Editor's Note: This book is available online through The Baldwin Project.
Among the stories in Wild Animals I have Known are those of a crow called Silverspot, named for a silver spot at the base of its beak, a partridge named Redruff, a cottontail rabbit named Raggylug, and best of all, the story of Lobo the wolf, King of the Currampaw.
Seton was an accomplished wildlife artist and his books are wonderfully illustrated by him. He was a prolific author, producing 60 books and nearly 400 magazine articles and short stories. He also wrote the first Boy Scout Official Handbook. He was admired, as a writer by Rudyard Kipling, Mark Twain, and Leo Tolstoy.
Seton is a co-founder of the Boy Scouts of America, associate of Lord Baden Powell, and founder of scouting in England. He gave scouting its original emphasis on woodcraft skills and exploring the out of doors. (This interest of Seton’s apparently originated when he introduced some wayward teenagers who had vandalized his property to nature and woodcraft as part of their “rehabilitation.") Among his best known books for youngsters on woodcraft are The Birch Bark Roll of Woodcraft Indians and Two Little Savages.
I have to give Seton credit for putting some wonderful stories in my hands, but also for much of my interest in nature. Scouting captured my interest as an adolescent, shortly before I got my first whiff of perfume and got hold of the keys to the family Plymouth. The elements Seton put into scouting that appealed to me, learning how to fend for yourself in the wild, building a lean to of pine boughs for the night’s shelter, gathering cattail tubers, and gigging a frog or fish for supper. All of this was followed by the savory mystery of sitting around your campfire at night, surrounded by night sounds and solitude and learning the to distinguish the call of Great Horned and Barred Owl.
I am well aware of the issue here. In scriptwriting for the series of National Wildlife Refuge films produced by STRS Productions, Blake and Emily Scott and I have had this sort of debate, the Seton-Burroughs debate, shall we say, with U. S. Fish and Wildlife biologists. They were concerned about objectivity and accuracy. We were too, but also with telling an interesting story for our audience.
Photo by F. Eugene Hester. Copyright © 1996 http://www.fcps.edu
For example, in a scene in one of the films, an Eastern Gray Squirrel sitting in a pine tree is barking at a flock of Wild Turkeys foraging below. The squirrel is “upset” that the turkeys are “stealing” acorns it has cached at the foot of the tree. In another scene, a Black-crowned Night Heron tries to sleep as a Double-crested Cormorant splashes about below fishing for lunch. Frustrated and annoyed at having its nap disturbed, the heron finally flies away. Does the squirrel actually feel wronged or worried, and does the heron feel vexed and irritated? That’s an interesting philosophical question, but probably an unnecessary encumbrance to sharing the dynamic life of a National Wildlife Refuge.
http://www.birdinginformation.com
As to the philosophical question, one needs to walk a fine line here, but I think it is a disservice to animals and humans alike to not grant animals the intelligence and feeling they have, although that they are not human in kind.Seton was an important voice for conservation in his day, an acquaintance of President Teddy Roosevelt, the “conservation President” who established the National Wildlife Refuge System and the National Park Service. Through his art, writings, and life, he left a vibrant echo of his unique voice for the love of wildlife and appreciation of nature.