. The outcasts . 1 ^-CHAPTER TOUR IN the morning Atim had for hisbreakfast a wistful remembranceof the yesterdays eating—thatwas all; while Shag made a frugalmeal off the bronzed grass, fast curingon its stem for the winter forage. Therell be good eating here forthe Grass Feeders,3 he said, grindingleisurely at the wild hay. Indeed there will,3 answered theDog-Wolf. The Grass Feeders willwax fat for the benefit of the Meat Eat-ers. I wish one would come my waynow,3 he sighed hungrily. We are almost half way/3 contin-ued Atim, as he trotted beside the long-striding Bull. 75 The Outcasts Im glad


. The outcasts . 1 ^-CHAPTER TOUR IN the morning Atim had for hisbreakfast a wistful remembranceof the yesterdays eating—thatwas all; while Shag made a frugalmeal off the bronzed grass, fast curingon its stem for the winter forage. Therell be good eating here forthe Grass Feeders,3 he said, grindingleisurely at the wild hay. Indeed there will,3 answered theDog-Wolf. The Grass Feeders willwax fat for the benefit of the Meat Eat-ers. I wish one would come my waynow,3 he sighed hungrily. We are almost half way/3 contin-ued Atim, as he trotted beside the long-striding Bull. 75 The Outcasts Im glad of that, Brother. My footjoints are not so well oiled as they oncewere, and are getting hot and that we should not see some ofour cousins, is it not, Dog-Wolf ? I saw one yesterday, replied Atim. Aye, Brother, and he saw you, too/ Else I had eaten him, added theDog-Wolf. A Coyote ? asked Shag incredu-lously; eat a Coyote? Impossible!No animal ever ate a Coyote ! No animal was ever so hungry as Iwas


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectanimals, bookyear1901