A List of the Full-Page Drawings in the Book
| PAGE | |
| "The leader of the caribou herd ... returned the stallion's inquiring stare with a glance of mild curiosity" | (See page [122]) [Frontispiece] |
| "Some inexperienced seal had been foolish enough to lie basking close beside an ice-cake" | [7] |
| "She led him farther and farther across the ice" | [13] |
| "Would run gleefully to snap them up and eat them" | [14] |
| "Some one on deck discerned the crouching bear" | [24] |
| "He saw a big sucker settle lazily where the thronging fry were thickest" | [34] |
| "Held firmly between the edges of his great beak" | [42] |
| "Leaping high out of the pools" | [45] |
| "Vanquished in their own element by the mink" | [59] |
| "Again he shot into the spray-thick air on the face of the fall" | [68] |
| "Scuttled off into the woods like a frightened woodchuck" | [74] |
| "The moose came in sight up the brook channel" | [79] |
| "At this moment a passing shrike swooped down" | [85] |
| "Lay motionless but for the easy waving of its fins" | [97] |
| "Only that sharp black fin, that prowled and prowled, kept always in sight" | [101] |
| "Directly beneath the shark the stranger came" | [105] |
| "He struck out desperately, and soon cleared the turmoil of the breakers" | [111] |
| "The southward journeying ducks, which would drop with loud quacking and splashing into the shallows" | [121] |
| "It was the cow moose calling for her mate" | [125] |
| "The plucky little animal jumped as far as he could" | [136] |
| "Then, with the largest prize in his jaws, he swam slowly to the rock" | [151] |
| "Lay down in sullen triumph to lick his wounds" | [152] |
| "The baffled shrew jumped straight into the air" | [158] |
| "With a frantic leap he shot through the air" | [160] |
| "Turn his narrow, snarling face to see what threatened" | [173] |
| "When he stopped to drink at the glassy pool" | [180] |
| "Noiselessly faded back through the covert" | [185] |
| "Then he leaped the fence again" | [186] |
| "He was in the iron clutch of a muskrat trap" | [198] |
| "His course took him far out over the soundless spaces" | [203] |
| "For all his seeming awkwardness he moved as delicately as a cat" | [208] |
| "The water splashed high and white about him" | [213] |
| "The shrew-mouse ... darted out into the light" | [218] |
| "His round, sinister eyes glared palely into every covert" | [220] |
| "He saw the gray forms of the pack" | [228] |
| "A snipe which flew too low over the ditch" | [238] |
| "Madly joyous, he killed, and killed, and killed, for the joy of killing" | [241] |
| "Would whisk sharply into the mouth of the black tunnel" | [247] |
| "Confronting the two great cats with uplifted paw and mouth wide open" | [258] |
| "Once more the watchful sentinel appeared" | [260] |
| "The noiseless wings were now just behind him" | [266] |
| "His apprehensive ears caught a curious sound" | [274] |
| "The big owl had been disturbed at its banquet" | [277] |
| "Which seemed to scrutinize him steadily" | [278] |
| "Those swift and implacable little whales who fear no living thing" | [296] |
| "Far offshore, one of these monsters came up and sprawled upon the surface" | [300] |
| "Up darted a livid tentacle, and fixed upon it" | [302] |
| "A singular figure, descending slowly through the glimmering green" | [304] |