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 the 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.
“Bodo caught a pig without any help”