 The series of which this is the first volume is an attempt to meet a need that has been felt for several years by parents and physicians, as well as by teachers, supervisors, and others who are actively interested in educational and social progress. The need of practical activity, which for long ages constituted the entire education of mankind, is at last recognized by the elementary school. It has been introduced in many places and already results have been attained, which demonstrate that it is possible to introduce practical activity in such a way as to afford the child a sound development, physically, intellectually, and morally, and at the same time equip him for efficient social service. The question that is perplexing educators at the present time is therefore not one regarding the value of practical activity, but rather one of ways and means by which practical activity can be harnessed to the educational work. The discovery of the fact that STEAM is a force that can do work had to await the invention of machinery by means of which to apply the new force to industrial processes. The use of practical activity will likewise necessitate many changes in the educational machinery before its richest results are realized. Yet the conditions that attend the introduction of practical activity as a mode of power in education are very different from those that attended the introduction of the use of STEAM. In the case of STEAM, the problem was that of applying a new force to an old work, in the case of practical activity, it is a question of restoring a factor which, from the earliest times until within the last two or three decades, has operated as a permanent educational force. The situation that has recently deprived the child of the opportunity to participate in industrial processes is due, as is well known, to the rapid development of our industrial system. Since the removal of industrial processes from the home, the public has awakened to the fact that the child is being deprived of one of the most potent educational influences and efforts have already been made to restore the educational factor that was in danger of being lost. This is the significance of the educational movement at the present time. As long as a simple organization of society prevailed, the school was not called upon to take up the practical work, but now society has become so complex that the use of practical activity is absolutely essential. Society today makes a greater demand than ever before upon each and all of its members for special skill and knowledge, as well as for breadth of view. These demands can be met only by such an improvement in educational facilities as corresponds to the increase in the social demand. Evidently, the school must lay hold of all the educational forces within its reach. In the transitional movement, it is not strange that new factors are being introduced without relation to the educational process as a whole. The isolation of manual training, sewing, and cooking from the physical, natural, and social sciences is justifiable only on the ground that the means of establishing more organic relations are not yet available. To continue such isolated activities, after away is found of harnessing them to the educational work is as foolish as to allow steam to expend itself in moving a locomotive up and down the tracks without regard to the destiny of the detached train. This series is an attempt to facilitate the transitional movement in education, which is now taking place by presenting educative materials in a form sufficiently flexible to be readily adapted to the needs of the school that has not yet been equipped for manual training, as well as to the needs of the one that has long recognized practical activity as an essential factor in its work. Since the experience of the race in industrial and social processes embodies, better than any other experiences of mankind, those things which at the same time appeal to the whole nature of the child and furnish him the means of interpreting the complex processes about him, this experience has been made the groundwork of the present series. In order to gain cumulative results of value in explaining our own institutions, the materials used have been selected from the life of Aryan peoples. But we are not yet in possession of all the facts regarding the life of the early Aryans. It is not considered a sufficient reason for withholding from the child those facts that we have when they can be adapted to his use. Information regarding the early stages of Aryan life is meager. Enough has been established, however, to enable us to mark out the main lines of progress through the hunting, the fishing, the pastoral and the agricultural stages, as well as to present the chief problems that confronted man in taking the first steps in the use of metals and in the establishment of trade. Upon these lines marked out by the geologists, the paleontologists, the archaeologists and the anthropologists, the first numbers of this series are based. A generalized view of the main steps in the early progress of the race, which it is thus possible to present, is all that is required for educational ends. Were it possible to present the subject in detail, it would be tedious and unprofitable to all save the specialist. To select from the monotony of the ages, that which is most vital, to so present it as to enable the child to participate in the process by which the race has advanced, is a work more in keeping with the spirit of the age. To this end the presentation of the subject is made, first by means of questions which serve to develop the habit of making use of experience in new situations, second by narrative which is employed merely as a literary device for rendering the subject more available to the child, and third by suggestions for practical activities that may be carried out in hours of work or play in such a way as to direct into useful channels energy which when left undirected is apt to express itself in trivial, if not in antisocial forms. No part of a book is more significant to the child than the illustrations. In preparing the illustrations for this series, as great pains have been taken to furnish the child with ideas that will guide him in his practical activities as to illustrate the text itself. Mr. Howard V. Brown, the artist who executed the drawings, has been aided in his search for authentic originals by the late J. W. Powell, director of the United States Bureau of Ethnology, Washington, D.C., by Frederick J. V. Schiff, director of the Field Columbian Museum, Chicago, and by the author. School collections and the best illustrative works on ethnological subjects scattered throughout the country have been carefully searched for material. I wish to take this opportunity to express my gratitude to Professor Dewey for the suggestions he has given me with reference to this series, and to acknowledge that without the inspiration that has come through his teaching I should probably never have undertaken a work of this kind. To Dr. W. I. Thomas, professor of sociology and anthropology in the University of Chicago, I am indebted for suggestions upon anthropological phases of many of the subjects presented. To Dr. S. W. Williston, professor of paleontology in the University of Chicago, I am indebted for a careful examination of the book from the standpoint of the paleontologist. Among the many friends who have given me help and inspiration, I would mention especially Professor Ella Flag Young of the University of Chicago, Superintendent F. A. Manny of the Ethical Culture Schools, New York City, Mrs. Charlotte W. Williams of Chicago, my sister Ms. Alpsa M. Dopp of the State Normal School, St. Claude, Minnesota, and Mr. W. W. Charters of the University of Chicago. To the late director J. W. Powell of the United States Bureau of Ethnology, and to director Frederick J. V. Schiff of the Field Colombian Museum, Chicago, I am under obligations for courtesies extended which have enabled me to gain access to illustrative materials. K. E. D. END OF PREFESS CHAPTER I. A STORY OF LONG AGO This is a story of long ago. It will tell you of the first people we know anything about. It will tell you how they lived before they had fire. It will tell you how they worked before they had tools. Many wild beasts lived then. They were fierce and strong. All the people feared them. The cave bear could strike with his big paws. The tiger could tear with his sharp teeth. The rhinoceros could trample one under his feet. Each animal knew how to do one thing well. But the people could do a great many things. They could remember, too, what had happened before. They learned to profit by their mistakes. You will learn how they became brave and strong. You will learn how they used their bodies and minds. They began the work we are doing today. They took the first steps. People who lived after them were able to do a little more. The next people could do still more. Many people have lived and worked since then. The work they have done helps us today. We have something to do, too. We can do our part better if we know what others have done. We can do it better if we learn to use our hands. We can do it better if we learn to use our minds. That is why we have this little book. This recording is in the public domain. Things to think about. What do you need in order to live? What do you think the tree dwellers needed? Sharptooth. Sharptooth was a tree-dweller. She lived a long, long time ago. She did not have any home. Nobody had a home then. People wandered from place to place. They had no shelter except the trees. Each night Sharptooth slept in the branches. Each day she hunted for something to eat. Sometimes she was very hungry. She had hard work to find enough food. She could not go to a store to buy it. There were no stores then. She could not buy food of a farmer. There were no farmers then. All plants were growing wild and the animals were wild, too. Sharptooth was afraid of them. That is why she climbed the trees. Things to do. Go out where everything is growing wild and find a place where the tree dwellers might have lived. Find as many wild foods as you can. Notice what places have the best wild foods. Find a place where the tree dwellers might have protected themselves from the wild beasts. Find a picture of Sharptooth running away from a wild animal. Tell a story about this picture. This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 3 of The Tree Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp Read for LibriVox.org Things to think about. Did you find a place where the tree dwellers might have lived? What kind of place was it? Did you find any wild foods where the ground was covered with grass? Do you think they could live on a grassy plain? Did you find any foods where the trees were thick? Do you think they could live in a dense forest? Where did you find the best wild foods? Could the sun get down to places where you found wild roots? Do vegetables grow better in the shade or in the sunlight? Are there as many wild foods here now as there used to be? Why not? Do you think you could live on such foods as the tree dwellers ate? Can you think of a name for the place where the tree dwellers lived? The Wooded Hills The tree dwellers needed a place where they could be safe from wild animals, so they lived among the tall trees. They needed to be near fresh water, so they lived by trees along the river. They needed to be where they could find roots and berries. Down in the river valley, most of the forests were dense. The sun could not shine through the thick leaves of the trees. There was not enough sunlight to make the roots and berries grow. There were not many nuts and acorns on the trees, so the tree dwellers could not live there. Out on the grassy plains, there were no trees. The tree dwellers could not live there. Near the head of the river valley, there were hills and uplands. The forest there were not so dense. The sun could shine through the open spaces. Many roots and berries grew there. On the Wooded Hills near the head of the valley was a good place for the tree dwellers to live. They could be safe in the tall trees. They could get fresh water from the river. They could find nuts and acorns on the trees. They could find roots and berries in the open spaces. Things to Do Model in sand the hills and uplands near the head of a river valley. Show where the trees grow. Where would you look for roots and berries? Where would the cattle find grass? What else would the cattle need? Where would they find it? End of Chapter 3 This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 4 of The Tree Dwellers By Catherine Elizabeth Dopp Read for LibriVox.org Things to Think About Do you think Sharptooth had ever been away from the Wooded Hills near the head of the river valley? If she had gone into the dense forest, do you think she would have stayed there? Would it have been safe for her to walk on the ground? What way would have been safe at the time? Do you think Sharptooth would dare to go out on the grassy plains? Why would she have liked the Wooded Hills best? Sharptooth's Excursions Sharptooth knew every spot on the Wooded Hills, but she seldom went to a strange place. One day, though, she took a long journey. This is the way that it came about. She found plenty of roots and ripe blueberries. She ate until she was satisfied. Then she began to play among the trees. She walked out upon a strong spreading branch. Then she grasped a tough branch just above her head. She swung herself into a neighboring tree. Then she walked out on another branch. She swung herself into another tree. She traveled in this way for a long time. At last she came to a dense forest. How dark and damp it seemed! How still it was! She stopped her play. She began to feel tired and hungry, so she rested a while, and then searched for food. She found few signs of roots or berries. There were many trees, but nuts were scarce. So she ate the bark from the tender twigs. But she was not satisfied. She missed the roots and berries. She missed the bright sunshine. She missed familiar sights and sounds. So she went back to the wooded hills. Another day Sharptooth went to the edge of a grassy plain. There were many wild animals feeding there. She hid in the tall green grass and watched the wild cattle from her hiding place. She saw mammoths eating the tender grass. There were smaller animals not far away. A lion was creeping up through the grass. Sharptooth saw him pounce upon the beast. The frightened creatures ran for their lives. Sharptooth wished that she had not ventured so far. She watched for a chance to get away. As soon as she dared, she crept to the trees. Then she hurried back to the wooded hills. She never forgot what she saw that day. Things to do. Think of Sharptooth as she was playing among trees. Draw the picture. Think of what she saw when she was hiding in the tall grass. Draw the picture. Show on your sand map where the dense forest was. Show where the grassy plain was. Cut a lion and a mammoth from paper. End of chapter four. This recording is in the public domain. Chapter five of The Tree Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp. Recorded for LibriVox.org. Things to think about. Can you think why the tree dwellers did not live in families as we do? Why did each one have to take care of himself? Who took care of the babies then? Do you know whether the baby tree dwellers could do anything for themselves? Sharptooth and her baby. We have learned that the tree dwellers had no homes. All the tree dwellers had a hard time to live, for they had not yet learned to help one another. It took many long years to learn to do that. But mothers have always taken care of their babies. Sharptooth's mother had taken care of her. But Sharptooth soon learned to take care of herself. Then she began to live as the other tree dwellers lived. She lived by herself the greater part of the time. She grew to be a strong young woman. Then a baby came to live with her. How proud she was of the little boy. Wherever she went she took him with her, for there was nothing else for her to do. There was no place where she dared to leave him, so the mother and baby were never apart. Sometimes the baby clung to her waist. Baby tree dwellers knew how to hold fast. Sometimes Sharptooth tied a vine around her waist. Then the baby clung to the vine. Sometimes he sat on her shoulder and clung to her head or neck. Sometimes he rode upon her back. Sharptooth helped him all that she could. But she needed her hands for other work. Things to do. Show how your mama carries your baby brother or sister. Show how Sharptooth carried her baby. Which of the babies do you think has the better care? How do you help to take care of the baby? Draw a picture of a mother and baby. End of Chapter 5 This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 6 of The Tree Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp recorded for LibriVox.org Things to think about. How many kinds of cradles have you seen? What kind of cradle does your baby brother or sister have? What kind of a cradle do you think Sharptooth's baby had? What kind of a lullaby would Sharptooth sing? What lullaby can you sing? The First Weaver Sharptooth had climbed most of the trees on the wooded hills. She had slept in many of them. But she liked the old oak near the trail, the best of all. Its strong, spreading branches were covered with vines. Here was a place to lay the baby. While he slept among the vines she gathered wild foods. But she never went far away and she never stayed away long. There were panthers and wild cats on the hills. Sharptooth knew that they could climb the trees. Many a time they had nearly caught her. She was afraid that they would get the baby. So she always stayed near him while he slept. When she stayed in a tree that had no vines there was no place to lay the baby. So she wove the slender branches together. She made a safe place for the baby to sleep. She lulled him to sleep as he lay in her arms. Then she gently laid him upon his bed. She watched him a moment as he slept. A moment more and she too was asleep. Things to do. Think of Sharptooth as she was laying the baby down among the vine-covered branches. Draw the picture. Find some vines or branches and make a cradle. End of Chapter 6 This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 7 of The Tree-Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp recorded for LibriVox.org Things to think about. There were a great many wild cattle when the tree-dwellers lived. They were not so gentle as our cattle. They had wide spreading horns. The fierce flesh-eating animals were always lying in wait for them. How could the wild cattle protect themselves from their enemies? Where would they stay during the day? Where would they go at night? Why did they stay in herds? Where could they find water? What kind of banks does a river have at the drinking-places? Do you think the cattle would make paths to the drinking-places? How? What happened when the wild cattle went to the river? The sun was just setting. Sharptooth was getting ready for the night. She was in the old oak-tree. The baby had gone to sleep. As she put him down upon his bed, she heard the mooing of the wild cattle. She looked out upon the hills. The wild cattle were coming down to the river to drink. She watched the long line winding down the trail. Other creatures were watching, too. Wild animals were coming out of their dens. A big bear passed close to Sharptooth's tree. He had heard the mooing of the wild cattle. Wolves were prowling about. They, too, were watching the herd. The cattle reached the river. They waited out. They drank from the flowing stream. They stood knee-deep in the cool water. At last the leader turned to go. The others followed, one by one. But some of the weaker ones lingered behind. They seemed tired. A big wolf watched them from a thicket. At length the cattle came out of the stream. They walked slowly along the bank. They passed close to the thicket. The wolf sprang from his hiding-place. He seized the smallest creature. The others dashed off through the underbrush. They were too frightened to keep the path. They lost their way. Wolves and bears were lying in wait. They fell upon the frightened cattle. The herd was too far away to help. So the poor creatures lost their lives. But the wolves and bears had a feast. Things to do. Model the wooded hills where the cattle fed by day. Model the grassy uplands where they fed by night. Show the trail that the cattle made. Make the banks at the drinking-place. Make the thickets and show where the wolf hid. Chapter 8 of The Tree-Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp Recorded for LibriVox.org Things to think about. Why did the wild cattle feed on the grassy uplands at night instead of during the day? Where did they spend the day? When do the flesh-eating animals sleep? When do they hunt? Can they live without flesh to eat? Do you know whether they kill more than they need to eat? How Sharptooth spent the night. It was now almost dark. The wild cattle had reached the grassy upland. They were feeding on the fresh grass. Sharptooth had watched them out of sight. And now she was getting sleepy. She could see nothing but dim shadows. But she could hear all sorts of sounds. Wild animals were coming out of their dens. Most of them had slept during the day. But now they were wide awake. Hippopotamuses were snorting and blowing. They were splashing in the water. They were crashing through the underbrush along the banks. Straight tusk elephants were trumpeting and bellowing. Lions were roaring. The hunted animals were seeking a place of refuge. Sharptooth was used to these sights and sounds. She felt safe in the old oak tree. She tied herself to a strong branch and soon was fast asleep. She slept all through the long night. Many of the wild beasts, too, were soon asleep. Some of the hunted creatures found places of refuge. Some beasts of prey were soon satisfied. Then they stole back to their dens and slept. But all of the wild animals did not fare so well. Not all of the hunted creatures found places of refuge. Not all of the beasts of prey found food. Some beasts of prey hunted all through the night and were still hungry when morning came. Things to do. Cut a hippopotamus or a straight tusk elephant from paper. Tell how little boys and girls that you know are taking care of at night. Tell how the tree-dwellers took care of their children. End of chapter 8. This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 9 of The Tree-Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dobb Recorded for LibriVox.org Things to think about. At the drinking place the river's banks were low. In many other places they were high and steep. In some places there was a solid wall of rock. In other places the rocks were broken and worn. In some places there were deep holes in the rocks. We call these holes caves. They were made long ago. Can you think how they were made? Can you think what the caves were used for? Sharptooth goes to the river. Before sunrise the next morning Sharptooth awoke. She opened her eyes and looked out upon the hills. She heard animals moving about. A large cave-bear was passing by toward his cave. Hyenas too were stealing down to their caves. Many flesh-eating animals were slinking away to their dens. They were tired of their night's work. Most of them had eaten until they were satisfied and now they were ready to sleep through the day. The wild cattle were coming back to the hills. The baby awoke. Sharptooth played with him a moment. Then she put him under her arm and slipped down the tree. She started down toward the river but she did not go by the trail. It was safer to walk in the shadow of the tall trees. Once she suddenly grasped a branch of a tree and swung herself up and looked about. She had heard her rustling in the underbrush. Long ago she had learned what such sounds meant. So she swung on the branches until she reached the river. She listened a moment in the tree. Then she slipped down and ran to the water's edge. She dipped up the water with her hand. She drank some and then gave some to the baby. He was so pleased that he laughed aloud. As quick as the flash, Sharptooth sprang for the tree. She was afraid the hyenas were in the thickets. She was afraid they had heard the baby laugh. She talked to the baby in a strange language. She made queer clucking sounds. After that he was always quiet when they went to the river. He must have understood what she said. Things to do. If there is a cave near where you live visit it. Model in sand some high river banks with caves. Show where Sharptooth went to drink and where the hyenas were hiding. Show how she gave water to the baby. Show how she sprang for the tree when the baby laughed. Draw a picture of Sharptooth and the baby. Ask someone to read you the first story in Kipling's second Jungle Book. End of Chapter 9. This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 10 of The Tree Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dobb recorded for LibriVox.org Things to think about. Where do hogs live today? How are they taken care of? How do you think the wild hogs found food? Do you think the tree dwellers could learn anything by watching the wild hogs? What have you learned from animals? What the wild hogs did for Sharptooth? The sun now had been up for some time. Sharptooth was getting hungry. She picked a handful of wild plums from a thicket, but she wanted something more. She kept on down the hill. The wild hogs were rooting under the oak trees. She wondered what they found there, so she stepped near enough to see. They were eating something round and black. She watched them for a long time. As soon as they started off toward the marsh Sharptooth ran down to the trees. She saw the loose earth that the hogs had rooted up. Then she began to dig where it had not been loosened. She had nothing to dig with except her hands, but she was not afraid to dig with them. She soon felt something that was round and hard. She dug it up and looked at it. It was a truffle. It was black and warty on the outside. She bit off a piece. It was white inside. She tasted it and found that it was good, so she dug another and ate it. She wondered how the wild hogs knew that the truffles were there. Perhaps you can tell. Perhaps you have heard stories of how hogs dig truffles in France today. Things to do. Collect five or six vegetables or fruits. Blindfold someone and let him smell one of the vegetables and guess what it is. When he guesses right, blindfold someone else. When you have a chance, dig a root with your hands, then dig one with a sharp stick. Which way is the easier? And of Chapter 10. This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 11 of The Tree-Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp. Recorded for Libervox.org Things to think about. Can you think how the wild hogs protected themselves? Do hogs have tusks now? Can you think why the wild hogs were not as fat as our hogs? How the wild hogs protected their young? Sharptooth watched the wild hogs every day. She learned many things from them. They were peaceable creatures when not disturbed. They lived on fruits, wild nuts, and roots. When they had eaten all they wanted, they went down to the river or lake. They hid in the reedy marshes. They hid in the thorny thickets. But they always kept together. Sharptooth watched them from a tree. There were tiny little pigs with long, light stripes. They kept close to their mothers. There were larger pigs that had lost their stripes. They, too, stayed with their mothers. There were wild boars about three years old. They did not go far from their mothers. They were not strong enough yet to protect themselves. There were many full-grown hogs. There were fierce boars with long tusks. Sharptooth watched them eating acorns. A pack of hyenas was watching, too. They were hiding in the underbrush. They were lying in wait for the smaller pigs. But the old hogs sent a danger. They gathered the little pigs together. The stronger ones stood in a circle around them. Their white tusks glistened in the sunlight. They were ready to fight for their young. The hyenas were afraid. They sneaked away in the underbrush. The little pigs were safe. Things to do Show how the wild hogs protected the little pigs. Show how the hyenas came up and sneaked away. Cut some wild hogs from paper. Chapter 12 Of the Tree-Dwellers Do you think that the tree-dwellers had schools? What did their children need to know? How would they teach them? Have you ever seen a cat teaching her kittens Have you ever tried to teach a baby? What can you teach the baby to do? What do you need to have done for you? What can you do to help yourself? What can you do to help others? How the tree-dwellers taught their children? Sharptooth's baby had grown to be a large boy. He was now about seven years old. His mother called him Bodo. Bodo did not have to wash his face. He did not have to wear any clothes. He had no clothes to wear. He did not have to go to school. There were no schools then. But he learned a great many things. His mother was his first teacher. She taught him where to find the ripe berries. She taught him where to dig for roots. She taught him how to catch birds and squirrels. She taught him how to hide from wild animals. She taught him to keep so still that he might be taken for a hump on a log. She taught him all that she knew. Bodo learned his lessons well. He always obeyed his mother. Sometimes he saw other tree-dwellers. He had seen them snatch food from his mother's hand. He had seen them help her too. But usually each tree-dweller took care of himself. Bodo was learning to take care of himself. He was beginning to feel that he was almost a man. One day he caught a pig without any help. The next day his mother let him hunt all alone. She knew now that he could find his own food. After that Bodo always hunted alone. Sometimes he saw his mother. But she no longer found food for him. She had another baby to care for. So Bodo knew that he must take care of himself. When the tree-dwellers lived nobody ever thought of taking care of a child who was able to find his own food. Things to do. Show how you teach your baby brother or sister to walk. Draw the picture. Show how sharp-toothed taught Bodo. Tell a story of how Bodo caught a little wild pig that had wandered away from its mother. End of Chapter 12. This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 13 of The Tree-Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp Recorded for Libervox.org Things to think about. What do you think Bodo would do when he left his mother? Who would teach him now? Do you think he could find bird's eggs? What do you think he would do with them? Do you know anyone who has a collection of bird's eggs? What would happen to the birds if we all made collections? How do the birds help us? How do we help them? How can we coax them to live near us? Alone on the wooded hills. Although Bodo was glad to take care of himself, he often wished that his mother were near. Sometimes he called to her. When she heard his call, she would answer him. Then he would swing on the branches until he found her. But sometimes she was too far away to hear. Then he listened in vain for her answering call. Sometimes it was hard to keep back the tears. Once he stopped so loud that a sleepy bear heard him. The bear started up and began to growl. Bodo hid in the branches of a tall tree. He stayed there until the bear went away. Then he was very hungry. As he started out to find something to eat, he heard a rustling among the branches. He listened. Bodo hoped that his mother was coming. But it was only a boy who was hunting bird's eggs. Bodo watched him climb among the branches. He watched him suck the eggs that he found. How he wished that he might find some eggs. He began to look for some. In a moment he saw a bird's nest above him. He climbed up the branch and peeped into the nest. There were three beautiful eggs. His eyes danced with joy. He sucked the eggs. Then he smacked his lips and hunted for more. Things to do. Show what the bear did when he heard Bodo sobbing. Draw the picture of the bear. Model a bird's nest in clay. Ask someone to read you the story of a little baby who lived with some wolves. It is in the Jungle Book. End of Chapter 13. This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 14 of The Tree-Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp Recorded for LibriVox.org Things to think about. Do you think that Bodo ever had any bread and sugar? Did he ever have any candy? What could he find that was sweet? How do bees make their honey? Where do they store it? How Bodo found wild honey? Bodo never had any candy. Nobody knew how to make it. But he knew where to find the wild honey. He had found some one day in a hollow tree. He learned to track a bee home to its tree. When he found a bee tree he robbed the swarm. Sometimes the bees stung him. But he was used to getting hurt. Things to do. Watch the bees as they gather honey from the flowers. What flowers do they visit? Do all bees look alike? Do all bees do the same kind of work? Draw a picture that will show how they work among the flowers. See if you can find some wild honey. End of Chapter 14. This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 15 of The Tree-Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp Recorded for LibriVox.org Things to think about. Do you think that the wild horses had leaders for their herds? What would the leader have to do? What might happen to the horses that did not follow the leader? What could Bodo learn by watching the wild horses? Bodo follows the wild horses. Two or three years passed by. Bodo was now about ten years old. He still lived on the wooded hills. One afternoon he went to the river. The wild horses were drinking there. Bodo watched them wade through the shallow water. He watched them toss their shaggy mains. He listened to their whinnying calls. He tried to whinny too. The horses drank until they were satisfied. Then they started toward their evening pasture. The largest horse led the herd up the trail. Others followed one by one. What a long line they made. The leader was far away over the hill before all the horses had left the stream. The smallest and the weakest ones lagged behind. Spotted hyenas were lying and wait for them. Bodo wondered if he could catch a wild horse. He wondered where the horses went at night. He followed the herd a long, long way. He went swinging along from branch to branch. At last he came to a grassy plain. He did not dare go out on the plain. So he sat on a branch and peeped through the leaves. Wild horses were feeding on the edge of the plain. Farther out there was a herd of mammoths. Beyond these, still other herds were feeding. They may have been bison's or wild cattle. All these animals were eating the fresh green grass. Bodo watched them till nearly sunset. But while the sky was still red in the west, Bodo tied himself to a branch and fell asleep. Things to do. Cut from paper some of the wild animals that Bodo saw eating grass. Make a picture of what Bodo saw when he was in the tree. End of Chapter 15. This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 16 of The Tree-Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp recorded for LibriVox.org Things to think about. Can you think why our horses are larger than the wild horses? How many toes does a horse have on each foot? On what part of the foot does he walk? Where is the horse's heel? Do you think the horse's foot has always been the same shape that it is today? On what part of the foot does the cow walk? How many toes does she have? On what part of the foot does the cat walk? How many toes does she have? Ancestors of our Mammals The wild horses that Bodo saw were about the size of ponies. Long before the tree-dwellers lived there were horse-like creatures the size of a fox. Long before that there was a time when there were no horses at all. Great reptiles moved about on the land. They swam in the seas or they flew through the air. All other creatures feared them. The tiny mammals that lived then were about the size of rats and mice. But these mammals were not like rats and mice. The little mammals ran but they did not run fast for their feet were not well fitted for running. They climbed rocks and trunks of trees and hidden holes in the ground. They ate the eggs of the large reptiles and became their enemies. Millions of years passed. Great changes took place. Parts of the land slowly sank beneath the seas and out of the seas rose dry land. Most of the larger reptiles died but the mammals multiplied. They grew to be as large as the fox or the sheep. At first they were all very much alike and they lived in about the same way. But as they became more and more unlike they had very different ways. Some became like cats and some like dogs. Some became like rhinoceroses and some like hogs. Others became like monkeys and still others became like horses. Things to do. Look at the picture above and tell how this animal must have changed to become more like a dog, a cat, a pig, a cow or a horse. End of Chapter 16. This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 17 of The Tree-Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp Recorded for LibriVox.org Things to think about. What part of the wild horse's foot touched the ground when he ran? What happens to muscles that are not used? What happens to muscles that are used most? The story of the wild horse. Perhaps you have seen the zebra. If you have, you must have noticed its stripes. The first horse-like creatures were probably striped in much the same way. These animals never ate hay and oats and at first they did not eat much grass. There was little, if any, grass at that time. These horse-like creatures lived on marshes and in swamps bordering streams and lakes. They probably ate stems and leaves of plants that grew on the marshy lands. They did not run as horses do today, but they plotted along on the soft ground. They spread out their toes as they walked along, so as to keep from sinking. When the dry land began to be covered with grass, little by little they left the marshes. They went to the grassy highlands to live and became more and more like horses. Some of the cat-like creatures went to the highlands, but they did not go for the grass. They were becoming more and more like tigers and they went to hunt the wild horses. The timid horses ran when their enemies came, for there was no place in which to hide. When they ran, they stepped on the tips of their toes. They used the third toe so much more than the others that it became larger and larger. Its hoof became hard and strong. The first and fifth toes were used so little that after thousands of years they disappeared. Meanwhile the horses had learned to run fast. When a pack of wolves chased them, they galloped away. They found rich grass on the highlands. Cults grew to be larger than their mothers. At the time they were as large as ponies, they used only the third toe. Two side-toes hung like dew-claws of a dog, but they did not reach the ground. When the tree-dwellers lived, little bones beneath the skin were all that was left to show where the side-toes had been. The hoof had become round and hard. The wild horses ran very fast. They outran all other creatures. When surprised, they struck hard blows with their hoofs and they bit with their sharp teeth. But if there was a chance to get away, they always ran when they were attacked. Things to do. Name all the animals you know that can climb trees. What kind of feet do they have? Name all the animals you know that have hoofs. Tell all you can about these hoofs. Notice the foot of a horse, a cow, a dog or a cat, and model it in clay. What pet do you have that is like a wolf? End of Chapter 17. This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 18 of The Tree-Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp. Recorded for LibriVox.org Things to think about. What tools do you know how to use? What do you use them for? How do you think that people did their work before they had tools? What tools do you think the tree-dwellers needed? How do you think they learned to make them? How Bodo learned to make tools and weapons? Bodo did not have any tools or weapons. Nobody knew how to make them. But he had learned to use his hands. He used them to catch small animals. He knew how to creep up softly. He knew how to wait patiently. He knew just when to grasp the animal. Bodo used his hands to gather berries and nuts. He used them to pull up roots. He used them to rake acorns together. He used them to scoop small things up from the ground. Bodo knew how to strike with his fists. He knew how to kick with his feet. Sometimes he threw stones. Sometimes he threw sticks. Sometimes he struck with a stick in his hand. He could strike harder blows with a stick than he could when he struck with his fist. Sometimes it hurt him when he struck with his fist. It did not hurt him when he struck with a club. Bodo had many enemies. He had to take care of himself. He felt safer when he had a club in his hand. Things to do. Show what Bodo used for a rake. Show what he used for a scoop. Show how he caught wild animals. Draw a picture of Bodo catching a squirrel. End of Chapter 18. This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 19 of The Tree-Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp. Recorded for LibriVox.org Things to think about. Have you ever used a hammer? What are our hammers made of? How do you think people learn to make hammers? Why did Bodo need a hammer? What do you do with your knife? How many kinds of knives have you seen? How do you think people cut their food before they had knives? What do you think they used for their first knives? Bodo's hammer and knife. Bodo had never had a warm dinner. He had no fire to cook his food. Much of his food was hard and tough. He had not learned to soften it with fire. He had not learned to crush or grind it with stones. His teeth did all of this work. The teeth of the tree-dwellers were large and strong. They were fitted to cut and grind tough food. They were fitted to crack the shells of nuts. Bodo often cracked nuts with his teeth. But sometimes he found nuts that he could not crack. He had never seen or heard of a hammer. So he threw a hard nut against a rock. The nut did not crack. So he kept on trying different ways. At last he struck the nut with a stone. Its hard shell broke. How glad Bodo was! He ate the kernel and then cracked some more nuts with the stone. This stone was his first hammer. Sometimes he used a rough stone. Its rough edges cut his hand. So he hunted for a smooth stone. At other times he wrapped one end of a rough stone in grass. The grass protected his hand. This was the first handle to his hammer. Bodo liked to use this hammer. He liked to use smooth hammer stones. But sometimes the smooth stone slipped or bounced back and jarred his hand. One day he found a smooth stone that had a little pit on either side. He put his thumb and finger into the pits and cracked a hard nut with the stone. This was just what he needed. It neither slipped nor jarred his hand. Some of the other tree-dwellers tried it. They wanted one like it. So they began to hunt for pitted stones. They could not always find such stones, but they never thought of making the pits. People lived many years before they learned to do that. Tree-dwellers simply used things that they found on the spot. They seldom changed their shape. We have only a few weapons that we know they made. They were found years ago deep down in some gravel. They had lain there many long years. Here is a picture of one. It is only a chipped pebble. Such a weapon is used nowadays only in play, but then it was used in real work. For a long time the tree-dwellers did not have even this. They used their teeth and nails instead. Some animals had larger and sharper teeth. The tree-dwellers found such teeth in the sand. They found sharp claws there too. They often found sharp bones and horns. They used such things for cutting for many long years, but at last they made a knife. It happened when Bodo was cracking a bone. In some way he broke his hammer. He picked up the pieces and looked at them. They were sharp enough to cut with, but the edges hurt his hand. So he found a smooth pebble and chipped flakes from one end. Before long he had a sharp point. He never hafted it, but he left one end smooth, so that it would not hurt his hand. It was such a weapon as this that was found in the gravel. You can see that it is something like a spearhead. Bodo used it when he hunted small animals. He used it to skin them and to hack off strips of flesh. Many things had been used as knives before, but this was the first knife that we know man-made. Things to do. Hunt for some smooth hammer stones. If you can find one with pits on either side, try both kinds and find out which one works the better. See if you can find a good stone for a knife. Strike the edge to see if it crumbles. Find one that will not crumble. Do you know whether stones have names? What stones have you that you would like named? End of chapter 19. This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 20 of The Tree-Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp. Recorded for LibriVox.org Things to think about. Have you ever seen wild animals protect their little ones? How do they do it? When the mother goes away, in what kind of place does she leave them? Do you know whether the young animals mind their mothers? What Bodo and Wonir found in the Olders. Bodo grew to be a large boy. He made many friends among the tree-dwellers, but he liked Wonir best of all. The boys liked to hunt together. When they had enough to eat, they liked to play. One night as they were watching a herd of wild cattle, a young cow caught their eye. She was running down toward the marsh. The boys wondered why she was going. They chased her down the trail. When the cow saw what the boys were doing, she started off through the underbrush. It was no longer safe to follow, so the boys gave up the chase. Darkness came on. The boys dropped their clubs and climbed a tree, where they spent the night. They slept until the break of day. As they were rubbing their sleepy eyes, they heard a queer sound close by. What is that? said Bodo. The boys listened. All was still. But they were sure that some animal was near. There was a clump of alders within a stone's throw. Perhaps a bear was hiding there. The boys were eager to find out, but they knew better than to rush into danger. So they waited and listened. All was quiet. Bodo threw a stick. Not a sound could be heard. He called out. Still there was no sound. The boys slipped down the tree and picked up their clubs. They crept up softly and peeped into the alders. There's nothing there, said one ear. Bodo knew better. He noticed a hump among the leaves. He reached at his hand and touched it. It was a little calf that had been hid there by its mother. It scarcely moved as Bodo touched it. Its mother had taught it to lie still. Many people might have passed it by. But Bodo had sharp eyes and besides he was very hungry. So the boys killed the calf and began to eat the raw flesh. They ate until they were satisfied. Then they played among the trees. Things to do. Choose somebody to be Bodo and somebody to be one ear and let them show how the boys found the calf. Model a calf in clay. End of chapter 20. This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 21 of The Tree-Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp recorded for LibriVogs.org Things to think about. Why were all the animals afraid of the rhinoceros? How could the little hyenas hunt the big-nosed rhinoceros? What could the tree-dwellers learn by watching the wild animals hunt? How the hyenas hunted? One day Bodo and one ear climbed a fig tree near the edge of a cliff. They were watching a big-nosed rhinoceros. It had just rooted up an oak tree with its twin tusked snout. Now it was tearing the trunk into strips as we tear a stalk of celery. The boys watched it grinding the wood with its great teeth. They were glad that they were safe in the fir tree. They watched the creature in silence. Suddenly Bodo gave one ear a nudge. One ear looked up. Bodo put his finger to his lips then pointed toward the underbrush. One ear stared with open mouth. A whole pack of hyenas was on the cliff. They were sneaking along towards the rhinoceros. What hungry-looking creatures they were, how their eyes gleamed. The boys wondered what the hyenas would do. They watched to see. The big-nosed rhinoceros went stupidly browsing along the edge of the cliff. He did not see the hyenas. The hyenas had learned that the rhinoceros could not see far away and now they were taking advantage of this. They were too cowardly to risk a fair fight. Even the mammoth and the sabertooth did not like to encounter the big-nosed rhinoceros. Even they could not pierce his thick, heavy skin. Even they feared his twin tusk snout. The hyenas crept softly from bush to bush. They kept their eyes fastened upon the rhinoceros. As he stepped on the very edge of the cliff they sprang out and began to growl. The rhinoceros turned fiercely upon them. He tossed one of the hyenas over the cliff. As he did this he lost his footing. The huge creature stumbled and fell. He rolled down the steep cliff and was dashed upon the rocks. The hyenas were no longer afraid. They feasted upon the carcass. They dragged the bones to their caves. They gnawed them until they left the marks of their teeth. The bones stayed in the caves for many years. Not long ago someone found them there. He sent them to a museum where they may be seen today. Perhaps you will go to the museum sometime. If you do, be sure and look at these bones. Perhaps you will be able to help your friends read the story they tell. Things to do. Think of the rhinoceros as he was rooting up the tree. Think of him as he was tearing the wood into strips. Draw one of the pictures. Think of the high cliff with the caves at its foot. Model the cliff and caves in your sandbox. End of Chapter 21 This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 22 of The Tree-Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp Recorded for LibriVox.org Things to think about. Can you think how a fire might have been started before people knew how to make it? What did the tree-dwellers think the fire was? Why did they fear it? What else did they fear? Frightened by fire. One day there was a great storm on the wooded hills. The lightning struck a tree in the forest. It set it on fire. At once the flames spread to the neighboring trees. The tree-dwellers were driven to the ground. They had never been so frightened before. They were afraid of thunder and lightning. They were afraid of beasts of prey. Only when they were up in a tree did they feel that they were safe. But now the trees were on fire. They thought that the fire was a wild animal. They thought that it was an animal that ate wood. Even the rhinoceros and the mammoth eat parts of trees. But this creature devoured all the trees in its path. Several years passed by. Once again a fire broke out on the wooded hills. Once again the wild animals ran. The tree-dwellers ran for they were still afraid. Bodo ran for he too was afraid. But he soon stopped and looked at the fire. He was almost full grown now. He was learning every day. He was curious about many things. And now he wanted to see what the red monster was doing. So he stood and watched at a moment. It seemed to be chasing him. So he ran to find a hiding place. He ran around through the underbrush until at last he found a safe place. The fire ran away from him now. He stood and gazed at the red flames. The wind blew. The fire monster spread its great red wings and leaped from tree to tree. The branches groaned and cracked and fell. Bodo was filled with terror. He did not know what to do. After a little while it began to rain. The fire monster became smaller and smaller. In a few moments it was gone. Bodo wondered where it went. Things to do. Think of the tree-dwellers and the animals running away from the forest fire. Draw the picture. Show how Bodo tried to find out more about the fire. Draw a picture of him as he was watching the fire. End of Chapter 22 This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 23 of The Tree-Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp. Recorded for LibriVox.org Things to think about. Why would the tree-dwellers want to use fire? How would they learn to take care of it? How could they live in a better way after they had fire? How people got their first homes? The tree-dwellers still thought that the fire was alive. The red monster still frightened them. Whenever they saw it they ran away. Bodo too was afraid of the fire. So he tried to be good to it and thus make it his friend. He gave it wood to eat. He learned to go near it without getting hurt. He learned to carry a burning branch. Once he carried a fire-brand to the old oak. He put it in the hollow of the tree. Then he gave it dry sticks that he found close by and he watched it while it ate them. As he stood looking at the fire the sound of footsteps fell upon his ear. He looked to see who was passing. It was Sharptooth. She was coming to the old oak tree. As soon as she saw the fire she ran. Bodo called to her. He asked her to come back. Sharptooth was trembling so that she could scarcely walk. Bodo took her by the hand. He led her to the fire. He told her how he had made friends with it. She listened to what he said but she still seemed afraid. Bodo wished to show that he was not afraid. He looked puzzled a moment and then he said I am not going to sleep in the trees any more. For a moment Sharptooth was speechless. At length she opened her lips and spoke. The cave bears will get you was what she said. But Bodo had thought of the bears. I am not afraid of the bears, he said. They run when they see me with fire. I am going to sleep at the foot of this tree. Then Sharptooth was troubled. She was anxious about Bodo. She had taught him the best that she could. But now he seemed to be risking his life. She wondered how he could do it. As it grew dark she climbed into a neighboring tree. She was afraid to sleep in the old oak that night. Bodo stayed on the ground beside the fire. Sharptooth did not close her eyes. She kept watch from a branch of the tree. She knew the wild animals were out of their dens. She saw their shadows among the trees. But when they saw the fire they turned and ran. But Bodo stayed by the fire. He was a brave boy yet he could not sleep. As long as he was awake he felt safe. But he was afraid of what might happen if he went to sleep. So he kept awake and fed the fire. Sharptooth still kept watch from the tree. At last she came down. Let me feed the fire Bodo while you sleep, she said. Bodo had been yawning for some time. He was glad to have a chance to rest. So he slept while Sharptooth took his place. She watched the fire cautiously at first. Then she fed it and found that it did not hurt her. She liked the warmth that it gave. She enjoyed the pleasant firelight. She saw that it was their friend. After that Sharptooth and Bodo did not sleep in trees. They lived by the fire at the foot of a tree. Sometimes their home was by the old oak. Sometimes it was in other places. But it was always where they carried the fire. Things to do. Tell how to make a fire. What does a fire need in order to burn? Put a tumbler over a lighted candle and watch to see what happens. Why does the light go out? Light the candle again and see if you can find out what it is that burns. End of Chapter 23 This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 24 of The Tree-Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp Recorded for LibriVox.org Things to think about What do you think the other tree-dwellers did when they heard of the fire Sharptooth and Bodo had? Does fire ever do any harm nowadays? Why do we need to be careful in using fire? How the tree-dwellers formed a clan? The next night one ear stayed with Sharptooth and Bodo at the foot of the old oak. Then other tree-dwellers came. At first they were afraid just as Sharptooth had been. But they too soon learned that the fire was their friend. So they sat around the fire each evening. They talked about the wild animals they had seen. As long as they sat by the fire they felt safe. So they came to the fireplace each night. They began to live together. They formed a clan. Their clan was the fire clan. The women with babies stayed near the fire. All the others went farther away. Each one hunted for his own food. Each ate what he found on the spot. But all came back to the fireplace at night. All were tired and needed to rest. Since they had no chairs they squatted on the ground. They talked and they played in the fire-light. When they got drowsy they fell asleep. But Sharptooth kept watch of the fire. Her sisters helped but she was the clan mother. It was she who took charge of the fire. She knew how the fire became their friend. She knew that it needed care. She knew that it gave them their first home. So she taught the people to worship the fire. Things to do. Play that you are tree dwellers just beginning to form a clan. Plan how you will divide your work. Choose sides and let those on one side tell a story of the tree dwellers before they had fire. Let those on the other side tell a story of the tree dwellers after they had fire. Look at the picture on page 100 and tell such a story about it as you think the tree dwellers would tell after they had seen such a fight. End of Chapter 24 This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 25 of The Tree Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp recorded for LibriVox.org Things to think about. How were the tree dwellers sheltered from wind and rain? How did they keep warm after they used fire? How did they find shelter from the rain? What trees offer the best shelter from the rain? Where is the rain that falls on those trees carried? Do you know what kind of roots those trees have? What trees do not give a good shelter from the rain? Why? What trees would give the best shelter in the winter? Why? How did the fire clan find shelter from the cold winds? If they were living in places that were not well sheltered what kind of a shelter do you think they might make? How the women made a shelter? When people slept in trees they did not need to make a shelter. They were sheltered by the trees. Long after they began to sleep on the ground the trees still sheltered them. The leaves of the trees kept off the rain. The thick underbrush kept off the cold winds. When the fire clan moved to a new place it was always sharp tooth who chose the spot for the fire. She knew the best sheltered places. Sometimes she chose a spot near an oak or a birch. Their tops were well-thatched with leaves. They shed rain almost as well as a roof. But when the oak and the birch trees dropped their leaves sharp tooth carried her fire to a fir or a spruce. These evergreen trees had needle-like leaves. They gave some protection from the rain and the snow. But sometimes a drizzling rain kept up for many days. Sometimes the cold winds blew. Then the fire clan shivered with the wet and the cold. Mothers were anxious about their children. They wanted to keep them safe from harm. So they tried to keep off the cold wind and the rain. They had not yet learned many ways of working. But they had long known how to weave cradles of vines. So the women now tried to weave a shelter. They broke off large armfuls of evergreens. They carried them to some saplings that grew near the fire. Then they bent down the tops of the small growing saplings. They tied them together and began to weave. They wove branches of evergreens among them. They piled larger branches against the wall. At last the shelter was done. It was the first shelter that they had made. There was not one like it on the wooded hills. Things to do. Make a playhouse that will shelter you from the wind and the rain. Find trees that give a good shelter from the sun and the rain. Notice trees that do not give good shelter. See if you can find out why some trees give a better shelter than others. When do oaks and birches drop their leaves? Do evergreen trees ever drop their leaves? Find out why we call them evergreen trees. End of Chapter 25 This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 26 of The Tree-Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp Recorded for LibriVox.org Things to think about. What do we use baskets for? What are they made of? Do you think the tree-dwellers made baskets before they had fire? When do you think that they would first need baskets? How do you think that they might have made them? How Sharptooth made a basket? Before the tree-dwellers had fire, they did not need baskets. For a long time afterwards they did not make them. They ate fruits from the trees and cracked the nuts where they found them. Each night they came home one by one. Sharptooth still had charge of the fire. She ate wild roots that grew near. She cracked nuts that she found in the trees close by. She ate berries in a neighboring patch. But she never went far away and she never stayed away long. The blueberries were now ripe, so she went to the patch. How she wished she might stay a long time. But as soon as she had eaten a few, she hurried home to the fire. As she scrambled over the fallen branches, she broke off a handful of bushes. They were loaded with ripe blueberries. She carried them home to the children. She told the women and children about the patch. They all wanted to go. So they piled broken branches upon the fire. Then Sharptooth told one of the women to stay at home and take charge of the fire. The women left their babies and the little children in charge of this woman, too. How disappointed the little children were. They watched the women and older children until they had passed out of sight among the trees. Sharptooth led the way to the patch. In a few moments they found it. It was almost blue with berries. The children ate as fast as they picked. The women ate, too, for a while, but they remembered their little ones at home. So they picked heaping handfuls of berries. They wanted to carry more berries, so hunted for something to hold them. One woman had a rabbit skin. The other women helped her to fill it with berries. Another woman made a basket of oak leaves. They filled that with berries. Sharptooth gathered some rushes from a marshy place and tried still another way. She sat down upon the grass and began to weave. The bottom of the basket was soon made. Then she bent the rushes and tied the ends together. After that she wove round and round. When the basket was deep enough she fastened the ends. Then the basket was done. It did not have a rim. Sharptooth did not miss the rim, for this was her first basket. She called the women and children around her. They ran up to see what she had made. Everyone wanted to take it. It did not take long to fill the basket with berries. Sharptooth took them home to the children. How glad the little ones were when they saw the women and children. They were glad to eat the berries. While they were smacking their lips Sharptooth showed them the basket. That night as the fathers and mothers came home the children ran out to meet them. Each time they told what Sharptooth had made. Each time they showed the rush basket. It was not many days before each of the older children had made one like it. Things to do. Look at the pictures in this lesson and see how Sharptooth's basket was made. Gather tough grasses or rushes and make a basket of your own. Show how the children ran to meet the fathers and mothers as they came home at night. Draw the picture. End of Chapter 26. This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 27 of The Tree-Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp. Recorded for LibriVox.org. Things to think about. Do you think that the fireclan used fire in as many ways as we do? What do we use it for? How many uses do you think that the fireclan made of it? Can you think how people learn to cook food? How Bodo used fire. All the tree-dwellers now knew that the fire was their friend. They found it useful in many ways. It guarded the spot where they slept at night and it helped them all through the day. They no longer swung from branch to branch. When they carried a firebrand it was safe to walk on the ground. Their hands were at last free. When Bodo started out with his firebrand the wild animals ran to their dens. Sometimes Bodo pursued them. He chased some of the animals home to their dens but he never went to the caves. Saber-tooth and the cave-bear were too large and fierce. The hyenas were small but they lived in packs. So Bodo learned to let them alone. But he was not afraid of the gophers and badgers. He chased them to their holes and tried to smoke them out. He would build a fire at the mouth of a hole. Then he would stand with a club in his hand and watch. He would watch until the animal came out. Sometimes he had to wait a long time. But in the end he nearly always got meat to eat. One day he was hunting squirrels. He chased a squirrel to its hole in a tree. Then he tried to smoke it out. He waited a long time in vain so at last he set fire to the tree. But the rain soon came and his fire went out. So Bodo struck the tree with his club. The trunk gave way. Bodo peeped into the hollow tree. He wanted to find the squirrel. It lay there perfectly still. He put in his hand and pulled it out. It had been killed by the fire and smoke. He began to eat the warm flesh. He wondered why it was so hot and tender. Bodo did not know then that the flesh had been roasted. This was the first time that he had ever eaten cooked food. Not long afterward all the people learned to roast meat. Things to do. Draw a picture of Bodo hunting with a firebrand. See if you can find trees that have hollows in them. How do you think that the hollows were made? Find out whether there are any animals near you that live in hollow trees. End of Chapter 27 This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 28 of The Tree-Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp Recorded for LibriVox.org Things to think about. Do you think that the people of the fire clan would help one another in time of danger? Can you think why people began to work together instead of hunting alone? How Bodo saved one ear's life? One day one ear was hunting gophers on the grassy upland. His torch went out so he tried to get back to the wooded hills without being seen. At first he crept through the tall grass but soon he came to a place where the grass did not cover him. He hurried on as fast as he could. He had almost reached the wooded hills when a cave bear crossed his path. The bear saw him. One ear shouted for help and then ran as he had never run before. But the cave bear overtook him. He soon had one ear in his embrace. One ear remembered nothing more. But the men who heard him saw what happened. They saw the cave bear grasp him with his huge paws. Then they saw Bodo rush up to the cave bear and wave a torch in his face. The cave bear let go his hold. The frightened beast ran off to his cave. The men came up in time to help Bodo raise one ear from the ground. They helped him back to the wooded hills. His wounds were soon healed. But he always carried the marks of that cave bear. That was the day that he lost his ear. We have called him one ear before. But the fire clan never called him one ear until after that day. Things to do. Find a stick that will make a good torch and make one. Draw a picture of one ear and the cave bear. End of Chapter 28. This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 29 of The Tree-Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp. Recorded for LibriVox.org Things to think about. How do you think the fire clan spent the evening? If they could not say what they wished to say, how do you think they would make themselves understood? How do you think they learned to hunt together? How people learned to hunt large animals. For many days the men talked about one ear's narrow escape. They acted the whole thing over again. One man would show what one ear did. Another would take the part of the cave bear. Then someone would play he was Bodo and rush up with a make-believe torch. Others learned how the men came up to the spot and helped one ear home. They played this over and over again. They learned to work together. They learned to play other plays as well. They learned it in this way. They watched the wild animals all through the day. At night they showed what they had seen. At last they made plans for hunting them. They did it the way children make a new game. First they chose a leader for the play. Then the leader asked them all to help. He showed them what to do. They all did as the leader said. They learned to play together. This play was their hunting dance. It helped the people to hunt together. It helped the brave men to lead in the hunt. It helped all the people to do their part. Only brave men were given a chance to lead the hunting dance. Each one led the best that he could. The people always chose the man that they thought led the best. This man led them all in the hunt the next day. Things to do. Let anyone who would like to lead in a hunt lead in a hunting dance. When all have led who wish to do so, let the class choose the one who led the best. End of Chapter 29 This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 30 of The Tree-Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp Recorded for LibriVox.org Things to think about. Why do you think the tree-dwellers like their brave men best? How do you think they helped them to become more brave? Can you think why people had not yet learned to wear clothing? Why would they care more for ornaments at first? Have you ever heard anyone speak of a feather in one's cap? Can you tell what is meant by it? What kind of ornaments do you like to wear? Do you know how to make them? Can you make such ornaments as the tree-dwellers wore? Why people began to wear ornaments? The fire clan played a hunting dance each night. They hunted every day. They began to attack the larger animals. Brave men were needed to do this. Men liked to show that they were brave, so they kept trophies of their conflicts with the wild beasts. These trophies were sometimes teeth and claws. Sometimes they were beautiful skins and feathers. When men found the time, they worked upon them. They made them into curious ornaments. It was hard work to bore holes through the teeth and claws, but they learned to do it. They strung them on sinews and hung them about their necks. Sometimes they wore them on their arms and wrists. Sometimes they wore them on their ankles and knees. They made headdresses of the feathers. They covered their shoulders with the skins. Men did not wear skins to keep themselves warm. They wore them to show that they were brave. Such trophies were worn by all the brave men. These men were the leaders in time of danger. When they were successful in the hunt, the people praised them. When they failed, the people mocked them. So they tried to do their work well. They tried to find the best stones for tools and weapons. They worked until they made them sharp and strong. They studied the animals until they learned their ways. They taught the people the hunting dance. They kept the trophies of their brave deeds. They were brave men. All the people praised them. Things to do. Tell a story of how Bodo earned a trophy. Find ornaments that you think the leaders might have worn. Dress some dolls the way you think that the leaders dressed. Perhaps you would like to string seeds and make a necklace. End of Chapter 30 This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 31 of The Tree-Dwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dup Recorded for LibriVox.org Things to think about. What animals live in the cold north? Do they like to live there? Would you be surprised if any of these animals came here to live? If they came, what do you think it would mean? The coming of the musk sheep. One day, long after Bodo lived, some men went up the valley to hunt. They had not gone far when the leader waved his hand. All the men stopped to find out what he wanted. He pointed to a herd of strange animals feeding on the rocky slope. Then he motioned to show them what to do. He sent some of the men up the trail to the right. He motioned for others to go to the left. He wanted to surround the animals. The strange creatures soon caught sight of the hunters. They huddled together like frightened sheep. Then the men thought they could surely catch them. They shouted aloud for joy. But the animals turned and ran up the slope. They jumped over rocks and chasms with ease. They were soon out of sight. How disappointed the hunters were. They did not know what these strange animals were. They did not know from what place they had come. They wondered why they had come to their land. Perhaps you would like to know. They were musk sheep that had come from the cold, cold north. They were used to treeless, desolate places. They were used to eating moss and young shoots of the willow. They looked something like sheep and something like oxen. Sometimes they are called musk oxen. They look something like bison. Sometimes they are called musk bison. Does it seem strange that the musk sheep should leave their cold home and come to the land where the treedwellers had lived? It was not so strange as it seemed. Many years had passed since the treedwellers lived. It was no longer warm on the wooded hills. There was snow on the ground, the greater part of the year. After many years it became very cold. Then all the animals came down from the north. The coming of the musk sheep was the sign of the coming cold. Things to do. Bend your arms and show how the musk sheep's horns curve. How do you think the musk sheep used its horns? Model a musk sheep in clay. End of Chapter 31 This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 32 of the Treedwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp Recorded for LibriVox.org Things to think about What animals stay here in the winter? How do they keep warm? How do they find food? The woolly rhinoceros About the same time that the musk sheep came from the north, another strange animal appeared. It was a huge creature. Not one like it has lived for ages. It was a woolly rhinoceros. The big-nosed rhinoceros liked to live where it was warm. It lived on the wooded hills before the treedwellers did. The small-nosed rhinoceros liked the warm country too. It came from the south when the treedwellers appeared. But the woolly rhinoceros came down from the north. It was able to live in the cold. It had an inner coat of fine, curly wool. This coat kept it warm. It had a coarse, hairy outer coat. This coat kept it from feeling heavy blows. It had two horns on its ugly snout. They kept it safe from harm. When it was not disturbed, it was a peaceable animal. But when it was attacked, there was no animal that was more fierce. The other animals learned to leave it alone. Sometimes the wolves and hyenas frightened it over a precipice. But it was a long time before men tried to hunt it. Things to do. Tell a story of how the wild animals were taught to let the woolly rhinoceros alone. See if you can find an animal that has both an inner and an outer coat. End of Chapter 32 This recording is in the public domain. Chapter 33 of The Treedwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp Recorded for LibriVox.org How we have learned about the treedwellers The treedwellers lived such a long time ago that we do not know all that they did. But they have left some things to tell their story. A few of their bones and stone weapons have been found in the gravel. We have learned something about the treedwellers from studying these. Bones of animals that lived then have been found in the caves. They tell something more about the life of the treedwellers. Marks of plants have been found upon the rocks. They too help to tell the story. Wise men have studied all these things. They have tried to learn all that they could about these people. We have written their story in this book for you so that you may know how our forefathers lived before they learned how to use fire. End of Chapter 33 This recording is in the public domain. Suggestions to Teachers from The Treedwellers by Catherine Elizabeth Dopp Recorded for LibriVox.org The test of a book is the service it can render. The character of the service demanded by it is determined by the needs of those to whom it is devoted. This book was not written for the child of five or six years, although children of that age have shown an interest in it. The child of five or six is absorbed in the activities of his own home and his immediate environment. His own neighborhood may well constitute the chief source from which to draw the subject matter in these early years. Even though many of the processes which he observes are complex, it matters little to the child at this time, for so easily do they lend themselves to dramatic play that they cause him little difficulty. The child at this time, therefore, has no need of this book. But there comes a time when the ideal and the real world begin to separate. No longer content with a make-believe process and unable to control the complex processes of modern life, he feels a need that cannot be satisfied by the resources of his neighborhood alone. There is need of looking elsewhere in order to find experiences that are sufficiently related to his spontaneous activities to enlist his attention and sufficiently related to what is best in the society in which he lives to form legitimate subject matter for this period of development. The materials which constitute the subject matter of this book have been selected and arranged with reference to the needs of the child at such a time. It is the child of six and a half or seven years for whom this book is intended. Were it not true that so many books that are written for children have little regard for real facts, it would seem unnecessary to state that in no case has material been introduced into this book, which cannot be justified by reference to a recognized authority in anthropology, paleontology, or geology. The story form by means of which these facts are conveyed is merely a literary device for bringing home to the child the truth that has thus far been ascertained regarding the fundamental steps in the development of our industrial and social institutions. The portrayal of the situation which caused our early forefathers to rob birds' nests and kill young animals will no doubt shock the sentimentalist who orders eggs or veal as a matter of course. There might be good ground for his feeling where they're not present in the child the instinct to do similar deeds even though living under social conditions that do not justify such acts. Anyone who will take the trouble to recall his own childhood or to make the acquaintance of children of six and a half or seven years will realize that such instincts are present and that they must find expression in one form or another. Is it wise to ignore the facts of the case and allow the child to form the habit of gratifying his blind instincts or shall we recognize the situation and meet it with all the wisdom at our command? Is it not the better plan to tell the child frankly of the way in which people lived at the time when they did what he would like to do now and lead him to discover the changes that have taken place that lead us to disapprove of actions which under different conditions were considered good? The teacher who knows that she has good ground for her convictions is not afraid to look upon a question from all sides. The fact that the teacher is willing to look at the question from the child's point of view is a means of establishing sympathetic relations between her and the child and thus becomes willing to look at the question from the teacher's point of view. A sounder morality can be developed by honestly facing the facts with the child and by giving him the benefit of a broader experience than by leaving him to face the situation alone in the light of but part of the facts. The problems with which the child at this time is grappling are so similar in character to those of the race during the early periods of his development that they afford the child a rich background of experience suited to his own needs. The successful solution of these problems is as important with reference to the development of the individual today as then in determining the welfare of the race. A firm basis for the development of the intellectual, the moral, and the physical life can thus be laid at this time by a wise use of the experiences of the race when it was laying the foundations upon which our civilization rests. It must be remembered that there is as wide a difference between the real situation in the hunting life and the scenes depicted in this book as there is between the real attitudes of primitive people and those of the child which are idealized forms of the same attitudes. The child which shrink in terror from the real conflict. His interest is in the dramatized form. If this dramatic interest of the child is satisfied it can be made to pay tribute to the sciences and the arts. If it is ignored or repressed it is liable to find expression in acts of cruelty. C. Catherine E. Dopp Some Steps in the Evolution of Social Occupations The Elementary School Teacher May and September 1903 The University of Chicago Press Method The subject matter is presented with the view of economizing the energy of the teacher as well as that of the child. The attempt has been made to base each lesson upon the experience of the child or at least upon that which he may be enabled to experience if he has not yet done so. This experience is so treated as to secure problems for advanced thought. The purpose of things to think about is to awaken the inquiring attitude. It is at this point of the lesson that the child is given the opportunity he prizes so highly of telling what he has seen, heard, or done. Here he meets with the new problems which compel him to reconstruct his experiences. The printed questions which map out the main features in the development of the lesson should be discussed freely. Care should be taken to avoid mechanical answers. It is much better to leave questions unsettled or to leave the subject with several different solutions that the different children have worked out than it is to secure uniformity by imposing upon the child the judgment of the teacher or of the author of the text. In case of a necessary delay in answering a question on account of a lack of related experience the teacher should use the means that are available for supplying the child with the necessary experience. If the printed questions are discussed before the story is read there will be less danger of a mechanical use of the book than might arise from the habit of reading the story first and making answers to the questions so as to fit the story. The story. The function of the story is to supply the child with racial experiences that will enrich his own more narrow personal experience. It is not intended merely to please but to present facts in a form which the child can understand. By using the simple form of a sequence of sentences each sentence standing by itself less difficulty is presented to the child in reading than if the paragraph form had been employed. The greater ease with which the young child reads this style together with the fact that the rhythm in a majority of the stories is of a character in keeping with the subject and readily appreciated by the child seem to justify the use of this style for a few months of the child's life. Things to do. The teacher should use her judgment in regard to how many of these suggestions it is best to carry out in the school hours. In schools where little work has yet been done in pantomime, drawing, modeling, and other kindred modes of activity it will probably be the better plan to have many of the suggestions carried out in hours of play. If the teacher takes an interest in what the child does outside of school hours as well as in what he does in regular recitation and work periods and if she utilizes the experiences of the child that are gained in informal ways she will have no difficulty in securing the hardiest cooperation in the work of the school. Where constructive work has already been introduced the teacher will have no difficulty in selecting from the suggested activities those that are best adapted to her purpose. She should always feel free to substitute for any of the printed suggestions others which may more nearly meet the needs of the child in the locality in which she lives. Typical modes of activity If there is one principle more than another upon which all educational practice not simply education in art must base itself it is precisely in this that the realization of an idea in action through the medium of movement is as necessary to the formation of the mental image as is the expression, the technique to the full play of the idea itself. John Dewey Gesture and pantomime The muscular sense is the foundation sense from which all the others have been derived. Perceptions through sight and hearing are uncertain often requiring to be verified by the use of the muscular sense or even of the use of smell or taste. Knowledge gained through the use of sight and hearing may be superficial. That which comes through the use of the muscular sense is wrought into the very fiber of one's being. Among the more simple modes of using the muscular sense are gesture and pantomime. They are within the reach of every teacher. They require no materials. A worthy idea and the desire to communicate it are the essential conditions for profitable work. Gesture and pantomime are two powerful tools in education to be used carelessly. The teacher should aid the child in discovering the real motive which animated the character to be represented. She should appeal to the best in the child. In so doing she will be able to use gesture and pantomime in such a way as to transform activities which when undirected are liable to degenerate into vicious habits into activities of great moral significance. Teachers who have tried gesture and pantomime as a preparatory step to other modes of activity have found it invaluable as a means of securing a genuine growth of imagery and free expression in a variety of forms. Play. It is now well known that many of the child's spontaneous plays are idealized reproductions of the serious activities of primitive people. It is possible to make a much larger use of these plays than has yet been made. It is hoped that the suggestions that are scattered throughout the pages of this and the succeeding volumes of this series will enable the teacher to make a large use of this most important educational force. Sand modeling. Almost every child has had experience in sand modeling before coming to school. The part of the teacher is to enable him to make use of this habit with reference to new ends. One who has not learned through experience the value of this art is scarcely in a position to realize what a stimulus it is to the growth of definite images of geographical forms. When based upon observation, as it always should be, it is unsurpassed as a mode of developing and communicating adequate conceptions of topographical features. Sandpans should be provided so that there will be at least one pan for every two children. If each child can have a pan, the conditions will be still more favorable. Whether sandpans are available or not, every primary school room should be supplied with a large sandbox, two or three if there is room for them. Excellent results have been attained in many schools by modeling typical areas and representing in a graphic way the life of the place. If the sandbox is lined with a sink, rivers and lakes may be represented with ease. In case there is no zinc lining, water may be represented by the use of tinfoil or by glass which may be laid in the bottom of the box, leaving only such portions uncovered as are needed in order to represent the water. Moss, twigs, grass, stones, toy animals all help to make the scene more life-like. By sprinkling the sand with lime water it hardens so as to keep it shape for a long time. Clay modeling Although clay does not respond so quickly to the touch as sand, it preserves its shape more easily. The more skill that the teacher has in clay modeling, the more freedom she will feel in the work. But she should not hesitate to make use of this mode of expression even though she has to learn with the child. The aim is not so much to secure finish in details or a result similar to that reached by other people as it is to secure the growth of the image and freedom in expression. Only by leading the child to compare the result of his work with the image in his mind does the image grow. By so doing and by referring to the real object when present, the child gradually gains control over this mode of acquiring and communicating ideas. It costs but little to supply a class with clay for the same material may be used again and again. It is desirable, however, to have a sufficient supply to permit the preservation of the best work for some time. Clay may be bought ready mixed at art stores and kindergarten supply stores. The common gray clay costs two or three cents a pound. Artist clay costs five cents a pound. A cheaper kind can be obtained of manufacturers of sewer pipes. The teacher will find suggestions regarding the use of clay in Fry's Child in Nature pages 36-8, Kellogg's 40 Lessons in Clay Modeling, Prang's Art Instruction in Primary Schools first year pages 27-39, second year pages 32-43, and in Kate Douglas-Wigan and Nora A. Smith's Frobel's Occupations pages 32-43. Excellent articles illustrated by the work of children appear in the University Elementary Record, which is published by the University of Chicago Press, Chicago. Basketry. The materials of which baskets are made are less pliable than clay or sand, yet the Child of Seven is able to manipulate some of them. Where possible, he should be encouraged to exploit his environment in the search for raw materials that are adapted to this purpose. In many localities, tough grasses, willows, rushes, or other pliable materials are present, and even though the Child finds little that is adapted to the purpose, the mere search for materials enables him to appreciate the value of the commercially prepared ones and aids him in picturing these materials in their raw state. The pleasant days of autumn should be used more available at that time. These may be prepared for use and stored until they may be needed later in the year. If the Child makes a ball of braided grass, he will find many ways of using it later in making baskets, mats, cradles, sandals, or anything which he may choose to make of it. Where natural materials cannot be obtained, commercially prepared ones may be substituted. Raffia, uncolored or colored with vegetable dyes, rattan reeds, and splints are obtained wherever kindergarten supplies are kept, as well as in large seed stores and in most of the department stores in large cities. Of the many books that are appearing upon the subject, probably none is more suggestive with reference to the significance of the art than George Wharton James's Indian basketry, and none more helpful with reference to mastering the processes than Mary White's How to Make Baskets. Drawing and Painting Since these arts were originally derived from the language, it is not strange that gesture and pantomime are the best means of preparing the child for these modes of communication. The child who has difficulty in expressing his image by means of drawing and painting should be given the opportunity to experiment by means of pantomime until his image has become so clear that he can express it in a less real way. Few children fail to draw and paint reasonably well when afforded this opportunity that should be denied to none. As a result, the teacher should be careful not to repress spontaneity by criticizing too severely. On the other hand, she should induce the child to make such comparisons of his work with his image and with the object when present as to prevent the formation of careless habits of work. Although watercolors are used in some schools, such materials present more difficulties than it seems worth the while for the child to encounter. More satisfactory results have thus far been reached by the use of blackboard crayon, colored crayon, and charcoal. Language. When the child talks about what he has experienced, his language is almost invariably simple and direct. The lessons in this book afford ample opportunity for the use of the fundamental forms of language and communicating actual experience. Many of the stories may well be supplemented by stories that the child tells himself. Care should be taken, however, to keep the child within the limits of what was possible during the age when he refers. Much benefit is derived from allowing the children of the class to dramatize a story after they have read it and represented it by means of pantomime. Although there is ample room for written work, it is oral rather than written language that should receive emphasis at this time. Field lessons. The geographical phases of the work are referred to so frequently throughout the text as well as under the special suggestions for each lesson. The teacher should make use of every opportunity to cultivate in the child an intelligent interest in his natural environment. Perhaps nothing will contribute more toward developing this interest than field lessons. The value of these lessons will depend upon whether an adequate motive is aroused in the child for taking the trip and upon whether he has given the opportunity to make use of the experience gained in a practical way. There are schools in crowded quarters of large cities where it does not yet seem practicable to take an entire class out on a field lesson. But it is always feasible to make use of informal observations that the child makes from day to day as well as the results of trips that have previously been taken by some members of the class. During the time that this book is used it is hoped that at least two or three of the following field trips or excursions may be made. One, to uncultivated spots on hillsides in the woods and on natural meadows to find a a place where the tree dwellers might have lived b. wild foods and to discover if possible the reasons for abundance or scarcity of certain forms c. trees that offer protection from the sun and rain and branches that are tough and strong d. suitable sticks for primitive implements and weapons e. grasses, barks, willows, rushes and other tough and flexible fibers for basketry f. the topographical features which later are to be represented in sand g. what animals now live in uncultivated places 2. to a brook or river to find a. the best drinking places for animals b. the best fords c. the best places to build bridges d. stones for primitive implements and weapons e. how the river grinds the stones f. what the river carries in its water and g. what plants and animals may be seen there 3. to a circus to see the wild animals so as to be better able to realize what the animals that lived when the tree dwellers did were like 4. to a farm to find a. what animals live there how they are taken care of and how they differ from wild animals b. what plants are cultivated on the farm and in the gardens how they are cultivated and how they differ from the wild plants that can be found in uncultivated spots 5. to a gravel bed or stone quarry to find a. what kinds of stone are there b. how stone is quarried and what it is used for