
<p>"I live at home," said Dot; but, wishing to be quite correct, she added,
"that is, when I am there."</p>
<p>"Then, where are you now?" asked the Koala, rather perplexed.</p>
<p>"I'm not at home," replied Dot, not knowing how to make her position
clear to the little animal.</p>
<p>"Then you live where you don't live?" said the Koala; "where is it?" and
the little Bear looked quite unhappy in its attempt to understand what
Dot meant.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page33" name="page33"></SPAN>[33]</span></p>
<p>"I've lost it," said Dot. "I don't know where it is."</p>
<p>"You make my head feel empty," said the Koala, sadly. "I live in the gum
tree over there. Do you eat gum leaves?"</p>
<p>"No. When I'm at home I have milk, and bread, and eggs, and meat."</p>
<p>"Dear me!" said the Koala. "They're all new to one. Is it far? I should
like to see the trees they grow on. Please show me the way."</p>
<p>"But I can't," said Dot; "they don't grow on trees, and I don't know my
way home. It's lost, you see."</p>
<p>"I don't see," said the Native Bear. "I never can see far at night, and
not at all in daylight. That is why I came here. I saw your fur shining
in the moonlight, and I couldn't make out what it was, so I came to see.
If there is anything new to be seen, I must get a near view of it. I
don't feel happy if I don't know all about it. Aren't you cold?"</p>
<p>"Yes, I am, a little, since my Kangaroo left me," Dot said.</p>
<p>"Now you make my head feel empty again," said the Koala, plaintively.
"What has a Kangaroo got to do with your feeling cold? What have you
done with your fur?"</p>
<p>"I never had any," said Dot, "only these curls," and she touched her
little head.</p>
<p>"Then you ought to be black," argued the Koala. "You're not the right
colour. Only Blacks have no fur, but what they steal from the proper
owners. Do you steal fur?" it asked in an anxious voice.</p>
<p>"How do they steal fur?" asked Dot.</p>
<p>The Koala looked very miserable, and spoke with horror. "They kill us
with spears, and tear off our skins and wear them because their own
skins are no good."</p>
<p>"That's not stealing," said Dot; "that's killing"; and, although it
seemed very difficult to make the little Bear understand, she explained,
"Stealing is taking away another person's things; and when a person is
dead he hasn't anything belonging to him, so it's not stealing to take
what belonged to him before, because it isn't his any longer—that is,
if it doesn't belong to anyone else."</p>
<p>"You make my head feel empty," complained the Koala. "I'm sure you're
all wrong; for an animal's skin and fur is his own, and it's his life's
business to keep it whole. Everyone in the bush is trying to keep his
skin whole, all day long, and all night too. Good gracious! what is the
matter up there?"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page34" name="page34"></SPAN>[34]</span></p>
<p>A terrible hullabaloo between a pair of Opossums up a neighbouring gum
tree arrested the attention of both Dot and the Koala. Presently the
sounds of snarling, spitting, and screaming ended, and an Opossum
climbed out to the far end of a branch, where the moonlight shone on his
grey fur like silver. There he remained snapping and barking
disagreeable things to his mate, who climbed up to the topmost branch,
and snarled and growled back equally unpleasant remarks.</p>
<p>"Why don't you bring in gum leaves for to-morrow, instead of sleeping
all day and half the night too?" shouted the Opossum on the branch to
his wife. "You know I get hungry before daylight is over and hate going
out in the light."</p>
<p>"Get them yourself, you lazy loon!" retorted the lady Opossum. "If you
disturb my dreams again this way, I'll make your fur fly."</p>
<p>"Take care!" barked back her husband, "or I'll bring you off that branch
pretty quickly."</p>
<p>"You'd better try!" sneered his wife. "Remember how I landed you into
the billabong the other night!"</p>
<p>The taunt was too much for the Opossum on the branch; he scuttled up the
tree to reach his mate, who sprang forward from her perch into the air.
Dot saw her spring with her legs all spread out, so that the skinny
flaps were like furry wings. By this means she was able to break her
fall, and softly alighting on the earth, a moment after, she had
scrambled up another tree, followed by her mate. From tree to tree, from
branch to branch, they fled or pursued one another, with growls,
screams, and splutters, until they disappeared from sight.</p>
<p>"How unhappy those poor Opossums must be, living in the same tree," said
Dot; "why don't they live in different trees?"</p>
<p>"They wouldn't be happy," observed the Koala, "they are so fond of one
another."</p>
<p>"Then why do they quarrel?" asked Dot.</p>
<p>"Because they live in the same tree of course," said the Koala. "If they
lived in different trees, and never quarrelled, they wouldn't like it at
all. They'd find life dull, and they'd get sulky. There's nothing worse
than a sulky 'possum. They are champions at that."</p>
<p>"They make a dreadful noise with their quarrelling," said Dot. "They are
nearly as bad as the Flying Foxes over there. I wonder if they made that
fearful sound I heard just before you came?"</p>
<SPAN name="image-0008"></SPAN>
<div class="figure">
<SPAN href="images/ill-06.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/ill-06-t.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="491" alt="DOT, THE NATIVE BEAR, AND THE OPOSSUM" /></SPAN>
<br/>
DOT, THE NATIVE BEAR, AND THE OPOSSUM</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page35" name="page35"></SPAN>[35]</span></p>
<p>"I expect what you heard was from me," said the Koala; "I had just
awakened, and when I saw the moon was up I felt pleased."</p>
<p>"Was all that sound and many noises yours?" asked Dot with astonishment,
as she regarded the shaggy little animal on the tree trunk.</p>
<p>The Koala smiled modestly. "Yes!" it said; "when I'm pleased there is no
creature in the bush can make such a noise, or so many different noises
at once. I waken everyone for a quarter of a mile round. You wouldn't
think it, to see me as I am, would you?" The Koala was evidently very
pleased with this accomplishment.</p>
<p>"It isn't kind of you to wake up all the sleeping creatures," said Dot.</p>
<p>"Why not?" asked the Koala. "You are a night creature, I suppose, or you
wouldn't be awake now. Well, don't you think it unfair the way
everything is arranged for the day creatures?"</p>
<p>"But then," said Dot, "there are so many more day creatures."</p>
<p>"That doesn't make any difference," observed the Koala.</p>
<p>"But it does," said Dot.</p>
<p>"How?" asked the Native Bear.</p>
<p>"Because if you had the day it wouldn't be any good to you, and if they
had the night it wouldn't be any good to them. So your night couldn't be
their day, and their day couldn't be your night."</p>
<p>"You make my head feel empty," said the Koala. "But you'd think
differently if a flock of Kookooburras settled on your tree, and
guffawed idiotically when you wanted to sleep."</p>
<p>"As you don't like being waked yourself, why do you wake others then?"
asked Dot.</p>
<p>"Because this is a free country," said the Koala. While Dot was trying
to understand why the Koala's reason should suffice for one animal
making another's life uncomfortable, she was rejoiced to see the
Kangaroo bound into sight. She forgot all about the Koala, and rushed
forward to meet it.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page36" name="page36"></SPAN>[36]</span></p>
<SPAN name="h2HCH0007" id="h2HCH0007"></SPAN>
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